It may be a product of sustained
transience but the chance to drop anchor for an undefined period in a familiar
place has been of great appeal. And so here I still am – Plymouth, Devon – and
only twice so far have I pined for the other side of the world. Once I was in
Starbucks and had a drink that had the front to be called coffee. The other
time, some dreadful nincompoop and his bumbling mates were taking over
Australia, and while I was not missing the crowing and hollering, my inner nerd
was bereaved of two party preferred counts, the swings, the coloured maps and
the abject head-shaking of democracy where a mandate is claimed when less than
half of the population vote for you and, even those who do, probably do not
agree with 100% of your policies.
Still, I do intend to return to
the country despite a change in the people who nominally run it but don’t
really do much at all. You see, at some point here the weather will get
continually miserable and the people will get more miserable and I will get
miserable with the miserable weather and the miserable people. And then I can
return to the land down under which is so fortunate it forgets how fortunate it
is. But the people there won’t be miserable because they got what they wanted.
Plymouth can be incredibly miserable but at the moment there is a
prolonged ray of sunshine that transforms even the dodgy concrete alleys filled
with rubbish bags into an artistic postmodern composition of urban life. The
crazy drunks walking the streets become salt of the earth characters and
chavved up pram pushers on the bus make for a colourful melee of handbags and
hairdos. I’ve heard it said that Australia is just like Britain would be with
good weather; not exactly, but the weather can do wonders for a place.
The familiar abounds but every
time I return there are incremental changes to the city. Royal William Yard is an obvious one and I have been impressed by the
conversion from disused naval quarters to swanky flats and waterside cafes.
Devil’s Point provides the picturesque walk to burn off jam and cream filled
shortbread from the bakery, and something approaching an alright cappuccino is
available on occasion. On my first
visit, in warm Sunday sunshine, I had the momentary feeling that I was back in
Australia such was the sparkle, the relaxed buzz, and general air of wellbeing.
I even had a flat white, but this was very English.
Part of the familiarity re-familiarisation
process is engaging in the foodstuffs of this part of the world. The issue is,
the longer I linger, the less I can justify filling my face. On day 1, cream
tea on Dartmoor was ticked off and
clotted cream has re-appeared on a number of other opportunities (like when I
made treacle tart, yum yum!). But I have also been back to Dartmoor and not
eaten cream – something that sounds like progress. Meanwhile Dartmoor continues
to captivate through its moods and sweeping vistas.
The Cornish pasties have bubbled
to the surface like oozing hot steak juice through a pastry crust, though only
infrequently. Almost every single one I have is a disappointment unless it is
from Pengenna Pasties. On which note,
I am pleased to have paid a visit to Bude
where the queues out of the door and mass munching in the town square are a
sure sign of Pengennirvana. This was the undoubted highlight of a bank holiday
Monday, which was a reminder of what a bank holiday Monday is all about.
Traffic queues, parking hassles, gritty sand packed with feral children and
people from Wolverhampton going red in the twenty degree heat. I didn’t really
enjoy Bude apart from that pasty.
By contrast another day trip in
Cornwall ranks as one of the best I have had this year; a year which, I remind
you, has encompassed a tour of New Zealand and a scenic meandering across
Australia. A piddly train to Penzance doesn’t rank up there with the journeys
but then an open top double-decker through the narrow lanes and warm sunshine of
West Penwith brought a sense of adventure to the trip. And this delivered me to
Porthcurno and a scene to celebrate,
a landscape bejewelled in sand and seas bedecked in a stunning clarity and rare
calm.
This is the pointy end of
Cornwall, the pointy end of Britain, and if anyone thinks Britain is a drab,
miserable place, well...stick ‘em with the pointy end. This is country best
explored on foot, on that magnificent coastal path, a path I followed for seven
miles or so around Land’s End and on to Sennen Cove. It is stunning country and
every minute was marvellous. Of course, you have to put a little asterisk here
and acknowledge that the sun shining makes a world of difference. But even on
dank, foggy days or, better still, stormy windswept occasions, it is a natural
wonder.
The coast path along here turned
out to be pretty good walking too, only dipping down to a cove and climbing
arduously up again about four times, which isn’t that bad for Cornwall. A lot
of the time you can just follow the cliff line, strolling upon high overlooking
clusters of volcanic rock tumbling into clear blue seas, where the occasional
trio of seals bob along and seabirds glide on warm air. Around, the exposed heath is a colour of gorse
and heather, a purple and gold that could quite justifiably replace the black
and white of the Cornish flag.
A blip of sorts pops up at Land’s End. While the coastline is
appropriately craggy and exposed, the necessary touristification due to
popularity takes away a bit from the surrounds. So there are eroded paths down
to see grumpy farmyard animals, shops selling fudge made in Wales and tea towels
made in China, arcade machines to play and One Direction posters for sale. There
are doughnuts and beer and ice cream to buy. Stop. Ice cream. I’ve been walking
five and a half miles. Ice cream. It’s mid afternoon. Ice cream. I deserve ice
cream.
Expecting lame, rip-off ice cream
I remember it quite fondly as not being particularly lame or too much of a rip
off. A popular Cornish brand it had enough creaminess to see me over the last substantial
hummock of the path before dropping down to Sennen Cove. I remember coming here about ten years ago, on a mild
but foggy old day, the cove sheltering a fine sweep of sand intermingled with
cottages and boats. It was deathly quiet then, a sure contrast to today.
Today Sennen was St. Tropez, but
thankfully the beach stretches beyond the comfortable confines of the car park.
Once over towels and tents and through ball games, the beach widens and
empties. The sand is genuinely sandy and the water a clear shade of blue.
Surfers attempt to do something in the lumps and bumps of wave that exist on
this breathless day while lifesavers watch on. Yes, it is, almost,
Australian.
It’s kind of funny how I look out
for a touch of the Australian in Britain and when in Australia the opposite
happens. I presume it’s the whole have your cake and eat it syndrome. When both
do come together – like in the creamy green hills around Kangaroo Valley or the
sunny, civilised sands of Cornwall – it’s something of a marvel. And while misery
quotients and government philosophies reach common ground there is little to
distinguish one over the other. For now.
1 comment:
I grew up in West Cornwall, and you have captured it beautifully in your pictures. The open top bus ride you mentioned is spectacular, a must-do for anyone visiting the area in summer.
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