Waxwing

Waxwing
"To see a world in a grain of sand,
And a heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand
And eternity in an hour."

From "Auguries of Innocence"

by William Blake

Saturday 21 October 2023

Herefordshire 2023 - October Visit - Part 5 Queenswood Country Park and Arboretum

 

Queenswood which is only 20 minutes away is a place where we all enjoy walking so we visited on the Saturday morning. Silly day to go really as it was packed!  

Queenswood comprises 123 acres of ancient mature woodland on Dinmore Hill which has been designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and an arboretum with many species of rare and exotic trees from around the world.  



It was once part of a large area of ancient oak woodland which stretched to the Welsh Borders. A Royal Forest where only the king and his nobles could hunt venison. As deer and boar hunting became less popular the woodland was managed for timber and coppiced.  Much of what was left of King's Wood gradually became farmland and only this small remnant remains.  Its name was changed to Queen's Wood during the reign of Elizabeth I.  Some decades ago there were rumours that the wood would be sold to a property developer for the construction of bungalows. To prevent this happening the Herefordshire branch of the Campaign for Rural England raised funds to successfully save the wood.  When they could no longer afford to maintain it it was leased to Herefordshire Wildlife Trust and Leaf Sustainable Development.

Over time native species felled between 1914 and 1918 were replaced and a public appeal in 1953 led to the planting of an arboretum of 1200 rare trees to mark the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.  

Many species of native trees have been recorded at the site and there are dormice hidden away and fallow deer.  There are a good variety of bird, wildflower and butterfly species.









There is a trail for families called the Gruffalo trail with statues to find.





























We walked up to the viewpoint where you can see Bodenham Lakes in the distance which is another Herefordshire Wildlife Trust reserve.









We eventually followed the Deer Trail for a while which is quieter than the main routes.

















Back on the Gruffalo Trail!






There is a very good shop selling goods on behalf of the Wildlife Trust and I bought some Christmas Cards. They had some really good books but I resisted the temptation!  We sat outside the cafe and had a lunch of cheesy chips.





As we left we spotted a display of woodland fungi collected by local naturalist societies for UK Fungus Day and there was a good selection. I was pleased to see Earth Star as I have never seen it before.







Here's the Earth Star in the centre












In the evening we went (early to avoid the crowds!) to have a meal to celebrate our wedding anniversary a week early at the C17th Fountain Inn in Tenbury Wells.  The food there is very good and there is a good selection of vegetarian dishes.






(I didn't take the camera so the photos of the pub are from an earlier visit)

All photos taken by me with the Panasonic Lumix FZ330 bridge camera - for some reason D didn't take photos this holiday. (I don't particularly rate my photos but if anyone wishes to use one I would be grateful for an email first - thanks).

Reference: "Fifty Gems of Herefordshire" by David Phelps Amberley Publishing 2022.


7 comments:

Rustic Pumpkin said...

What an interesting history, especially the background to saving it from being developed. I hope Timothy enjoyed the Gruffalo Trail. If you read between the lines there, I guess what I'm saying is, I hope Timothy wasn't in your backpack the whole time. Lol. Some really lovely photographs in today's blog. Thoroughly enjoyed it.

The Quacks of Life said...

ooh that looks good! love the first statue :)

Ragged Robin said...

Rustic Pumpkin - Thanks so much. Iam going to blush now and eat humble pie - Timothy was on the shelf and I forgot to pack him :( He will never forgive me!

The Quacks of Life - Thanks so much. Quite a few statues like that but too many children round most of them to get photos this time. It is nice there but weekends and school hols not the time to go! Lovely visitor centre, shop and tearoom too. Free apart from car park charges.

Rosie said...

Looks a great place to walk and I like the Gruffalo Trail. Good that they have a visitor centre and shop too. All the fungi looks interesting, we've seen quite a lot of different ones recently. The Earth Star is most unusual, never seen on of those. Glad you had a lovely meal for your anniversary:)

Ragged Robin said...

Rosie - Thanks so much. The shop is really good there. I am assuming fungi were found in the woods there but to be honest forgot to ask! At least I recognised a few.I'd love to find an Earth Star. Still not used to sitting in pubs again Rosie but we went early and sat in a nearly empty conservatory by an open fire door! There are still some things I am reluctant to do these days with covid still rife!

CherryPie said...

This looks like a lovely place to go for a walk.

Ragged Robin said...

CherryPie - Thank you.