Sand Bay

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Sand Bay looking north from Monk's steps. Spartina grass can be seen at the north of the beach. Sand Point is in the background and South Wales in the far distance across the water.
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Sand Bay looking north from Monk's steps. Spartina grass can be seen at the north of the beach. Sand Point is in the background and South Wales in the far distance across the water.

Sand Bay is a strip of coast in North Somerset bordered to the south by Worlebury Hill and to the north by Middle Hope (commonly referred to as Sand Point). It lies 3km north of the popular seaside resort of Weston-super-Mare, and across the Bristol Channel from South Wales. It is adjacent to the village of Kewstoke.

The north end of Sand Bay has become overgrown with spartina grass since the 1950s. This hardy grass was planted to support the banks of a tributary to the Bristol Channel further upstream than Sand Bay. Over the last 20 years the grass has rapidly taken over the north end of the beach and is now beginning to grow in isolated areas of the south end. The grass also began to grow on the beach at Weston-super-Mare, but was removed by the local council.

In the 1980s part of the beach at Sand Bay was raised to prevent flooding by pumping sand from the Bristol Channel up onto the beach. The beach now has two levels, one at the original height near the sea and one borderding the adjacent road at the higher level. The upper beach level has now become covered in grass in many areas (not with the spartina grass - which is found at sea level).

The beach is polluted with rubbish that washes up from the Bristol Channel, and has never received a European Blue Flag.

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