HOME
Morte_Point

 

  

As a non-commercial Community web site we rely totally on people in the community to send us information and photos that will add to other people's knowledge of Exmoor and its surrounding area. Many thanks to the thousands of people who have contributed information so far to Everything Exmoor. Do you know the history of a particular place or have a story to tell about a local character? If so please send it along.

Add a FREE business listing - Send us photos and text for the site - Suggest new pages
Add events to the Exmoor Calendar - Add an Exmoor related Online Shop


Business Section

Menu


Home
Submit Listing
Compare Memberships
Login Now
Advanced Search
Contact Us
Sitemap
Improve your listing
Online Exmoor Shops

Categories


   Accountants
   Agriculture
   Animals
   Artists
   Art and Antiques
   Arts and Crafts
   Beauty and Hair
   Building and Construction
   Business Services
   Care Providers
   Charities and Voluntary Groups
   Clothing
   Clothing & Accessories
   Clubs and Societies
   Computing and internet
   Dancing
   Education
   Employment
   Entertainment
   Environmental
   Family
   Farming
   Festivals and Events
   Financial and Legal
   Food and Drink
   Furniture
   Gardening
   Health and Beauty
   Home Services
   Horse Riding
   Information Websites
   Insurance and Security
   Investigators
   Local and Community
   Manufacturing and Engineering
   Marine
   Media and Communication
   Personal Development
   Personal Services
   Photography
   Portal websites
   Property and Accommodation
   Public and Social Services
   Shopping
   Solar and Wind Energy
   Sport and Leisure
   Towns and Villages
   Trades
   Transport and Vehicles
   Travel & Tourism
   Village websites
   Weddings
   Wood Fuel Heating
  

Login Now


Username:
Password:


Password Reminder

Fun and Fitness Nordic Walking on Exmoor

Above is a randomly chosen banner to support an Exmoor Business

Recent Listings


Counselling Online and Face To Face
, TAUNTON, Somerset

Online and face to face counselling service
26-08-2008

Dartmoor Motorcycle Training & Services
, Tavistock, Devon

Motorcycle & Scooter training - CBT or A2 &
25-08-2008

Hatherleigh Holidays
, Hatherleigh, Devon

Self Catering Cottages and Luxury Bed & Breakf
25-08-2008

Umberleigh North Devon Community information
, Umberleigh, Devon

A free community web site for the area
22-08-2008

Property Swapping - Homeowners - Council tenants
, Bruton, Somerset

A new property swapping website
17-08-2008

Robbers Bridge
Robbers Bridge
Picture courtesy of www.lyndalephotographic.co.uk



America Uncorked LLC

Above is a randomly chosen banner to support an Exmoor Business

Search for:    

Click here for an ADVANCED BUSINESS DIRECTORY SEARCH

Morte Point

Add your information to this page

The headland of Morte Point with its Mortehoe Slates is in contrast to the headland of Baggy Point. Designated a site of special scientific interest primarily for its maritime heath, it is one of the few surviving examples of coastal heath in North Devon.  heather and gorse abound forming an attractive landscape. Seabirds including Gulls, Fulmars and Cormorants can frequently be seen.  The dreaded Morte Stone lies off Morte Point. Here a sunken reef of rocks has claimed many ill-fated ships and their crew’s lives. Legend has it that the Normans christened it the ‘Death Stone’.  During the last war both the Stone and the Point were used ads target practice from land, sea and air.

On a clear day you can see Buff Point, Hartland Point, Lundy Island and the coast of South Wales.

Several features of Morte Point are interesting for what they show of man's past activities in the area. On the south side the remains of a quarry are visible, cut into the rock. The slate was taken from here and used to roof nearby houses. North Morte Farm still has one roof of these so-called 'scantle'slates, which were held to the lath by oak pegs. Small areas of the Point were once ploughed and the end of the Point was once cut off by a wall. In 1914, at the outset of the Great War, a coastguard lookout was on the highest point, at over 150 metres, where it had a commanding view over the approaches to the Bristol Channel. Although it was demolished in 1982 when improved technology made it obsolete, the site is marked by an inscription and a list of names of those who 'waited and watched, guarding our coasts'.

The sea life is especially rich around Morte Point where in the summer it is often possible to see Dolphins, Porpoises, Sunfish and Basking Sharks.  The most common sight is, however, of Grey seals which haul themselves out onto the rocks below the point.

On the acidic soils of Morte Point and along stretches of the north-facing coast, bird's-foot-trefoil, tonnentil, wild thyme and heath bedstraw flourish among grasses such as fescues, sweet vernal and common bent. Between Bull Point and Sandy Cove and in the Torrs Park section there are heath spotted orchids. Some wetter areas have southern marsh orchid and bog pimpernel. All these grasslands are good for insects, especially butterflies, such as the dark green fritillary butterfly. The heathland includes heather and plants such as sheep's bit, bird's-foot-trefoil, buck's horn plantain, autumn squill and betony, and in areas more sheltered from sea winds, mixtures of heather, bell heather and gorse grow.

