.. a neat and tidy 5ft-wide path which takes you into Seafield Avenue. Keep left and you'll arrive at the inner road...
.. here. If you manage to cross you can take a look at...
.. a good water feature.To the right here, you can see daylight coming through from the other side of the wall. To the left, a long dark pipe to the beach.
.. ooh, that looks occupation-y. Under all those leaves are probably steps down into a small shelter, I imagine.
It doesn't look like an observation post, or a gun position, or a telephone cable bunker, so I'm guessing it's an Action Point like the one near Rozel Manor or the one at Le Catillon, Grouville.At the Rozel one there are holes in a similar position to these metal fixings.
Not a lot to see on the other side. Good view, but there's just a hint of concrete bunker roof amongst a weed patch.
From the hill, you'd be able to spot this if you weren't too busy concentrating on driving around the bend without any collisions.
Up the hill a bit, and hiding in the bank are some steps that led to the bunkers in the field above. More of that in a moment or two, but first we head up the track farther down the hill from here...
.. (a private track but hey).. a memorial bench sits by the track to the nearby houses, and by a rusting relic and some stones.
Interesting, the woodwork here appears to be blocking access to something suspiciously like some German Concrete.Maybe a knowledgeable reader can let us know...? And those stones? Well, if you prefer your history a little older than WWII, you may already know...
.. it's a megalithic structure moved here from a field nearby (when the Hotel Cristina extended their carpark?) in the 1970s...
field 819 being here next to the hotel on an old map.
So, back to the bunkers once reached from those old steps. Looking over the field north-west from the stones, and there's the observation post for Battery Fritsch in the hedge. The battery was a little distance away, 4 field guns in fields between Rue de la Blanch Pierre and Mt Felard.The guns were moved later in the war to Maufant, becoming Battery Dietl.
We took our chances with angry farmers and twitching net curtains and made our way around the field (no crops were present to be damaged in the process) and in the north facing hedge there's this...
.. and finally the Obs Post itself. This is taken when I was facing the sea direction..... and clambering into the hedge, this time I'm facing the airport.
Facing back towards the bay, this is the view south-ish, with the bench and stones ahead.This is all private land, so it's up to you to decide whether you want to cause an incident or not :)
6 comments:
A very interesting set of photos. I'd heard about the megalithic stones that were moved, but had not seen them until now. I had no idea that there are so many bunkers up there as well and had never noticed that staircase before. Brilliant, can we have more like this please?
Thanks James, great to hear that my efforts were worthwhile! I will try to focus on specific topics and out of the way places rather than just trying to take pretty pictures - the viewing stats have shown that most of my visitors come from Google when searching for certain things, e.g. old hotels and tourist attractions, post boxes and bunkers are the most popular.
I'm glad I managed to cater to your interests!
Christmas Greetings from the Emereld Isle.
I'd never heard of Mont Felard until I read your blog. Looking at the road on Google Maps Streetview, the very steep sides are unusual, it appears to have been dug out of the ground. Would this have been excavated by the Germans or is it older? Indeed, what is (or was) Mont Felard? I couldn't find any info using Google. I'm intrigued...
Hi Irish visitor, Mont Felard gets its name from an old Jersey family name of Felard. It was one of the main roads created by the Lieutenant-Governor General George Don in the early 1800s, and prior to that the steep footpath was the original lower part of Mont Felard. Some of the current Mont Felard was indeed quarried through rock.
C.m.
You were right, it was a bunker under that wood. Photos inside the bunkers are here now
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=oa.1591959537705303&type=1
Thanks
Sounds interesting, thanks very much! I suppose I'll have to join that Farcebook thing just to take a look!
Thanks for commenting :)
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