The Oldie Spring issue 412

Page 87

Taking a Walk

The Isle of Thanet, Britain’s big toe

GARY WING

patrick barkham

If Kent is Britain’s right foot, the Isle of Thanet is its big toe. I’d never really touched this toe, and knew it only from the vivid reportage of James Meek who once wrote a brilliant essay about Nigel Farage’s attempts to win a parliamentary seat there. An almost-island, which lost its geographical independence from England when the Wantsum Channel silted up in the Middle Ages, Thanet has long been a magnet for charismatic conquerors, from the legendary Hengist and Horsa, said to have been rewarded with the isle for helping the king of the Britons, to Lord Northcliffe, who launched the Daily Mail and kept alligators in the back garden of his seaside retreat here. A friend recommended Joss Bay, which I reached on a bright early-spring afternoon. My map showed a stony coast – so I was surprised to find a perfect bay of bright yellow sand backed by low chalk cliffs. The beach was also surprisingly empty except for a solitary metal detectorist. The chalky, blue-green tide was out and so I followed the beach around into Kingsgate Bay. Here the cliffs rose higher, topped by Kingsgate Castle, originally a mere stable block for the country pile that became part of Lord Northcliffe’s alligator-and-golfing estate. Around Kingsgate, the cliffs turned a brilliant Dulux white, and it took me a moment to realise this meant their outer sections had recently broken away. Caves disappeared into the whiteness, various notices ushering us away for our own safety. Wading through an ankle-deep layer of seaweed, I reached the end of Kingsgate Bay at a dazzling white archway, a natural threshold through the cliffs into another dimension, or at least another beach. The moment the coast turned this corner into my third bay, Botany, was like listening to a new album and belatedly realising that this was a glorious piece

of music. This was a sensational walk. We’re blessed with so much scenic coastline that Thanet is probably not top of many lists, but it should be. Forget the extremities of Land’s End or John o’Groats – what about the south-eastern extremity: England’s tremendous big toe? Surrounded by so much sea and blindingly bright chalk, this isle possesses a particularly compelling luminosity. The light had ‘a vertiginous depthlessness’, just as Meek had written, ‘as if you’d come to the rim of the world and a few steps forward would take you into some infinite, radiant void’. J M W Turner told Ruskin that the skies over Thanet were the most beautiful in Europe. Botany Bay was the loveliest of the three bays so far, a long, lustrous stretch of sand backed by broken-away sections of chalk cliff standing like statues on the beach. The chalk resembled freshly painted blocks of stone, as if laid down by stonemasons, not crustaceans. At the far end of Botany Bay, I cut across Long Nose Spit, and strolled into Palm Bay, Margate glimmering in the distance. Then I headed back, along the clifftops of Cliftonville. Here was a decent

stretch of chalk grassland which would be stunning in midsummer and was pretty enough now; Alexanders were in flower and, above them, there was the song flight of a skylark, which performed a neat pirouette followed by a swallow dive in mid-sky. Behind it stood legions of Sixties chalet bungalows with big picture windows. The neighbourhood echoed with the dull hum of lawnmowers. Given the beauty of the beach, I cut down to the sand, flint and chalk again, back through Botany’s arched door and into Kingsgate and then Joss. There are various theories about the etymology of Thanet: tanet, meaning place of holm oaks, or thanatos from the Greek for death (of serpents); but the most likely name is ‘bright island’ from tân, Welsh or Breton for fire. The glory of this walk still flares in my mind whenever I recall it. Joss Bay to Palm Bay and back is a gentle four miles with plenty of parking all along the coast. Check tide times – it is worth saving this walk for low tide. Then you can enjoy a beach walk from bay to bay The Oldie Spring 2022 87


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Articles inside

Ask Virginia Ironside

1hr
pages 98-131

Crossword

3min
pages 89-90

On the Road: Tina Brown

3min
pages 85-86

Taking a Walk: the Isle of

3min
pages 87-88

Overlooked Britain Lululaund, Hertfordshire

6min
pages 82-84

Chatsworth revisited

6min
pages 80-81

Bird of the Month: Black

2min
page 79

Drink Bill Knott

4min
page 73

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 69-70

Golden Oldies Rachel Johnson

4min
page 68

Television Frances Wilson

5min
page 66

Music Richard Osborne

2min
page 67

Film: Benedetta

3min
page 64

An Author Writes: The

6min
pages 57-60

History

4min
pages 61-62

One Day I Shall Astonish the World, by Nina Stibbe Lucy

4min
pages 54-56

Young Mungo, by Douglas

5min
page 53

Readers’ Letters

9min
pages 44-45

Why frumps disappeared

3min
page 40

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 43

Postcards from the Edge

3min
pages 38-39

Town Mouse

4min
page 36

Country Mouse

4min
page 37

In search of lost love

5min
pages 34-35

The last gentlemen’s

6min
pages 30-32

Children’s books aren’t

7min
pages 26-27

Small World

4min
page 33

Why aren't I funny?

4min
pages 24-25

Downton’s tricky French

7min
pages 28-29

I love Half Man Half Biscuit

5min
pages 22-23

The Deer Hunter's genius director Charles Elton

9min
pages 16-19

Inside the court of Lord

5min
pages 20-21

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10

The Old Un’s Notes

10min
pages 5-8

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Media Matters

4min
page 13

The Two Ronnies: what a fine

7min
pages 14-15

Hostesses from hell

2min
page 11
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