List of nature reserves in the London Borough of Barnet

The London Borough of Barnet, on the northern outskirts of London, is mainly residential, but it has large areas of green space and farmland. The spread of suburban development into the countryside was halted by the designation of a statutory Green Belt around London after the Second World War, and almost one third of Barnet's area of 8,663 hectares (21,410 acres) is Green Belt. Without this control, Barnet would be very different today, and this list of nature reserves would be much shorter.[1]

Beech Hill Lake in Monken Hadley Common
Beech Hill Lake in Monken Hadley Common

Most of Barnet lies over London Clay, which is poor for agriculture, and open land is mainly used for activities such as horse grazing, playing fields, parks and golf courses. Features of the traditional agricultural landscape have survived, such as old hedgerows, ancient trees and areas of herb-rich grassland. Some hay meadows have a large diversity of wild flowers, and the London Ecology Unit (LEU)[a] described them as one of Barnet's most important ecological assets.[4]

Barnet has large areas with designations intended to protect them from "inappropriate development", and to "provide the strongest protection for the preservation of Barnet's green and natural open spaces". As well as 2,466 hectares (6,090 acres) of Green Belt, Barnet has another 690 hectares (1,700 acres) of Metropolitan Open Land, which receive a similar level of protection. Watling Chase Community Forest[b] covers 72 square miles (190 km2), extending north and west from Totteridge into south Hertfordshire.[6]

In 1992 Barnet Council commissioned the LEU to carry out a survey of wildlife habitats in the borough, which looked at green sites covering 4,055 hectares (10,020 acres), 45% of the borough. In 1997 the LEU published Nature Conservation in Barnet, which described 67 Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation (SINCs).[7][8] This formed the basis of Barnet's nature conservation policies in its 2006 Unitary Development Plan, designated as "a material planning consideration" to be used as "non-statutory guidance".[9] The table below lists SINCs described in Nature Conservation in Barnet.[10][c] SINCs do not have statutory protection, but some sites are also wholly or partly designated as Sites of Special Scientific Interest[d] or local nature reserves,[e] which do have statutory protection.[18] According to a report of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, 39% of Barnet's SINCs were "in positive conservation management" in 2009–10. Barnet Council did not supply figures for 2010–11, 2011–12 or 2012–13.[19]

Nature reserves

Key

Sites

SitePhotographHectares[f]Location[g]AccessTypeDescription
Arkley Lane and Pastures 52Arkley
51°39′18″N 0°13′48″W / 51.655°N 0.230°W / 51.655; -0.230 (Arkley Lane and Pastures)
TQ 225 965
PPB2The site covers Arkley Lane, a neighbouring woodland and fields on either side. The lane, now a quiet country path, is thought to be an old drovers' road. The hedges have massive gnarled oak trees, lofty ash and mature field maples, while the hedge bottoms have a diverse range of plants. The woodland is probably ancient, and supports a variety of nesting birds.[25]
Arkley South Fields 38Arkley
51°38′28″N 0°13′55″W / 51.641°N 0.232°W / 51.641; -0.232 (Arkley South Fields)
TQ 224 951
VB2This is an extensive area of open grassland crossed by ditches and with mature hedgerows. Its importance lies in its breeding grassland birds, including skylarks and meadow pipits, and it is the main site in the borough for these species. Skylarks have declined in recent years, and they are a priority species in the UK Biodiversity Action Plan.[26][27]
Arrandene Open Space and Featherstone Hill 25Mill Hill
51°36′47″N 0°13′48″W / 51.613°N 0.230°W / 51.613; -0.230 (Arrandene Open Space and Featherstone Hill)
TQ 226 920
PMThis site's fields, which are divided by ancient hedgerows, were rated by the LEU as one of the best examples of old hay meadows in London. Wild flowers are abundant in the summer, with each field having its own specialities. The woods and scrub are important habitats for birds.[28][29]
