What a Century!
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In 1821 Mary Anning discovered the first complete ichthyosaurus while wading and searching for fossils under the dangerous, crumbling cliffs in her home town of Lyme Regis in West Dorset, on the coast of South West England. What would this proud, uneducated ... Read review
The fourth edition of the 'Country Living Rural Guide To England - The West Country' ... more
continues the success of the popular rural guide series with updated information on the many unique places of interest throughout picturesque region. The attractive new cover features the Tin Mine Engine House at Wheal Coates in Cornwall.
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Advantages: Preserving a Phenomena. Tourism. International Recognition Disadvantages: None
...to Australia. What would these Dorset farm labourers who altered the social structure in England, think of the latest news?
In 1840 Thomas Hardy the Dorset author was born, yet to write his world famous classical literature to include ‘Far From the Madding Crowd’ ‘Tess of the D’Ubervilles’ and the ‘Mayor of Casterbridge’ based on a fictional area called Wessex. What would he think of the latest ... ...beautiful, tender poetry in the Dorset dialect. What would he think of the latest news?
In the early 1800s, seventeen year old Thomas Hine left Beaminster in Dorset to find fortune in France and was to become the renowned producer of Hine Cognac, one of the finest connoisseur brandies in the world. What would he think of this latest news?
So What’s The News?
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The Chairman of ... more
What a Century! ******************* In 1821 Mary Anning discovered the first complete ichthyosaurus while wading and searching for fossils under the dangerous, crumbling cliffs in her home town of Lyme Regis in West Dorset, on the coast of South West England. What would this proud, uneducated working class woman think of the latest news?
In 1834, the six men now known as The Tolpuddle Martyrs, the founders of the Trade Union movement, were found guilty of Mutiny in the County Court of Dorchester, the County town of Dorset, and sentenced to seven years transportation to Australia. What would these Dorset farm labourers who altered the social structure in England, think of the latest news?
In 1840 Thomas Hardy the Dorset author was born, yet to write his world famous classical literature to include ‘Far From the Madding Crowd’ ‘Tess of the D’Ubervilles’ and the ‘Mayor of Casterbridge’ based on a fictional area called Wessex. What would he think of the latest news?
In 1801 William Barnes the celebrated poet and curate was born near Sturminster Newton, Dorset. Barnes wrote beautiful, tender poetry in the Dorset dialect. What would he think of the latest news?
In the early 1800s, seventeen year old Thomas Hine left Beaminster in Dorset to find fortune in France and was to become the renowned producer of Hine Cognac, one of the finest connoisseur brandies in the world. What would he think of this latest news?
So What’s The News? ****************** The Chairman of the Dorset Coast Forum, Professor Denys Brunsden, has spent the last seven years organising the bid to get awarded the World Heritage Status from UNESCO for the Jurassic Coast of Dorset and East Devon. It looks likely to get it too! This is eighty five miles of coastline between Swanage in Dorset to Exmouth in Devon. This magnificent news puts this wonderful part of England on a par with The Grand Canyon and The Great Barrier Reef and will be the first time mainland Britain has been awarded such status.
The significance of this recognition is only just registering with me. The whole Dorset coastline would be internationally recognised as one of outstanding universal value, and ranked with the most famous and exciting heritage sites in the world. World Heritage brings with it a responsibility to ensure that a Site, identified as of global importance, should be conserved for future generations and has the Governments full backing and commitment. In my excited state, I would call this Dorset’s own natural Theme Park. It’s better than Disney, and it’s real, interactive and fun for adults and children alike. It’s Dinosaurland!
A Walk Through Time ******************* The Dorset Coast Path forms part of the South West Coast Path that runs from Studland to Minehead in Somerset. Try to imagine this. A walk along this proposed World Heritage site will take you through a time span of two hundred million years! Between Exmouth in Devon and Old Harry Rocks near Swanage in Dorset can be found one of the most complete sequences through the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods of geological time anywhere in the world.
On the fossil rich beaches of Charmouth and Lyme Regis, where the celebrated Mary Anning made her discovery, the explorer may find something as stunning as a roaming Dinosaur footprint to a simple ammonite that the enthusiastic collector can take home with them. Some of the ammonites are enormous and mustn’t be moved because of the threat of landslides, as during wet winters mudflows spill onto the beaches from the rocks and cliffs above. But this is exciting as the natural displacement throws up hundreds of fossils for geologists and the curious amateur to discover.
The rocks also contain evidence of life on the land in the form of fossil wood and insects that were washed into the sea some two hundred million years ago. It has to be imagined that in the forming of the world, Lyme Regis has been a desert as well as under the sea, illustrated with the discovery of fossilised tropical fish that lived here during the Jurassic period.
