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SUSTAINABILITY

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FEATURES<br />

Conserving the bridleway<br />

at Elstead Common<br />

Flooded bridleway in desperate need of repair © Landmarc Support Services<br />

Landmarc Support Services has<br />

worked closely with the Defence<br />

Infrastructure Organisation and Natural<br />

England on a project to restore an old<br />

flooded bridleway and track on Elstead<br />

Common, making it a usable resource<br />

for both military training and the local<br />

community, whilst preserving and<br />

enhancing the protected habitats of a<br />

diverse range of wildlife.<br />

Elstead Common in Surrey, in the South<br />

East Region of the defence training<br />

estate, is an important training feature<br />

for soldiers practising logistics and minor<br />

infantry manoeuvre exercises. It is also<br />

a popular location for walkers, cyclists<br />

and horse riders from the surrounding<br />

villages, and part of a Site of Special<br />

Scientific Interest, a Special Protection<br />

Area and next to a Ramsar wetland on<br />

Thursley National Nature Reserve.<br />

access and access by the emergency<br />

services to respond to heath fires, which<br />

are common in the area.<br />

The solution was to raise the level of the<br />

track and introduce a prominent camber<br />

to enhance drainage. This was achieved<br />

using the old traditional method of<br />

excavating and re-using the existing<br />

green sand from alongside the bridleway<br />

to create holding banks and ditches.<br />

The excavated sand was then<br />

compacted in layers to form a strong<br />

base, raising the bridleway by some<br />

6ft in the worst areas. Rather than just<br />

creating a linear ditch to provide the<br />

drainage solution, the material was<br />

harvested by constructing a series<br />

of linked shallow swales or ponds<br />

alongside the bridleway. These will<br />

slow down the water flow into local<br />

streams and rivers and deliver an<br />

additional structural diversity to the<br />

heathland mosaic that will benefit<br />

wildlife. South facing banks attract<br />

basking reptiles like the sand lizard,<br />

smooth snake and adder as well as<br />

feeding birds such as the dartford<br />

warbler, wood lark and stonechat and<br />

over 20 species of breeding dragonflies<br />

and damselflies. A hibernacula has<br />

also been created from the rotting<br />

wood covered with soil to provide<br />

a safe place for hibernating reptiles,<br />

amphibians and other wildlife.<br />

By adopting old fashioned engineering<br />

methods to manage the water flow,<br />

using natural earth and sods, the<br />

project has delivered a sustainable,<br />

value for money solution with minimal<br />

impact on the environment. The<br />

swales also provide an important<br />

conser vation feature, where local<br />

schools, community groups, Wildlife<br />

Trusts and families can bring children to<br />

safely study the local wildlife.<br />

Robert Hodson<br />

Rural Manager, South East<br />

Landmarc Support Services<br />

A section of the bridleway had become<br />

increasingly prone to flooding over<br />

recent years, with parts more or less<br />

permanently under water. This caused<br />

the area to deteriorate to such an extent<br />

that it was impassable on foot, by horse<br />

or by vehicle, presenting significant<br />

challenges for military training, public<br />

The restored bridleway and track provides year round access for all users © Landmarc Support Services<br />

44<br />

Sanctuary 44 • 2015

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