Miller's Dale Quarry

Miller's Dale Quarry, Mark Hamblin

Miller's Dale Quarry, Mark Hamblin

Common spotted orchid, Derbyshire Wildlife Trust

Common spotted orchid, Derbyshire Wildlife Trust

Red tailed bumblebee, Jon Hawkins, Surrey Hills Photography

Red tailed bumblebee, Jon Hawkins, Surrey Hills Photography 

A disused quarry now inhabited by many unusual plants and animals. Situated along the Monsal Trail its part of a string of nature reserves along the trail and a real treat just off the beaten track!

Location

What3Words: //blogs.oatmeal.budgeted

Just off the Monsal Trail.
Wye Valley
Miller’s Dale car park, SK17 8SN
Buxton
Derbyshire

OS Map Reference

SK 1380 7326
A static map of Miller's Dale Quarry

Know before you go

Size
24 hectares
z

Entry fee

No
P

Parking information

Miller’s Dale car park, SK17 8SN is a great place to start your adventure.

Grazing animals

Yes

Walking trails

The quarry edge can be hazardous. To avoid danger please keep to the paths

Access

Access is just off the Monsal Trail. Whilst the trail is accessible, the reserve is not easy to negotiate in a wheelchair or with a pushchair. 

Dogs

On a lead

When to visit

Opening times

Open at all times

Best time to visit

Summer for wild flowers, orchids and birdsong

About the reserve

Until 1930 Miller's Dale was a bustling limestone quarry, with smoke billowing from the kilns and quarrymen hauling limestone to be burnt.

Things have certainly changed since those days. With the departure of the quarrymen, nature has taken hold and the quarry is now inhabited by many unusual plants and animals.

The quarry floor is a special place, and the best time to enjoy it is on a hot July day when the scent of fragrant orchids fills the air. Walk carefully here to avoid treading on these delicate plants. Many other wild flowers flourish on the poor soil, where they do not have to compete with other plants and grasses.

From early summer the reserve puts on a colourful show, with cowslips, early purple orchids, harebells and wild strawberries among the flowers that grow here. As you enter the reserve you climb wooded slopes where ash, hazel and willow have established themselves.

Other parts of the reserve have not been affected by the lime industry and very different plants grow here. Look for valerian, rosebay willowherb and lady's bedstraw, among others. With such a variety of plants around the reserve, it is a haven for insects.

On a sunny summer's day you'll see butterflies such as the common blue, as well as the day-flying six-spot burnet moth. The quarry face contains crevices which provide safe nest sites for jackdaws and sometimes a pair of kestrels. Watch the sky above for swifts feeding on insects. Sometimes in the spring the concessionary path through the quarry is closed to protect nesting birds, please contact us for further details.

Contact us

Derbyshire Wildlife Trust
Contact number: 01773 881188

Environmental designation

Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI)

Volunteer here

Get hands on

Take a look at the latest sightings

Nearby nature reserves

Download our nature reserve leaflets

Check out the reserve map

Miller's Dale Quarry reserve map

Miller's Dale Quarry reserve map

Play Wild rating

Wildlife may be sensitive at certain times of year.

Learn more about Play Wild.

Play Wild amber

Play Wild amber