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West Dorset: Things to Do /
Useful Links

this includes a map which may take time to download


MAP OF WEST DORSET (52 K, so it may take a few moments)      

 Click map for a higher resolution version (158 K)

West Dorset Coast

As the above map shows, Grays Farmhouse is ideally placed as a centre from which to explore an area rich in interesting places to visit and things to do, in the heart of West Dorset.

Click here for a selection of nearby Interesting Places

While every attempt is made to ensure that the links are all working properly, it would be much appreciated if you could email Rosie information of any problems you encounter.

Agricultural Shows /  Biking off road  Coastal Attractions  /   Children /    Cycling /     Fishing /    Fossil hunting /    Gardens to Visit /    Golf /    History /    Houses to Visit /    Museums /    Music /   Painting and Photography /   Riding /    Swimming /    Walking /   Tourist Information

Agricultural Shows
Melplash in August and Dorchester in September are the two big ones.

 
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Biking Off Road

Guests tell us that the off-road biking in the area is superb. There is ample space to leave bikes locked up and we shall be getting a power-hose so you can wash them down easily after your ride.

Children
Dorchester Museum has an interactive Children's Trail, while the Tithe Barn, Children's Farm and Swannery at Abbotsbury are much loved by children www.abbotsbury-tourism.co.uk , as is the Dinosaur-museum.org.uk , Tel. 013052699880.) Lovers of Teddy Bears should visit the Teddy Bear house and the annual Teddy Bears' Picnic in Dorchester. Older children may enjoy The Tutankhamun Exhibition

At Easter Abbotsbury hosts a Great Egg Hunt and there is a Kite Festival at Weymouth in the Spring, and on Eggardon in September. There are summer regattas and Trawler races, Red Arrow and firework displays along the coast.
The Kingcombe-Centre near us runs Children's Days for budding naturalists aged eight upwards. Tel.01300320684 ( Web site:- ) .
Further afield is the Wildlife Park at Cricket St. Thomas Tel.01460 30111.

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Coastal Attractions
The World Heritage coast within 25 minutes drive offers remarkable variety.  Nearest to us is the National Trust family beach at Burton Bradstock, with golden honey-combed cliffs and an excellent cafe overlooking the beach. Slightly further afield to the east are the magnificent chalk cliffs and rock formations of the Isle of Purbeck, including Kimmeridge, Lulworth and Durdle Door and to the west lie Charmouth and Lyme Regis.

 Weymouth has a long sandy beach set in a beautiful, expansive bay, and a fascinating old harbour.  The east coast of Portland is unique, with disused, luxuriantly overgrown quarries right by the water's edge.  At the southern tip, Portland Bill has a lighthouse overlooking a wild shoreline piled with slabs of the famous stone from which many of London's grandest buildings were created.

Portland

The cliff path on Portland's west coast provides glorious views towards Lyme Regis down the Chesil Beach, an eleven-mile strip of shingle. The inland water behind it, the Fleet, is a bird sanctuary, and Abbotsbury is renowned for its swannery.  
Nearer us, the western end of the Chesil is the sandiest part.
See "Swimming".

Chesil Beach

West Bay is where "Harbour Lights" was filmed.  The golden cliffs to each side are quite different in character from the chalk ones east of Weymouth, reaching their highest point between West Bay and Charmouth at Golden Cap.

    Lyme Regis- view from Golden Cap

The marvellous coastal views, from Portland to the tip of South Devon, combined with the gentle folds of meadow and woodland close to the cliff edge that is full of tiny inlets, make this an idyllic stretch of coast.

SW Coastal Path

Coastal erosion means that this part of the cliffs is forever changing.

 Charmouth and Lyme are renowned for their fossils, and Lyme in particular is a fascinating old town with its famous cobb and some tempting teashops! 
To the west of Lyme the cliffs slipped dramatically in the nineteenth century, resulting in a huge rift where almost jungle-like vegetation and sheer inland walls of stone create an environment reminiscent of Conan Doyle's "Lost World".   By then you are into Devon...

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Cycling
Even in the height of summer the lanes around us are quiet enough to make cycling enjoyable, and there are also plenty of bridle paths and tracks through Hooke Woods. Much of the disused railway line from Maiden Newton to West Bay is still accessible. Bikes may be hired at Dorchester cycles.
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Fishing
The nearby River Frome is stocked with trout and some salmon. For details of fly fishing see www.goflyfishing.co.uk Course fishing and trout fishing are available on various lakes in the area. West Bay and Lyme Regis offer mackerel fishing trips round the bay, or deep sea fishing for conger, cod, skate and pollack. Fishermen are usually to be found fishing from the pier/cobb or on the beach at Burton Bradstock.

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Fossil Hunting


Lyme Regis and Charmouth are famous for the crumbling Jurassic rock cliffs, which have revealed 200 million-year-old fossils. For more information, contact the Charmouth Heritage Coast Information Centre, 01297 560772.
In July 2000 a 40 foot ichthyosaur was discovered at Charmouth. For a fascinating account of this, see www.charmouthfossils.co.uk Most of our own very modest collection has been found under the cliffs at Burton Bradstock.
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Gardens to Visit
Mapperton Manor has an Italianate water garden set in truly idyllic surroundings. The well- known garden -writer Anna Pavord describes it as her favourite garden anywhere. Open every afternoon April- October. Tel.01308 862645.

The Scented Garden in the Bride Valley is home to a national collection of lavenders. Open Tuesday afternoons, June and July.

On the coast is the spectacular subtropical garden at Abbotsbury, open and well worth seeing all year, while inland are the landscaped gardens of Minterne, with a hillside of Himalayan rhododendrons and azaleas overlooking a chain of lakes, waterfalls and streams. Open daily 10A.M. - 7p.m., April- October.

To the North West, Forde Abbey was winner of Christies Garden of the Year Award. Open Daily, 10a.m.- 4.30 p.m. Tel. 01460 221290

For details of these and others in West Dorset and Somerset, www.visitourgardens.co.uk/

West Dorset Garden

Rosie can advise you on many more worth visiting, as well as the magical local village Open Garden days,and our library of garden books and magazines would keep an enthusiast happy for hours. Visitors who return often take a keen interest in the changes afoot here at Gray's Farm, and their advice is always warmly welcomed.

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Golf
There are eleven golf courses in West Dorset, many of them in stunning settings on the coast. Guests tell us that those at both Lyme Regis and West Bay are interesting courses. We can provide a leaflet giving full details, or the local T.I. office will send you one on request.
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History
From the World Heritage Jurassic, fossil-rich cliffs of Lyme, to Dorchester, capital of Hardy's Wessex, the past is probably as apparent in West Dorset as in any part of England.
Iron-age hill forts and burial mounds, Roman roads and settlements, the Cerne giant, motte and bailey castles, Norman churches, farmland completely untouched by modern methods, the Jacobean facades of medieval manor houses, the 200 listed honey-coloured buildings of lovely Beaminster, the wide streets of rope-making Bridport: the list is almost endless of the way the past still makes its presence felt within moments of leaving the A35 .
Roger researched and wrote the local Millennium Community Play, celebrating four thousand years of life in Powerstock, and charting the fascinating impact through the ages of national events on this tiny, seemingly timeless, community.
Alastair Chisholm, a delightfully entertaining and knowledgeable extrovert, does a range of guided walks round Dorchester, and Maiden Castle by moonlight. Tel. 01305 261135

See also Museums
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Houses to Visit
Athelhampton, built in 1485, has a magnificent early Tudor Great hall, and houses an outstanding collection of English furniture, from Jacobean to late Victorian.
Athelhampton Tel.01305 848363.

Slightly further afield, Forde Abbey, a magnificent family home since the 17th.Century, was a Cistertian Monastery, founded in 1140 (see above, but the house only open in summer and on certain days). http://www.bournemouth.co.uk/ptg/dd003889.htm

Montecute houses much of the Tudor and Stuart collection of the National Portrait Gallery.

On a far humbler scale, Hardy's birthplace, Higher Bockhampton, is an idyllic little cottage just outside Dorchester . Both these last two are National Trust.
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Museums
All the local towns boast museums, and those at Dorchester and Lyme Regis are award-winning. (01305 262735 www.dorset.museum.clara.net and 01297 443370 . The former houses a reconstruction of Hardy's study.

