Drinkum Bay: The Beach Where Monks Party
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Drinkum Bay: The Beach Where Monks Party
ISLANDS editor Robert Stephens and photographer Jon Whittle are galivanting around Wales in the United Kingdom right now. Here's Robert's latest finding.
This is a secret spot with a secret message: Monks can get wild. I'd asked David Blackmore of Pembrokeshire to beat a new path on Caldey Island. We ferried over to Caldey from Tenby, on a narrow panga-style boat. The island is known around the southwest region of Wales for its monastery and the perfumes and chocolates made by the 25 year-round residents (some of whom are women and children, by the way). On the way over, the little boat's captain, Graham Waring, said, "Get off the paved trail on the island. Go through the brambles to Drinkum Bay. The monks used to go there. They'd jump down from the cliff with a rope swing. Nobody's been on that beach except them." So a few of us hiked through thistles and cow parsley to this rarely-visited overlook. We couldn't find the rope to get down to the sand, but you can imagine monks cutting loose, Tarzan-style, to their private escape. And you have to wonder where the name "Drinkum" came from.
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Wales. It's all about castles and ancestries. That's what I thought until a stop in Burry Port, along the country's south coast, about an hour into our first day. We'd stopped here because when Amelia Earhart became the first woman to cross the Atlantic by air in June 1928, the plane landed right here. It would be worth a look. Through a proud Welsh accent, peppered with lots of strange consonants shot from the roof of his mouth, Rhys Anthony stood on the pier and pointed to two beaches behind this centuries-old limestone wall. They total 15 miles in length. It's the start of the summer season here and on 15 miles of beach we saw fewer than a dozen people. But ...
Ted Alan Stedman treks across the countryside to see the heart of a nation
A friendly stroll through British traditions
See the map and more in our Best Beaches archive





