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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, 13 June 2026

 Day 27 - Land’s End to Penzance: 18.98 km






































Day 28 - Rest Day in Penzance


The South West Coast Path is a sadistic bitch. These past four days have been a relentless rollercoaster that’s left me emotionally frayed and physically violated. I’ve reached two conclusions: first, I am OVER boulders. Granite can suck it. Second, the wind and rain can fuck right off into the Atlantic. I’m going to bitch, and I’m going to bitch loudly, because if you’re planning to trek from St. Ives to Penzance, you need to know that the "scenery" is a front for a technical nightmare of rock scrambling and infrastructure collapse.


The early stages of the SWCP were a knee-shattering but this section? This is where the soul goes to die.  By hour six, you aren't a traveler; you’re a wet, shivering animal. And don’t think for a second a "civilized" British bed offers sanctuary. In this corner of the world, central heating is a dark art they refuse to practice. Youllayer every rag you own and spoon your hydration bladder filled with hot water like a rubbery lover just to keep your core from shutting down. Then there is the "food."  You’ll exist on King Pot Noodles and baked beans.  The locals are delightfully ‘earthy"—which is a charming euphemism for a place where caffeine is a forbidden luxury. I need black tea, real milk, and enough sugar to stop a horse’s heart. I’m an animal of vice, not a monk. The local ethos leans hard into ascetic veganism. By the time I crawled into Penzance, I was a hollowed-out, caffeine-deprived mess of a human. I was so calorie deprived  I would have strangled a cow with my bare hands and eaten the heart raw right there on the trail.


Also, the boulders on this section can literally fuck right off. Ken and I have had more domestics over rocks than most couples have over money, in-laws, or whose turn it is to unload the dishwasher.

"It’s only 8.5 km," he'll say, peering optimistically at the map.

"About two hours."

No, sweetheart.

The map is lying.

The map neglects to mention that those 8.5 kilometres consist of scrambling over the collapsed remains of an ancient war between geology and common sense. Distance on this section is measured not in kilometres but in swear words, bruises, and break ups. If the map says two hours alert your next of kin. Every muscle in my body hurts. Muscles I didn't know existed have emerged filing formal complaints. At this point I've done enough climbing, hauling, squatting, lunging, and crawling that I feel qualified for SEAL team 6.  For the first hour, the boulders are almost entertaining. Adventurous, even. You feel rugged. Competent. Like the star of your own outdoor documentary. Six hours later, after crawling through cracks in granite cliffs, dangling awkwardly over rocks while searching for somewhere safe to put a foot, and surviving on lentils, herbal tea, and naan bread with the moisture content of Victorian plaster, the romance begins to fade dramatically.


Now for the good


The hosts along this stretch are the sort of women I adore and  aspire to become. They radiate the kind of environmental and political conviction that comes from having planted things, protested things, and survived things. Warm, confident and uninterested in anyone’s BS. Their homes burst with colour and art. . Every house  comes equipped with a dog that is either a bodhisattva, Christ returned, or at the very least a highly enlightened Labrador. None of these women will save you from your bad decisions. Yet after a brutal day on the trail, they will reward honest effort with homemade preserves, fresh bread, a hot water bottle, and temporary custody of a saintly dog for therapeutic cuddling. This section of the path is  a controlled spiritual demolition. Arrive prepared to be dismantled and rebuilt.


We visited the Minack Theatre, and I am not exaggerating when I say I could happily spend an entire day here and still want more.The story of the Minack begins with Rowena Cade, the formidable force who willed it into existence. Born in August 1893 into an Edwardian family in Cheltenham, her life was reshaped by war and the death of her father in 1917. In the 1920s, she and her mother moved to Cornwall, where Rowena bought the Minack headland for the princely sum of £100. What followed was decades of backbreaking labour. Armed with determination, concrete, and a level of stubbornness reserved for pirates and tax inspectors, she carved a theatre into the granite cliffs by hand. It clings to the coastline like a glorious act of madness, proof that sometimes the most extraordinary monuments begin with one woman refusing to take no for an answer.


Rowena was a goddess.  Her vision of the Minack casts a spell on anyone lucky enough to wander those cliffs. You feel her everywhere. In the stonework she carved with her own hands. In the intricate details coaxed into existence with little more than a screwdriver and an alarming disregard for sensible hobbies. In the gardens bursting with succulents, those tough, beautiful survivors tcling to life in impossible places. Much like Rowena herself. What moved me most were the men who chose to believe in her. Billy Rawlings, her gardener, remained by her side until his death in 1966. Theirs is a kind of love rarer than romance. A love that asks for no possession. Billy saw the impossible and said, "Aye, let's build it." Then there were Charles and Thomas Angove, who fell willingly under Rowena's spell and spent years hauling sand, stone, and backbreaking loads up a cliffside. Together they built something greater than any one person could claim. That is real love. Not ownership or ontrol.  But Shared purpose.  Rowena was never interested in power. She was interested in wonder. In creating a place where strangers could sit above a raging Atlantic and feel gloriously alive. Even now, writing this, I find myself in tears. For the beauty and her the devotion. For the reminder that men and women can create extraordinary things when ambition is met not with fear, but with faith. Rowena dreamed outrageously big. The men around her were never threatened by the size of that dream. They picked up a shovel and helped build it. And a century later, the world is still richer for it.


