Carvings in Piper's Hole
The deep gully on the west side of Crantock Beach is known as Piper's Hole. Within this, inside the first cave on the right is a flat surface with carvings which include a female figure, a horse and a few lines of verse.
This has given rise to romantic stories that the poem and drawings were carved by an an artist after his lover got cut off by the tide on her horse and both were washed out to sea. However the horse was added around 40 years later and its tail wasn't added until 2011!
The original carving made of the female figure was made by London artist Joseph Prater who often visited relatives in Crantock and made the carving on one of his visits, probably in the early 1900s. The identity of the woman is not known. The horse was carved in the 1940s by James Dyer of Crantock but for some reason this didn't include a tail. The carving was tidied up by an artist commissioned by the Parish Council in 2011, removing some graffiti, re-carving the poem and adding the missing tail.
On walks
- Crantock and The Gannel (4.5 mile walk)
- Crantock (2.3 mile walk)
- West Pentire to Crantock Beach (3.5 mile walk)
Also mentioned in walks
- Holywell to Crantock (4.9 mile walk)
- Holywell Bay to Newquay (via bus) (6.9 mile walk)
- West Pentire and Polly Joke (2.2 mile walk)