Gupton Farm
Most of the Cawdor Estate in South
Pembrokeshire is in the ownership of the National Trust, one property
Gupton Farm and parts of Castlemartin Corse are to be taken inhand
and managed by the Trust.
Freshwater West, is undeveloped and
sought for wildness and solitude. The surfers and recent films made
there has led to intense visitor pressure.
The beach and the sand dunes are of
scientific interests one of the few relatively intact calcareous
water meadows.
The area was improved by drainage by
the Cawdors, the water levels managed for agriculture.
For most of my life with the outfall to
the beach (recently removed)the area has contained seasonal dune
slacks and winter flooding meadows with a calcareous alkaline soil.
With dune stabilisation by the National
Park the supply of wind blown ground up shell fragments, has not
replenished the “machair”.The high rainfall leaches the lime from
the sand which becomes acid the water draining into the streams is
alkaline, When there are is wind blown shells the top two or three
centimeters are alkaline, which when combined with close grazing
produces a herb rich grassland home to a mutitude of flowering
plants.
The dune slacks and the watercourses
are flooded with alkaline mineral rich clear water, a haven for fish
invertebrates insects with a profusion of water plants.
Reading a Consultants Report from 2007
the area has been changed by drainage not being maintained and by run
off from upstream ploughing filling the drains with silt.
It is now an offence under the European
waters Directive to allow further degradation of historical waterways
used by migratory fish for spawning purposes
The steam has an annual run of elvers
in and mature eels out to sea. Lampreys are present (or were). The
future pressures on the land are critical, the desire by Surfers to
set up an International Surfing Center, to quote their words”surfers
will not walk far, they need car parks at the top of the beach cafes
and camping.”
Pembrokeshire County Council recognises
Global Warming and predicts the destruction of the present road by
rising sea levels, one proposed solution is to close the road from
the road to Angle to Castlemartin and restrict vehicle access to
householder access,.
The farm has to produce an economic
return to pay for Conservation, and to support local people.
The dune slacks and the seasonal
flooding historically have been a haven for waterfowl of
international importance.
At present there is no public access,
any public access with free running dogs will degrade this as it
has destroyed the sanctuary value of other sites in Pembrokeshire.
These are some of the competing
priorities, the debate about future use is too important to be left
to Pembrokeshire Politics, this area is of international importance.
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