Day 32 - Coverack to Helford Passage: 23.99 km
Oh we’re half way there
Whoa oh living on a prayer
Today was a milestone: the halfway point of the SWCP. There’s a big-ass marker and everything. You’d think we’d arrive like conquering heroes, crack open a bottle of bubbly, and bask in the glow of our own magnificence. Instead, we sort of stood there looking at it. The truth is, it felt oddly anticlimactic. We have thoughts about that….
Part of it is the weather has spent the last several weeks methodically beating any trace of joy out of us. We’ve not had a single day without rain. Maybe three days of actual sunshine. The rest have been varying combinations of fog, wind, drizzle and cold. It’s the middle of June and we're still layering up every morning like pensioners preparing for an Arctic expedition. Every day starts with rain. Around noon it eases off. By four o’clock it's back again, laughing at your optimism.
At this point we are less walkers and more ambulatory sponges. The constant damp changes everything. One of the great pleasures of a long-distance trail is finding a glorious spot, unpacking lunch and sitting for twenty minutes doing absolutely nothing except admiring the view. We've had precious few opportunities for that. Most lunches involve standing awkwardly in the shelter of a hedge while trying to stop a sandwich from becoming a marine habitat. Cafés become objects of near-religious devotion. The problem is they're as unpredictable as Cornish weather. A café with glowing reviews Monday can be closed on Wednesday indefinitely because someone couldn't get staff. You learn quickly not to make plans.
Then there’s the daily blood sport known as finding lunch.
You cannot count on a café. You definitely cannot count on a pub. Since leaving Penzance, we have not passed a single shop. Not one. Lunch, therefore, becomes less a meal and more a scavenger hunt designed by a sadist. Packed lunches? Forget it. Places you stay don't do them. Cafés, when they miraculously appear charge ten to twelve pounds for a sandwich. Just a sandwich. Served on bread pale and uninspiring. The price alone raises your blood pressure. The calorie count does nothing to lower it. An hour later you're running primarily on low blood sugar, resentment and the vague fantasy of murdering a family-sized trifle.
Then there’s accommodation.
Five months ago, when I was booking, finding somewhere near the route felt like trying to secure front-row tickets to a reunion tour of a band that broke up in 1987. Anything remotely convenient has been swallowed whole by walking companies. Independent walkers are left picking through the scraps. What follows is a daily logistical ballet of mild despair. Your bed is rarely on the route. More often it's five or six kilometres away. So after walking all day, you arrange transport to your accommodation. The next morning, you arrange transport back to where you left off. Repeat until financially or emotionally exhausted.Expect to take taxis. A lot.
Expect to pay a lot for taxis. The South West Coast Path is becoming a surprisingly expensive hobby involving weatherproof clothing, logistical gymnastics and a growing familiarity with every taxi driver in Cornwall and Devon.
If you are lucky enough to find a pub on route, or better yet stay somewhere attached to one, reserve a table the night before. This is survival advice.
Fail to do so and you may find yourself eating dinner standing at the bar. Assuming you eat at all. Evening food service runs for a two-hour window, usually from six to eight. You want to be there at six. By seven, half the menu has vanished. Securing a plate of food can feel like a competitive blood sport.
And the prices. Sweet Jesus, the prices. I am not a fussy eater. Give me something simple, hearty and made with love and I'll be happy. But there is no elegant way to describe paying forty Canadian dollars for a handful of chips and a meat pie scarcely larger than a respectable tart. If you've spent the day climbing cliffs in horizontal rain and require enough calories to feed an elephant, expect to part with fifty or sixty dollars. The heartbreaking part is that most of the people serving it are trying their best. You can see it in their faces. Someone in the kitchen is sweating bullets and panicking while doing the work of three people because finding staff in Cornwall has become about as easy as finding a unicorn.
It leaves you with a strange mix of sympathy and frustration. Everything is expensive. Nothing feels worth what it costs. Some nights I just cry. Out of frustration and sadness of what the UK has become since Brexit and Covid. Sadness because I see it happening to the US and I know now what’s coming. Sadder still that my province could also be heading this way. Perhaps that's what keeps me awake.Not the cost of the pie. The uneasy feeling that so many of us, in so many places, are trying to hold together communities, livelihoods and futures that suddenly seem far more fragile than we ever imagined.
Today’s stage is one I would politely describe as “character building.” I do not recommend it. Much of the route is inland, and what does hug the coast is a landscape scarred by old quarry mines. The trails are not well travelled, which means they are less “charming rural path” and more “nature has reclaimed this place and is now charging admission.” Add several weeks of relentless rain and you get mud. Ankle-hungry, boot-swallowing mud.
Then come the river crossings. Two crossings that require perfect tidal timing. One needs the tide out so you can walk across. The other needs the tide in so the boat can operate. Unless you bus and cab, you cannot realistically make both.
When the weather is kind, you can wade the first crossing. We did it the first time we walked it. But when it’s cold, windy and miserable, the idea of standing thigh deep in freezing water while holding your backpack above your head feels less like adventure and more like a low-budget survival documentary. Of course, if you want the full SWCP Vietnam experience, grab your pack, channel your inner Hegseth and march in. I will not judge.
Much.
It was a long day.
The final ferry only carries six people at a time, and if someone arrives with a bike, that bike becomes the equivalent of two human passengers with wheels and entitlement. There are also three hours each day when the ferry cannot run because the tide is too low. The later ferry, the one every tired walker wants, becomes a floating rush hour. So yes, you may be waiting in the rain for a while.
The consolation prize? The ferryman looks suspiciously like Michael Fanone.
Tonight we about 5 km off route at Hotel Meudon. Go ahead, look it up. The website is a seductive siren song of sweeping gardens, spa treatments, fine dining and the sort of refined elegance where everyone appears to own a blazer that has never encountered mud. It is not where I would have chosen to land, but it’s all there is. The staff are lovely. Genuinely. The problem is the place is severely understaffed, which seems to be the unofficial theme of the coastal hospitality industry right now. The food, exists in a realm of its own. A realm where prices are ambitious and portions are working as minimalist art installations. We did not have the proper attire for the dining room, so we ate at the bar. Ken ordered a burger and fries. A sensible, beautiful, honest meal. I ordered sticky BBQ Char Siu ribs and a rocket salad with parmesan. The burger arrived. It was good.
The ribs arrived. Four bones. Four tiny, tragic monuments to what might have been. They had plenty of sauce, because the barbecue had to carry the emotional burden of the entire dish. The salad was a coffee cup of rocket with a gentle dusting of parmesan. That was it. After a full day of walking, my body was not asking for a Michelin experience. It was asking for calories. It wanted fuel. It wanted something that said, “Congratulations, human, you survived!” Instead, it received lawn clippings with cheese confetti.
I cried. The quiet, exhausted tears of someone who has spent weeks being battered by weather and hills and has finally been defeated by a salad.
I sent it back. Could I please have the burger? The burgers were sold out.
Of course they were. The bar menu had now achieved a Zen-like simplicity: rib bones or chicken Caesar salad. Thankfully, we had four emergency packets of instant oatmeal in our bags. And because the evening needed one final punchline, the hotel had also run out of tea supplies for our room. Tea. In England. At a fancy hotel.
Welcome to the SWCP in the post Brexit, post Covid era and whatever fresh hell the world has decided to throw into the pot. In other words, we are walking it like your grandparents might have in 1943. Complete with no heat and food rationing. Boris Johnson and TACO can fuck right off.



























































