About Me

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Whimsy comes in many forms and if you are lucky enough to encounter even one of them, your life will change forever. Jedi Queen is one of those whimsical creatures. She spends her entire life living on the edges. Growing up off the grid she lived the hippy life before it became main stream. After high school she left the farm for more concrete pastures and bucked her anarchist roots for post secondary values. A Master's degree in Clinical Social work and another in Art Therapy lead to private practice as an Existential Sherpa. To her parent's horror she married a doctor and settled into a life of suburban banality which lasted all of six months. Now days Jedi Queen and the Good Doctor divide time between their yorkie minions and ancient obese cat with epic overland adventuring. You can take the girl from the wild but you can't take the wild out of the girl!

Saturday, 6 June 2026

Day 21 - Newquay to Perranporth:  23.14 km


Holy mother of God. Today can fuck right off into the sun.

I am so exhausted I can’t even summon the willpower to chew. Exhaustion doesn’t  begin to cover this level of physical bankruptcy. I want to crawl into a dark corner, curl into a ball, and succumb to the elements. It was a hell of a day, a masterclass in suffering, but before I unpack that baggage, we need to give some well-deserved credit to Newquay and the Breakwater Hostel.


Last night I pitched this place as a chance to relive those gloriously unhinged days of Camino  albergue living, a lifestyle anyone who has done a pilgrimage remembers with a cocktail of fondness and deep PTSD. But I can assure you there is no 5:00 AM crinkling of plastic bags, no shady characters stealing your carbon-fiber trekking poles, and no ancient European men wandering naked through the communal spaces. Aside from  the toilet requiring you to descend three flights of vertical stairs, this was a beautiful stay. First, there is a secret, tiny half-bath hidden on the second floor right under the staircase. Nobody tells you it’s there, but we all discover it because architecture under stairs begs to be explored.

The communal showers offer infinite scalding hot water, and the local surfer dudes are  polite, constantly yelling stuff like "Hey, you need any soap or shampoo? I got a spare bottle if you're hurting!" through the steam. You can shower with a friend or just a total stranger in the massive main wash station. It’s technically designed for hosing down surfboards, but it transforms into a low-key party zone for anyone feeling free and unbothered. I walked in to use the facilities and two naked dudes were just standing there having a passionate debate about kayaking and kite-surfing. They cheerfully waved as I passed by and just carried on with their conversation.  The hostel staff are all Aussies over on their two-year working holiday adventures, and they are pure, unfiltered joy. We learned from them that the place is a haven for long-distance walkers, especially the hardcore crowd who camp. It’s a cheap, cheerful, and deeply social break from the elements. I highly recommend it if you are down with the basics and don't mind a little full-frontal nudity on your way to the can.


Newquay does have a touch of posh to it, as we discovered on our way out today. Coming in, it's rough around the edges in a way I adore. Like a biker  rescuing kittens. Then suddenly the town softens into elegant townhouses. There is a strange harmony to it. The wealthy and the working class seem to coexist without demanding the other become something else. The more I think about it, the more I want to come back, rent a place for a week, and marinate in its scruffy charm. Besides, I still need the full Captain Matt trifecta. It was absolutely bucketing down when we woke up. My enthusiasm packed its bags and left immediately. Still, English weather has the attention span of a squirrel, so another walker and I declared, "fuck it," and headed into the deluge, convinced it would blow over in half an hour. Thirty minutes later the rain was still coming sideways and the wind had begun auditioning for a disaster film. I was having  PTSD flashbacks to the last windstorm, but Ken reminded me we had several escape routes if things went south. So onward we trudged. Ninety minutes later we reached the ferry crossing. Unfortunately, the ferry was shut down due to high winds. FFFUUUCCKKK. This presented two immediate problems. First, how the hell were we supposed to cross the river? Second, if the weather was too rough for a man who ferries people for a living, what exactly had we wandered into? Options were scarce. Wait for low tide and wade across, retreat to Newquay and catch a bus, or call a cab. We chose the cab, paying for a 15-kilometre ride to solve what should have been a five-minute trip across the water. 


By this point I was so wet and cold I was beginning to regret every romantic notion that had convinced me this walk would be a nostalgic little adventure. We agreed to push on to Holywell and decide there whether Perranporth was still on the menu. The good news was the rain finally eased. The bad news was the wind completely lost its damn mind. The rest of the day exists as scattered fragments because it was so brutally intense that my brain unplugged from reality to conserve resources. I was frozen solid. Gusts were hitting 70 km/hr and every step felt like negotiating with an angry god. Locals strolled past in shorts, casually walking their dogs. Important distinction though. They're out for thirty minutes. A quick lap, a pee for the dog, then straight to the pub for a pint and central heating. They are not scrambling over exposed cliffs for six hours. So here is today's lesson: if the ferry isn't running because it's too windy and the locals are avoiding the high routes because it's too windy, you should bloody well not do the stage.

