Chance Wood

Chance Wood by Pauline Homer

Chance Wood by Pauline Homer

Chance Wood

A small plantation woodland with carpets of spring flowers.

Location

Stourton
Stourbridge
DY7 5BQ
A static map of Chance Wood

Know before you go

Size
3 hectares
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Parking information

There is no parking at the wood. Nearest Nearest parking is approx 1km down the main road by the canal at Stourton.
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Walking trails

The reserve is not far from the River Stour and the Staffordshire & Worcestershire Canal.

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Access

Please keep to marked paths, which are muddy and slippery when wet.

Dogs

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When to visit

Opening times

Open at all times

Best time to visit

February to June

About the reserve

This small reserve was planted as an ornamental wood in the 19th century.  It is dominated by large oaks and beech with big specimens of hornbeam, ash, sycamore, horse chestnut and a few conifers. Visitors to this open woodland on a hillside overlooking the River Stour will come across glades of bracken and bramble.  A dry valley runs through the reserve and down to the river.

Wood sage and foxgloves thrive on the rather acid soil, produced by underlying well-drained pebble-beds and sandstones.  Extensive carpets of snowdrops appear early in the year, followed by daffodils and bluebells later.  Frequent visitors will also discover dame’s violet and Italian lords-and-ladies, a relative of wild arum with dark green leaves and palely marked veins.  The latter are garden escapes that have become naturalised.

Many woodland birds thrive here; tits, woodpeckers, nuthatches and treecreepers are frequently seen.  The old trees provide a good supply of invertebrate food and contain suitable nesting holes.  These have been supplemented with nest boxes and bat boxes. 

The woodland also features a small cemetery for dogs on the hilltop.  The headstones date back to 1869.  Who was “Punch, died 1898”?

Contact us

Andy Harris
Contact number: 01905 754919

Location map