Hartington Meadows
Meadows bursting with wild flowers and birdsong during the summer - a great stop off the Tissington Trail.
Tom Hibbert
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Meadows bursting with wild flowers and birdsong during the summer - a great stop off the Tissington Trail.
An ancient woodland which provides good opportunities to see Bluebells in the spring.
The reserve is a relict of bog that has been extensively dug for peat and subsequently colonised by birch.
An ancient mill pond and the largest body of semi-natural open water in east Surrey.
A small but perfectly formed valley mire, full of rare and interesting plants. Encircled by alder and beech trees, this reserve has a wonderful feeling of seclusion and tranquillity.
Vivid cerise marsh orchid spikes grow within grassy glades surrounded by hawthorn scrub. Large pastured fields that attract whimbrel in autumn are surrounded by mature hedgerows, home to farmland…
A disused limestone quarry of particular interest for butterflies - in fact 24 species of butterfly have already been recorded here!
This nature reserve represents one of the finest remaining areas of wet unimproved grasslands in Norfolk
Dramatic scenery created by steep valley sides and exposed rock faces - it's a great place to see woodland wild flowers including bluebells and orchids.
This reserve’s woodland and grassland habitats are home to a wonderful array of plants, which grow in the undulating ‘ridge and furrows’ created by medieval farmers using oxen-pulled ploughs.
Our largest meadow reserve, being restored to its former glory.
Rare orchids are the treasures of this small but outstanding reserve - and it's also a haven for birds, butterflies and moths. This reserve can attract a lot of visitors when the orchids are…
Wander through the heather, purple moor grass and secluded glades and discover the ancient wood pasture that’s bursting with wildlife.
A rejuvenated oak wood with a colony of dormice
Scrub and grassland habitats on a stretch of disused railway line.
A large area of grassland, hedgerows and standing trees with a wildflower meadow. Managed by Surrey Wildlife Trust on behalf of The Land Trust.
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
Hunsdon and Eastwick Meads are two of the finest surviving wet meadows in Hertfordshire, managed in the same way for hundreds of years, where orchids and wildflowers thrive.
A new woodland, regenerated from poor grassland.
323 results