After an unsuccessful attempt in the morning, where only Islay had managed to get out, we went for a wander down the beach to explore. You could see large sections where the cliff had erroded, it looked like giant lava flows of  red and grey mud/clay had slid down to the beach leaving fan like mounds along the cliff’s base. Further down there were large sea defences aimed at protecting the houses perched at the top of the cliffs, sadly deferring the inevitable. What they were successfully doing was collecting a lot of rubbish (which otherwise would probably be out at sea).

The village of Overstrand, once popular with the Victorians as a location for second homes, earning it the title “Village of Millionaires” had a local store where we picked up some supplies before heading back to what felt like the wind picking up.

At 17:00 the wind finally came in from the SE so we quickly rigged up. It was light and at first we struggled to make much ground upwind, but it increased just enough to make this possible. It was hard work for 2 hrs but we made some good distance, passing some notable landmarks: the radar dome at RAF Trimingham, Bacton Gas Terminal and the Lighthouse and church at Happisburgh. With Sea Palling in sight the wind finally dropped and with fading light we called it a day. We put a waypoint in the gps and then motored the last 3 miles to Sea Palling where we anchored between man made reefs.

Fun Fact: In July 2010 flint tools over 800,000 years old were unearthed near Happisburgh, making this the oldest evidence of human occupation anywhere in the UK. The 78 knapped flint artefacts are believed to have been used by hunter-gatherers to pierce and cut meat or wood.

Fun Fact: Bacton Gas Terminal is one of 6 major terminals across the UK and the only one linking to continental Europe. During winter and in periods of peak demand, it handles tens of millions of dollars of gas a day, then sits idle sometimes for weeks at a time when there’s a lull. That flexibility makes it a buffer for fluctuations in flows elsewhere in the system.

When it was first opened in 1968 it was 100meters from the coast, but now due to erosion at places it is only 15m. A scheme is underway to pump enough sand onto the coast in front of Bacton to fill half of London’s Wembley Stadium, and hopefully protect it from falling into the sea for another 15-20years. Hopefully by then our reliance of fossil fuels would have decreased, and we’d have turned to greener energy sources.

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