The White Lion at Bridport
The Market House at Bridport
West Street, Bridport
The Old George Inn at Bridport
Colmer's Hill from Bridport
The Greyhound Hotel at Bridport
bussing up East Street
Bradfords at Bridport
seaside snack bars
the harbour at West Bay
Station Kitchen at West Bay
country jam
the road to Lyme Bay
high on Abbotsbury Hill
blue sea and green fields
West Street cottages
West Street thatch
house at Red Lane corner
Abbotsbury lattice
Strangways bus stop
Abbotsbury signage clutter
Rodden Row cottages
Glebe Close, Abbotsbury
The George at Chideock
bussing through Chideock village
St Giles' Church, Chideock
Warren House, Chideock
Annie's Cafe at Morcombelake
house with flying colours
The Peek Hall, Rousdon
bussing through Axmouth
River Axe at Axmouth
Seaton sign
The Vault Bar bus stop
Seaton seaside
waves shape the eyesore
bus at Seaton seafront
Seaton seafront
Trevelyan Road houses
Seaton Tramway carbuncle
looks like a barn conversion
approaching Sidford
Buckton Hill
Blue Ball Inn at Sidford
Church Street, Sidford
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The scruffy but attractive top-knot of pine trees was planted during World War One by the Colfox family, whose lands still include Colmer’s Hill. The hill’s original name, Sigismund’s Berg, gave its name to the village at its foot: Symondsbury. Sigismund was a Viking chieftan who landed with a raiding party near Bridport and, like many after him, was taken with the
little round hill. The present name is later, being that of Rev John Colmer, a landowner in Symondsbury and briefly its rector in the early 19th century.
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