Bored on a Cornwall Holiday? How is that even possible?

Being bored is not something that should happen during Cornwall holidays and if you do manage to become bored then you’re doing something wrong.

I’ve got a few tips to avoid boredom whilst you’re staying in Cornwall, so without further ado we’ll jump headlong into them.

The first is to get into the countryside. Find a map or look up some walking routes and footpaths online and head out. You can wander over hills, across farmland, through forests and even along the coast if you so desire. There’s plenty to see in Cornwall and you can discover a lot of it on foot. Or you could choose a route that’s suitable for cycling and hire out a bike for the day. You could even look into getting a horse and riding through the countryside, exploring it in a much more traditional way.

Of course, those interested in the coastal areas, like those staying in St Ives or Marazion cottages, will be much more interested in activities that take place on the beach. Firstly, there’s playing in the sea. Whether it’s swimming, surfing, body boarding or just paddling, you should be able to find a way to have a good time in the water. If not even that will relieve your boredom then you have the sand to play with. And don’t just think that means building sandcastles! Metal detecting is also a popular pastime and can bring families together for that sense of discovery and adventure.

If you’re still bored… I don’t know. You should have brought a book, I guess.

Port Isaac the Home of Doc Martin

Port Issac

The Pretty Cornish fishing village of Port Isaac is probably one of the most well known villages in the whole of the UK, yet many may have never heard of it. The reason Port Isaac is so well known is because it has been the back drop to film and TV shows for many years.

The village first came to prominence in 1975 with the popular BBC series Poldark. The series proved to be one of the most popular costume dramas ever and was a world wide hit with the Port Isaac back drop being seen in 40 countries. In the 80′s another BBC drama was filmed here, this time it was the horror thriller The Nightmare Man which used the Cornish village despite the story being set in Scotland. In 2000 the award winning British film Saving Grace used Port Isaac as the location for the film, the popular movie, which won awards at the Sundance Film Festival, would then lead on to perhaps the villages most famous resident, Doc Martin.

The Martin Clunes character Doc Martin had first appeared in Saving Grace. The character then got two prequel spin off films for Sky which told the story of how the London doctor ended up in a tiny Cornish fishing village. After the two prequels ITV acquired the rights and turned it into one it’s most popular programs. The drama has since been shown around the globe with a world wide audience of millions watching the beautiful Cornish locations each week.

For any Doc Martin fans, or merely those who love Cornwall, a holiday to Port Isaac is a must. The area has plenty of Cornwall holiday cottages to provide an ideal base to explore the village and surrounding locations and who knows you may even bump into the good doctor yourself.

Weddings and Newly Weds in Cornwall

Cornwall may be best known as a great place to take a holiday, but there are plenty of other reasons people flock to the area year after year, other than simply wanting to stay in Marazion cottages. An excellent example, especially with spring only a few months away, is the popularity of weddings in this beautiful county.

With a wonderful coastline, venues that offer a view of the sea are obviously popular, but further inland Cornwall offers areas that are perfect for the big day as well. Lush, green grass, blooming flowers and budding trees make for the perfect back drop for a wedding. Combine that with the warm spring and summer sun that Cornwall receives and you have what should be a wonderful wedding day. The wealth of accommodation available means your guests won’t have to travel far either, and you can be sure that they’ll find things to do to occupy themselves if they arrive early or stay late.

Of course, after the wedding comes the honeymoon, and Cornwall won’t disappoint for this either. The county’s beauty makes it the perfect romantic getaway, and a couple can become totally isolated from the horde of family members and friends that want to wish them well. They’re free to relax in each others company.

Hundreds of Cottages in Cornwall are available for the just married to stay in, enjoying beach walks, charming restaurants and, of course, days spent in bed.

Why the Cornish Lizard is Fascinating

Kynance cove

The Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall is the most southerly point in of the British mainland. The geological features of this area are unique and similar geological features can only be found in a few other regions in the world. It’s not surprising that people visit the area whilst staying at their cottages in Cornwall. The exposed rocks of the Lizard complex are the best known preserved example of ophiolite. An ophiolite is an exposed section of the oceanic crust. This exposure happens when two tectonic plates shift and one moves underneath the other causing the underneath plate to sink into the earth’s mantle and lifting the mantle to leave parts of it exposed.  The serpentinite and metamorphic rocks on the Cornish Lizard peninsula are comprised of parts of exposed earth’s mantle and parts of a former oceanic floor. The serpentine rocks which span nearly twenty miles in Cornwall are a rare geological find.

