wharfedale-nats.org.uk
Marshes and Flushes - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/wild-wharfedale-the-web-site-of-the-wharfedale-naturalists-society-10
Marshes and Flushes - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Bird’s-eye primrose and butterwort near Grassington. Where soils are normally wet, they can develop either as marshes, on flatter ground, or flushes, where the ground slopes. Marshy grasslands are very similar to other types of grassland and wetland but occur in wet hollows and next to streams and do have typical wetland herbs, unlike acidic and neutral grasslands which usually are species-poor.
wharfedale-nats.org.uk
Acid grassland - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/wild-wharfedale-the-web-site-of-the-wharfedale-naturalists-society-7
Acid grassland - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Acid grassland and woodland in the Washburn valley. The commoner plants in these grasslands include mat-grass, common bent, heath bedstraw, sheep’s fescue and tormentil. Rather less frequent are bilberry, sheep’s sorrel, sweet vernal-grass and wavy hair-grass. Sometimes devil’s-bit scabious, heath milkwort, spotted and more uncommon orchids, mountain pansy and fir clubmoss are found. At Kettlewell Mead...
wharfedale-nats.org.uk
Discovering our Dales - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/discovering-our-dales
Discovering our Dales - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Littondale from above Cowside Beck. This large part of our web site is dedicated to revealing Wharfedale’s nature to other explorers. The Habitats. Taking action for Our Bright Future. Mon, Sep 05, 2016, Continue reading at the source. Stunning images win British Wildlife Photography Awards. Mon, Sep 05, 2016, Continue reading at the source. Mon, Sep 05, 2016, Continue reading at the source.
wharfedale-nats.org.uk
Blanket Bogs - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/wild-wharfedale-the-web-site-of-the-wharfedale-naturalists-society-9
Blanket Bogs - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Species-poor cottongrass bog, overwhelmingly dominated by hare’s-tail cottongrass tussocks, usually has some some bog-moss present, mainly S. capillifolium and S. papillosum. Dwarf shrubs may be entirely absent but usually some heather or bilberry can be found. It is found on the Langstrothdale-Ribblesdale watershed. On the Barden and Blubberhouses moors there are some deep mires on the higher moorland&#...
gaylemill.org.uk
Links
http://gaylemill.org.uk/visit-us/links
Friends of Gayle Mill. Please see the below list of useful links about the Mill and the surrounding area. Gayle Mill on TV. Gayle Mill was a finalist on the BBC's Restoration TV series back in 2004. To view a BBC video created a few months before the Mill reopened in 2008. BBC's "Wensleydale water-powered sawmill still cutting it" was first broadcast on Look North in July 2011 and showed many aspects of the Mill and its water powered woodworking machinery which is still in use today. A guide to the area.
wharfedale-nats.org.uk
Limestone pavements and cliffs - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/limestone-pavements-and-cliffs
Limestone pavements and cliffs - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Pen-y-ghent from Dale Head. At the Helks, above Beckermonds, partially-exposed pavement provides an interesting refuge for hay meadow species such as wood crane’s-bill and melancholy thistle. The exposed pavements nearby have more typical species, including lesser meadow-rue, green spleenwort, wall lettuce and hairy stonecrop. At nearby Grass Wood the scr...
wharfedale-nats.org.uk
Report a sighting - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/report-a-sighting
Report a sighting - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Rose growing wild near Almscliffe Crag. Please fill in the following form to submit a wildlife record:. Please leave this field empty. Your Email (if possible). Your Address (required - to confirm you are a member). Telephone number (if possible). What did you see? When did you see it? Taking action for Our Bright Future. Mon, Sep 05, 2016, Continue reading at the source. Respite for Countryside Ste...
wharfedale-nats.org.uk
Woodland - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/wild-wharfedale-the-web-site-of-the-wharfedale-naturalists-society-12
Woodland - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Wharfedale is fortunate in having preserved a number of woods which are ‘ancient’ – they have been in existence since at least 1500. They have been subject to traditional management which retains the native ground flora, or at least only modifies it slightly. In Littondale, Hawkswick Wood has developed on stable limestone scree and is an open ash wood. There is a scattered shrub layer of hawthorn and haz...
wharfedale-nats.org.uk
People - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/people
People - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Wharfedale Naturalists’ enjoying a birding day. The Society runs its affairs through a committee, currently comprising:. 8211; plus other committee members. Maintaining the Society’s natural history records, advising on conservation matters and occasionally speaking to meetings – it all falls to our Recorders. We have Recorders for:. Vertebrates (other than birds). Please leave this field empty. Fri, Aug 26, 2...
wharfedale-nats.org.uk
Lead mining - Wharfedale Naturalists Society
http://www.wharfedale-nats.org.uk/lead-mining
Lead mining - Wharfedale Naturalists Society. Limestone pavements and cliffs. Bird List 1946 – 2003. Spring sandwort on lead waste at Hebden Gill. Lead mining was once the main industry in parts of the Dales, including Wharfedale. From the seventeenth century to the late nineteenth it employed hundreds of men and boys, exploiting the veins in the limestone at Greenhow, Hebden, Grassington, Linton and Conistone, Appletreewick and elsewhere. At Hawkswick Wood alpine penny-cress can be found on old mine spo...
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