The Great Outdoors – July 2019

(Ben Green) #1

A BEGINNERS GUIDE TO GUERNSEY


St Peter Port to Jerbourg
This first leg of the walk was a six-mile
jaunt to Jerbourg point, the most
south-easterly part of the island. It gave us
a good taste of Guernsey’s three top
features: rugged coastline with impossibly
pristine bays; old military relics with a
story or two to tell; and a unique cuisine
conjured from fresh, local sources and
years of French influence. 
As predicted by the Tourist Information
advisor, the path was easy to find from the
port and, after passing the enticing
rock-hewn bathing pools at La Vallette, it
took us up into the woodland overlooking
St Peter Port. The sky was overcast yet the air
was moist with spring warmth. Aside from
the distant hum of a plane and the echo
of renovations taking place at a sprawling
nearby mansion, our journey was peaceful. 
The first of the military relics is Clarence
Battery. The island’s military headquarters
from the 1780s and throughout the
Napoleonic wars, it was repurposed by the
German Luftwaffe as their radar station
when the entire island was occupied during
WWII. The building is vastly overgrown
now, with the former magazine stores
covered in grass and the surrounding area
shrouded in woodland.
The coast path took us up and up again
on long stone steps, through sycamore, ash
and elm woods. Then it opened out into a
magical dell covered in just-past-their best
bluebells – as well as less familiar ‘white bells’



  • and we wondered if perhaps we’d walked
    into a fairytale. The air was perfectly still
    and moist with a faint garlicky smell. Then
    the woodland opened out again into sea
    views and my ears were filled with the ever-
    present breath-like sound of the swash and
    backwash of the waves massaging the rocks
    below. The bluebells stayed with us, flanking
    our way like crowds at a royal procession
    and ushered us down into Fermain Bay.
    Here we had our first indication of the
    ‘tasty’ part of the walk: the vast menu at the
    award-winning Fermain Bay beach café –
    featuring smoked salmon, prawn and crab
    sandwiches, steak on ciabatta, Cajun
    pan-fried salmon sandwiches – and a cake
    menu and wine list which each run to an
    entire side of A4. 
    Fuelled by banoffee pie, we left the
    seclusion of the bay behind and pushed
    on – up and down as the undulations of the
    cliff path dictated – our city legs stretching
    into proper use. The deciduous woodland
    was replaced by pinewoods and, as late
    afternoon wore on, the clouds dispersed and
    the sunlight picked out the pigments on


62 The Great Outdoors July 2019

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