Wild Haweswater
Wild Haweswater
  • Видео 17
  • Просмотров 51 156
Cumbria River Restoration Partnership Programme - European Riverprize winners 2022
An ambitious programme to restore and improve rivers in the Lake District beat competition from across Europe to win the prestigious European Riverprize 2022.
The award was in recognition of efforts across Cumbria to reinstate natural river processes that benefit both people and wildlife.
The Cumbrian River Restoration partnership programme has improved almost 100km of river length and restored over 150 hectares of floodplain across the catchments of the Rivers Eden, Derwent and Kent. It has also reduced flood risk, removed plastic from rivers and boosted biodiversity in the region.
Partners on the project include the Environment Agency, Natural England, West Cumbria Rivers Trust, Eden Riv...
Просмотров: 4 167

Видео

UK River Prize 2022 - Restoring Swindale Valley
Просмотров 7 тыс.Год назад
A partnership project to restore habitats in the valley of Swindale near Haweswater in the Lake District has won the 2022 UK River Prize Project-scale Award.
Life Beyond The Ledge: Creating Mardale Mountain Meadow
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.Год назад
Hidden away on the crags of Harter Fell are fragments of natural wonder. Away from the footpaths and the grassy slopes, flowers festoon steep gullies and ledges. Roseroot, wood cranesbill, wild angelica, yellow mountain saxifrage and devil’s bit scabious grow alongside lush stands of ferns and great The flowers provide nectar for a great abundance of insect life and the steep cliffs make safe n...
A Vision for Haweswater's Future
Просмотров 7 тыс.2 года назад
Tucked away at the eastern edge of the Lake District National Park, Haweswater Reservoir sits encircled by looming fells. The landscape is undoubtedly beautiful, full of Lake District grandeur. However on closer inspection, major ecological issues stand out... This Wild Haweswater film shares a vision for the future of this RSPB reserve, showing how bold action today can secure a vibrant future...
More wiggles and wetlands for Haweswater
Просмотров 3 тыс.3 года назад
Following from the successful 'rewiggling' of Swindale Beck in 2016, the RSPB have once again teamed up with United Utilities and the Environment Agency, as well as Ebsford Environmental and AquaUoS, to restore a natural river system in the valley. With works completed in October 2020, the historically straightened drain has been re-naturalised to feature meanders, and reconnected with the natu...
Naddle Forest | Red Squirrel Signs
Просмотров 5013 года назад
A quick exploration of Naddle Forest, a SSSI Western Atlantic Oakwood, with RSPB Haweswater’s Visitor Development Officer Heather, in search of Red Squirrel signs.
RSPB Haweswater tree nursery (in 60 seconds!)
Просмотров 3873 года назад
Planting thousands of trees has to start somewhere... and for us, it's right here at our RSPB Haweswater Naddle Farm base, in our on site tree nursery. Intern Lucy Hughes gives a whistle-stop introduction to the process, in 60 seconds. (Filmed by Heather Devey)
Haweswater's Red Squirrels
Просмотров 3913 года назад
RSPB Haweswater is a stronghold for Red Squirrels, and their bright red flashes can often be seen scampering through the treetops of Naddle Forest. Filmed and edited by Will Mercer. Music by Lee Schofield (leeschofield.co.uk/)
Haweswater Cam: Curious Roe Doe
Просмотров 884 года назад
This Roe Doe was ready for her close up as she passed through Naddle Forest, Haweswater.
Haweswater Cam: Badger Cubs in Bluebells
Просмотров 2094 года назад
A couple of beautiful bundles make their way through Naddle Forest's bluebells in search of food. Check out our link to find out how to visit our Haweswater Badger Hide.
Haweswater Cam: Fox Trot
Просмотров 784 года назад
Red Foxes are elusive at Haweswater, but our camera traps manage to pick them up in gnarly Naddle Forest.
Haweswater Cam: Roe Buck grazing in Bluebells
Просмотров 674 года назад
A Roe Buck (Capreolus capreolus) forages amongst the bluebells of Naddle Forest.
Haweswater Cam: Roe Buck in Velvet
Просмотров 1414 года назад
A stunning Roe buck (Capreolus capreolus) crosses Haweswater's Naddle Beck amongst the gnarly trees. If you look closely you can see his antlers are in full velvet!
Haweswater Cam: Badger Family in Bluebells
Просмотров 1734 года назад
Haweswater Cam: Badger Family in Bluebells
The Lakes: Wild Once More
Просмотров 26 тыс.4 года назад
The Lakes: Wild Once More

Комментарии

  • @VIGOUROSO2024
    @VIGOUROSO2024 2 дня назад

    Very nice.