Until today I had no appreciation for how much mental fuel conditions like this consume. Not fear. Not anxiety. Pure cognitive exhaustion. Every second is spent recalculating where to place your feet, how to lean into the gusts, how to see through stinging eyes, how to function while the wind roars so loudly it drowns out thought itself. Your core burns from constantly fighting to stay upright. Time evaporates. The world shrinks to the patch of ground directly ahead. Thoughts stop arriving. There is only the next step. Eventually you stop noticing the person beside you. You stop noticing yourself. It becomes a strange out-of-body drift where identity loosens its grip and reality grows slippery. Like wandering through a dream that somehow swallowed another dream whole.


We still had to cross the dunes, and I can confidently report that walking through sand dunes during a windstorm is an activity best left to lunatics, prophets, and people with unresolved issues. It was agony. Sand blasted into our faces with the enthusiasm of a medieval punishment. My skin was on fire, my eyes burned, and rubbing them would have only invited further agony. The wind sucked every last molecule of moisture from my body. Egyptian embalmers spent seventy days making mummies. Cornwall managed it before lunch. I slathered on half a tub of Ponds Hyaluronic Acid cream and still resemble a decorative piece of driftwood.

By the time we staggered into Perranporth, I was cooked. Emotionally, mentally, spiritually. I was one strong gust away from sitting in the street and weeping. Instead, we arrived to the absurdity of Tunes in the Dunes. Techno pounded through the air while crowds of festival-goers roamed about looking equally prepared to dance or start a bar fight over absolutely nothing. Police were everywhere. Our Airbnb is out in St Agnes and requires a bus ride, which would have been simple had several thousand people not descended upon the town at once. Services were delayed, routes limited, and bedlam reigned.The irony was exquisite. I could have caught a bus from Newquay, spent the day drinking cider and singing along with The Proclaimers. Instead, I spent seven hours getting thoroughly shit kicked by Mother Nature. She warned me early this morning that she was not in the mood for my bullshit. I ignored her, strutted out anyway, and received the meteorological equivalent of a firm slap across the back of the head.

Sorry, Mum. You were right.

 





























Friday, 5 June 2026

 Day 20 - Porthcothan to Newquay:  22.07 km

This will not be an inspiring dispatch. In fact, its sole motivation is to simply drag today's meager photos through the editor and throw them up for posterity. I don’t have the energy for anything resembling profound prose, so feel free to swipe past this one. Consider it a hollow entry just to keep the Captain’s Log updated before the abyss takes me.


It hadn’t truly registered until this morning just how exhausting yesterday’s gauntlet  was. We were tired, sure, but the reality is that we had completely numbed out, slipping into survival mode by the time we staggered into MacDonald’s Farm. We had a gorgeous little cabin booked, complete with a private wood-fired hot tub, but we possessed  zero energy to enjoy it. Primarily because the setup required us to channel our inner caveman and start the heating process ourselves with a log burner. It would have taken until nine at night to reach a decadent temperature. There was no universe where either of us had the mental bandwidth to start a fire and wait for that hot tub time machine experience to commence. As it was, just weaponizing our legs for the five-minute trek to the cafe for burgers felt like an Olympic feat.


This place was an immaculate slice of rustic luxury, and I wish we had the time and life force to appreciate it. Especially our personal alpaca attendants, who were stationed  outside the cabin like fluffy, majestic concierges, hoping we would take them for walkies.  Imagine their disappointment when I had to look them in their big, beautiful eyes and explain that walking was canceled, offering them a couple of basic biscuits instead as hush money.


To reach Macdonald’s Farm, you have to catch a bus from the Constantine Corner Store, which turned out to be a delightfully weird, high-stakes surprise. Google Maps had us into thinking it was your prototypical, depressing small-town British bodega, the kind that sells lukewarm cider, stale candy, and cheap smokes. It boasted atrocious online reviews, so we braced ourselves for absolute squalor, assuming we wouldn't even find a snack worth chewing, let alone dinner. Without belaboring the point, the shop deserves its digital reputation, yet it is infinitely more fascinating than your local convenience store.


The plot twist? The place is a  high-end foodie haven, a decadent playground for the elite. We are talking artisan sourdough loaves, local game pâtés, stinky cheeses, and everything you need to make a high-brow charcuterie board hit like a drug at your next book club. The wine section is stacked with pricey French, Italian, and Spanish vintages, flanked by limited-batch local gins and high-end whiskeys. No budget trash beer here. So why the digital hate train? Cornwall has always had a fierce, deeply ingrained suspicion of outsiders, a cultural hangover from its smuggling days when everyone was looking over their shoulder for the taxman. The current owner takes this historical paranoia to an absolute, unhinged extreme to deter shoplifters. On one occasion, she mistook a wealthy vacationer’s son for a thief from the previous week. She aggressively chased the boy around the aisles like a feral hound while he and his  father pleaded his innocence, explaining the kid was away at boarding school until forty-eight hours ago. Then there was the elderly woman who was berated for asking too many questions about a relocated item, and explicitly told she wasn't worthy of being in the shop. I guess you need to flash your crypto portfolio or bank statements just to browse.

