Greenlee Lough National Nature Reserve

LOCATION

ONCE BREWED, NORTHUMBERLAND

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Greenlee Lough NNR occupies one of the loughs, or shallow lakes, found near the World Heritage Site of Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland. It is the largest natural freshwater lake in Northumberland, supporting aquatic plant species that require low levels of nutrients, with a mixture of surrounding habitats such as mires, reedbeds and wet carr woodland. There is a good variety of water plants, including 11 species of pondweed and stonewort. Around the margins are areas of reedbed with other plants including bog bean and marsh cinquefoil. The starry white flowers of bog bean are found in shallow ponds, fens, bogs and marshes, and it blooms from March until June. The deep red stars of marsh cinquefoil is a good source of food for nectar-loving insects such as bees and hoverflies. The lough is also used extensively by wildfowl and waders that feed in the shallow waters and wetlands.

Greenlee Lough National Nature Reserve
Once Brewed

Features

About the area

Discover Northumberland

If it’s history you’re after, there’s heaps of it in Northumberland. On Hadrian’s Wall you can imagine scarlet-cloaked Roman legionaries keeping watch for painted Pictish warriors while cursing the English weather and dreaming of home. Desolate battlefield sites and hulking fortresses such as Alnwick, Dunstanburgh, Bamburgh and Warkworth are reminders that this, until not so very long ago, was a contested border region. The ruins of Lindisfarne bear witness to the region’s early Christian history.

Northumberland also has some of Britain’s best beaches. On summer days, and even in winter, you’ll see surfers and other brave souls making the most of the coast. Inland, there are some great walks and bike rides in the dales of the Cheviot Hills and the Simonsides – just hilly enough to be interesting, without being brutally steep. There's dramatic scenery in the High Pennines, where waterfalls plunge into deep valleys, and there are swathes of heather-scented moorland. Northumberland National Park covers over 400 square miles of moorland and valleys with clear streams and pretty, stone-built villages. It’s just the place for wildlife watching too. You’ll find flocks of puffins, guillemots and other seabirds around the Farne Islands, and seals and dolphins offshore.

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