A considerate start
Monday, December 22nd, 2008When the shareholders of Bedruthan bought the old Tredragon Hotel, the site consisted of the old 27 bed hotel including an indoor pool, bar, lounge, restaurant and terrace as well as a bungalow and garage. The hotel grounds were partially landscaped and laid to lawn, terraced in parts, divided by Cornish hedges (stone faced banks of earth) and a large area of impenetrable brambles and spiky bushes.
As part of the site preparation all the buildings needed to be demolished and taken away. Before any of this could happen and the bulldozers allowed on site, it was brought to our attention that the site was almost certainly home to slow worms, lizards and even some snakes. I discovered that slow worms are protected under The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. As a developer, we needed to take reasonable steps to prevent the killing or injuring of slow worms during the clearance of buildings, vegetation and top soil on the site.
By the time we were aware of this responsibility it was September and we needed to safely move these shy creatures before the weather got too cold and they went into hibernation. With the help of a few experts we encouraged them out of their homes with some black roof felting and strategically placed corrugated metal sheets on the ground!
The slow worms found a new home with one of the shareholders, Debbie, who is a very keen gardener. They now enjoy protecting her vegetable garden against hungry slugs!
As we cleared the site, piece by piece, we then undertook a “destructive search” whereby we took the Cornish hedges apart, stone by stone catching even more of the reptile population on the site. Finally, we carefully dug up the top layer of soil and then laid a black plastic sheet fence, partially underground, around the whole site to prevent them from returning while our backs were turned.
All in all, we were on site just over five weeks and the weather was unseasonably warm so we were able to complete this operation very successfully. In that time we caught nearly 120 slow worms, lizards and two small adders.
When we open the hotel next summer we hope that the landscaping we have undertaken, including the building of a natural pool will encourage a similar diversity of reptiles to make this site their home. We will have a number of green roofs, and much of the site will be planted with the type of wild grasses which one finds on the nearby dunes. In fact their will be no mown grass on this site at all!
Keep slow worms safe!!


