Seven-ish hours and a combination of train, bus, and car is what's required to get from London to Cornwall, a long peninsula that stretches out from the United Kingdom's southwest corner into the Atlantic ocean. This anomaly of land has a lush south coast that's moderated by the Gulf Stream to be mild and wet with dense, tropical-like plants. Its north coast is a barren wall of wind-hammered bluffs opening into coves of sandy beaches. Both coasts are magnets for brutal storms, and can be excellent for surfing.
I spent a week during late winter visiting both sides of the peninsula, hosted and guided by the Cornwall-based surf and outdoor brand Finisterre. There I learned that the tip of Cornwall where the two coasts meet has long been known as “Land’s End,” or “End of the Earth.” Or, in Cornish, Penn an Wlas ("end of the land"), and in Latin, Finis Terrae, “end of the earth”—the source of the British company's name. This often harsh location that has retained its remoteness for centuries has shaped Finisterre's distinct identity among a sea of outdoor brands, influencing an approach to making gear that's ideally suited to the most varying and extreme coastal coordinates around the globe.