We personally had no beef with her, other than she is abrupt and possesses zero interest in speaking to you unless you smell like old money. All that being said, the shop possesses genuinely top-tier shit. If my social battery wasn’t depleted and we had a few days to burn, I would have gladly bankrolled the local producers here. I also would have made Ken pretend to shoplift the artisanal fudge and infused sea salts just to see if she'd tackle him into the cheese display.


I just wasn’t feeling the magic today. I failed to calculate the deep, soul-sucking tax of surviving yesterday’s gauntlet. Today, my brain was stuck on autopilot. The weather was technically acceptable—a teasing morning sun giving way to petty, intermittent showers—but it was freezing. The Cornish air refused to warm up enough to make sitting on a rock and romanticizing the coastline anything other than an exercise in mild hypothermia. This specific stretch has its own cinematic beauty, but it’s increasingly choked by a sprawling landscape of hyper-expensive vacation homes and sleek boutique hotels. It feels less like conquering the untamed wild and more like weaving through exclusive enclaves for wealthy elites looking for a weekend getaway. Which, as you can imagine, makes hunting down a single night’s lodging on the trail a horror story. this coastline wasn’t always a playground for the gentrified. In the 18th century, these  coves were the wild west of the UK, heavily populated by ruthless smugglers running illegal brandy and tea  under the noses of the crown. Today, the contraband is just real estate and oat milk lattes.


Tonight, we have drifted into Newquay. No self-guided luxury walking tour would ever stop here, and honestly, I see why. It’s a real town. It isn’t particularly pretty, but it possesses this grungy,  unwashed surfer energy that completely envelopes the streets. You can instinctively feel that during the summer peak, it’s an absolute riot if you are young, love hanging ten, and enjoy a bit of chaotic hedonism. We are bunking at the Breakwater Hostel. If you are grinding along the path and feel a sudden, unhinged urge to relive those raw Camino de Santiago  days of albergue survival, this is your holy grail. We’ve been assigned a tiny, claustrophobic cell of a room on the third floor. The communal bathroom and shower require you to descend to the main level.  Pro tip: buy adult diapers or completely cut off all fluid intake by 6:00 PM. The showers are located in the exact same damp room where the locals store their surfboards and neoprene wetsuits. On the plus side, the kitchen is fully equipped, and the staff are pure, cheerful gold. The local Sainsbury's is only a block away, sitting next to the legendary Buns and Things guy, a local hero who rolls up in a food truck at dusk to sling magnificent, grease-dripping items on buns. Right beside this culinary oasis is Captain Matt’s Tattoo Emporium, in case you get the sudden desire to get inked, pierced, or branded after a few beers. The captain offers a package deal if you opt for all three, and the Bun Man will throw in a free breakfast bunwich to seal the deal. I may or may not go for the triple crown tonight. When in Rome.




















Thursday, 4 June 2026

 Day 19 - Padstow to Porthcothan: 22.19 km

There is no rest for the wicked, and frankly, my soul is screaming for a vacation from this vacation. Yesterday’s reprieve was a beautiful lie, nothing more than the universe prepping us for another absolute pounding by the elements. But before we get to the impending wreckage, let’s talk about Port Isaac - last night’s sanctuary.


First recorded in 1338, Padstow was born of grit, fish scales, and coastal trading. It was one of the most remote settlements in Britain, a safe harbor carved into the treacherous north Cornish coast. Mother Ocean is a cruel, unforgiving mistress. Between 1823 and 1846, 130 ships were violently wrecked on these cliffs, and the churchyard at St Endellion is packed with the bones of drowned mariners. During World War II, the town offered a different kind of refuge when the Bide A While Hotel became a boarding house for traumatized children evacuated from the London Blitz. Today, the village has swapped historical trauma for tourist dollars, known for its cinematic scenery and decadent eating establishments. Rick Stein has two joints here: one barely affordable if you skimp on rent, and the other so wildly expensive it borders on financial humiliation for a humble walker.

For comfort food, The Cherry Trees Cafe serves award-winning Cornish pasties and homemade scones as soft and pillowy as your nan’s embrace. I foolishly attempted the Cornish method, spreading the jam first and the clotted cream second. It was a complete shitshow. Trying to smear thick clotted cream over slick jam on a piping hot scone is like trying to shampoo a feral cat. It is a venture destined for destruction and mayhem. The pastry disintegrated, the cream slid off like cheap makeup, and my dignity vanished. Thankfully, I had a backup scone. For round two, I went full Devon, cream first, jam on top. Unfriend me if that offends your delicate sensibilities.


