Hayle
Hayle is a town, civil parish as well as cargo port in west Cornwall, United Kingdom. It is positioned at the mouth of the Hayle River (which discharges right into St Ives Bay) and is roughly 7 miles (11 kilometres) northeast of Penzance. Hayle parish was developed in 1888 from part of the currently inoperative Phillack parish, with which it was later on combined in 1935, and bundled part of St Erth in 1937. The contemporary parish shares boundaries with St Ives to the west, St Erth to the south, Gwinear as well as Gwithian in the eastern, and is bounded to the north by the Celtic Sea. Hayle's setting by the sea and its 3 miles of golden sandy coastlines enabled it to create as a vacation destination. Indeed, Hayle still has much holiday lodging. The dune or Towans are the favoured location for a variety of vacation villages and caravan as well as camping sites. The Gwithian coastline near Godrevy is attractive and also a prominent area for water-related sports including searching, windsurfing as well as body-boarding.