1st Good Beer Guide Tick of 2026
There was a time today when we thought this would be the "2026 walk of the year". There was an equal length of time when we were questioning our own lifestyle choices.
Identifying post walk refreshment opportunities along a particularly remote section of the Cornish Atlantic coast, we decide to start at the Gurnard's Head Hotel. A striking, mustard yellow hotel with the name emblazoned in the roof tiling. Recognised by CAMRA for good beer and other associations for good food, Mrs M quickly identifies the only sandwich they do is £17.50. Without chips. Crab sarnies are now the national Cost of Living measure.
Down to the sea for a spectacular stretch of the SWCP. Wild but exhilarating walking south to Rosemergy. Abandoned mines and warning signs showing unwary ramblers falling head-first down shafts. Who doesn't like a bit of edge to their morning constitutional?
Onwards to the Bronze Age Stones...
Men-an-Tol, near Madron in west Cornwall, is a small prehistoric stone monument consisting of a circular granite slab pierced by a round hole and flanked by two upright stones, set starkly on open moorland; it probably dates to the late Neolithic or early Bronze Age (around 2500–1500 BCE) and may once have formed part of a larger stone circle or ritual alignment. Its folklore is unusually strong and persistent: for centuries people believed that crawling through the holed stone—often nine times and sometimes at dawn—could cure ailments such as back pain, rheumatism and childhood illnesses, promote fertility, and protect against witchcraft or curses, giving the site a lasting reputation as a place of healing, protection and symbolic rebirth.
Coops, the Labradoodle, should be forever protected against back pain.
It's then the misery kicks in. I have misinterpreted the guide books hand drawn maps and where I think there is accessible common land, we are met with walls of gorse and no available paths. We double track to eventually get tied up in ancient field systems. We have to look very hard for field exits - they are there, but Cornish stiles would not be out of place on the TV programme "Wipe Out". Through in aggressive/inquisitive horses and a pub that refuses to reveal itself until the final moments and you can lose the morale of the troops.
Two things tells me we will have a problem in the Gurnard's Head Hotel. The car parking has over-spilled to the grass verges and there are people using the outside picnic areas when the temperature is barely above freezing.
Regardless, we press on in and are met with a full house. Who would have thought people had money left after the festivities? We do manage to grab high stools at the bar and I hope for a drink to satisfy the Good Beer Guide Ticking committee. After failing to be acknowledged by the three harassed staff, let alone served, we decide to use other facilities available and cut our loses.
Zennor is just down the road and they have the Tinners Arms.
Again, this is packed but we do manage to get a seat. Two things of note - the house beer, Tinners Ale - is brewed by Sharps. It looks, tastes and smells like Doom Bar. It is served in a Doom Bar Glass. It is of course, Doom Bar.
And the Crab Sandwich here is £18.50.
Still without chips.
Walk Details
Distance - 8.5 Miles
Walk Inspiration - Enjoy Walking in West Cornwall, Walk 32
Geocaches - 2




























