Asham Meads

Asham Meads

Jim Asher

A lovely expanse of grassland, Asham Meads harbours rare communities of national and local botanical gems, including maroon-flowered great burnet, meadow fox-tail grass and tubular water-dropwort.

Location

5 miles south of Bicester
Oxfordshire
OX5 2RF (nearby farm)

OS Map Reference

SP 590 143

what3words: deliver.classics.appointed
A static map of Asham Meads

Know before you go

Size
23 hectares
z

Entry fee

No
P

Parking information

See Getting There below.

Grazing animals

Yes

Access

Ridge and furrow, uneven underfoot and soft when wet; kissing gates. No access to Upper Marsh.

Dogs

On a lead

When to visit

Opening times

Open at all times

Best time to visit

March to August

About the reserve

Ancient meadows
These lovely expanses of Oxfordshire grasslands, near Otmoor, harbour rare communities of national and local botanical gems. Asham Meads - probably named after the lost Otmoor village of Nash - is made up of three damp meadows (Upper Marsh, Lower Marsh and Rowbottom), an oak plantation which dates from the 1930s, a pond, hedges and scrub.

Ridges and furrows
The meadows were once ploughed into ridges and furrows. The ridges of the north-eastern field, Rowbottom, are covered by maroon flowers of great burnet, dropwort and meadow foxtail grass. Nestling in the wetter furrows are marsh-loving plants, such as ragged-robin and the uncommon tubular water-dropwort. On the ridges of Upper and Lower Marsh you will find common knapweed and traditional meadow grasses crested dog's-tail and sweet vernal-grass. Among the panorama of flowers are pepper-saxifrage, yellow rattle, saw-wort and many green-winged orchids. 

Home to rare butterflies
All these flowers support a host of butterflies. The rare and hard-to-spot black and brown hairstreak butterflies are to be found in the blackthorn hedges, the foodplant of their caterpillars. In summer, the meadows themselves positively shimmer with small copper, meadow brown and marbled white butterflies.

A bird haven
Listen out for skylarks, blackcap, yellowhammer and curlews in the breeding season. 

Getting There
On Boarstall to Murcott road, after bridge over M40, continue west towards Murcott for 2 miles, take left turn to Whitecross Green Farm and Manor Farm. Go through farmyard, if the gate is chained shut, lift chain, drive through and replace chain. Follow track for approx 800m then turn left over bridge into unsurfaced car park. If car park is full, park at nearby Whitecross Green Wood.

Contact us

Berks, Bucks & Oxon Wildlife Trust (BBOWT)
Contact number: 01865 775476
Contact email: info@bbowt.org.uk

Environmental designation

Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI)