
Inspired to walk the ‘Salt Path'? These are the best bits of the 660-mile coastal route
Without any other options, they came up with the idea of embarking on an adventure, by walking the 630 miles of the South West Coast Path and seeing where it took them, figuratively and physically.
With almost 300 miles of it in Cornwall, it begins in Minehead in Somerset, traverses along the north Devonshire and Cornish rugged coasts, and heads back along the south coast of the counties into Dorset, finishing at South Haven Point in Poole. It's a mammoth walk that initially seems almost totally unachievable for them, considering Moth's ill health, along with having such little money that they have to live off packet noodles, and wild camp.
In the film, locations aren't given, and instead, geography is only marked by the number of miles walked, focusing on the idea of the gravity of the challenge, and how location doesn't matter to them. Instead, it's all about keeping moving.
As one of the UK' s best coastal hiking routes, the South West Coast Path can be taken at a much slower pace, and walkers usually complete it in sections over many years. So if you're inspired to pull on your walking boots, here are some of the best sections along the famous route to stomp along, as well as places to rest your weary head, that don't include the need for a tent.
1. Clovelly to Hartland, North Devon
Some of the most memorable – and instantly recognisable – scenery in the film comes from the little 14th-century village of Clovelly perched 400ft up on the north Devon coast. Clovelly isn't actually on the coast path itself, it's just off it, as one of the UK's only privately owned villages. It's been privately owned by the Hamlyn family and their descendants since Elizabethan times, which means you have to pay to enter (£9.90 for adults). The current owner is John Rous, and it's this entrance fee that's allowed it to become a maintained relic of a time gone by that's still inhabited and thriving and, most importantly for Cornwall, hasn't been taken over by holiday lets as second homes aren't allowed.
The walk down to the harbour isn't the easiest, as not only is it very steep, but it's entirely cobbled too. Too steep even for cars, years ago villagers came up with the idea of using sledges to transport goods up and down the slope. Years ago, donkeys were used, but now you'll find them in the stables at the top of the village.
Back on the path, this section that's part of the Hartland Heritage coast is truly spectacular with soaring ascents, making it renowned as one of the hardest parts, but the views make it well worth it.
Stay at: The Collective, Woolsery
In the little village of Woolfardisworthy, locally known as Woolsery, is the Collective, a complex made up of a pub, fish and chip shop, local shop, farm and accommodation. The area has been given a new lease of life thanks to Michael and Xochi Birch. Millennial readers will remember their social media platform Bebo, which they sold. They then swapped Silicon Valley for north Devon, as Michael's family had lived here for 600 years. The Farmers Arms pub has excellent food, including hogget from their own farm too. There are rooms, suites and cottages over the road.
Doubles from £275 night; woolsery.com/stay
2. Boscastle to Tintagel, north Cornwall
Perhaps the most ethereal villages on the entire coast path are Boscastle and Tintagel, which are only about 3.5 miles apart and will likely take about five hours to walk between. The fishing village of Boscastle sits in a deep rugged valley that's incredibly dramatic and has an air of mysticism to it. Its windswept landscapes inspired poet and author Thomas Hardy, while it's also home to the Museum of Witchcraft and Magic, with thousands of witchy books, spells and paraphernalia.
Walking out from Boscastle's pretty harbour, pick up the coast path along the clifftops where the white watchtower is perched. Just under a mile from Tintagel, if it's a sunny day, drop down to Bossiney beach, a fabulous little sandy cove, for a swim.
The section is another fairly challenging part of the path, but you'll see Tintagel Castle in the distance before descending into the village. It's regarded as the birthplace of King Arthur and is steeped in myth and legend. From the heart of the village, it's another steep walk down to the ruins of the castle (there are Land Rovers for those who prefer a quick ride) which is owned by English Heritage and costs £16.80 for adults.
The reward is worth it, thanks to the views walking over the footbridge, suspended 58 metres above the sea, over to the medieval ruin. Look out below at the craggy inlets, and Merlin's Cave, a blowhole that makes a loud whooshing sound as the waves wash in as the tide comes in. On the other side, don't miss Gallos (which translates to 'power' in Cornish) the life-size bronze statue that's been inspired by King Arthur.
Stay at: Kudhva
Just two miles from Tintagel is Kudhva (Cornish for 'hideout'), a glamping site with futuristic-looking angular treehouse pods that sit among the treetops, with ladders up to the entrances. The whole site, which is set in a disused quarry, is about connecting with nature, from swimming in the lake to stargazing.
In the film, one of North Cornwall's biggest towns, Newquay, is portrayed as a rather down-and-out place full of delinquents. It did have a reputation as the place to celebrate finishing school exams, and being full of stag and hen dos – but now this is firmly behind it. It's always had some of the UK's best beaches and has been the home of British surfing since the Sixties, hosting the championships at Watergate Bay.
From Watergate Bay, walk about an hour north to the beautiful small town of Mawgan Porth. Once it was only locals who knew about this wide open beach and great waves, but now it has been found by celebrities and it's changing quickly. Or for a longer hike, head south along the coast to Perranporth, which is about 4.5 hours of walking.
Cornwall's first aparthotel, SeaSpace bridges the best bits of a hotel and an apartment. It's right on the clifftops above Watergate Bay in Newquay and has one- to three-bedroom apartments. For the best views, book a room at the front of the building which looks over the sea. Families will love the Miami-inspired 19-metre pool, and you can also hire a surfboard and hit the waves that are just a hop, skip and jump away.
4. Pendeen lighthouse to St Just, West Cornwall
At the southern tip of Cornwall on Land's End peninsula are some of Cornwall's best preserved tin mines. The industry was the beating heart of the county in the 18th and 19th centuries, when it was the world's biggest tin exporter, making the county extremely wealthy. Unsurprisingly, it's now designated a world heritage site.
Starting from Pendeen lighthouse, heading south will take you past the Geevor tin mine museum (one of the last mines to close in 1990), the Levant mine, Crown's Engine House and Botallack mine (which features in both the 2015 Poldark series and the Rick Stein's Cornwall series), as well as the Wheal Edward Engine House.
The rolling cliffs here are full of drama, and some headlands have very narrow paths, which almost feels like walking on a tightrope; they're so narrow that they likely won't be there for too much longer, so tread with care.
Stay at: Gurnard's Head hotel
Slightly further back up the coast is Gurnard's Head hotel, an unmissable landmark thanks to its bright gorse-yellow painted exterior that's right on the clifftop. The former coaching inn is still a traditional cosy pub (refreshingly, there are no TVs in the rooms), and it's just a short walk to the coast path.
6. Branscombe to Beer, east Devon
Along this little stretch of east Devon's coastline, there are two of the county's most picturesque beaches. Starting in the twee 14th-century village of Branscombe, where the local thatched pub has taken over much of the village, it doesn't get much more bucolic than this. From the beach at Branscombe, with its dark reddish cliffs and beach huts, it's about 4.5 miles to Beer.
At Beer, the pebbled beach is flanked on either side by the south coast's chalky cliffs. At the end of each day, the fishing fleet is hauled up out of the water onto the pebbles waiting to return again the following day. At the top of the beach, near the sloped entrance, and just 100 metres from the water, is a hole-in-the-wall fish market selling the day's catch.
Stay at: Glebe House
Slightly inland, near the village of Southleigh, is Glebe House. Run by Hugo and Olive, they're paying homage to the Italian agriturismo model of B&Bs. Plenty of the food they serve comes from their smallholding, they organise food experiences with nearby producers, and Olive's eye for colourful, vintage-inspired artsy interiors is infectious.
Doubles from £159 night; glebehousedevon.co.uk
7. Kimmeridge Bay to Swanage, Dorset
This final walk comes in right near the end of the South West Coast Path, which officially ends at Shell Bay on South Haven Point in Poole, just opposite Sandbanks and Brownsea Island in prime Enid Blyton territory. Part of the Jurassic Coast world heritage site, it's far quieter here than the much shorter Lulworth Cove to Durdle Door section further east.
This is the longest section featured here, covering just over nine miles, from Kimmeridge Bay to Swanage. Walking along the chalk ridge, this section is one for budding archaeologists which keen fossil hunters will also love as it's an area people have lived and hunted in since the Mesolithic period, about 6,000 years ago. Views from the aptly named 'Heaven's Gate' are some of the best – inland looks to the Purbeck Hills, and over to Corfe Castle, and it offers excellent views back over the coastline. A fitting view to end on.
Looking a little like The Pig hotels, The Canford is on the other side of the English Channel and is just a short ferry ride over. It has chic countryside-inspired rooms in heritage colours that sit above the pub.
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Times
17 minutes ago
- Times
25 of the prettiest village mini breaks in the UK
Nearly a millennium since the Domesday Book, Britain's villages have maintained their ageless appeal and also moved with the times. The best ones cocoon both those who live there and visitors with a sense of community — just as they have for centuries. They may — like Evershot in Dorset — have adorable thatched cottages, or a babbling brook running through it like Cartmel in Cumbria, but it's the cherished churches and red telephone boxes that make them so important to the British psyche. And villages have a special appeal in the summer months. This is when, in the best villages, you can spill out from the pub, pint in hand, to watch a leisurely game of cricket on the green. People organise fetes and set out honesty stalls with their surplus eggs, fruit and vegetables. Even if we live in cities, we can still buy into the joy of a village. Forget a cricket pavilion on the green, the best accessory a village can have these days is a good hotel. They are perfect portals for locals and visitors to mingle, just as they might in a village hall but accessorised with great food and a top-notch bar. Sometimes, like Eckington in the Cotswolds, a manor house next to the village opens up to paying guests. Venerable coaching inns, some dating from the 16th century, have also been given a new purpose in the 21st century in some villages. The best, like the Talbot Inn in the Somerset village of Mells, regularly hosts concerts. Some even put on operas or — taking a leaf from the WI — have book talks and cooking classes. And then there are the village pubs that have been rescued from the threat of closure by adding bedrooms. Whether your ideal village is veering towards a hamlet or one with a rom-com-worthy collection of trendy shops, we've got you covered in this list of the UK's 25 prettiest — all with a gorgeous place to stay. This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue This New Forest village is a place of pilgrimage for posh petrolheads, thanks to its National Motor Museum, but there are plenty of other things to see. On one side of the River Beaulieu are the 13th-century ruins of its abbey plus Palace House, where the car-minded Montagu family have lived since 1538 (£30; Beaulieu village is on the other side and with its melange of half-timbered and Georgian buildings, is regularly voted one of Britain's most beautiful villages. Travellers have been arriving at the Montagu Arms since the 17th century. There are now 33 rooms and suites, a posh restaurant and a pub, Monty's Inn (and, handily, plenty of car parking). Details B&B doubles from £176 ( • 18 of the best hotels in the New Forest Tucked between Ilkley and Otley moors on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales, Askwith has a clutch of stone buildings and a Victorian village school surrounded by superb walks. However, for all its aged furrows, this is a village looking to the future. One example is the Penny Bun restaurant with rooms, which opened in 2024. Named after a local mushroom, it's part of the Denton Reserve, which is working towards a more sustainable method of farming. All five bedrooms are filled with furniture made by local makers, the food is hyper-local and if the weather is clement, best enjoyed on a raised terrace that maximises the staggering views. Details B&B doubles from £200 ( With its priory ruins and the River Eea trickling past its 18th-century homes, Cartmel has serious good looks. Pep comes from the racecourse just outside the village, sustenance from its two Michelin-starred restaurants and a shop that has industrial quantities of its sticky toffee pudding as well as local cheeses. There are plenty of places to stay in Cartmel, but my pick would be L'Enclume, not least because rooms come with a guaranteed reservation at Simon Rogan's justly famous restaurant. Rather than a traditional hotel building, the 16 rooms are dotted around this absurdly pretty village. Details B&B doubles from £280 ( • 33 of the best hotels in the Lake District Surrounded by the vineyard-studded South Downs, Cuckfield's high-functioning village has chemists and cafés mixed in with posh antique shops and boutiques. Cuckfield's more well-heeled residents tend to be members of Ockenden Manor's spa. It's a short walk along the lane from the hotel and the high street and has an indoor and outdoor swimming pool, fed by a natural spring. They also treat the hotel as a handy place to socialise, including in the restaurant, where tables spill out into the garden in good weather. The rest of us can buy in by staying in one of the 27 bedrooms, with low beams and mullioned windows. Details B&B doubles from £247 ( • 13 of the best luxury hotels in Sussex Thomas Hardy — in his day job as an architect — extended Summer Lodge in 1893. This late Victorian villa now delivers five-star West Country luxury, with extensive afternoon teas, an elegant restaurant, a beautifully tended garden, a spa and 25 