Oliver's Cornwall
The Clay Trails
Trails in the Bugle
and St. Austell area
Wheal Martyn working clay pit
The new entrance at Wheal Martyn
Spoil heap on Hensbarrow Downs

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The Clay Trails - Cyclists, Horse Riders and Walkers
Were the Clay Trails worth all the expense?

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© Copyright Oliver Howes 2008
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Page updated 19 December 2008

The Clay Trails - Cyclists, Horse Riders and Walkers

We were delighted when in June 2005 the new Cornwall Clay Trails opened, in conjunction with improvements at the Wheal Martyn Museum of China Clay.  It took a lot of co-operation and clearly a vast amount of money to complete the project.  The bodies involved included Cornwall County Council, the Eden Project, the National Cycle Network people Sustrans, the Lottery Fund and Imerys, the company that operates the vast clay fields. The Clay Trails are essentially Cycle Trails.  Paths are wide, firm and well drained, the few gradients are relatively gentle and their clear local purpose is to encourage people to arrive at the Eden Project (they all go there - once) by bike or on foot. 
There are effectively four Clay Trails.  Wheal Martyn to Eden, with a detour towards Carthew, definitely the scenic trail and the best for walkers.  Bugle (where you can rent bikes) to Eden, not very scenic, except for a detour on foot round Treskilling Pit.  Par Beach (near the former Imerys clay exporting harbour) to St. Blazey, with a footpath extension to Eden.  And Wheal Martyn to St. Austell, continuing south to link with the Pentewan Valley Trail.   Waymarking is good and explanatory displays are being installed at some points of interest.  Occasional shelters have domed grassy roofs.
Were the Clay Trails worth all the expense?
Massive spoil heap on Hensbarrow Down
 Trails website.   Leaflets from Wheal Martyn. 
Update June 2008.  I learn from surveyor and map maker Ernie Biddle that there are now aditional off-road links to the clay trails.  A link seems to be planned from the Goss Moor Nature Reserve trail to the trail from Bugle to Eden.  And, if you are on the Pentewan Valley trail to the south of St. Austell, you will find continuations to Heligan Garden and Mevagissey.
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Were the Clay Trails worth all the expense?
When the first of the Clay Trails opened in 2005 I was full of enthusiasm.  Indeed Jane and I walked the very first, from Wheal Martyn towards Eden, before it opened.  Later I did the same for Wheal Martyn to St. Austell.  I enjoyed my walks but with qualifications:  except for the Sky Extension on Wheal Martyn to Eden, and the views of St. Austell Bay approaching Trethurgy, there is not much scenery along the way.  Perhaps cyclists don't notice scenery.  In August 2007, while waiting for the weather to improve for some photos at Wheal Martyn, I walked from there to Eden and back and started to wonder whether we taxpayers have got value for our money.  I think not!  Because I had the trail almost to myself, I counted how many people were on it.  In 10 miles there and back I saw 5 local dog walkers, 2 couples having short walks - and just one walker and 2 cyclists doing the trail.  And this in the height of the holiday season.  Where were the streams of cyclists (for whom the trail was created at great expense) heading for Eden?  The answer was nowhere.  What a waste of money!  And now more fortunes are being spent on planting new woodland (being overwhelmed by the dreaded rhodo ponticum) and recreating the old heathland habitat (which is recreating itself naturally anyway).  Wouldn't it have been nice if, instead of clay trails, the money had been spent on clearing, maintaining and signing the many miles of lost footpaths for which the County Council have responsibility?
Wheal Martyn Museum  - now known as China Clay Country Park
Wheal Martyn working pit - one of the smaller pits
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REVIEWS INDEX and SITE CONTENTS
Recent Reviews
Homes
Gardens
Museums & Galleries
Coast & Country
Holy Sites & Churches
Antiquities
Castles
Towns & Villages
Miscellanea
Pubs
Scilly
Devon
Introductory Guide
Home Page
Contact Me
© Copyright Oliver Howes 2008
 Return to main Trails  page for index of trails
Page updated19 December 2008

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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