Beverley Parks Nature Reserve
For another dose of chlorophyll, this 49-acre reserve is on the town’s southern fringe.
The history of the site can be traced back to the Domesday Book in 1086 when the land was owned by the Archbishops of York.
The two large fields here have evidence of Medieval ridge and furrow farming, and these are currently being turned into traditional parkland.
The reserve also has a small wood and a bucolic orchard that was planted for the new millennium.
In the orchard is a set of hives maintained by the Beverley Beekeepers Association.
The history of the site can be traced back to the Domesday Book in 1086 when the land was owned by the Archbishops of York.
The two large fields here have evidence of Medieval ridge and furrow farming, and these are currently being turned into traditional parkland.
The reserve also has a small wood and a bucolic orchard that was planted for the new millennium.
In the orchard is a set of hives maintained by the Beverley Beekeepers Association.

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