Hoselaw Loch and Din Moss
A reserve with impressive numbers of wintering geese
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A reserve with impressive numbers of wintering geese
Rich in flora and fauna, this important reserve contains Kent's last four valley bogs and one of its few remaining fragments of open heath.
Five pretty meadows; very colourful from spring to summer.
Ancient woodland with exceptionally rich and interesting range of flowering plants. Coppice management benefits several species of butterfly and part of the nature reserve is a traditional…
An area of chalk downland with old chalk spoil heaps that are rich in wildflowers. Managed on behalf of Surrey County Council.
Take a walk around one of the best coastal grazing marshes in Essex, with its amazing display of wintering wildfowl and rare saltmarsh plants
Wildlife flourishes in this pastoral site, whilst above, planes start their descent to Heathrow Airport.
Important notice: We experienced flooding at Huckerby's Meadows over the summer…
Huish Moor is located one mile south west of the village of Huish Champflower on the Brendon Hills. The reserve comprises neutral grassland and mire and woodland on a north facing slope around the…
A small beach, cliffs and coastal slopes
With excellent views over Morecambe Bay, this limestone promontory has an unusual assemblage of plants and interesting geological exposures. Great place for watching birds on the estuary.
A small wildflower meadow covered with thousands of anthills.
A hay meadow with wildlife-rich hedgerows
Hunsdon and Eastwick Meads are two of the finest surviving wetland meadows in Hertfordshire, managed in the same way for hundreds of years, where orchids and wildflowers thrive.
A superb flood meadow owned jointly by Essex, Herts & Middx Wildlife Trust. This 68 acre of is one of the finest surviving areas of unimproved grassland in Eastern England and provides a…
A cliff reserve with a nationally important number of Kittiwakes
A new woodland, regenerated from poor grassland.
This dingle woodland reserve contains a rich mixture of broad leaved trees, ferns & mosses
A sliver of beech woodland and chalk grassland, Hurley Chalk Pit is visited by 15 species of butterfly and is home to wild orchids.
A large area of secluded chalk grassland and woodland, supporting many rare plants and insects, which has benefited from the return of traditional grazing.
Hutchison's Meadow is an interesting flower-rich grassland that is a mix of spring fed wet grassland and drier grassland associated with sand and gravels.
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