Ashley Lane 1Hendon
51°36′04″N 0°13′01″W / 51.601°N 0.217°W / 51.601; -0.217 (Ashley Lane)
TQ 236 906
PB2This ancient trackway is over 400 years old. It has retained its ancient hedgerows along much of its length. Old oak and ash trees line the lane, and there are also some wild service-trees. The hedgerows have diverse shrub species.[30]
Avenue House Grounds 3.5Church End
51°35′51″N 0°11′37″W / 51.5975°N 0.1937°W / 51.5975; -0.1937 (Avenue House Grounds)
TQ 251 902
PLThis small public park is the garden of Avenue House. It has a terrace with ornamental plants and a rockery. There is a pond which has hornwort, yellow iris and water-lilies, together with common frogs and koi carp. There are large areas of shrubbery.[31]
Barfield Allotments Nature Park 0.9Whetstone
51°37′37″N 0°09′29″W / 51.627°N 0.158°W / 51.627; -0.158 (Barfield Allotments Nature Park)
TQ 276 935
VLThis small wildlife site is adjacent to a playground. Its scrub and grassland provide a haven for common lizards and slowworms, both legally protected species.[32]
Barnet Countryside Centre 2.8High Barnet
51°39′29″N 0°12′58″W / 51.658°N 0.216°W / 51.658; -0.216 (Countryside Centre)
TQ 234 969
VLThe centre was established in the 1970s to provide schoolchildren with contact with farm animals and wildlife. After a period of closure the now renamed Barnet Environment Centre operates a full programme of environmental education visits for school children from Nursery to A level. Its woodland has a wide range of birds. Ponds support aquatic life and more open areas have a wide variety of insects.[33][34]
Bell's Hill Burial Ground 2.8High Barnet
51°38′56″N 0°12′54″W / 51.649°N 0.215°W / 51.649; -0.215 (Bell's Hill Burial Ground)
TQ 235 959
PLThis small cemetery has mown grass in the western part, but in the east it is less managed, and has a wide variety of wild flowers. The LEU described it as a fine site for butterflies, including gatekeeper, small skipper and meadow brown.[35][36]
Belmont Open Space, Cockfosters 1.0Cockfosters
51°38′49″N 0°09′25″W / 51.647°N 0.157°W / 51.647; -0.157 (Belmont Open Space)
TQ 275 958
PLThis site is a secluded small park, which has a fair number of wild flowers and mature trees, together with an old hedgerow. The local Royal Society for the Protection of Birds has recorded a wide range of birds for a small suburban park.[37]
Big Wood and Little Wood 8.6Hampstead Garden Suburb
51°34′59″N 0°11′24″W / 51.583°N 0.190°W / 51.583; -0.190 (Big Wood)
TQ 255 887
51°35′10″N 0°11′35″W / 51.586°N 0.193°W / 51.586; -0.193 (Little Wood)
TQ 253 890
PB1 LNRThese woods are remnants of an ancient large forest. Big Wood has a wide variety of trees and shrubs, with pedunculate oak the dominant species. There are several old wild service-trees. All the common woodland species of birds are present in the woods, and Little Wood has a small theatre.[38]
Brent Reservoir (Welsh Harp) 46[h]Hendon
51°34′16″N 0°14′42″W / 51.571°N 0.245°W / 51.571; -0.245 (Brent Reservoir)
TQ 215 871
PM LNR SSSIBrent Reservoir is Barnet's only Site of Special Scientific Interest. It is an important breeding site for waterfowl and other birds, including one of Britain's largest breeding populations of great crested grebe. It has many uncommon wetland plants and insects, including over forty rare species of invertebrates. It is also one of the few London sites with water shrews.[39]
Bruno's Field 6.6Mill Hill
51°37′34″N 0°14′46″W / 51.626°N 0.246°W / 51.626; -0.246 (Bruno's Field)
TQ 215 934
NOB2This steeply sloping site has a varied topography. On higher ground there are dry areas, while lower down there are areas of bog crossed by several small streams. The field has typical pasture herbs, a scattering of mature trees and a wide variety of birds.[40]
Burtonhole Lane and Pasture 8.5Mill Hill
51°37′12″N 0°12′25″W / 51.620°N 0.207°W / 51.620; -0.207 (Burtonhole Lane and Pasture)
TQ 242 927
PPB2Burtonhole Lane is an old green lane which is now a bridleway and footpath. Its hedgerow has several species of trees, such as wild service-tree and black bryony, which suggest that it is ancient, and its verge is rich in wild flowers. The pasture area is dominated by Yorkshire Fog. It is crossed by Burtonhole Brook, which supports a number of uncommon plant species.[41]
