The Story of Dell Woods, Abernethy NNR
For further information on Dell Woods, Abernethy NNR contact:
The Reserve Manager
Scottish Natural Heritage
Achantoul
Aviemore
PH22 1QD
United Kingdom
Tel: 01463 725219
Email: [email protected]
Foreword
Abernethy National Nature Reserve (NNR) lies on the southern fringes of the village of Nethy Bridge, in the Cairngorms National Park. It covers most of Abernethy Forest, a remnant of an ancient Scots pine forest that once covered much of the Scottish Highlands and extends high into the Cairngorm Mountains. The pines we see here today are the descendants of the first pines to arrive in the area 8,800 years ago, after the last ice age. These forests are ideal habitat for a vast number of plant and animal species, some of which only live within Scotland and rely upon the Caledonian forests for their survival.
The forest of Abernethy NNR is home to some of the most charismatic mammals and birds of Scotland including pine marten, red squirrel, capercaillie, osprey, Scottish crossbill and crested tit. It is also host to an array of flowers characteristic of native pinewoods, including twinflower, intermediate wintergreen and creeping lady’s tresses.
In 2006 we consulted on the future of the group of NNRs within the Cairngorms. As a result of this consultation we greatly extended Abernethy NNR. This document focuses on the Dell Woods section of Abernethy NNR, owned and managed by Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH). The wider Abernethy NNR is managed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB).
Abernethy NNR is one of a suite of National Nature Reserves in Scotland and one of eight within the Cairngorms National Park.
Scotland’s NNRs are special places for nature, where some of the best examples of Scotland’s wildlife are managed. Every NNR is carefully managed for both nature and people, giving visitors the opportunity to experience our rich natural heritage. The network of trails close to visitor facilities in the village of Nethy Bridge makes Dell Woods a truly accessible reserve for all to explore and enjoy.
The reserve Story contains background information about the reserve, describing the wildlife interest, its land use history and management since it became a reserve. The Abernethy – Dell Woods NNR Management Plan 2015-2025 covers the future management of the reserve.
All the documents can be downloaded from the Abernethy page of the NNR website or obtained from the address below.
Map for Abernethy - Dell Woods NNR
Introduction to Abernethy - Dell Woods NNR
Dell Woods covers 267 hectares (ha) of native pinewood on the outskirts of the village of Nethy Bridge, 18 kilometres (km) north-east of Aviemore in Badenoch and Strathspey. The reserve is part of Abernethy Forest, the largest remnant of the ancient native pinewoods that once covered the foothills of the Cairngorms.
The climate at these northern latitudes is cool and wet, being under the influence of mountain weather systems and prevailing south to south-westerly winds. It can be a challenging environment with temperatures varying as much as 45°C between winter lows and summer highs.
Dell Woods is typical of a Caledonian pine forest; it is open mosaic woodland where Scots pine is the dominant species. As glaciers retreated at the end of the last ice age, they deposited a layer of debris across this area. This created a landscape of free draining dry hummocks and wet poorly drained hollows. It is this drainage pattern which creates the rich and diverse woodland found at Dell. The Scots pine and other trees favour the drier hummocky conditions and in the wet hollows bog woodland and bog develop.
Within the hollows heather, cross-leaved heath, cotton grasses and bog (sphagnum) mosses dominate. The occasional gnarled bog pine manages to survive in spite of the water logged conditions. In the wettest areas the combination of poor drainage and low temperatures has created ideal conditions for peat to build up, forming blanket bogs. Peaty dubh lochans (black pools) within these bogs provide excellent habitat for dragonflies.
Many of the species seen here are restricted to Caledonian pinewoods and have declined in other places due to habitat loss and changes in forest management. For hundreds of years Dell was a working forest with timber production as its primary purpose. Traditional forestry practices have largely shaped the landscape and have provided optimum conditions for some of Britain’s rarest wildlife. Stump lichen, for example, grows on untreated pine stumps in the reserve, and is found at just a few sites in the Highlands.
Designations
We declared Dell Woods NNR as an extension to Abernethy Forest NNR in 1988. Of its 375 ha, Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) owns 267 ha and the remaining 108 ha was leased from the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), who own much of the adjoining forest. This lease was terminated in 2009 and the land was returned to the RSPB. In 2007 we declared a new Abernethy NNR, replacing Abernethy Forest NNR and increasing its size considerably to 12,754ha. Dell Woods is part of this greatly extended NNR.
The reserve’s national importance has been recognised by its inclusion within the much larger Abernethy Forest SSSI, which includes the original Abernethy Forest NNR. It is also included within three sites designated under European legislation known as Natura 2000, reflecting the site’s international importance. These three sites are Abernethy Forest Special Protection Area (SPA), Cairngorm Special Area for Conservation (SAC), and the River Spey SAC. Table 1 summarises each of these designations and their qualifying features. The table refers to the whole of Abernethy NNR and the wider geographical areas covered by both the UK and European designations. Where a feature is known not to occur within Dell Woods, this has been noted.
