Following on from Part One, which can be seen in the previous post, I had a walk along Old Beer Road on 7th July 2012 after torrential rain caused floods and landslides a few days earlier. The
trees on the left side of the above photo were once part of the coastal side of the road, which
started to collapse soon after the floods. Looking more like bushes as
the trees have slid down leaving just the tops showing.
I lived in Seaton Hole for several years (until moving nearer to the town, then back again for a few more years until going to live in Seaton proper) and whilst there that part of the road and pavement were moved inward and narrowed at least twice, and a very pretty walk beneath the trees near to the picnic area is no longer there.
Talking
to a steward at the local museum, he told me the story of a friend of
his who was mowing his lawn when half of it suddenly disappeared over
the cliff! That must have been a fright, although at least it saved him
having to mow the rest...unless he'd already done that bit first!
The
road
later collapsed once again, taking a huge chunk leaving nowhere else
for another road as there are properties on the other side. This time a proper
pallisade fence was erected to prevent people and cars from dropping
into the chasm. Gas pipes for the
houses were damaged when they were ripped out from the ground during the
fall and had to be replaced and left above ground, as can be seen in
the photos below. The dark part across the road beyond the pipes is the chasm.
Another
view of the very first photo in the Part One article; this time with a
tree that fell from the cliffs. As well as this and the road collapse,
some other damage occurred along the coast during and after the
torrential rains.
However, the erosion is a continual
process and not always as dramatic as that week, although small cliff
falls along the White Cliff and Beer Head have been a continuous thing
over the years. I remember, especially during the winter, the booming sounds of cliff falls in the night when I lived at Seaton Hole.
Meanwhile,
there were some minor cliff falls along West Walk from the Chine almost
to the centre of the beach at a section known as Fisherman's Gap.
There
was no major damage here but several beach huts were pushed away from
the wall by mud, stones and branches from trees. They don't look too bad
in my photos but they had been tidied up a bit and the path swept by
the time I got there! However, the huts are rather heavy so the fall must have been hefty enough to push them away from the wall.
Where part of the cliff fell can be seen in the photos below as well as some more crazy angles of the huts.
Another consequence of the weather was the flooding of the River Axe.
I
walked up towards the harbour mouth, below, only to be met by a barrier
further along. A chap I know was there too, and we stood chatting away
for a while and getting absolutely soaked by the rain which had started
up again.
Below
is a photo I took over the barrier. It can't really be seen clearly but
there was a cliff fall towards the end, spilling trees and earth onto
the path and into the river. On the left side, and three-quarters of the
way up the cliff, there was an area known as the Elephant Graveyard. It
was absolutely gorgeous; a lovely hideaway with its own microcosm and
wild flowers in abundance, including species of British wild orchids.
I'd climbed up there a couple of times, then on up to the golf course at the
top of the cliff. I'd heard a very long time ago that to be considered a
true Seatonian you had to have climbed the Elephant Graveyard. Sadly,
it hasn't been there for many years due to cliff falls.
The river didn't breach its banks but it was a pretty close thing, with the water just below the top of the harbour edges.
Usually
reached by fixed ladders and a landing stage further along, the boats
could easily have been boarded right from the harbour edge itself because of
the height of the water.
The water was just beneath the arches of the old Axmouth Bridge and not far off from the top of the new road bridge a short distance the other side. Most of the landing stage by the old bridge was submerged.
And
from the new bridge looking up river. There are several small islands
in this section but they've all disappeared below the water, apart from a
tiny bit of the largest one seen above the boats.
And there we have it! There may be more erosion since then but I haven't been able to walk far enough to check for it. If I do I might have a part three to do! :)
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