antique-stuffed rooms. Just outside the gates is an old-fashioned bakery, post office and the 16th-century Acorn Inn. Also owned by the hotel, the inn was namechecked by Hardy in Tess of the D'Urbervilles as the Sow & Acorn but now serves pan-seared duck breast alongside Jurassic Coast-sourced haddock with chips. Details B&B doubles from £275 ( • 14 of the best hotels in Dorset Over the past 600 years Blakeney, just inland from the North Norfolk coast, has gone from being a medieval metropolis to a clear contender for Norfolk's cutest village. Surrounded by salt marshes, it has plenty of holiday desirability with boat trips to see seals, easy coastal walks, cafés and flint cottages. On the quayside, the Victorian Blakeney Hotel has 60 rooms, an indoor swimming pool and a restaurant and terrace bar, and steers a course between catering for posh holidaymakers and urbane locals. Details B&B doubles £176 ( • 29 of the best hotels in Norfolk The ancient Romans loved this corner of Somerset near Frome, as does, well, pretty much anyone who comes here now. Surrounded by honey-coloured stone houses is the Walled Garden, a community-run shop, café and aesthetically perfect nursery that brings Mells into the 21st century with pizza amid the plants ( The Talbot Inn, at the cobblestoned heart of the village, is a perfect posh paint-job matched with glammed-up pub-grub affair, with regular quizzes and music events alongside eight bedrooms with roll top baths, Egyptian cotton sheets and high levels of indulgence. Details B&B doubles from £117 ( • 13 of the best luxury hotels in Somerset Much of this village near Lewes is still owned by the Gage family, leading to a feudal but aesthetic vibe. The village cricket team has been playing on the same pitch since 1758, while the lack of street markings and lights adds to Firle's slightly 1930s arty aspic feel (several of the Bloomsbury set lived here). You won't find many holiday lets in Firle — the estate prefers to rent to people with young families who help to keep village life and the shop going — but the 500-year-old Ram Inn has a handful of very nice bedrooms, all tastefully decorated, and serves top-notch food. Details B&B doubles from £193 ( • 19 of the best hotels in East Sussex The artist Stanley Spencer was born in Cookham in 1891 and rarely left before his death in 1959. The Thames-side village appears in many of his most famous works, which are on show at the museum (£7; the focal point of this decidedly posh village, which also has restaurants, shops and delis. Bel & the Dragon, opposite the Stanley Spencer Gallery, is a gastropub with ten very comfortable bedrooms, a working kitchen garden and its own commitment to culture; opera and Shakespeare will be performed in its garden over the summer. Details B&B doubles from £125 ( A featured location in the 1995 film Jude and the ITV drama Vera, this village near the River Derwent was built from the stones of a 12th-century abbey. The austere grey stone buildings, tucked into the middle of the Northern Pennines here, are softened by the 124 residents who sustain a village shop and other businesses. Housing pilgrims before turning to hotel guests, the Lord Crewe Arms has 26 rooms divided into Cosy, Canny and Champion categories and furnished with flair, while the hotel adds to Blanchland's buzz with regular concerts, wine tastings and cookery demos. Details B&B doubles from £219 ( • The Lord Crewe Arms hotel review: a cosy hideaway on the Northumberland moors With a handful of whitewashed cottages wedged above a small cove, this tiny village on the Roseland peninsula has plenty of superb optics. It was once a thriving harbour, and a few boats still drop off crabs and lobsters while foot traffic comes from walkers on the South West Coast Path, which travels through the village. The Lugger hotel has been part of the Portloe landscape since the 18th century, when it allowed villagers to absorb smuggled goods, especially French brandy. These days, with 22 rooms and three cottages, it delivers a beautifully curated Cornwall land and seascape. Details Room-only doubles from £134 ( • 37 of the best hotels in Cornwall If you like your villages to have almost all the reality edited out — leaving plenty of perfection — head to the Cotswolds idyll of Southrop. Caryn and Jerry Hibbert moved into the 17th-century manor house in 2002 and have since restored both it and the surrounding cottages. The courses it runs will nudge you into improved cooking and wellbeing tweaks, or you can have a treatment at the Meadow Spa before dining on food sourced from the estate and nearby at the Ox Barn. Want something simpler? Southrop's village pub is part of this organically grown, very tasteful vision. Lucky locals. Details B&B doubles from £440 ( • Thyme spa review: modern country luxury in the Cotswolds Painted buttercup yellow, the Sun Inn lies at the very heart of Essex's prettiest village. Close to the border with Suffolk in the middle of supremely walkable Constable country, this former coaching inn has welcomed travellers since the 