Try GOLD - Free

Dartmoor's Twisted Oaks

Landscape

|

March/April 2017

With its ancient moss-covered trees and boulder-strewn floor, Wistman’s Wood exudes an atmosphere of mystery.

- Simone Stanbrook-Byrne

Dartmoor's Twisted Oaks

AT THE HEART of remote Dartmoor in England’s South West lies a strange and mysterious wood. Pale spring sunlight trickles through just-unfurling leaves, cascading down twisted, stunted trunks of oak trees. Huge, moss-softened boulders cover the woodland floor. The music of the meandering West Dart River filters through lichen-festooned branches, creating a harmony with birdsong. At the woodland edge, a cuckoo calls.

This is Wistman’s Wood, a long, narrow tract of trees flanking the west-facing slope of a valley 165ft (50m) from the river. It is one of only three high-altitude woods on the moor. At its highest point, the 8.5 acre wood sits 1,425ft (435m) above sea level. This altitude makes it a rare habitat for the south of England, with a range of plants more typical of northern England or the Scottish Highlands.

Within its borders, lichens and bryophytes – primitive non-vascular types of plant communities such as mosses and liverworts – cloak the gnarled branches. They bring an ethereal, haunted quality to the wood. Their dense velvet and frilled greenery upholster the mighty granite boulders known as clitter. Swathes of fruticose lichen, an indicator of clean air, drip from the twisted branches. In 2003, 158 species of lichen were recorded here, including usnea, or bearded lichens. These have expressive and descriptive common names such as string-of-sausage and witches’ whiskers. Their greyish-green, wispy forms against the dark trunks create a long-forgotten, almost lost world ambience.

Shaped by nature

The woodland sits within a larger National Nature Reserve, itself within a Site of Special Scientific Interest. It is managed by Natural England.

MORE STORIES FROM Landscape

Landscape

Landscape

Frost-Coated Waves

A Norfolk garden’s airy grasses and lingering seedheads create an inspiring sight of beauty, texture and movement in the winter months.

time to read

7 mins

January - February 2017

Landscape

Landscape

The Garden In... March And April

Kari-Astri Davies is settling in plants and sowing seeds to enjoy her garden in the months ahead.

time to read

6 mins

March/April 2017

Landscape

Landscape

Pots Of Sunshine

The most joyful early flowers, daffodils thrive in containers, creating bright spots of colour.

time to read

3 mins

March/April 2017

Landscape

Landscape

Dartmoor's Twisted Oaks

With its ancient moss-covered trees and boulder-strewn floor, Wistman’s Wood exudes an atmosphere of mystery.

time to read

4 mins

March/April 2017

Landscape

Landscape

Recreating The Living Past

A painstakingly - created model landscapes encapsulates the essence of a rural Oxfordshire vale in bygone times

time to read

7 mins

September/October 2017

Landscape

The Wild Mushroom Hunter

Wayne Thomas uses his expert eye to forage for edible fungi in the woodlands of the Wye Valley

time to read

6 mins

September/October 2017

Landscape

Landscape

Flush Of Rich Perfume

The pink buds and flowers of Viburnum x bodnantense bring a sweet fragrance to frosty borders

time to read

3 mins

January - February 2018

Landscape

Landscape

Brewing A Heritage

A family business in the heart of the Black Country produces beer the traditional way

time to read

3 mins

January - February 2018

Landscape

Landscape

Bold Performers

Their striking appearance may belie a tender nature, but a long, colourful display earns Hebe speciosa hybrids a sheltered place in the garden

time to read

6 mins

September/October 2017

Landscape

Landscape

Mellowed In Time

At the foot of the South Downs sits an East Sussex garden where grasses wave in the wind and flowers thread through ribbons of foliage

time to read

9 mins

September/October 2017

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size