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Page author
Ron Bailey
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Lyme and its
surrounding countryside can only be truly appreciated on foot.
Begin by exploring the network of narrow back streets where
there’s a different view or something new around every corner.
Even if time,
ability or little ones limit your scope, the traffic-free,
south-facing Marine Parade and the Cobb are lovely for a gentle
stroll with plenty of places to stop for a rest, gaze out across
the bay or watch the comings and goings of fishing boats and
pleasure craft.
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To the west of the town is
the Undercliff National Nature Reserve, one of the wildest and
most unspoilt areas of the coast, accessible only to walkers
(it was a few miles along this stretch of coast that the
famous landslip of 1840 occurred when around twenty acres
slipped down towards the sea!). If you’ve the stamina for a
hike through quite rough terrain, you’ll be rewarded by rare
flora and fauna - there are hundreds of different wild flowers
including many species of orchids and ferns. You may be lucky
enough to hear a Nightingale or glimpse a Lesser Spotted
Woodpecker. |
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For
the more adventurous the Heritage Coast footpaths stretch for
over twenty miles to the east and west of Lyme – official
recognition of the area’s beauty, rarity and need for
protection.
Our neighbouring town of
Charmouth has a Heritage Coast Information Centre where you
can see interesting displays, handle fossils or talk to
someone who knows and loves this stretch of coastline – as
no doubt you will too.
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