FOR YOUR DAILY DOSE OF DORSET ENTER YOUR EMAIL IN THE BOX ON THE RIGHT!
SIDMOUTH-A long and mainly pebbly beach with sand at Jacobs Ladder to the west. Here you can find rock pools at low tide to explore. Wide traditional seafront ends with the distinctive red-hued Triassic cliffs.
Ladram Bay |
WESTON MOUTH-Only accessible via footpath from the village of Weston. It is a peaceful and isolated beach. Isolated enough to be a popular beach for naturists. It is listed as one of nineteen nudist beaches in the UK.
Beer |
BRANSCOMBE-A lovely wide, wild strand of shingle. Not too wild, though...The Sea Shanty serves everything from fry-ups through to cream teas throughout the day.
BEER-Small, picturesque cove. Under the chalk cliffs are beach cafes serving everything from all day breakfasts to homemade cake. After you’ve had your fill, laze away the afternoon in one of the rows of deckchairs while staring at the little fishing boats puttering towards the horizon or drawn up on the pebbles. If you’re feeling particularly energetic, fishing trips leave from the sloping pebble beach.
SEATON-Wide seafront similar to Sidmouth. A long curve of pebbles is backed by a wide promenade. Sand at low tide.
Lyme Regis |
CHARMOUTH-The long beach in Charmouth lies about a quarter of a mile from the village centre. It is a mix of shingle, stone and sand divided by the river Char. Apart from beach activities there are fossils to look for as well as rock pools to explore at low tide. The Heritage Centre gives you a fascinating insight into the area and has a cafe.
SEATOWN-Peaceful with shingle which shelves quite steeply.
West Bay |
EYPE- Shingle beach with a backdrop of Golden Cap. Dorset's highest headland to the west.
WEST BAY-Two wide shingle beaches, East beach and West Beach divided by a small harbour
BURTON BRADSTOCK-Long clean sandy beach overlooked by cliffs and farmland. Strong point: the award-winning Hive Beach Cafe when hunger bites.
CHESIL BEACH-An eighteen mile bank of pebbles which is one of the wonders of the natural world. Currents and a steeply shelving beach make bathing unwise. Behind it lies the Fleet, an enclosed area of brackish water which is now an area of special scientific interest and was the inspiration for the classic story Moonfleet by J Meade Faulkner.
The beach pebbles are naturally graded by the currents; from gravel in the west to large pebbles in the east. In previous centuries fishermen used this phenomenon to guage exactly where on the coast they had landed.
MORE TOMORROW...
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