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Cove Harbour Cellars Cove Harbour Cellars [South Entrance] Cove Harbour Access Tunnel [east] Cove Harbour Cellars [North Entrance] Cove Harbour Cave [1] Cove Harbour Cave [2] Cove Harbour Cave [3] Cove Harbour Access Tunnel [west] Cove [Overview] Cove [Rockfall] Cove Harbour [Undercut] Piper's Cave Cove Harbour Cave [4] Cove Tunnel [1] Shafthead Cove Tunnel [1] Cove Tunnel [2] Tod's Hole Hollow Rock Cove (Caves of) [4]
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Cove Harbour, Berwickshire.
| NGR: | NT 78395 71702 |
| WGS84: | 55.93788, -2.34742 |
| Length: | Not recorded |
| Vert. Range: | Not recorded |
| Altitude: | Not recorded |
| Geology: | Not recorded |
| Tags: | Other |
| Registry: | main |
Although OS maps and Canmore coordinates place this cave near the blocked entrance to the cellars at Cove it is obvious from the description that this should be NT 78422 71736 (see Cove Harbour Cave [1]).
In addition to the works connected with the harbour projects, the inlet contains an interesting tidal cave. The cave opens just north of the north end of the beach, and, although clearly of natural origin, has evidently been adapted as an underground berth for boats - a precursor, as it were, of the bomb-proof U-boat pen. It is 21ft [6.4m] long, tapering internally; the mouth is 12ft 6ins [3.8m] wide by about 14ft [4.3m] high. The sea enters it at every high tide, and the mouth is fully exposed to easterly seas driving in from the harbour-entrance; the soft sandstone walls are thus very heavily weathered, and the traces of human work are consequently much smoothed off. However, it is possible to point, on the right-hand side, to a kind of irregular ledge, formed some 5ft [1.5m] above the floor, by the running-together of a series of footholds similar to those on the cliff-face E of the South Pier, and at its outer end this ledge expands into a small shelf, measuring 3ft 6ins [1.1m] by 2ft [0.6m] on which is fixed an iron ring with a few links of stout chain attached. At the inner edge of the cave, four footholds mount to the level of the ledge, and on the left-hand side several more run back towards the entrance; associated with these latter is an aumbry-like recess 2ft 9ins [0.8m] wide, 1ft 5ins [0.4m] deep and 2ft 6ins [0.8m] high in front, suitable for holding a lantern. The incised initials that cover the walls of the cave all appear to be the work of fairly recent visitors. The footholds and aumbry differentiate this cave markedly from Tod Hole. [A. Graham, 1966]
Alternative Names: None recorded.
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This entry was last updated: 2022-02-06 12:46:37
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