A VISIONARY landscape-scale restoration project has been announced showcasing an ‘alternative future’ for Yorkshire’s uplands.

Wild Ingleborough aims to restore an iconic area in the heart of the Yorkshire Dales National Park and put Yorkshire at the forefront of the UK’s large-scale restoration efforts.

The project, which is a partnership between Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, WWF, Natural England, The University of Leeds, the United Bank of Carbon and The Woodland Trust, promises to be an important venture for people, nature and climate; working together with local communities including farmers to share skills and knowledge that will create a wilder future around Ingleborough, the second highest peak in the Dales.

Rachael Bice, chief executive at Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, said: “Ingleborough is one of the most iconic and cherished landscapes in our great county. The opportunity to support nature to flourish here is something we are incredibly proud to be involved in. By intervening carefully, we will see the landscape of the Dales transform; restoring natural process and communities of plants and animals, which will help to secure and enrich the future of Yorkshire’s residents and visitors too.”

The striking landscape includes swathes of bare limestone pavement and heavily grazed pasture. But in the future, the area will be transformed into a nature-rich haven, with a variety of rare flora and fauna to benefit from the restoration of their natural habitats.

Covering an area from the River Ribble up towards the mountain summit, Wild Ingleborough will see the restoration of peatlands and the expansion of native woodland and scrub, to remove and store carbon, helping to tackle the climate emergency. The project will initially cover 1,200 hectares and plans to be one of the first examples in England of re-establishing the natural tree line, from broadleaf woodland to dwarf shrub, heather moorland and lichen heathlands.

It will connect existing nature reserves in the area, creating a bigger, more joined up space for wildlife. In some places, vegetation will regenerate naturally, while in others the project will connect areas of woodland through tree planting. Over the next 12 months, the project will create around 40 hectares of new native woodland, with half created by planting 30,000 trees and the other half through natural regeneration.

By aiding nature’s recovery, the project hopes to protect and restore wildlife-friendly habitats, home to precious animal species including black grouse, red squirrel, cuckoo and curlew - of which there are currently only two pairs within the Ingleborough project area. The project will also focus on plants such as juniper - most of which around Ingleborough have suffered from disease - as well as bird’s-eye primrose, globeflower and the nine species of fern that can be found in the area.

Three hundred hectares of land are already being restored as part of the first phase of the project, with 3,000 native trees planted, including rowan, hawthorn and hazel, and hundreds of metres of drystone wall rebuilt.

The news comes ahead of the critical COP26 climate summit in Glasgow this November.