Groundwork Cheshire Lancs & Merseyside is awarded a £250,000 grant by The National Lottery Heritage Fund to conserve and restore the Lindow Moss landscape.
Lindow Moss Landscape Partnership Members: (L-R):
Richard Doran (Cheshire East Green Infrastructure Manager), Prof. John Handley (Transition Wilmslow), Cllr John Kelly (Wilmslow Town Council), Lisa Russett (Groundwork BID Manager – Wilmslow), Andrew Darron (Executive Director, Groundwork CLM), Jane Selva (Transition Wilmslow), Brian Donohue (Chair Lindow Moss Landscape Partnership) and Gary Parker (Chair Friends of Lindow Moss)
Peat Bog at Lindow Moss
Today, Groundwork has received a grant of £250,000 from The National Lottery Heritage Fund on behalf of the Lindow Moss Landscape Partnership for an exciting natural heritage project it is co-ordinating in Wilmslow, Cheshire: Lindow Moss – A Landscape In Discovery.
Made possible by money raised by National Lottery players, the project will start in February and will help to deliver a programme of work that will conserve, restore and interpret this important landscape.
The Lindow Moss Landscape has been described as ‘archaeologically and historically one of the most important lowland wetlands in Britain’. For many years, peat extraction on an industrial scale, along with continual drainage to support low grade farming and pasture has led to ecological and environmental decline. At the heart of the landscape is a ‘cut over’ peat bog – at the centre of which is the find site of Lindow Man – Britain’s most intact Iron Age Bog Body. The site is unmarked.
Supported through the Heritage Fund, the project will harness community support through a programme ecological restoration and interpretation. It will also train a new generation of people in the Green Skills needed by the emerging green economy – specifically woodland management, peat conservation and nature recovery – all areas with a current skills deficit nationally.
Groundwork is one of the founding partners of the Lindow Moss Landscape Partnership which was enabled by the Wilmslow Neighbourhood Plan. It is a collective of liked-minded partners, land owners and organisations that are committed to working together in order to conserve, restore and interpret the wider Lindow Moss landscape.
The partnership has developed a 10 year plan to deliver its vision of a ‘landscape in recovery – for nature, for the climate and for our citizens’. This includes:
- Ensuring Lindow Moss is recognised, celebrated, conserved and protected for its unique heritage.
- Improving bio-diversity and nature recovery, with a practical programme of conservation volunteering.
- Realising the potential of Lindow Moss to capture and store carbon from the atmosphere.
- Harnessing the potential of Lindow to support the health, wealth and happiness of the community with the involvement and support from local businesses.
- Providing a training ground to develop new skills for a greener economy.
- Creating a social action programme that enables communities to take the lead.