Site name | Habitats |
---|---|
Cairngorms SAC |
|
Cairngorms SAC (These species are found on the wider Abernethy NNR but not within Dell Woods.) |
|
Abernethy Forest SSSI | Caledonian forest/ Native pinewood |
Site name | Species |
---|---|
Abernethy Forest SPA |
|
Cairngorms SAC |
|
River Spey SAC |
|
Abernethy Forest SSSI |
|
The Natural Heritage of Dell Woods
Introduction
Large areas of the great forests that once covered Scotland have now disappeared, and with the loss of this vital refuge we are seeing the decline of some of Scotland’s most fascinating wildlife. Dell Woods is important for the fragment of native Caledonian pinewood that it protects, but also for the rich mosaic of bog woodland, blanket bog and dry heath. This diversity of habitat, together with the animal and plant communities and important populations of specialist Caledonian pine forest species, contributes to the international status of the site.
Geology, geomorphology and soils
The rocks underlying Dell Woods are Moine schist. Originally sedimentary; there rocks were laid down between 1,000 million and 870 million years ago. They began life as sand and mud laid down in an ocean environment. Over time they formed sandstone and mudstone. They have been metamorphosed twice, firstly about 1000 million years ago and secondly about 420 million years ago when the Iapetus Ocean finally closed. When the rocks were metamorphosed, sandstone became quartzite and mudstone became schist.
The rocks are overlain by soils deposited by melt water from retreating glaciers at the end of the last ice age about 10,000 years ago. Their deposition gave rise to the undulating landscape of mounds, ridges and hollows found on the reserve. This also explains why much of the sand and gravel found in these skeletal soils is derived from distant granite rocks, having being carried there by glaciers. The soils in Dell Woods are very acidic and poor in nutrients because they have been leached by rainwater.
Habitats
Dell Woods has an undulating topography, created by the glacial deposits described above. The altitude of the reserve varies between 210 m and 260 m above sea level. Although predominantly pinewood, the reserve has a surprising range of other habitats, including open areas of heath, bog woodland, rough grasslands and species-rich grassland where stock grazing has occurred.
The scars of past timber exploitation are still evident, but across the reserve natural regeneration is occurring, and the largely undisturbed woodland supports an important range of pinewood species.
The pinewood
Native pine woodlands are relict forests dominated by self-sown Scots pine. After the last ice age, these pinewoods covered thousands of square kilometres (km2) of the Scottish Highlands. Today, native Caledonian pinewoods are found at only 84 sites in Scotland, covering around 180 km2. They occur throughout the central and north-eastern Grampians, and in the northern and western Highlands of Scotland. There is a strong concentration of remnant pinewoods in the Strathspey area and Abernethy Forest is the largest of the remaining remnants, covering an area of 5,796 hectares. Of this, 267 hectares fall within Dell Woods.
Native pinewoods occur on infertile, strongly leached, podsolic soils. They do not support a large diversity of plants and animals compared with some more fertile habitats. However, there is a characteristic plant and animal community which includes many rare and uncommon species.
The dominant species of the Caledonian pine forest is the Scots pine. The majority of those in Dell Woods are between 100 and 140 years old; the even age of these trees reflects a long history of woodland management for timber. Scattered amongst the even aged trees are ancient ‘granny pines’, some over 200 years old. These provide an important seed source for the regeneration of the pine woodland. Scots pine is successfully spreading in the forest and there are dense thickets of regeneration. These are concentrated on areas of heath that have been cleared of non-native trees, for example adjacent to the Tulloch road and under the old power line wayleave (the powerline was removed in 2011).
Although Scots pine dominates, the forest at Dell has a healthy shrub layer with juniper (an indicator of ancient forest), aspen, birch, rowan, bird cherry and alder. The woodland tends to be very open with a luxuriant ground layer of heather, blaeberry and cowberry.
Broad-leaved trees are far rarer here at Dell than in more natural forests. In the past, broad-leaved trees were selectively cut for firewood and charcoal, or removed as “weeds” from the commercially managed pinewoods. Browsing by deer is also likely to have had a serious impact on the regeneration of broad-leaved species. Broad-leaved trees are no longer removed from Dell Woods and the control of deer is likely to encourage their regeneration.
Bog woodland
In Scotland, bog woodland usually forms part of a mosaic of natural forest types within the wider Caledonian forest habitat, as found in Dell. Although there are good examples of bog woodland in the west of Scotland the majority is found in the east with Abernethy being particularly important. Dell Woods contains extensive areas of bog woodland, a rare habitat in the UK with less than a 1,000 hectares left (it was once much more widespread). Bog woodland usually forms in areas where the topography is quite varied, often a product of irregular glacial deposits resulting in diverse drainage patterns, as found within Dell Woods. Bog woodland is a distinct habitat with its own ecological relationships, where there is a fine balance between tree growth and bog development. Tree growth is slow so trees don’t take over the bog, and other bog species are able to survive.