17th century. The high street is also home to Little Merchant Dedham, purveyor of tasteful gifts, cafés, a proper butcher and a grand 15th-century church. Owned by Piers Baker since 2002, the Sun Inn rises above local competition with its food — including local Mersea oysters and Italian-accented dishes — while the seven bedrooms mix antique furniture, modern art and decent prices. Details B&B doubles from £185 ( Near the course of the Avon at the borders of the Cotswolds, Eckington has flower festivals, community films and walks and a thriving WI alongside its quintessentially pretty 12th-century church and village cross. Eckington Manor, at the western edge of the village, is a 16-room hotel in a 14th-century building with its own 60-acre farm with cattle, sheep and Gloucester Old Spot pigs for the restaurant and cookery B&B doubles from £149 ( Encompassing a harbour, a nature reserve and a village green, Walberswick has rural and coastal kudos. And there's a posh homeware shop on the Green, the award-winning Black Dog deli and a high celebrity count — Emma Freud and Richard Curtis have a home here, as does the film director Paul Greengrass. Imaginative names are not Walberswick's strong point but on the Street is the Anchor, a bunting-strewn pub with ten rooms that will embed you into the village, predictably posh pub grub and beer from Adnams brewed across the Blyth River in neighbouring Southwold. Details B&B doubles from £150 ( For peak village perfection in the Peak District head to Ashford, which lies on the banks of the River Wye. Envy-inducing aspects include the medieval Sheepwash bridge, a church that dates from the 12th century and a thriving cricket club that plays on the village green, as well as a collection of very charming limestone cottages with carefully tended gardens. Along with the posh restaurant with rooms, Riverside House Hotel (B&B doubles from £300; the Ashford Arms recently opened with nine funked-up rooms and cheery food aimed at hikers and other hearty, healthy types. Details B&B doubles from £185 ( • 21 of the best hotels in the Peak District Lucky are the 200 inhabitants of this tiny village in England's smallest county. Not only were their thatched cottages and half-timbered houses preserved when Rutland Water was created by flooding the surrounding areas in 1976, but they have Hambleton Hall as a very pleasing, if somewhat pricey, village amenity. Housed in a Victorian mansion where Noël Coward was a regular visitor, it has been owned by Tim and Stefa Hart since 1979. There are 17 suites and bedrooms alongside a Michelin-starred restaurant and grounds with a spectacular view onto the surrounding nature reserve that nurtures ospreys. Details B&B doubles from £425 ( • Hambleton Hall hotel review: a lakeside manor with a Michelin-starred restaurant Nowhere does quiet villages quite like the Cotswolds and Oxfordshire has some particularly choice ones from which to choose. Ascott-under-Wychwood has the requisite slightly ridiculous name and also heaves slightly less than Kingham or Burford. It has all the honey-stone buildings you want, there's a community-run village shop and a train station so you don't have to fire up the Range Rover to reach it. Best of all, now part of Sam and Georgie Pearman's three-strong Lionhearth group, the Swan clearly knows how to make a 16th-century pub sing and its 11 rooms B&B doubles from £144 ( The whitewashed houses of Plockton line up against Loch Carron on Scotland's west coast. Quiet and contemplative, the gardens stretch to the water's edge and a sprinkling of palm trees gives credence to Gulf Stream claims. People return year after year to the Plockton Hotel. Once a private home, it has 11 bedrooms, all simply decorated. Each May it runs a gin and whisky festival, while summer regattas mean plenty of yachties drop in for meals Details B&B doubles from £170 ( • 19 of the best hotels in the Scottish Highlands Straddling the River Tay with its wrought iron bridge, Ballintaggart is one of Perth and Kinross's stealth-wealth villages and when brothers Chris and Andrew Rowley turned a backpacker hostel back into the Grandtully Hotel, it got the focal point it deserved. Now its eight bedrooms, decorated with mid-century calm and rich colours, as well as a restaurant and the Tully bar cater for locals and visitors alike. The brothers also run a cookery school and have converted a collection of cottages while the Tay has rafting and canyoning from just outside the hotel. Details B&B doubles from £215 ( On the northern coast of Aberdeenshire, this village faces Pennan Bay, where dolphins often come to frolic while seals bask on the rocks to the east. Pennan village is just a single — and highly beautiful — line of whitewashed houses facing the bay all built in the 18th and 19th centuries. In 1983, the release of the film Local Hero brought Pennan's beauty and its red telephone box to an international audience. Staying at the Pennan Inn puts you at the centre of things. There are just three rooms but they look out at the same elemental