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Wear clothing suitable for the weather, at 900 feet above sea level you will feel cooler when you stop, and wear walking boots since it is rocky underfoot and muddy when it rains. Please take care at cliff edges, keep dogs on a lead and follow The Countryside Code. |
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The land around Cheddar was a royal hunting forest from the time of the Saxon Kings of Wessex, who built a wooden "palace" at Cheddar. In 1204 King John gave the land to the Bishop of Bath & Wells, whose tenants cut down the trees to graze their sheep and goats. Sir John Thynne, Lord Bath's ancestor, bought Cheddar Gorge in 1556 and grazing continued until the 1920s when it became uneconomic on such difficult terrain. Since then ivy and ash trees have taken root in the joints and bedding planes on the cliffs, accelerating natural climatic erosion by over 40 times, while gorse and bracken have grown rapidly on the plateau, shading out the limestone grassland and rare wildflowers like Cheddar Pinks, Cheddar Bedstraw and Rock Stonecrop. |
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The Gorge has been recognised as a Site of Special Scientific Interest, under the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981, as the finest example of karst limestone geology in Britain and for its rare remnant calcareous grassland. |
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During the Winter months, our RockSport Climbing Instructors abseil down our 450ft high cliffs removing invasive vegetation and bringing down loose rocks under controlled conditions. In 2005 we introduced a feral herd of Primitive British goats to eat the scrub and allow grassland to recover. Our Conservation Officer, and his team carry out bat, dormice and water vole Surveys, put out bat and dormice nesting boxes and lay down corrugated tin sheets for basking adders, sloworms and grass snakes. A greenhouse heater placed in Gough's Old Cave helped a small Winter hibernacula of 40 Greater Horseshoe bats increase to a year round breeding colony, nursery and hibernacula for over 400 individuals – the largest colony of these rare mammals in Britain. |