Within Dell Woods the bog woodlands have formed on areas of peaty ground where the high water table and shortage of nutrients has restricted tree growth. The unique character of this open habitat is defined by the scattered trees which are gnarled and stunted, with twisted branches. Some of the Scots pines can be up to 350 years old, but are deceptively small in size.
An important group of plants found in bog woodland are the Sphagnum mosses, forming lush waterlogged carpets of bright green and rich red. Able to hold large amounts of water these mosses have a key role in peat formation. In the wettest parts of the woodland there are luxuriant plumes of purple moor-grass; hare's-tail cotton grass is also common. In drier areas there are the more usual woodland plants, ling heather, blaeberry and Hylocomium moss. Bog woodlands are typically very low in nutrients and certain species are specially adapted to this. Butterworts and sundews are two insectivorous plants found at Dell Woods.
Where the conditions are most waterlogged bog woodland is replaced by small areas of blanket bog. These areas are dominated by the sphagnum mosses and no trees survive. The sphagnum mosses have built up over time into a deep layer of peat. Across the surface of the bog are small scattered bog pools which are rich in invertebrates.
The Species of Dell Woods
Vascular plants
Over 200 species of vascular plant have been recorded on the reserve. Abundant dwarf shrubs such as heather, blaeberry, cowberry and crowberry are intermingled with common cow-wheat, wood-sorrel and chickweed wintergreen. Aromatic bog myrtle grows in the peat bogs alongside yellow-flowered bog asphodel and insectivorous plants, such as round-leaved sundew and butterwort. Juniper bushes grow abundantly along the woodland trails.
Rarer species on the reserve include the diminutive twinflower, with two pink bell-like flowers on a slender stem; its lower stem creeps along the ground forming small mats or colonies of the same plant. Twinflower is an Arctic-alpine plant that is a relic of the ice age. It is nationally scarce, growing mainly in the pine woods of Scotland, and particularly in the Cairngorms. The disappearance of twinflower colonies is thought to be due to the clearance of native woodland and the decline in traditional forest management. There is a single colony of twinflower within the reserve, with all its flowers belonging to the same plant.
Creeping lady’s tresses is an attractive orchid with small white flowers twisting up the stem, and a rosette of roundish leaves at its base. Several hundred spikes occur on the reserve, distributed across several localities. This is one of the few British orchids that is almost exclusive to Scotland, and is found mainly in remnants of Caledonian forest. This nationally scarce species declined considerably during the last century as a result of felling and replanting of forests, and due to smothering by brambles and other coarse plants.
Although perhaps not as photogenic as some of the other plant species on the reserve, heath cudweed is probably the most threatened, and has been classified as endangered. This species declined dramatically throughout Britain and Ireland during the latter part of the last century. Other less-common plant species found on the reserve include intermediate wintergreen, serrated-leaved wintergreen and narrow buckler fern.
Fungi and Lower Plants
Dell Woods has a rich understorey of mosses and lichens. Many species are typical of Caledonian pinewoods, such as the yellow-green fern-like fronds of the glittering wood-moss (Hylocomium splendens), while others such as common tamarisk moss (Thuidium tamariscinum) are found in woodlands throughout Britain.
Fungi can be seen for most of the year in a variety of forms, from the woody bracket fungi to the bright red caps of the fly agaric, to the delicate fingers of yellow stagshorn fungus.
The pinewoods are swathed in lichens that form delicate green filigree over the trunks, and hang like wispy beards from the higher branches. Reindeer moss nestles amongst the undergrowth.
The critically endangered stump lichen (Cladonia botrytis) also grows within the reserve. This small 'twig-like' lichen typically grows on the cut stumps of conifers, usually Scots pine, and is known only from seven areas within the Scottish Highlands. In 1998 it was found at several locations on the reserve. This species probably benefited from traditional forest management, and recent changes including a reduction in tree felling, cutting trees lower to the ground and chemical treatment of stumps may have contributed to its rarity.
Birds
Over 70 species of birds have been recorded in Dell Woods, including at least 37 breeding species. The Scottish crossbill, capercaillie and crested tit are all relatively rare species in Britain, and are strongly associated with native pinewoods. The most likely to be seen are crested tits, which are common on the reserve and excavate their nest within soft, dead tree stumps. The Scottish crossbill, recently confirmed as Britain’s only endemic bird species, also breeds here. Its diet consists almost entirely of conifer seeds, particularly pine, which it extracts with its specialised bill.