Much of the Lizard peninsula consists of the serpentinite rocks, which are green and reddish in appearance.  The serpentinite rock formations are the exposed and metamorphosed remains of the earth’s mantle that were exposed through the shifting of tectonic plates known as subduction.  Some sections of the serpentinite grow foliage while other sections are covered in amphibole, which are black colored rocks. The serpentinite rocks form the Kynance Cove cliffs, these rocks are distinctive to this area.  The Kynance Cove is known as one of the magnificent and beautiful stretches of coastal land in the South West.

Parts of the Lizard peninsula are the remains of an ancient ocean floor that was pushed to the surface when giant plates shifted and collided. At the lizard peninsula the boundaries between the Earth’s crust and mantle are visible. At one side you can see the serpentinite rock which is altered rock from the earth’s core. In a transition area, known as the basalt dykes you can find basalt and gabbro, which are the remnants of magma in the earth’s mantle, and at another nearby section you will see the gabbro stone which is a remnant of the oceans crust. Gabbro is a form of magma that has solidified. The Lizard Peninsula is one of the few places Moho is visible, Moho is the boundary between the Earth’s crust and mantle.

Remnants of geological features and occurrences can be traced in some parts of the lizard peninsula. The hornblende schist, found in the northern and southern areas of the lizard peninsula near serpentinite rock, is a remnant of basaltic intrusives that have metamorphosed at least three times.  Basalt is formed in three ways, erupting oceanic hotspots, in mantle plumes, and shifting oceanic divergent boundaries.

Oceanic hotspots are areas where an eruption occurs on the ocean floor the eruptions can become frequent and strong enough to form an island over time.  Mantle plumes are the upwelling of a hot section of rocks in the earth’s mantle.  Most of earth’s basalt however is produced as a result of plate tectonics below the ocean floor. This is where convection or heating occurs; and as the hot rock melts away the divergent boundaries pull apart and an eruption occurs. This method of the formation of basalt is what most likely occurred in the Lizard Peninsula region.

The various rock formations and remnants of geological occurrences found at the Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall are a treasure trove of discovery for Geology and Earth science students. A visit to this astounding geological feature during your North Cornwall holiday will give you a peek into the world deep below the earth’s surface.

The Towns of Cornwall – Bude

Bude

History has Bude as being a “harbour of the holy men” a landing place for Christians in North Cornwall.  Bude is a resort seaside town, small in size but packed with affordable often referred to as cheap family holiday accommodations.  Families planning a Cornish holiday will find Bude to offer many options for reasonable places to stay.  Set in a stunning countryside with beautiful beaches the local hotels, bed and breakfasts (B&B’s) in Bude offer many discounted rates.  Family room accommodations and last minute and late room availability plus self catering accommodations are all available at discounted rates.  A Bude weekend getaway will be both enjoyable and affordable for the family budget and afford a cheap family holiday for your Cornish holiday.

Carboniferous sandstone cliffs surround this little seaside resort town.  A orogenic episodes, the Variscan Orogeny, or mountain building event is responsible for the evolution of Cornwall.  The sand cliffs contain calcium carbonate a natural fertilizer and farmers were said to use the sand from the beach to fertilize their fields.  The sequence of stratified cliffs surrounding this seaside are known as the Bude Formation.  In the 18th century the Bude Canal Company built a canal to improve the harbor which was small and unprotected from tidal waves.  The tidal moorings for the original harbor are still used today by sport fishermen and some small-scale, semi-commercial fisherman for crab and lobster fishing.  The mineral-rich sands of the beaches of Bude were transported via the canal for use in the argricultural fields.  The commercial use of the canal was extinguished with the arrival of the railway but the wharf area and harbor still maintained its usefulness by providing a means of transporting grain from Wales to Cornwall and coal back to Cornwall.  Many ships have fallen victim to the jagged reefs at the base of this coastal expanse, one church still displays the figurehead of one such ship in its churchyard lawn.

Summerleaze and Brooklets are beaches within the town of Bede and a few miles south Widemouth and Sandymouth Beach offer long, wide and sandy beaches.  Sandymouth Beach is noted for its cliffs ad rock formations with shingle below the cliffs and large expanses of sand at low tide.  This very impressive coastal scenery makes this a good destination for cheap family holidays for your Cornwall holiday.  Tourism is the main industry of Bude and the hotels, restaurants and other vendors offer many discounted prices to make this affordable for a family holiday that’s cost effective.  The surfing is good, there is some fishing and the watersport opportunities in Bude are plentiful.  In addition you might want to do a walking tour, or cycle, horseback ride or rock climb, there is also tennis, field archery, paintball and much more to do, so explore this seaside resort and find fun at affordable prices for your family holiday.

