Honister Crag SSSI

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InterestBiological and geological
Location mapMagic Map
Honister Crag
Site of Special Scientific Interest
Honister´s via ferrata with Honister Pass in the background
InterestBiological and geological
Notification1988
Location mapMagic Map

Honister Crag SSSI is a Site of Special Scientific Interest in Cumbria, England. It is designated for both biological and geological interest. The site covers an area of 302.9 hectares (1.170 sq mi) on Honister Crag, from which it takes its name, and Fleetwith Pike, an adjacent fell.

With other SSSIs in the English Lake District, it forms part of the Lake District High Fells Special Area of Conservation It is separated from one of the other SSSIs, Buttermere Fells, by the B5289 road.

Management

The site is important for its plants and provides one of the best examples of species-rich upland ledge communities in West Cumbria. It supports a mixture of montane and lowland species.[1]

English Nature (the predecessor organisation of Natural England) identified (in 2004) a need to:

  • control grazing stock (overgrazing has also affected other sites in the Lake District High Fells SAC)
  • manage human access[2]

In 2011 Natural England successfully prosecuted Honister Slate Mine for damaging the SSSI. The mine had been redeveloped by a local businessman as a tourist attraction, and the facilities included an unapproved extension to an existing via ferrata and a zip wire. It was noted their use by paying members of the public caused significant damage to the vegetation through trampling.[3]

In November 2018 the Lake District National Park Authority approved a planning application from the Slate Mine for a zip wire running 1 km from Fleetwith Pike (a longer wire than the one which was the subject of controversy in 2011)).[4] The Cumbria Wildlife Trust expressed concern that damage would be caused to alpine flowers.[5]

Geology

There are important exposures of rocks of the Skiddaw Group in contact with lavas and tuffs of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group.[1]

Management

According to English Nature (which became Natural England in 2006), the "ideal management for natural inland geological sites is the maintenance of rock exposure free of vegetation and, in some cases, the build-up of rock debris".[2]

Other levels of protection

See also

References

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