Cherry Tree Wood 4.7East Finchley
51°35′10″N 0°09′36″W / 51.586°N 0.160°W / 51.586; -0.160 (Cherry Tree Wood)
TQ 275 890
PLThis local park was once part of the Bishop of London's Great Hornsey Park. it has an inner area of lawn with a playground and tennis courts, which is surrounded by the surviving ancient woodland. Its tree canopy is mainly oak and hornbeam, and its sparse undergrowth has a number of species associated with ancient woodland, such as wild garlic and wood-sedge.[42]
Clarefield Park 3.2Brent Cross
51°34′19″N 0°13′16″W / 51.572°N 0.221°W / 51.572; -0.221 (Clarefield Park)
TQ 232 874
PLThis small park has mown grass, a children's playground, scented shrubs and a small wildlife pond.[43] In October 2010 Barnet Council gave planning consent for the Brent Cross Cricklewood Planning Application, which includes closure of the Clarefield Park and development of the area.[44][45]
Clay Lane 1.8Edgware
51°37′48″N 0°16′23″W / 51.630°N 0.273°W / 51.630; -0.273 (Clay Lane)
TQ 194 939
PLThis is an ancient green lane which leads from Edgwarebury into the Hertfordshire countryside. An old hedge bank and herbaceous plants associated with ancient woodland suggest that it is of considerable antiquity. Its canopy has fine old oaks above an understorey of midland hawthorn, blackthorn and hazel.[46]
Clitterhouse Recreation Ground 16Brent Cross
51°34′08″N 0°12′54″W / 51.569°N 0.215°W / 51.569; -0.215 (Clitterhouse Recreation Ground)
TQ 238 871
PLThis large recreation ground is managed as a sports field, and its main wildlife interest is in the unmanaged perimeter which has species such as crab apple which are typical of ancient hedgerows.[47] The Brent Cross Cricklewood scheme includes improvements to the Recreation Ground.[48]
College Farm 4.5Finchley
51°35′35″N 0°12′07″W / 51.593°N 0.202°W / 51.593; -0.202 (College Farm)
TQ 246 897
PPLCollege Farm in central Finchley was a working farm open to the public from 1980 until the foot and mouth epidemic in 2001. A charitable trust purchased the site in 2006, but as of March 2013 efforts to re-open the farm have failed, and the farm buildings are an equestrian shop. The site has trees and scrub which provide a habitat for birds, and pipistrelle bats have been recorded.[49]
Coppetts Wood and Scrublands Local Nature Reserve 12Colney Hatch
51°36′32″N 0°09′25″W / 51.609°N 0.157°W / 51.609; -0.157 (Coppett's Wood and Scrublands)
TQ 277 915
PB1 LNRThese sites provide a range of wildlife habitats. Coppetts Wood has a population of juneberry, and a pond which has yellow iris and breeding common frogs and smooth newts. Scrublands is on the site of a former sewage works. It has a number of rare plant and insect species.[50]
Copthall Railway Walk and Copthall Old Common 11Mill Hill
51°36′25″N 0°13′23″W / 51.607°N 0.223°W / 51.607; -0.223 (Copthall Railway Walk and Copthall Old Common)
TQ 231 912
PB2This is a green path along an old railway line, with Copthall Old Common at one side. The grassland on the walk is mostly false oat-grass, with a wide diversity of wild flowers. The hedges have some fine old oaks and areas of bluebells. A pond on the common has yellow iris and water-starwort. The site also has a range of birds and invertebrates, including glow-worms, a scarce and declining species.[51]
Copthall South Fields 6Mill Hill
51°36′07″N 0°13′59″W / 51.602°N 0.233°W / 51.602; -0.233 (Copthall South Fields)
TQ 225 908
PLThe fields have what the LEU described as "a surprisingly rural quality", even though they lie alongside the A1 road. The hedgerow trees are oak, ash and field maple, and the fields contain flowers typical of clay grassland, such as meadow vetchling, meadow buttercup and common sorrel.[52]
Deans Brook and Stoneyfields Park 3.3Edgware
51°37′30″N 0°15′47″W / 51.625°N 0.263°W / 51.625; -0.263 (Deans Brook and Stoneyfields Park)
TQ 203 929
PPB2Kingfishers and grey wagtails are often seen along the two kilometre Deans Brook, which largely follows a natural course. In Stoneyfields Park it has been widened into an ornamental lake, which has a wide fringe of tall water plants such as great and lesser reedmace, and breeding birds such as coots, moorhens and mallards. The woodland in the park is oak and hazel, and the hedgerows have plants which show that it is ancient, such as wood-sedge and ramsons.[53]
