Relaxed café bar offering stunning views across the bay, breakfast, lunch and dinner menus and a wide selection of craft beers, wine and cocktails. Indoor and outdoor seating available. Live music every Thursday night from 8pm.
Audrey and Katie Vellacott welcome you to the Beach House Café, situated on Marine Parade with seating available inside, outside and in the beach garden. Offering all-day breakfasts from 8am to 3pm, including traditional options or our famous Middle Eastern shakshuka, as well as a varied lunch menu, hot and cold drinks.
Telephone: 01297 445923
Business Address:
The Beach House Café
Marine Parade
Lyme Regis
Dorset
DT7 3JF
The Fisherman’s Wife is no ordinary fish and chip takeaway, with specials including hand-dived Lyme Bay scallops in garlic butter, alongside the traditional favourites of cod, fish cakes and burgers. Situated just a stone’s throw from Lyme’s historic Cobb harbour.
The Fisherman’s Wife
Ozone Terrace
Lyme Regis
Dorset
Superb panoramic views looking out over the bay, with views down to the Cobb Harbour and along the world famous Jurassic coastline.
Relax on the sun-drenched terrace or enjoy the breath-taking sea views from inside the stylish Café interior with floor-to-ceiling windows and décor – which showcases simplicity and clean lines with natural materials combined with hints of industrial vintage elements for a modern feel.
We’ve carefully selected our coffee roasters to provide the highest quality blends and we offer a large range of Organic teas. Breakfast and lunch is seasonal and changes frequently depending on what great produce the Chefs source locally. Superb wines, West Country produced artisan gins and vodka, quality beers and local ales are all on offer. They source the freshest seafood and seasonal local produce to create gorgeously tasty dishes all served in the heart of Lyme Regis nestled on the beautiful Dorset Coastline.
They serve Breakfast, Lunch + Afternoon Tea 7 days a week!
SPRING OPENING TIMES
Monday – Sunday
9.00am – 5.00pm
The Lyme Bay – Café & Bar
8-10 Bridge St
Lyme Regis
Dorset
DT7 3QA
A variety of stalls to browse and something different
Cricket Club bar is open all afternoon in their pavilion.
Marquee and village hall displayed Show and Craft entries
Family Dog Show
Children’s races
Cream teas, homemade cake and fresh sandwiches in the Village Hall
Uplyme Morris Men performances
HiDDeN – blues, folk and popular soft-rock music
Free steam train rides from Weymouth & District Model Engineering Society
A variety of stalls to browse and find something different
Munchkins Miniature Shetland Ponies
Peak Hill Llamas – groom and walk with them
Willow work and Hurdle Maker
Cricket Club bar open all afternoon in their pavilion
Roland Thompson, a farrier known as Nags and Nails
Rousdon Spinners in the entrance to the Village Hall
Patchwork and Quilting Group
Blackdown Poultry
Bouncy castle
Ice creams
Axe Vale & District Conservation Society
Dorset Wildlife Trust
Butterfly Conservation
Blackdown Hills Hedging Association
1.15 pm HiDDeN – blues, folk and popular soft-rock music
2.00 pm Uplyme Morris Men
Family Dog Show Competition begins.
2.30 pm Q&A with Anne Swithinbank
3.15 pm HiDDeN – blues, folk and popular soft-rock music
Children’s races organised by Vanessa and Jethro
4.00 pm Uplyme Morris Men
4.30 pm Presentation of Awards by Anne Swithinbank and
Raffle Draw in the Events Arena
The park and ride service operates from Charmouth Road to the east of Lyme Regis (DT7 3UE).
We strongly recommend that visitors who are driving to Lyme Regis during busy periods use the park and ride whenever possible.
The service will operate on the following dates:
Saturday 5th May to Monday 7th May
Saturday 26th May to Sunday 3 June (Whitsun)
All weekends in June
All weekends in July
Thursday 26 July to Sunday 2 September (summer holidays)
Buses run every 20 minutes. The first bus leaves the park and ride site at 10am and the last bus gets back to the site at 7.35pm. The site will be closed at 8pm. Detailed timetables are available at the tourist information centre.
