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OS Map: Explorer OL14...Grid Ref: SO553158

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Visitor Guidelines | Description | Management |Acquisition | General Info | Downloads

 

Visitor Guidelines

 

Some areas of the reserve are stony, while others can be wet and muddy, even in summer; stout shoes/boots are advised. If you enter the two deer-fenced areas, it is vital to ensure that the gates are secured when you leave, to prevent grazing damage to regrowing coppice stools.

 

Description

 

Today, much of the reserve consists of broad-leaved woodland, apart from a few open rides and clearings. Although seemingly uniform now, the woodland areas have had a complex history over the last two centuries. In 1840 the area covered by the reserve was divided into about ten enclosures, some woodland (presumably ancient), some grass and some arable land. The original field divisions can still be seen in many places as tumbledown walls of broken limestone. Multi-stemmed and often strangely twisted beech trees grow in or on these walls, the outgrown survivors of the original beech hedges. Although no buildings were present in 1840, the remains of two later structures can be found on the reserve today. One lies near the entrance gate; the other is situated near the south-east boundary path, and is traditionally said to have been an old cider house frequented by iron-ore miners of the period - hence the name given to the reserve. Evidence of former extraction industry can be also be seen in the form of old sand pits and a small stone quarry. Since this peak in human activity in the 19th century, the area has seen increasing neglect, as first arable and then grazing land went out of use, allowing scrub and later, secondary woodland, to encroach once more. This succession over time has produced a rich mosaic of habitats in the reserve, which in turn support an unusual variety of plants and animals.

Apart from past human intervention, the Carboniferous limestone rock underlying the whole reserve is the other dominant influence on the vegetation pattern. A rich calcicole flora has developed, particularly in the more open areas, including Meadow Saffron, Columbine, Yellow-wort, Fairy flax and Quaking grass. The woodland is dominated by Beech, together with some Oak and Ash, which has been coppiced, either in the last five years (as in the two deer-fenced enclosures), or at intervals during the past two centuries. Whitebeam and Wild Service trees are frequent. The rides, clearings, and latterly, the newly coppiced areas are of great entomological interest, with stable populations of a variety of butterflies including Grizzled Skipper and the nationally scarce Pearl-bordered Fritillary.

 

Present Management

 

Management aims to retain a mix of ancient and developing secondary woodland, open grassy areas and scrub and to restore the traditional coppicing regime which will benefit the coppice-follower butterflies (Grizzled Skipper and Pearl-bordered Fritillary), and allow the calcicole flora to flourish. To date, two coppice coupes have been cut, one during the 1996/7 winter, the other during 1998/9. As new coupes are created, connecting rides will be provided, allowing colonisation by butterflies moving from older coupes into newly cut areas.

 

Acquisition Details

 

Freehold purchased in 1984 with generous assistance from Mr. J.C. Cadbury.

 

General Information

 
Best time to visit
   
Habitat
  Ancient broad-leaved woodland & limestone grassland.

Size

  Size: 3.1 hectares (7.7 acres).
Specialites
  Grizzled Skipper (5-6), Pearl-bordered Fritillary (4-5), Holly Blue (4-8), Silver-Washed Fritillary (6-8). Meadow Saffron (8-9), Yellow-wort (6-10), Columbine (5-7), Greater Butterfly Orchid (6-7), Wild Service Tree.
Parking
  There is limited parking in the reserve entrance.
OS map
  Explorer OL14
Nearby Reserves
  King Arthur’s Cave, Leeping Stocks, Lord’s Wood Quarry, Lower Wood, Mount Wood, Woodside and White Rocks.

 

 
 
 

Downloads

 

Download reserve details 461kb

 
 
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Herefordshire Nature Trust is a registered charity, number 220173, and a company limited by guarantee, number 743899.
Registered Office: Lower House Farm, Ledbury Rd, Tupsley, Hereford, HR1 1UT

Last updated Wednesday, September 26, 2007 © Herefordshire Nature Trust 2007. All rights reserved.
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