Awoke at, yes, you guessed it, same time as always, 7:30. But alone this time? you ask? Au contraire, mein freund. For, with Tim's departure, the critters have come out in their legions to cheer my morning. Most immediately obvious was the fly buzzing incessantly around the tent's interior. There was also the daddy long-legs ambling around on the floor. And not to mention, quite visible from inside, the snail patiently scaling the outside surface of the tent. Good morning, critters.


Our plan for the day? A day walk! Naturally, having come all this way, P&N are keen to see some of the trail, and some of that vaunted rugged Cornwall coastline. I was briefly tempted to take us east, back in the direction of Gwithian just because I hadn't walked that stretch, and I'd already walked the stretch in the other direction, toward Zennor, and I was going to walk it again tomorrow. But of course we should do the nicest walking available to them. So we hoofed it out of town toward Zennor.
The weather was mixed sunshine interspersed with threatening rain. But that notwithstanding, A) I got a picture of a kissing gate properly utilised; and B) when I clambered up on a large rock, my companions actually followed me up! Tim & Charles & Son were never so daft!

Back in town, we moved smartly to the serious business of getting a beer, to crown our day's walk. We then dropped briefly by the Yellow Canary, ostensibly to get directions to the stellar burger place (the name of which I couldn't remember, which complicated the problem of finding it); but with the secondary project of saying goodbye and giving a card to the bookish girl whom I fancied fancied me (but who of course did not she still hasn't written).
We did find the burger joint, but we found it closed. Only mildly disappointed, we ambled back to the water and had pizzas instead on the old reliable patio cafe overlooking the beach, and overlooked by the Tate Gallery. There we sipped and munched and chatted beneath "lovely, wheeling, hovering, scanning gulls". And then I walked with Paul and Nicole up the long hill to their car, and bid them a very fond but melancholy goodbye. And then: fini. I was alone.
I treated myself to one last banana and chocolate pasty on the way back through the old town, before heading up the hill to the camp site. For laundry day.
"Now I sit in the camp site laundry room, wearing only my Gore-Tex trousers, rolled up to the knees [because it was freaking hot]. I am sniffling incessantly as it seems to have become pollen season in St. Ives. Paul and Nicole, the 3rd Shift Crew, have gone off shift. And I am on my own.
It is Sunday. After this, 12 more walking days, and a last travel day home: Penznace, Land's End, St. Michael's Mount, the Isles of Scilly, Lizard Point, Falmouth all of it solo. (Unless, as Tim put it, I make a friend. But somehow I don't feel like going on the prowl tonight. Perhaps I am sneezing too much.)
Off now to find more tissues."



Afterwards I found I was actually still a bit peckish, so I ducked into a shop for a late-night snack, then did the final late-night hill climb. And then did I sleep.
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