Cornwall’s Very Own Tate Gallery

tate st ives

Tate-St Ives Gallery in Cornwall, England exhibits work by modern British artists.  Part of the Tate Gallery network, it also manages another museum and sculpture garden in St Ives.  The gallery is experiencing a period of growth due to the increased number of visitors and to expand the area available for teaching art.  Tate Gallery has a 3,000 year history.  During the Victorian period social and economic developments overshadowed the artistic growth of the area.  With the arrival of the Great Western Railway in 1877 Cornwall was established as a resort area and became a working base for artist.  Aspiring  artist early in their careers benefited from schooling in Cornwall and all the natural beauty available for the subject of their artwork.  Art became very fashionable during this period and Cornwall with its remote location, natural beauty and availability of studio space and affordable tuition attracted many seeking to become artist to the area.

What Makes Tate Gallery Special?

In the 1920′s Tate Gallery and Cornwall provided a “Vision of Simplicity” an opportunity for an artist could go to renew themselves and come up with a simplistic vision and move forward with their art work slowly on a solid base.  There were in Cornwall two schools of art coexisting since the late nineteenth century, Newlyn and St Ives.  At Tate St Ives twentieth century art was presented in the context of Cornwall and is internationally known.  Cornwall’s natural beauty and romantic remoteness is captured by the artist who live and work in Cornwall.

The gallery also exhibits work form artist who live in other places and the artist in the gallery’s residency program have an opportunity to develop professionally.  The local artist often create works that reflect the town and its harbor and beach providing the visitor to the gallery a chance to see a work which was created in its surroundings.  Tate gallery is public gallery dedicated to the modern art which is distinctively St Ives.  Contemporary artist also display at Tate and their work reflects the Cornish influences in life in Cornwall.

An extension of the Tate Gallery is The Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden which opened in 1976 and is a part of Tate St Ives but located at a different site in Cornwall.  When you plan your Cornwall Holiday or reserve a Cornwall Holiday Cottage be sure to include a trip to the world renown Tate Gallery.  The gallery changes its displays regularly and with such an extensive collection different selections are available for viewing.  Temporary exhibits with focus on certain artist or a particular theme are part of the rotation on exhibits.  In addition, the relationship between Tate Gallery and other Tate centers allow for the exhibition of non-Cornish works.  Most visitors to the gallery appreciate the pure and realistic quality of the marine life and landscape of the area in paintings displayed at Tate Gallery.

Visit Perranporth

Perranporth

Are you looking for miles of glorious sand washed beach near the ocean, then Perranporth should be on your list of destinations for Cornwall holidays.  Perranporth is  popular seaside village with sandy, soft beaches on the north coast of Cornwall.  If you like to snorkel, surg and sail or maybe just splash around in the water your holiday to Perranporth will fulfill all your wishes.  Rockpools abound where searching for creatures brought in by the tide will only be abandoned by exploring nearby caves said to be haunted by smugglers and miners.  There is a tidal pool at Chapel Rock which is patrolled by lifeguards during the summer to insure your safety.

Just a Little History

The patron saint of Cornwall St Piran landed on the shores of Cornwall at Perranporth.  Piran was said to possess miraculous powers and the order of the Irish King was suspicious Piran’s powers.  Legend has it that the king had Piran cast to the sea tied to a millstone.  Piran survived his treacherous journey on the stormy sea and upon arrival at Perranporth built an oratory to promote Christianity.  This oratory of long ago is now preserved in the sand dunes at Perran Sands.  The tin mining which became the backbone of Cornish industry was discovered by Piran accidentally.  Tin smelting resulted from a white liquid that was very hot leaking from black stone in Piran’s fireplace.  The Cornish flag reflects the importance of tin and the country devotion of Piran, the “Patron Saint of Tinners’.  It is believed that St Piran lived to be 206 years old despite his fondness for indulging in small shots of intoxicating liquor, a tipple, on a regular basis.  There is an annual St Piran Play that is growing more popular and the hundreds of people attending make a pilgrimage to St Piran small chapel, oratory, and other landmarks.

