Oak Tree Farm

View across flooded field

Oak Tree Farm (Sophie Cowling)

Oak Tree Farm

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12 hectares ()
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No dogs
Bird hide ()
A wetland nature reserve which forms a stepping stone for wildlife in the Lugg Valley.

Location

Oak Tree Farm Nature Reserve
Hope-under-Dinmore
Herefordshire
HR1 3JP

OS Map Reference

SO 507 506

View on What3Words

A static map of Oak Tree Farm

Know before you go

Size
12 hectares
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Parking information

Free car park
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Grazing animals

Sheep graze the meadows seasonally
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Walking trails

There are two permissive paths which lead to the bird hides. There is no public access to the remainder of the site.

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Access

Paths are unsurfaced and quite steep and currently unsuitable for wheelchairs or pushchairs.

Dogs

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Facilities

Bird hides

When to visit

Opening times

Dawn to dusk

Best time to visit

Autumn

About the reserve

Oak Tree Farm is a 30 acre site, lying directly below Dinmore Hill and slopes down to the Rive Lugg which forms its southern border. Herefordshire Wildlife Trust purchased the site in September 2020 following a successful fundraising appeal. Many thanks to the 500 individuals that donated to the appeal, The Banister Charitable Trust, Herefordshire Ornithological Club, Herefordshire Community Foundation and Severn Waste Services.

The site originally comprised pasture and meadow as well as a temporary pool beside the river which was fed by a spring. In 2022 and early 2023 we created a series of pools and scrapes along the banks of the river. Pools that would hold floodwater and provide additional habitat for wetland wildlife. The areas around these pools will be a wet grassland, with a variety of wildflowers providing food for pollinators like bumblebees. A swale, taking run-off from the road to the pond, was also created and planted with reedbed – a nationally scarce habitat. This work was funded by National Highways as part of their Network for Nature funding.

Together with Bodenham Lake and Lugg Meadow, this reserve forms part of our flagship Lugg Valley Nature Reserves which, together with Queenswood Country Park & Arboretum, will offer some of the best wildlife-watching in the county. 

Contact us

Trevor Hulme

Maps showing the new site and connectivity to the surrounding landscape

 

The Lower Lugg Valley

The floodplain of the River Lugg is a unique wetland landscape. It includes a series of lakes formed from gravel extraction pits including Bodenham Lake and the Wellington Gravel Pits.

The river, floodplain and lakes of the Lower Lugg Valley could together provide a fantastic landscape for wetland wildlife. However, currently, the distances between the various lakes, and the lack of permanent pasture along the riverside, restrict the movement of wildlife through this landscape. Though wetland birds, mammals and invertebrates can all be found here, they are not visiting or breeding in anywhere near the numbers they should be, nor do we see the diversity of species which could thrive here.

Oak Tree Farm forms a stepping-stone between Wellington Gravel Pits and Bodenham Lake Nature Reserve. This allows wildlife to move more freely through the landscape, increasing feeding, breeding nesting and sheltering places.

The Wildlife of the Lugg Valley

Wildflower meadow of yellow and white flowers with tall hedgerow in background and hills beyond

Davies Meadow Nature Reserve (Paul Lloyd)

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When you join us as a member of Herefordshire Wildlife Trust you will receive our Herefordshire Nature Reserves Guide with full details of all our nature reserves including maps and species of interest.

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