How salt is preventing pony deaths in national park

Ponies often stand in the roads to lick salt after the surfaces have been gritted in winter
- Published
A trial aiming to reduce the number of animals killed on roads in a national park has been dubbed a success by campaigners.
Ponies in the New Forest, which are attracted to the gritting salt spread on roads in icy weather, are being lured away from traffic with saltlicks.
Made from plastic bowls filled with rock salt, 30 of the devices have been placed near key routes across the forest.
The scheme was introduced following the deaths of four ponies on Roger Penny Way in 2020.

Himalayan salt, which does not dissolve easily in rain, are secured inside old tyres for the livestock to lick
A total of 22 ponies were killed in traffic accidents in 2024, according to figures from Verderers of the New Forest - a record low.
Gilly Jones from New Forest Roads Awareness said the saltlicks were helping to discourage them from standing in the road.
"The animals lick the salt day and night and this is what we have to remind people of," she said.
"It's safer for them, it's safer for the drivers because obviously no one wants to have an incident involving livestock."

Commoner Sally Jolly says she recently lost one of her ponies in a hit-and-run
Thousands of animals, including ponies, cattle and donkeys, roam free in the New Forest.
They are owned by commoners who have rights to use the land for grazing.
Sally Jolly from East Boldre, Hampshire, said her pony named Whisper was "left for dead" after being hit by a car in December.
She said: "It doesn't get any easier - I think people think that we've got quite a few ponies but they're like family to us."

Tony Vanderhoek says it is a cost-effective way to prevent animal deaths
Tony Vanderhoek, part of the New Forest Commoners Defence Association, has been making and installing the saltlicks in the forest for about four years.
He puts the devices near the roads "most notorious" for animal deaths, including the B3054 in Beaulieu and the B3078 near Fordingbridge.
"Because of that horrific accident, there was outcry, there needed to be something done," Mr Vanderhoek said.
"They're in danger of being run over if people aren't paying attention."
Costing about £500, the project is being funded by the New Forest Trust for the first time this winter.
It is hoped, alongside campaigns to target speeding motorists, the numbers of animals being killed on roads in the New Forest will continue to fall.
Get in touch
Do you have a story BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight should cover?
You can follow BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight on Facebook, external, X (Twitter), external, or Instagram, external.
Related topics
- Published31 January 2024
- Published27 September 2024
- Published1 January 2021