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Industrial Teesside isn't a location you'd automatically
associate with nature watching but a trip to Seal Sands is a real treat for wildlife
lovers.
During the medieval period the area was important for the salt
industry, with salt being extracted from sea water. | Nature
haven with a difference. Photo - Natural England/Peter Wakeley |
Modern visitors can see the grassy mounds of ash from the fires
used to evaporate sea water to crystallise the salt, near the North Gare car park.
Today
Seal Sands continues to be an important industrial centre - but for petro-chemicals.
Located between Hartlepool and Middlesbrough, you'll find a nuclear power
station and chemical works on the horizon but don't let the industrial landscape
put you off.
Although it isn't the prettiest place, Seal Sands is a top
location for urban wildlife including wading birds and seals. If you're
a wildlife lover, this place is not-to-be-missed, mainly because you can get really
close to the animals and birds. Internationally
important wildlife Seal
Sands is of international importance because it's the only area of inter-tidal
mud flat between Lindisfarne to its north and the Humber to the south. This
industrial location provides a sense of isolation despite the heavy traffic running
along its edges. Ironically there's relatively little human disturbance,
so the birds and mammals can flourish at Seal Sands. As a result the area
can get up to 30,000 ducks and waders in the autumn and winter months. Sometimes
the industry works in favour of the wildlife in strange ways - some of the raptors,
for example, use the industrial chimneys as perches. As a result it's a
surprisingly good place to spot Peregrine Falcons and Short-eared Owls. Industry
and nature The
industrial lighting also helps wading birds to feed around the clock, another
happy accident. The northern side of Seal Sands reserve at North Gare is
a large expanse of sand-dune and mudflat, a top spot to see birds. The hide
on the northern side of Seal Sands provides one of the best views of the birds
including Shelduck, Knot and Redshank. The southern hide at Greatham Creek
also provides a good view point for both birds and seals. Occasionally bird
watchers will see rarer species like Little Egret and Red-throated Divers. Look
beyond the heavy industry and this is also a great spot to find flowers in summer
and birds throughout the year. Seals spectacle Once
upon a time there were more than 1,000 seals lounging on the sandbanks at Seal
Sands, but pollution, dredging and human interference resulted in a dramatic decline
in their population. By the 1930's a sight of a seal was very rare.
It was only in the 1960's that Grey Seals returned, followed in the 1980s
by the rarer Common Seals. Even then it was a tough time for the returning
animals - pollution was still a problem. It's only in recent years that
things have improved - and visitors can now find around 100 seals at Seal Sands. If
you visit at a low tide, you'll nearly always see the animals lounging out on
the sandbank in the middle of the lagoon. Come when the tide is in and you'll
be able to see the seals much more closely as they push themselves up Greatham
Creek, which runs under the busy main road, before pulling themselves out onto
the mudbanks. Who would have thought that you'd get top quality views of
one of our largest mammals from a footpath by a busy road between a power station
and an oil refinery? Go
on the Seal Sands wildlife walk
Photo
credits
Images courtesy and copyright of Natural England and
Peter Wakeley. |