Surfing
in the journal.

Llangennith Beach Surfing in Wales
Llangennith Beach on the Gower Peninsula is the longest and most exposed surf beach in south Wales — a three-mile west-facing stretch of sand…

Hells Mouth Surfing in Wales (Porth Neigwl)
Porth Neigwl — usually called Hells Mouth — is a four-mile west-facing bay on the Llyn Peninsula in north-west Wales. It's one of the…

Manorbier Beach Surfing in Wales
Manorbier Beach sits on the south Pembrokeshire coast, three miles east of Tenby — a sheltered south-facing bay backed by Manorbier Castle and the…

Perranporth Beach Surfing in Cornwall
Perranporth is a three-mile north-facing beach on Cornwall's Atlantic coast — a forgiving, accessible surf spot that's been one of the standard learn-to-surf venues…

Praa Sands Surfing in Cornwall
Praa Sands is a mile-long south-facing beach on the south Cornwall coast between Helston and Marazion — one of the few south-coast Cornish beaches…

Sennen Beach Surfing in Cornwall
Sennen Cove is the most westerly surf beach in mainland England — a north-facing bay near Land's End that catches plenty of swell but,…

Gwithian Beach Surfing in Cornwall
Gwithian Beach is part of the three-mile sweep of sand stretching from Godrevy Point south to Hayle on the north Cornwall coast. It’s one…

Fistral Beach Surfing in Newquay, Cornwall
Fistral is the UK's most famous surf beach — a wide, west-facing bay on the north Cornwall coast that catches almost every Atlantic swell…

Bigbury Beach Surfing in Devon
Bigbury-on-Sea sits on the south Devon coast at the mouth of the River Avon, with Burgh Island (and its art-deco hotel) just offshore. The…

Bantham Beach Surfing in Devon
Bantham Beach is part of the south Devon coast at the mouth of the River Avon, two miles east of Bigbury. Together with Bigbury,…