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Wildlife Trust of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and Peterboorough logo
Wildlife Trust of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and Peterboorough logo
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Getting there and getting around

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Management

Woodland

Coppice to create diverse habitat.
Retain dead wood for insects and fungi.

Rides and paths

Mown for visitor access and to retain low soil fertility for wildflowers.
Edges coppiced to allow more light for flowers and butterflies.

Raveley Wood

image of reserve

A fragment of a once great ancient wildwood, now an important sanctuary for many woodland species


As with many of the other small woods in the area, Raveley puts on a stunning display of flowers in the spring including bluebells, primrose, goldilocks buttercup and the locally scarce wood speedwell. As well as oak, ash and field maple, the wood has elm trees, many of which have been killed by Dutch elm disease. Some of those that survived have been coppiced, which helps protect against the disease as well as increasing their value to birds and insects. During the summer you may see the white-letter hairstreak butterfly flitting around the elm trees or along the grassy rides and glades.

The dead elms have also provided much valuable deadwood habitat and giving the wood a rich variety of fungi to spot in the autumn. A large bank of earth found close to the wood’s entrance is part of a medieval wood bank that defined the woodland boundary. This bank is intersected by an ancient moat on the east side.

Best time to visit
Winter
Spring
Plants: Bluebell, wood anemone, midland hawthorn, yellow archangel, goldilocks buttercup, early-purple orchid
Birds: Tits and finches
Summer
Insects: Purple hairstreak and white-letter hairstreak butterflies
Birds: Woodpeckers, warblers, treecreeper
Autumn
Fungi: Woodland fungi
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