The vast tidal flats are empty save for the hunched figures of three black-backed gulls considering a decomposed dogfish, and four humans (one rather small) trudging through the endless silt. A light mist obscures the coast with its string of motley houses and, on the breeze, there is only the distant soughing of shallow waves chasing foam over the sand. There is the piquancy of seclusion and its attendant danger here, perhaps the closest thing Kent has to wilderness. I’m relishing the long walk in this lonely place, but my children are less enthusiastic about our annual pilgrimage to the
Bodies of all 9 skiers killed in devastating avalanche recovered by authorities
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