
The cove provides tolerable shelter in moderate offshore conditions from west round to north. Positioned in the southwest end of a clean bay with gradually descending depths to the shore, the approach is straightforward during daylight and at any stage of the tide.
Keyfacts for Portscatho
Facilities
Nature
Considerations
Protected sectors
Approaches
Shelter
Last modified
March 19th 2019 Summary* Restrictions apply
A tolerable location with straightforward access.Facilities
Nature
Considerations
Position and approaches
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Haven position
This is in a depth of about 3 metres 150 metres to the northeast of Portscatho's small pier.
What is the initial fix?
The following Portscatho Initial Fix will set up a final approach:

What are the key points of the approach?
Offshore details are available in southwestern England’s coastal overview from Start Point to Lizard Point 
- A central approach from the southeast steering for Gerrans Church, a good seamark for Portscatho, presents no issue.
- Vessels approaching from Veryan Bay need to navigate around Gull Rock and The Whelps.
- Vessels approaching from southwest should be aware that races and overfalls, called The Bizzies, can occur over an underwater ledge extending from Greeb Point.
Not what you need?
Click the 'Next' and 'Previous' buttons to progress through neighbouring havens in a coastal 'clockwise' or 'anti-clockwise' sequence. Below are the ten nearest havens to Portscatho for your convenience.
Ten nearest havens by straight line charted distance and bearing:
- Saint Mawes - 2.2 nautical miles SW
- Falmouth - 4 nautical miles WSW
- The River Fal - 5.6 nautical miles NNW
- Gillan Creek - 7.4 nautical miles SW
- Helford River - 7.9 nautical miles SW
- Gorran Haven - 7.9 nautical miles ENE
- Portmellon - 8.7 nautical miles NE
- Mevagissey - 9 nautical miles NE
- Coverack - 10.7 nautical miles SSW
- Charlestown - 12.2 nautical miles NE
These havens are ordered by straight line charted distance and bearing, and can be reordered by compass direction or coastal sequence:
- Saint Mawes - 2.2 miles SW
- Falmouth - 4 miles WSW
- The River Fal - 5.6 miles NNW
- Gillan Creek - 7.4 miles SW
- Helford River - 7.9 miles SW
- Gorran Haven - 7.9 miles ENE
- Portmellon - 8.7 miles NE
- Mevagissey - 9 miles NE
- Coverack - 10.7 miles SSW
- Charlestown - 12.2 miles NE
Chart
What's the story here?

Image: Michael Harpur
Portscatho is located on the Roseland Peninsula and tucked into the south-westerly corner of Gerrans Bay of which it is the main village. Set into the southern end of a small east-facing cove, located between Pencabe and Pednvaden, it has a small pier on its southern side that gives protection to the drying foreshore. This provides protection for a drying harbour, from which a few part-time boats of less than 5 metres work their pots and nets. The fishing village adjoins Gerrans which is in such close proximity that the two villages have effectively coalesced.
The harbour is run by the local council and they provide seasonal moorings. For further information contact Simon Taffnder, 1000 - 1230 Mon, Wed, Fri,
How to get in?

Image: Michael Harpur
Gerrans Bay is entered between Greeb Point and Nare Head. The bay is 3½ miles wide and 1½ miles deep with soundings from 25 metres in the centre gradually decreasing to the shore. The bay is clear of dangers but at low water, the rocks dry out to 200 metres offshore.

Image: Michael Harpur
The spire of the church standing in Gerrans, above Portscatho and 2½ miles southwest of Nare Head, is conspicuous from seaward. Keeping the spire midway between Nare Head and Gull Rock on 248° T leads through the passage.
Those passing south of Gull Rock need to navigate around The Whelps. This is a covered reef with two detached rocky patches that mostly dry to 4.6 metres, and which extends 600 metres south-southwest from Gull Rock. At its southern extremity is the outer Whelp, which is the larger of the two detached rocks, with the middle Whelp being located about midway between it and Gull Rock. Both rocks may be approached to within 200 metres in good conditions.

Image: Michael Harpur
A central approach from the southeast presents no issue. Gerrans Church, with its 77 metres high spire located a ¼ inland, is clearly visible from offshore making a good seamark for Portscatho.

Image: Michael Harpur

Image: Michael Harpur

Image: Michael Harpur
Land at the quay or on the beach. Those intending on landing at the quay should note that it is entered through a channel. This has been cut through the rocks around the head of the pier to enable half-tide access. The rocks on either side of it dry to about 3 metres. The comings and goings of local boats keeps the seaweed clear of its approaches so that the exposed sand makes the path highly visible.