Capercaillie are present on the reserve all year round, but these shy and elusive birds are rarely seen. Surveys carried out in the 1990s confirmed that there had been an alarming decline in capercaillie numbers in recent decades, and raised fears of a second extinction of this species which was reintroduced into Scotland in 1837. As part of the conservation effort deer fencing in Dell Woods has been removed, where practicable, in an attempt to reduce bird collisions.
Ospreys may be seen overflying the reserve between late March and the end of summer, when they are usually resident at nearby Loch Garten. Ospreys are one of the success stories of bird conservation in Scotland. They were driven to extinction in Britain in the Victorian era but in 1954 came back to nest at Loch Garten. Since that date the Scottish population of ospreys has increased to 160 breeding pairs, and two million people have been to Loch Garten to see successive pairs of ospreys and their young at the nest.
There are many resident bird species on the reserve that are less elusive. Buzzards are commonly seen, hunting over the open ground or perched among the forest. Tawny owl and great spotted woodpecker are also present, and the abundance of tit species attracts the sparrowhawk. Wrens hop nervously around in the undergrowth, and treecreepers scour the tree trunks for insects.
Cuckoos herald the start of summer and the arrival of other seasonal visitors such as tree pipit, redstart, spotted flycatcher and willow warbler. Woodcock are plentiful and are particularly conspicuous on evenings from April to early June, when they can be seen and heard “roding” over the reserve.
Mammals
Both red and roe deer may be seen on the reserve. The density of red deer in Dell Woods is generally fairly low, although numbers can build up particularly in late winter when damage to neighbouring arable crops and young trees can occur. Roe deer are principally creatures of the woodland, and are frequently seen or heard (roe deer bark) on the reserve.
Although grazing from deer can kill young trees, the areas of short vegetation and bare ground created by their browsing and trampling provide niches in which tree seeds can become established. Both red and roe deer are culled on the NNR to maintain the optimum balance for natural regeneration of the woodland.
Red squirrels, or the gnawed cones they leave behind, are often seen on the reserve. The red squirrel is one of the most threatened species of mammal in the UK, and today is found mainly in Scotland. A major factor contributing to their decline has been an increase in grey squirrels, which displace them from their territories. The Caledonian pinewoods of Speyside provide an important stronghold for red squirrels in Scotland.
Otter spraints (droppings) are regularly recorded on Duack burn and its tributaries, and there are also occasional sightings. Otters declined dramatically during the period 1950-1980 at most inland sites in the UK, with the possible exception of northern Scotland. The species now occurs over the whole of Scotland, with the Cairngorms area supporting a widespread and important population.
Another protected species to be recorded on the reserve is the pine marten. Their numbers declined in Scotland at the beginning of the 20th Century as a result of habitat destruction and persecution. More recently its range in Scotland has increased due to the expansion of woodland habitat through planting of commercial forestry, and the regeneration of native woodlands. The sight of a pine marten at Dell Woods is a rare treat as they are active mainly at night.
Scottish wild cats are one of Britain’s rarest mammals, now restricted to northern Scotland. They may be in serious danger of extinction as a result of interbreeding with feral domestic cats, persecution, loss of habitat and fragmentation of populations. A reduction in persecution in the 20th century has allowed some expansion in their range, and it is reported that although they became extinct at Abernethy at the end of the 19th Century, they probably returned to the area in the mid-20th Century. An image of what appears to be a Scottish wildcat was captured by the RSPB in Abernethy in 2000.
Other mammals recorded on the reserve include the common pipistrelle bat, mole, common shrew, rabbit, brown hare, short tailed field vole, fox, stoat, weasel and badger.
Invertebrates
The dome-shaped piles of pine needles forming wood ant nests are a common sight in some parts of the reserve. Wood ants are important species within the Caledonian pine forest ecosystem, with up to 100 000 individuals living in a single nest. They eat significant numbers of leaf-eating insects, potentially increasing tree growth, and are eaten by species including capercaillie, red squirrels and woodpeckers. Wood ants disperse the seeds of many woodland plants, including common cow-wheat, violets and wood anemone. The three species of wood ant that occur within the reserve are all nationally rare, with two of them being Priority Species within the UK Biodiversity Action Plan.
Nine species of dragonfly and damselfly have been recorded on the reserve. A particularly important species is the northern damselfly, Scotland’s rarest and most endangered species of damselfly. In the British Isles it is know from just 26 sites in Speyside, Aberdeenshire and Perthshire.
In 1991 a species of water beetle was discovered on the reserve, which in Britain is only known from the Abernethy Forest. Its formal name is Ilybius wasastjernae and it lives in the water filled holes left when trees are blown over.
Fourteen species of butterfly have been recorded on the reserve, including the pearl-bordered fritillary, a UK BAP Priority species. Green hairstreak and small pearl-bordered fritillary also occur. The commonest species on the reserve is the Scotch argus. Over 100 species of moth have been recorded at Dell Woods, including two UK BAP Priority Species, square-spotted clay, and the day-flying argent and sable.