Drivers Hill 10Mill Hill
51°36′58″N 0°13′16″W / 51.616°N 0.221°W / 51.616; -0.221 (Drivers Hill)
TQ 231 920
VB2This site consists of several fields and two small woods. The pasture areas have a variety of grasses and wild flowers, including some typical of old pasture, such as crested dog's-tail and oval sedge. Wetter areas have plants such as tufted hair-grass and greater bird's-foot-trefoil, while the woods are mainly oak, ash and sycamore.[54]
East Finchley Cemetery 16East Finchley
51°35′31″N 0°11′02″W / 51.592°N 0.184°W / 51.592; -0.184 (East Finchley Cemetery)
TQ 258 896
PLMost of this cemetery is formally managed, but it has some old oaks which have survived from its rural past, and evergreen trees such as cedar of Lebanon and Wellingtonia provide a habitat for goldcrest and coal tit. In less managed areas there are wild flowers such as burnet saxifrage, and around the edges of the site ash and sycamore are evolving into woodland.[55]
Edgware Way Rough 5.5Edgware
51°37′30″N 0°17′17″W / 51.625°N 0.288°W / 51.625; -0.288 (Edgware Way Rough)
TQ 185 932
FMThis site is London Clay pasture which has not been cultivated for many years. In areas of damp grassland it has London's largest population of the herb great burnet, and other rare plants characteristic of old meadows include sneezewort and devil's-bit scabious. Breeding birds include the yellowhammer and spotted flycatcher, both of which are declining species.[56]
Edgwarebury Brook 5Edgware
51°37′26″N 0°17′02″W / 51.624°N 0.284°W / 51.624; -0.284 (Edgwarebury Brook)
TQ 188 935
VB2This stream rises among fields and flows through Edgware Way Rough on to suburban Edgware, where it join Deans Brook. The most important section ecologically is the upper part, which was rated by the LEU as one of the best areas of wetland vegetation in Barnet. There is a mass of floating sweet-grass with clumps of brooklime and water pepper. The banks have clumps of great willowherb and trifid bur-marigold.[57]
Edgwarebury Park 15Edgware
51°37′30″N 0°16′59″W / 51.625°N 0.283°W / 51.625; -0.283 (Edgwarebury Park)
TQ 190 934
PLThe hedgerows in this large park have fine oak and ash trees, and the presence of wild service-trees is considered an indicator that the hedges are ancient. It has a variety of wild flowers in damp areas and nesting birds include song thrush, mistle thrush, great spotted woodpecker and common whitethroat.[58]
Folly Brook and Darland's Lake Nature Reserve 11Arkley/Woodside Park
51°37′30″N 0°12′18″W / 51.625°N 0.205°W / 51.625; -0.205 (Folly Brook and Darland's Lake Nature Reserve)
TQ 240 934
PB1Darland's Lake, which is now a nature reserve, was originally an ornamental feature created by damming Folly Brook. The water quality is good, and Darland's Lake has extensive reed beds. On its margin there is a boggy wood of willows and alder, a scarce habitat in London. The site has a number of tree species typical of ancient woodland, and a diverse bird and invertebrate population, while eighteen species of mammal have been recorded.[59]
Friary Park 8.8Friern Barnet
51°37′05″N 0°09′43″W / 51.618°N 0.162°W / 51.618; -0.162 (Friary Park)
TQ 273 926
PLOld oak trees date from before the foundation of the park, and they support woodland birds such as nuthatch and treecreeper. Near a small stream, a tributary of Pymme's Brook, there are wildflowers such as cow parsley, lesser celandine, dog violet and garlic mustard.[60]
Glebe Lane Pastures 11Arkley
51°38′42″N 0°14′02″W / 51.645°N 0.234°W / 51.645; -0.234 (Glebe Lane Pastures)
TQ 223 954
VB1This is an area of five fields which was once part of a communal pasture called Barnet Common. The grassland is unimproved clay grassland, a relic of the old common. It has many species of wild flowers, and the most important aspect of the site is its diverse old meadow plants. Some of the rarities have been found in temporary pools, such as bog stitchwort and pond and ivy-leaved crowfoot.[61]
Glebelands Local Nature Reserve 7.5Colney Hatch
51°36′14″N 0°10′08″W / 51.604°N 0.169°W / 51.604; -0.169 (Glebelands Local Nature Reserve)
