logo
EXCLUSIVE Why I regret moving to Cornwall: My relationship was ruined, I was told 'go back to London' for trying to buy oat milk and it takes half a day to get anywhere because of tourists

EXCLUSIVE Why I regret moving to Cornwall: My relationship was ruined, I was told 'go back to London' for trying to buy oat milk and it takes half a day to get anywhere because of tourists

Daily Mail​10-05-2025
With a glass of champagne in hand and the turquoise River Fal gleaming in front of me, I felt smug. It was October 2017, and my fiancé and I were celebrating the acceptance of our £450,000 offer on a cottage just outside the seaside village of St Mawes.
We were finally escaping the exhausting daily commute of the south east, replacing it with peaceful beaches, quaint villages and an altogether slower pace of life in Cornwall.
I was convinced that the county's untouched Roseland Peninsula was the ultimate upgrade. We'd be a stone's throw from our favourite spots including Portscatho's tiny harbour, the Lost Gardens of Heligan and endless quiet coves.
But sadly the reality didn't live up to the much-hyped daydream.
For a start, it wasn't until Christmas 2019 that we finally managed to make the move full-time, with a baby in tow. One of us was always needed back in London or Cambridge for work.
When we eventually spent more than a few weeks together in our coastal bolthole, our 14-year relationship imploded from the stress of living in a half-renovated property in a remote village, with a newborn.
I found myself a single mother in the middle of nowhere, cut off from the hectic pace of the capital and desperately missing its anonymity and my friendship network.
Ironically, I was physically closer to my mum, grandmother and extended family than in decades. They were just an hour or so up the road on their farm, but even that felt a world away when I was caring for a little one and juggling work with property renovation.
Life in Cornwall didn't magically get better when summer hit. Tourists descend in droves each year, gridlocking narrow, single-lane roads that inexplicably haven't been upgraded since the days of horses and carts. Bins constantly overflow and seagulls circle, dive-bombing for discarded pasties or fish and chips. And parking becomes a competitive sport.
The only half-decent hotel gym in miles shuts its doors to locals so it can cater to visitors. I try to avoid even a trip to the supermarket, as traffic slows to a crawl and it ends up taking almost half a day.
Locals call this 'overtourism.' I call it what it is and that's a woeful underinvestment in infrastructure.
The Cornish are famously proud of their cultural heritage. And rightly so. But I was shocked by how real the hostility to 'incomers' and resistance to change can be.
Soon after our arrival, I asked, perfectly politely, if the village shop stocked oat milk. An elderly man looked me up and down and commented: 'We don't sell that muck in here. F*** off back to London.'
I think he was joking, but it definitely carried a sharp edge.
Months later, I was shocked to hear the popular local electrician tipsily bragging in the village pub about charging some 'emmets' – a Cornish word for 'outsiders' – four times the usual rate.
Even the weekly girls' ballet classes at the village hall is a battleground. It costs £10 a session, but parents aren't allowed to wait indoors during the lesson — not even in the empty room next door — unless we pay extra to hire the space.
When I queried this rule, I got a cold response. Days later, I was quietly removed from the village Facebook group. I later learned that there had been a thread filled with complaints about the fact I'd spoken out.
It is funny, I suppose, but at the same time the message is crystal clear. Toe the line or you're out.
I'm constantly puzzled by how often locals lament the so-called 'housing crisis,' while fiercely opposing the construction of any affordable homes that might actually help solve it.
Of course, there are fewer sirens in sleepy Cornwall. You don't worry about getting mugged by a teenager on an e-scooter. But crime doesn't disappear, instead it takes a different form.
I can't recall any drug raids or stabbings in this neck of the woods, yet my neighbour's dog defecates in my front garden every single day without fail. It's not a crime that will get anyone locked up, but it's the kind of thing that slowly chips away at your sanity in a place where everyone swears they're just doing their best.
Some people thrive in this tight-knit environment. They love that nothing goes unnoticed and that gossip travels faster than the local broadband signal. Personally, I've struggled to adapt to the village-wide interest in my every move.
When the police turned up at my door, as I called a retired officer a raging misogynist, it felt like front page news for weeks. People still comment on it over a year later. These days, I second guess almost everything I say.
I desperately miss the privacy and excitement of the city, being able to get on with life without mistakenly stepping on local toes. And I miss grabbing oat milk at the nearest shop without triggering a minor culture war, and not having to tiptoe through what feels like a political minefield every time I challenge how something's done.
But even if I wanted to disappear back to London, I can't. My ex-fiancé has already remarried and had another child. Our daughter, who adores her dad, wouldn't want to live far away from him, and I wouldn't want that for her either.
So, I've decided I'm staying put. I'm going to learn to love this place.
Fortunately, the school run and my child's extracurricular classes have opened up new friendships. I'd become uncharacteristically shy after the oat milk moment and ballet hall debacle, but slowly my confidence has returned.
I tentatively turned back to Facebook, not for the cliquey village group, but to connect with newcomers and locals looking to build new friendships.
Things have gone surprisingly well and I've met some brilliant friends, some with their own faintly traumatising tales of adapting to rural life.
Gradually, I'm beginning to appreciate the seaside peace I once craved. I spend time outside gardening or sitting with a cup of tea, enjoying the stillness. It's far from the seaside life I imagined, but it's becoming one I can live with. Maybe even love.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Win a dream Cornwall home worth over £3 million overlooking the coast
Win a dream Cornwall home worth over £3 million overlooking the coast

