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Oxclose Wood


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About Oxclose Wood

This young woodland provides an excellent place to explore enjoying great views over the local countryside. Its surfaced paths are suitable for walkers and cyclists, and its two waymarked trails make it easy to navigate around the site. A lovely place to walk, reflect, be creative and simply enjoy the beauty you walk among!

Oxclose Wood was once a site of colliery spoil, now transformed into a community woodland. The coal from this region was not as easy to mine as it was around the Chesterfield area, meaning that deep shafts had to be sunk. Such a process produced a lot of waste material, or "gangue" which grew into the sizeable spoil heaps that were commonly seen around the area. A process of coal washing, landscaping, fertilsing and planting has enabled this beautiful woodland to develop and flourish.

Today you can take a stroll around or cycle along a network of paths within the woodland and, depending on the season, see a whole host of wildlife.  From the top of site you can look out over towards Hardwick Hall, Pleasley and the Derbyshire foothills, sometimes catching aglimpse of a buzzard as it wheels on the thermals. With the aid of a pair of bincoulars, on a clear day, you can look across to the proud towers of Lincoln Cathderal. Below, you can literally fly across the countryside with your eyes, taking in the communities of Mansfield woodhouse, Mansfield, Shirebrook, warsop and Church Warsop.

How to get there:

Mansfield Woodhouse is the nearest town or village.

The wood is adjacent to the Robin Hood Line Station at Mansfield Woodhouse, just off the A6075.

OS Grid Reference: SK535633
For details of public transport visit http://www.transportdirect.info

Start your visit from:

Mansfield Woodhouse railway station car park
PEACOCK

Facilities:

InformationOther Facilities

Activities:

WalkingCyclingEducationalWildlife ActivitiesView Point

Contact:

Sherwood Forest Community Rangers
01623 822447
e-mail: enquiries.sherwood@forestry.gsi.gov.uk

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What's of interest

J.T. Bradbury tells us in his book "Wd'hus and the Wolf-hunters" that man has been active in the vicinity of Mansfield Woodhouse for at least the past 10,000 years. However it wasn't until the Sherwood Colliery was sunk that the population of Mansfield Woodhouse expanded and eventually grew into what it was today.

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