TQ 270 911
PB1 LNRThis is a fragment of the old Finchley Common. It has tall scrub and woodland, together with numerous streams and seasonal ponds. The pools have a number of rare species, and it is the only known London site for lesser water-plantain. Other rarities are thread-leaved water-crowfoot (Ranunculus trichophyllus) and marsh speedwell, and the site has diverse breeding birds.[62]
Greenhill Gardens 1.5High Barnet
51°38′41″N 0°10′57″W / 51.6446°N 0.1824°W / 51.6446; -0.1824 (Greenhill Gardens)
TQ 258 955
PLThe principal feature of this small park is its large lake, with a wooded island. Water birds include mallard, mute swan, coot and moorhen, and pipistrelle and noctule bats have been seen foraging.[63]
Hadley Green 10Monken Hadley
51°39′40″N 0°11′56″W / 51.661°N 0.199°W / 51.661; -0.199 (Hadley Green)
TQ 246 973
PMHadley Green was the site of one of the major battles of the Wars of the Roses, the Battle of Barnet in 1471. It is mainly acid grassland with some wetter areas and several ponds. It has a number of rare species of plant, such as mat-grass and oval sedge in the grassland, lesser spearwort and marsh ragwort in the ditches, and tufted forget-me-not and fiddle dock in the ponds. There are also eleven species of dragonflies and damselflies.[64]
Hampstead Heath Extension and Golders Hill Park 46[i]Golders Green
51°34′30″N 0°11′10″W / 51.575°N 0.186°W / 51.575; -0.186 (Hampstead Heath Extension and Golders Hill Park)
TQ 258 878
PMThe LEU described the hedges of Hampstead Heath Extension as some of the best on the Heath. It also has a chain of seven ponds which have a wide variety of aquatic and pond margin plant species. Golders Hill Park has areas of formal and less managed parkland. Swan Pond is a large ornamental lake which has a variety of exotic and native wildfowl.[65]
Hendon Park and Northern Line Railway Cutting 14Hendon
51°34′55″N 0°13′19″W / 51.582°N 0.222°W / 51.582; -0.222 (Hendon Park and Northern Line Railway Cutting)
TQ 233 884
PLThe site is mainly informal parkland, with mown grass and mature trees. A variety of small birds forage among the tall hedgerows at the northern end. The railway cutting has rough grassland and patches of woodland, which provide a habitat for birds such as the great spotted woodpecker and goldcrest.[66]
King George's Fields 27Monken Hadley
51°39′22″N 0°11′42″W / 51.656°N 0.195°W / 51.656; -0.195 (King George's Fields)
TQ 250 969
PB2This site is mainly covered with coarse grasses, but it also has herb-rich fields dominated by creeping bent and red fescue, together with wild flowers commonly found on unimproved grassland. Oak trees grow in old hedges, and breeding birds include sparrowhawk and stock dove.[67]
Lakeside Nature Reserve 0.6Church End
51°35′58″N 0°11′06″W / 51.5994°N 0.1850°W / 51.5994; -0.1850 (Lakeside Nature Reserve)
TQ 257 904
VLThis site is a lake with a small island behind an office block, surrounded by a belt of trees. The island provides a safe breeding ground for wildfowl, away from mammalian predators. The lake also has fish, frogs, toads and terrapins.[68]
Lower Dollis Brook, Brent Park and River Brent 28Woodside Park/Hendon
51°34′19″N 0°14′10″W / 51.572°N 0.236°W / 51.572; -0.236 (Lower Dollis Brook)
TQ 243 906
PB2This site covers Dollis Brook between Woodside Park and its end in Temple Fortune, where it becomes the River Brent, the Brent as far as the A1, and Brent Park. At the Woodside Park end there is a wild area with old ivy-clad oaks and alder. Brent Park has a lake which may have been created by the abbots of Westminster almost a thousand years ago. It has a wooded island which provides a refuge for birds.[69]
Mill Hill Golf Course 60Mill Hill
51°38′02″N 0°15′32″W / 51.634°N 0.259°W / 51.634; -0.259 (Mill Hill Golf Course)
TQ 206 942
NOB1The golf course has several small streams which meet in Stoneyfields Lake, which was formed by damming Deans Brook. On the edges of the fairways there is a variety of wild flowers, some of them relics of old farm meadows. The most important area ecologically is acid grassland which contains the rare plant dyer's greenweed.[70]
Mill Hill Old Railway Nature Reserve 9Mill Hill
