Let’s Learn Moor set to deliver a school day like no other

Let's Learn Moor

More than 2,500 children from across the north of England will have a chance to feel spongey sphagnum mosses under their feet and see sticky insect-eating sundew plants when the UK’s largest uplands classroom returns this summer.

They will also get to meet hardy Swaledale sheep, see soaring birds of prey and hear the chattering of red grouse and the iconic curlew calling as part of this year’s Let’s Learn Moor events, which will be held at locations across the north of England between 1-5 July 2024.

Let’s Learn Moor is the UK’s largest annual upland education event, providing an opportunity for children to meet the people and organisations that help to protect our stunning moorland landscapes and species.

Co-ordinated by the Regional Moorland Groups, BASC and Countryside Learning and involving more than 50 partner organisations, nearly 10,000 children have been part of Let’s Learn Moor since its launch in 2017.

A fantastic event

Curtis Mossop, BASC’s head of education and outreach, said: “We cannot wait to welcome children back to Let’s Learn Moor this summer. We have an array of interesting and exciting activities planned for them. 

In the past, they have had a chance to “rescue” their teachers with the mountain rescue, solved rural crimes with the police and learn about the importance of the precious carbon-rich peatlands below their feet. 

Our young guests will get to sample wild food, with pigeon and venison burgers on the menu. We are very excited to be working alongside Countryside Learning and the Regional Moorland Groups once again to deliver this fantastic event.”

Regional Moorland Groups spokesman Richard Bailey said:  “All of the moorland group coordinators are really looking forward to welcoming lots of new faces up onto the moors next week, showing these youngsters what makes the moorlands of the UK special. Each day has a fun-filled roster of educational activities planned, whether that’s learning about the animals, the plants or the people who work in the uplands. 

“There will also be plenty of opportunities for the children to get ‘hands-on’, whether that’s helping to man the fire pumps or shearing sheep. Many of the pupils who come to these events live close to the moors but rarely have a chance to visit or to understand what happens – for example why they are asked to keep dogs on leads, or to not light campfires. Hopefully the Let’s Learn Moor days will both educate and entertain, and our visitors will go home with some food for thought.”

The events involve National Parks, local farmers, emergency services, gamekeepers, water utility companies, conservation groups and many more.

Interested in BASC’s outreach and education work? Read more about Let’s Learn Moor here.

Let's Learn Moor in pictures

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