Great Traston Meadows

Great Traston Meadows

Rob Waller

A marshy grassland bursting with wildflowers, butterflies, bees and birds in the summer.

Location

Pye Corner
Newport
Gwent

OS Map Reference

ST 346 843
A static map of Great Traston  Meadows

Know before you go

Size
37 hectares
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Entry fee

No
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Parking information

There is space for two cars in the small car park directly off Nash Road. Please make sure the field gate onto the reserve is left clear for agricultural vehicle access.

Grazing animals

Cattle and sheep

Walking trails

 A circular walk is signposted around Great Traston Meadows – this takes around 30 minutes to complete. The Wales Coastal Path passes through the reserve.

Access

The reserve is flat but uneven in places and can be wet and muddy, particularly after heavy rain and in autumn and winter.

Dogs

On a lead

When to visit

Opening times

Open at all times

Best time to visit

Spring and summer

About the reserve

This type of traditional landscape has existed for hundreds of years on the Gwent Levels. The low-intensity management of this land has allowed a rich diversity of plants to flourish and support a whole host of insects including the shrill carder bee, the UK's rarest bumblebee.

The reserve is at its best in spring and summer when the meadows are full of tall grasses, vibrant-pink vetches and yellow buttercups that are joined by a spectacular display of over 5,000 Southern marsh orchids in June and July. The abundance of nectar- and pollen-rich flowers provides a banquet for hundreds of butterflies, bees and other insects, and dragonflies and damselflies patrol the waterways. Autumn and winter is a quieter time but as the meadows become barer it is easier to see some of the more elusive residents, like otters and snipe. As the warmer months return, warblers, swifts and swallows appear to feast on the insects beginning to fill the air once more.

What we do here
Great Traston Meadows is a triumph of teamwork, with Gwent Wildlife Trust working in partnership with the owner, Eastman Chemical Ltd, to manage the site for the benefit of people and wildlife.

To benefit the diversity of plantlife on the reserve, our management regime involves an annual hay cut and low intensity grazing, normally with cattle. We are opening up some of the densely-shaded reens (drainage channels) to improve them for wildlife, such as otter and water voles, and cutting glades into areas of forest plantation around the reserve to provide sheltered, sunny spots for insects.

History
The low-lying land of the Gwent Levels has been farmed and modified for centuries to exploit its rich alluvial soils. The network of grips, ditches and reens that cross the Gwent Levels, and can be seen on the reserve, were handcrafted by man to allow management of the land but now play an important role in the richness of wildlife found here. By continuing the traditional, low intensity management at Great Traston Meadows, we have preserved these features and the diverse plants which thrive in them.

Directions
By car
Exit the M4 motorway at Junction 24 and, at the roundabout, take the exit signposted ‘City centre (A48)'. Stay on this road for approximately 4km until the 5th roundabout. At this roundabout, take the 1st exit onto Nash Road. Continue until you reach a T-junction and take the right turn to continue along Nash Road.  After another 500m, you will pass a double-fronted white house on your right called ‘Fair Orchard’. Just after the house, the road will bend to the right and the turning to the reserve is on the right where the pylons straddle each side of the road (grid ref ST 346 843).

Near the reserve
Gwent Wildlife Trust’s Magor Marsh and Peterstone Wentlooge Marshes reserves are close by. The Newport Wetlands National Nature Reserve is a five minute drive away and is a great place to watch wetland and migrant birds.

The Wales Coastal Path passes through the reserve, detouring inland from the River Usk to the west, before continuing on to re-join the coast at Nash in the south. Public footpaths link the reserve to the villages of Nash and Goldcliff that both have pubs offering refreshments.

Contact us

Gwent Wildlife Trust
Contact number: 01600 740600
Contact email: info@gwentwildlife.org

Environmental designation

Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI)