Our little ponies – amazing grazers arrive in Doncaster

Our little ponies – amazing grazers arrive in Doncaster

(C) Charlotte Dring 

New arrivals will help to manage wetland habitat at Potteric Carr nature reserve

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust has welcomed the Trust’s first Konik ponies which will graze wetland areas at Potteric Carr nature reserve. The Trust’s four grey-and-white ponies are all female and aged between 10 and 16 years old and arrived from Kent Wildlife Trust on Tuesday 28th June. 

The Trust have enlisted the help of ponies and other grazing animals before, but this is the first time this particular breed has got involved. They will prevent the marshland from overgrowing and create new habitat for ground-nesting birds through their gentle grazing.

Charlotte Dring, conservation grazing manager, said: “The Koniks will be in the Huxter Well Marsh area, which is too wet for cattle to graze. Ponies graze close to the ground and the nooks and crannies, which will improve the long term health of the reedbed. They eat selectively - sedges, coarse grasses, rushes and bark, but also nibble at bits like nettles, thistles and docks. which will keep them in check to allow other flowers and plants to come through.”

If the trial at Potteric Carr goes well, there’s potential to introduce grazing ponies to some of the Trust’s other wetland reserves too.

Charlotte added, “I went to see how Kent Wildlife Trust were grazing with different breeds and was impressed with what I saw, and the benefits that Koniks have. Sharing expertise between our family of Trusts around the UK and talking to other livestock managers is invaluable and works very well. We have an incredible support network.”

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust has already seen the benefits of grazing on some of its reserves, along with encouraging results from trialling cutting-edge GPS collar technology to guide livestock to sustainably graze reserves where this wasn’t previously possible. Grazing with cattle and sheep can help grassland reserves like Wheldrake Ings and Spurn become more vibrant and diverse; an increase in flowers and plants means more food for a wider variety of insects, pollinators, birds and bats. 

Potteric’s Konik ponies will live as wild ponies, but with regular checks from the vet and farrier. Keep an eye out - they may be spotted, but away from the reserves main footpaths.