West Cornwall, Guided

Guided access to West Cornwall — by someone who calls it home.

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Porthcurno

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.

Pedn Vounder

What I Offer

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.

St Michael’s Mount — Tinners Way

About Chris

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.

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