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Plea for walkers to steer clear of muddy Duncan Down in Whitstable to allow nature to recover

11:11, 24 February 2021

updated: 11:21, 24 February 2021

There are calls for dog walkers to stay away from Whitstable’s largest nature reserve as parts of the beauty spot resemble a mud bath.

Duncan Down, now known as Gorrell Valley Nature Reserve, is feeling the impact of a “perfect storm” of rain, snow and increased footfall.

The extent of the damage to Duncan Down
The extent of the damage to Duncan Down

As a result, Cllr Ashley Clark, a leading figure in managing the open space, is pleading with walkers to utilise the town’s coastline instead of the swamp-like village green.

“If people have got a choice as to where they can go, we’d prefer it if they went down the beach for a few weeks,” he said.

“They won’t need their Wellingtons down there.

“We appreciate Duncan Down is a community asset, but you don’t want to ruin your own asset by abusing it.

“We expect kids to do outdoor and adventurous things - the slope’s been used for sledging for decades, and it’s great we’ve got somewhere people can do that, but now people have had their fun.

Paths have been turned into mud baths
Paths have been turned into mud baths
Cllr Ashley Clark. Picture: Chris Davey
Cllr Ashley Clark. Picture: Chris Davey

“We say ‘the nature reserve has provided you with some fun, but return that by now staying off it for a bit and come back in the spring.

“It’s about providing kindness to the ground.”

“It’s not a case of saying ‘don’t come and never come back’, we just want people to give it a period of leaving it alone.”

Cllr Clark says the combination of a wet autumn and winter, compounded by heavy footfall and snow, has caused the reserve to become a mud bath.

“This is the worst it’s ever been - and that’s because kids aren’t at school.

How Duncan Down could look if it were to recover. Picture: Ashley Clark
How Duncan Down could look if it were to recover. Picture: Ashley Clark

“The grass has been hammered every single day.

“Give it two or three weeks to recover.

“To go trampling through will make its recovery take longer.

“We don’t want to kill anyone’s fun. We don’t to put any signs up, just hopefully people will realise it’s better in the long run to let nature recover."

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