Here’s a new one to add to your list of family things to do at the beach – take the kids on a nurdle hunt! Yes really…(and this post contains a couple of other things you may never have heard of either).
Last week the Cubs had a fascinating (and worrying) marine plastic awareness evening at a local beach, doing a litter pick, jellyfish spotting and some quick rockpooling to look for Sea Hares & Sea Lemons! Yes they’re a thing.
Oh and we collected nurdles (raw plastic beads) of which there were many.
It was brilliant fun, who’d have thought it! I’ve written before about how much children love litter picking – ask them to tidy at home and no way but take them to the beach or a stream and they’ll clean up for hours! Curious creatures, kids.
Lots was learnt by everyone and the Cubs did some eagle-eyed spotting of both litter and wildlife.
So who’s heard of a nurdle then?!
An ear-worm told me I was vaguely aware of the word from somewhere, possibly Blue Planet 2, or a Marine Conservation Society article, but if I did know what one was I hadn’t appreciated their environmental impact.
What Is A Nurdle?
Apart from a great word, nurdles are pellets of raw plastic, about the size of a lentil. They are usually white, clear, yellowish or blue and are the basic raw material micro-plastic used to produce ALL plastic products. Apparently they never leave the marine eco-system, they simply break down into smaller pieces, are ingested by wildlife and enter the human food chain too.

Going On A Nurdle Hunt
We met at the roadside for an introductory talk by National Trust Coastal Ranger, Jane Lancaster, a conservation dynamo and fount of much plastic and wildlife knowledge.
Jane walked us along the sandy track through the dunes where she asked us ‘to get our eyes in’ and start looking for nurdles. Not in the sea, nor on the beach but on the track to the beach, blown there by the wind. Which shows how prolific the problem is.
Within 5 minutes or so our small group had found all the nurdles in the main photo as well as these pieces of plastic cotton bud stems.
The Cubs were genuinely interested as well shocked at the amount we found and their effects in the sea.
We continued to the beach and spread out across three recent strandlines to search for litter. It turns out there wasn’t much, mostly due to Jane’s regular volunteer teams. We did find a dead Guillemot which Jane would have dissected on other occasions to check for ingested plastic, a stranded Lion’s Mane Jellyfish which Caroline proudly identified and 3 vehicle tyres which required collection at a later time.
With little time before parents arrived we dashed to the rocks to spot Sea Hares – black sea slugs – which were busy mating in the shallow rockpools. 17 were counted in a short space of time (poor old Billy-no-mates…)! Sadly we didn’t see any Sea Lemons – yellow sea slugs, funnily enough – but we know where to look next time.

Plastic pollution is a problem that’s not going away any time soon. Blue Planet may have brought it to the world stage but it didn’t give us many ideas for solving it. There are lots of ways you and your family can help keep our beaches clean but we really need to stop using so much plastic in the first place.
How Can I Help Keep Beaches Clean?
- Do a nurdle hunt and record your findings to help scientists monitor the problem. Click here for the online recording website
- Take a bag and do a 2-minute beach clean every time you visit a beach. 2 Minute Beach Clean even have an app to locate your nearest beach cleaning station
- Join the Great British Beach Clean every September. Find one near you on the MCS website
- Surfers Against Sewage organise regular beach cleans. Check out their website and borrow one of their beach clean boxes to make life easy
- Donate to any of the above charities by clicking the links. American charity 4 Ocean give a recycled plastic bracelet and promise to clean 1 pound of sea litter for every $20 donation received
- Become a #litterhero with The Outdoor Guide – sign up for their bag for life in conjunction with Trail Magazine and use it to collect litter everywhere you go, not just at the beach
Encouraging the kids to collect litter and search for nurdles is a fantastic start. Everyone visiting a beach should do this. But the products aren’t going to stop entering the environment just because we clean them up. They will still keep coming.
How To Reduce Plastic Pollution
It’s all very well saying we’ll stop buying single-use plastic and recycle the rest but is that really going to solve the problem? What about the reusable plastic mug you’ve bought to re-fill every day at Costa? It may save you using thousands of single-use cups over a lifetime but it’s still got to go somewhere and it can’t be recycled.
We need to change the way we live. We need to re-think the need for coffee on the go, for food wrapped in cellophane and plastic, for plates and cups we can just chuck away. A recent article in The Guardian highlights more of the problem.
I wrote in 2016, a year before BP2, about the plastic in teabags amongst other things. I suggested a few obvious things we can all do to reduce plastic use.
All in all we had a really enjoyable, eye-opening evening and all of us have come away wanting to do more to reduce plastic. Let’s start now – be the change you want to see.
Let me know your thoughts or ideas on what you’re doing to reduce the plastic problem.
Wild wishes for a successful nurdle hunt!