landscape and there's a nice restaurant. Details B&B doubles from £121 ( This pastel-coloured homage to Portofino is unlike anywhere else in the UK. Portmeirion may be a thoroughly 20th-century concoction but it's also totally enchanting. Started in 1925 by the architect Clough Williams-Ellis, it's a melange of eccentric buildings in Pokemon colours, exuberant gardens and pale blue benches. More than 200,000 people pay to visit each year but you can also stay overnight, as many of the buildings are holiday lets and there are also two hotels. The Hotel Portmeirion has the best position with heart-melting sunsets by the edge of the Dwyryd Estuary. Williams-Ellis adapted a Victorian building to create 14 bedrooms, while Terence Conran updated the dining room in 2005. Details B&B doubles from £214 ( Just inside Wales on the River Wye, Tintern inspired Wordsworth with the ruins of its 11th-century Cistercian Abbey and now has film nights and fêtes. Spread out amid this natural landscape is its 1,000-strong village, which spreads into the hills and includes shops, cafés and the Parva vineyard ( This month, the 20-room Royal George will be taking guests again and offering them significantly more comfort than Wordsworth would have found, including two restaurants and a café.Details B&B doubles from £165 ( Often described as Cheshire-by-Sea, come summer Abersoch becomes Wales's trendiest village, with regattas, golf and a surfy sense of cool. An easy stroll up the hill, the very foodie — but relaxed and friendly — Porth Tocyn hotel is now in the fourth generation of family ownership. In summer, it reaps the rewards of its outdoor swimming pool while the terrace means that the restaurant spills outdoors with views onto the bucolic Llyn peninsula. There are 17 rooms, a shepherd's hut and a cottage with a double and single room. Details B&B doubles from £195 ( On the banks of Strangford Lough is this village of just 200 people. An hour from Belfast, it has a series of pastel-coloured fishermen's cottages leading to the quayside with its tiny ferry that regularly heads off to Portaferry. Opposite the village green, a two-minute walk away, the Cuan takes its role as a community hub seriously by regularly hosting local bands and also serving acclaimed dishes featuring fish from the Lough. Details B&B doubles from £139 ( • The Cuan hotel review: one of Northern Ireland's best-kept secrets Which other villages should have made our shortlist? Let us know in the comments below


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Calls for views on possible future Cornwall 'tourism tax'
Business owners in Cornwall have been asked to give their opinions on whether there should be a tax or a levy on body Visit Cornwall has started a survey which will run until the end of the month which it said was about presenting a "unified industry response". A tourism tax or levy is extra money generated from tourists or the tourism industry, such as added charges on overnight accommodation for visitors. Jon Hyatt, who chairs Visit Cornwall, said he was "against any charge that might put visitors off". Although Cornwall Council said in 2024 it would not press the government for devolved powers to introduce such a levy, Visit Cornwall said there were "growing suggestions" again for its introduction. Mr Hyatt added he did not want tourists to receive "wrong messaging" which might lead people to think they would be "better off going elsewhere"."Tourism tax and visitor levies do work in other locations, but that is particularly mainland Europe and cities where the visitor demographic and local economy is different," he said any proposal should meet the "principles of fairness and transparency, industry involvement and reinvestment in Cornish tourism". 'Create a barrier' Alistair Handyside, from the South West Tourism Alliance, said he did not welcome the idea of a tourism said he did not know of "rural and coastal areas" where it had worked."You have to be very careful how this would be applied, what the money is used for and how it is determined how it is spent," he CEO of the Eden Project, Andy Jasper, also had doubts about the said Cornwall had seen a "slight decline" in tourism in the last decade."We completely understand the rationale behind wanting to bring in more money to support the tourism industry, but why would you put anything in place to create a barrier in this area?" he said. In St Ives, mayor and town councillor Johnnie Wells said he had called for a voluntary community proposal was for a voluntary scheme run through accommodation providers which would not require any legislation."Any money collected in St Ives should stay in St Ives," he said."We have 11,500 people who live here paying for services that hundreds of thousands of visitors use a year. One pound a night would seem to be a fair price compared to Europe."It would need to be affordable, transparent and spent on things that offset the impact of tourism - like recycling or training for local young people."The Visit Cornwall survey is running until 31 July.


