winter

SELECT A RESERVE

Green Light Reserves

1 Brandon Marsh

2 Clowes Wood and

New Fallings Coppice

3 Draycote Meadows

4 Pooley Fields

5 Ryton Wood

6 Shadowbrook Meadows

7 Swift Valley

8 Ufton Fields

9 Wappenbury Wood and

Old Nun Wood

10 Whitacre Heath

 

Amber Light Reserves

11 Ashlawn Cutting

12 Brook Meadow

13 Claybrookes Marsh

14 Crackley Wood

15 Grove Hill

16 Hampton Wood and

Meadow

17 Harbury Spoilbank

18 Kenilworth Common

19 Leam Valley

20 Loxley Church Meadow

21 Newbold Quarry

22 Radway Meadows

23 Rough Hill Wood

24 Snitterfield Bushes

25 Stockton Cutting

26 Stonebridge Meadows

27 Tocil Wood and Meadow

28 Welches Meadow

29 Welcombe Hills and

Clopton Park

 

Red Light Reserves

30 Alvecote Meadows

31 Cock Robin Wood

32 Deans Green

33 Earlswood Moathouse

34 Eathorpe Marsh

35 Elmdon Manor

36 Glasshouse Spinney

37 Goldicote Cutting

38 Harvest Hill

39 Henley Sidings

40 Knowle Hill

41 Lion Wood

42 Parliament Piece

43 Priory Fields

44 River Arrow

45 Stoke Floods

46 Temple Balsall

47 Whitnash Brook

48 Wyken Slough

49 Hunningham Meadow

50 Windmill Spinney

51 Oakwood and Blacklow

Spinney

52 Tysoe Island

 

Green Light
These reserves are considered well worth the travelling time to visit, even if you don't live locally. 'Green' sites tend to have several of the following attributes: good access, parking, waymarked wildlife walks, hides, scenic landscape, large size, sufficient interest to warrant a longer visit.

 

Amber Light
Worth a visit for a shorter period of time. The sites may have several of the attributes found at 'green' sites but may be smaller in size and hold less interest.

 

Red Light
Worth a visit if you live locally. These sites tend to be small and lack most of the attributes of 'green' and 'amber' sites. They are nevertheless important for
conservation.

Whitacre Heath SSSI

whitacre_heath2

 

WHITACRE HEATH SSSI 0.5 km SE of Lee Marston. Entrance SP 209931. 44 ha (109 acres) Owned by the Trust. Access restricted to members only. Postcode: B46 2EP.

 

Old gravel workings in the Tame Valley, along the River Tame, which have developed into a mixture of grassland, wet woodland and wetland. The reserve is noted for its breeding birds. A car park is located off the Birmingham Road, between the villages of Lea Marston and Whitacre Heath.

 

Contact: Tim Haselden, Wetlands Living Landscape Officer: 024 7630 8995.

 

Whitacre Heath

Join_WWT_Header Support_WWT_Header

Wild Events Campaigning as Champions

You Tube flikr follow us on twitter Warwickshire Wildlife Group on Facebook