Danemead
This Site of Special Scientific Interest contains important oak hornbeam woodland where broad-leaved helleborines and butterflies thrive
To enable everyone to enjoy their time at our nature reserves please remember to allow sufficient space for your fellow visitors where possible, especially in hides and other confined spaces.
Ash dieback has been identified on a number of our sites and this could mean changes or closures to access for safety reasons - please check our information pages before you visit.
Please take extra care not to disturb wildlife by following on-site signage, keeping dogs under effective control and remembering to take all your rubbish home with you.
Please follow Natural England's Countryside Code and Respect, Protect and Enjoy.
For your safety and the safety of others, please never light a fire or BBQ and do not go swimming or boating at our nature reserves.
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This Site of Special Scientific Interest contains important oak hornbeam woodland where broad-leaved helleborines and butterflies thrive
A fantastic woodland for bluebells and wood anemones in the spring, and diverse fungi in the autumn.
Hobbyhorse Wood is a mixed woodland – ancient woodland has been replanted with mixed species, mainly beech, hornbeam and oak with some conifers.
Hunsdon and Eastwick Meads are two of the finest surviving wetland meadows in Hertfordshire, managed in the same way for hundreds of years, where orchids and wildflowers thrive.
This small woodland is a wildlife haven in Kings Langley, an oasis nestled behind houses.
Possibly the most varied piece of woodland in Middlesex, with fantastic wildflower displays in spring.
Nestling amongst the wooded estates of central Hertfordshire, this small wood is a beautiful example of traditional coppice management and its value to wildlife.
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