We had a few days away in the campervan this week. About 130 miles away from home near Burnham on Sea on the Somerset coast.
The tide goes out a long way on the North Somerset coast into the Bristol Channel – but mud is a big sticky danger with over a couple of miles on mud to the waters edge at low time some places having a 35 foot drop in water at low tide. Several of the coastal towns have RNLI Hovercraft rescue craft as well as lifeboats.


These pictures show the tide going out at Weston-super-Mare The Island in the background is Steep holm. A place of nature and old coastal gun batteries.


Weston-super-Mare Grand Pier. Opened in 1904. The pier was gutted by fire in July 2008. but was rebuilt and open again on 23 October 2010. £3 for Donkey rides but closed for the winter.

If anyone remembers the 1967 British TV series The Prisoner you will recall the beach ball stopping people from leaving the village I had “I am a person not a number moment “while on the beach when I was passed by a giant beach ball bouncing along the beach!

There is a gem of a pier at Weston-super-Mare Birnbeck Pier which is sadly in a poor state It is the only pier in the country which links the mainland to an island, linking to Birnbeck Island.In the past the pier was popular with locals and tourists as a boarding point for steamers in the Bristol Channel. During WW2 the pier was commissioned as HMS Birnbeck by the Admiralty as part of miscellaneous weapons development site. After the war the steamer trade declined and by the 1970’s the pier started to fall into its current unsafe state. Today it is in a largely derelict state. Part of the pier collapsed during storms on 30 December 2015.



Heading up the coast to Clevedon is a pier that has been restored and well worth a visit and this shows you what a great attraction Birnbeck could be.


A modern lighthouse at Battery Point,
There is a good view across to Wales from the point.


A warning sign at Battery point and a memorial.



Black Nore Lighthouse which is also known as Blacknore Point Lighthouse) at Portishead. it was judged to be no longer needed for navigational purposes, and the light was decommissioned in September 2010. It is a listed building and now owned by a trust.




looks like the ball had somewhere to go?
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Yes – just kept going!
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You’ve done a nice job with the history here Andy. I agree with Wayne … that ball just kept on going and going, like the Energizer Bunny!
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thanks, Linda guess someone will find it at the other end of the beach!
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Yes and with any luck, it’ll land in the water and confound people where it originated from!
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It confounded me as no one about when it passed me!
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Hi Andy. Saw this great post and enjoyed the history lesson. Loved your pictures. That definitely was a terrible fire on the pier, but glad to hear it was restored. That sticky mud does sound quite dangerous. Such a lovely place to see.
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Glad you enjoyed the visit to Somerset England Peggy.
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Thank you for the backstory of the pictures. Great color photos, as well as the B&W ones. Nice lighthouse images and amazing the water drop at low tide. Hope no one gets stuck out there!!
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Lot’s of warning signs but people do venture onto the mud !
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I hope no one gets hurt in the mud! Warning signs are there for a purpose. I’ve learned the hard way that nature is much stronger and bigger than me…fell backwards on the rocks at tidepool with Ellis in my arms. Got a humongous goose egg and a trip to to the er on our first family vacation.
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