Guided access to West Cornwall — by someone who calls it home.
This land is not something I discovered.
It’s where I was raised. It’s home.
The lanes without signposts.
The coves before the footprints.
The stone circles before the guidebooks.
West Cornwall isn’t just beautiful.
It’s personal.
Private coastal drives and story-led journeys through West Penwith.
Guided walks across ancient landscapes — with thoughtful drop-offs and pick-ups to suit your pace.
Hidden beaches, historic tin mines and discreet stone circles that most visitors pass without noticing.
Flexible, immersive days shaped entirely around you.
If a walk should finish at a characterful Cornish pub known more to locals than guidebooks, we’ll plan it that way. If the best pasty in the county calls for a small detour, we’ll make it. A proper cream tea, a well-earned pint of Cornish ale, or a table overlooking the sea — each day can be carefully shaped or left open to evolve naturally.
You’re not simply booking a tour — you’re my guests here, and together we’ll create a visit that feels entirely your own.
I was raised in far west Cornwall — it’s the place I’ve always called home. My family’s roots here stretch back to at least the 1600s, and that long connection to this landscape shapes how I see it — and how I share it.
West Penwith sits at the furthest south-westerly edge of mainland Britain, surrounded by rugged coastline and open Atlantic. This part of Cornwall carries a depth that’s difficult to put into words. It holds one of the richest prehistoric landscapes in the country, with an extraordinary concentration of ancient sites — stone circles, quoits and standing stones — still embedded in a setting that has remained remarkably unchanged for thousands of years.
I know the hidden corners, quiet coves, the best beaches, and ancient lanes that most visitors never see. Although I spent time living in Australia, I always found myself drawn back. The pull of this coastline is quiet but constant.
Over the years, I’ve introduced friends — and friends of friends — to this part of Cornwall. Not as tourists, but as guests. Sharing the simple things that make it special:
Swimming in the clean Atlantic.
Freshly caught seafood straight from the harbour.
A proper Cornish cream tea.
A locally-made Cornish pasty after a coastal walk.
Cornish ales in authentic Cornish pubs.
Rugged footpaths and an evening sunset.
I’m fortunate to have strong local connections — people and places that allow me to open doors and create experiences that feel natural, personal and uncontrived. I can also recommend a range of carefully chosen accommodation options, so it’s always worth getting in touch before you visit.
What began as something deeply personal gradually became something I wanted to devote more time to — sharing this remarkable corner of Cornwall in a way that feels thoughtful and authentic.