
One English grandmother spent an entire year cleaning all of the trash off of 52 British beaches after she made it her 2018 New Year’s resolution to clean one sandy beach each week.
Woman spends an entire year cleaning plastic trash off 52 beaches in the Southwest of England
Pat Smith, 70, spent all of 2018 on Devon and Cornwall’s iconic beaches each week. Armed with bin bags, rubber gloves and a litter picker, she travelled from one end of the South West of England to the other, collecting litter in beauty spots from Coverack, Cornwall, to Blackpool Sands, Devon.

The married mother-of-two has no intention of stopping – saying that the beaches need her
Pat Smith, 70, founder of the environmental campaign group Final Straw Cornwall, telling SWNS: “Doing 52 beach cleans in 2018 was my New Year’s Resolution and it’s finally done. I won’t stop as our beaches need me.
“A lot of the rubbish I have picked up consists of everyday items. These things are used by all of us and it is shocking to find them polluting our beautiful beaches. Please let’s try to be more thoughtful in this coming year.
“I’m driven to try and protect our living planet for my children and grandchildren and I will continue to do everything in my power to achieve that.”
Pat said she was urged to take action after noticing the effects of plastic pollution, and she reflected back on her life.
She said: “I grew up in the generation where plastic use was at it’s worse. I lived through that, yet I lived the life campaigners are pushing for now.
“Even though it was everywhere, we had no plastic at home – we would walk to the shops or get the bus to get groceries.”
Pat said that she was often joined by other volunteers who were determined to keep our beaches clean.
Source: SWNS.com

“We should all take responsibility for picking up the litter,” says Pat
Retiree Pat she said not everyone understood, and on some occasions, she would be mistaken for doing community service.
She said: “People don’t understand I’ve been doing this voluntarily. We should all take responsibility for picking up the litter, as well as ensuring we don’t drop litter in the first place.”
Along the way, Pat, who also runs a bed and breakfast in St Austell, Cornwall, joined with other campaigners. She spent time with Martin Dorey, founder of the 2 Minute Beach Clean, and Wayne Dixon, who is walking the UK coast as an ambassador for Keep Britain Tidy, and volunteers from Beach Guardian and Surfers Against Sewage.
Source: SWNS.com

List of the beaches Pat cleaned in 2018 (some of them more than once)
If you don’t spot 50 beaches on the list, that’s because some of them were cleaned more than once over the course of the year. If you’d like to read the full comprehensive list of the beaches Pat cleaned, and memorable highlights from her year-long, 52 beach-clean diary, click HERE.
- Fistral
- Mawgan
- Porth
- Maenporth
- Porthpean
- Coverack
- Crinnis
- Charlestown
- Pentewan
- Par Beach
- Portreath (with her grandchildren)
- Harlyn Bay
- Spit Beach
- Crantock
- Porthtowan
- Polkerris
- Readymoney Cove
- St Anthony in Meneage
- Charlestown Beach
- Roads near Bosinver Farm Cottages (which Pat owns)
- Par Beach
- Croyde
- Widemouth Bay
- The road by Pat’s house
- Carne Beach
- Watergate Bay
- Trevone Beach
- Duporth
"Please let’s try to be more thoughtful in this coming year. I’m driven to try and protect our living planet for my children and grandchildren and I will continue to do everything in my power to achieve that.” — says Pat.
To find out more about Pat’s efforts and to find out how you can help visit the FinalStrawCornwall website or Facebook Page.
Source: CornwallLive.com


How to Organise a Community Clean Up: 5 Steps (With Pictures)
Picking up litter is commendable, but a quick way to get litter-clearing done over a larger area is to organize a community clean up. It's a great way to get to know your neighbours and neighbourhood better, as well as ending up with cleaner streets! Here’s how...