Chale Bay Explained

Country:England
Official Name:Chale Bay
Civil Parish:Chale
Coordinates:50.5949°N -1.3323°W
Static Image Name:File:Chale Bay.jpg
Static Image Caption:Chale Bay looking to the north-west
Map Type:Isle of Wight
Region:South East England
Hide Services:yes

Chale Bay is a bay on the south-west coast of the Isle of Wight, England. It lies to the west of the village of Chale from which it takes its name. It faces south-west towards the English Channel, its shoreline is NaNmiles in length and is gently curving. It stretches from Artherfield Point in the north-west to Rocken End in the south-east.

The bay is best viewed from the car park on the A3055 above Blackgang Chine or anywhere along the Isle of Wight Coastal Path which follows the whole coastline along the clifftop.[1] Since the closure of the steps at Whale Chine, the beach at Chale Bay has become somewhat inaccessible, with no way down from the clifftop anywhere along its three miles. Parts of the beach are sometimes used by naturists, who are known locally as "Blackgang Bares".

Geography

The beach is predominantly shingle and is bordered by tall cliffs which are made of sandstone, chalk and clay and so are often subject to erosion. There are a number of coastal chines and ravines around the bay; most notably Whale Chine, Blackgang Chine and Walpen Chine.[1] The bay's eastern end is the site of Shag Rock which is a boulder around the size of a small building, though a storm in 1980 shifted it from its once prominent position on the shoreline.

When approaching from the west, the bay marks a change in the type of coastline of the island to a rockbound shore which is unsuitable for landing vessels; this sort of coastline stretches until Sandown Bay.[2] The seabed is a mixture of mud, sand and shells.

Shipwrecks

In 1314 the St. Mary, out of Bayonne, France, with a cargo of white wine from Aquitaine was wrecked at the west end of the bay. [3]

The wreck of the Wheatfield steamer, which beached on New Year's Eve in 1882,[4] lies around 200 yards west of Shag Rock.[2] The 1,200-ton steamship broke up on the rocks after her crew escaped in their lifeboats, no fatalities were recorded but, her cargo (which included tinned meat and flour) was lost. After the wreck, a number of locals were fined for being in the position of cargo salvaged from the ship.[5]

In 1996, a 75-foot sailing boat was washed ashore by high waves generated from the arrival of Hurricane Lili. All five of her passengers were rescued by the local lifeboat service.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: IOW3: Brighstone to Niton. www.visitisleofwight.co.uk.
  2. Book: Peter Bruce. Wight Hazards. May 2008. Boldre Marine. 978-1-871680-51-5. 34–36.
  3. "Back of the Wight: yarns of wrecks and smuggling" by Fred. Mew, Newport: The County Press, 1934, 12th impression 1990, p.5, ISBN 0951037943
  4. Web site: Hunting & Son, Newcastle. www.mariners-list.com. 27 February 2021.
  5. Web site: Wheatfield. www.backofthewight.co.uk. 27 February 2020.
  6. Book: David Longshore. Encyclopedia of Hurricanes, Typhoons, and Cyclones. 2008. Infobase Publishing. 978-1-4381-1879-6. 162.