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Sand blowing across Oystermouth Road in Swansea (Image: South Wales Evening Post)

Wales - The battle to stop Swansea being taken over by sand

Old tree trunks, fences and physically moving the sand about are being used in a 'constant battle with nature'

On a windy day, you'd be forgiven for thinking Oystermouth Road in Swansea - or certainly the pavement running alongside it - was actually the desert, or maybe even just one big beach with cars driving up and down it! Even the slightest of breeze can cause the road to be covered with sand, whilst a strong wind or stormy day sees tons of it shifted from the shore and deposited on the road.

Over the years, Swansea Council has brought in various measures to try to keep the sand where it belongs - on the beach - but it's been a constant battle with the elements. In 2016, severe weather saw the council work with Natural Resources Wales to introduce a "sand-trapping fence" to help create sand dunes further down the beach and away from the sea-wall.

Whilst the fence served its purpose for a good while, by the time of Storm Ali in 2018, the council had to bring in contractors to dig a three-metre trench along the length of the sea-wall on the beach and use a JCB to transfer tonnes of sand further down the beach, nearer the sea, as the sand had spread in the storm. Sand, which had blown into the road, however, could not be transferred back onto the beach for fear of contamination - so was mixed with salt and used in the winter months to help grit the roads.

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Now, Swansea Council is working on "environmentally-friendly improvements" on the beach to help keep the shifting sands at bay. The council is in the process of using several logs and tree trunks, those that have been blown over in recent storms, as "natural wind breaks" on the beach near Brynmill Lane, along with 240 metres of "chestnut fencing" to further help trap sand that would typically spill out onto Oystermouth Road and nearby pavements.

Sand often covers the cycle/pedestrian promenade path in Swansea
Sand often covers the cycle/pedestrian promenade path in Swansea (Image: South Wales Evening Post)

Announcing the works, a statement from Swansea Council explained: "Every year the council has to shift hundreds of tons of naturally wind-blown sand from the beach that ends up on the prom and the nearby Oystermouth Road. Now steps are being taken that will not only help reduce the amount of sand shifting off the shores but also create a cluster of new sand dunes and protect the natural environment.

"Logs and tree trunks blown over in recent storms have been brought in to act as natural wind breaks on the beach near Brynmill Lane to help reduce the amount of sand getting picked up and carried into places where it causes a nuisance to pedestrians, cyclists and drivers.

"The council is also planning to install 240m of chestnut fencing in the area to help trap sand that would end up on the roads and pavements instead, to create a new section of sand dunes in the area. Retaining the sand on the beach will help attract marram grass and other plants, maintaining and encouraging natural habitats for plants, insects, birds and other wildlife."

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