Blackmoor Copse

Tree Planting in Wiltshire at Blackmoor Copse

Blackmoor Copse is an attractive area of woodland close to the county boundary with Hampshire. It is also one of the most important woods in Wiltshire for wildlife; with rare and uncommon plants and animals to be found.

IMPORTANT VISITOR INFOTake only photos. Leave only footsteps.

To keep the woodland as natural as possible we don’t label individual trees and we ask that visitors do not place their own plaques, labels, flowers, etc in the woodland. Each tree we plant should be seen as part of a natural woodland.

Before visiting this woodland, please read our Frequently Asked Questions page, which gives you helpful tips about your tree and visitor guidance.

* THIS WOODLAND IS Full *
We’ve planted so many trees here that there isn’t any space to plant more.
For the nearest alternative woodlands take a look at the Woodlands Locations Map.

Blackmoor Copse is an attractive area of woodland close to the county boundary with Hampshire. It is also one of the most important woods in Wiltshire for wildlife, with rare and uncommon plants and animals to be found. It was for this reason that the wood became the Wiltshire Wildlife Trust's very first nature reserve in 1963.

The reserve is criss-crossed by a number of woodland paths giving good access to most areas, including a pond. There is also a circular walk that takes about an hour to complete.

The route is marked on the accompanying map and on the interpretation board near the reserve entrance. Much of the reserve lies on clay soil and can therefore remain wet underfoot even during summer months. Wellies are strongly recommended during winter!

Blackmoor Copse is best known for its butterflies, many of which are very rare or extinct elsewhere in Britain.

Of 55 species found throughout Britain, over 30 have been seen here regularly in the last ten years. This includes eight species that are now rare in other parts of the country. One of the reserve's rarer butterflies is the Pearl-bordered Fritillary (Boloria euphrosyne). This beautiful insect is now thought to occur in just half a dozen woods in Wiltshire. Its caterpillar will only feed on violet leaves growing where there is abundant leaf litter, dead bracken or bare ground nearby.

These areas absorb the sun's warmth and allow the caterpillars to bask before going off to feed. New areas with plenty of violets and hotspots for basking caterpillars must be created close by if this butterfly is to survive on the reserve. Coppicing is the best way to create this type of habitat.

The new hazel trees will be coppiced on a 10 year cycle, prolonging the life of the trees while enabling local woodworkers to harvest wood from the trees too.

Despite being one of the Trust's oldest nature reserves there is much of Blackmoor Copse's history still to be unravelled. We know, for example, that part of the wood used to be arable farmland and that there is an orchard and two dwellings shown on the map from 1811. But why was a row of yew trees planted across what is now the middle of the reserve, and why is the pond known as King Charles' Pond?

In recent years the management of the reserve has focused on coppicing to maintain optimum habitat for the rare butterflies and the Dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius). Because of the large numbers of Roe Deer (Capreolus capreolus) that browse on tree and scrub shoots in the wood, areas that have been cut are being protected with deer fencing to keep the deer out.

Other areas of the Nature Reserve will be left undisturbed so that the Oak (Quercus robur) and Ash (Fraxinus excelsior) trees will be able to develop into big, old, spreading trees, a very important habitat for the insects and fungi that thrive on decaying and dead wood. In early 1998 the Wiltshire Wildlife Trust was able to increase the area of the reserve by buying White's Common, an adjacent area of woodland with a very rich flora. The total area of the reserve is now 90 acres.

Photo Gallery

  • Newly planted trees at Hems Down

Tree Species at Blackmoor Copse

Since 2010 EFORESTS has worked with the land owners and local volunteers to plant 400 new native tree species.

The following tree species were planted on the site:


Address



Wiltshire
SP5 1AG

Map



External links

http://www.wiltshirewildlife.org/VppC6pUH%2bEi0GKZzB3IxsA%3d%3d/Reserve.aspx?mainmenuretained=%2fptBoQi9bkyn%2bPyND08qtA%3d%3d&articlepage=Reserve.aspx&Category=Reserve

EFORESTS is not responsible for the content on external websites.

IMPORTANT VISITOR INFOTake only photos. Leave only footsteps.

To keep the woodland as natural as possible we don’t label individual trees and we ask that visitors do not place their own plaques, labels, flowers, etc in the woodland. Each tree we plant should be seen as part of a natural woodland.

Before visiting this woodland, please read our Frequently Asked Questions page, which gives you helpful tips about your tree and visitor guidance.

Dedicate a tree to be planted in Wiltshire or elsewhere in the UK.