Foster's Green Meadows National Nature Reserve

LOCATION

BROMSGROVE, WORCESTERSHIRE

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Our View

Eades Meadow, the largest field in the Foster’s Green Meadows NNR, is a traditional hay meadow with surviving medieval ridge-and-furrow earthworks. It is surrounded by dense hedges made up of field maple, wild service, spindle and elm. Foster’s Green and Eades Meadows were once part of Foster’s Green Farm and their importance lies in the fact that they have not been ploughed for at least 100 years nor have they ever been treated with chemical fertilisers, herbicides or other agricultural chemicals. The meadows lie on heavy clay soils, and the main natural history interest lies in the over 180 plants which have been recorded here, and the huge number of insects, spiders and other invertebrates that they support. Eades Meadow is particularly famous for its green-winged orchids in spring and meadow saffron in autumn. The colour of the meadow changes daily as different plants come into flower throughout the spring and summer.

Foster's Green Meadows National Nature Reserve
BROMSGROVE, B60 4HY

Features

About the area

Discover Worcestershire

Worcestershire is a county of rolling hills, save for the flat Vale of Evesham in the east and the prominent spine of the Malverns in the west. Nearly all of the land is worked in some way; arable farming predominates – oilseed rape, cereals and potatoes – but there are concentrated areas of specific land uses, such as market gardening and plum growing.

Worcester is the county town, and home to Worcestershire County Cricket Club, which has what some regard as the most attractive grounds in the country, in a delightful setting with views of Worcester Cathedral. The Malverns, Great and Little, set on the slopes of the Malvern Hills, are renowned for their refinement. Great Malvern, terraced on its hillside site, came to prominence as a genteel spa for well-to-do Victorians, rivalling the likes of Bath, Buxton and Cheltenham with its glorious surroundings.

Sir Edward Elgar was a Worcester man, and his statue stands on the High Street, facing the cathedral. The cottage where he was born is now a museum and he is commemorated on the £20 note. Other notable Worcestershire figures include poet A E Housman, chocolate magnate George Cadbury; and Lea and Perrins, inventors of Worcestershire sauce.

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