Reflections on business, seasonality and operational life from West Cornwall
Entering the Season
May in West Cornwall is always an interesting time.
The weather improves, the roads become busier, suppliers start running harder, rotas stretch, and businesses begin shifting into a different gear. You can feel the season changing before the numbers fully arrive.
For hospitality and seasonal businesses, this transition is familiar. There is excitement in it, but also pressure. Preparation starts meeting reality.
Over the years I have spent a lot of time around businesses operating in these conditions. Hotels, restaurants, cafés and independent operators trying to balance growth, staffing, customer expectations, cashflow and exhaustion — often all at once.
What I have noticed is that businesses are usually discussed in terms of performance, growth or crisis, but much less often in terms of health.
Health feels like a more useful word to me.
Not just financial health, but operational health:
- how pressure is handled
- whether systems hold together
- whether communication works
- whether the business can recover properly after busy periods
- whether growth is strengthening the business or quietly damaging it
- whether people are permanently operating at capacity
In seasonal parts of the world like Cornwall, rhythm matters. Businesses expand and contract. Energy changes. Demand changes. Good operators learn to prepare, adapt and recover.
That idea feels increasingly relevant beyond hospitality as well.
Many businesses now operate without proper pauses between periods of pressure. Recovery is shortened or delayed, strain accumulates quietly, and over time a constant state of urgency begins to feel normal.
The aim of these notes is simply to reflect more carefully on the realities of seasonal business life.
Not as a consultancy blog filled with advice and trends, but as an ongoing reflection on business health, operational pressure, resilience and the realities of running seasonal businesses.
Some articles will be practical. Some observational. Some will probably ask more questions than they answer.
The aim is simply to think more carefully about what makes businesses genuinely healthy over time.
Starting in Cornwall feels appropriate.
Seasonality is visible here. You can see the consequences of preparation, overextension, adaptation and recovery playing out every year. The landscape itself works in cycles, and businesses do too, whether they acknowledge it or not.
As we move into another busy season, this feels like the right time to start paying closer attention to those patterns.



