40 years! No wonder young people don't bother with the BBC.Are you looking for contributions to www.facebook.com/groups/I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue Appreciation Society?
There you go, some Celtic coast names.A question: along the Atlantic/Channel French coast a huge number of maritime physical features bear names with rural / agricultural etymology, people were historically tied to the land and when they went to sea for fishing they used farming terms, today we have rocks/shoals/capes named The cow, The pig, The butter pot, The big sow, etc etc, is it the same in the UK?


Young people these days have no sense of humour.40 years! No wonder young people don't bother with the BBC.
Maybe not, but I wouldn't want to be the BBC in 20 years when the old codgers who listen to rubbish on the wireless die off.Young people these days have no sense of humour.
... There is also a Chicken Rock somewhere off the Isle of Man, with its own lighthouse.
Probably in memory of some highwayman... Friends of mine live in Scratchface Lane, probably named before the advent of tractor-driven flails for "trimming" hedges...Not quite nautical, but in Wivenhoe we have Cutthroat lane, one of several I believe.