I live very near and no it's not normally known as a place for cliff jumping but it has been all over the news lately because it seems to have become the Dorset place of choice for ridiculous numbers of visitors totally ignoring distancing. It has the locals up in arms.
well, they're a lot closer together once the helicopter lands and takes up half the beach. And again when they leave the beach in a queue. That should increase the infection rate, but I'm not sure that's their fault.
237SJ
I am a very long way from Dorset.
In our neck of the woods, tomb-stoning usually referred to illicit sex in a grave yard/cemetery, after a good night on the ale.
I visited Durdle Door back in the '90s. Lovely coast, lovely view - shame about the shingle beach, not a patch on the nice, sandy ones we have up here. No-one was jumping off anything. It seems to be a new-ish craze. They are the idiots, theirs is the problem; except that they are taking-up valuable medical resources which should be directed elsewhere. 'The selfish generation' strikes again.