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MENUMENU
  • Home
  • Discover
        • Discover the Blackdown Hills

        • Blackdown Hills National Landscape
        • Landscape
        • Habitats
        • Wildlife
        • Farming
        • Community
        • Art and culture
        • Heritage and history
        • Teachers' resources
  • Visit
        • Visit the Blackdown Hills

        • Places to see
        • Easy to access
        • Viewpoints
        • Heritage
        • Wildlife sites
        • Events
        • Walks and rides
          • Walking
          • Easy routes
          • Cycling routes
          • Horse riding
        • Maps
        • Transport
        • Visitor advice
        • 30 ways to explore
        • Explore & create for children
  • About us
        • About Blackdown Hills National Landscape

        • What is a National Landscape?
        • What we do
        • How we are funded
        • Blackdown Hills Partnership
        • Management Group
        • Meet the team
        • Jobs
        • Contact us
  • Our work
        • Our work

        • Management plan
        • Planning
        • Annual reviews
        • Document Library
        • Our projects
        • Current Projects
          • Connecting the Culm
          • Farming & Woodland Group
          • Landscape Enhancement Initiative
          • Making Rivers Better
          • Nature Recovery Plan
          • Rivers Run Through Us
          • Triple Axe project
        • Completed Projects
          • ELMS Tests and Trials
          • Blackdown Hills Natural Futures
          • Catchment Communities Conference
          • Corry and Coly Natural Flood Management
          • Culm Community Crayfish project
          • Culm Enhancement Project
          • Discovering Dunkeswell Abbey
          • Dunkeswell War Stories
          • Field boundaries & linear landscape features
          • Nature and Wellbeing
          • Metal Makers
          • Somerset Nature Connections
          • Woods for Water
  • Get involved
        • Get involved

        • Volunteering
        • Wildlife sightings
        • Community projects
        • Find funding
          • Access for All
          • Farming in Protected Landscapes
          • Sustainable Development Fund
          • Blackdown Hills Countryside Fund
        • Donate
        • John Greenshields Award
  • News & social

Archives

Monthly Archive for: "March, 2019"
The Forestry England looks after several sites around the Blackdown Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty including Castle Neroche and Staple Hill. Community Ranger, Rob Greenhalgh, shares his woodland wisdom and springtime updates...
 Spring awakening – what’s happening in the woods?
0
By Rob Greenhalgh
In Farming & land management, Nature & wellbeing, Nature & wildlife, Volunteering
Posted 26th March 2019

Spring awakening – what’s happening in the woods?

The Forestry England looks after several sites around the Blackdown Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty including

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