Reptiles, amphibians and fish
Palmate newts, frogs and toads may all be seen in and around the many bog pools on the reserve. On sunny spring and summer days, common lizards bask on the warm rocks. All of these species breed on the reserve.
Salmon spawn in gravel beds in the burns that pass through the reserve, and care is taken not to create barriers to their migration to the River Spey, or to disrupt their spawning grounds.
Summary
Dell Woods was once an integral part of the great Caledonian forest that covered much of the Scottish Highlands. The trees present today are the direct descendants of the Scots pines that first arrived in the area after the last ice age. The hummocks and hollows carved out by the retreating ice, form an intimate mosaic of woodland and bog habitat that is of outstanding importance for its fauna and flora. The woodland supports many species characteristic of native, ancient pinewoods that are rare elsewhere in Britain. The nature of the present day woodland reflects not only the thread of continuity linking it to the ancient forest, but also the influence of the people who have made a living here for over 4,000 years.
Management of Dell Woods before it became a NNR
History and Culture
It is thought there has been human habitation around Nethy Bridge, or Abernethy as it used to be called, for around 4,000 years. Standing stones, which date from around this time, can be seen just north-east of Nethy Bridge, at Ballintomb on the north bank of the River Spey. In these early days the timber clearance associated with small-scale agriculture would have had little impact on the great forest, and regeneration would have occurred naturally. Over the centuries the intensity of human activity increased, and became the principal driver of changes in the forest.
The following timeline gives a brief summary of some of the key dates in the reserve’s history:
Date | Event |
---|---|
Approx. 8 800 years ago | The first pine trees became established in the area (from pollen analysis). |
Approx. 4 000 years ago | The first people settled around Abernethy. |
13th Century | The King’s Road (the main route through the reserve from Culvardie) was built following a royal decree that communications be improved between Abernethy (Nethy Bridge) and Tulloch. |
15th Century | Large-scale felling of timber began across all of Abernethy Forest. |
16th Century | Local timber sent to London for naval ship-building, or made into charcoal to smelt iron-ore (mined at the Lecht) for weapons manufacture. |
1728 | Contract between Sir James Grant and the York Buildings Company for large-scale timber cutting, south of the Spey, over a period of 15 years. Coulnakyle (between Nethy Bridge and the River Spey) became the main base for the operations. |
18th Century | Dams and sluices were constructed by the Company on the upper reaches of local rivers to flush timber ‘rafts’ downstream. The site of the Funalt Dam lies within Dell Woods NNR. |
1737 | Departure of the York Buildings Company. |
1760s | The Lairds of Grant and their woodland managers began to display concern for the long-term management of the forest. |
1766 | A pipe-boring mill was constructed at the Dell of Abernethy (just outside the eastern reserve boundary) to supply wooden water pipes to the New River Company in London, but this venture was short-lived. |
Early 19th Century | During the Industrial Revolution, from 1840 onwards, Abernethy timber was in demand for railway sleepers and carriages, and pit- props for coal mines. |
1855 – 1984? | A tree nursery was established at Lower Dell, which lies just beyond the north-eastern boundary of the reserve. Its purpose was to rear young pine seedlings from seeds collected in the forest for subsequent re-planting. |
1863 | Railway station established at Abernethy. The village name was subsequently changed to Nethy Bridge to avoid confusion with an existing station of the same name further south. |
Late 19th Century | Timber ‘floating’ declined as the road and rail network was upgraded. |
1860 – 1890 | The Duack Mill, at the reserve’s north-western corner was in operation cutting timbers. |
First World War | A light railway (Puggy Line) was constructed by the Canadian Forestry Corps to transport timber from the forest to the main railway line for export. The route of the railway followed the western boundary of the reserve from Ryduack to Mondhuie. This railway was closed by the Board of Trade at the end of the First World War. |
Second World War | Around 30 foresters from Newfoundland (Newfies) stayed on land that is now tenanted by Dell Farm, clear felling pines to make their camp and levelling the ground. This levelled ground is still visible within the ‘Kennedy Triangle’. |
1921 | A large fire started on the west side of Dell Road and came down through the reserve to Culvardie Road. Charred bark from this fire is still visible on some trees within the reserve. A burst of tree regeneration occurred after the fire. |
1940s | Native conifers were planted alongside Hamack’s Road to gap-fill previously cleared areas. |
1950s | The pylon line was built across Dell Woods. |
1984 | Clear felling of a large area of native pinewood straddling the King’s Road. |
1986 | “Protective purchase” of the reserve by SNH’s predecessor body the Nature Conservancy Council (NCC) was triggered by the above event. |
Land use history
The tranquil atmosphere of Dell Woods today belies its busy past. It was very much a working woodland and for many centuries provided shelter, food and employment for its inhabitants.
