Date Saturday 28 September
Timing
2-4pm
Length 3 miles
Ascent 482ft
Difficulty level Moderate. Some ascents but taken at a gentle pace. Family friendly.
Leader Dave Dick
Cost £10
Meet at St Andrew's Church (registration centre)
Dave will lead a walk around Gallow Hill, a community woodland area immediately above the town. This is an area of mixed habitat for birds that is at an exciting stage of development. It contains some beautiful mature woodland, and is an important amenity for Moffat. It also has a large open area (the result of the felling of commercial woodland by the previous owners), which is now being re-planted with deciduous trees by Moffat Community Woodland.
Date Saturday 28 September
Timing
2-4pm
Length 3 miles
Ascent 482ft
Difficulty level Moderate. Some ascents but taken at a gentle pace
Leader Dave Dick
Cost £10
Meet at St Andrew's Church (registration centre)
Dave will lead a walk around Gallow Hill, a community woodland area immediately above the town. This is an area of mixed habitat for birds that is at an exciting stage of development. It contains some beautiful mature woodland and is an important amenity for Moffat. It also has a large open area (the result of the felling of commercial woodland by the previous owners), which is now being re-planted with deciduous trees by Moffat Community Woodland.
The views from the top of the hill allow us to see up into the Moffat Hills and across to the Lowthers. On a clear day, you can see as far as the Solway Firth and the mountains of the Lake District.
In September, many of our small migrant birds will have left but among the young trees and in the various layers of the older woodland, we should hear and see great, long-tailed, blue and coal tits; great spotted woodpeckers; jays, ravens, carrion crows, jackdaws and rooks; buzzards, kestrels and sparrowhawks and, with luck, a passing red kite or goshawk.
Gallow Hill attracts soaring birds and, by early October, flights of geese – greylag, pink-footed and barnacle geese are a daily spectacle to be heard heading to, or from the Solway Coast. Roe deer and brown hares are regularly spotted too.
Although we will be on well-made paths throughout the walk, some parts can be muddy so we recommend walking boots and waterproof clothing.
Top tip bring binoculars
Local bird conservationist, Dave Dick, has been a resident of Moffat since 2007 when he retired from his post as Senior Investigations Officer with RSPB Scotland. Since childhood, Dave has been fascinated by nature in his native Scotland and enjoys showing others the rich wildlife of places such as Gallow Hill. He is a specialist in birds of prey, having worked on golden eagle and peregrine falcon surveys. Initially in charge of monitoring many species of rare birds, including setting up the Scottish Raptor Study Groups, he eventually specialised in working with the justice system to help prevent such crimes as the poisoning and trapping of birds, egg and chick theft and the international trade in wild birds. Read more in his autobiography Wildlife Crime. He is also a musician and plays guitar regularly in Moffat.
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Walk Moffat
Walk Moffat
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