Barton Hills, Bedfordshire

Barton Hills
Barton Hills

 Barton Hills shown within Bedfordshire
OS grid reference TL08847295
List of places: UK • England • Bedfordshire

Barton Hills are situated southeast of the village of Barton-le-Clay in the English county of Bedfordshire. They are part of the Chilterns and hiking routes are marked on maps at the entrance to the hills. From the foot of the hillside, a spring (Barton Springs) marks the start of a chalk stream river. During the summer, Dartmoor ponies roam the hills.

National Nature Reserve

A large part of the area is managed by Natural England as a National Nature Reserve.[1] The reserve is also designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.[2]

The steep well-grazed slopes are a classic downland habitat, however there were no sheep on the hills from about 1930 until the 1980s and woodland has formed on the hillside to the west of the stream which issues from Barton Springs. The reserve is the main site in Bedfordshire for the pasqueflower (Pulsatilla vulgaris), and in some years over a thousand flowers are present. Other unusual plants are field fleawort and a dwarf form of hairy violet.[3]

Barton Gravel Pit

To the east of the main reserve area, near the border between Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire, () there is Barton Gravel Pit, a nature reserve managed by the Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and Peterborough.[4]

References

  1. ^ Natural England, Barton Hills NNR.
  2. ^ Natural England, Barton Hills.
  3. ^ B.S. Nau, C. R. Boon, and J. P. Knowles, Bedfordshire Wildlife, Castlemead, 1987, ISBN 0-948555-05-X, pages 86-89.
  4. ^ Wildlife Trust, Barton Gravel Pit.