  • @VIGOUROSO2024
    @VIGOUROSO2024 3 дня назад

    Don't EAT the Foxgloves! 🦊🧤🥀

  • @trifin5772
    @trifin5772 5 дней назад

    Awesome. ❤

  • @RussTillling
    @RussTillling 7 дней назад

    Great video! Should have way more likes & comments!😢

  • @yyyfffff33333
    @yyyfffff33333 Месяц назад

    Expect less flooding downriver !

  • @uktruecrime
    @uktruecrime 2 месяца назад

    My opinion is that the 'climax' of most UK ecosystems is a mature woodland, including moors etc. All this grazing land is totally artificial.

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 2 месяца назад

      You're right that trees should be much more prevalent in the landscape. In the uplands the trees should be more sparse, low-growing, old trees, than the denser, mature woodlands in the lower landscapes. The uplands would also be much wetter with fully functioning bog eco-systems. This is shown in more detail in our vision here: bit.ly/HWRVision - Annabel

  • @tonyadeney1245
    @tonyadeney1245 2 месяца назад

    nice to hear some of the technical bits ....

  • @tonyadeney1245
    @tonyadeney1245 2 месяца назад

    nice photography good job

  • @pleatedskirt18
    @pleatedskirt18 2 месяца назад

    A truly wonderful project that will have so many benefits. Here on Dartmoor, leaky dams have been installed on many of the smaller streams that spring up in the wet weather - and we do have quite a lot of that - and they will undoubtedly benefit the wider environment as well as the immediate local ones. Thanks, Lee, and thank you RSPB and others. PS. An excellent book! Here's to more being done in the lakes and other areas,

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 2 месяца назад

      Thanks very much for your lovely comment. Really pleased to hear you enjoyed reading Wild Fell. I have passed your kind words onto Lee and the team - Annabel

  • @bloggalot4718
    @bloggalot4718 4 месяца назад

    Excellent work, let us see more projects like this in the U.K.

  • @sueeverett277
    @sueeverett277 4 месяца назад

    Fantastic project. This is what is needed across our uplands. Benefits are many. To people and nature.

  • @Reayendgoldstar
    @Reayendgoldstar 4 месяца назад

    Absolutly beautiful, well done by you all.

  • @Reayendgoldstar
    @Reayendgoldstar 4 месяца назад

    Absolutly beautiful, well done

  • @bloggalot4718
    @bloggalot4718 4 месяца назад

    What has been the benefits please?

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 4 месяца назад

      Hiya, thanks for the question. It depends on the project. Some have been about removing large amounts of plastic from river systems to benefit the wildlife. Some have been about removing artificial features such as weirs or embankments, and putting natural bends back into straightened courses - these have multiple benefits for wildlife, reducing flood risk and improving drinking water. More information on our project in Swindale here: bit.ly/UKRiverPrizeWinner22 - Annabel

    • @bloggalot4718
      @bloggalot4718 4 месяца назад

      Thank you.

  • @daniellemurphy9755
    @daniellemurphy9755 5 месяцев назад

    Bring the bloody BEAVERS back!!!!!!

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 5 месяцев назад

      That's the vision for Haweswater and other parts of Cumbria. Find out more here: bit.ly/HWRVision - Annabel

  • @deanfowles3707
    @deanfowles3707 6 месяцев назад

    My fear is that climate change will just make shlte of all these efforts

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 6 месяцев назад

      Hi Dean, a lot of these measures are about making these habitats more resilient to climate change, so whilst individually they can't stop them, it will help buffer against it. They are all also measures that can be replicated elsewhere to help mitigate the impact. - Annabel

    • @deanfowles3707
      @deanfowles3707 6 месяцев назад

      @@wildhaweswater5622 personally having dedicated a lot is time to researching all of this I think we’re gonna need Solar geoengineering if we’re to stand and Fgking chance And yes I do mean the big bad stratospheric aerosol injection. That’s just me, not a popular opinion for a nature lover I know.

