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website, town owned and operated 150-acre park and nature center Audubon Center at Bent of the River: Southbury: New Haven: Part of the National Audubon Society, 700 acres with 15 miles of trails Audubon Greenwich: Greenwich: Fairfield: website, part of the National Audubon Society, main sanctuary is 285 acres with 7 miles of trails
Kerridge Hill is a designated nature reserve, managed and owned (since 2019) by the Cheshire Wildlife Trust. The reserve is a species-rich grassland with an abundance of native wildflowers including betony , devils-bit scabious and knapweed .
This is a list of state parks, reserves, forests and wildlife management areas (WMAs) in the Connecticut state park and forest system, shown in five tables. The first table lists state parks and reserves, the second lists state park trails, the third lists state forests, the fourth lists Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs) and the fifth lists other state-owned, recreation-related areas.
The Cheshire Wildlife Trust (CWT) was granted tenancy over the land in 1993 by the site's owner at the time, the British Railways Board. In 1997, Frithmere Ltd. (a subsidiary of Brock PLC of Ellesmere Port) bought the land in an open auction. In 2009 New Ferry Butterfly Park was threatened with closure when CWT was told to vacate the site by ...
Urban park: Main urban park with listed war memorial pillar [19] Victoria Park: Warrington: Urban park: On the banks of the River Mersey with athletics stadium: Walton Hall: Warrington: Park and formal gardens: With zoo, events and leisure activities: Walton Lea Walled Garden: Warrington: Walled garden: Managed by a charity: Whitby Park ...
rECOrd is a Local Biological Records Centre (LRC) serving Cheshire, Halton, Warrington and Wirral (including the vice-county 'pan-handle' boundary around Stockport) - 'The Cheshire region'. It provides a local facility for the storage, validation and usage of Cheshire-based biological data under the National Biodiversity Network (NBN) project.
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There were several campaigns to maintain public access to the lake after it was bought by the Wildlife Trust in 1998. [4] Initially the Trust fenced off the only access point to the lake suitable for swimmers. A pressure group, the Friends of Hatchmere, was formed, and eventually the Wildlife Trust backed down and agreed to allow swimming in ...