10 days tour

Guernsey Islands - Channel Island Way, 10 Days

Guernsey Islands - Channel Island Way, 10 Days

This tour includes:

Meals

9 breakfasts

Accommodation

9 nights accommodation guesthouses, hotels or pubs on a twin share basis with ensuite facilities, where available The hotels described are our normal choice of accommodation, however if these are not available then alternatives are used and if these are of a different standard and thus different price, you will be informed at the time of booking. Baths / Showers: Many rooms with ensuite or private facilities have a shower rather than a bath, usually because of limited space as well as a desire to save water which is quite important on the islands. Some accommodations may however have a separate room in the building where a bath is available to guests. We will try to accommodate double room requests, however the majority of the rooms booked will be twin share.

Others

Information pack including route notes & maps Emergency hotline

Not included:

Guide

Guide is not included.

Others

Lunch, Dinner and drinks Entrance fees Travel to the start and from the end point of the trip Travel insurance Personal expenses such as laundry and phone calls Excess Luggage Inter-island flights and ferries small local payment for return luggage transfer from Sark ferry to Sark accommodation Bus to Cobo Hotel A supplement will apply if you are travelling solo or book a single room Guide - this is a self guided holiday

Insurance

Insurance is not included.

Optional

Other activities and services not included.

Transport

One piece of luggage per person transferred from Inn to Inn, not exceeding 20kg, on Guernsey mainland

Flights

International flights are not included.

Start planning your experience

Itinerary of your trip Guernsey Islands - Channel Island Way, 10 Days

  • Day 1 Day 1: Arrive Guernsey
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 1: Arrive Guernsey

      Fly or ferry to Guernsey, St. Peter Port. The Islandโ€™s capital is a bustling, friendly place with a row of attractive harbours and marinas set under a steeply terraced townscape with some remarkably well preserved buildings especially from the 1700 and 1800s. Visit Castle Cornet the 800 year old fortress, the restored Victorian Gardens, the house where Victor Hugo stayed, or just relax along the promenade with its array of pubs and restaurants. At certain high points in the town you can see Herm, Sark, Alderney and the coast of Normandy. Accommodation: La Piette Hotel is family owned. It dates back to the 1700โ€™s with many of its original architectural features remaining including a magnificent carved wooden fireplace, rumoured to have come from the town church in 1870.

  • Day 2 Day 2: St. Peter Port To Petit Bot Bay 14Km/8.7 Miles, 4.5 Hours
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 2: St. Peter Port To Petit Bot Bay 14Km/8.7 Miles, 4.5 Hours

      Starting from the โ€˜Liberation Memorialโ€™ marking the end of the German occupation, head south out of town along the coast road passing some tidal bathing pools before the way follows a climbing path through the artillery positions of Victorian Fort George. More gently you wind through what in late April โ€“ May are beautiful bluebell woods, dropping down to attractive Fermain Bay where you could have a swim or refreshments at the cafรฉ. The Path becomes rougher, undulating around headlands, including St. Martins, Jerbourg and Icart Points and a gorgeous series of bays. There are views across to several sea stacks called the โ€˜Pea Stacksโ€™ and you occasionally pass Nazi strong-points. Just when you are ready for an afternoon tea you reach Moulin Huet Bay with its tea room. In the coves below, Renoir did a series of paintings. The undulations finally take you down to โ€˜Petit Bot Bayโ€™ a pretty shingle beach. The coastal walk finishes here, but the accommodation is another 25 minutes walk inland in the parish of St. Martin. Accommodation: We use a popular country pub, The Captains. The pub has a great menu and sometimes folk music. Just down the road, there is the possibility of an upgrade to another pub hotel.

  • Day 3 Day 3: Petit Bot Bay To Cobo Bay 25Km/15.5 Miles, 7 Hours. There Is An Option To Walk To Perelle Bay 18.8Km/11.6 Miles, 5.5 Hours. Then Bus To Cobo Bay.
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 3: Petit Bot Bay To Cobo Bay 25Km/15.5 Miles, 7 Hours. There Is An Option To Walk To Perelle Bay 18.8Km/11.6 Miles, 5.5 Hours. Then Bus To Cobo Bay.

