Rss Feed
Tweeter button
Facebook button
Linkedin button
Digg button
Stumbleupon button
Youtube button

Cornwall Kitesurf Guide No.2: Hawker’s Cove

May 17th, 2011, 10:15H · Topics: Cornwall kitesurf spot guide, Kitesurfing, Spot guide · Print

Ultimate all-terrain with flat water bias

Head to Padstow and take the Crugmeer turning.

Low tide Hawker's, waiting for the lagoons to fill in

Wave rating: 2/5

Flat water rating: 5/5

Hawker’s Cove in the Camel Estuary is one of the most unique kitesurfing spots I’ve seen anywhere. On its day, it’s a real flat water paradise and the water can be as clear as any Egyptian lagoon; as you blast across the flats, look down and see the turbulence trails in the sand from the wake of your board.

You can sail and launch here at any state of tide, though pure low tide means a massive walk to the water and at high tide it’s not at its best. It’s during the middle of the tidal curve that all sorts of shallow lagoons appear, giving perfect flat water freestyle conditions. You can easily find a spot of water deep enough to try your most adventurous moves so it stays pretty safe.

Hawker's just before high tide. Thanks to Alex B for the pic.

An hour or so before it fills up completely, waves start breaking over sand bars near to the river. Although you wouldn’t exactly get pitted at Hawker’s Cove, on a windy day those walls are definitely worth a slap or two on the wave board.

Wakeskate action in a shallow lagoon

Launching

Another easy launch. At low tide, I suggest pumping up then walking down to the water’s edge, then self launching.

Winds

North and North East winds give classic conditions, as do South East winds. Anything with West in it or pure East is a real shocker so avoid.

Restrictions

During July and August, no kiting between 10am and 6pm in the Camel Estuary.

Low tide overview of Hawker's on the left, facing north. Access via the left hand corner.

NEXT GUIDE: Watergate Bay

Tags: , , ,

  1. 1 derren May 27th, 2011 12:02H

    great guide. heading to cornwall soon. Hawkers and daymer appear to be the same spot more or less. how does one decide which side of the estuary to set up on? Tide dependent? Cheers!

  2. 2 Dom Moore May 27th, 2011 12:16H

    Thanks Derren. It’s a question of wind direction – touch of west? Head to Daymer. East? Hawker’s. If it’s straight northerly doesn’t matter but they are a half hour drive from one another, so your proximity to each launch will be a deciding factor.

  3. 3 Dano October 6th, 2011 23:20H

    Amazing site Dom, thanks for the info makes being a newby bearable. I’m heading to Daymer and Hawkers in November whats the riding like then?

  4. 4 Dom Moore October 7th, 2011 7:17H

    Thanks for dropping by Dano, glad you’re finding the guide helpful! :)

    In November it can be hit and miss like anywhere, but if these northerly winds persist Hawker’s and Daymer will be very good. It’s usually dry and sunny but cold on a northerly in Cornwall.

    If it’s more north west, Daymer. More north east, Hawker’s. Daymer is best low tide till about an hour or two before high, Hakwer’s is best a couple hours off low onwards.

    Like all spots, best not to kite it alone, but if it’s on, most likely you’ll see other kiters there. Have fun!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Your photo in comments, use Gravatar
Please include http://
Note: XHTML is allowed.

Subscribe to this comment feed via RSS

Surf your life away, or let the Man bleed you dry drop by drop

Switch to our mobile site