Stockings Meadow
Location
Know before you go
Dogs
When to visit
Opening times
Dawn to duskBest time to visit
Early spring to late summerAbout the reserve
The name "Stocking" indicates that what is now a field was once woodland cleared for agriculture long ago, leaving the land covered with "stocks" or tree stumps. Large old hedges border the meadow on two sides (north and west) and contain a variety of shrubby species. Bramble thickets adjacent to these hedges provide breeding sites for blackcap, garden warbler and long-tailed tit in season.
The brook is fringed with alders, and harbours in its fast flowing waters, nymphs of caddis, alderfly, mayfly and stonefly, as well as river limpets and other invertebrates indicative of relatively unpolluted, oxygen-rich water.
The meadow has a very rich flora. Numbers of common spotted and heath spotted orchids occur here in close proximity, their species integrity presumably maintained by differences in microhabitat and reproduction, although some hybrids do occur.
Species
Habitat
Contact us
Join today and receive a free Nature Reserves guide
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.