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Curlews Cottage, Looe

Curlews Cottage, Looe

Curlews Cottage, Curlews Cottage, Middle Market Street, Looe, PL13 1AY, United Kingdom

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Property details

Visit England 4 Star GOLD accreditation awarded for 2022 – 2023. Over three floors: 3 bedrooms. 1 x first floor double, 1 x second floor double, 1 x second floor twin. First floor family shower room, additional first floor WC. Open plan living area with kitchen, dining area and sitting area with real flame-effect electric stove. Utility.

Key features & notes

Beach
Bed linen
Broadband/wifi
Cot available
Dishwasher
Fridge/freezer
Heating
Highchair available
Hob
Microwave
Oven
Pub
Roadside parking
Shop
Shower
Towels
Tumble dryer
TV
Washing machine

About where you'll be staying

East Looe is home to twisting alleyways and a bunch of tourist shops, whilst West Looe looks out across the harbour. Looe’s central point, Banjo Pier, can be reached from the quay and is convenient for looking across the bay to Looe Island, which can be walked to occasionally at very low tides. The sandy Looe beach adjoins the pier and is very popular with families. Children can make the most of the rock pool at Hannafore.
Nearby: CyclingFishingGardensWalkingWaterWatersports
See More Holiday Cottages In Cornwall

Bird watching in Cornwall

With its sweeping beaches, rugged moorlands, hidden woodlands, and rolling countryside estates, Cornwall is a superb destination if you want to spend some time bird watching on holiday.

One of the best spots is Hayle Estuary Nature Reserve, managed by the RSPB. This rich wetland habitat attracts a variety of birdlife, including teals, wigeons, and goosanders. While winter offers the highest numbers, spring and early summer also bring migrant waders such as oystercatchers, dunlins, and whimbrels to the tidal pools and marshes.

Marazion Marsh, also managed by the RSPB and overlooking the iconic St Michael’s Mount near Penzance, boasts Cornwall’s largest reedbed. It’s a haven for species like chiffchaffs, Cetti’s warblers, little egrets, and grey herons. Bitterns are regularly recorded here, and birds of prey, including sparrowhawks and buzzards, are often spotted too.

For a variety of songbirds and raptors, head to the Rame Peninsula near Cawsand. This beautiful area of tidal creeks, sandy beaches, and peaceful farmland attracts goldcrests, firecrests, warblers, and buntings. You may also glimpse birds of prey such as hobbies, merlins, peregrine falcons, and, if you’re lucky, the rare hen harrier.

At Stithians Lake, a large reservoir, breeding birds like little grebes, coots, and moorhens are common. Waders such as greenshanks, ruffs, and curlew sandpipers can also be seen foraging along the muddy banks.

Not far from St Ives, St Ives Island, actually a headland between Porthmeor and Porthgwidden beaches, is a top spot for seabird watching, especially in autumn. Huge flocks of skuas, terns, gannets, fulmars, and auks pass by, alongside waders like purple sandpipers, whimbrels, and turnstones.

Finally, no trip to Cornwall would be complete without exploring Bodmin Moor. This dramatic granite moorland, scattered with ancient ruins and rich in wildlife, is especially rewarding in spring and summer, when skylarks, stonechats, wheatears, and sedge warblers arrive to breed. In autumn and winter, the moor plays host to thousands of golden plovers, along with snipes and the more elusive jack snipe.

Nature on your doorstep

Fal-Ruan
24.5 miles

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