Plan to cut town's flood risk 'naturally'

Jason Arunn Murugesu
BBC News, North East and Cumbria
Friends of the Lake District A Lake District scene showing clouds and mountains with lots of grass and trees on the ground. The clouds are covering the peaks of the mountains.Friends of the Lake District
Friends of the Lake District says it wants to make the land a "wildlife haven"

A charity which has bought land it hopes to turn into a "wildlife haven" has announced a plan to use "natural" techniques to help cut the risk of flooding in a nearby town.

Friends of the Lake District said it had doubled the land it owns at Dam Mire Wood, near Keswick, Cumbria, at the foot of the mountain Blencathra.

The body's head Michael Hill said the new patch of land it owned was in a "poor natural state" but they hoped to improve it to encourage wildlife to flourish.

At the same time, he said, the restored land would help the group do their "little bit to save Keswick from flooding again".

The charity now owns about five hectares of land at the foot of Blencathra.

It has already planted about 1,000 trees on the original fields it has owned since 2021.

Mr Hill said: "We see badgers and all sorts of birds.

"We're seeing the wildlife come back to this restored piece of land."

Friends of the Lake District A view from the foot of Blencathra. It is covered in green and brown grass and plants and is triangular in shape but with a flat top, a bit like the pitched roof of a house.Friends of the Lake District
Water runs down Blencathra into Keswick, says Michael Hill

He said the team wanted to take more of a "wetlands approach" with the new land as it was already very "boggy".

This includes adding ponds along with shallow depressions which can fill up with rainwater.

These waterbodies would then hopefully fill up with "all types of toads and invertebrates", he said.

The team also hopes to install "leaky dams" into a beck on the field to slow down the flow rate as water runs down Blencathra and ends up in Keswick.

"The method is all about what can you do upstream of these danger areas to reduce those big pulses of water as they race down hills," Mr Hill said.

"We can slow the flow of water down that hill and hopefully do our little bit to save Keswick from flooding again."

The charity is currently seeking donations for the project.

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