Gibraltar Point National Nature Reserve
Sandy, muddy seashores, sand-dunes, salt marshes and fresh water habitats on the Lincolnshire coast.
Tom Hibbert
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Sandy, muddy seashores, sand-dunes, salt marshes and fresh water habitats on the Lincolnshire coast.
One of the least disturbed areas of lowland woodland remaining in Aberdeenshire
An old hill farm with glorious views, rich in wildlife and history.
PLEASE NOTE: There are currently grazing cows with calves on site, please be careful and note that some fields and paths…
A small but characterful oak woodland
Limestone grassland reserve on west facing slopes with areas of mixed scrub and woodland great for wildflowers and butterflies. Gilling Down is adjacent to New Hill, Tannager and Great Breach Wood…
A fine example of oak woodland and hazel coppice with a very rich ground flora
The grasslands have unique properties, enabling them to support a specific range of common and rare wildflowers, as well as invertebrates, wading birds and mammals.
A mix of blackthorn scrub and mature woodland that is a refuge for the rare black hairstreak butterfly
This nature reserve used to be part of the railway line from Brecon to Hereford. Parts of the railway were built along the line of the earlier 1818 Brecon to Eardisley horse-drawn tramroad that…
Wild, Welsh wilderness
Lying in a remote valley with reminders of a historic past.
One of relatively few basin/valley mires with open water in Renfrewshire
A beautiful nature reserve with an outstanding wooded river valley and parkland, which ranks as one of the best examples of its type in Western Europe.
A traditional hill farm managed for wildlife in the spectacular Glens of Antrim.
Glenullin Bog is the newest addition to our suite of nature reserves and home to a range of important and interesting habitats and species. Our work at this site, over the coming years, will focus…
**Please note that Glion Darragh suffered extensive storm damage in both December 2024 and January 2025. As of 4th February 2025 all primary paths have now been reopened. Please note that large…
High in the Yorkshire Dales on Malham Moor, close to Malham Tarn, is one of our smallest and oldest reserves. It’s named after its brightest and best-known attraction – the globeflower.
Set on a south-facing slope running down to the River Glyme, this reserve is a remaining fragment of limestone grassland in the Oxfordshire Cotswolds.
A fantastic woodland for Bluebells and Wood Anemones in the spring, and diverse fungi in the autumn.
Airy grasslands above the Combe contrast dark woodlands below. A great spot for butterflies with magical views across Mendip.
2209 results