Durham Coast National Nature Reserve

LOCATION

BLACKHALL, COUNTY DURHAM

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Our View

The Durham Coast NNR is made up of five separate areas of land on the northeast coast of County Durham. The reserve is noted for its striking Magnesian limestone geological features and lime-rich grassland, home to numerous wildflowers and butterflies. The area also supports many birds, most notably an important breeding population of little terns. This delightful chattering seabird is the UK’s smallest tern. It arrives from West Africa in May to noisily nest on the sands at Crimdon. The reserve is a wonderfully varied coastline of shallow bays and headlands with yellow limestone cliffs up to 30 metres high. The coastal slopes and grasslands are home to a fabulous display of rare wildflowers, butterflies and other insects. In contrast, the wooded coastal denes are a totally different landscape of tangled ancient trees that support roe deer and many species of woodland birds in their mysterious depths.

Durham Coast National Nature Reserve
Blackhall

Features

About the area

Discover County Durham

County Durham reaches halfway across England, from the North Pennines in the west, to the sea in the east. Much of it is very sparsely inhabited, and is naturally beautiful; a mix of rolling hills, monumental valleys, lush farmland and unforgiving moors. It’s strong on industrial heritage as well, and remnants of the now all-but-vanished mining industry are everywhere.

The City of Durham has a magnificent Cathedral which can be traced back to the establishment of a church in the 10thcentury as the final resting place of the miraculous remains of Saint Cuthbert. The Cathedral, alongside the city’s Castle (an 11th-century structure that now houses University College), were created a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1986. The area’s mining past is fully documented at the Durham Mining Museum; an amazing resource. Bishop Auckland is the other major settlement, and for centuries was run almost as an independent state by the powerful Bishops of Durham. These days it is still a bustling town with plenty of shops, historical interest and events like the annual food festival. The coastal town of Peterlee is unusual; it was set up as a new town to house Durham miners after WW2. 

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