Pauline
Forums Admin
There are 11,000 miles of coast in Britain (not including Northern Ireland) and parts of it are falling into the sea. Since no one lives more than 70 miles from the coast, this affects all of us living here. I live in West Dorset on the South West coast. Every year we have small rockslides from our famous cliffs at West Bay (featured in the TV series Broadchurch). I live a mile and a half inland from these cliffs. Most of these slides happen and no one is involved, but a few years ago someone was killed by a rockslide while walking on the beach near Hive Beach.
The South West Coast Path (official long distance trail) goes along the cliffs, starting in Minehead, Somerset, through North Devon, all of Cornwall, South Devon, and Dorset, ending at Poole. The trail is rerouted in places because of landslips.
The cliffs in our area are filled with fossils and when there is a new rockslide people come out to go through it looking for them. This can be dangerous because the rockslide is not stable and people have to be rescued if they sink into the dirt/mud.
On Thursday morning we had a huge rockslide, bigger than any I have seen here. Not as big as some of the very old ones that you can see (these might be thousands of years old), but big. We had a dry winter and spring, then a lot of rain this week. A few days earlier there was a small rockslide in this same place.
We have some Brits on the forums and some people who travel here. Does anyone have information about landslips/rockslides/cliff erosion in their area?
The South West Coast Path (official long distance trail) goes along the cliffs, starting in Minehead, Somerset, through North Devon, all of Cornwall, South Devon, and Dorset, ending at Poole. The trail is rerouted in places because of landslips.
The cliffs in our area are filled with fossils and when there is a new rockslide people come out to go through it looking for them. This can be dangerous because the rockslide is not stable and people have to be rescued if they sink into the dirt/mud.
On Thursday morning we had a huge rockslide, bigger than any I have seen here. Not as big as some of the very old ones that you can see (these might be thousands of years old), but big. We had a dry winter and spring, then a lot of rain this week. A few days earlier there was a small rockslide in this same place.
East Cliff and the rockslide the day after it happened
Looking at East Cliff from the pier
On top of the cliffs is a 20 foot wide strip with the coast path, then a fence and a golf course. After the slide, the fence is hanging in air. No more coast path here. This is a spot we regularly walk. Now we have to use an alternate trail on the other side of the golf course.
We have some Brits on the forums and some people who travel here. Does anyone have information about landslips/rockslides/cliff erosion in their area?