Walker rescued from 'dangerous' Swanage beach
- Filed under:
Travel News
PA
A walker had to be rescued by fire crews on Friday, after he became stranded on an "extremely dangerous" stretch of Swanage beach, Dorset.
BBC News reports that the walker was pulled from a waterlogged mix of mud and sand, situated near recent landslips.
According to the Bournemouth Echo, the walker ignored warning signs and became stuck in the mud.
Purbeck District Council Chief Executive Steve Mackenzie told the Bournemouth Echo that he is concerned that people are risking their lives by walking in dangerous areas.
He said: "We are extremely disturbed to hear that people continue to ignore the warning signs and are getting stuck in the mud near the landslip.
"It is particularly worrying that someone could take a chance at high tide or in the dark when there is no one around to see them."
He added: "Do not ignore the warning signs, do not risk your life. The signs are there for your safety."
The beach has become unsafe due to heavy rain in December and January. Wet weather has made parts of the cliff unstable, and a number of landslips have caused debris to fall onto the beach. There have been significant landfalls to the north of Ocean Bay, particularly in the section between Burlington Chine and Sheps Hollow. The ground is so waterlogged that there is a risk of further falls of rock and clay.
Click on the image below to see some of the world's most dangerous beaches...
World's most dangerous beaches
- Morecambe Bay, UK<p> You don't have to go to exotic shores to find dangers lurking in deceptively calm waters. <a href="http://www.visitlancashire.com " target="_blank">Morecambe Bay</a>, in Lancashire, is notorious for its quicksand and fast moving tides, which took the lives of 23 Chinese cockle pickers in 2004. Visitors should only cross the sands of Morecambe Bay with an official guide.</p>

- Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands<p> Poor old <a href="http://www.bikiniatoll.com" target="_blank">Bikini Atoll</a> was once just a beautiful group of islands in the South Pacific. Then, in the Forties, it became notorious for two things: providing the name for the saucy new two-piece swimsuit, and being chosen by the US as the site for nuclear testing. The amounts of radiation that still exist in the food chain have made it impossible for the Bikini Islanders to return to their homeland, although tourism has been introduced to the ship graveyard dive site in Bikini Lagoon.</p>

- Hanakapiai, Hawaii<p> An unofficial wooden beach sign at <a href="http://www.gohawaii.com" target="_blank">Hanakapiai</a> on Kauai island shows more than eighty tally marks representing those who've drowned there, official reports put the number at thirty. Either way, the rip currents here are so treacherous, the sign's warning not to go in, or even anywhere near, the water is worth taking very seriously indeed.</p>

- Chowpatty Beach, Mumbai<p> Just when you thought Chowpatty Beach couldn't get any dirtier, a cargo ship sank off the coast in 2011, its load of 60,000 metric tons of coal polluting the water even more. Despite the layer of rubbish on the sand, locals still use the beach for their evening promenade, and even venture into the water every September during the festival of Ganesh.</p>

- Maho Beach, St Maarten<p> Ok, as far as we know no one's ever actually been hit by an airplane while innocently sunbathing on St Martin's <a href="http://www.st-maarten.com" target="_blank">Maho Beach</a>, but you only need to take a look on Youtube to see how dangerous getting up close to the jets can be as they take off from the scarily close airport. Blown away, literally.</p>

- Port St Johns, South Africa<p> Other beaches might have more frequent shark bite attacks, but nowhere are the sharks more aggressive and the attacks more likely to be deadly than in <a href="http://www.southafrica.net" target="_blank">Port St Johns</a>, on South Africa's southeastern coast, which has seen six fatal shark attacks in just over five years. Locals believe the bull sharks here are particularly blood-thirsty because witch-doctors make animal sacrifices on the beach, throwing the entrails into the sea.</p>

- Zipolite, Mexico<p> A relaxed attitude to nudity and soft drugs may attract many travelers to the stunning hippy haven of <a href="http://www.visitmexico.com" target="_blank">Zipolite</a>, but it's name - The Beach of the Dead - and the fact that there is a cliff at the far end of the beach covered in crosses to mark those who've died at the mercy of the powerful rip tides - reveals a rather scarier side of paradise.</p>

- New Smyrna Beach, Volusia County, Florida<p> <a href="http://www.visitflorida.com" target="_blank">Volusia County</a>, Florida holds the dubious honor of being the world's shark bite capital, with 231 reported attacks from when records began in 1956 and 2008. And if the sharks don't get you, a bolt from the sky just might, as Central Florida has more lightning strikes than anywhere else in the world.</p>

- Fraser Island, Australia<p> It's a cruel trick of nature that water as beautiful and clear as that surrounding Australia's <a href="http://www.australia.com" target="_blank">Fraser Island</a> conceals sharks, jellyfish and rip tides so dangerous you can't swim in it. Dry land's got its fair share of potentially fatal fauna too, including dingos, Funnel web spiders and pythons.</p>

- Recife, Brazil<p> The waters off <a href="http://www.brazil.org.uk" target="_blank">Recife</a> are so shark-infested that even the lifeguards don't go in the sea any more, training in a nice, safe swimming pool instead. After 56 shark attacks in the last twenty years - 21 of them fatal - surfing's been banned, and if that's not enough to put you off, the fact that most of Recife's sewage runs untreated into the water, just might.</p>

Related articles:
Dorset beach closed following major landslip
Landslip warps train tracks in Yorkshire









