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Camping, caravans, motorhomes and getting out and about in Dorset
Durdle Door...
Durdle Door is possibly the most iconic feature of the Dorset coast. It’s been painted, photographed, used on TV and in the movies. It has also made national news.
All of which isn’t bad for what is essentially a rock with a hole in it! But that’s a bit like saying St Paul’s Cathedral is an interesting pile of stones.
Believe it or not, Durdle Door and St Paul’s are more closely related than you might think. One may be in the middle of the Nation’s capital city and the other poking its nose into the English Channel, but both are made from Portland Stone.
It’s true that one was built by an army of stonemasons and the other carved by the sea, nonetheless, they are hewn from the same, very special, Jurassic limestone that runs all along this part of the Dorset coast, including the Isle of Portland, which gives the stone its name.
Whilst St Paul’s may be impressive, nature’s stone mason has achieved something just
as inspiring from the same materials -
The stretch of coast of which Durdle Door is part, will take your breath away, in more ways than one! By any yardstick this is a serious piece of coastline, cliffs and coves, beaches and promontories, landscapes and seascapes. But to get the best out of them you have to put in some effort!
You can get to Durdle Door by walking along the beach from “Dungy Head” near Lulworth Cove, but walking on shingle is a hard slog and for your effort you get a view of the sea on one side and the bottom of a cliff on the other!
The alternative route is an even harder slog, but takes an aerial path, which rises steeply from the Lulworth Cove car park and provides an awe inspiring view of what happens when undulating Dorset limestone meets 185 million years of erosion by the sea.
It’s not an easy walk, but it is well worth it. The view across St Oswalds Bay towards
Durdle Door and Swyre Head and Bat’s Head beyond is all a cliff-
The walk from Lulworth to Durdle Door is one of those treks that never looks the
same twice. Clear, crisp blues and greens one day and wild greys and white-
The descent to Durdle Door itself is also challenging, with lots of rough-
The beach can get busy in summertime, and the walk from Lulworth is popular at most times of the year. But you’ll always find somewhere to sit and marvel at what nature has achieved. You’ll be amazed that Durdle Door stays up. And one day, no doubt, it will fall into the sea and become just another rock. Hopefully it will be at least a few thousand years before it does so.
In the meantime, this magnificent and gravity defying piece of Dorset and the landscape around it has inspired writers to write, painters to paint and film makers to use it as a backdrop to their stories.
More recently it has also inspired a “tomb-
So, there you go, Durdle Door: a hole surrounded by rock; a lovely beach; and a walk with a purpose. For many locals it’s what Sunday afternoons were made for! And an excellent way to burn calories!