Although there is little recorded early history for Dell Woods, as part of the greater Abernethy Forest we may assume it shared its fate. The lack of older trees within the reserve is testament to the large-scale felling that must have occurred. Over the centuries the emphasis was on exploitation of the timber for a variety of uses including ship-building, charcoal production for iron smelting, railway sleepers and carriages, wooden pipes, and pit-props for mines. Hundreds of people were employed in the forest for timber production.
Imagine as you walk through the reserve the very different experience this would have been 300 years ago. The woodland would have been ringing with the sounds of a vibrant and industrious community; men shouting and laughing as they cut the timber, the rasp of saws, children’s voices, dogs barking, the rattling chains of the great horses dragging the fallen trees, and the rumbling of cart wheels along the King’s Road heading south to Tulloch.
In these early days timber was transported from the forest to the nearest riverbank by horse. It was then floated downstream to a collecting point or sawmill. Sluices in specially constructed dams in the upper reaches of these rivers were opened to flush the logs downstream, guided by men with poles. There were at least six of these specially constructed dams in the upper parts of the forest that fed into the River Nethy. The Funalt Dam, which lies within the reserve, was one of two dams that controlled the flow of water into the Duack Burn. The practice of ‘floating’ timber down the rivers persisted until the latter half of the 19th Century when the road network was upgraded, and the railway arrived providing cheaper and more efficient routes to transport timber to the south.
The legacy of the timber companies can be seen across the local landscape. They were largely responsible for the network of roads that became established in the forest, the erection of proper sawmills, and rock cutting in the rivers to enable the timber to pass.
During the 19th and 20th centuries many people in the area continued to work in these sawmills. The Duack Mill, at the reserve’s north-western corner, was in operation between 1860 and 1890. The dam, sluice and lade (channel) that provided the water to power this sawmill lie within the reserve, near the Culvardie entrance. They were restored by Explore Abernethy in 2006.
Twentieth Century
During both World Wars there was an increased demand for local timber. As part of the war effort the Canadian Forestry Corps, and foresters from Newfoundland (Newfies), came to work in the forest. The Canadians ran a light railway (the Puggy Line) to transport timber from the forest, which ran down what is now the western boundary of the reserve. Nothing remains of the railway, but a keen eye can still see part of the embankment along which the track ran.
At the Culvardie Road entrance to the reserve stands a metal hut, known as Willie Steel’s sawmill. This was constructed in the early 1930s by a retired gamekeeper, William Steel, who started a business with his two sons producing kindling. Possibly not a good business proposition in an area like Nethy surrounded by woodland! The hut is built out of corrugated iron that came from a First World War German Prisoner of War Camp at Lettoch. Subsequently the hut was used for storage.
The only croft within the reserve dates from around the1730s, and was at Racoig (known locally as ‘Reoak’) to the west of the Duack Burn. It was cultivated and grazed until the 1950s, although there is no evidence of any buildings. From 1926 until after the war, cattle from a dairy on Culvardie Road were driven daily along the King’s Road to graze on the croft.
Historically, local people collected firewood from the reserve, and there was some local poaching of roe and red deer for the pot. Peats were dug for personal use from three main locations in the reserve known as ‘Marshall Moss’, ‘Kennedy’s Moss’ and ‘Hamack’s Moss’. ‘Hamack’s (pronounced Hay-mack’s) Moss’ was named for James Hamish Mackenzie, a shoemaker by trade, who stayed in Culvardie. He cut peats there until around the 1950s, wheeling them back along ‘Hamack’s Road’ on a peat barrow.
Sustainable management
From the mid-1700s successive Lairds of Grant, and their woodland managers, began to display concern for the sustainable, efficient, and profitable long-term management of the forest. Many other forests were either completely cleared to make way for sheep-walks and deer forest, or shelter for animals, providing little opportunity for natural regeneration.
The underlying forestry management at Abernethy was based upon sustainable exploitation of the forest. This included selective thinning of mature trees and the felling of small coups. Natural regeneration was supplemented by the replanting of felled areas with native pine seedlings grown in local tree nurseries.
Tree nurseries were established at Castle Grant, and later at Lower Dell. The walls of the Lower Dell nursery can still be seen at the north-eastern corner of the reserve. The cone-kiln from this nursery, used to dry the cones and extract the seed, has been preserved and may be seen in the Landmark Centre at Carrbridge. Many of the seedlings from these nurseries were grown from seed collected locally from native Scots pine trees. Seedlings were also raised from exotic species, such as larch and lodgepole pine, and some of these were planted in Dell Woods.
The establishment of the reserve
The forestry management practises evolved over time, but largely remained sympathetic to maintaining the continuity of the native woodland. However, the financial pressures on estates during the mid-20th century resulted in these practises being abandoned in favour of intensive, industrial scale forestry. Large blocks of native forest were clear-felled and drained. Exotic conifers such as Norway and sitka spruce and lodgepole pine were planted in preference to Scots pine.
