The Trelowarren Woodland
Walk is justly famous. In the course of it,
you can visit a Victorian folly, the highest
point on The Lizard, an Iron Age Hill Fort,
a river formed by the Ice Age and an 18th
century garden.
The
walk is open year-round to timesharers and
self-caterers staying with us, and to the
visiting public between 1st April and 30th
September. A leaflet is available from the
Estate Office setting out the options. The
main walk is about four miles (6.5km) long,
but there are also shorter, circular walks
of one and two miles (1.6 - 3.2km) and an
"extension" to Tremayne Quay, on the Helford,
which is 2.5 miles (4km) each way.
All the walks are varied and provide a
wonderful mixed landscape of views, historic
features, natural variety and more ordered
planting - with the occasional bonus of rare
wildlife. Specific points of interest
include:
The Turret: A clever Victorian reworking
of old stones to resemble part of a medieval
fortification.
The Mount: Built with earth cleared to
build a drive, again in the 19th century.
The highest point on the peninsula.

The
Fogou: A Cornish mystery. A large
underground chamber with a single, narrow
entry beneath an Iron Age Hill Fort.
Ilex
Avenue: So-called because it is the
botanical name for the ancient Mediterranean
oaks planted here in the 19th century.
Long Valley: Glorious views and an
extraordinary collection of trees, foreign
and native: Douglas Fir, Sitka Spruce,
Lawson Cypress, Hemlock, Redwood and Radiata
as well as Ash, Beech and Oak.
Tremayne Quay: Reached through beautiful
National Trust woods and overlooking the
sailing and fishing paradise of the Helford
River.
The
Pleasure Garden: Dionysus Williams' clever
use of contour and greenery to create a
contemplative masterpiece. Now being
restored on his original 18th century plan.
The Restoration Gates: The Vyvyans were
staunch royalists in the Civil War and
erected these Grade 1-listed gates to mark
the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660.
The walks all end where they begin, at
the Stable Yard, where you will find a plant
nursery, pottery and weaving, the Cornwall
Crafts Association gallery and of course,
the New Yard Restaurant.
Having walked up an appetite, where
better to satisfy it?