51°36′43″N 0°15′25″W / 51.612°N 0.257°W / 51.612; -0.257 (Mill Hill Old Railway Nature Reserve)
TQ 203 917
PLB2This linear nature reserve on the site of an old railway line is managed by the London Wildlife Trust. Trees in the woodland canopy include oak and sycamore, and there is a scrub layer of hawthorn, blackthorn and grey willow. The grassland has a range of wild flowers, and the site has a large population of slow-worms.[71]
Mill Hill Substation Pastures 15Mill Hill
51°37′00″N 0°12′38″W / 51.6168°N 0.2106°W / 51.6168; -0.2106 (Mill Hill Substation Pastures)
TQ 240 925
VMThe LEU described this site as a "remarkable example of unimproved herb-rich pasture on damp clay soil, with substantial populations of attractive and locally uncommon wild flowers". Burtonhole Brook crosses the site, providing a corridor of damp habitat, and old hedgerows and small areas of woodland provide a refuge for birds.[72]
Moat Mount Open Space and Barnet Gate Wood 110Mill Hill
51°38′02″N 0°15′11″W / 51.634°N 0.253°W / 51.634; -0.253 (Moat Mount Open Space and Barnet Gate Wood)
TQ 215 943
PB2 LNRMoat Mount is a large hilly area, which slopes down to valleys, which have open fields crossed by old hedgerows. Towards the top of the hill woodland opens out to Leg of Mutton Pond, which has clumps of water-lilies and Nuttall's waterweed. The site also includes the neighbouring Barnet Gate Wood, which is probably a remnant of an ancient forest.[73]
Monken Hadley Common 72Monken Hadley
51°39′36″N 0°10′37″W / 51.660°N 0.177°W / 51.660; -0.177 (Monken Hadley Common)
TQ 263 972
PB1 CLThis large common is mostly wooded, with small areas of grassland. Daubenton's bats forage over an artificial lake called Jack's Lake. The principal trees are oak, hornbeam and beech, and the ground flora includes several plants which are normally only present in ancient woodland. Breeding birds include sparrowhawk, tawny owl and cuckoo.[74]
Mutton Brook 13Hampstead Garden Suburb
51°35′13″N 0°12′36″W / 51.587°N 0.210°W / 51.587; -0.210 (Mutton Brook)
TQ 251 892
PLThe brook is a tributary of the River Brent. Oak, ash and willow trees fringe the bank, providing a habitat for birds, and grey wagtails forage at the water's edge. Woodland wild flowers include dog's mercury and winter heliotrope.[75][76]
New Southgate Cemetery 20Brunswick Park
51°37′26″N 0°08′38″W / 51.624°N 0.144°W / 51.624; -0.144 (New Southgate Cemetery)
TQ 286 933
PB2The cemetery is closely managed in the vicinity of recent burials, but woodland has developed in other areas, where young oak, ash, birch and sycamore are growing between mature oak and yew trees. There is a range of breeding birds such as green and great spotted woodpeckers, coal tit and nuthatch, and the cemetery is the most northerly known site for the dusky cockroach, a native species.[77]
North Middlesex Golf Course Ponds 0.8Whetstone
51°37′16″N 0°10′05″W / 51.621°N 0.168°W / 51.621; -0.168 (North Middlesex Golf Course Ponds)
TQ 269 930
NOB2These ponds have one of few known populations of palmate newts in Barnet, and there is also a colony of the more common smooth newt. The pond edges have some Michaelmas daisies and water mint. A ditch leads to a small area of woodland, and this is probably an important corridor for amphibia.[78]
Northern Line Embankment, High Barnet 6.5Totteridge/High Barnet
51°38′28″N 0°11′06″W / 51.641°N 0.185°W / 51.641; -0.185 (Northern Line Embankment, High Barnet)
TQ 256 951
VB2The vegetation varies between low bramble scrub and light woodland, and it provides a habitat for small birds such as tits and finches. The main ecological significance of the site lies in one of Barnet's few known colonies of the common lizard, which are protected by the absence of pesticides, and freedom from dogs, cats and people.[79]
Oak Hill Wood 10East Barnet
51°38′27″N 0°09′08″W / 51.6409°N 0.1521°W / 51.6409; -0.1521 (Oak Hill Wood)
TQ 280 951
PB1 LNRThis wood is managed by the London Wildlife Trust. The canopy is oak, hornbeam and ash, with some horse chestnut trees. Ground plants include bluebell and wood speedwell. A small stream flows through the wood, and a meadow has common wild flowers and butterflies. The site also has several bat species.[80]