It was the clear felling of a large area of native pinewood straddling the King’s Road in 1984 that triggered the “protective purchase” of the reserve in 1986 by SNH’s predecessor body, the Nature Conservancy Council (NCC). The NNR was formally declared in March 1988.
Summary
Despite a long history of timber exploitation in Dell Woods, the early sustainable management policies of the Lairds of Grant helped preserve the forest for future generations. It is largely to their credit that the pinewoods of Abernethy have persisted to the current day, with much of the wildlife of the original native forest still intact.
Management of Dell Woods NNR
Key dates
A few of the key dates in the history of Abernethy - Dell Woods NNR are:
Date | Event |
---|---|
1986 | Protective purchase of Dell Woods by the Nature Conservancy Council (NCC). |
1988 | Abernethy Dell Woods NNR is declared as an extension to the Abernethy Forest NNR. |
Late 1980s | Mr A. McCook is appointed as Honorary Warden for the reserve. |
1990 | Abernethy Forest is classified as a Special Protection Area (SPA). |
Early 1990s | Small-scale felling of exotic conifers carried out on the reserve. |
1991 | A rare species of water beetle, Ilybius wasastjernae, was discovered on the reserve. |
1991-1994 | Seasonal wardens employed at Dell Woods NNR. |
1995-2004 | The felling of exotic conifers on a much larger scale by external contractors. |
1996 | First Management Plan for Dell Woods NNR. |
1998 | The rare stump lichen was found at several locations within the reserve. |
Late 1990s | Formalisation of the reserve paths network, with way-marked routes. |
1999- 2001 | Wet Woods Restoration Project funded by European Union Life-Nature programme to restore areas of forest bog. |
2005 | Cairngorms Special Area of Conservation (SAC) designated. |
2005 | River Spey SAC designated. |
2006 | Restoration of the Duack Dam and lade by Explore Abernethy. |
2007 | Red squirrel feeding station installed on the reserve, by the King’s Road. |
2009 | Leased area of Dell Woods returned to RSPB. |
2009 | New McCook’s Path created linking Steel’s Mill to Hamacks. |
2011 | New NNR signage installed. |
2011 | Electric pylons removed from powerline. |
2013 | New signage opposite Community Hall installed and village footpath network waymarked. |
2013 | New NNR leaflet completed and distributed. |
2013 | Kings Road and Hamacks paths upgraded to all abilities standard. |
2013 | 5 dragonfly ponds created on old pylon line. |
2014 | Bog blocking of drainage ditches commenced. |
Management of the Natural Heritage
The emphasis, in managing the natural heritage of Dell Woods, is largely that of non-intervention and ‘primacy of nature’. Large areas of the reserve are regenerating naturally, and the woodland structure is improving without our intervention.
Other areas of the reserve have suffered past damage through drainage, planting of exotic species, and excessive grazing by deer. In these areas we are attempting to restore the woodland and associated areas of bog woodland to a more natural state.
Some restoration of bog woodland has been achieved through the Wet Woods Restoration Project. In 1999 timber from felled exotics (lodgepole pine) was used to infill drains on the reserve, and this along with tree removal resulted in the 5 ha site becoming re-wetted. In 2001 further work was carried out to block drainage over a 14 ha area of the reserve, through the installation of 30 hand-made dams. This created a network of pools and saturated ground that will allow the recovery of the original habitats. A reflection of how quickly times change is that the contractor carrying out this damming work had also dug the original drains. In 2014 further damming work was also commenced.
In the 20th century, many areas of the reserve were planted with exotic conifers including Norway spruce, lodgepole pine and noble fir. Starting on a small scale in the early 1990s, some of these trees were felled to provide areas where native Scots pine could regenerate naturally. In one project horses were used to extract the timber, which proved popular locally. Between 1995 and 2004 felling took place on a much larger scale, with large areas of exotics being felled by external contractors, so that today only small areas of exotics remain.
In the past, red and roe deer numbers had increased to a level that prevented the natural regeneration of both pines and broad-leaved trees on the reserve. A programme of deer culling commenced, and although the area is difficult to stalk, satisfactory levels of regeneration have now been achieved. The target number of deer to be culled in a year is not fixed, but is varied according to the results of natural regeneration monitoring.
Much of the deer fence on the reserve has now been removed. Although fences can enhance woodland regeneration through the exclusion of grazing deer, they present a collision hazard for capercaillie. Removal of the fences has also enabled better access, and will allow the woodland to develop a more natural boundary.
In 2013 a study was made into the Twinflower colony and new plants were introduced from different clones in the hope that cross fertilisation and seeding would take place. Early signs are encouraging.
