The Sands of Forvie - Aberdeen (Scotland)

0 Conversations


1,018 hectares 1 of undisturbed sand dunes, heath, estuary and sea cliffs, full of eider duck, terns, and skylarks. Wild pansies, eyebright and primroses in grass kept short by hundreds of rabbits. Eider heads bobbing up and peering at you from the heather.


Walking along the estuary to the dunes, terns glide alongside before banking and diving into the water after sandeels. The shifting sand dunes are never the same one year to the next. Reaching the sea; a mile and a half of empty sand, empty except for seagulls and oyster catchers, stretching north to the beginning of the cliffs.

Estuary, Dunes, Hinterland and Cliffs

Estuary


The River Ythan's estuary, running along the southern edge of Forvie Sands, is intertidal sand flat and mud with some saltmarsh. At low tide in summer there are always curlew stalking, prodding the mud, redshank picking their way around the water edge. In winter thousands of geese arrive. At high tide swans, eider and mergansers take over.

Dunes


The sand dune system is the fifth largest and least disturbed in Britain. Dating back to at least 2000BC the dunes are still forming at the southern end, still unstable and shaping new landscapes in every storm.

Hinterland


Behind the dunes is heathland, where the sands have been colonised by heath, heather, crowberry and creeping willow, with areas of marshland and water pools. Thousands of eider will breed in the heather in spring.

Cliffs


The northern half of Forvie is edged by sea cliffs, home to gulls, kittiwakes and fulmars. Schools of porpoise are sometimes seen, out at sea, from the cliffs. Half way along is Hackley Bay, a horseshoe shaped beach with pink sand. Steps take you down steep cliffs onto the beach where you may be buzzed by seagulls if you get too close to their young.

Birds, Butterflies and Plants

Birds


Forvie has recorded more than 225 species, at least 43 breeding.
6,000 eider duck spend summer there, breeding, moulting and chuntering away to each other in large flotillas on the water. In spring you'll see 'nanny' eiders out at sea with nurseries of fifteen to twenty chicks swimming behind in a long tail, undulating in the waves like a miniature Loch Ness monster.

In winter up to 10,000 geese take refuge on the estuary, gleylag, pinkfoot and others. Four species of tern breed in a protected area. Apart from the birds already mentioned, among the 225 species are lapwing, little ringed plover, turnstones, various duck, greenshank, knot, ruff and bar-tailed godwit.

Butterflies


Pearl-bordered and dark-green fritillary, small coppers, and grayling are among the butterflies flying over Forvie, together with a variety of moths 2. There is an abundance of insect life in general.

Plants


The dune colonisers, marram grass and sea rocket trap the moving sands, stabilising them for the heathland plants. Thrift and campion line the cliffs with the occasional wild orchid and beautiful blue flowered carnivorous butterwort. The marshland hosts reed beds, wild iris and marsh marigolds. There are many other species - wild violets, cowslips, ferns - too many to list.

2 and the odd helicopter on its way to the north sea oil rigs
Archaeology and Today

Archaeology


Shifting sand has revealed evidence of man's presence at Forvie from 5000BC. But over time the dunes have driven man out, taking until 1413, when a 9 day storm buried the last remaining foothold in sand. All that can be seen now is part of the walls of the Forvie village church. It's said that this storm was the result of a curse by three sisters driven out to sea in a leaking boat.

Today


In 1959 Forvie Sands became one of Scotland's first National Nature Reserves. The reserve is held under lease agreements with various landowners who retain rights for some wildfowl shooting on the pools and various leisure activities on the estuary. On the beach traditional salmon nets are set up. The reserve is managed by a warden and open to the public all year round.

Directions for visitors

Directions


Forvie is on the coast, about 12 miles north of Aberdeen. Follow signs for Newburgh off the main A92 and then for Collieston. Half a mile north of Newburgh is the bridge over the Ythan estuary, over this, almost immediately on the right (going north), is a parking area. A lane and footpaths lead by the estuary into Forvie Sands.It's about 3/4 of a mile from the car park to the beach.

Staying on the road, you come to two laybys on the left with good views over the estuary. Carrying on still further you come to a crossroads.The right handed turn for Collieston takes you to another right turn off to the northen end of Forvie and the visitor centre.

Turning left instead of right at the crossroads takes you, after about a mile and a half, to a small lane on the left leading to a bird hide overlooking the estuary.

Forvie Centre and Footpaths


Forvie has a visitor centre with information and a video presentation, but it is not always open and there are no "facilities"
when its closed.

Two footpaths start here, one going straight to the cliffs past a large water pool, the other cutting a corner and taking you across dunes and heath meeting the first path at the cliffs further south. The path continues along the cliffs, past Hackley Bay to the site of Forvie village where you can go left onto the beach or right, crossing heathland, to meet up with the path along the estuary. The walk from the centre to Forvie village is about 2 miles.

Bird Hide


The bird hide, directions above, gives very good views of the mud flats and waders, or the water and ducks, depending whether the tide is in or out.


Forvie Sands is a wild place, full of life. It needs to be taken care of if it is to stay like this. Visitors are asked to keep to paths and to keep dogs on leads, and all the usual requests about not picking plants, lighting fires, etc apply. Go there to see the wildlife, the eiders and terns in particular, then go to the very pretty Balmedie beach area, a few miles closer to Aberdeen (signposted from the A92), to let off steam, fly kites, buy ice cream at their centre, surf in the North sea, whatever!

1 4 square miles2 and the odd helicopter on its way to the north sea oil rigs

Bookmark on your Personal Space


Conversations About This Entry

There are no Conversations for this Entry

Entry

A376643

Infinite Improbability Drive

Infinite Improbability Drive

Read a random Edited Entry


Written and Edited by

Disclaimer

h2g2 is created by h2g2's users, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the Not Panicking Ltd. Unlike Edited Entries, Entries have not been checked by an Editor. If you consider any Entry to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please register a complaint. For any other comments, please visit the Feedback page.

Write an Entry

"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."

Write an entry
Read more