Oakleigh Park Rail Cutting 8.0Oakleigh Park
51°37′59″N 0°09′43″W / 51.633°N 0.162°W / 51.633; -0.162 (Oakleigh Park Rail Cutting)
TQ 272 944
VLThis site has a diverse habitat. The eastern bank has an open expanse of bramble scrub with clumps of blackthorn, hawthorn and dog-rose. The western bank has a mature woodland of oak, ash and sycamore, with goat willow in wetter areas. Tall herbs are useful to seed eating birds such goldfinch, wrens and dunnocks.[81]
Princes Park 1.2Temple Fortune
51°34′55″N 0°12′22″W / 51.5820°N 0.2061°W / 51.5820; -0.2061 (Princes Park)
TQ 243 885
PLThis small park is highly managed, with mown lawns and flowerbeds, but some of the old trees pre-date the surrounding houses. In the south-east corner a small woodland appears to be a fragment of an old farm wood. Mature hawthorns around the perimeter may be relics of old farm hedgerows.[82]
Pymme's Brook 13Monken Hadley/New Southgate
51°37′55″N 0°08′46″W / 51.6320°N 0.1462°W / 51.6320; -0.1462 (Pymme's Brook)
TQ 284 942
PB2Two separate sections of Pymme's Brook are included in this site. The northern section, which runs 500 metres from Monken Hadley, goes through rough grassland and scattered scrub, with a narrow strip of oak woodland. The three kilometre southern stretch to the boundary with Enfield is largely wooded. One part is ancient, with an understorey which includes wild service-trees, midland hawthorn, field maple and crab apple.[83]
Rowley Green Common 4.9Arkley
51°39′01″N 0°14′36″W / 51.6502°N 0.2433°W / 51.6502; -0.2433 (Rowley Green Common)
TQ 217 960
PM LNR CLThis site has a mosaic of habitats with different conditions and many rare species. Most of it is woodland with fairly young trees, and the most important area ecologically is a sphagnum bog, described by the LEU as an extremely rare habitat in south-east England. The site also has an area of acid grassland and a pond which supports diverse wetland plants.[84]
Rowley Lodge Field 4.4Arkley
51°38′44″N 0°14′28″W / 51.6456°N 0.2410°W / 51.6456; -0.2410 (Rowley Lodge Field)
TQ 218 955
FB2This is an old hay meadow with a few oak trees and small patches of scrub. It has diverse wild flowers, including great burnet and pignut. Areas of acid grassland are dominated by red fescue, together with sheep's sorrel and tormentil.[85]
Scratchwood 57Mill Hill
51°38′24″N 0°15′50″W / 51.640°N 0.264°W / 51.640; -0.264 (Scratchwood)
TQ 201 948
PM LNRPart of Scratchwood is ancient woodland, possibly dating back to the end of the last ice age, which has small streams, tall sessile oaks and old hornbeams. Other areas include Bluebell Wood, which is more open and has extensive carpets of wild flowers, and Scratchwood Pond which has marshy areas nearby described by the LEU as botanically very rich.[86]
Silk Stream and Burnt Oak Brook 8Edgware
51°35′56″N 0°15′32″W / 51.599°N 0.259°W / 51.599; -0.259 (Silk Stream and Burnt Oak Brook)
TQ 207 903
PPB2These streams were described by the LEU as valuable wildlife corridors through suburban housing. Mallards and grey wagtails are often seen along the banks, and fish include three-spined stickleback. The streams are best seen when they go through parks, such as Silkstream Park, Montrose Recreation Ground and Rushgrove Park.[87]
St Pancras and Islington Cemetery 74East Finchley
51°36′00″N 0°09′54″W / 51.600°N 0.165°W / 51.600; -0.165 (St Pancras and Islington Cemetery)
TQ 272 907
PB2Parts of this cemetery which are no longer used for burials are managed for nature conservation. These areas have woodland and open grassland, while Strawberry Vale Brook which flows through the north-east corner. The LEU considered the understorey of the wood as surprisingly rich, including pignut, goldilocks buttercup, cuckooflower, primrose, wild and barren strawberries.[88]
Sulloniacis Pastures 4.2Edgware
51°37′55″N 0°18′07″W / 51.632°N 0.302°W / 51.632; -0.302 (Sulloniacis Pastures)
TQ 176 940
VB2Most of this site is herb-rich grassland on London Clay, and it has many flowers typical of clay pasture such as greater bird's-foot-trefoil, burnet saxifrage, agrimony and devil's-bit scabious. There are also small plots of woodland and scrub.[57]
Sunny Hill Park and Hendon Churchyard 22Hendon
