Wildwood Discovery Park

Wildwood Discovery Park

Wildwood Discovery Park is a woodland discovery park in north-east Kent, England. It features over fifty species of native British animals such as deer, badgers, wild boar and wolves. It is located on the main road between Herne Bay and Canterbury.

Wildwood is a Registered Charity in England, No 1093702, whose aim is to save British Wildlife from extinction and reintroduce recently made extinct animals such as European beaver, wild boar and Modern Tarpan (Konik Horse).

Wildwood Trust are achieving this through operating the UK's most successful British Wildlife education project attracting nearly 100,000 visitors each year and educating 13,000 children on organised education trips. Wildwood Trust has an active membership of 30,000 people.

Visitors to the park can see British animals species past and present, with the animals set in natural enclosures.

Wildwood's Animal Collection:

The collection reflects species currently native, introduced and those previously native to Britain, back to the last ice age (~10,000 years ago). Wildwood Trust currently maintains the most varied native collection in the UK, comprising 30 mammals (including 11 rodents), 18 birds, 6 reptiles and 4 amphibians. The two highlights for visitors are the large pack of European wolves roaming a wooded enclosure, and a group of badgers in their underground set. Other species rarely kept in UK collections are water shrews, pine martens, stoats, roe deer, European beaver, coypu (the only exhibit of this species in the UK), ravens, Eurasiancranes and Northern adders.

Education

Wildwood Trust's Education team offers a range of National Curriculum-linked programmes for local schools, such as adaptation, homes and habitats through to animals in Viking myths and English folklore, as well as running an informal public education programme including talks and events. Educators and animal staff work closely together to host a variety of programmes, from animal talks to training courses.

Conservation

One species that Wildwood is indelibly linked with is the breeding of water voles. This species was in recent years tagged‘the most catastrophically endangered species in the UK’ because of the decline linked to habitat loss and the impact of introducedmink. While previously a lot of effort went into mitigation contracts and supplying other zoos with stock, Wildwood Trust isnow concentrating on reintroducing the species into new or reclaimed habitat through partnerships with other conservationorganisations, in particular WildCru at Oxford University.

Another major success has been the reintroduction of captive-bred hazel dormice, with a large number of Wildwoodstock transferred to sites in the Midlands and Yorkshire. Other on-going projects include DNA and behavioural research on pinemartens with Waterford Institute of Technology in Éire; funding for the pool frog reintroduction with Herpetological ConservationTrust/English Nature; water shrew husbandry with Imperial College, London; and in-situ breeding of harvest mice with ChesterZoo.

Future projects will see Wildwood being more involved the utilisation of large herbivores for near-natural grazing.

Two species (European beavers and konik polski) are currently used for these purposes on several reserves in Kent. Konik polski (meaning ‘Polish small horses’) are a robust breed closely related to the extinct tarpan and have been used in similar grazing schemes in the Netherlands and Poland. The long-term vision is for Wildwood Trust to manage large tracts of land with large once-native herbivores such as koniks, beavers, wild boar, and heck cattle (re-created aurochs).

That future vision will hopefully see British people experiencing the real Wildwood again.

The Wildwood Site:

A twisting trail winds through 42 acres of natural ancient woodland which is attached to the Blean, the largest tract ofancient woodland in southern England dating back to the Domesday Book. The woods have been managed by humans on acoppice rotation, harvesting trees between 5-20 years, allowing the stools to regenerate. Much of the Blean woods are a Site ofSignificant Interest due to the extensive areas of heather and hazel, both which thrive in coppiced woodland. Heather provides animportant habitat for the uncommon heath fritillary butterfly "Melitaea athalia", a UK BAP priority species, historically linked with traditional woodland coppicing. The caterpillar’s food plant cow-wheat is also abundant in the woodland.

Consisting mainly of sweet chestnut, silver birch and English oak, one area of Wildwood includes a former conifer plantation ofCorsican pine and Western hemlock. Some timber is used in the park, while much is left to provide suitable habitat for invertebratesand small mammals. The natural wildlife in the park includes red foxes, hazel dormice, wood and yellow-necked mice, bank andfield voles, common and pygmy shrews, nightingale, woodpeckers (all three species), tawny owls, jays, tits (four species), thrushes,stag beetles, dragonflies, wood ants, bumblebees and butterflies.

History

Wildwoood's history can be traced back to the 1970s when Terry Standford, Operations Director of English Woodlands, created a woodland nature reserve which grew into a small wildlife park in a woodland setting. Following major reinvestment ‘WildwoodDiscovery Centre’ started life in 1999 as a visitor centre, with the vision to educate local people about the need to conserve nativewildlife and their habitats.

After three years of Wildwood being open Wildwood's founders decided its future was best ensured by it becoming a charitable trust The Trust was formed By Kenneth West, a retired company Chairman and Peter Smith, a conservation scientist and charity management expert and they assumed running of the park in June 2002, and officially took over the park in December of that year. Since then has been known as Wildwood Trust. The Trust has grown considerably in this time and is now one of the largest charities in Kent.

External links

[http://www.wildwoodtrust.org Wildwood website]


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