On the sacred topic of sustenance, it is imperative that you check Google Reviews before spending a single pence here. Like any tourist trap, the culinary scene is a gamble: it’s either a magnificent orgy in your mouth or a deeply disappointing, dry hump of a meal. The fish and chip shop next to Cherry Trees rocks a horrific 1.5-star rating despite its prime real estate and aesthetic seating. Meanwhile, Harbour Ice Cream scoops decadent, locally made dairy heaven, but do not touch their espresso under any circumstances. Despite a sign boldly lying about "real Italian coffee," it was a crime against humanity. I paid five pounds for a flat white that turned out to be tepid brown water topped with sad, chemical foam. The internet reviews completely backed me up on this, a digital warning I ignored at my own peril.


Last night’s stay was Cullanan’s B&B, clinging to the edge of the harbor like a barnacle. These places are anchored by a rapidly fading generation. It’s becoming brutally common to get a text saying your host has fallen ill and can’t take you. We’ve been hit by this heartbreak twice now. Our original Port Isaac booking was with a legendary guy from a previous hike, but three weeks before we landed, he reached out. Cancer, swift and merciless, had moved him to palliative care, and he  transferred us to Cullanan’s. This is why the surviving old-school B&Bs demand multi-night stays. It’s not naked greed; it’s that these beautiful, frail humans simply don’t have the physical mojo to strip sheets and scrub toilets every single morning. It’s a tragic decline, mirroring the loss of the ancient minshuku lodgings along Japan’s Shikoku pilgrimage route.


But Cullanan’s? Absolute peak charm. The hosts are an elderly, childless couple who spent their youth sailing world oceans, scaling jagged peaks, and executing highly classified, deeply badass missions for the Royal Marines. Historically, Cornwall was the crucible for the real-world elite commando units of the 1940s, and looking at the grain-heavy photographs lining the hallways, it’s blindingly obvious this pair lived a life that would make The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare look like a corporate team-building exercise. They’re well into their eighties now. He navigates the steep stairs with a cane and stubborn determination, though I half suspect that limp is from an old injury sustained while rappelling down an Afghan cliffside to escape hostile tribesmen. The wife is a majestic Viking shield-maiden who could captain a longship better than any man  and return with more plunder  and women than Ragnar Lothbrok and hissing combinedf. The house is a living museum, dense with soul and thick with the perfume of clandestine history. Our room was tiny, featuring a shower casually positioned right next to the bed but I could have stayed there for an eternity, drinking gin and listening to their lives. 


It was a total bastard of a walk today. Thank God the universe threw us a bone with only a few three-hundred-meter inclines instead of the usual twenty soul-crushing peaks, because I was already running on fumes.  It was freezing, and I  did not pack enough layers for this bullshit. What began as a dreary overcast drizzle rapidly degenerated into gale-force headwinds and weaponized sleet that felt like shards of broken glass hitting your face. We fought that for four hours, and I mean a visceral, full-body bar fight with the sky. At times, the sheer atmospheric pressure made forward motion impossible, and getting violently body-checked sideways onto the wet turf was just the baseline vibe.This stretch of the coast has been killing people for centuries. It’s littered with the carcasses of  Spanish and French trading vessels that miscalculated the savage Cornish reefs. Today, the sea was proudly demonstrating that lethal pedigree.


Every single beach was under strict "red flag" lockdown. The lifeguards were out in full force, acting as highly stressed bouncers to ensure some influencer didn't try to chase TikTok clout by filming an aesthetic death-drop in the surf. Monstrous thirty-foot waves slammed into the ancient cliffs, exploding into a thick, soapy sea foam that carpeted the cliffs, making the landscape look beautifully, poetically alien. I am so profoundly exhausted from fighting those sixty-five-kilometer gales. My face feels like it has been sandblasted down to the skull, and my eyes need a  gallon of Visine just to stop the burn.  We crossed paths with those overconfident Americans, but they’ve vanished into the mist, presumably crying into a damp fleece. Meanwhile, the hardcore German ladies are sheltering at the same farm glamping grounds we are, and like us, look completely beaten into submission by the elements.


The campground features a small, grease-trap of a cafe, and we all converged there to inhale burgers and fries like wolves that hadn't seen meat in a month. Outside our yurt, the resident alpacas are tightly folded into the grass, desperately praying for the storm to end, while Wilbur the pot-bellied pig has wisely sought asylum inside the chicken coop. Only two unhinged billy goats and a group of local  children on a trampoline remain outside, actively giving the weather the proverbial middle finger while doing things no living being should ever do to test the laws of physics. Time will tell who wins this  battle against Mother Nature, and who goes home with a broken radius or a fractured hind leg.