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How to Join Scouts or Guides
The Cubs thoroughly enjoyed themselves, and if you haven’t considered Scouts or Guides to get your kids outdoors more, find a pack near you and check them out.
Beavers, Cubs and Scouts – Scouting, Traditional Scouting
Rainbows, Brownies and Guides – Guiding
This is hideous, and I’m glad you’ve highlighted it. I will look out for a beach litter pick near us!
Scary isn’t it. Doing our little bit seems futile really but every little helps. Needs a society wind-change, which might be happening gradually. Fingers crossed
Ali, you don’t need to go on an official litter pick – just head to the beach and start collecting.
I remember my kids doing litter picking with Beavers and Cubs, like you say it is suddenly a whole lot more fun with friends at the beach than asking them to do it around Coombe Mill. When we did it was pre the plastic awareness campaign, I must say it is scary and has made me think twice about my love of sea food. I do hope the litter message gets home, I think I was the generation brought up to believe that litter dropping was so anti social you wouldn’t dream of it. #CountryKids
I find the litter thing unbelievable really. We go out of our way not to leave anything behind, even chasing tiny pieces of other people’s wrappers in the wind to make sure nothing is left behind! Over the summer so many people came to our beach and just abandoned all the brand new children’s buckets etc they’d bought. I can’t get my head round it! Awareness is a start.
I saw something on TV the other day about this. Can’t believe what a mess we have made with our planet 🙁 #countrykids
Shocking isn’t it, and so simple in principle to rectify yet monumental in reality. We can only do our bit
It’s so upsetting to see this – but brilliant that the cubs learned so much and were able to help out.
It was a great night all round, for fun and plastic awareness. The Cubs were enthusiastic about it all. We could all learn so much from the attitude of children!
What a fascinating trip for them all, but how sad is it to have found all those nurdles! #CountryKids
I know. They all really took on board the environmental impact so it was educational too.
Sounds like a great educational trip was made. My uncle in law is a scout leader and I think my girls would enjoy being in the brownies when they are older.#CountryKids
I’m a firm believer in the benefits of Scouts or Guides for everyone. Hope your girls enjoy it as much as Caroline when they join up!
I had never heard of nurdles before reading your post and it is quite an eye-opener to realise just what a problem they are. Litter-picking each time you visit a beach is such a good idea but we do need to reduce our plastic consumption as well. I havev to admit that I could do a lot better on this front but I do use washable nappies and have started using beeswax food wraps to try and reduce my cling film consumption. I’d also never heard of sea hares or sea lemons so have learned a lot from reading your post! Thank you for sharing such an informative and educational post. #countrykids
Glad it’s helped raise awareness. The nurdles are incredibly hard to spot so general litter picking is much easier for us all to help with. I’m desperate to spot a Sea Lemon so I’ll let you know if I do! Thanks for being the driving force behind country kids x
We live near the beach. This is an amazing read! I have heard about nurdles and we will be in the lookout for it from now on =) #countrykids
We’ve tried to find some since but it’s not easy unless you know a nurdle ‘hotspot’!
Monkey has just started Beavers so I may suggest this. Its really quite scary, we have moved away from plastic bottles and would like to continue that trend into other areas of our lives. Its so important. #CountryKids
Wow, that’s pretty scary indeed. It’s one of the things I would like to do when on a beach, just to see myself how many of these little things I can find sifting through a couple of hands of sand. Looks like it’s pretty bad…
I reckon there must be thousands of these that we just never see. Very worrying indeed. Thanks for stopping by
Litter picking is brilliant, as is raising awareness of the problem but I have a question. What happens to the plastic that is collected? Without that being properly disposed of … and I don’t really know how that can be … it risks re-entering the environment again at a later date. #GoingGreen
I know, and there’s the irony of using plastic bags for collecting litter in too. Jane retained everything to dispose of. Our local tip is household waste recovery centre which includes an area for hard plastics so one would hope it gets reclaimed or recycled somehow. The whole problem is almost too immense to contemplate. Did you see the BBC documentary Drowning in Plastic?
I didn’t see Drowning in Plastic but heard it was a very well put together programme. The Earth really does need humans to have a complete change in the way we live and each if us in the western works needs to massively reduce how much of everything we buy and waste. We need to make second hand the new New.
I had no idea what nurdles were. Thank you for sharing. Beach cleaning and helping to protect the animals from plastics is so important. We will have to join a beach clean next year!
#goinggreen
Thanks for your message and apologies for the delay, you’d gone into spam! I’d not really heard of nurdles either.The plastic issue is getting worse and worse. Thanks for stopping by