When walking our cliffs it is easy to forget that pretty much the whole
of the southern ridge, from Durlston to Worth, would have once been a
big industrial estate. Quarries of all sizes were worked along here,
some for generation after generation, and these have given us the
landscape that we cherish today. Following the paths that weave between
the quarries may not give us many obvious clues as nature has reclaimed
much of what man has done but when you
reach the coast path, the workings that have changed the cliffs are more
visible as well as more impressive. The amount of stone taken from here
and transported far and wide without the use of today’s machinery is
difficult to imagine but what remains can tell us a great deal and there
are many books that can explain what we see.
On a beautiful, blue
sky day when these places are calm and peaceful you may be forgiven for
thinking that working here, with the superb views and cool clear air,
would be a joy and maybe on some days it would be. In Winter though,
when the sea is churning white and the wind blows right through you but
still your very livelihood depends on every hour worked regardless of
the risks, they become different.
No less impressive, no less wonderful, just different.
Having lived next to Portland for so long . . . it's often seemed as if the place has been digging itself up and sending itself away for so long it's a wonder there's any land left to stand on. Yours is a good post to remind us that much of what is beautiful has been created, if only by chance, by people forced to live less than idyllic lives.
ReplyDeleteI'm now in West Yorkshire, with a new blog to match.
https://looseandleafyinhalifax.blogspot.co.uk/
Thank you, and I'll be sure to check out your blog.
ReplyDelete