East Dartmoor Woods
East Dartmoor National Nature Reserve is one of the best places in the country to enjoy the outdoors and to encounter wildlife. The Reserve lies just a stone’s throw from the iconic Haytor Rocks, and straddles both the high open moors and lower wooded valleys of Dartmoor National Park. It comprises three joined but distinct areas: Yarner Wood, Trendlebere Down and the valley of the River Bovey. Nature Reserves safeguard some of Britain’s most important wildlife for present and future generations to cherish and enjoy. East Dartmoor is managed by Natural England in partnership with the Trendlebere Down Commoners Association, the Woodland Trust and Dartmoor National Park Authority. The blogs on this page are from the East Dartmoor Blog and capture the activity that took place during and after the Heritage Lottery Funded Moor than Meets the Eye project. (The East Dartmoor Blog was closed in 2025).

From Wood to Moor – a Dartmoor Conservation Story (chapter 1)

A Tour of East Dartmoor

A Year in Yarner

Elm on the Edge

Work to the Reservoir Starts!

Long Gone, But Not Forgotten ... Remembering the PiedFlys

Extraordinary Women in an Extraordinary Place

At Home in the Woods

Sound and Vision – A New View of the Behaviour of Woodland Bats

Woodland Management with the Bristol Scouts

Crucial Connections – Lichen on Wood Banks

Riverflies - Life in the Teign River Catchment

What’s new with Marmaduke and his herd?

Yarner's Butterfly Transect

Wildlife All Nighter

Burying a Body in the Woods

A Cut Above the Rest

Shades of Light & Dark

Pullabrook Wood Boundary - Lost in Time?