Dorset Isn’t Just Jurassic Though ***************************** Much of Dorset is designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The countryside has rolling hills, pretty villages, great pubs, interesting churches and all steeped in history and culture. Most of the towns and villages have museums recording historical events and giving the visitor an insight into how life was lived in Dorset in past times, including Jurassic and fossil museums.
You don’t have to be interested in fossils to enjoy a visit to Dorset. The county offers the opportunity for traditional beach holidays such as in the Georgian fronted Weymouth, caravanning in some beautifully situated caravan parks, luxury hotels, inns, bed and breakfast, camping and self catering. To a large extent these facilities are the same as the many other beautiful counties in the West Country have to offer, but they don’t have their own natural Jurassic Park!
But I could all go literary on you and tell you about T. E. Lawrence (of Arabia) who is buried in Moreton and encourage you to visit his home, Cloud’s Hill. I could tell you to call at Lyme Regis and see the house where Jane Austen stayed while writing ‘Persuasion’. I could tell you to visit the cemetery in Dorchester and see the grave of Sir Frederick Treves, author of ‘The Elephant Man’ I could urge you to take a chance on spotting John Fowles, author of ‘The French Lieutenant’s Woman’ who lives in Lyme Regis. I could tempt you with the offer of a visit to Hardy’s cottage and birthplace at Higher Bockhampton. But I won’t!
I could tell you to seek the ancient Iron Age hill fort of Maiden Castle built by the Ancient Britons at Dorchester, view the magnificence and size of the fertility carving of the Cerne Abbas Giant in the chalk hills at Cerne Abbas. I could advocate you go to Corfe Castle and see the Norman settlements. Go to the Swannery and Nature Reserve at Abbotsbury and watch the cygnets hatching. I could tell you to visit the Tutankhamun Museum in Dorchester. But I don’t want to tell you that. I want to tell you about The Dorset Jurassic Coast and The World Heritage Status.
World Heritage Status will benefit Dorset, principally by creating new opportunities to improve the educational use of the coast, support scientific study, and increase our potential in visitor management. We need tourism and recognition in Dorset. Many peoples livelihoods rely on the much required income they generate. Dorset is often overlooked by the exodus of visitors from the North, Midlands and the South East in the summer, and all year round, as they make their way to Devon and Cornwall, bypassing us. What an excellent opportunity for my wonderful adapted county to be renowned because its geology and physical geography is of international conservation importance.
My Bit of Jurassic **************** I live on the coast in West Dorset, right at the centre of this natural phenomena. My six hundred year old cottage is built of local amber coloured building stone, complete with the occasional visibly imbedded coiled ammonite and pencil shaped belemnite. I dig my garden and they appear like stones in my soil. A walk on the beach at Charmouth, and instead of looking outwards to the horizon and the breathtaking scenery, I look down onto the beach and they appear like magic amongst the fallen rocks.
Have you ever found a fossil? Imagine finding a Dinosaur egg? Have you been with a child and watch their eyes open in wonder as you explain the history they are holding in their hand with a simple ammonite? A family holiday on The Jurassic Coast is the real thing. Not a film, a computer game, a book.
When you come to the eighty five mile stretch of World Heritage Jurassic Coast in Dorset, and you will come, take some care if you go fossil hunting. The tides around in Lyme Bay can be dangerous, so walk along the beach as the tides are going out. The cliffs are unpredictable, some of the footpaths are closed or diverted as they are unsafe, and the mudflows can cause cliff falls, so the collector is able to stay further away from the threat of landslides when the tide is out. Sometimes people have hunted fossils directly under the cliffs, the tide has come in, there’s been a rock fall and the lives and resources of the Rescue Services have been put at risk whilst saving them. Be aware.
Thinking of Mary Anning ********************* In an age when women had little social standing, especially the working class, Mary Anning proved to be an outstanding example of independence and belief in herself and her ability to find and recognise rare fossils. Many of her discoveries, like the long-necked plesiosaurs, found under the cliffs at Lyme were taken from her, exhibited, and attributed to the City ‘men in suits’ who considered geology had no place in a woman’s world, especially a poor, low class, uneducated woman. Her brilliance lay in the fact that she recognised the fossils as scientifically important and would painstakingly piece them together, just using her instinct and enthusiasm.
You can walk through time for nearly two hundred million years along this coast, and this is the only place on earth you can do that! What would the pioneering Mary Anning have made of the news? Her beloved home of Lyme Regis in Dorset becoming part of a World Heritage Site!
Advantages: so much to do, so much to see Disadvantages: you would need to be there for a month to get everything in.
I am not long back form a lovely honeymoon in the New Forest - the perfect place for a quiet, romantic escape from the world. Did you know, by the way, that the origin of honeymoon is an old fertility practise in which newlyweds would share a glass of mead (honey wine) for a month (moon) after marriage! We have been doing this.
