Geltsdale RSPB reserve
Geltsdale RSPB reserve is a nature reserve in Geltsdale, Cumbria, England. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds manages the site for upland birds such as the hen harrier and black grouse.
| Geltsdale RSPB reserve | |
|---|---|
![]() Howgill Beck and Stagsike Cottages (visitor information point for the RSPB reserve). Photo by Ian Taylor. | |
| Location | Cumbria, England |
| Coordinates | 54.91929°N 2.61621°W |
| Operator | Royal Society for the Protection of Birds |
| Website | http://www.rspb.org.uk/reserves-and-events/find-a-reserve/reserves-a-z/reserves-by-name/g/geltsdale/index.aspx |
The reserve is within a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) called Geltsdale & Glendue Fells. Along with other SSSIs in the North Pennines, it is designated a Special Protection Area under the Birds Directive. The reserve is managed within the context of a commercial hill farm.
Birdlife and habitats
The hen harrier is a bird of open habitats such as heather moorland, a type of vegetation which is typical of the reserve. Although such habitats are common in the uplands of England, the bird is scarce, being illegally persecuted as a predator of red grouse. In 2013, hen harriers failed to breed successfully in England for the first time in almost half a century.[1]
The black grouse requires a more varied habitat than the hen harrier and the RSPB has planted many trees at Geltsdale.
Facilities
There is a visitor information point.[2]
There is free entry to the reserve. There are four waymarked trails leading from the car park at Howgill:[3]
- There is a viewpoint at an altitude of 1,500 feet at Bruthwaite.[4] The Bruthwaite trail is 1.8 miles,
- the Stagsike Trail covers 2.8 miles
- the Moorland Trials are 2.5 miles and 5 miles respectively.
Recent Hen harrier breeding attempts
In 2016 a hen harrier chick fledged at the reserve.[5] Named Bonny,[6] he was one of only seven such chicks to fledge that year in England. Bonny was satellite tagged as part of a project funded by the European Union's LIFE Programme, "Conserving the hen harrier (Circus cyaneus) in northern England and southern and eastern Scotland" (LIFE13 NAT/UK/000258). Information was no longer transmitted from the tag after 14 December 2016 and he is assumed to have died.[1][7]
Notes
References
- "Welcome to the hen harrier LIFE project". RSPB. Retrieved 2017-12-19.
- "Exciting new exhibition to be held at RSPB Geltsdale" (Press release). 2016.
- "Geltsdale". NatureConservation.org.uk.
- "Bruthwaite Viewpoint". Waymarking.com.
- "Geltsdale hen harrier chick takes flight". RSPB News. 2016.
- Story (11 September 2016). "Famous hen harrier chick". News and Star. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
- "Bonny". RSPB.