51°35′49″N 0°13′48″W / 51.597°N 0.230°W / 51.597; -0.230 (Sunny Hill Park and Hendon Churchyard)
TQ 227 901
PLMost of this site is formal parkland, but at the southern end there is a wild flower meadow with black knapweed, common sorrel, lesser stitchwort and three species of buttercup. An area at the northern end is managed to preserve slow-worms.[89]
The Mill Field 3.4Mill Hill
51°37′19″N 0°14′10″W / 51.622°N 0.236°W / 51.622; -0.236 (The Mill Field)
TQ 221 929
PB2The grassland in the more natural part of this site has scattered oak and willow scrub, and mature trees and hedgerows on the periphery. There is a variety of wild flowers, and the small copper butterfly has been recorded. A small pond has rich aquatic flora including nodding bur-marigold and branched bur-reed.[90]
Totteridge Common 3Totteridge
51°37′53″N 0°13′22″W / 51.6315°N 0.2227°W / 51.6315; -0.2227 (Totteridge Common)
TQ 230 939
PB2 CLThe trees on this site are mostly sycamore and elm, but it also has two black poplars, which are considered England's most threatened native tree.[91] The most important feature ecologically is a chain of old ponds, which are valuable for dragonflies, other insects and amphibians. Plants in deep water include white water-lily and curled and broad-leaved pondweeds.[92]
Totteridge Croft Field (or Dell's Down Acre) 2.4Totteridge
51°37′34″N 0°11′53″W / 51.626°N 0.198°W / 51.626; -0.198 (Totteridge Croft Field)
TQ 248 934
NOB1This site was described by the LEU as an interesting example of unimproved clay grassland. Much of it is covered with tufted hair-grass, but there is considerable variety between the different fields. There is a variety of wild flowers, including uncommon species such as sneezewort and pignut.[93]
Totteridge Fields and Highwood Hill 103Arkley
TQ 231 945
51°37′55″N 0°14′02″W / 51.632°N 0.234°W / 51.632; -0.234 (Totteridge Fields)
TQ 222 935
PPM LNRThis site has large areas of uncultivated grassland with old hedgerows. Part of it is a local nature reserve managed by the London Wildlife Trust. There is a wide range of wild flowers, including some that are locally uncommon, and breeding birds include the skylark, which is a declining species. A number of beetles and spiders found here are nationally rare.[94]
Totteridge Green 4.6Totteridge
51°37′41″N 0°11′43″W / 51.6281°N 0.1953°W / 51.6281; -0.1953 (Totteridge Green)
TQ 250 936
PB2 CLThis is a typical English village green with open grassland, scattered trees, small areas of scrubby woodland and a pond. The main grasses are perennial rye-grass and other coarse meadow species. There are several damp hollows, probably former ponds, which have uncommon wild flowers such as great burnet and bog stitchwort. Woodland plants include soft shield-fern, which is rare locally.[95]
Turner's Wood 2.4Hampstead Garden Suburb
51°34′20″N 0°10′43″W / 51.5722°N 0.1785°W / 51.5722; -0.1785 (Turner's Wood)
TQ 263 875
NOB2This private nature reserve is a fragment of Bishops Wood, part of the Bishop of London's medieval estate. The landscape is undulating, with two small streams going through the centre. The main tree in the canopy is sessile oak, with a rich understorey including rowan, midland hawthorn and some wild service-trees. The site is managed for nature conservation, especially for birds.[96]
Upper Dollis Brook 40Mill Hill/Woodside Park
51°34′18″N 0°14′10″W / 51.5717°N 0.2361°W / 51.5717; -0.2361 (Upper Dollis Brook)
TQ 253 943
PB1This six kilometre long stretch runs from Arkley to Woodside Park, and the site also includes neighbouring areas such as Whetstone Stray and Wyatt's Open Space, which have flower-rich meadows divided by old hedges. The hedges have uncommon shrubs such as spindle and buckthorn. Birds seen along the stream include kingfishers, grey wagtails and moorhens.[97]
Woodridge School Nature Reserve 2.5Woodside Park
51°37′22″N 0°11′44″W / 51.6227°N 0.1955°W / 51.6227; -0.1955 (Woodridge School Nature Reserve)
TQ 250 930
PLThis small site was established as a nature garden for local primary schools. It has young oak woodland and rough grassland, which has wild flowers such as pignut and yellow archangel.[98]

See also

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External links