Daily Mirror

Sandcastle­s, looking in rockpools and crabbing.. it’s easy to forget the simple pleasures of a beach

Mirror’s Jason returns to his hometown Swanage

- BY JASON BEATTIE Head of Politics SUMMER APPEAL jason.beattie@mirror.co.uk @JBeattieMi­rror

STILL THE SAME Swanage high street

Iam not sure which hit me first, the noise or the smell. I could hear the waves rolling on to the beach, gently turning pebbles as they raced up the shore. Then there was that unmistakab­le air of brine and seaweed.

It was at that moment I knew I was back. Some 30 years ago, I left Swanage – the Dorset town where I had tried, and at times failed, to grow up – for a new life in the big cities. First Birmingham and then London.

As my parents moved too, there was little reason to go back.

Three decades on, I may have changed but, thankfully, Swanage hasn’t. The sandy bay still sweeps round to Old Harry Rocks. The high street still bustles with the same cafes and shops. Tourists still gather outside the same fish and chip shop.

Asked to conjure up the image of perfect English seaside town, it’s hard to find somewhere that fits the bill as perfectly as Swanage. It’s got a sandy beach, Victorian shelters, bright beach huts, amusement arcades, a pier and almost constant sunshine.

It is so gentle and genteel, its picture should, and does, grace boxes SWEET TREAT Ice cream stand

of fudge. My memories of Swanage are mixed. From late September to May, the town hibernated from the rain and the wind. Then, for three joyous months – June, July and August – there was nowhere better.

After school we would race down to the beach. We swam, we played cricket, we messed around in dinghies and fished for bass.

In my teenage years, there were beach barbecues and nights out at the only nightclub in town.

Did I appreciate all this? Hell, yes. Did I realise how lucky I was? Not so much. Nearly one in five children in England have never been to a beach.

They have never experience­d the joy of building sandcastle­s, poking about in rockpools, or burying yourself in the sand. That is why the Daily Mirror has launched a summer appeal with the Family Holiday Associatio­n, to raise money for kids who would never normally get the chance to spend a few days by the seaside.

In this digital age of instant gratificat­ion it is easy to forget the simple pleasure of spending time as a family on a beach holiday.

You saw that joy on the face of Felix Stanley, three, as he tried to save his sandcastle from the waves, ably assisted by his dad Merrick and grandfathe­r Chris. Here were three generation­s and it was hard to tell who was the biggest kid.

“It’s fun and it’s safe and the water’s Jason in Swanage Lad gets crab perfect,” says Merrick, from Bromley, South East London. The same innocent delight could be found on the quay, where Tina Chawes watched her three sons – Adam, nine, David, seven, and Simon, six – fish for crabs.

They travelled from Copenhagen. What attracted a family of Danes to our south coast? Tina says: “I love England in the summer. It’s nice and friendly. And I like the bakery.”

The bakery/cafe, Haymans, was where I had my first-ever job, aged 13. It is a reminder of how little has changed. The Tesco is now a Budgens and the cafe on the seafront is a Harry Ramsden’s but, otherwise, Swanage has taken a leisurely stroll into the 21st century. Though there are nods to changing tastes – the ice cream stall on the front has added an

A S S E

“artisan” range to its staples. I bump into Bruno Forte, who runs La Trattoria restaurant – another place I worked. He says: “It is busier than it was. We have a lot of festivals.

“There are also a lot of independen­t shops. When all high streets look the same, they like the fact Swanage has an independen­t feel. But the reason they come is the beach. For families, it needs to be the beach.”

Please don’t change, Swanage. If you promise to stay the same, I will M

not leave it another 30 years before I I come back.

Tell us what you think: yourvoice@mirror.co.uk

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