Killeter
NNR
Like many areas in NW Europe, the hills
of West Tyrone receive high rainfall from the prevailing Atlantic
winds. This high moisture and cool climate waterlog the soil
so that normal breakdown of plant remains is extremely slow.
Because of this, peat covers large areas
of upland. It is known as blanket bog. Today, much of the blanket
bog in Ireland has been exploited for fuel or planted over with
conifer trees. Killeter Nature Reserve comprises two areas where
the blanket of peat is deep and has many specialised plants.
The peat-forming Sphagnum moss dominates, with Heather or ling
on the drier hummocks.
White bog
cotton and yellow bog
asphodel add beauty throughout the summer. In the autumn,
frost signals an end to the growing season and the bog takes
on the rich autumn shades of brown and orange. Winter visitors
may see the berries on the cranberry or hear the Greenland whitefronted
geese as they fly over looking for a bog on which to feed. These
winter visitors, known as bog-geese, traditionally fed on the
roots of sedges in the vast bogs of Ireland. Being wary of people
and enclosed spaces, they no longer stop at Killeter.
Facilities:
None. We advise visitors to admire this site from the road.
For a closer look at peat bogs, visit the Peatlands Park near
Dungannon.