Western Daily Press

The silent disco lovers who are cleaning up

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BEACHGOERS are swapping boogie boards for a boogie beach clean to help protect nature in Devon.

Silent disco beach cleans at the National Trust’s Woolacombe beach are encouragin­g people to get grooving whilst helping clean up the coastline.

Organisers wanted to broaden the appeal of beach cleans by adding a new twist to attract both new and younger volunteers.

The numbers turning up to help tackle damaging plastic waste and litter have increased since introducin­g tune-filled headphones, with one event welcoming nearly 100 people.

The three-mile-long beach is a haven for surfers and bodyboarde­rs, and during the summer months can welcome 10,000 visitors a day.

Volunteer Louise Gavin said: “It’s great to be able to come out and help the local community to keep the beaches clean and how you would like them for yourself.

“It’s important to us to help the local wildlife in any way that we can and work to prevent more plastic from getting into the ocean.”

Monthly cleans make the coastal location a safer home for marine wildlife including seabirds such as gannets and puffins, and marine mammals like dolphins and seals.

North Devon National Trust ranger Fraser Goodfellow said: “We’ve been running monthly beach cleans at Woolacombe for over a year and uptake can vary widely. Now, with the addition of North Devon Silent Disco, a mix of people from the local community and holidaymak­ers of all ages, including families and young people, are coming together in a communal effort to keep the beach clean and healthy.

“Nearly half who come along haven’t done a beach clean before and it’s fantastic to see a wider range of people volunteeri­ng their time to get stuck in.

“We want to say a huge thank you to them all for their hard work; with a constant stream of marine waste and litter arriving across our shores, cleaning up our coastline has never been more important.”

Litter has always been a big problem on beaches and in the countrysid­e, as it is hugely damaging to the wildlife and environmen­t. Unsurprisi­ngly, plastic is the most common material washed ashore at Woolacombe, with a staggering 90% of beach rubbish collected in 2019 being plastic or polystyren­e.

Recent litter finds at Woolacombe include a Coke can dating from 2020 and originatin­g in Denmark, plastic shopping bags from the 1990s and a plastic fairy liquid bottle with the price marked in shillings.

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