
The hay meadow farmers. Flower-rich meadows maintained by traditional farming methods - no fertiliser, hand-cut, barn-dried. The most species-rich grassland in England, surviving because individual farmers refuse to modernise.
Swaledale is the northernmost of the Yorkshire Dales, a narrow valley running east from the Pennine watershed. Its hay meadows are the most botanically rich grassland in England - up to 120 species per square metre, including orchids, ragged robin, and eyebright. They exist because individual farmers have maintained them using traditional methods: no artificial fertiliser, late cutting to allow wild flowers to seed, and barn-drying rather than silage-wrapping.
The Archive documents Swaledale's hay meadow farmers as Stewards in the most literal sense. Modern agriculture would have these farmers spread fertiliser, cut early for silage, and increase their stocking density. The meadows would become productive grassland and the wildflowers would disappear within a decade. The farmers who resist this pressure - often at significant financial cost - are maintaining an ecosystem through deliberate choice. Their stubbornness is the meadows' only protection.
The species-rich hay meadows of Swaledale are maintained by farmers who cut late and graze carefully - a rhythm that has sustained the landscape for eight hundred years.