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Walk - Constantine Bay to Mawgan Porth

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Route Description

Cornwall Cottage Holiday sponsor this walk pageFrom the bus stop in Constantine Bay, follow the road northwards for about 100yds. At the road junction, opposite the golf club entrance, take the footpath on your left, which runs along the edge of the golf course to Constantine Bay, where you join the Coast Path.

Constantine Bay and Treyarnon Bay are popular with surfers but the rip currents can make swimming hazardous. After crossing the beach at Treyarnon Bay, the Coast Path climbs onto the cliff tops.

Separated from the shore by a narrow channel is Trethias Island, and here or further along this section of the coast you may see seals hunting for fish. This section of coast is unusually indented with narrow coves formed as the sea has eroded the weaker bands of rock, leaving the harder rocks as headlands.

Cutting across the neck of the headlands south of Trethias Island are low banks which formed the defensive ramparts of what was a single Iron Age cliff castle. Due to the active erosion of the cliffs on this walk, it is advisable to stay away from their edges, as they may be undercut. At Fox Cove, the remains of a tanker, ‘Helmsley I’ wrecked in 1969, on its way to a breakers yard, are visible.

Passing more small islands and coves, the Coast Path descends into Porthcothan, goes along the road for a short distance to cross the stream, and then returns back onto the cliff tops. After about a mile you reach Porth Mear, owned by the National Trust.

Close to the path between here and Park Head are six Bronze Age burial mounds that probably date from 1200BC and 2500BC. Across the neck of Park Head is another cliff castle, with its two defensive banks separated by a ditch.

As you head south from Park Head you get your first view of the rock stacks known as Bedruthan Steps.

These take their name from a giant called Bedruthan who used the stacks as stepping stones forming a short-cut across the bay. However it is claimed by some, that this is just a story made up in the late 19th century when it first became a tourist attraction, and ‘the steps’ actually take their name from the cliff staircase used to access the beach (swimming here is also hazardous).

From Bedruthan Steps the Coast Path steadily descends down to Mawgan Porth.

Constantine Bay, Treyamon Bay, Porthcothan Bay and Mawgan Porth are dog-friendly beaches throughout the year.

Nearby refreshments

Treyarnon Bay(seasonal), Porthcothan (seasonal), Carnewas (National Trust Café) and Mawgan Porth.
At the end of the walk in Mawgan Porth the Merrymoor Inn is recommended by users of www.doggiepubs.org.uk as serving good food and being dog-friendly.

Public transport

The start and finish of this walk can be reached using the relatively frequent Western Greyhound bus service number 556 that links the coastal villages between Newquay & Padstow. For details visit Traveline or phone 0870 6082608.

Parking

Mawgan Porth (Postcode for Sat Navs: TR8 4BA), Constantine Bay (Postcode for Sat Navs: PL28 8JJ).

Latest News

  • Coast Path Motographer of the Year 2013 competition

    The South West Coast Path team is encouraging budding mobile phone photographers of all ages to capture a moment in time on the Coast Path as part of its Coast Path Motographer of the Year 2013 competition.

  • New record set for completing the Coast Path!

    A new record has been set for the fastest completion of the South West Coast Path! Contours Walking Holidays' Managing Director, Mark Townsend and fellow runner, Julie Gardener, completed the full South West Coast Path in a record time of 14 days, 14 hours and 44 minutes.

     

  • Great South West Walk exceeds half a million!

    The South West Coast Path Association’s Great South West Walk came to a grand finale on Tuesday 7th May, raising over £500,000 for 90 improvement projects to the entire South West Coast Path covering Cornwall, Devon, Dorset and Somerset.

  • Latest news on path diversions

    Following numerous cliff falls over the past few months, many sections of the Coast Path have been diverted. Click for details of route changes.

  • Cliff fall near Lulworth Cove

    Following the landslide at St. Oswald’s Bay between Lulworth Cove and Durdle Door on the morning of 30 April 2013, diversionary routes have been put in place by Dorset County Council and the Lulworth Estate, allowing the South West Coast Path to remain fully open and safe for visitors to this area. 

  • New slate waymarkers guide the way for Cornish walkers

    The sand dunes of west Cornwall attract thousands of local walkers and tourists every year who will now benefit from new slate waymarkers to guide the way along the South West Coast Path.

  • Five top family walks for summer

    Why not get out and about this summer and combine a family walk on the South West Coast Path with a host of other old-fashioned childhood pleasures, from crabbing in rockpools and exploring hidden coves, to following in the footsteps of giants.

  • Great South West Walk kicks off

    The Great South West Walk is underway - but still time to join up and help make the Coast Path even better.

  • Jurassic Coast Gateway nearing completion

    Exmouth is taking pride of place at the Western end of the Jurassic Coast as finishing touches are applied at the Jurassic Coast Gateway.

    The project will be completed in time for the Easter holidays, and will highlight its status as the oldest part of the World Heritage Site.

  • South West Coast Path To Receive £250,000

    The South West Coast Path Association is delighted to announce that it has secured £250,000 in funding for improvement projects around the entire South West Coast Path, before their fundraising event has even taken place.