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Aldeburgh:
once the home of Benjamin Britten, Elizabeth Garrett
Anderson (England’s first woman doctor), Orlando
the marmalade cat and affluent second homers. 10 minutes
from the A12 in Suffolk the road to Aldeburgh heads
in a straight line towards the east coast through
open fields, past gorse on the heath, the busy golf
course and into the town. It does not turn right or
left and only has a couple of slight bends to avoid
being boring. |
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Drive
past “retired” looking houses with well
kept gardens beside the broad road, over the roundabout
and past the solid church that stands on the left
facing the sea. As the road drops down towards the
water, the high street to the right and the back entrance
to the hotels to the left, we go straight ahead past
a warm pub on the corner to try and park the car by
the waterfront. |
We
are facing the North Sea, a sea of changing colours
and temperaments; the stillness of a summer day and
clear blue sky reflected in the calm of the water
- through to the winter rages when it lashes across
the pebbles, stirring up sand and mud so that it looks
like an ugly brown soup with a frothy cascade of foam
as it tumbles onto the beach.
Aldeburgh
is a place for simple pleasures where people, who
would never deign to go to a “chippy”,
happily queue for some of the best fish and chips
in East Anglia. Sitting on the sea wall sharing freshly
cooked fish the circling keen eyed sea gulls are waiting
for a the chance to grab a chip or an unguarded moment
to enjoy the feast; however it is now forbidden to
feed the gulls! The sea front hotels offer a warm
haven for weekend guests and long-term visitors; I
used to stay in a lovely room, small, yet with the
best coastal views in town. However the bureaucrats
discovered that some rooms had a beautiful bed, glorious
view, a basin but no loo. Across the corridor I had
my own personal bathroom, bigger than most ensuite
facilities, with a huge bath and a window overlooking
the gardens. Of course in order to maintain the star
rating my favourite room had to be closed for the
lack of a loo. Sadly the customer is not always right.
Park
the car for at least 3 hrs. If I’m staying at
the Wentworth parking is not a problem. There is a
spacious car park beside the road to Thorpeness at
the edge of town. Walking along the beach may be good
for you but wandering along the high street looking
for clothes I don’t really need is much more
interesting. Some of the traditional dress shops have
left town to be replaced with “Chelsea on sea”
shops but I can always find a store that “may”
have something I might need and the local bakers always
has a supply of simple buns and rolls; for food addicts
there are smart restaurants, interesting pubs and
a
vegetarian restaurant that has an interesting stock
of vegetables and fish.
My
walk starts on the beach opposite the White Lion Hotel
and close to the traditional seaside shelter, a sensible
building that provides shelter away from the wind
and where you can gossip with friends, people watch
or you can enjoy hot chocolate overflowing with cream.
Civilised toilets are nearby (knowledge of good toilets
is essential when there are open beaches and no place
to hide!) |
| “Fresh
fish today” proclaims the sign outside the fishing
hut. If your timing is good you can watch the boats
being hauled up the steep shingle beach until they reach
the eager customers at the hut. Fresh cod, whiting,
dabs and flounders depending on sea conditions and the
number of days the fishermen are able to go to sea.
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The
walkers’ choice: asphalt and speed or shingle
and stamina; The well used path on the firmer ground
close to the coast road is the easier walk, great
for conversations when you can concentrate on the
words not the walk. The pebble beach is steep as it
tumbles down to the terrace below, a great place to
sunbath in seclusion as the afternoon sun heads towards
the coast at the Orford end of the beach. There is
space to be alone or to play games, a place where
you can sit down and hug your knees as you relive
happy times, a place where you can lie stretched out
to the sky and dream of golden days and lovely people.
I head for the waters edge believing that walking
on damp sand and drying shingle will be easy. No one
is watching so I can play dare with the waves and
hope they don’t win and I get wet feet.
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| The
shell or scallop – a memorial to the composer
Benjamin Britten by Maggi Hambling rests high on the
shingle beach. The controversy created by the siting
of the “shell” on the beach caused a major
debate in the local media; the shopkeepers and tearooms
of Aldeburgh must have been grateful for all the publicity
that encouraged visitors into the area during the winter
months when it was first unveiled. The shell is not
a cold monument to the past it is a warm monument that
can be sat on, played on or just admired. It does not
interfere with the stark beauty of the landscape it
is a feature that stirs interest and controversy and
brings visitors onto the beach, which is great.
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Depending
on the season you may find bright yellow flowers with
spiky leaves on the beach. I need to return to read
the names of each flower carefully logged on a neat
sign on the beach.
Walk on: the deep shingle fills the beach all the way
to Thorpeness and then beyond to the power station,
with only tiny pockets of sand. I walk past the beach
houses on the edge of the village of Thorpeness; they
emerge from banks of sand with spacious gardens that
have to withstand the force of the North Sea winter
storms that can range across the water. The large car
park just behind the beach has been allowed to evolve
so that it is in several parts separated by a few bushes
unlike the usual urban white lined car parks, where
planners deem that cars must all park in regimented
rows. |
| Thorpeness
has two tearooms, shop, a famous boating lake (The
Meare) and a re-energised pub; the houses are mainly
holiday homes built in the 1900s in a mock Tudor style
around the lake and the lanes of the village. The
huge lake is reported to be only a 3 or 4 feet deep
and the islands represent children’s nursery
rhythms. My one gripe is with people who do not control
their dogs or think it is fun to see their dogs chasing
the ducks, even during nesting times. Moan over!
The
entertainment in winter is free: feeding the greedy
swans and ducks with special duck food that is on
sale in the tea rooms; and in summer watching (or
taking part) as families struggle to display their
rowing skills. Toasted tea cakes with local jam and
a fresh cup of Earl Grey tea overlooking the lake
is a simple pleasure, it is easy to find someone to
talk to and it is just as good to sit alone and people
watch.
Enthusiasts
and proper walkers will stride past Aldeburgh towards
Sizewell and then on to more natural habitats along
the coast.
The
beach at Aldeburgh is my refuge, a place to restore
the soul, regain lost energy and to put life back
into perspective. Walking a mile in the deep shingle
may be good for the thighs, it also helps to refocus
and enjoy the natural coastline. |
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