Frays Island and Mabey's Meadow
Alder and willow woodland set between the Rivers Colne and Frays in West Drayton, rich in aquatic life.
Tom Hibbert
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Alder and willow woodland set between the Rivers Colne and Frays in West Drayton, rich in aquatic life.
Burnet moths and beautiful wildflowers brighten up this idyllic meadow near Chorley.
These marvellous wildflower meadows are a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).
An ancient grassland, bursting with flowers and insects
The reserve consists of hillside grassland and streamside habitats in the valley of a tributary of the River Lymn.
A field of coastal grassland and mixed woodland
A dry grassland site, providing a secluded haven for visitors
Explore this little reserve and look for specialist lead-tolerant flowers and glow worms!
A small woodland reserve in a river gorge
"Gruffy” or “groovy” ground is the Mendip name for land with numerous mineshafts, and other mining hollows, such as those covering most of the reserve. Lead was mined here in the 16th and…
Consisting of two separate woodland blocks, George's Hayes is one of our best ancient woodland sites and best known for its native wild daffodils
One of the least disturbed areas of lowland woodland remaining in Aberdeenshire
Limestone grassland reserve on west facing slopes with areas of mixed scrub and woodland great for wildflowers and butterflies. Gilling Down is adjacent to New Hill, Tannager and Great Breach Wood…
The grasslands have unique properties, enabling them to support a specific range of common and rare wildflowers, as well as invertebrates, wading birds and mammals.
This nature reserve used to be part of the railway line from Brecon to Hereford. Parts of the railway were built along the line of the earlier 1818 Brecon to Eardisley horse-drawn tramroad that…
One of relatively few basin/valley mires with open water in Renfrewshire
A traditional hill farm managed for wildlife in the spectacular Glens of Antrim.
High in the Yorkshire Dales on Malham Moor, close to Malham Tarn, is one of our smallest and oldest reserves. It’s named after its brightest and best-known attraction – the globeflower.
Set on a south-facing slope running down to the River Glyme, this reserve is a remaining fragment of limestone grassland in the Oxfordshire Cotswolds.
Airy grasslands above the Combe contrast dark woodlands below. A great spot for butterflies with magical views across Mendip.
896 results