BEFORE
AFTER
Bridgend County Council
and the Environment Agency Wales in conjunction with Glamorgan
Wildlife Trust have now completed the river bank repairs
to lower Newbridge fields, in Bridgend Town. The repairs
to the eroded left hand bank became necessary as fears
grew for public safety and the impact on the preceeding
Road bridge. However due the presence of nesting Sand
Martins the planned works had been delay until the birds
vacated and a new suitable nesting area developed.

The embankment has now been replaced with
block stone back filled with topsoil and a man made sandbank
installed ready for the return of the sand martins.
Sand
martins and the law
Sand martins and their nests are fully protected by the
Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. Under the Act it is
an offence to intentionally kill, injure or take any wild
bird. It is an offence to intentionally take, damage or
destroy the eggs or nest of a sand martin while it is
in use or being built.
Sand martins often turn up at active sand quarries. They
will tunnel into the quarry face even when the sand is
being excavated, and in some cases have been known to
start nesting in heaps of loose sand. Quarry owners and
their workers are likely to be helpful if warned about
nesting sand martins, and can often work around the colony
or avoid the immediate area until nesting has finished.
Source: Sand martin wildlife information leaflet (1998)
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