People are being asked to help them plant 4,000 wildflower plants in Carlisle’s newest nature reserve.
The event, at Swifts Nature Reserve on Saturday between 10am and 3pm is part of The Big Buzz Big Plant.
The Swifts has been transformed into a bee and butterfly haven and support is needed to help top the area up with more flowers to feed the local wildlife.
The drop-in event is also an opportunity to explore the Swifts by walking around the pollinator trail and win a small prize.
There will also be children’s activities with Faye from Beevive and a bio blitz with Dr Alex Dittrich from 10am to 1pm.
There is free parking in the Swifts and Sands car parks.
Work has been recently been completed on the new 42-acre wildlife haven for birds, bees and butterflies in Carlisle. The Swifts golf course and driving range in Carlisle city centre has become an urban bee and butterfly oasis.
The Swifts site, in the centre of Carlisle, includes grassland, woodland and riverbanks. It has been transformed into an urban nature reserve thanks to ÂŁ80,000 funding fromCumbria Waste Management Environment Trust (CWMET) and ÂŁ8,000 from the Environment Agency.
The funding has breathed new life into the site, transforming once manicured greens and fairways into wildflower meadows, species-rich wetland and native woodland, helping to boost populations of bees and butterflies.
The site is owned by Carlisle City Council, which worked with Cumbria Wildlife Trust to ensure the successful delivery of the project.
With improved access and signs, and within close walking distance of Carlisle city centre, the site is an oasis for wildlife and visitors to the site. The funding has been secured by Cumbria Wildlife Trust, and working in partnership with Carlisle City Council, the restoration works were part of the Get Cumbria Buzzing! Project.
The project is supported by The National Lottery Heritage Fund and aims to create and link pollinator habitat across north west Cumbria.
Cllr Nigel Christian, portfolio holder for environment and transport, said: “Pollinating insects are a critical component of a healthy ecosystem, however more than half of UK bee, butterfly and moth species have declined in the past 50 years and 30 species of bee face extinction. Over the last 75 years 97 percent of flower rich meadows have been lost, whilst 60 per cent of flowering plants are in decline.
“The Swifts project restores and create three different types of habitat in the centre of Carlisle: wildflower hay meadows; diverse woodland containing native flowering tree and shrub species; and wet grassland featuring seasonal scrapes – shallow pools of water.
“This combination will not only provide essential habitat for pollinating insects but will also offer feeding and nesting opportunities for a wide range of bird and mammal species. As part of the project, we have retained and enhanced the existing network of informal public footpaths across the site.”
Tanya St Pierre, of Cumbria Wildlife Trust, said: “The Swifts project has been an incredible opportunity to work in partnership with Carlisle City Council to create valuable new wildlife habitat that will contribute to nature’s recovery. Its city centre location means it is a wonderful, accessible place for people too, and we know a thriving, wildlife-rich environment benefits both physical and mental health. It’s a great example of how spaces in urban areas can be transformed for both wildlife and people and we’d love to see more projects like this across the city.”
Over the past two years, the city council has removed old golf course infrastructure; thinned dense stands of non-native amenity trees; re-created species rich hay meadows; planted native flowering tree species; and installed a series of shallow seasonal bodies of water, known as scrapes.
Contractors working on the council’s behalf on the project were: OpenSpace Cumbria Ltd, Evans Agricultural Contractors Ltd, Cumbria Wildflowers Ltd and Volker Stevin Ltd.
The Swifts has remained open to the public throughout the duration of the project.
The Swifts will continue to be managed and maintained by Carlisle City Council’s green spaces team to improve and develop the range of habitats created during this project. This includes management of the grassland areas by cutting and removing an annual hay crop, plus additional planting of wildflower plug plants and additional trees, when and where appropriate.
The Swifts is open to public access at all times, entrance points are located to the rear of the Sands Centre, off Swifts Bank Car Park and from the flood embankment to the North of Trinity School. Paths across the site are informal but easily accessed during the summer months.
Cumbria Wildlife Trust is seeking people’s views on other spaces in the city that could be transformed for nature and local communities. To suggest a site, visit https://www.cumbriawildlifetrust.org.uk/about/what-we-do/current-conservation-campaigns/wilder-future/wilder-carlisleÂ