Seaton
Towns & Villages

Seaton

Previously, I had only been in Seaton when passing through walking the Cornish Coast Path and had paid it little attention except to be surprised by the greyness of the beach. This time I made a proper visit in February 2016 in order to see what it really looked like and to find out what I thought of it. Seaton is a strange place, unlike anywhere else I know on the Cornish coast. You automatically think of Cornwall's beaches as being sandy and golden; not Seaton's which is of rounded slate stones, blue-grey in colour. The little River Seaton, which rises only 10 miles or so away, on the fringes of Bodmin Moor, not far from Minions, bisects the beach. Not surprisingly, rising in mining territory, the little river has suffered from bad copper and arsenic pollution. Presumably it is this mineral pollution that has led to to blue-grey colour of the beach and its shingle. The last two miles of the river's course is through Seaton Country Park; you can walk through it for 2 miles to Hessenford. Views from the beach are to Looe to the east, Rame Head to the west. Surprisingly, there are three places for refreshment in the little village: a good beach caf� with an extended outside undercover seating area and the excellent value Smugglers Inn (note pensioners and fish and chips prices). Waves, a fairly new glass fronted caf�-bar, overlooks the beach.

From A38, E of Liskeard, B3252 by Widegates, to Seaton

Looking to Rame Head from Seaton Beach

This review was written by Oliver Howes and is reproduced here in his own words. All text and photographs remain his work, preserved in his memory.

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Sennen Cove

Sennen Cove

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St. Agnes

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St. Cleer

St. Cleer

Cleer