The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
A moment that changed me: An accident left me terrified of risk. Then I joined a stranger on a motorbike adventure
As I watched the sleek, white motorbike roll out of the hire shop in Thakhek, Laos, I wondered if I was making a dreadful mistake. It was March 2017 and I had agreed to go on a road trip with a stranger – an American named Travis, whom I had met a few weeks earlier. We were classmates on a Rotary International Peace Fellowship, which brought together people from sectors such as academia, farming and activism to learn about conflict resolution, in Thailand. I tended to have my guard up around people I didn't know but Travis's constant gentle efforts to get to know me had worked, and we bonded over a shared sense of humour. When he suggested we explore Laos together, it felt like a natural progression of our budding friendship. Travis wanted to visit a climbing hotspot, I wanted to see the Laos that wasn't on the typical tourist trail – and it seemed like the only way we could do both was to travel by motorbike, a mode of transport I actively avoided for many years. As a kid in London, I'd thought I would become a biker once I was old enough. My dad would zip to work on his bike every day and it seemed like a perfectly natural way to travel. But on New Year's Day 2004, I ended up in a Cambodian medical clinic while backpacking in the coastal province of Sihanoukville. A friend and I had been travelling by motorbike – me on the back – when it stalled and crashed to the ground. As we went down, my leg bounced three times on the hot exhaust pipe. At first, I was in shock. As I realised that the crisp smell of burning was emanating from my calf, I gasped; I went to scream but the pain was so intense that I couldn't make a sound. I tried to get help from a pharmacy but the language barrier meant I was given pigment cream for the shining, pink flesh glaring through my brown skin. Eventually, my burns were cleaned and dressed, but the wound was deeper than I had realised and I was required to return to a clinic daily for the next fortnight. I didn't Skype my parents for several days while I tried to assess the extent of my injuries. I vowed to wear more suitable, protective clothing when riding a motorbike in future but, once I was back in London, with so many other means of transport available, I found I was keen to avoid motorbikes altogether. The scars on my leg became a permanent reminder of the incident and I grew cautious about doing anything that involved an element of physical risk. By 2017, it had been more than a decade since I had ridden on a motorbike. Travis assured me that he had a licence and would drive safely. I looked down at the scars on my leg, took a deep breath and put on my helmet. I needn't have worried. The journey was smooth as we travelled to stunning temples, expansive lakes, hidden caves and little cafes. I even attempted rock climbing. We rode in the dark, travelling through winding mountain roads to reach scenic nooks that we would never have otherwise encountered. It was a trip that imbued me with the confidence to connect more readily with strangers and to adventure more. After I returned from Laos, I started going on more solo trips, relying on a mix of gut instinct, due diligence and being open-minded to realise my travel dreams while also staying safe. Travis introduced me to his school friend, Jackie, who showed me around Boulder during my trip to Colorado. The ripple effect of connecting with strangers continued when I took a solo trip to Puerto Rico and Jackie introduced me to Eli, a mountaineer from the Colorado climbing scene who was living in Ciales. At my San Juan guesthouse, I met Jess, Kathryn and Matt, and about an hour later, we were all heading to Eli's family's forest farm, The Flying Coconut. There, we shared life stories over incredibly juicy homegrown fruit – an experience I would never have had if I'd not been willing to ask people to split costs and come on something of a magical mystery tour. Sign up to The Traveller Get travel inspiration, featured trips and local tips for your next break, as well as the latest deals from Guardian Holidays after newsletter promotion Last winter, I visited Oulu in Finland. Since the buses into town weren't so regular, I got on a bicycle and learned to cycle for the first time in heavy, falling snow. The feeling was euphoric. My friend Erika even organised a road trip with a photographer named Teija early one dark morning so that I could fulfil a long-term desire to hang out with 100 howling huskies at Syötteen Eräpalvelut. From Travis to Teija, and with all of the many others in-between, I've realised that what these trips have in common is a willingness to step out of my comfort zone and forge valuable connections with people I don't know. By opening up a little bit more each time, it has led to endless adventures – and turned many of my dreams into reality. Bear Markets and Beyond: A Bestiary of Business Terms by Dhruti Shah and Dominic Bailey (Portico) is available now