Apart from general local social and natural history, there are specialist museums to be found on such widely ranging themes as Tanks (Bovington 01929405096 www.tankmuseum.co.uk ), Yeovilton Fleet Air Arm Museum, Dorchester Keep, ENIGMA (Blandford, Royal Signals Museum, 01258 482248, The Tolpuddle Martyrs, (Tolpuddle, outside Dorchester, 01305 848237), Ropemaking (Bridport, 01308 4216659), Underwater Exploration and the 'Titanic' and The Museum of Coastal Defense (Weymouth), and much more.

Honiton Lace All hallows Museum www.mda.org.uk/vlmp

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Music and the Arts
Our nearest Summer Festival is at Beaminster in late June. For a whole glorious week there are concerts in the church each evening, events in the square at lunch time, several exhibitions, a garden walk-about, and much else.
tel. 01308 863000.  

Beaminster

Sherborne Abbey and Sherborne School have a full programme of events:

www.concertsinsherborne.org.uk/

Abbotsbury, Burton Bradstock and Cerne Abbas also have interesting festivals. Lyme Regis has a Jazz Festival www.lymeregis.com/jazz-festival Kingston Maurward, Sherborne Castle, and Abbotsbury all host open air concerts and operas .  www.westdorset.com/whatsnew.htm  


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Painting and Photography
The wildlife artist, Gordon Beningfield, passionately loved this area and made regular pilgrimages to Powerstock to paint the wild flowers and animals, while the wildlife photographer, Colin Varndell, considers the wildlife around Powerstock second to none.
If broad landscape or seascapes are more your interest, the wide horizons from Eggardon, Golden Cap, Abbotsbury Castle or Hardy's Monument could hardly be bettered, while those who love to paint mellow old cottages and churches, or picturesquely crumbling stone farm buildings, will be spoilt for choice. My own great loves are the ancient gnarled trees that surround us.

Trees in West Dorset
my painting site

There is plenty of room to store your painting gear in Rosie's own studio, and if the weather is bad, there are covered areas from which to work around the grounds. I run occasional painting workshops and residential art courses

Dorset Art Weeks is a biennial event. From 29May -13th. June 2004, over 300 studios, including mine, will be opening to the public in what will be the biggest show of its kind in the country. Bridport Open Studios is every August Bank Holiday and there are other opportunities to see the work and studios of many local artists and craftspeople.

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Riding
There are plenty of bridle ways, both following the coastline and inland, and good tracks of open countryside suitable for galloping.

Horse Riding is available at
Cattistock    01308 863006
Portisham   01305 871011
Monkton Wilde    01297 678747

Llama Trekking in the Brit Valley
Beaminster    01308 8868674

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Swimming
There are a number of good family beaches with golden sand, notably Burton Bradstock, West Bay, Charmouth and Lyme Regis. In season dogs are banned.
Bridport has a Leisure Centre with an indoor pool. 01308 427464
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Walking
Grays Farmhouse lies at the heart of a seemingly endless maze of paths and tracks and The Jubilee Trail passes close by. After five years of regular walking, we are still discovering new routes from our doorstep, including variations on our favourite walks to Powerstock, Eggardon, and Mapperton Manor. The Wessex Ridgeway and the South-West Coastal Path are within easy reach.  Local T.I. Centres and the Websites given below provide details of nearly 300 guided walks, including many from the Kingcombe-Centre

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Tourist Information
The West Dorset District Council website is a mine of helpful information, www.westdorset.com , and in addition West Dorset produces an interesting tourist guide, along with much other information, available for order by email or at the following T.I. offices:-

Bridport    01308 424901
Dorchester    01305 267992
Lyme Regis   01297422138
Sherborne   01935 88815341
West Bay   01308422807
Weymouth   01305 785747/ 772444

In addition, the following websites are very informative:
Bridport:   www.bridportandwestbay.co.uk
Cerne Abbas:      www.sacredsites.com/1st30/cerne.html
Charmouth   www.hometown.aol.com/charhercen
Lyme Regis   www.lymeregis.com
Weymouth  www.weymouth.gov.uk

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B&B with view to coast near Golden Cap
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Maps and routes and ways of contacting us are shown on the Contact page - see the link below.

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Site Updated July 12, 2005

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