Blackmoor Copse
Blackmoor Copse is one of the most important woods in Wiltshire for wildlife, especially butterflies.
10 results
Blackmoor Copse is one of the most important woods in Wiltshire for wildlife, especially butterflies.
This nature reserve on the edge of the Braydon Forest is awash with wildflowers and alive with insects during summer.
Previously a field of rough grass, volunteers have transformed it into a peaceful haven for nature.
Visit these three meadows near Royal Wootton Bassett in spring and summer for their vivid wildflower displays.
These three hay meadows in Minety with countless wildflowers form a Site of Special Scientific Interest because of their long history of traditional farming.
We bought this small section of dismantled railway in Marlborough from British Rail in 1988 for £1. It has a variety of common plants and birds such as whitethroat and garden warbler.
Set within the New Forest National Park, the bog is a carpet of feathery moss with expanses of heather and purple moor-grass.
A mosaic of six small water meadows, wet woodland, marsh, ponds, chalk rivers, hedgerows and ditches.
A pocket of secluded, peaceful woodland in the heart of what was once the Royal Forest of Braydon.
Part of a large woodland complex on the River Avon and Kennet & Avon Canal.
10 results