Calke Park National Nature Reserve

LOCATION

TICKNALL, DERBYSHIRE

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Our View

Parts of the Calke Park NNR are the remnants of a grazed medieval woodland known as wood pasture, with many trees at least 400 years old, including oak, beech and small-leaved lime. This wood pasture is dominated by more than 200 huge, stag-headed oaks ­that are some of the largest and most ancient trees in Britain. One, known as ‘The Old Man of Calke’, is thought to be over 1,200 years old. The reserve is also well known for its fungi, over 350 species of beetles and at least eight species of bats. The NNR is the tenth best site in Britain for invertebrates that live on dead and decaying wood. There are also red and fallow deer in the restored deer enclosure. Calke NNR is home to many species of woodland birds including spotted flycatcher, great spotted woodpecker, green woodpecker, tree creeper and nuthatch. Look out for little owls and tawny owls in summer and redwings and jays in winter.

Calke Park National Nature Reserve
Ticknall

Features

About the area

Discover Derbyshire

The natural features of this central English county range from the modest heights of the Peak District National Park, where Kinder Scout stands at 2,088 ft (636 m), to the depths of its remarkable underground caverns, floodlit to reveal exquisite Blue John stone. Walkers and cyclists will enjoy the High Peak Trail which extends from the Derwent Valley to the limestone plateau near Buxton, and for many, the spectacular scenery is what draws them to the area.

The county is well endowed with stately homes – most notably Chatsworth, the palatial home of the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, with its outstanding collections of paintings, statuary and art. Other gems include the well preserved medieval Haddon Hall, the Elizabethan Hardwick Hall, and Kedleston Hall, whose entrance front has been described as the grandest Palladian façade in Britain.

The spa town of Matlock is the county’s administrative centre and other major towns of interest include Derby and the old coal mining town of Chesterfield, with its crooked spire. Around the villages of Derbyshire, look out for the ancient tradition of well dressing, the decorating of springs and wells – the precious sources of life-sustaining water – with pictures formed from flowers.

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