Boscastle Harbour
The steep-sided valley of the river Valency forms a sheltered natural harbour at Boscastle. The two stone harbour walls date back to Elizabethan times, built in 1584. The outer breakwater was built in 1820, but destroyed in 1941 by a drifting mine and then rebuilt by the National Trust.
The harbour was very difficult to approach in a sailing ship and it was not safe for ships to enter under their own sail. On a ship's arrival, a boat with eight men, known as a "hobbler", would go out to tow them into the harbour, whilst men on the shore held the ship in the middle of the channel, using ropes.
On walks
- Boscastle Headlands (3.3 mile walk)
- Boscastle to Buckator (5.4 mile walk)
- Boscastle to Rocky Valley (6.2 mile walk)
- Boscastle to Tintagel (via bus) (5.5 mile walk)
- Crackington Haven to Boscastle (via bus) (7 mile walk)
Also mentioned in walks
- Boscastle to Minster Church (2.6 mile walk)