Often associated with a 75-foot Greenland Whale that washed up here, its name probably originates from the Wavell family,[1] owners of the nearby Atherfield Farm between 1557 and 1636.[2]
During World War II, concrete fortifications where built there.[3]
It is reached from a car park on the A3055 coastal road, where a stream running parallel to the cliff in a man-made ditch takes a right-angled bend to descend to the beach.[4][5]
In the past, descent to the beach at Whale Chine could be achieved by some 126 wooden steps, since their closure in 2005, these steps were washed away by the sea in the winter storms of 2013 and 2014. As the beach is a popular fishing site, Local fisherman have constructed a new flight of stairs by carving steps down through the rock, although this is not recommended. Despite the old steps forming part of a footpath and legal Right of Way (footpath C34, Chale Parish), the Isle of Wight Council refused to repair them, stating that "major structural works at great expense would be required to make the path safe for use with no guarantee that such works would be a permanent solution." They have been inaccessible to the public since at least 2005 and subject to a "temporary closure" since then.