      Continue along the undulating path which involves numerous steps in places. Passing the pretty National Trust land and seascapes near to โ€˜Le Gouffreโ€™ and then along a particularly wild and rocky coastline dotted with occasional watch towers. Heading westerly, some huge fortifications come into view - reinforced concrete direction finding towers used by the Nazis to direct their artillery at allied shipping. You will come across a restored trench system with a 22 cm artillery piece in its pit. There are views inland to Torteval Church which was used as a โ€˜Seamarkโ€™ so that pre radar, sailors could locate themselves and then out to sea there is Hanois lighthouse which protects shipping from the dangerous reefs. Leaving the cliffs walking into Portelet Harbour, you can enjoy your first extensive sweeps of sand and possible swimming around the bay. It may be worth visiting the interesting โ€˜Cup and Saucerโ€™ fortress of Fort Grey which is now a shipwreck museum. From here it is another long sandy beach up to Lโ€™Eree headland passing Lihou Island and another trench and tower system. Note that due to limited accommodation at Perelle Bay (unless you have a minimum 2 night stay) it will be necessary to bus or walk (1.5 hours) to the hotel at Cobo Bay. Accommodation: You will stay at the well regarded hotel in Cobo Bay. The hotel has a beautiful location with possible sunset views and a great bar restaurant that spills outside onto a terrace on warm days.

  • Day 4 Day 4: Perelle Bay To St. Peter Port 29.4Km/18.25 Miles, 7 Hours.
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 4: Perelle Bay To St. Peter Port 29.4Km/18.25 Miles, 7 Hours.

      This is a different day to the first two, it is a long walk, but unlike the others it is relatively flat allowing you to cover distance faster as you circumnavigate the bays and promontories to ultimately complete your walk around Guernsey. The route leaves Perelle and enters Vazon Bay, a beautiful sandy beach that you could follow for a couple of kms if the tide is out. The bay is popular with surfers. You then come to huge Fort Hommet, an interesting site with a huge Nazis searchlight and battery station built within a Victorian Fort and pre Victorian Martello tower. There is another long stretch of sandy beach at Cobo Bay before passing some smaller bays and walking around the Rousse Headland into Le Grande Havre. Until the early 1800s, this marked the point of a separate island now filled in so that you can continue your walk with dry feet. The route heads round Chouet headland passing gorgeous โ€˜Baie de la Jaonneuseโ€™ and then extensive โ€˜Pembroke Bayโ€™ with its antitank wall. Passing more forts of differing eras, the path becomes more remote before heading south again, reaching the cafรฉ at picturesque Bordeaux Harbour before the last few kms into St. Peter Port. If you wish to shorten the distance with use of your map, you can bypass some of the peninsular forts saving approximately 5 km. If you prefer, you could end the walk on the coastal road and take an hourly bus into St. Peter Port. Accommodation: Return to your first nights accommodation La Piette Hotel. You will spend a further 2 nights here.

  • Day 5 Day 5: Ferry To Herm. Around Island Walk Return To Guernsey 6.6Km/4.1 Miles, 2 Hours
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 5: Ferry To Herm. Around Island Walk Return To Guernsey 6.6Km/4.1 Miles, 2 Hours

      Herm is a gem of an island, no big forts, just an isle with a short cliff top walk followed by long sections on sandy bays and grassy commons, passing a couple of beach cafรฉs. It is a 25 minute hop across on the ferry and the walk is short giving you enough time for a swim, or an extended lunch at the popular โ€˜Mermaid Tavernโ€™. You may see puffins at โ€˜Puffin Bayโ€™ and sometimes seals hang out on the northern beaches. You can also walk up the spinal road and take the woodland walk to the buildings around the St. Tugualโ€™s chapel. Afternoon ferry back to Guernsey. You may choose to stay at the โ€™White House Hotelโ€™ in Herm, in this case you will need to take your own luggage onto the ferry and request with us.

  • Day 6 Day 6: Ferry To Sark. Island Walk, Stay On Sark 16 Km/10 Miles, 4-5 Hours
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 6: Ferry To Sark. Island Walk, Stay On Sark 16 Km/10 Miles, 4-5 Hours

      Pack your things in the morning to take on the ferry to Sark. This is a larger boat than for Herm and you can book the crossings online. The ferry takes 45-50 minutes. Sark is in its own time-warp. It is a very special island, there are no cars, only tractors and horse carts and no street lighting. Due to this and its island position, the International Dark-Sky Association designated Sark as Europeโ€™s first Dark Sky Community and the first Dark Sky Island in the world (2011).This recognises that Sark is sufficiently clear of light pollution to allow naked-eye astronomy. It also means that you should bring a good torch! Sark has a quasi-feudal system of government under a Seigneur although they have recently tried to make it more democratic.This harks back to the late mediaeval period when a number of original families were โ€˜planted โ€˜on the island. Some of their houses still remain. Due to the nature of the island, geography and history of landownership, there is no continuous path right the way around it. Here the Channel Island Way does a kind of figure of eight. You can decide whether to do the walk today, half of it, or wait for better weather tomorrow. The walk takes you across a chasm via โ€˜La Coupeeโ€™ a dramatic walk way to Little Sark that will one day be breached by the sea. On little Sark drop down to the site of the silver mines at Port Gorey, enjoy a cream tea at โ€˜La Sablonnerieโ€™ then walk round the wild coast up at the northern end of the island. You may have enough time to visit the gardens of โ€˜La Seigneurieโ€™ before finding your overnight accommodation. Accommodation: La Marguerite Guesthouse, this is a comfortable family run guesthouse.

