Allonby Bay

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Across Allonby Bay toward Dubmill Point

Allonby Bay is a crescent-shaped bay of the Solway Firth indenting the north-western shore of Cumberland. The bay is approximately five-and-a-half miles across. Its northern point is at Dubmill, between the village of Mawbray and the hamlet of Salta, and its southern end is just to the north of Maryport, near the village of Crosscanonby.

The B5300 coast road follows the shoreline of Allonby Bay, running between Silloth-on-Solway in the north and Maryport in the south.

The bay is named for the village of Allonby, which sits roughly in the centre of the shoreline. As an inlet of the Solway Firth, Allonby Bay is also part of the Irish Sea.

Geography and conservation

Allonby Bay has a five-mile stretch of beach which was awarded the coveted blue flag in 2005.[1] However, following water quality tests in 2012, Allonby Bay was on the verge of losing its blue flag status, which caused much concern in Allonby itself, as the village relies on tourism as a major source of income.[2]

Near the northern end of Allonby Bay is Salta Moss, an area designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest within the Solway Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. It includes some rare plant and animal specimens, including the bog bean Menyanthus trifoliata, and adders.

Several streams and becks enter the Solway Firth at Allonby Bay, including many fed by irrigation channels. One such example is the Black Dub, which flows into Allonby Bay at Dubmill.

The Lake District Coast Aquarium in nearby Maryport hosts a variety of aquatic life native to Allonby Bay, and has been a popular tourist attraction in the area since it opened in 1997.[3]

Designated protection areas

The southern part of Allonby Bay, near the village of Crosscanonby.

Allonby Bay is in the Solway Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. It comprises a large part of the southern section of the designated area, which runs from just north of the hamlet of Beckfoot to the southern tip of Allonby Bay near Crosscanonby.

In 2016, Allonby Bay was made a Marine Conservation Zone,[4] the designated zone covering a 5.6 mile stretch of coast and the adjacent of parts of the Irish Sea.[5] The stated objectives of the Zone were to maintain sub-tidal sediments and sands (important spawning and nursery grounds for plaice, skate and thornback rays) as well as the reefs of the honeycomb worm (sabellaria alveolata). [6] [7] MCZ status was expected to give protection to some vulnerable marine creatures which live in the bay, particularly in the area off Dubmill Point known as Dubmill Scar, and the southern part of the bay nearest to Maryport.

Honeycomb worm

Reefs constructed by honeycomb worms host a variety of other marine life. Allonby Bay, which is at the northern edge of the species´ range, has good examples of such reefs.[8][9]

History

On Salta Moss, a Bronze Age rapier was discovered in the 1980s, and now resides at the Tullie House museum in Carlisle. Archaeological expeditions in and around the small communities along Allonby Bay have found evidence of human activity in the area dating back to the Neolithic period.[10]

Milefortlet 21 from the air

During Roman times, Allonby Bay was home to several Roman milefortlets, small castles which extended beyond the western end of Hadrian's Wall to defend against incursions across the Solway. Along the shoreline of the bay stood Milefortlets 17 to 22, of which Milefortlet 21 is the best preserved.

The unquiet times of the Middle Ages left the coasts vulnerable to raiders, just as the farms inland were plagued by border reivers. As late as the 1550s a man named William Osmotherly of Dubmill Point, near Salta, was taken for ransom in a Scottish raid.[11] A system known as the "seawake" - a night watch along the coast - was created to defend against such incursions.[12]

Location

References

  1. Lake District Coastal Cottages
  2. "ITV Border - Allonby beach fails water test". http://www.itv.com/news/border/2012-11-06/allonbys-south-beach-fails-water-test/. Retrieved 14 January 2015. 
  3. "Lake District Coast Aquarium, Maryport". http://www.coastaquarium.co.uk/planning-visit/memberships/. Retrieved 14 January 2015. 
  4. 'Coastal zones: UK's protected 'blue belt' expanded' – BBC, January 2016
  5. "Allonby locals split opinion over conservation zone". ITV (www.itv.com). January 2016. http://www.itv.com/news/border/2016-01-21/allonby-locals-split-opinion-over-conservation-zone/. Retrieved 27 January 2016. 
  6. "The Wildlife Trusts - Allonby Bay rMCZ". http://www.irishsea.org/MCZ/Allonby-Bay. 
  7. "The Wildlife Trusts - Allonby Bay rMCZ". http://www.irishsea.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/rMCZ-Allonby-Bay.pdf. Retrieved 14 January 2015. 
  8. "The Wildlife Trusts - Allonby Bay recommended MCZ". http://www.wildlifetrusts.org/MCZ/allonby-bay. Retrieved 14 January 2015. 
  9. "The Wildlife Trusts - Allonby Bay". http://www.wildlifetrusts.org/sites/default/files/allonby_bay.pdf. Retrieved 14 January 2015. 
  10. "British Archaeological Sites data". http://www.archiuk.com/cgi-bin/web-archi.pl?PlacenameFromPlacenameFinder=Parsonby&CountyFromPlacenameFinder=Cumbria&distance=10000&ARCHIFormNGRLetter=NY&ARCHIFormNGR_x=14&ARCHIFormNGR_y=38&info2search4=placename_search&placename@digital-documents.co.uk. Retrieved 14 January 2015. 
  11. Records of the Holm under Elizabeth – British History Online
  12. Holme St. Cuthbert History Group (2004). Plain People: Bygone Times on the Solway Plain.