I’d hung around St. Helier to watch Middlesbrough F.C. play in the Championship final on the tv. Long story short, Middlesbrough lost the game and one thing led to another resulting in waking up the following morning feeling a little jaded.


Well stocked with liquids, I caught the bus from St. Helier to La Corbière on the south east tip of the island.
Arriving at La Corbière. The sky was cloudless and there wasn’t a whisper of a breeze. It was fairly obvious that there was to be no let-up in the heatwave.

Prior to my trip to Jersey, I’d been quite keen to visit some of the WWII concrete Atlantic wall installations. The Frederich Tamms designed structures had influenced the brutalist designs of the nineteen sixties. However, my visit to the Forced Labour memorial at La Hougue Bie had altered my perspective on these structures. Faced with the reality of how these structures were built, the term brutalist had taken on taken a different meaning.

I walked inland, following the bed of an old railway, to take a look at a large pink granite slab known as La Table des Marthes. The slab is thought to be the capstone of a Neolithic dolmen and was discovered in 1850. Originally the slab had been supported at each end by pillars of stone and earth. Pottery, burned stones and broken stone axes were also found. The structure was destroyed in 1899 during the construction of a railway.
From La Table des Marthes I followed the footpath down to Petit Port Beach and then climbed up through the dusty scrubland to look for a monument known as La Sergentè

La Sergentè is a dry stone wall lined circular chamber approximately three meters in diameter. The entrance to the chamber is via a short passage lined with upright stones and paved with granite slabs. The structure dates to the Early Neolithic making it one of the earliest monuments on the island.

The design of the chamber is unique in the Channel Islands however similar structures have been found in Northern France. When excavated, four early Neolithic pottery vessels were discovered along with a substantial amount of rubble from what is believed to be a corbeled roof. The structure was originally covered with an earth mound.



I had planned to walk along the coast to a couple of sites located in the scrubland further north. Hiking during the hottest part of the day during a heatwave is not my idea of fun. I decided to call it quits and return to St. Helier and visit the excellent Société Jersiaise museum.
During my brief visit to Jersey I was fortunate to visit a number of lovely places. Hopefully, one day I’ll return to the Channel Islands and visit a few more.











































