Search our site
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Willow, goat
Also known as the pussy willow, the male catkins of the goat willow look like a cat’s paws. It supports lots of wildlife, including the elusive and regal purple emperor butterfly.
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Willow, bay
Small but pretty, the bay willow is named after its smell and misleading appearance. It’s a lover of damp conditions, and feeder of pollinators and caterpillars.
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Willow, white
Silvery leaved, waterside and fenland dweller. White willow feeds and shelters native wildlife and has been a source of natural remedies for centuries.
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Willow, osier
Strong, neat and bendy, osier willow is the best of the best for basket weaving. It’s not only a source of food and shelter for native wildlife, it can even decontaminate soils it is planted on!
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Willow warbler
A common and dainty summer visitor with a mournful song that rings through the trees. The willow warbler likes to sing and shake its feathers while it forages for insects.
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Willow, crack
Scruffy and loud, the crack willow is named after its habit of splitting with cracks and fissures, and how noisy its branches are when they break. It’s one of the largest willows and its leaves are popular with moth caterpillars.
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Willow, grey
A soft, silvery lover of damp woodland, the grey willow is a bit scruffy but full of charm. Caterpillars flock to feed on its leaves and its fuzzy catkins are an early pollen source for pollinators.
-
Blog
Chiffchaff or willow warbler? How to tell the difference
Chiffchaffs and willow warblers will start to arrive on our shores soon. Do you know how to tell the difference?
Charlotte Armitage • 19 Mar 2018
-
Woodland Trust Wood
Windy Willow Wood
Runcorn
1.35 ha (3.34 acres)
-
Somerset County Council Wood
Glastonbury Willow Walk
Somerset
1.41 ha (3.48 acres)
-
Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council Wood
Willow Bed Plantation
Merseyside
1.69 ha (4.18 acres)
-
Privately owned Wood
Willow Farm Woodlands
Leicestershire
39.51 ha (97.63 acres)
-
Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council Wood
Ryton Willows
Tyne & Wear
7.22 ha (17.84 acres)
-
The Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside Wood
Willow Farm Wood
Lancashire
4.23 ha (10.45 acres)
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Poplar leaf beetle
A bright-coloured, picky eater. The poplar leaf beetle spends its time munching on the leaves of willows and, you guessed it, poplars.
-
Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council Wood
Willow Ground Wood
Lancashire
1.97 ha (4.87 acres)
-
Portsmouth City Council Wood
Willow Dene
Hampshire
0.74 ha (1.83 acres)
-
Privately owned Wood
Willowbrook
Oxfordshire
5.94 ha (14.68 acres)
-
Trees woods and wildlife
Wet woodland
Wild, transient, boggy and rare. Wet woodlands are now some of our least common wooded habitats. Trees like alder, willows and birch dominate on wet soils, whilst sedges, ferns and mosses flourish beneath.
-
Privately owned Wood
Willow Farm
Suffolk
1.12 ha (2.77 acres)