Tuesday, 15 February 2022

Skulferatu #59 - Sea Cave, Dumpton Bay, Broadstairs, Kent

 

On a cold, but sunny winter afternoon I walked along the coast from Broadstairs to Ramsgate.  As the tide was out, I walked along the sandy beach by the cliffs at Dumpton Gap.  In the bright sunlight the lower part of the beach, nearer to the sea, reflected white through the rocks and seaweed. The white of crumbled and sea washed chalk from the cliffs.  The sea was a Turneresque blue green and was a flat calm stretching out into the curve of the horizon.

 

According to the amateur geologist Cecil Carus-Wilson, who specialised in the acoustic qualities of rocks, the sands around Dumpton Gap are musical.  A rare phenomena that only occurs in a few places around the world.  Seemingly if you strike the sand, it makes a musical note.  I tried this but it just went ‘thud’.  I must have been doing something wrong.

 

As I walked along, I passed many little sea worn caves in the cliffs and then came across one large enough to wander into. 

 

A photo of a cave entrance in the chalk cliffs at Dumpton Bay by Dumpton Gap in Broadstairs.  In the foreground is the beach leading up to the white cliffs topped by a pencil thin layer of greenery and above is a blue, winter sky.  Photo by Kevin Nosferatu for the Skulferatu Project.
Sea Cave at Dumpton Bay

 

A photo showing the entrance to the cave - it looks like a dark gash in the white chalk cliff face. Photo by Kevin Nosferatu for the Skulferatu Project.
Sea Cave at Dumpton Bay

 

A view out from the sea cave to the beach and the sea.  Inside it is big enough for a person to move around in and it is likely that Samuel Taylor Coleridge changed in a cave like this before going for a swim in the sea here at Dumpton Bay. Photo by Kevin Nosferatu for the Skulferatu Project.
Looking out from the cave

 

A photo of the chalk wall inside the cave.  It is pitted and cracked and stained green with slimy seaweed. Photo by Kevin Nosferatu for the Skulferatu Project.
The pitted walls of the cave, slimy with green seaweed

 

I wondered if it could be the same cave that Samuel Taylor Coleridge had found on one of his many visits to Ramsgate.  A cave he had used to strip off in before having a ‘glorious tumble in the waves.’  Looking out from the cave I could almost imagine a naked, opium addled Coleridge lolloping around as he headed down to the sea.

 

This area was also notorious for being a landing site for a gang of local smugglers and this is something Coleridge referenced in his poem ‘The Delinquent Travellers’ -

 

Methinks, along my native shore,

Dismounting from my steed I'll stray

Beneath the cliffs of Dumpton Bay,

Where, Ramsgate and Broadstairs between,

Rude caves and grated doors are seen:

And here I'll watch till break of day,

(For Fancy in her magic might

Can turn broad noon to starless night!)

When lo! methinks a sudden band

Of smock-clad smugglers round me stand.

Denials, oaths, in vain I try,

At once they gag me for a spy,

And stow me in the boat hard by…

 

If you are worried as to the fate of the hero of this poem then take comfort in the fact that he is allowed to disembark from the boat when it arrives at Boulogne, and he then heads off to Australia.

 

Inside the cave the chalk walls were pitted and green with seaweed slime.  There was a pungent smell of the ocean as if the sea had scented the very rocks with its salt.

 

I left the Skulferatu that had accompanied me on my walk in a gap in the chalk wall of the cave.

 

A small ceramic skull (Skulferatu 59) being held up with the entrance to the cave at Dumpton Bay near Dumpton Gap in Broadstairs in the background. Photo by Kevin Nosferatu for the Skulferatu Project.
Skulferatu #59

 

A photo of a small ceramic skull (Skulferatu 59) in the pitted. white chalk wall of the cave at Dumpton Bay by Dumpton Gap in Broadstairs. Photo by Kevin Nosferatu for the Skulferatu Project.
Skulferatu #59 in gap in wall of cave

 

A close up photo of a small ceramic skull (Skulferatu 59) in the pitted. white chalk wall of the cave at Dumpton Bay by Dumpton Gap in Broadstairs.  Photo by Kevin Nosferatu for the Skulferatu Project.
Skulferatu #59 in gap in wall of cave

 

Google Map showing location of Skulferatu #59
Map showing location of Skulferatu #59

 

The coordinates for the location of the Skulferatu are –

 

Latitude 51.347914

Longitude 1.438490

 

I used the following sources for information on Dumpton Bay

 

Ramsgate Recorder, Winter 2021-2022

 

The Isle of Thanet News, Thanet History with Martin Charlton: Coleridge and Ramsgate, October 26, 2021

The Isle of Thanet News

 

Field Excursion and Science Lecture

The Thanet Advertiser, June 13, 1903