Cassiobury Park Local Nature Reserve

Off Gade Avenue, Watford

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Grid ref: TQ 093968

14 hectares.

Local Nature Reserve

Old watercress beds within urban parkland

Discover, in a corner of Cassiobury Park, a wildlife haven close to the heart of a bustling town.

The wet habitats found on the reserve were once shallow watercress beds with a gravel base, fed with water from the river through a series of ditches.

These have developed into marshland and open pools, surrounded by wet woodland of alder and willow, some of which is periodically coppiced. This provides valuable cover and nesting sites for birds. There are also areas of grassland where birds such as goldfinches and greenfinches feed on the seed heads of thistles and teasels. Water rail, lesser spotted woodpeckers and siskins are typical birds here.

The lagoons and ditches are particularly rich in aquatic life with many different invertebrates, frogs and small fish such as minnows. Bullhead fish are found in the clear gravelly stretches of water, often under large pebbles.

In summer the reserve is full of luxuriant growth when the purple loosestrife is bright with flowers. Blue water forget-me-not and brooklime catch the eye closer to the water and there are also pink expanses of great hairy willow herb and a scattering of meadowsweet.

The Trust works with the owner, Watford Borough Council.

Management of the reserve includes maintenance of the water cress beds, restoration of the ponds and ditches and mowing and raking of the meadows.
Visiting
Access by road is from the A412 Watford to Rickmansworth road. Gade Avenue leads off this road (north) near the roundabout and a large car park is situated at the end, just inside the park gates.
The reserve is well served by public transport.
Always open.
All year.
Good walking shoes recommended. 

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