andrew on September 25th, 2008

After visiting Sacketts Hill, we decided to go to the beach to enjoy what is likely to have been the last of the summer weather.  We headed to the beach and found a tea house right near the car park.  It was lovely: someone’s home surrounded by flower gardens.

Sage

Unfortunately, the service was very slow and we were starving.  It did leave some time to take pictures, though.

Sage

River

And Molly managed to get some knitting done, so it wasn’t time entirely wasted.

Knitting

The coast at Botany Bay is just amazing.  The chalk cliffs at the back of the beach are stunning.

Botany Bay

We discovered that there were lots of little hand and foot holds that enable easy climbing.  The kids decided the sand made a nice, soft place to land and spent quite a bit of time climbing up so they could leap down again and again.

River 1River 2River 3River 4

The chalk did prove to be quite soft, not quite what you’d like for real climbing, but it was fun to scramble around a bit.  I’ve been going fairly regularly to the indoor climbing centre in Nottingham, which is fun but not quite the same as being outside on real rock.

Cliff climbing

We’d heard quite a bit about the geology of chalk in Terry Pratchett’s novels for kids about Tiffany Aiken.  If you haven’t read The Wee Free Men (Discworld) and enjoy smart, incisive fantasies, I highly recommend it. The others in the series are excellent as well. Apparently, the witches in Terry Pratchett’s world cannot perform magic on the chalk since it is not true rock, but Tiffany gets her power from the flints embedded in the chalk matrix. Seeing the flint in Botany Bay and Ramsgate and on houses and walls all through Kent, I really got an understanding of this sort of geology.

Flint walls

It does make an attractive wall finish.  We brought a few pieces of flint and chalk home to add to the growing rock and fossil collection.

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