Clock House Inn at Chideock
The Royal Oak, Charmouth
Bell Cliff Restaurant
Royal Lion and Bell Cliff
coast road near Burton Bradstock
Dorset finger post
The Bull Inn at Swyre
Royal Oak at Charmouth
Rock Point Inn and fish bar
Colyford Post Office
Seaton stonework
Check House, Seaton
Sidford chip shop
Sidford loos
Royal Mail on the road
Devon Hotel at Matford
Gissons Inn at Kennford
Jolly Farmer at Newton Abbot
Golden Lion at Newton Abbot
Wolborough Inn, Newton Abbot
Totnes Castle
Two Mile Oak at Newton Abbot
Wolborough Street
Old Inn at Bridport
Balson family butchers
Leakers bakery
West Bay car park
West Bay weather dolphin
Rax Dairy ghost at Bridport
Ropemakers sign at Bridport
Bridport milestone
Rousdon lodge house
bussing through the raindrops
grey day at Weymouth
Morrison's weather vane
Dorchester lamppost
Dorchester Plaza
Grey School Passage
Dorchester Museum
Dorset Museum
Stinsford bus stop
passing the Blue Vinny
White Hart, Milborne St Andrew
English village bus stop
Red Barn Farm, Thornicombe
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www.dorsetlife.co.uk/2015/03/treasures-of-dorset-colmers-hill
It is equally recognisable from any direction, as its steep slopes are not obscured by any other significant hill close by. This means, too, that there is a wonderful 360° view from the trig point on its summit. Its appeal lies also in its pleasingly regular shape, a rounded, flattened cone, which led Bridport children to give it its alternative name of Pudding Basin Hill.
Then there is its colour, especially in the autumn and winter, when the bracken-covered slopes are a blaze of gold. Finally there is the scruffy but attractive top-knot of pine trees, planted during World War One by the Colfox family, whose lands still include Colmer’s Hill.
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