Management for People
Dell Woods offers opportunities for visitors to experience and enjoy wildlife throughout the year. Exact visitor numbers are unknown, but it is estimated that approximately 5 000 people visit the reserve each year. Local people and visitors use the reserve for quiet recreation, whether watching wildlife, walking the dog, jogging, or simply enjoying the peaceful atmosphere. Local wildlife holiday organisations bring their customers to the reserve, as it is an excellent place to see the area’s distinctive wildlife.
Many walkers detour into the reserve, as a number of long-distance paths pass through the area. The Speyside Way passes close to the reserve, following the north-western boundary for a short distance. The track leading into the reserve from Dell Road is a right of way, leading into the RSPB part of Abernethy NNR and on to Forest Lodge. It links to the network of old drove roads across to Deeside, such as the Lairig an Laoigh and Larig Ghru. It is a popular route with mountain bikers and walkers. The King’s Road, passing southwards through the reserve from Culvardie Road is also a right of way. It was formerly the main route to Tulloch.
The northern half of the reserve is well served by a network of formal and informal footpaths. SNH and Explore Abernethy have maintained and enhanced this network of paths, with the aid of local business sponsorship. Although the reserve is well- used, the difficult terrain encourages visitors to stay on the footpaths. This enables species sensitive to intrusion to flourish, particularly in the less disturbed southern half of the reserve. Sections of footpath linking Culvardie Road and Dell Road have been upgraded for all-ability use.
Explore Abernethy was a community initiative grant-aided by SNH. It was established in 1997 to record and interpret the cultural heritage of the Nethy Bridge area and its unique association with the surrounding forest of native Scots pine. Explore Abernethy established a way-marked network of footpaths within the reserve and beyond, and produced an accompanying leaflet. The award winning Explore Abernethy Room in the Nethy Bridge Community Centre interpreted and recorded the cultural heritage of the surrounding area, including the reserve. In 2015 a new Nethy Bridge Community and Visitor Centre developed.
It is an easy walk to the reserve from the nearby village of Nethy Bridge, where car parking is available at the Community Centre. There is also a small informal car-parking area at the end of Culvardie Road, by Steel’s Mill. Dell Woods NNR signs mark the entrances at Culvardie Road and Dell Road. There is currently no interpretation on the reserve. A new reserve leaflet was published in 2013.
SNH enjoys good relations with the local community. There was originally a full-time Explore Abernethy Ranger who provided useful links with the community, and in conjunction with the Highland Council Ranger Service, provided a summer programme of guided walks in and around the reserve and the local area. This Ranger post has now been amalgamated into a shared post with less time available for Dell Woods related work.
Property Management
Dell Woods covers 267 ha and is owned by SNH.
Mr Ian Kennedy of Dell Farm farms 36 ha of land from SNH under an agricultural tenancy.
Hydro Electric still have right of access for maintenance and repair to a wayleave running east-west across the reserve. The pylons have now been removed so there is no longer any requirement to fell scrub birch and naturally regenerating trees.
The track running south from Dell Lodge to Forest Lodge is regarded as being a vehicular right of way. Highland Council have indicated that this is an old drove road and should be open to stock and horses.
The only building on the reserve is a metal hut at the Culvardie Road entrance known as Willie Steel’s sawmill.
SNH is responsible for the condition and maintenance of reserve infrastructure. A fire plan is in place and is routinely checked.
Summary
Dell Woods NNR is a very important place for wildlife, particularly native pinewood species. Our natural heritage management largely follows a policy of non-intervention to allow the woodland to develop naturally. We have intervened to reverse the damaging effects of some past management practises, including felling exotic conifers, restoring water tables, and managing deer populations.
Our visitor facilities are low-key so as not to detract from the natural setting of the reserve. A network of waymarked paths, most now to all abilities standards, enable visitors to experience and enjoy the reserve, whilst other areas remain undisturbed, providing a haven for sensitive species.
We maintain good links with the community through ‘Explore Abernethy’ and liaison at local Community Council meetings. The new Ranger service continues to conduct guided walks through the reserve in the summer.
Document properties
Photographs and Maps
Photography by Lorne Gill, David Genney, Peter Duncan, David Carstairs and Stewart Taylor.
Maps by Geographical Information Group, SNH.
Acknowledgments
The first edition of The Story of Abernethy – Dell Woods NNR was written by Peter Duncan (reserve Manager), Jane Cox (Contractor) and Susan Luurtsema (Managed Sites Officer) and approved by George Hogg (Area Manager).
This second edition has been written by Peter Duncan (reserve Manager), edited by David Miller (Operations Officer), and approved by Chris Donald (Operations Manager).
We would like to thank the following SNH staff for their contributions to the 1st edition: John Mackenzie, David Carstairs, and Alison Matheson.
Links
For information about Scotland’s National Nature Reserves and further information about the reserve, please visit our Abernethy NNR pages.
For information on the protected areas associated with Abernethy NNR please go to: SNHi
Other useful links:
Nethy Bridge Community website