A fishing day that was not productive, led to this little kayak trip and adventure.
So we start the kayak trip with a paddle past
Dean Point quarry which produced Grabbo an aggregate mainly for use as foundation stones in infrastructure projects such as sea defences and roads.
The workings are located in
St Keverne a remote section of the cornish coast. The narrow local roads meant all the stone worked here was sent out via ship from the rusty quay. The quarry was first worked in 1890 with production running until
2005.
Coverack lies in the parish of
St. Keverne, a large parish on the
Lizard Peninsula, bounded by a picturesque coastline, moors upon which there still thrive plants which were growing there before the last ice age and rich arable land. It is steeped in history dating from the Mezolithic, when people were hunter-gatherers, to the Neolithic, the fruit farmers,
The Bronze Age and the
Iron Age.
Evidence of these periods is seen in numerous scatters of flint tools, pottery shards, standing stones, burial mounds and hut circles found on ploughed surfaces and moors.
There are numerous surviving ancient documents relating to the parish. The earliest known are the
Saxon Charters of 995, 997 and 1059. All three of these record property boundaries, the names of which date to the
Celtic peoples in
Cornwall in prehistory.
It is recorded in the
Doomsday survey that in Anglo-Saxon times St. Keverne was a collegiate college of secular cannons. The survey records that these cannons held one manor called Lannackbran and that there were four other manors.
The parish church in St. Keverne is a large and beautiful building which is, in all probability built on the foundations of the church built by St. Keverne when he came over from
Ireland and converted the people of the village to
Christianity in the late sixth century.
In 1235, the church and its lands were given in tenureship to
Beaulieu Abbey, in
Hampshire, by
Richard, Duke of Cornwall, in whose care it remained until the
Reformation, when it was sold by
Henry VIII to a layman. The cartulary (collection of records) of
Beaulieu records the tithes paid to it by St. Keverne during its three years of stewardship and the numerous expenses the parish had in producing the wherewithal to pay the tithes.
The Royal Pateat-Rolls and the
Fleet of
Fires kept in the
National records
Office in
London are rich in the names of people who had the rights of tenure of land in the parish from Beaulieu during this time.
The people of St. Keverne, right throughout time, have had the reputation of being very forthright and independent. In 1497, under the leadership of
Michael Joseph An Gof, the local blacksmith, the people of St. Keverne marched to London in protest against the crippling taxes imposed upon them by
Henry VII.
Again, at the time of the reformation, they were prepared to oppose with their lives the changes in the
Church rituals being imposed upon them. At both of these rebellions people lost their lives.
A study of the extant records of the 17th,
18th and 19th
Centuries give a vivid picture of the day-to-day lives of the ordinary men and women of St. Keverne
Parish. They tell tales of men going to sea to fish and never being seen again, for they were abducted by pirates; of a man requesting a piece of wood to mend his wooden leg; of new instruments needed for the small group of musicians who played in church before the days of organs; of errant fathers being made to pay the parish the cost of keeping their baseborn sons; and so much more.
The education of the children in St. Keverne is well documented, the earliest one dated 1698 when land was given to the parish, the rents of which were to be used for education.
Old
Lifeboat Station at Coverack.
The Royal
National Lifeboat Institution (
RNLI) stationed a lifeboat at Coverack in
1901 following the wreck of the
SS Mohegan on
The Manacles in 1898 with the loss of more than
100 lives. A boat house with a slipway was built on the harbour.
The station was closed in
October 1978 following the allocation of a faster boat to
Falmouth Lifeboat Station.
A coxswain of the Coverack lifeboat,
Archie Rowe, was a subject of
This Is Your Life in
1958 when he was surprised by
Eamonn Andrews at the
BBC Television Theatre.
The following lifeboats were stationed at Coverack -
Constance Melanie 1901--1934
The Three Sisters 1934--1954 and
William Taylor of
Oldham 1954--1972.
Filmed the end of
March 2013 and a really warm day.
Filmed with FT-20
Panasonic Lumix and GoPro3, music mixing all my own creation.
Coverack translates to Porthkovrek in
Cornish.
Kayak
kayak
kayaking
yaking
yak
canoeing
canoe
seal
grey seal
longships
lighthouse
seal pup
gweek seal sanctuary
lands end
porthgwarra
poldark
cornish
sea kayak
tidal race
strong current
cornwall
kayak trip, kayak trip, kayak trip, sea kayaking.
- published: 15 Jan 2014
- views: 477