|
Local
records show the woodland dates back to at least the 18th century.
The
32-acre wood was bought along with the rest of the estate by the
county council in 1945 and it is currently managed by The Friends
of Oakfrith Wood.
|
Local
nature reserves give people special opportunities to enjoy
and have contact with nature, or to study and learn about
wildlife.

|
|
Katie Lloyd, English
Nature |
People
are welcome to explore the woodland, predominantly made up of beech,
ash and oak with a few conifers, by using the network of publicly-accessible
paths, which are open around the year.
There
are a wide range of plants and animals to be found and enjoyed in
the woodland. In early spring bluebells and early purple orchids
cover the woodland floor There are many birds and sharp-eyed visitors
may even spot badgers, deer, wood mice and grey squirrels in the
woodland.
The
estate has had a number of owners and before it was purchased by
the county council to establish a residential education centre it
was owned by the Pollock family.
The
woodland is one of the few remaining areas of significant woodland
in the Pewsey Vale following the ravages of the Dutch elm disease
in the early 1970s.
However,
little of the original wood remains, after many trees were felled
to provide timber for the war effort in 1917. It was replanted by
the Pollock family in the 1930s.
More
recently a new copse was planted by volunteers on the southern edge
of the wood in 2000 as part of a millennium tree planting project.
 |
| Primroses |
Wiltshire
County Council, which owns the land and the nearby manor, successfully
applied to rural champion English Nature for the designation that
will give the wildlife oasis greater protection and recognition.
Cabinet
member for the environment Toby Sturgis said: "This
Wiltshire woodland provides people with the opportunity to enjoy
many aspects of the natural world that is easily accessible."
English
Nature spokesperson Katie Lloyd said: "Local nature reserves
give people special opportunities to enjoy and have contact with
nature, or to study and learn about wildlife.
"English
Nature is delighted Oakfrith Wood has been declared as the 1001st
local nature reserve in England. It is a haven for wildlife, and
a great asset to the county of Wiltshire."
|