The
hills of Exmoor surround Porlock on three sides, with
the heather covered moors cut by deep, often wooded
combes with clear sparkling streams at their base.
The spectacular beauty
of Exmoor is protected by the Exmoor National Park
Authority and the National Trust, with the flora and
fauna on the moor helped by the award-winning purity
of the air. In addition, Porlock Bay has received
EU awards for the cleanliness of the sea-water. Its
unique situation allows Porlock to enjoy a wonderful,
warm and soft climate.
Porlock is a traditional
Exmoor Village with a long history of settlements
existing on or near the site of the existing village,
with stone-age remains only a short distance away.
It is also a working village with shops supplying
all that you need, to be found in the High Street.
You will certainly be sure of a friendly Exmoor welcome
in them all. This will be echoed in the pubs, hotels
and restaurants to be found here.
Porlock Weir, only 2
miles away, is a quaint little harbour with a unique
charm that has to be experienced. It also boasts the
remains of a prehistoric forest, small parts of which
are occasionally visible still at a very low tide,
and it was here that some remains of an Aurochs were
found. These are now on display in the Visitor Centre
in Porlock.
The poets Wordsworth
and Coleridge found Porlock very much to their liking
and indeed Coleridge was interrupted by “a man from
Porlock” whilst writing “Kubla Khan”; the consequence
of which was that he lost his inspiration and never
completed it. In 1798 their friend Robert Southey
stayed at "The Ship Inn" at the bottom of
Porlock Hill. To commemorate the association with
Coleridge, Porlock is the western end of The Coleridge
Way, the newly established walk from Nether Stowey
in the Quantocks to Exmoor.