Beeding Hill to Newtimber Hill

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationWest Sussex
Coordinates50°53′13″N 0°13′26″W / 50.887°N 0.224°W / 50.887; -0.224
InterestBiological
Geological
Beeding Hill to Newtimber Hill
Site of Special Scientific Interest
Beeding Hill to Newtimber Hill is located in West Sussex
Beeding Hill to Newtimber Hill
Location within West Sussex
LocationWest Sussex
Grid referenceTQ 250 112[1]
Coordinates50°53′13″N 0°13′26″W / 50.887°N 0.224°W / 50.887; -0.224
InterestBiological
Geological
Area321.0 ha (793 acres)[1]
Notification1986[1]

Beeding Hill to Newtimber Hill is a 321 ha (790-acre) biological and geological Downland Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) north of Shoreham-by-Sea in West Sussex.[1][2] It is a Nature Conservation Review site, Grade 2,[3] and it includes Devil's Dyke Geological Conservation Review site.[4][5]

There are thirteen distinct areas within this SSSI. Most of it is on the north-facing slope of the South Downs on unimproved chalk grassland. Grazed chalk downland, such as this, has a diverse flora with around 40 flowering plants per square metre.[6] There are areas of scrub and in places this scrub has developed into woodland, and there are also some areas of mature beech woodland.

The richest areas are dominated by upright brome and fine-leaved grasses such as sheep's fescue and crested hair-grass. The site supports rare orchid species including frog orchid and in the woodlands, yellow bird's nest and bird's nest orchid. The site supports a nationally important assemblage of the Opilionid group of Arachnids (harvestmen), a locality of the nationally uncommon scarce forester moth and the adonis blue butterfly.[7]

Anchor Bottom at Sunset

The western three areas of the SSSI are in the Upper Beeding parish. These areas are separated from the ten areas to the east by approximately a kilometre of undesignated intensively farmed land. These western areas include Anchor Bottom, a precious piece of unimproved chalk grassland in excellent condition, with many species that are characteristic of good quality chalk grassland such as fairy flax, round-headed rampion, thyme and kidney vetch. There are large Adonis blue butterfly emergences in this area in most years.[8]

The other two areas are both on the north slope of Beeding Hill. The western area (area two) includes the Lynchet Triangle (TQ 207 098), which has medieval ‘cultivation terraces’ which were strips of open fields cultivated until the middle of the nineteenth century. In 2008 there was yellow rattle, three orchid species, common and latticed heath moths and grizzled skipper butterfly as well as glowworms,[9] but the area is deteriorating and is in unfavourable condition, due to lack of grazing.[1]

There are two bostals that run up the escarpment. One, called The Bostal, runs up from Castle Town, Upper Beeding and the other runs up from Golding Barn. This second trackway's sides retain good chalk grassland flora, with horseshoe vetch, orchids and harebell, and overhanging wayfaring tree and old man's beard (wild clematis). The slopes have abundant yellow cowslips in spring and in autumn there are persistent waxcaps fungi. There are many butterflies, moths, mosses and lichen and the tony moss snail and scree snail.

Truleigh Hill to Fulking Hill

Pathway to Fulking from Perching Hill

The midsection areas run between Truleigh Hill and Fulking Hill (areas four to seven). These areas are largely north-facing escarpment slopes in unfavourable but recovering condition with the exception of Truliegh Hill, which in good condition, with summer flowers such as small and devil's bit scabious, horseshoe vetch and bird's foot trefoil.[10]

This area spans the parishes of Upper Beeding and Fulking and at its centre is Edburton Hill (TQ 237 110), which still has evidence of the banks of a Motte and Bailey castle, built by a Norman overlord. The banks of the Motte and Bailey have field fleawort and chalk milkwort.[9]

There were once four manors that grazed their sheep in this area. These were Truleigh, Aburton (spelt the way old Sussex folk pronounced Edburton), Paythorne and Perching, and each had its chunk of Down pasture on the greensand arable under the Downs, their sticky wooded patch of Gault clay beyond, and more pasture on the fertile lower greensand to the north. Each of these four farmsteads still exist and can be seen from these hills, although only Truleigh Manor still has its old working farmyard. Each of the farmsteads had a daughter farm to the north on the lower greensand — Truleigh Sands, Edburton Sands, Nettledown and Perching Sands. The woods of Tottington-Longlands and Perching Hovel mark the poorly-drained Gault clay. And the spire of Hurstpierpoint church and the glaring white cottages of Nep Town, Henfield, mark the extension of the lower greensand ridge to the north.[9]

There are number of tracks that run up from the Edburton Road, including the Edburton bostal, Perching bostal and Fulking bostal.

Devil's Dyke and surrounding woodland

Newtimber Hill and Newtimber Holt

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI