Around Kent > Coastal Walk > Birchington to Margate

The third walk also neatly divides into two short sections of 5 and 4km. The first has a number of small sandy bays, including Epple, Westgate, St Mildred and Westbrook Bays - before ending in Margate's "The Bay."

Click map to zoom

Click here for Multimap


History of the area


The internet has very little light to shed on this short stretch of coast - although a nice selection of photos of the area from the early 20th century can be found at the Birchington Heritage Trust site - including Beresford Gap, Epple Bay, the beached whale of 1914 and the sea freeze of 1963. Perhaps the most commonly quoted and self-proclaimed fact about Birchington is that it's "England's largest village" - at 14000 people - and it was formed around a church dating from the 13th century.

Another point of note is that Westgate was used as an air base in World War II, and its short airstrip was located near to St Mildred's Bay. More recently, Thanet has been showered with European Blue Flag awards for clean and safe beaches - scooping 7 of Kent's nine in 2006 (85 were awarded in the UK as a whole); and 12 Seaside Resort Awards from the Tidy Britain Group:

Green - Blue Flag & Seaside Resort Awards
Yellow - Seaside Resort Award only

1 - Minnis Bay
2 - West Bay
3 - St Mildred's Bay
4 - Westbrook Bay
5 - Margate Bay
6 - Walpole Bay
7 - Botany Bay
8 - Joss Bay
9 - Broadstairs East Cliff
10 - Viking Bay
11 - Ramsgate Sands
12 - Ramsgate, Western Undercliff

Base map of image (C) Google Maps


The walk


The variation of this stretch of coast between low and high tide is suprising. In 2005 I walked this section in reverse whilst the tide was low, and was able to stroll around the base of all the cliffs. When I completed the previous coastal walk which ended up at Beresford Gap, there wasn't a sign of a beach here, and the sea was pounding against the sea wall.

This time it must have been a couple of hours past low tide - so while the beach and rock outcrops were visible, you couldn't get around the bottom of the cliffs without chancing wet feet - and a few climbs up to the clifftop were in order. It was also apparent that the storms of the previous night had sent the waves way above the main sea wall, with loads of seaweed strewn across the footpath in places - which makes you realise that you wouldn't want to be trapped down there during high tide.

On a Sunday afternoon in November the beaches were empty - but there were a couple of nice stretches that must be good during the summer months. With a few stations in a short distance (Birchington, Westgate-on-Sea and Margate), this is definitely worth an easy stroll.

 

Maps are copyright of Multimap, Ordnance Survey and Google Maps