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24 September 2014
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NATURE
You are in: North Yorkshire >I Love NY > Nature > Walk Through Time > Stage 10
A beachful of holidaymakers
The beach on a warm but misty day

Foreshore Road back to the Spa

This bit is easy! Cross Foreshore Road, and stroll, either on the path or the beach, according to your whim, shoes and the prevailing weather, back to the Spa complex.

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Foreshore Road is a long, level curve, following the contour of the South Bay. It's an easy stroll, with plenty more interesting wildlife to enjoy.

The South bay area is a good place to spot bird-life with Mediterranean gulls now becoming quite common.

Herring gull
In effortless flight

In winter vagrant birds like Glaucus gull and Iceland gull, and different kinds of waders like Curlew, Oyster catcher, Dunlin and Turnstone might be spotted.

There have even been two sitings of Ross's Gulls in Scarborough, a bird from the far east of Europe, not expected to venture this far west.

Occasionally if the wind is blowing onto the land you'll see birds like Littleauk, which look a little like penguins only a few centimetres high.

In the bay itself, keep your eyes peeled for a sight of a grey seal, or perhaps even a dolphin offshore. The harbour still acts as a focal point for debris, so the marine mammals take advantage of it as an easy source of food.

In the past, whales and Basking Sharks (the second largest fish in the sea) have swum into the South Bay waters, in search of plankton drifting inshore. However don't be alarmed at the mention of Sharks. The Basking Shark is harmless, unless you're plankton.

From a small sheltered fishing port, to a wealthy medieval town with a significant ship building industry, throughout it's history Scarborough has been redefined several times.

But it was the industrial revolution that defined the most recent transformation into a bustling holiday resort.

At about the same time the ship building businesses died out, then with the advent of railway transport, for the first time it was possible for the masses to enjoy what had previously been reserved for only the very rich... a holiday.

So Scarborough's second front was created. The loud, flashy seafront we all love or hate. But it can't mask the importance of Scarborough's first front. It's position as a frontier area where vagrant species land and find out if they'd like to settle in Britain.

Whether these vagrants are plant, bird, animal or fish, they make an investigative walk markedly more rewarding than it would be in a more stable environment.

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