Residents in the WA town of Esperance could be restricted from driving on its famous white beaches after an area of revegetation in a national park was damaged by four-wheel drivers.
Residents in the seaside town of Esperance could be restricted from driving on its famous white beaches after an area of revegetation was vandalised by four-wheel drivers.
This year, Esperance’s Lucky Bay, in Cape Le Grand National Park, was voted one of the world’s top beaches for its clear water, white sand and “untouched nature”.
Driving on the beach is a popular pastime for locals and visitors to Esperance who use the coastline to access fishing and camping spots along the south coast.
The damage comes two weeks after the Shire of Gingin in the midwest tabled a report recommending four-wheel driving on beaches around Lancelin, Ledge Point and Seabird be reduced to prevent erosion.
In May, Variety WA held a four-weel-drive tour from Warton Beach to the mining town of Kalgoorlie to raise money for the children’s charity.
Mr Brownlee said if attempts to reduce erosion were hampered by people driving where they shouldn’t, local and state governments would have few options.
The original article contains 499 words, the summary contains 160 words. Saved 68%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Residents in the seaside town of Esperance could be restricted from driving on its famous white beaches after an area of revegetation was vandalised by four-wheel drivers.
This year, Esperance’s Lucky Bay, in Cape Le Grand National Park, was voted one of the world’s top beaches for its clear water, white sand and “untouched nature”.
Driving on the beach is a popular pastime for locals and visitors to Esperance who use the coastline to access fishing and camping spots along the south coast.
The damage comes two weeks after the Shire of Gingin in the midwest tabled a report recommending four-wheel driving on beaches around Lancelin, Ledge Point and Seabird be reduced to prevent erosion.
In May, Variety WA held a four-weel-drive tour from Warton Beach to the mining town of Kalgoorlie to raise money for the children’s charity.
Mr Brownlee said if attempts to reduce erosion were hampered by people driving where they shouldn’t, local and state governments would have few options.
The original article contains 499 words, the summary contains 160 words. Saved 68%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!