The Mount Wood
OS Map: Explorer
OL14...Grid
Ref: SO555161
Where
is it? | Location
map | Reserve
map | Reserve
photos
Visitor Guidelines | Description | Management |Acquisition | General Info | Downloads
Visitor
Guidelines |
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Access to this reserve
is RESTRICTED. Most of this reserve lies on a
very steep broken slope running down to a cliff
face with a sheer drop of 20-30 metres. There
is no access path and movement around the wood
is difficult. Tough walking boots/shoes are definitely
advised, and it would be prudent to avoid the
vicinity of the cliff-top.
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Description |
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The majority of
the reserve consists of ancient semi-natural
woodland, with some Beech, Oak, Ash and Cherry,
growing on thin, stony soils derived from the
underlying Lower Dolomitic Limestone rock, which
breaks the surface all over the reserve. The
impossibility of cultivation on the slope here
means that the woodland is almost certainly ancient.
This is borne out by 1847 Tithe map evidence;
this records woodland over the whole site, apart
from a small area below the cliff which had been
levelled into an arable field, now overgrown
and scrubby. The Beech has evidently been coppiced
in the past but, probably in the 20th century,
has been allowed to grow on into tall, multi-stemmed
trees. There is a thin understorey, mainly of
Yew, with some Holly, Hazel and Bramble. The
deep litter of Beech leaves together with the
dense shade cast in summer by the canopy means
that there is little ground flora, other than
Bluebells which flower before the trees break
leaf and a rich growth of ferns and mosses. With
pockets of deep leaf litter and much dead and
dying timber present, this wood is good site
for fungi in autumn.
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Present
Management |
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Management aims
to maintain the wood as high forest with minimum
intervention. There are currently no plans to
re-establish a coppice regime.
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Acquisition
Details |
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A gift to the Trust
in 1983 by Miss F.H.C. Crampton.
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General
Information |
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Best
time to visit
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No access
allowed. |
Habitat
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Ancient semi-natural
woodland on limestone, plus a small area
of secondary scrub. |
Size
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0.9 hectares (2.2 acres). |
Specialites
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Green and
Great Spotted woodpecker breed. Bluebell
(4-6), Polypody and Hart's Tongue Ferns (5-9).
A variety of fungi species found on dead
wood. |
Parking
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There is parking
for one or two cars at Miners Rest. |
OS
map
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Explorer OL14 |
Nearby
Reserves
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King
Arthur’s
Cave, Leeping Stocks, Lord’s
Wood Quarry,
Lower Wood, Miners
Rest, Woodside and White
Rocks. |
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Downloads |
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| Download
reserve details 500kb |
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< Click here for public transport details |
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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.
Protecting Wildlife for the Future