Arwen's meanderings

Hi everyone and welcome to my dinghy cruising blog about my John Welsford designed 'navigator' named Arwen. Built over three years, Arwen was launched in August 2007. She is a standing lug yawl 14' 6" in length. This blog records our dinghy cruising voyages together around the coastal waters of SW England.
Arwen has an associated YouTube channel so visit www.YouTube.com/c/plymouthwelshboy to find our most recent cruises and click subscribe.
On this blog you will find posts about dinghy cruising locations, accounts of our voyages, maintenance tips and 'How to's' ranging from rigging standing lug sails and building galley boxes to using 'anchor buddies' and creating 'pilotage notes'. I hope you find something that inspires you to get out on the water in your boat. Drop us a comment and happy sailing.
Steve and Arwen

Saturday 28 April 2018

Devoran, a potential dinghy cruising destination and Cornish mining history


Devoran, at the upper reaches of one of the Fal tributaries, is an old Victorian quayside. Maintained by the small village (two roads of terraced cottages built of Cornish brown stone, with stunning views across the upper reaches of the estuary and its mudflats and marshes), the quayside includes the old, long abandoned hutchings where copper and tin ore were stored before being loaded onto barges and later small coastal steamers tied up, bound for the smelters in South Wales.


In its heyday, Devoran quayside must have been some place. The Redruth and Chasewater railway arrived at the quay in 1826, replacing the pack horses that bought the copper and tin ore down from the mines inland. Devoran became the principal quay for copper ore on the Fal. Following the railway in 1826, a new town was developed by the Lanhydrock estate – during the 1840’s two long terraced streets appeared; one being commercial with shops, a market house, four pubs, a post office, police station, school, church and chapel. For a time Devoran was the busiest quay in Cornwall, with nearly 100,000 tonnes passing through it in 1853. Several hundred tonnes of copper and tin ore exports and coal imports would be hand barrowed across the quayside whilst rafts of Scandinavian timber would be poled further upriver to be seasoned in ponds, ready for pit props at a later date.





Now the long quayside is grassed over, gorse bushes creep in from the margins and a number of discreetly placed benches are all that is left. The small creek alongside the quayside has silted up although I still thought it would be an excellent dinghy cruising destination on a high spring tide. I could tie up alongside the quay, dry out on flat mud as the tide ebbed and whilst camping isn’t allowed on the quay itself, I’d hope that the village council wouldn’t mid a one-night stay on board under tarp tent.


How did we arrive at the lovely village with its pub, school, chapel and stunning terraced houses? Well we turned south instead of north when we arrived at Bissoe and its bike hire shed and cafĂ©.  We followed the small brook downstream as it meandered and slowly widened to a stream; down through the old industrial heartland, now a nature reserve of clay pit lakes and heathland. We admired butterflies and soaring buzzards, marvelled at the engineering accomplishments of the great western railway engineers who built such monumental viaducts across the Cornish valleys and sat on the banks of the meandering stream where rushes were starting to grow in the warm spring sunshine and river weeds were a verdant green in contrast to the coppery brown muds and gravels below.

From the upper creek at Devoran, the stream widened rapidly to a river. Wading curlew, oyster-catchers and sandpipers strode purposefully along the waterline dipping slender beaks into the brown ooze in search of tasty morsels. On the far bank, fallen branches, weathered silvery grey with exposure to the elements over the years, provided useful roosts for heron and egret. From the small square harbour with its small yachts and boats, sounds of maintenance – a mallet and chisel; then a drill. Essential refit work being done ready for the coming season.  Way to the south, along the eastern bank, large detached houses with long lawns sloped down to the riverside and somewhere around the far corner lay the port of Falmouth; but that seemed a far, far away distance from this sleepy little village basking in the higher than average sunshine temperatures.



Having cycled south, we headed back north, stopping for salted caramel ice creams before navigating the cycle trails across the old mining landscape to the south of Scourrier. Here the landscape showed the scars of its past industrial heritage; huge slate grey spoil tips stained with yellow and copper brown streaks; piles of old waste slate and mine workings; capped mine shafts with their now familiar conical iron lattice frameworks to stop the unwary from a nasty fall. 


On the skyline the old wheal mines, tall round chimneys and the two-story engine houses with their triangular gable end silhouettes. In places abandoned mine buildings provided exploring opportunities. Yesterday was a leisurely 7 miles. Today we did 12. Building up the fitness for the summer, slowly but surely!



Back at the campsite, we sat out in the sun in the lee of the caravan and an old stone wall covered with grasses, low hawthorn hedges and cow parsley; cuppas and the Saturday papers, the sun began its descent in the far west, a deepening but dimming fiery orangery pink ball casting the same colour palette mix across a linear swathe of the silvery grey Atlantic ocean. It was going to be a spectacular sunset from the dining table tonight!




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