Fares
Group return ticket (up to five people, any ages) – £6
Adult single – £2
Adult return – £3.50
Child single – £1.50
Child return – £2.50
The service will call at Lyme Regis square, Charmouth Road and Holmbush car park.The Woodmead Road (Hill Road – DT7 3HN) car park is a good all-round car park that is within easy walking distance of the town centre.
Car Parks
There are two long stay car parks in Lyme Regis; Charmouth Road (DT7 3DW) in the east of the town and Holmbush car park (DT7 3LD) in the west. Both car parks are within walking distance of the town centre and seafront although there are some hills to contend with.
Seafront car parks (Cabanya and Monmouth Beach) are located at the harbour end of the seafront and are very convenient for the beaches and the Cobb (DT7 3JJ). These car parks are more expensive for longer stays.
For town parking, there is a small NCP car park at the top of Broad Street (DT7 3QH) and a small amount of short term parking in two car parks at the bottom of Broad Street (DT7 3QD).
Hop on the Jurassic Coaster – The Jurassic Coast Bus
There are 5 buses servicing this route. The X53 in particular allows you to enjoy some of the most spectacular views of the Jurassic Coast. The Jurassic Coaster services are operated by First Bus. The bus services change fairly often so the best thing is to look at the First Bus website.
The local bus into Lyme is the X51 and X53. The stop is by the pub and they leave throughout the day. The bus leaves the centre of Lyme, the time table can be seen here.
The Black Dog Tea Room is a short walk from the cottage towards Lyme. The owners, Rod and Sonia are very accommodating and flexible with menu and all the food is home made. There is a Lovely garden with views over the valley and they are very dog friendly.
They are open from 10am to 5pm everyday but closed on Wednesday. To reserve a table call them on 01297 444063.
For those interested in railways or industrial archaeology the Cannington Viaduct is one of the largest viaducts in East Devon and it heralds from a time when railway construction was at its height. The Lyme Regis branch line was just over 6 miles long from the main line at Axminster to Lyme Regis and was known as the Bluebell Line.
It was a ‘Light Railway’ built to slightly lower specifications than the main line and at its height there were up to nine trains a day between Axminster and Lyme Regis.
When the railway closed Lyme Regis station was dismantled and re-erected on the Watercress Line near Winchester in Hampshire. Lyme Regis station was about 0.63 miles (1km) from the centre of the town and the site is now occupied by Travis Perkins builders merchants.
Directions
From the Cottage turn left and walk down to the Village Hall.
Go through the gate at the back right hand side of the Village Hall car park into a field (passing a finger post grid referenced SY 324934). Walk in front of the cricket pavilion, cross a bridge and go through a gate.
Continue ahead up a field bearing left around a line of trees. Follow the top edge of the field with the trees on your right and go through a gate to reach a tarmac track where you turn left to reach the road at Wadley Hill.
Cross this junction and continue ahead (along Cannington Lane) passing a 30mph speed restriction sign and bear left at the next junction with the viaduct in view in front of you.
After 680 yards (625m) you go under the Cannington Viaduct.
The 203 yards long viaduct was part of the Axminster to Lyme Regis light railway which opened in 1903 and was the first viaduct in Britain to be made from concrete. It has 10 elliptical arches and is about 92 feet high.
Soon after it was opened the western end began to subside and an extra ‘fill in’ arch was added. The branch line closed in 1965 and there is no public access to the viaduct itself.
About 110 yards (100m) after the viaduct go left through a field gate just before Shapwick House. You follow a public bridleway across a field with great views of the Cannington viaduct.
The term Shapwick means ‘sheep farm’ and several places around here bear the name. Just before the viaduct on the right (as you walk along) is the site of Holcombe Roman villa which was first excavated in the 19th century. Beneath the villa was a late Iron Age settlement where a rare mirror (AD 30 – 70) was discovered and it is now in the British Museum. The site has been grassed over and there is nothing to see today.