Image: Michael Harpur
It is also possible to sound in 300 metres northward, under Pednvaden, and anchor in sand. Land on the sandy Porthcurnick beach or come south to Portscatho. At low tide, Porthcurnick has acres of flat sand and being a National Trust owned beach it has toilet facilities.
Why visit here?
Portscatho, or more correctly 'Portscatha' derives its name from the conjunction of the old Cornish words of Porth and scathow. The word scathow being the plural of schath meaning 'large rowing-boat', so the name means 'harbour' or 'cove' of 'rowing boats'.
Image: Michael Harpur
Protected from the prevailing winds the little cove of Portscatho is likely to have been used for launching fishing boats since mediaeval times. The small harbour that is seen today developed during the 18th and 19th-century pilchard fishing boom. 'The pilchard' as Alan Kittridge noted in his 1989 'Cornwall's Maritime Heritage',' was responsible for the development of virtually all of Cornwall's picturesque fishing villages and coves'. This included Portscatho which was in its time one of the busiest pilchard ports on Cornwall's south coast.

Image: Michael Harpur
It was on the little oily fish that the community was built, the fishermen, the women and children who packed the fish for export, the boatbuilders, the rope makers and the men who made nets, as well as the smiths, masons and carpenters who built the cellars. An 1841 map shows two fish cellars, and a coastguard watch-house was noted on an 1880 map. The original harbour was protected by just its naturally occurring rocks and it was not until 1891 that the small quay was constructed.

Image: Michael Harpur
Yet, guided by shouts from ‘Huers’ from the high surrounding cliffs, the small natural harbour brought in enormous quantities of fish. During the great catch of 1908, when the pilchards were almost overpoweringly abundant, the fishermen worked continuously through several days to land four and a half million. But as was well noted by Fortescue Hitchins and Samuel Drew in their 1824 'The History of Cornwall' research piece ... 'few things are more precarious than the adventures in the pilchard fisheries', it was a boom-and-bust occupation. The great hauls were a thing of legends but the fortunes of the fishing seasons could so easily fluctuate from one year to the next. As was the case with almost all other coastal Cornish villages, the community had a side income from smuggling, to even out their highly unpredictable earnings.

Image: Michael Harpur
Portscatho was one of the last locations to maintain its smuggling activities along this coast. It continued well into the 1840s when Cornwall’s black market economy had all but come to a close. Being so remote and having the benefit of the adjoining hills, where scouts could reliably see the approach of any revenue cutters, it avoided the clampdown that put an end to most other ports. It was only after 1841, when Prime Minister Robert Peel killed it off by eliminating tariffs on more than 600 products, that Portscatho let go of the rough trade.

Image: Michael Harpur
The village has all the characteristics of a traditional Cornish fishing village, including a harbour wall reportedly one of the county’s largest granite breakwaters, and surrounded by many small stone buildings. All set below a rising hinterland with a higher village that has streets, a church and many houses that are larger than the usual cottages. The latter being set well away from the invasive smell of the oily fish, the proceeds from which financed their construction.

Image: Michael Harpur
Today the two villages of Gerrans and Portscatho have now virtually merged into one, although they have retained their individual identities and there is still some local rivalry between the two. But Portscatho's fishing days are all but over. Today there are only three part-time boats of less than 5 metres working pots and nets from here. The sea still yields a harvest, but the larger catch since the 19th century has been holidaymakers, who return year after year to this small holiday resort. Its beaches, cafés and tiny harbour tend to attract an arty crowd, the Portscatho Society of Artists was formed here in 1984. It has the air of a village recently found by tourists, but not yet taken over.

Image: Tim Green
The same shelter that attracts boaters makes for great family appeal with safe swimming, ample rock pools to explore, and fine sandy beaches. It also offers interesting walks with an abundance of wildflowers. Much of Gerrans Bay is surrounded by National Trust land and the surrounding countryside of the Roseland Peninsula is perhaps some of the most beautiful on the Coastal Path. Portscatho represents England as it was and should be. However most of the people here are holidaymakers with the bulk of the housing being for rent or second homes. This makes it is a delight in the season, but unfortunately it means that the locals are priced out of owning properties so the village is absolutely dead in the middle of winter.

for a second home
Image: Michael Harpur
From a boating perspective, being so close to Falmouth and affording shelter from the prevailing south-westerly winds, it is a very popular days sail for many of its boatmen. It makes for a good anchorage in westerly winds as a ridge of land to the south and west of the villages protects it from the worst of the prevailing winds. So it makes for a wonderful out of the way location for the coastal cruiser, except of course when the 'east wind doth blow'.
What facilities are available?
Toilets near the beach. In the village centre, you’ll find several shops including a butcher and a decent grocery/off licence. It is possible to buy locally caught fish and locally grown garden produce as well as a locally produced crafts. The Plume of Feathers pub serves up St Austell Ales and good pub grub. Five minutes walk up the hill to Gerrans provides another good pub, the Royal Standard.With thanks to:
eOceanicAerial Overview 1
Aerial Overview 2
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