    • @deersbrook4485
      @deersbrook4485 29 дней назад

      Keep drinking the climate change cool aid!​@deanfowles3707

  • @funkystuf23
    @funkystuf23 7 месяцев назад

    I’ve written this so many time, but it really is a shame that things like this just don’t get the views.. but some self absorbed lass can get millions of views for putting make up on to make herself look like a drag queen

  • @tonyadeney1245
    @tonyadeney1245 7 месяцев назад

    Give people credit for trying this, of course TREES with sheep and and cows is an option, - wont look like the paintings but - purbeck project - good example of sensible balance - makes money for landowners looks natural isnt yet, has campers walkers eco tourism - and makes more money than most farms per area for poor quality land - many do come to the lakes for the views but Cumbria, Lancs Westmorland is a big place ...

  • @gowanhewlett745
    @gowanhewlett745 7 месяцев назад

    Congratulations congratulations

  • @daniellemurphy9755
    @daniellemurphy9755 8 месяцев назад

    The bloody reservoir shouldn't fucking be there - it means there's a man-made dam and that absolutely should NOT be there!!!!

  • @daniellemurphy9755
    @daniellemurphy9755 8 месяцев назад

    RSPB???

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 8 месяцев назад

      Hi Danielle, the work at Haweswater is a partnership between the landowner United Utilities and the land manager the RSPB. Best wishes, Annabel

  • @LovroRavbar
    @LovroRavbar 9 месяцев назад

    Amazing work!💪❤️

  • @sil8127
    @sil8127 11 месяцев назад

    Planting trees like that is such a waste of resources. The seeds would naturally get there like they have done for millennia. However, the overpopulation of sheep is what is stopping it... If you keep the sheep out and stop the overgrazing, the whole thing would rewild for free. Like how beavers would have re-wiggled that river for... FREE. If only they had some trees to eat and use in the damn making.

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 11 месяцев назад

      Hiya, thanks for your feedback. We agree about sheep over-grazing, which is why we've reduced our flock and they only graze the enclosed land near the farm. We've also fenced out massive areas from sheep (and deer) to allow natural regeneration to take place which is happening. But we have also planted over 200,000 trees to give the landscape a helping hand too. And likewise, Beavers are in the plans....check out our vision video: bit.ly/HWRVision - Annabel

  • @anniehill9909
    @anniehill9909 Год назад

    So inspiring.

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaleta Год назад

    Regenerative ag is my religion.

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 Год назад

      A brilliant religion to choose :) - Annabel

    • @vivalaleta
      @vivalaleta Год назад

      @@wildhaweswater5622 It's so good for the land, the wild and farmers. There's really no downside!

  • @johnrowland6144
    @johnrowland6144 Год назад

    bring in pine martens to control grey squirrel population

  • @johnrowland6144
    @johnrowland6144 Год назад

    get rid of overgrazing and bring back the lost woodlands

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 Год назад

      Absolutely! That's a big part of our work here. - Annabel

  • @stevegoody3744
    @stevegoody3744 Год назад

    Read, wild fell.

  • @user-TonyUK
    @user-TonyUK Год назад

    Wow I hope I get to see this finished before I die, I currently have just 3 months before Retirement kicks in and in the past I have hike across this area twice on my Coast to Coast visits to the Lake District and one return visit to the Borrowdale area 10 years after my first visit to the Lake District in 2000. I find no matter the distance I walked or hiked in that area each day on my C2C Hike I always felt "at home" in that, for me, a far off Paradise. Tony in Essex

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 Год назад

      Thanks very much Anthony. I hope you enjoy many happy years hiking in retirement - Annabel

    • @user-TonyUK
      @user-TonyUK Год назад

      @@wildhaweswater5622 Sadly that is no longer possible due to age, but I have my memories of past hikes and the whole of RUclips to refresh the parts I have forgotten.

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 Год назад

      @@user-TonyUK Ah, great to have those memories and tech then. :)

  • @jwornell2114
    @jwornell2114 Год назад

    amazing video and job!

  • @jwornell2114
    @jwornell2114 Год назад

    great job!

  • @jwornell2114
    @jwornell2114 Год назад

    amazing mission!!

  • @jwornell2114
    @jwornell2114 Год назад

    great video!!

