The Herald - The Herald Magazine

Kate Humble on the coastline

- SARAH MARSHALL

ONCE walked by dinosaurs and used as a hideout for smugglers, Britain’s coastline is awash with exciting discoverie­s, says TV presenter Kate Humble. It’s often described as a beautiful, peaceful stretch of the Suffolk coastline, but hundreds of years ago, bandits and smugglers would hide out in the cliffs and coves of Sailors’ Path, hijacking unsuspecti­ng wealthy visitors who’d recently arrived by ship.

“The coastline is full of wonderful history and stories,” says TV presenter

Kate Humble, an avid walker and nature lover, whose latest six-part Channel 5 series explores popular and less familiar sections of the country’s coastline.

Kate Humble’s Coastal Britain tells tales of a millennia-old tribe in Exmoor, shares the story of a remarkable oyster farm in Suffolk, and reveals how adders have colonised a rubble of 16th century factory ruins in Yorkshire.

“I really enjoyed understand­ing that our heritage is rooted in the sea and the coast,” says Humble, who lives inland in an area of outstandin­g natural beauty in the Welsh Wye Valley. “Often, it’s easy to forget that.”

Although she’s travelled all over the world, visiting exotic destinatio­ns on every continent, Humble insists she still made several exciting discoverie­s while filming the series – some only a few miles from her home.

“It’s always good to be reminded how unfamiliar we often are with places that are right on our doorstep,” she says, referring to the wild and craggy Exmoor coast, which she compares to parts of South Africa, in terms of scale and grandeur.

“It has that feeling of being in the mountains; it’s incredibly dramatic but with the majesty of being by the sea. It was a real surprise to explore somewhere that is basically two and a half hours from where I live.”

In Dorset, she visited another familiar haunt on a fossil-hunting mission, sparking several fond childhood memories.

“When I was younger, I had a great friend whose family lived inland from

Lyme Regis,” she reminisces, describing a sequence following the trail of 19th century palaeontol­ogist Mary Anning.

“I love her story. At a time when women were overlooked and left to do the laundry, there was this incredible woman who managed to find an ichthyosau­r fossil.”

Returning to the area as an adult, Humble says she developed a new appreciati­on for the skills of fossil hunters.

“It’s easy to assume these guys and women are lucky and stumble over rocks. But they know exactly how storms and erosion can reveal extraordin­ary things. They have a superhuman vision to see a shape in the rock that might contain a fossil.

“It was fascinatin­g to learn about what our land hides and how people’s knowledge has been built up to reveal it.”

As someone who describes walking as “a very intrinsic part of my life”, Humble says she revelled in every footstep of her journey. But one area she particular­ly enjoyed researchin­g was Yorkshire, a place with several personal connection­s.

“My husband was born in Scarboroug­h, and both my parents were from Yorkshire, so there is a bit of a Yorkshire tug,” she says. “My husband told me, ‘When you’re in Scarboroug­h and you’re at the castle, will you just phone me and tell me that you’re looking at it’.”

Further along the coast in Robin Hood’s Bay, she recalls delving into a series of tunnels hewn beneath the northern fishing village and once used by smugglers.

“People snuck up to the pub amidst barrels of brandy,” she says, admitting the scenario felt more like a chapter from a Robert Louis Stevenson novel than an historical account.

“But in the same breath, she claims one of the biggest joys of the series was “myth being made real”.

“For me, it made the coast and those coastal communitie­s more three dimensiona­l than the picture postcard holiday resorts we always think about. These are living, breathing communitie­s with a history, and that history continues today.”

Along with colourful tales from the past,

 ??  ?? Above: Kate Humble, presenter of a new series about coastal Britain; Scarboroug­h Castle; and Robin Hood’s Bay
Above: Kate Humble, presenter of a new series about coastal Britain; Scarboroug­h Castle; and Robin Hood’s Bay

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