No wind in the forecast, and no wind arrived. It was a beautiful day to be on the boat and warm enough to break out the shorts and also the drone.

In the afternoon Joe and Stew walked the 3miles into Skegness – meaning beard shapped headland in Norse. It is a huge beach and looked pretty clean which you would expect from an East Coast beach where the prevailing offshore winds blow any rubbish out to sea, not onto the beach. This may be one of the factors this is one of only ~200 beaching in the UK awarded the Blue Flag. Unfortunately nowhere’s perfect and by the time we’d reached Skegness our arms were full. Mostly of plastic but there was a kite (not one of ours!), part of a vacuum cleaner and an old lobster pot. .
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A seaside town where the first Butlins was opened in 1936 ( and is still there ), every other shop was selling fish and chips and of course donkey rides on the beach. A seaside tradition started in the Victorian times which somehow Islay had never heard about. We were after a fishing tackle shop ( another light wind activity ) but sadly the shop had since moved on.  Instead we stocked up on bbq food (our first of the trip) and headed back along the shoreline, this time following the marshes. We almost made a tactical mistake as a large channel opened up and separated us from the beach. We had to follow it all the way to where it met the sea and with a bit of mud between the toes made it across. Luckily it was low tide or we would have been swimming.

We had a grey seal come and check us out.  One of the rarest seals with 40% of the world’s population found in UK waters. Surprisingly Donna Nook, the bombing range we passed through on the first day was opened as a nature reserve in 2002, the only one in the UK on MOD land. Not entirely sure how the two are compatible, but during November/December each year ~2,000 new seal pups are born.

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