The New Forest is largely in Hampshire but there is quite a bit in Dorset, which is where we stayed. The reason it is "New" ... ...have been forested, it was turned into farmland, and later turned back into forest to be used as a royal hunting ground - for this to happen, all the local people were moved from their land.
We stayed in Alderholt Mill neare Fordingbridge - a lovely area whre most houses have thatched rooves. Fordingbridge is on the Avon and is a very sweet little town and the villages around it are lovely. Alderholt itself is grim and well worth avoiding.
We walked ...
Bryn_Pearson 14.08.2001
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Dorset (England)
Advantages: Seeing primates playing happily. Disadvantages: Knowing they have bad histories.
Have you ever visited Monkey World near Wareham in Dorset? It is well worth the trip if you enjoy watching primates.
Monkey World was set up in 1987 by Jim and Alison Cronin, to provide sanctuary for the badly treated primates of the world. Most of them have awful stories of cruelty to tell.
Monkey World is set in about 40 acres of woodland and the animals are in large compounds arranged in colonies.
It costs about £17.00 for a family ticket which ... ...to have a picnic and play areas for children to let of steam, one area is full of old tyres for children to stack and climb on.
There are regular talks by the keepers, so you can learn more about the natural habitat of the animals.
There is even a pets corner where you can touch tame farm animals.
My favourite part is watching the baby chimps. in the nursery compound, I also like to watch Gordon the baby orang-utan.
If you want a taste of what ...
monkeyjo 27.08.2000
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Dorset (England)
Advantages: great day out Disadvantages: only 3 days
this weekend sees the annual steam fair held near Blandford if you are looking for a great day/night out this could be the place to go with a huge amount to do for all the family or just adults. there are the traction engines themselves which have come from as far a field as New Zealand, also a fair, country crafts and a huge number of vendors selling just about everything. Some of the displays are awesome especially the wood cutting which leaves ...
elrathia 31.08.2000
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Dorset (England)
Advantages: a top seaside resort Disadvantages: not much happening out of season
Weymouth definately has something for all the family. A seaside resort which is totaly second to none, Just imagine a Big safe beach and many traditional attractions. If you head towards the town you will discover the heritage and picturesque harbour.
It was approx. 200 years ago that Weymouth became known as a resort this was after it was visited by george III, since then the town has maintained its ever growing popularity. A absolute mix of the ... ...a leisurely stroll alond the esplanade, or if you are not keen on walking a nice ride on the road train.
Weymouth's glory iss it beautiful beach with golden sands and award winning facilities. You will be pleased to know Weymouth is one of the warmest and driest parts of the west country, which makes the golden sands a strong magnet. Along the beach you will find many attractions which include Punch and Judy, donkey rides, trampolines, pedaloes ...
MISSTEAPOT 11.01.2001
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Dorset (England)
Advantages: Unspoilt. Traditional. A Microcosm of England. Compact Disadvantages: Very few.
Dorset is I think one of the greatly under-rated counties of England. A lot of people going to the South West for their holidays target Devon and Cornwall - and both are delightful-but at best hurry through Dorset. Yet this county has a great deal to offer the visitor ranging from typically English,rustic,villages, to the sophistication of Bournemouth, the elegance of Poole, the delights of Georgian Weymouth,the beauty of the coastline and the joys ... ...Literary buffs will find Dorset is no backwater for this is Hardy country and it was the home for part of his life of T.E.Lawrence.Dorset also has its place in agrarian history as the Tolpuddle Martyrs serve to remind us.
Celebrities are beginning to "discover" Dorset, Meryl Streep,filmed at Lyme Regis and then are now reports that Madonna is buying a country mansion in Dorset.
Lulworth Cove is a spot well worth visiting,as are the small towns ...
ashford 21.10.2000 (16.08.2001)
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Dorset (England)
Value for Money
Sightseeing
Shopping
Nightlife
Ease of getting around
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Advantages: You'll probably never have delays Disadvantages: Car parking, the terminal buildings and staff
~Where is it?~
Bournemouth airport (BOH) is located in the south of England about 5 miles north of the seaside resort of Bournemouth. It is located near the village of Hurn on heath land just west of the A338 and north of the B3026, it may also be know by its old name of Hurn airport.
~Getting to BOH~
By Car - With the M27 Junction 1 only 15 miles away you would suspect that getting to BOH is easy. Well it normally is, but in the summer months the A31 which leads you all the way down into deepest darkest Dorset from the M27 can turn into a car park. After the A31 it is only a few miles down the A338 before you take the Hurn exit, turn right at the traffic signals, left at the next roundabout onto the B3026 and finally right into BOH's entrance.
On summer days it could take you around a hour or so to travel the 15 miles from the M27 ...