The bridleway goes in front of the large house ahead and joins a largely concrete track. Almost at the end of the track you reach Cuckoo Hill Cottages with a stile on your left.
Cross the stile and bear right heading down across fields, crossing two more stiles and the track of the dismantled railway. You reach a gated footbridge into the Hook Farm campsite.
Walk through the campsite to reach the road (Gore Lane) where you turn left and descend to reach the Talbot Arms. Here go right to reach Blacksmith’s Cottage.
This is a delightful short walk which begins at Lyme Regis in Dorset and ends at Uplyme in Devon. The walk starts at the historic resort of Lyme Regis and follows alongside the River Lym (or Lim) to reach the village of Uplyme.
Much of this walk is on firm surfaces so it makes a good all year round walk. Several sections are part of the East Devon Way – a 40mile (60 km) inland footpath from Exmouth to Lyme Regis marked by a foxglove logo and signed by pink arrows.
Directions
From Cobb Gate at Lyme Regis there are two routes to the Town Mill:
a) Go through Broad Street (pay & display) car park and descend the steps on the right at the back of the car park to reach the Town Mill and Craft Centre.
b) Walk along Coombe Street, opposite the Museum and Guildhall, signed ‘Riverside Walk Town Mill’. After 120 yards (110m) go sharp left signed ‘Riverside Walk Town Mill’ to reach the Town Mill and Craft Centre
The Town Mill dates from the 14th century and was used as a wheat mill until the 1920s when it closed. After being a Council yard and used for storage (including deck chairs) the mill fell into a derelict state until it was restored and reopened to mill grain in 2001. Grain is still milled here and three different kinds of flour are on sale inside. Surrounding the mill are other buildings used as a Craft Centre and cafe.
Turn left between the end of the mill building and ‘Old Lynch Mill Lane’ (house) along a narrow walled path. At the end go right. Walk along with the mill leat on your right and the river on your left.
At the road continue ahead up Mill Green (a road) and after a short distance, you join the riverside path again.
Cross the river to reach a road with Windsor Terrace opposite. Continue along Windsor Terrace with the river on your left to reach a stone arch bridge and fingerpost at Horne Bridge (named after the Horne Tavern which once stood near here). Continue ahead signed ‘Uplyme & East Devon Way ‘(part of the Wessex Ridgeway).
Continue ahead with the river on your left crossing a stone footbridge to reach a field. Go through the field aiming for the fingerpost and gate ahead.
After the gate cross a wooden footbridge and go left at a fingerpost (grid referenced SY 333933) at ‘The Old Mill’ and signed ‘Uplyme ½ ‘.
From the 14th to 18th century there were lots of mills along the river with many of them being textile mills producing good-quality cloth. Dying and weaving was also carried out in the village and it is said that cloth was produced here for Queen Elizabeth I’s soldiers.
One of the remaining mills is the Old Mill here which was built in the 18th century as a textile mill driven by an overshot water wheel.
Walk in front of the Old Mill and then along a raised path above the river. You reach a track (Mill Lane) where you go left passing Honeysuckle Cottage to reach a road (where the fingerpost is at SY 329934).
Cross the road and continue ahead (signed ‘Uplyme ¼’).
At the next road (Church Street) take the path to the left of Church Cottage unless you wish to visit the church where you turn right and climb the hill to the church.
The Church
The original church was medieval but it was largely restored in 1876 and has a very attractive wagon roof. On the right from the entrance, there is a fine stained glass window dedicated to the memory of Wilfred Parke, a very early aviator, who was killed in 1912 ‘by the fall of his aeroplane’ (the word “crash” had not yet been invented).
The yew tree is the oldest living inhabitant of Uplyme being over a thousand years old.
The path on the left of Church Cottage reaches the car park of the Talbot Arms and the bus stop with the Village Hall opposite.
The Talbot Arms is named after a local landowner Sir John Talbot who was an admiral and Lord of the Manor from the early part of the 19th century.