Seachange in policy means new plan for Swanage seaweed

After 30 years, the local farmer who removed excess seaweed from Swanage Beach during the summer season is retiring and it’s causing a dilemma for the town council.

In order to allow beachgoers plenty of sand to enjoy and to prevent it getting smelly during hot weather, seaweed that has been blown on shore by an easterly wind has been removed by farmer Paul Loudoun who’s used it on his farm as fertiliser.

Advertisement 
Seaweed collection from beach

Farmer Paul Loudoun has collected excess seaweed from Swanage Beach for the last 30 years

Nutrient rich seaweed

Now Paul is retiring from the council contract and it’s proving hard to find someone who has the right credentials to provide the same service.

Many local farmers don’t want to put seaweed on their fields due to a change in agricultural policy which leaves them better off being paid to restore the natural biodiversity of their land, which the addition of seaweed would interfere with.

Seaweed is nutrient rich and high in calcium, sulphur and alginates, which is good to encourage growth, but of course, seaweed is not naturally found on Purbeck fields and heathlands.

Seaweed on the beach this week

An easterly wind can suddenly deposit a huge amount of seaweed on Swanage Beach, although it can also disappear on the next tide just as easily

Seaweed collection from beach

In Swanage the seaweed mainly collects on the beach between The Mowlem and the Banjo Pier, so beachgoers can usually find a seaweed free stretch if they head towards the northern end of the bay

Blue Flag beach

Swanage is a Blue Flag beach, which means that it’s managed to the highest of environmental standards and the awarding body, the Foundation of Environmental Education is advising that seaweed is left on the beach unless it’s a nuisance and if disposed of, that it’s done in an environmentally friendly way.

This means that the options to dispose of the naturally occurring seaweed are very limited and councils are being encouraged to think of other solutions.

One of the most viable options is to push it back into the sea, which is a method used elsewhere and has been done in Swanage in the past, although it requires a great deal of skill and a good knowledge of the tides.

It’s understood that nuisance seaweed in Poole Harbour is collected by boat and then taken back out to sea and released.

Seaweed on Studland beach

The National Trust which manages beaches in Studland leave seaweed where it settles

Seaweed on beaches

Seaweed can be tricky to navigate on busy summer days but it is a naturally occuring product of the coastal location

“Please bear with us”

At a meeting of the Swanage Town Council coastal change and beach management advisory committee on Wednesday 7th February it was proposed that a new approach would be trialled for 2024.

Chair of the advisory committee, councillor Mike Bonfield said:

“Due to the retirement of Paul and a change in environmental and agricultural policy, we’ve got to come up with a new management plan for excess seaweed on the beach during the summer. I’d like to thank Paul for all that he has done for the last 30 years and also for the help and advice that he has provided to the council.

“We’re now looking at how best we can return the seaweed back into the sea and considering our options on who could do that task. It’s going to be a one year trial to see how it goes.

“We’re just asking for everyone to please bear with us, as it may mean that the seaweed won’t be removed as quickly as in the past.”

Dessert was chocolate mousse with salted caramel and Studland seaweed

Studland outdoor company Fore Adventure runs foraging courses showing how seaweed can be used to make interesting meals including desserts

Seaweed in the garden
RHS

Seaweed is good for allotments and vegetable beds

Seaweed can be used by gardeners

Seaweed is popularly used in skincare products and as a food source. There’s also new products like a thin film which is created as an alternative to plastic.

However these production processes only require relatively small amounts of seaweed and are already provided for.

One of the major problems is moving large quantities of seaweed, deposited often with little warning due to changes in the tide and wind direction, and then transporting it from Purbeck.

Traditionally local residents have scooped up bags of seaweed to use on their allotments or vegetable beds and that’s still allowed for non commercial activities, so in future there may be even more opportunities for gardeners to improve their soil using Swanage seaweed.

How to use seaweed in the garden

Share this story

Contact us

Do you have anything to add to this story?

We like to keep everything up-to-date, so if you know more, please help us by getting in touch.

Advertisement 

Top stories

Three weeks of roadworks to begin in Corfe Castle Just in time for the new school term, a three-week lane closure on the A351 at Corfe Castle begins on Monday 15th April 2024. 1 month ago More Purbeck visitors urged to take trip to Brownsea 2 months ago Heritage loco derails during Swanage Railway diesel gala 1 week ago Swanage nightclub transforms into top new venue 1 month ago Open invitation to explore one of Swanage’s best kept secrets 4 weeks ago

Most recent

TV’s Time Team reveal results of Wytch Farm dig New light has been shed on Purbeck’s history following TV’s Time Team crew three-day dig carried out in fields at Wytch Farm near Corfe Castle in Dorset. 18 hours ago New sanctuary garden officially opened in Swanage 2 days ago Purbeck’s first shuffleboard tournament to raise funds for skatepark 3 days ago Sounding good – launch of new radio station for Purbeck 4 days ago Flying the Blue Flag for Swanage again 5 days ago