Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Herts_and_Middlesex_Wildlife_Trust an entity of type: Thing

Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust manages over 40 nature reserves covering nearly 810 hectares (2,000 acres) north of London, in Hertfordshire and the historic county of Middlesex, part of which is divided between the London boroughs of Barnet, Enfield, Harrow and Hillingdon. It has over 21,000 members, and is one of 46 Wildlife Trusts across the UK. It is a Registered Charity, with its Registered Office in St Albans, and had an income in the year to 31 March 2014 of over £1.5 million. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust
rdf:langString Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust
rdf:langString Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust
xsd:integer 22022482
xsd:integer 1111334956
rdf:langString Local Wildlife Sites Newsletter
rdf:langString signage and a wooden gate in woodland
rdf:langString The entrance to Hexton Chalk Pit, near Hitchin
xsd:date 1964-10-09
rdf:langString Hertfordshire and Middlesex Wildlife Trust Limited
rdf:langString St Albans, Hertfordshire
xsd:integer 290
rdf:langString Lesley Davies
rdf:langString Chief Executive
rdf:langString TheWildlifeTrusts.svg
rdf:langString The Wildlife Trusts badger logo
xsd:integer 180
rdf:langString Hertfordshire, parts of North London
rdf:langString Conservation charity
rdf:langString Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust manages over 40 nature reserves covering nearly 810 hectares (2,000 acres) north of London, in Hertfordshire and the historic county of Middlesex, part of which is divided between the London boroughs of Barnet, Enfield, Harrow and Hillingdon. It has over 21,000 members, and is one of 46 Wildlife Trusts across the UK. It is a Registered Charity, with its Registered Office in St Albans, and had an income in the year to 31 March 2014 of over £1.5 million. The trust's activities include managing nature reserves, advising landowners on how to manage their land for wildlife, commenting on planning applications, advising planning authorities and campaigning to protect wildlife. The trust also encourages people to be active volunteers helping to maintain nature reserves. The first preparatory meeting of what was to become the trust was held on 16 November 1963, and the Hertfordshire & Middlesex Trust for Nature Conservation was incorporated on 9 October 1964. By 1970 it had twenty reserves and in the same year it took over management of its first Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), Blagrove Common. In 1987 it changed its name to the Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust. In 2007 it purchased Amwell Quarry, and started restoration which has now made the site internationally important for its wetland birds. Two of the trust's nature reserves are Ramsar sites, internationally important wetland reserves; fifteen are SSSIs, and five are Local Nature Reserves. The first site was Fox Covert, donated by Mr Fordham of Letchworth on the trust's foundation in 1964. The largest is King's Meads, at 96 hectares (240 acres); this is water meadows where 265 wildflower species have been recorded, and it is an important site for over-wintering European stonechats. The smallest is Alpine Meadow at 0.8 hectares, which has been designated an SSSI as an example of unimproved chalk grassland.
rdf:langString Hertfordshire & Middlesex Trust for Nature Conservation
rdf:langString Registered charity 239863
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 55092
rdf:langString Hertfordshire & Middlesex Trust for Nature Conservation
xsd:date 1964-10-09

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