Vision Projects

Eyam Delf

Eyam Delf information boardEyam Delf is being managed as an informal local nature reserve by Eyam Delf Action Group with support from the landowner, Eyam School, the Vision Project and Peak District National Park Authority ranger service.

Funding has been provided for the site directly by the Vision Project and more recently by the BBC Breathing Spaces programme.

Taddington Mere

Taddington MereTaddington Mere has recently been restored in a collaborative effort between Taddington Parish, Taddington School, the Vision Project and Peak District National Park Authority ranger service.

Funding from the Local Heritage Initiative was given for the works on the mere and for an interpretation panel.

Calver Marshes

Calver Marshes information panelsCalver Marshes is being managed as an informal local nature reserve with a steering group including landowners, local naturalists and community representatives overseeing an annual programme of awareness raising and conservation action.

Children from Curbar School have helped to produce a series of information panels about the site.

Silence Mine

Silence Mine information boardFollowing compulsory purchase by the Authority and transfer to a Village Trust, Silence Mine is being managed by people from Foolow and Great Hucklow villages. The site supports areas of very high quality grassland in association with old mine remains and includes numerous cowslips and orchids.

A programme of practical action and awareness raising is being implemented in addition to the dedication of the site as open access land.

Silence Mine website

Furness Quarry

Climbers generally enjoy their sport on someone else’s land. How about climbers welcoming local people and visitors alike to enjoy quiet recreation on their land?

That is exactly what the British Mountaineering Council (BMC) has done through its acquisition of Furness Quarry – known to climbers as ‘Horseshoe’ – in Stoney Middleton Dale. It all happened after a chance conservation in 1998 between BMC Patron Sir Chris Bonnington and Tarmac’s Land and Minerals Director Chris Dobbs.

Parts of the site remain in private ownership, and there is no right of access to these. But after lobbying for more open access the BMC has been true to its convictions and designated its landholding here as open for everyone to enjoy – on foot – under the Countryside and Rights of Way Act (2000).

There is another side to it too. Some have tried to characterise climbers in the past as damaging vegetation and disturbing birds in the single-minded pursuit of their own objective. This is not the case at Horseshoe, here a nature reserve is being managed to show how wildlife and recreation can happily co-exist. It’s a super place to see a complete succession of vegetation cover from bare areas through grassland to climax vegetation (the final stage in the development of an area from bare ground through colonising vegetation to the most appropriate vegetation for the climatic conditions).

And there is more. Clearly visible on the quarry floor are ancient coral beds whilst the vertical faces exhibit mineral veins, feathering from blasting, fossil remains, chert deposits and clearly defined bedding planes.

It’s right in the middle of the Vision Project area. Why not drop by and have a look for yourself?.

Please remember to keep children well away from the unfenced cliff edges, and from the base of cliffs too.