Cull-Peppers Dish (grid reference SY814926) is a 0.9-hectare (2.2-acre) sinkhole and geological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Dorset, notified in 1989.
[1] The name of the site and that of the nearby Culpeper's Spoon were possibly named after the herbalist Nicholas Culpeper.
[2] The site is used in Thomas Hardy's novel The Return of the Native as the place where Mrs Wildeve collects holly for a wreath.
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