Trebetherick Explained

Country:England
Map Type:Cornwall
Static Image Name:Trebetherick viewed from inland.JPG
Static Image Caption:Trebetherick from the south
Coordinates:50.5652°N -4.9192°W
Official Name:Trebetherick
Cornish Name:Trebedrek
Population:1,449
Population Ref:(2001 Census, includes Polzeath)
Region:South West England
Post Town:WADEBRIDGE
Postcode District:PL27
Postcode Area:PL
Dial Code:01208
Os Grid Reference:SW934782

Trebetherick (Cornish: Trebedrek) is a village on the north coast of Cornwall. It is situated on the east side of the River Camel estuary approximately 6miles north of Wadebridge and NaNmiles south of Polzeath.[1]

Trebetherick straddles the Polzeath to Wadebridge road and extends west to Daymer Bay and northwest to Trebetherick Point, a rocky headland in the estuary, where the remains of shipwrecks can be seen on the foreshore. The National Trust owns land adjacent to Trebetherick Point.

Geography

South of Trebetherick Point is Daymer Bay with a sandy beach sheltered from the Atlantic. The beach provides safe bathing for holidaying families and is also popular with windsurfers.

At the south end of Daymer Bay Brea Hill rises to 62m (203feet) with several tumuli at the summit.

Behind Daymer Bay's sand dunes and south of Trebetherick is the St Enodoc Golf Club's golf course. Between its fairways is St Enodoc Church, a small church with a bent steeple. It lies considerably below the current surrounding ground level, having been excavated in 1863 after being completely buried by drifting sand.

Trebetherick Point, a headland to the west of the village, is designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest for its geology. The headland contain deposits from the Quaternary period as well as various slates.[2]

History

Legend has it that St Petroc first landed in Trebetherick before crossing the River Camel to Hawkers Cove.[3]

John Betjeman

As a child, John Betjeman (who would later become Poet Laureate) enjoyed family holidays in Trebetherick and he returned there often as an adult. The surrounding area and its churches, railways and landscape (indeed, Cornwall in general) are celebrated in his work.

Betjeman's poem Greenaway describes the stretch of coast at Trebetherick between Daymer Bay and Polzeath where he often walked. It begins:

I know so well this turfy mile,

These clumps of sea-pink withered brown,

The breezy cliff, the awkward stile,

The sandy path that takes me down.

Another poem, Trebetherick, celebrates the area and also reveals Betjeman's familiarity with, and affection for, this part of the Cornish coast:

We used to picnic where the thrift

Grew deep and tufted to the edge;

We saw the yellow foam-flakes drift

In trembling sponges on the ledge

Below us, till the wind would lift

Them up the cliff and o'er the hedge.

Later in life, Betjeman bought a house called 'Treen' in Daymer Lane, Trebetherick, where he died on 19 May 1984, aged 77. He is buried half a mile away at St Enodoc's Church, a place he commemorated in his poem Sunday Afternoon Service thus:

So grows the tinny tenor faint or loud

And all things draw towards St. Enodoc.

John Betjeman's grave is on the right immediately inside the entrance gate to St Enodoc's churchyard.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 200 Newquay & Bodmin
  2. Web site: Trebetherick Point. Natural England. 25 October 2011. 1986.
  3. Book: Darke , Jo . Cornish landscapes. Opus books. 1983. 59. 0-7134-4187-9.