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Wildlife Trust of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and Peterboorough logo
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Management

Woodland

Conifer removal and coppicing to create lighter conditions for wildlife

Rides

Annual hay-cut of alternate sides to encourage wild flowers

Scrub

Rotational cutting for black hairstreak butterfly

Brampton Wood

image of reserve

Sheltered, sunny rides, wild pears and a wealth of wildlife in this great expanse of ancient woodland


Brampton Wood is the second largest ancient woodland in Cambridgeshire and is at least 900 years old. The first records date back to Doomsday Book, “woodland pasture – half a league long and 2 furlongs wide,” when animals such as pigs used to feed on acorns. A large earth bank marks its ancient boundary, with several other minor banks and ditches inside, thought to be prehistoric field drainage systems.

The trees are mostly oak, ash and field maple, and in the past the wood has been used for hazel poles, timber, and hay as well as oak bark for tanning. The entire wood was once clear felled and has regenerated naturally, and some areas were planted with conifers. The conifers provide habitat for the pine beauty and pine hawk moths, and several types of fungi – plums-and-custard is a particularly colourful species you might see on stumps.

Some areas are now coppiced and provide food for dormice, which were reintroduced to the wood in 1992. They are most active at night and so are difficult to see. There are over one and a half miles of woodland rides here, some are at least 200 years old. Their important plants include meadow grasses, cowslip, yellow rattle, devil’s-bit scabious, primrose, water-purslane, wood spurge and both hairy and trailing St. John’s wort.

Woodland butterflies, such as the white-letter hairstreak, brown argus and white admiral feed on the flowers and insects provide food for birds such as the spotted flycatcher and green woodpecker. Several beetle larvae rely on dead wood including the uncommon Anaglyptus mysticus, a longhorn beetle and Ischnomera cyanea, a thick-legged flower beetle. Blackthorn thickets provide a home for five colonies of black hairstreak butterflies, one of the UK’s rarest butterflies.

Wild pear is a native but uncommon species and the two trees are hidden away in the corner of the wood may be the last surviving ones in the county. There are several small ponds where smooth and great crested newts are found as well as dragonflies and water insects.

Best time to visit
Winter
Birds: Marsh tit, Woodcock
Spring
Plants: Primrose, cowslip, dog-violets, wood anemone, yellow archangel, bluebell, wood spurge
Insects: White-letter hairstreak butterfly, longhorn beetle
Birds: Green woodpecker
Amphibians: Newts
Summer
Plants: Devil’s-bit scabious, yellow rattle, large birds-foot treefoil, hairy St.Johns-wort, creeping-jenny, guelder-rose, meadow grasses
Insects: Brown argus, white admiral and black hairstreak butterflies, pine beauty moth and pine hawkmoth, glow worm
Birds: Spotted flycatcher
Autumn
Fungi: Plums-and-custard and other woodland fungi
Plants: Wild pear
Birds: Redwing, fieldfare
Mammals: Dormouse
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