The Mail on Sunday

Bodyboard blight

Britain’s most beautiful beaches drowning in 14,000 polystyren­e boards dumped by tourists

- By Simon Murphy

AN ASTONISHIN­G new tide of plastic waste is threatenin­g Britain’s beautiful coastline – tens of thousands of polystyren­e bodyboards dumped by thoughtles­s holidaymak­ers.

Campaigner­s believe a remarkable 14,000 of them are being abandoned each year on beaches in the South West alone.

And in a single month, volunteers retrieved more than 600 from just three beaches – Croyde Bay in Devon and Summerleaz­e and Widemouth Bay in Cornwall.

The continued surge in the popularity of bodyboardi­ng and this year’s hot summer are likely to o make the problem even worse.

Many of the boards are made in China and sold for as little as £ 5.99. They are so flimsy they often snap within minutes.

When they break, polystyren­e beads are scattered on to the sand, posing a big risk to wildlife.

Former Spice Girl Geri Horner was criticised on social media just last week after posting a snap of f herself holding one of the boards on a Cornish break with husband Christian and their 18-month-old d son Montague – though there is no o suggestion she discarded it.

Many of the boards that cause the e problem are brightly coloured and d decorated with cartoon characters s to appeal to youngsters.

Neil Hembrow, from Wave Against t Waste, a campaign organised by the e charity Keep Britain Tidy’s beachcare programme, said: ‘ These boards are basically used either to o surf down the sand dunes, where they snap and are left, or they snap after being hit by one or two waves s because they’re only 2in thick.’

The 43-year-old campaigner and keen surfer urged holidaymak­ers to rent or buy sturdier versions.

‘We actually found some bodyboards left on the beach still in their wrappers,’ he added.

‘People had bought them, wedged them into their cars and they had snapped. The problem with expanded polystyren­e is it’s a plastic and, if these boards split, you get hundreds of polystyren­e balls that can spill out. They will float round our oceans and the potential for damage to marine life is huge.’

Mother-of-two Deb Rosser, 54, a primary school teacher from Bude, North Cornwall, volunteers to help clear rubbish from local beaches.

She said: ‘It’s a problem that’s not going to go away unless we raise the issue with the producers, the suppliers, the buyers, the shopkeeper­s and the public. These cheap bodyboards are always colourful and have got pictures of sharks and dolphins on them.

‘They’re pink for the girls, blue for the boys.

‘That is done because if you take eight-year-olds into a shop, they’re the ones they’re going to want.

‘They can snap after one or two waves’

It’s very clever marketing to appeal to children.’

A spokesman for Cornwall Council said that recovered boards were incinerate­d, adding: ‘If people do purchase polystyren­e boards, we would encourage them to take them home with them.’

 ??  ?? SCRAP HEAP: Discarded bodyboards piled up on a Cornish beach. Below: Geri Horner and her family with one of the boardsMA drone shot s showing b boards co collected by vo volunteers at a Bude beach. Ab Above: Beads sc scattered from aba broken board MARINE THREAT:
SCRAP HEAP: Discarded bodyboards piled up on a Cornish beach. Below: Geri Horner and her family with one of the boardsMA drone shot s showing b boards co collected by vo volunteers at a Bude beach. Ab Above: Beads sc scattered from aba broken board MARINE THREAT:
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