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Lyme Regis is the Pearl of the Jurassic Coast. It’s the UK’s fossil capital. Beyond its crumbling cliffs and sandy beaches, a small hub of design-forward B&Bs, independent shops and sea-to-fork restaurants make this a great destination for urbanites in need of a long-weekend hit of salty-fresh, small-town coastal charm.
01 October, 2020
This
pocket-sized town was thrust onto the world stage in 1814
when a young Mary Anning discovered the first complete ichthyosaur
skeleton on its shores and became the poster child of
palaeontology. Fast forward a couple of centuries and the so-called
“Pearl of the Jurassic Coast” hits the headlines again courtesy of
2020 biopic, Ammonite, starring Kate Winslet (as Anning) and
Saoirse Ronan.
These aren’t Lyme’s only flutters with fame. In 1685, the
Monmouth Rebellion that attempted to overthrow James II began here.
More 100 years later, Jane Austen’s Persuasion describes Louisa
Musgrove falling from The Cobb. In the 60s, John Fowles used the
town as the setting for The French Lieutenant’s Woman, later
adapted into a film starring Meryl Streep.
Yet for all its stardom, Lyme’s vinegar-tinged coastal charm
remains uneroded. In Lyme Bay, the 13th-century Cobb arcs out into
the English Channel. Battenburg-coloured townhouses and Regency
villas are framed by beach huts, shingle shores and limestone
cliffs that crumble to reveal fossilised shells and scattered bones
of prehistoric creatures. Community life revolves around a calendar
packed with knees-ups: a fossil festival and Jazz Jurassica in
spring; morris dancing and water polo in the sea come summer.
Beyond the bustling harbour, independent cafés and shops hug
Broad Street, the quiet thoroughfare that draws the town inland.
Until 2020, chef Mark Hix’s eponymous townhouse and restaurant were
the London-export headline grabbers for visitors here, but since
their closure, other design-forward boltholes and sea-to-fork
eateries have quickly assumed their place in the limelight.
A three-hour drive from London (or two hours and 40 minutes by
train to Axminster railway station, followed by a 15-minute cab
ride), Lyme Regis is prime territory for a long-weekend break or a
pit-stop on a Jurassic Coast road trip – Lulworth Cove, Chesil
Beach, The Undercliff nature reserve, Charmouth and Beer are all
worthy additions to any itinerary.
Fuelled by pints of cold-water prawns, we’ve scoured East Cliff
Beach for ammonite, sifted through coastal knick-knacks on the high
street and washed down Dorset knobs – the local biscuit of choice –
with local mead to bring you the best of Lyme Regis. Dive in.
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