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Karren grooves at The Rakes (Walks 16, 18)
Industry through the ages
Early settlers
The earliest settlers chose the well-drained terraces of Warton Crag, close to springs of good water. Dog Holes, above Crag Foot on Warton Crag, is archaeo-logically interesting but there is no public access. At the foot of a small shaft there are several galleries which have yielded a rich collection of remains, the earliest dating from Late Pleistocene times. Beaker-ware, flints and human remains from Neolithic times, Bronze Age pans and enamelled bronze-work and Roman pottery have all been recovered. It seems that the cave was used for human habitation over a very long period of time. Other archaeological remains have been found at another Dog Holes, on Haverbrack, but not in the same quantity as at Warton.
Mining
Copper was scarce in the area and therefore highly prized. Copper ore was mined in Elizabethan times near Jenny Brown’s Point, and a little later near Storth. Between 1800 and 1830 copper was mined at Crag Foot by Cornish miners. The ore was smelted at Jenny Brown’s Point in the smelt mill built at the end of the 18th century, using engines transported from North Wales.
The Higher and Lower Warton Mines at Crag Foot enjoyed a further lease of life between 1836 and 1840 when haematite was mined for reddle, a very powerful red dye used in the manufacture of paint and for colouring doorway threshold stones. The ore was floated, dried, crushed and screened, then roasted to give different colours. Leighton furnace was built in 1713 and operated into the 1800s.
Coppicing
Until around 1914 most of the woodland in this area was managed on the coppice-with-standards system, in which the standard trees, particularly oak, were allowed to grow normally, while the surrounding underwood, usually of hazel, was cut regularly. The felled tree stumps produced a growth of straight, slender poles of varying thickness which was then harvested for a wide range of uses including charcoal manufacture. The coppiced wood was also used for the flourishing bobbin industry of South Westmorland. The term coppice, or copse, derives from the French word couper – to cut. During the First World War many of the standards were cut down and coppicing went into decline.
Wildlife
The woodlands support a prolific but shy wildlife. Deer are prevalent over the whole wooded area; alongside the native red and roe deer are small numbers of shy, pale fallow deer whose forebears have escaped from the introduced Dallam Park herd. Although deer can often be seen, they prefer undisturbed surroundings and usually keep away from the popular paths. Walkers should be aware that ticks from red deer have been known to carry Lymes Disease, a particularly unpleasant illness. However, cases are very rare. It is sensible to wear long trousers, and if you have flu-like symptoms after a bite, or a red circle around the bite, consult a doctor. Dogs can also pick up the ticks.
Fallow deer
Other wildlife in the area include red squirrels, which can still be seen in some of the woodlands; badger setts are not uncommon, but you will only see these shy nocturnal creatures if you are very lucky around twilight.
The limestone area is renowned amongst naturalists for its exceptionally interesting flora, protected in several extensive reserves. Many species of orchids can be seen in late spring and early summer. The sheltered limestone crevices, or grykes, provide a perfect habitat for a range of interesting plants, some of which you would expect to see on a woodland floor. Often, you will see flowers here when they are long past their best in more open surroundings.
Particular plants to look for in the grykes are the many species of fern: hart’s tongue, hard shield and male; wall and maidenhair spleenworts; and polypody. Also present are the rare rigid buckler fern and limestone fern, and the nationally scarce blue moor grass. Limestone pavement is also an ideal habitat for a range of uncommon plants including angular solomon’s seal, lily-of-the-valley and several orchids including the dark red helleborine. All plants are protected by the Wildlife and Countryside Act, which makes it an offence to pick or remove any wild flower without the owner’s permission.
Crevices in the limestone are a haven for ferns
Butterflies and moths thrive on the limestone grassland and you may see the diminutive small heath or the larger dark green fritillary. Birds to look for are the skylark, willow warbler and yellowhammer.
The Leighton Moss Reserve was established by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds in 1964, and in 1974 it purchased an additional 6000 acres of the marshland on the edge of Morecambe Bay between Hest Bank and Arnside Point to create one of the most important bird reserves in the country. Over 270 bird species have been recorded on the reserve, including the elusive bittern and the striking avocet.
Many walkers who are not especially interested in birds do not realise the significance of the intense activity which takes place on the estuary and the moss. It is of international importance. Many birds use the estuary as a staging post on a long migratory journey, such as greenshank and whimbrel on their way from the Arctic to Africa. White wagtails pass in spring on their way to Iceland, while pink-footed geese fly over from their breeding grounds below the icecaps of Central Iceland. It is worth a special visit to the coast in winter to see the vast flocks of dunlin, knot, oystercatcher, blacktailed godwit and redshank which gather on the edge of the tide. In spring many of them migrate northwards, to Scandinavia and Russia, to breed. Shelduck, a colourful bird which finds its food in the estuary mud, is often seen in large numbers. They breed in the area, often inland in rabbit holes, and make a strange moult migration to Heligoland in Germany, returning in mid-September.
Bittern
Bearded tit
Occasional rare visitors, like the osprey, promote great excitement on the grapevine for ‘twitchers’, and Leighton Moss is invaded by keen bird watchers from a wide area. There is a public hide on the Causeway; access to the reserve hides is free to RSPB members, but a charge is made to non-members.
Walking seasons
Walking in the Silverdale and Arnside area can be enjoyed throughout the year. Springtime, with its abundant flowers, and the colourful displays of autumn are especially rewarding. Summer is the busiest time, with the greatest influx of human visitors. In winter vast flocks of birds can be seen in Morecambe Bay, and the weather is often good for walking here when the nearby Lake District is shrouded in mist and rain. The woods can also provide sheltered walking in strong winds.
Every season holds a special charm. Perhaps most rewarding is late spring, when the trees are bursting to life with delicate fresh green leaves, and flowers carpet the floor of the woodlands in a spray of colour – whether it is purple violets, white wood anemones, yellow primroses or daffodils or the pink of herb robert. Almost all year round the woodland carpet is dog’s mercury. Its early shoots accompany the earliest flowers, and its leaves hide the ground providing a backdrop for more colourful flowers during the rest of the year.
High summer is predominantly green. Most of the popular walks are on paths that are broad enough to be traversed comfortably even at the zenith of vegetation growth. Where the paths are slender the trails take on a jungle character, where you follow too closely at your peril or you may suffer the whip-lash of a punitive branch. Bracken can be troublesome on Hutton Roof Crags, where some of the paths become difficult to negotiate.
Autumn is another high point of the year when the blaze of colours is at its best, particularly in the abundant deciduous woodland. This is the time to seek out the stately beeches in Eaves Wood, although caution is necessary on the leaf-covered paths where slippery limestone lurks