The Sun

time27 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Win a dream Cornwall home worth over £3 million overlooking the coast

SWAP busy city views for a stunning coastal one, ditch rush-hour commutes for peaceful, beachside strolls. For one lucky person, this dream could become a reality by entering the Omaze Million Pound House Draw, for your chance to win a coastal home in Cornwall worth over £3 million. Enter the Omaze Million Pound House Draw On top of the luxury house giveaway, the lucky winner will also take home a life-changing £250,000 cash prize. The contemporary coastal masterpiece is perched above the stunning Porthcothan Bay, with phenomenal panoramic views. Boasting four bedrooms and four bathrooms, the property is neatly tucked away, providing easy access to the South West Coast Path, which is perfect for dog walks, early morning strolls, and viewing the daily sunrises or sunsets. The lounge and main bedroom are on the upper floor to make the most of the jaw-dropping ocean views and reverse-living layout. Enter the Omaze Million Pound House Draw Boasting light and airy spaces that are filled with natural textures, soft neutrals, and floor-to-ceiling windows, this home frames the sea like a piece of art. Every inch of the home has been carefully considered, from the statement lighting and sleek fittings to the soothing colour palette that echoes coastal luxury. The open-plan kitchen and living areas are ideal for entertaining guests, or simply soaking up the views with your morning coffee. Enter the Omaze Million Pound House Draw ENTER HERE There's also a dedicated home office, cleverly positioned to give you focus when you need it, and a peaceful, serene spot to work with even better views. If the Omaze Cornwall home wasn't enough, the winner will also receive £250,000 cash to help them settle in. The Cornwall property is just 15 minutes from Newquay Airport and has an estimated rental income of approximately £3,500 per month, or the winner can choose to sell up and walk away a millionaire. Entries to the House Draw close at midnight on Bank Holiday Monday, August 25, 2025. By entering the Cornwall House Draw, you'll be supporting FareShare, helping turn surplus food into vital meals and support for people who need it most. Plus, if you enter online by midnight on August 10, you'll also get a chance to win an Early Bird Prize: a luxury VW California Ocean campervan worth over £80,000 and £100,000 cash.

We quit London and learnt how to be baristas who bake
We quit London and learnt how to be baristas who bake