Cornwall Holiday-Perranporth

You may be looking for serene, tranquil place to spend your family holiday or maybe a lively more spirited environment is your choice the holiday parks at Perranporth will be able to fulfill your requirements.  Chalets or bungalows offer peaceful moments, in contrast the camping and touring parks are available for more lively family fun.  Some of the local things to do include:

  • Golf clubs
  • Kite School and Bike Trails
  • Flying Lessons over the Cornish Coast
  • Bowling
  • Surfing and Surf Schools
  • Riding stables featuring beach rides
  • Museum with displays about mining, fishing, farming and local costumes
  • Holistic healing – Rieki

In addition there are beautifully arched beach cliffs with tin-mining entries; above the cliffs there is a youth hostel at Droskyn Point, where many young people stay to enjoy the surfing.  Annually Perranporth plays hosts to an inter-Celtic festival, usually held in October and many people from the six Celtic nations are drawn to this festival.  Once buried under sand, Perranporth maintains its status as a popular family destination and your Cornwall holiday and trip to Perranporth Holiday Park or other lodging will inspire you to return to this special place.

Things to do on your Cornwall Holiday

Cornwall sees a huge number of tourists passing through its borders year after year. Many of them are visiting for the first time, but many are return visitors, wooed into making repeat trips by the wealth of things to do that they discover in Cornwall.

The most famous part of Cornwall is its coastline, which is understandable when it has more coastline than any other county in England. There are beaches in Cornwall that can meet the demands of absolutely anybody. Are you interested in surfing? Then there are plenty of beaches known for having great waves. Would you prefer to play on the sand all day and occasionally go paddling? Then the long, sloping sandy beaches such as Widemouth will be perfect for you. Prefer somewhere quieter where you can lap up the sun? Sandymouth might just be the perfect place for you.

For those who don’t want to be limited to just visiting the beach whilst staying in their Cornwall cottages there are plenty of attractions inland too such as the world famous Eden Project or one of Cornwall’s Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, Tamar Valley. You can also spend your days wandering through the delightful villages that are dotted around Cornwall that still possess definite rural charm.

Of course, it’s not just activities that bring people back for their Cornwall holidays year after year; the whole area is absolutely beautiful. Whether you’re out walking the cliffs, lying on a beach or exploring the inland areas of this marvellous county, you’re sure to be wowed by the views you set your eyes upon.

A Christmas Cottage by the Sea

christmas by the sea

If you have decided that this year you want to do something a little different for Christmas then who could blame you? Many people often find the idea of Christmas at home more stress than it should be and can quite easily suffer cabin fever a few days into the festive break. With relatives popping over and a constant stream of other guests that you are catering for it’s no wonder more and more people think that getting away this Christmas could be just the answer.

What could be better than looking at Cornwall Holiday Cottages to stay in where this Christmas you and your family could blow the cobwebs away with strolls along the beach, warm your cockles by an open fire and play traditional Christmas games that hark back to the good old days?

Of course it’s not just Cornwall that can offer these treats; there are plenty of fantastic holiday cottages in Devon to choose from and if you are travelling from London or the midlands, Devon offers somewhere a bit closer for all the family.

Rugged coastlines, quaint little villages and character cottages could be just want you need this Christmas and if there is a sprinkling of snow then you could find you and your family in a magical winter wonderland. Leave your relatives to their own devices and catch up with them when you are back. You could even consider booking your family into one of the many fabulous pubs in Cornwall or Devon for Christmas lunch so all that is on your agenda is present opening, eating and relaxing.

Sounds like the perfect Christmas if you ask me.

What is there to say about Cornwall?

If you look across the posts of this blog, ranging from the very oldest to the very newest, you will find plenty of information about Cornwall and the cottages in Cornwall that people stay at. You will also be treated to a whole plethora of blog posts about places to visit in Cornwall, including the attractions and villages that prove popular year on year with holiday makers.

It’s quite likely that you’ll also find one or two posts about the history of the county, or some interesting or odd food that is popular there. You could even find articles related to the festivals or celebrations that occur in this beautiful part of the world year after year, which has reminded me that you’ll also find plenty of posts regarding just how beautiful it is.

Ideas for holidays will also be there in number, whether it’s cycling along the coast, camping out in specific locations, spending your time entirely by beaches or moors or wandering up and down the whole county. You could even find reviews of some of the best beaches, as well as some of the recommended activities to do at those beaches (depending on if they’re rocky, sandy, pebbley and so on).

It’s possible that you’ll even find articles comparing Devon to Cornwall across a variety of factors, although there’s more than a fair chance that you’ll find they draw no real conclusion about either destination.

And so, what is there to say about Cornwall or the Self Catering Holiday Cornwall that you might be inclined to take? If we haven’t convinced you already I’m not sure what else we can do. Perhaps it will be time to stop writing about Cornwall soon? Maybe next week. Or the week after that.

Or the week after that…

Or the week after that…