Wednesday 16 May 2012

Field Trip to Cornish Sea Salt Company

Spent today with the Cornish Sea Salt Company, visiting their sea salt works and looking at the salt making site at Trebarveth as a Lead site within the UK ECOSAL Route of Traditional Salt Making.


The modern sea salt works of the Cornish Sea Salt Company is unfortunately located on private land and is unaccessible for public visits.

The Roman salt making site at Trebarveth, St Keverne on The Lizard Peninsula is located on a coastal footpath. We walked from Coverack. It was excavated in 1969 by David Peacock and an excavation report is published in Cornish Archaeology Vol.8 p47-65.

The remains of the huts and salt hearths are now being eroded by the sea.
See below. Perhaps it would be possible to insert some coastal protection measures here, as have been created at Port Eynon on The Gower, South Wales and at Crosscannonby in Cumbria, to protect this salt making site for future generations.



Also spent time preparing for our salt making demonstration of ancient salt making, using replica ceramic salt pans as might have been used at Trebarveth. Details of our part in Newlyn Art Gallery's Museums at Night event over the night of 19-20 May.



Some delays in our travelling today were caused by local preparations getting ready to receive the Olympic Torch Relay, which arrives at Lands End on the morning of 19 May with its first stop at Newlyn on the morning of our salt making demonstration. Current weather forcast is for rain!

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