Broadhead Clough Nature Reserve

Broadhead Clough - Skipper butterfly

Broadhead Clough - Skipper butterfly

Cuckoo credit Amy Lewis
Harebell credit Bruce Shortland
Curlew

(c) Elliott Neep

The steep, invigorating climb from the deep valley floor through the woods will ultimately reward you with beautifully rugged Pennine views, though there’s plenty to savour on the way up too.

Location

Frost Hole Lane
Nearest town: Mytholmroyd (1.4m/2.3km)
West Yorkshire
HX7 5HB

OS Map Reference

SE 0002 2502

View on What3Words

A static map of Broadhead Clough Nature Reserve

Know before you go

Size
23 hectares
z

Entry fee

Free
P

Parking information

Roadside parking on Cragg Road. Walk 0.6m/1km up the steepish access track to the reserve.

Grazing animals

Cattle graze the meadows on site part of the year.

Walking trails

Public footpath through site up the valley to moor. Keep to the path to avoid bogs and marsh. Height gain 215m from road to top of nature reserve with some steep climbs and steps. The paths are slippery when wet.

Access

Public footpath through Reserve. Not suitable for pushchairs or wheelchairs - very steep and uneven with many steps and narrow points.

Dogs

On a lead

Footpath only. Please respect the local wildlife and keep dogs on a short lead. 

When to visit

Opening times

Open at all times. We recommend a half day trip for this reserve.

Best time to visit

September to October

About the reserve

In the 18th century, Broadhead Clough was home to the notorious Cragg Vale Coiners, who produced fake coins, but the real value of this site is in its rare wet woodland mires and Pennine fringe habitat. The peat mires support an abundance of moss and liverwort, including sphagnum and star mosses, with tufts of rush and other plants, including marsh orchid, and fungi, such as bog beacon. In turn, these conditions are ideal for invertebrate larvae, providing food for birds including curlew, cuckoo, woodpeckers, and finches.

Contact us

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust
Contact number: 01904 659570
Contact email: info@ywt.org.uk

Environmental designation

Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI)

About

The most important habitat of this diverse site is the rare wet woodland bog areas. A number of small streams flowing through the site spread out to form boggy areas known as mires, undermining tree roots and causing them to crack or the trees to fall prematurely. Fallen wood combined with the underlying peat soils, leaves and sphagnum moss rots away to form more peat bog.

There are 65 species of moss and liverwort here, which include sphagnum and star mosses, with tufts of rush and other wetland plants and fungi. This provides ideal conditions for the larvae of many invertebrates, which provides food for many charismatic birds including curlew, cuckoo, woodpeckers and finches that rely on the nature reserve for food or shelter.

Following the main footpath to the moorland commons above gives a stunning view onto the mires and across the whole nature reserve down the valley.

Seasonal highlights

  • Spring: Plants - Wood sorrel; Marsh violet; Birds - Curlew; Cuckoo; Blackcap
  • Summer: Plants - Marsh orchid; Cotton grass; Heather; Harebell; Bird's-foot trefoil
  • Autumn: Fungi; Birds - Jay; Redwing; Fieldfare
  • Winter: Birds - Woodcock; Red grouse; Tawny owl; Long-tailed tit; Mammals - Brown hare

History

The area was home to the Cragg Vale Coiners, an infamous gang of local criminals who produced fake gold coins in the late eighteenth century.

If you like social history arrange to also visit nearby Coiners Barn.

Directions

Public transport
Mytholmroyd has a station and regular buses from Halifax and Burnley. National Cycle Route 66 crosses the B6138: for cyclists who like a challenge this road is the longest continuous climb in England.

By car
Take the B6138, signposted Littleborough until ½ mile from Mytholmroyd, the houses on the right give way to fields. Visitors’ vehicles are not allowed to use the track to the nature reserve and should be parked on the roadside. Immediately before the road swings left and right to cross Dauber Bridge, there is a track on the right, with a public footpath sign to Frost Hole. Walk along the track for about a ¼ mile, fork left onto the concrete road until you reach the main entrance (0.6 miles from the road).

Roe Deer © Darren Wozencroft 2020

Roe Deer © Darren Wozencroft 2020

Magical Wildlife Moments...

Watching roe deer fawns in the woods in May whilst listening to the beautiful dawn chorus.

A tree top canopy with a blue sky.

Guy Edwardes/2020VISION

Let’s go wild for Yorkshire's wildlife!

From the heights of Ingleborough to the tip of Spurn, our nature reserves are a home (often the only home) to Yorkshire’s rarest and most incredible wildlife. Will you help us continue our work and provide these vital sanctuaries for nature?
£