Betchcott Hill Land Appeal
Help us restore 50 hectares in the Shropshire Hills and create a haven for wildlife
Can you support Shropshire Wildlife Trust, in our largest appeal to date, to purchase and restore this land in the Shropshire Hills so the haunting ‘cur-lee’ of a curlew is not lost forever?
Nestled between the craggy outcrops of the Stiperstones ridge, and the imposing plateau of the Long Mynd, is a piece of land, 50 hectares in size. It neighbours the ancient Portway, and descends gradually to meet the rolling fields of the lowlands. Meadow pipits and skylarks flutter and parachute above, whilst a shy brown hare creeps through the grasses below, ears flat along its back, all as an unmistakable ‘cuckoo’ call drifts by on an upland breeze.
This is Betchcott Hill, a promising site, containing pockets of valuable habitat, and home to some specialist species, not least a breeding pair of curlew. But it is sadly in poor ecological condition, and in need of considered restoration and land management. And that is exactly what Shropshire Wildlife Trust is planning to do to...
But we need your help!
To secure the 50 hectares of land for nature and to fund its restoration we need £1,113,000. We have already secured £975,000 towards the total so now need a further £138,000 by the 31st December - can you help us?
What your donation could do!
£10 could fund...
1m of new hedgerow to provide shelter and food for insects, birds, and mammals£40 could buy...
green hay to cover 1ha to improve the biodiversity of the grassland habitat£250 could buy...
one GPS cattle collar to enable better, targeted conservation grazing£3,000 could fund...
one new wader scrape to create a vital feeding site for curlew and lapwing£10,000 could help...
create accessible parking and a waymarked route with seating, so visitors of all abilities can enjoy the extensive viewsSupport our appeal
and help turn this site into a haven for wildlife in Shropshire*Images used are for illustrative purposes only and may not be an exact representation of work that is completed on the land.
Our plans for the land
Grassland
We want to enhance this habitat, making it a species-rich grassland. Through targeted conservation grazing and hay strewing, we aim to enhance the botanical diversity of the grassland and extend areas of heathland where possible.
Wetland
There are wet flushes on the site, which are perfect habitat for the resident wading birds. By blocking and filling the drainage ditches, we can expand this wetland, reinstating it for curlew and lapwing, as well as a variety of dragonflies and invertebrates.
Woodland
The on-site woodland area doesn’t require much intervention. We will carefully monitor what is happening in this woodland habitat, removing or planting trees when necessary to keep the balance.
The restoration work we plan to carry out here will create an important link in the chain of habitats found here in the Shropshire Hills.
A haven for wading birds
The site has great potential for wading birds, with lapwing and snipe already present. Curlews also visit, with a pair nesting on the site earlier this year. Tragically, the young were predated, a devastating but all too familiar blow for this near-threatened species. We intend to carefully manage the areas of woodland to help stop this predation, giving the curlew, and other ground-nesting birds, a fighting chance to fledge their chicks.
We will block the drainage systems that are present in order to expand the wet flushes and keep water on site longer. We’ll also be adding scrapes, shallow depressions made to hold rainwater into the warmer, summer months, which create important feeding sites for wading birds and their chicks. These changes to the land will make it wetter and better for the lapwing, snipe, and curlew.
Donate to restore a haven for wading birds in the Shropshire Hills
There’s so much opportunity here at Betchcott Hill. We’re going to build on what’s already special about the site, like the wet woodlands, the wet flushes, and the nesting curlews. Our work should see several benefits for wildlife, fundamentally in making a safer space for the animals that are here.Tom FreelandHead of Nature Reserves, Shropshire Wildlife Trust