  • Day 7 Day 7: Continue Island Exploration On Sark
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 7: Continue Island Exploration On Sark

      More time to explore the natural wonders of Sark and the parts of the island you missed yesterday. You could do half of yesterdayโ€™s walk today, or all of it if the weather had been too bad. Otherwise you could hire a bike or take a horse cart ride through the island. The horse drivers have to pass a driving test and have a great island Knowledge. Top speed 10 mph/16 kph. Chill out on the sea cliffs, visit โ€˜La Seigneurieโ€™ gardens, the Sark Museum and one of several great cafes and restaurants.

  • Day 8 Day 8: Ferry To Guernsey. Transfer To The Airport And Take A Flight To Alderney
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 8: Ferry To Guernsey. Transfer To The Airport And Take A Flight To Alderney

      In the morning take the morning ferry back from Sark to Guernsey. Make your own way to the airport. We recommend a mid-afternoon flight to Alderney in the small dornier aircraft, just in case the ferry is delayed. Hopefully you will get great views of the islands on this 20 minute flight. Catch a taxi to your accommodation in St. Anne for two nights. Settle in and look around the town or perhaps walk down to the harbour at Braye for a seafood dinner. Alderney, home of purple post boxes and blonde hedgehogs, is the most remote and perhaps wildest of the accessible islands on the โ€™Channel Island Wayโ€™. It has some of the best wildlife especially in terms of bird viewing. The coastal path is beautiful with some great cliff walks and a few sandy bays and coves for good measure. There is also the dark history of the island, the damage done to it by the Nazis in World War II and the legacy of the concentration and labour camps which although small by continental standards, are perhaps not commemorated as well as they could be. Accommodation: Two nights in St.Anne we use a couple of sister hotels across the cobbled road from each other with pleasant ensuite rooms. One doubles as a local pub.

  • Day 9 Day 9: From St. Anne, Walk Around Alderney; 22Km / 13.65 Miles, 5.5 Hours
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 9: From St. Anne, Walk Around Alderney; 22Km / 13.65 Miles, 5.5 Hours

      The walk takes you out to some dramatic locations before a descent and steep ascent to a point where you overlook โ€˜Les Etacsโ€™ and the vast Gannet colony. Continue passing German artillery positions to bypass the causeway to Fort Conque on its island. This is a private site but just round the headland you arrive at Fort Tourgis. Continue past Crabby Bay to the harbour at Braye which has the longest sea wall in the UK. Itโ€™s an attractive spot with fishing boats and cafes. A stretch across sandy Braye Bay brings you to Fort Albert, a huge Victorian fort designed to protect what was soon to be an obsolete, uncompleted naval harbour at Braye. There are some interesting Nazi trenches and look-out posts down towards the sea if you look for them. The trail bends southerly around the island, passing coves and a lighthouse arriving at Longis Bay. This is the site of a bird watching centre and a medieval structure called โ€˜The Nunneryโ€™ which has a history going back to Roman times. Climb back up the cliffs via Essex Castle to complete the island loop.

  • Day 10 Day 10: Depart After Breakfast
    • 12:00 am - 11:59 pm

      Day 10: Depart After Breakfast

      Take a convenient flight to Return to Guernsey and depart Guernsey

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Experience Style

Experience Style

Mixed

There will be challenging activities such as hiking, biking, canyoning and trekking, but youโ€™re also going to have other means of transportation and relaxed moments to just chill.

Accomodation level

Accomodation level

Medium

This accommodation includes essential services like a hot shower, electricity, and a nice and comfy bed.

Experience Type

Experience Type

Small Group

Youโ€™ll be accompanied by a small group of travelers just like you.

Physical Rating

Physical Rating

Average

There are several physical activities that last from 2 to 6 hours in easy terrains, low altitude flats, or water experiences. Please ask if youโ€™re not sure this applies to you.

Age range

Age range

Min: 2 / Max: 99

Age range allowed for this experience.

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