Times

time7 hours ago

  • Times

We quit London and learnt how to be baristas who bake

Ten years ago I lived in London where I worked in luxury hospitality as a commercial director for a swanky hotel company [Simon Kerr, 58, says]. My husband, Andrew Talbot, worked in Whitehall, in public health. One day I remember sitting in a meeting room in one of those boring presentations full of corporate speak and watching a couple of guys abseiling outside, cleaning windows. When the meeting finished, I started chatting with them. They told me they loved climbing mountains and that they made a lot of money going up and down buildings in London for six months purely so they could go to do the things that they enjoyed for the rest of the year. And it just got me thinking. • Read more expert advice on property, interiors and home improvement Andrew and I already had a holiday home in Falmouth in Cornwall, so we spent a lot of time down there. One day I saw this advert on the internet for a café in Truro. I asked Andrew: 'What do you know about running cafés?' Neither of us knew anything at all, but we went to have a look at it the next day. It turns out a guy had built the café for his wife using reclaimed wood and it was an absolutely stunning space. Then after all that his wife turned around and said: 'I don't really want to do this.' He was stuck holding the baby and had to sell. So Andrew and I decided to take the plunge, give up our lives and take a big leap of faith. We bought the lease to the café for £20,000 and rented a house about four miles away in a little village called Devoran, which is on the edge of Falmouth Bay. We called the café Lily's of Truro after our dog, and we threw ourselves into it and learnt from scratch. We learnt to be baristas, we learnt to work in the kitchen, we learnt to bake cakes — and we burnt a lot of cakes. I've lost count of the amount of times I've sat in bed looking at YouTube videos on how to poach the perfect egg. Owning and running a small business is phenomenally different to working in a larger corporate environment. We had to learn about cashflow and keeping your margins tight to maximise your profit — because in the hospitality industry things are so, so tight. We learnt to deal with staff — everyone from 16-year-old kids with their issues all the way up to older adults, some of whom come with their issues as well. We built it up to be a very successful business. And then, five years ago, a lady called Amy approached us and offered us £120,000 to buy us out. She already ran a catering business but she loved the space. We stood to make a £100,000 profit in four and a half years. We went for it and resolved to buy our own place. We love Cornwall, but we found it to be a long way away from our friends in London, who we could hardly ever see. As an alternative, we looked at Somerset, Wiltshire, East and West Sussex, Hampshire, Suffolk and Dorset, but we decided on Norfolk. You can get more for your money in Norfolk, and it was only an hour and a half on a train to London. We came across an ideal site: a business and three-bedroom home wrapped together in Castle Acre, which is a stunning historical village that has two English Heritage sites, a Norman castle and a priory. It had a café, which we later called Wittles Castle Acre but at that point was called Barnfields, and we immediately fell in love with it. It had been run by a couple who were very much ready to retire and were running the business down. We bought the property for £625,000. Remarkably, we moved in a week before the second Covid lockdown, which with hindsight was absolutely crazy. How, we thought, could we start a business at a time when nobody could go inside during the middle of winter? • We moved to the country during Covid. Now we're returning to the city So we baked cakes, made a pot of soup and a vat of curry and started trading out the front door. And it turns out it was an amazing way to meet our neighbours. Everyone from the village came out, and everyone loved it. Social distancing was still in place, but the fact they could come and be sociable somewhere near to their home, get a damn good cup of coffee and an interesting cake and maybe see their neighbours was fantastic. It became a weekly event. It was the best way to introduce ourselves to the village, and those customers have helped to sustain us throughout the years, along with the village's many visitors. It became a booming success. Five years later though, and after agonising over the decision long and hard, we've decided to sell. We love it, but it's a physical job. We're nearly 60 and we're tired at the end of the day. We want to go and live in Italy, in either southern Tuscany or Umbria, and live a quiet life together. A couple of friends have died during the past year, which was very sudden, and it got us thinking that life can be short. We enjoy what we do. We're working hard and we're successful and we make good money. But we don't want to work ourselves into a grave.

Superyacht owned by Russian billionaire docks in Greenock
Superyacht owned by Russian billionaire docks in Greenock

The Herald Scotland

time7 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Superyacht owned by Russian billionaire docks in Greenock

The luxury vessel belongs to billionaire businessman Oleg Tinkov, the founder and former owner of Russia's largest online bank Tinkoff. The yacht is powered by a Caterpillar engine and has a maximum speed of 17 knots. Read more: Billionaire's £240 million superyacht spotted on loch Family sells longstanding Scottish yacht charter firm She cruises at around 14 knots and has a range of 3000 nautical miles, with a steel hull that makes her ideal for ice-breaking. According to media reports, La Datcha offers first class luxury with a top deck jacuzzi and a fully equipped gym and it is also equipped with lots of exploration equipment, including two helicopters, a submersible and snow scooters. It has boasts a water slide and waverunners. The vessel was built by the Dutch based Damen and she was launched in 2020.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store