We are in Penzance for a rest day and I’m in love. A salty, knackered town it t has full-on queer energy, the kind that doesn’t ask permission. First place in the UK to ban single-use plastics. Everyone recycles like it’s a moral sport and makes art like it’s in their veins. Market Jew Street is lined with hand-made clothing, pottery fired from Cornish clay, and shops that feel like someone’s  eccentric Lesbian aunt decided capitalism needed to be more interesting. The food scene is scrappy and eclectic. It is worn out but not defeated. More like a boxer coming back for one more round because it still believes in its own chin. It was the first town in Britain to receive news of Nelson’s victory and death at Trafalgar. A strange badge of honour to hang your identity on. Weird flex, but I have seen worse marketing campaigns. In the 17th and 18th centuries, Barbary pirates raided these shores, taking people as captives, dragging them across seas that did not care for consent or comfort.  Piracy is not just theatrical costume and drunken pantomime. It is history soaked in salt and loss. Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance turned the idea into comic opera because Victorians had a talent for turning trauma into light entertainment and calling it a night out. I can’t help thinking that back then, being swept off by pirates might have felt only marginally worse than listening to another drunk sailor rehash Nelson’s legacy in a pub until closing time. Different kind of captivity, same endless monologue.



Thursday, 11 June 2026

 Day 26 - Pendeen to Land’s End: 9.43 km

Ugh. Do not even talk to me about today.


It will surprise no one  that the weather was absolute shit. We woke to pouring rain, thick fog, relentless wind, and a damp cold that bled through every layer of clothing. Not Calgary-in-January cold, but 11 degrees with sideways rain and Atlantic wind that has a person question every life decision that led them to this moment. Mother Nature did not arrive as a wise mentor today. She arrived as a pub landlady throwing us out at closing time.


The stretch from St Ives to Penzance is, quite frankly, savage. Not because it lacks beauty. The problem is that beauty here comes wrapped in the hospitality of a bar fight. This section feels less like a walking holiday and more like you've accidentally wandered into a lost episode of Bear Grylls. There are precious few places to stay. Food options become mythical. Transportation exists largely as a rumours passed between weary hikers. The buses seem to operate according to ancient lunar cycles. I suspect one appeared sometime around the reign of Queen Victoria and everyone has simply been living off that memory ever since. As for taxis, when the weather turns bad they become rarer than honest politicians and considerably harder to pin down.


Cornwall's coast has always been a hard place to travel. Shipwrecks littered these shores because sailors underestimated the weather and overestimated themselves. Walking here can inspire similar mistakes. If you're planning to tackle the route from St Ives to Land's End, arrive prepared for everything. Rain. Wind. Fog. Cold. Isolation. Existential dread. Unexpected moments of wonder. This coastline is a magnificent, foul-mouthed seductress. She'll break your heart, empty your bank account,  laugh at your itinerary, and somehow leave you wanting one more dance.


Our stay last night was an Airbnb. Basic is the most generous description available. There was a bed, a shower, WiFi, and tea. Just tea. Which in Britain is considered sufficient emotional support for almost any crisis. To be fair, if you're walking the South West Coast Path, this is pretty standard. Anyone arriving with dreams of fluffy robes, artisanal toiletries, and a pillow menu should immediately adjust expectations. This is not that kind of relationship. The host was lovely, as was her neighbour, who graciously rescued us from the trail yesterday after nine hours of punishment.  It was that ore give ourselves over to the ponies as a protein source 


Food options are largely fictional. Equally fictional is the idea that your Airbnb host will be providing any meals. This is not because people are stingy or indifferent. Quite the opposite. Life is hard along these remote stretches of coast. People work long hours to keep roofs over their heads and the lights on. Hospitality here practical not performative.  What you'll get instead is something far more valuable. You'll get a warm welcome at the end of a miserable day. You'll get local knowledge earned through years of living with this wild coastline. You'll get detailed advice on stages, weather, shortcuts, and transport. And without fail, you'll be handed a mug of hot tea and a homemade treat produced by someone who insists it's "nothing special" despite it tasting better than half the desserts in London.


Luxury is absent. Shampoo may be absent too. Body wash is an optimistic concept. There will usually be a bottle of almost empty soft soap by the sink doing double duty as hand wash, face wash, and possibly industrial cleaner. Bring your own supplies if you're attached to extravagances. In that regard, it feels remarkably similar to the Camino. Strip away the frills and what remains is the good stuff. Kindness, tea, conversations, and the quiet understanding that everyone out here is just trying to make it through another day.


So back to today…


It was a long day of buses, a taxi, some walking, then another bus. We shared this odyssey with four other walkers who had also reached the end of their romantic relationship with wind and rain. We sat scattered across the bus seats like veterans returning from  a war nobody wanted. Nobody spoke. We simply exchanged the look. The one that says, "Yeah, I've seen shit. Don't test me. I have mud in places mud should never be." We managed a few hours on foot and made it to Land's End which, if I'm being charitable, is a triumph of marketing over geography.


The actual headland is magnificent. The tourist complex attached to it is as subtle as a slot machine in a monastery. The famous signpost is barricaded behind a paywall. For roughly the price of a kidney they'll let you pose beside it and customise one of the directional signs. I briefly considered paying for either Palestine or Dildo. Both real places. Both guaranteed to start conversations. Tonight we're staying at another Airbnb hosted by a woman who has constructed her life with the uncompromising precision of a medieval cathedral builder.

She is passionately vegan. There are strict instructions that no meat or animal products enter the house. Ever. A large pro-Palestine poster occupies the front window. She adores Finnish classical composers, rare birds, and textile art. There is no microwave. No plastic. She won't host guests travelling by car. You must arrive on foot or by bicycle. She makes the finest fruit loaf I've ever eaten.

On the table sits a clay jar filled with vegan shortbread and a beautifully hand-calligraphed note that simply reads: Eat Me.


I suspect she has spent her entire life ignoring instructions, disappointing expectations, and refusing to colour inside anyone else's lines. There is something glorious about that. She has built a world entirely on her own terms and is perfectly content living it. In another life, I suspect I became exactly this woman. Though probably with a microwave and slightly fewer opinions about dairy.