Axmouth to Lyme Regis across
Lyme Bay from the Undercliff (
Lyme Regis) The Undercliff in
Dorset-
East Devon stretches the between
Lyme Regis, near to the Cobb harbour, and
Seaton. Like its namesake on the Isle of Wight, this feature also arose as a result of landslips and has become a rare and unusual habitat for plants and birds. It is a
national nature reserve – the Axmouth to Lyme Regis Undercliffs NNR – and the
South West Coast Path runs through it. The footpath stretches for 7 – and is not accessible except at each end. It is not permitted to leave the path due to the nature reserve status and the dangerous terrain. Some of the landslips that created the Undercliff took place within historical record. Recorded slips took place in 1775, 1828, 1839 (the Great Slip) and 1840. The 1839 slip was especially well-documented since the geologists
Buckland and
Conybeare were in the area to survey it. A large tract of land below Bindon Manor and Dowlands Farm slipped, creating the features now called Goat Island and the Chasm. It took with it an area of sown wheatfield which remained sufficiently undamaged for the wheat to be harvested in 1840, when the slip was a popular visitor attraction. The Undercliff was formerly open rough pasture, grazed by sheep and rabbits, including features such as Donkey Green (an area of turf used for picnics and sports), Landslip Cottage (which used to sell teas to visitors), and Chapel Rock (where, according to tradition,
Tudor religious
dissenters met). However, it became heavily overgrown in the 20th century following the cessation of sheep farming and the decline in rabbits due to
myxomatosis, and access is now difficult, the terrain being treacherous due to its unstable cliffs, deep gullies and dense undergrowth.
Sabine Baring-Gould's 1900 novel
Winefred, a story of the chalk cliffs is set in the Undercliff area, with the Great Slip as its climax. The Undercliff was also one of the settings for the novel ''
The French Lieutenant's Woman'' and a location for its
film adaptation.
Hooken The Hooken Undercliff is on the cliff route between
Beer, Devon and
Branscombe. A
slump in the
Chalk cliffs in 1790 separated a tract of land, now a wooded and sheltered habitat with chalk pinnacles on the seaward side. It is reached via a steep footpath leading from the clifftop to Branscombe Beach. A cave, that can be found halfway up the cliff and seen from the footpath, is thought to have been used by the infamous smuggler
Jack Rattenbury. ==East Sussex==