RE: By the Sea?
A salient point at this time is to mention flooding and your prospective bug out area. Depending on the nature and severity of "the event" it has huge implications for many areas of the UK regarding flooding and re-growth of ancient flood basins and marsh/Carr land.
Historically large areas of England have been drained to make way for farmland and cities, and are only kept that way through an intricate network of pumping stations, all controlled by electricity and computers. Recent events have shown us that these can be overwhelmed by a succession of bad storms, even though those stations were all working and pumping.
In a scenario where the power grid fails these areas will revert quickly back to their natural state. The area of Holderness where I live was formerly a land of Meres (lakes) waterways and Marshes, with the villages all being found on the high ground. Geoffrey Chaucer 1340-1400 in the Summoners tale (part of the Canterbury tales, opens with the line
"Masters, there is in Yorkshire, as I guess,
A marshy region that's called Holderness"
The only Mere left now is Hornsea Mere 120 hectares and the largest natural lake in Yorkshire, but at Chaucers time there were still 50 or so other lakes. If the pumps stopped in Holderness the vast majority of the land would disappear, the remaining small pockets would only support a small population, travel being more efficient by boat than road.
Other flood plains like the areas around the Wash, the Fens, The levels and South Yorkshire wood be impassable.
When William the Bastard took his army Northwards in the Winter of 1069-70 to subdue the Northern counties he was held up by the local Saxons who had destroyed the only bridge allowing access to the area, the rest of the country being bog and marsh and useless for cavalry. Being unable to pronounce the Saxon word for the place he named it "Broken bridge" in Latin PONTEFRACT. So anyone living in this area should be aware of the natural tendency of this area to become wetland and plan accordingly.
The fens which occupy an area of 1500sq miles has always historically been an area of low lying marshland interspersed with high ridges of land where the villages are found. This area also would revert back to its former condition where travel and living area would be severely compromised. To get an idea how the land would look and the extent, imagine an area from Lincoln to Cambridge going East to the coast, the majority of that land underwater. We have historical accounts that describe the land as "wild Fenland". The area was so remote and hard to navigate that Hereward the Wake 1035-72 a Saxon rebel held off the Bastards Army with a small band of men, only succumbing when the attackers built a series of causeways to their stronghold of modern day Ely, which was known as the Isle of Ely. If you live in this area you need to be aware that what is now dry land won't be if the pumps stop. For those people whose plans include a total breakdown of life as we know it, and the breakdown of industrial infrastructure, I would recommend studying your local areas Historical accounts and Archaeological/Geological material as the area you live in may change beyond all recognition very quickly once the pumps stop.
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