  • @philgriffiths5514
    @philgriffiths5514 Год назад

    Nice one. I will go have a look this spring when I go up visit my Mum. Great to see the diversity up there slowly change form the bare hills I grew up in.

  • @grantmccoy6739
    @grantmccoy6739 Год назад

    I wonder why they got rid of that weir. It looks like they excavated some streams, and made some ponds/watersheds. Not a whole lot needed to be done though, I imagine. It's really beautiful.

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 4 месяца назад

      With artificial structures like weirs and embankments, they affect the rivers ability to function naturally, so their removal helps to put the natural course and features back into the channel, improving it for wildlife (for example fish passage). - Annabel

  • @sparkymark68
    @sparkymark68 Год назад

    It's a very thought provoking book. Highly recommended.

  • @leswalker2207
    @leswalker2207 Год назад

    Great photography

  • @Just_shush_now
    @Just_shush_now Год назад

    Isn’t it Europe’s only aquatic passerine as well?

  • @peterhicks3516
    @peterhicks3516 Год назад

    and, to think, that BEAVER, left unattended, would do most of the river work for free.

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 Год назад

      They would indeed. Hopefully more of them to come in future. - Annabel

    • @grantmccoy6739
      @grantmccoy6739 Год назад

      I would think so. In places like this, not a whole lot needs to be done with heavy machinery. It does more harm than good, it would seem.

    • @RussTillling
      @RussTillling 7 дней назад

      There are hardly any trees for them to create dams, or use for food, so not suitable for beavers currently. Once a volume of trees have been planted and have matured, then beavers would be more likely to be a success.

  • @simonartley1645
    @simonartley1645 Год назад

    Tree restoration can improve soil structure and PH .Along a river it can help with providing shade for fly life and small fish and trout and who knows maybe even salmon parr?

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 Год назад

      It can indeed. When we re-wiggled Swindale Beck, salmon returned to spawn for the first time in over 100 years. - Annabel

  • @synappticuser7296
    @synappticuser7296 Год назад

    What a wonderful video! Seeing our wild lands being restored touches my heart so deeply. To see these places recovering and returning to their wild glory, and to see the wildlife return and flourish, is just wonderful. Big thanks to the RSPB! 🏞️👏😊🤸

  • @lewistempleman9752
    @lewistempleman9752 Год назад

    YES HORSEWATER GO ON!!!

  • @michaelshephard6629
    @michaelshephard6629 Год назад

    Lovely to see nature being given a chance to succeed. Great work

  • @mikemellor759
    @mikemellor759 Год назад

    Great video on overall scheme - I’d love to learn more about some of the major projects.

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 4 месяца назад

      Thanks Mike, really glad you like it. The individual organisations have more on their individual projects. You can find out more about our work in Swindale here: bit.ly/UKRiverPrizeWinner22 - Annabel

  • @ruskinyruskiny1611
    @ruskinyruskiny1611 Год назад

    "Traditional farming" is the problem. Green New Deal where locals get to stay where they are with a good income but not destroying the wild is the answer.

    • @deanfowles3707
      @deanfowles3707 6 месяцев назад

      But doing that is communismizms or summin , and we can’t do that because Alan sugar said we shouldn’t do it.

  • @Jerbod2
    @Jerbod2 Год назад

    I loved watching this! So peaceful and informative. A bit like bbc earth, but less storytelling.

  • @elliottblaauw4575
    @elliottblaauw4575 Год назад

    good shot of a deer stripping a young tree ... there are 1 million deer in scotland now so there is hardly any natural regeneration .since it was us that wiped out their predators its down to us to do the culling or lose what woodland is left

    • @wildhaweswater5622
      @wildhaweswater5622 Год назад

      You're absolutely right - deer management is also an important part of the work to restore the woodland here along with deer fencing to allow regeneration. _ Annabel

  • @andrewdking
    @andrewdking Год назад

    This is no amateur RUclips video. Very good indeed. That black butterfly had me going for a while, thinking you had slipped in a species from abroad as a fill in. Its not a butterfly at all, but it sits on the flower just like one. Its a Chimney Sweeper moth

  • @ArjayMartin
    @ArjayMartin Год назад

    Great mini documentary

  • @aarononeal9830
    @aarononeal9830 Год назад

    Please talk about Ecosia they are a search engine that plants trees