Between Lee Bay and Ilfracombe there are bluish grey or silvery slates and shales with occasional limestone bands, known as Ilfracombe Beds. The Morte Beds which run from Lee to Morte Point are pale grey, glossy Morte slates with conspicuous quartz veins. The reefs revealed at low tide along this coast consist of jagged masses of slates tilted almost vertical. The western coast has alternate bands of slates and sandstones. Most of the Baggy headland is of interest to geologists and is designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest for its geological features. The southern side is notable for a series of old shore platforms and raised beaches which provide evidence of former changes in sea-levels. Scattered along this coastline are several erratic boulders -rocks carried to the locality by glacial action and of a type not otherwise found here. The largest erratic is a 50 tonne granulite gneiss lying on the shore platform on the southern side at Freshwater Gut. It is similar in composition to rocks found in western Scotland and may have been carried here by icebergs.

The tapering headland of Morte Point, is renowned both for its wild beauty and its treacherous sea conditions. 'Avoid the race and rocky ridge of Morte Point' warned seafarers in years gone by and well they might, for twice daily the incoming tides swirl furiously around the dreaded Morte Stone, separated by a deep channel from the Point itself. Numerous ships have foundered on the rocks along this coast, five in the winter of 1852 alone. It is no wonder that many people believe that the word Morte means 'death', though Mortehoe probably means 'small, short or stumpy', referring to the shape of the headland.

There are many sayings which reflect the awe felt about the area: 'Morte is the place which heaven made last and the devil will take first' claims one. The inhabitants, too, gained the reputation for fierceness and their neighbours from Woolacombe were said to come to the village in groups 'because of Mortemen'.

Morte Point is a glorious place to be in all its many different moods. In late summer it is a blaze of colour with the purple heather contrasting with the spectacular golden yellow of the gorse. The rock exposures glow with bright pink clumps of thrift and other maritime flowers nodding in the sea breezes. The Point has been designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest for its coastal heathland and maritime grassland vegetation and for the birds, butterflies and many scarce insects which thrive there. Small numbers of fulmar and herring gull nest along the cliffs and oystercatcher breed along the rocky shore. Inland from the coastal fringe, the scrub and grassland is useful for birds such as stonechat -with their distinctive call like two stones being knocked together - as well as meadow pipit, linnet, yellowhammer, whitethroat and wheatear. In summer, seals can often be seen basking in the sunny, sheltered inlets of the northern coast.

Morte National Trust

Contributed by: Julia Clive

Add your information to this Everything Exmoor page now

Community Section

Number of people currently online at Everything Exmoor - 33
Maximum number of people simultaneously viewing Everything Exmoor recently - 97

Full list of Everything Exmoor Pages SEE FULL
LIST OF EXMOOR
COMMUNITY PAGES...
Currently over 1200 pages of information - you can add more..
QUICK CHOOSE A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Exmoor Calendar of Events

Calendar
Events on Exmoor

Blaze - lost Collie dog
Blaze - lost Collie dog




HELP ME to find information on this web site
Contact us
Add to Favourites
Refer a friend
Project Background
Public Notices

Local Weather
Newsletter
Read the National Park Exmoor Visitor Newspaper


SwiftMemory
Above is a randomly chosen banner to support an Exmoor Business

Dunster Yarn Market , Exmoor National Park
Dunster Yarn Market , Exmoor
National Park

Buzzard , Exmoor National Park
Buzzard , Exmoor National Park


Featured Listings


Fleet Limos of Minehead
, Minehead, Somerset




RM and CJ Penfold
, Williton, Somerset




Dunster Wood Fuels Ltd
, Barnstaple, Devon




Botanical Artist
, Watchet, Somerset




Spotlight Web Designs
, WELLINGTON, Somerset





Featured Products




Cranberry Vase
Lovley round vases 3", 4" and 5" diameter -hand made in Porlock Weir


Cranberry jugs
Simple hand made cranberry jugs 24% lead crystal


Bowls Dishes
Hand Blown 24% lead Crystal Blows and dishes





© 2006-2008 Everything Exmoor All Rights Reserved for the site structure.

All text, content, photos, diagrams, logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owners who are a mix of individual contributors from the community, organisations and businesses.





Disclaimer | Privacy | Terms of Use | Business Directory Site Map | Community Pages Site Map

As a condition of using this web site you note that Everything Exmoor and those creating the web site try to ensure that the information supplied and published on Everything Exmoor is accurate. However, we cannot accept any liability for the accuracy of content and no responsibility can be accepted by anyone connected with Everything Exmoor for any consequential loss or damage arising from its use. Visitors who rely on the information on Everything Exmoor do so at their own risk. Prior to using this web site you must read and agree to the following three documents Disclaimer, Privacy and Terms of Use

This site is continually being updated - last major update 07th April 2008

We would very much appreciate it if you you place a link to this web site from your own web pages