
Dogs and owners work to help protect Devon countryside
Dogs and their owners are being encouraged to enjoy the countryside in a way that respects the environment as the number of dog walkers increases.Local authorities say there are more and more people walking their dogs in east Devon as more homes are built in the area.Devon Loves Dogs is funded by local councils and offers guided walks and advice to dog owners.People behind the scheme said picking up dog mess and not allowing dogs near nesting or grazing sites were the two most important issues.
Julie Lowe is coordinator at Devon Loves Dogs, a project funded by East Devon District Council, Teignbridge District Council and Exeter City Council.Ms Lowe said: "People are out all the time all across our protected sites, so it's really about helping people to know a bit more about those places so they can do the right thing when they're out with their dog."It's also about being on top of things - so watching your dog when you're out on a walk, making sure you've got a lead, poo bags and making sure you're really engaged with your dog so you know where they are at all times and what they're up to."
Devon Loves Dogs is one of the projects run by South East Devon Wildlife, which has been set up to protect three wildlife sites in the area - the Pebblebed Heaths on Woodbury and surrounding commons, the Exe Estuary and Dawlish Warren.Kim Strawbridge, reserves manager for Pebblebed Heaths, said there were about 900,000 visitors each year to the site with about three-quarters of those people walking their dogs.She said: "At this time of year, we've got our ground-nesting birds, so most of the birds here are nesting in the vegetation on or close to the floor."By staying on the paths and keeping your dog under control you're really making space for those birds to thrive."Dog mess could be a issue but Ms Strawbridge said most people "bag it and bin it".She said: "But not everyone is on it - so it's really important that dog walkers have their eyes on their dogs so they can clear up after them."I think most of the waste that's left is purely people just not paying enough attention."
Dog walker Nell Parry said: "It's great socialisation for dogs and it's great for people - just to meet and know where you are and to learn about the environment and how to protect it."Karen Heywood, out walking with her dog Ernie, said: "It's been quite enlightening about the birds and the nesting season."You don't feel embarrassed if your dog is not quite behaving itself - it's not all about perfectly-behaved dogs, it's about learning to be with other animals."Devon Loves Dogs has been nationally recognised by the Forestry Commission as a best-practice community-based scheme. Walks are free and held throughout the year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
7 days ago
- BBC News
Seaton Hole: Major cliff protection work brought forward
A massive cliff protection scheme is likely to go ahead this year after a council agreed to bring forward Hole on the south coast has suffered repeated major landslips that have left beach users and coastal homes in Devon District Council said 7,000 tonnes of rock must be delivered by sea to Seaton by September to be able to press ahead with the project before prices go council's cabinet recommended an upfront investment of £673,500 this year to enable the £2.2m scheme to go ahead with a final decision due to be made by full council on 18 June. The council said the decision was "critical to help reduce delays and cost increases".Geoff Jung, cabinet member for environment at East Devon District Council, said: "Approval from council will allow us to push ahead and order the new rock to ensure best value for money now, as delays may result in higher costs being incurred next year."The project included increasing the volume of existing rock armour at the base of the cliffs, upgrading the steel baskets used to hold rocks in place and maintaining the current total cost is expected to be £2.2m and has already been approved by the Environment council said it was confident planning permission would be granted, as no major issues were raised during the pre-application report said there was a "small risk" of not getting planning permission but "in the worst-case scenario" that would result in the council having rock armour for future schemes.

The National
04-06-2025
- The National
Former Reform MP calls for Scottish Parliament to be scrapped
Lowe, who is an independent member after he was suspended from Reform earlier this year following a string of allegations about his conduct, which he has strenuously denied. The Great Yarmouth MP took to social media to call the Scottish Parliament, which was established in 1999, "a bloated, taxpayer-funded talking shop", adding that it was "time to scrap" it. READ MORE: Westminster's anti-migrant politics leaves new Scots 'hopeless and afraid' On Twitter/X, he wrote: "It's time to scrap the Scottish Parliament — a bloated, taxpayer-funded talking shop that duplicates what MPs already do. "Waste of time, waste of money. With the English being unfairly treated, again. "Abolish the Scottish Parliament." It comes after Nigel Farage — Lowe's former party leader — visited Scotland for the first time since 2019 this week, and said "devolution is here to stay" but hinted he would scrap the Scottish Parliament's funding mechanism if he won power in Westminster. Farage said the mechanism was 'out of date', adding: 'What I'd like to see is a Scottish Government that's able to raise a bit more of its own revenue and a Scottish economy that's actually got genuine growth and I don't believe that can happen without this sector [oil and gas] booming. 'I think, you know, the Barnett formula goes back to the 1970s. Is there an argument it should be looked at again? Of course there is.' Lowe was suspended from Reform UK in March after he was accused of making verbal threats against party chairman Zia Yusuf, and of bullying. The Crown Prosecution Service said no criminal charges would be brought against the independent MP earlier this month in relation to alleged threats towards Yusuf. Lowe has since accused his ex-colleagues of engaging in a 'sinister' attempt to use the police to silence him, and branded Farage a 'coward and a viper'. The MP has hinted in interviews since his suspension he would be interested in setting up his own challenger political party on the right. He has also suggested he would be open to joining the Conservatives, if the party were to undergo reform.


BBC News
12-05-2025
- BBC News
Developers told to stop work at Wolborough homes site
Developers have been ordered to stop work at a site in Devon where 1,200 homes are set to be District Council issued a temporary stop notice to Vistry Homes relating to the development at Wolborough, on the edge of Newton said they were concerned that groundworks being carried out at the site - known as NA3 - may have gone beyond agreed planning Homes said it was working with the council "to resolve any concerns". Residents feared excavation work in Stray Park Meadow could damage Wolborough Fen, a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).David Knopfler, one of the founder members of the band Dire Straits with his brother Mark, now lives in Wolborough, where his home overlooks the development said he and other residents were "heartbroken" by the start of the said: "These rolling green hills are irreplaceable, and they're full of all kinds of natural wildlife and plants that are native to the area, endangered and so forth."Of course, once you make a huge scar like this, you've done the damage already." Discussions over plans for the site have been going on for more than 10 years and the scheme was give outline approval by the planning inspector in District Council said it had served a temporary stop notice on the developer "for a potential breach of planning control".A spokesperson for Vistry Group said: "We have paused these initial works whilst we work in partnership with Teignbridge Council to resolve any concerns they have relating to the original planning permission."