General
Description
Mixed Farmland and Woodland – Medium Scale has a pattern of a
small to medium areas of pasture with arable farmland, woodland, shelter
belts and hedgerows. In some areas, large swathes of connected woodland
dominate the landscape, with forestry plantations, alongside semi-natural
woodland. Other areas are dominated by arable farmland providing large
open fields, sometimes with thin gappy hedgerows or no hedgerows at all,
which are further enclosed by adjacent woodlands, shelter belts or thick
hedgerows.
Parklands are a feature of this landscape type with landscape features
such as woodlands and shelterbelts, scattered trees, rows of trees, wood
pasture (in the case old deer parks) exotic trees, ancient pollard trees
and veteran trees. The character type has a low density of small nucleated
and linear settlements, with scattered farmsteads and large houses with
areas of parklands. A high density of rural lanes criss-cross the valleys
and ridges.
Ridge deposits of sand and gravel are found in the southern areas of
the Borough, giving rise to past and present mineral workings.
Location
The type forms a part of the more complex and varied landscapes (which
include LCT4) that separate the heathlands (LCT1) and pasture and woodlands
associated with heathlands (LCT2) to the south and the chalk and clay
wooded farmland (LCT6 and 7) and chalk downlands (LCT10) to the north.
There are three areas of this landscape character type found within the
Borough, as follows:
Physical Influences
Geology and soils: London Clay and Reading
Beds with areas of Higher Terrace Gravel and Plateau Gravel.
Landform: The topography of this landscape
type is irregular and provides a mix of small valleys, local knolls, ridges
and depressions.
Drainage: The type includes part of the lower slopes
of the River Test catchment area.
Biodiversity and Vegetation Pattern
Mixed Farmland and Woodland – Medium scale has a high proportion
of woodland cover and is characterised by extensive ancient semi-natural
woodland and semi-natural woodland with active coppice linked by hedgerows.
There is a wide range of biodiversity associated with this type which
includes hedgerows with banks and large standard trees as well as streams
and meadows. Occasional pockets of heathland remain. The majority of species
found are typical of neutral to calcareous soils and include Oak, Ash
and Field Maple. Pastoral farmland is the dominant land use. Arable and
rotational grassland is abundant although not co-dominating.
Notable habitats
Unimproved neutral grassland
Heathland
Semi-improved grassland
Historical Influences
The landscape is characterised by a mixed historic landscape with several
historic field systems indicating 18th and 19th century development present
throughout this type. This process included the formal and informal enclosure
of earlier field systems and the development of substantial parklands
particularly close to the valley floor of the River Test.
The historic development of such a landscape may demonstrate the development
of agricultural based wealth within the Test Valley. This prosperity during
this period often resulted in the purchase of larger farming estate and
the development of formal parkland environments. This would then lead
to areas of exclusion and social control.
Also present are areas of landscape that demonstrate substantial assarting
of a previously wooded environment which result from an increased intensification
during the later medieval and post-medieval periods. With the small and
medium assarted field system displaying irregular boundaries, it can be
presumed that this clearance occurred between the early medieval to early
post medieval period. The larger assarted fields, with their straight
boundaries and more regular shapes, suggest that either the small and
medium sized fields lost their boundaries or medieval to 18th/19th century
clearance took place. The final style of assarting present is the regular
assart with straight boundaries. These date to the 19th and 20th centuries
indicating either the alteration of previous assarting or further clearance.
Settlement Pattern
The settlements present within character type are generally dominated
by their proximity to a good supply of water. Examples of Chalk River
Valley, Clay River Valley and Chalk/Clay Spring Line settlements can be
identified. These settlements tend to retain one or more historic cores,
dating to the later medieval and early post-medieval period, as well as
evidence for the presence of an early medieval church foundation.
Such settlements tend to develop in a linear pattern and, where a significantly
sized river is present, can often be found upon suitable bridging or fording
points. These settlements are often located at nodal points within the
road network and the main settlements are surrounded by smaller subsidiary
groupings and farmsteads.
Communication Network
Running throughout this character type are numerous droveways, woodland
tracks and park pales, indicating a heavily developed landscape.
Key Natural and Cultural Landscape Issues
Impact of mineral workings and long term restoration
Potential change in farming practices, with increased areas managed
as ‘hobby farms’ or as horse paddocks, characterized by rank
weedy grassland and poorly managed boundaries
Potential loss of parkland features
Deterioration and further loss of hedgerows
Poor woodland management
Loss of unimproved mesotrophic grassland to arable or through application
of fertilisers
Declining farmland bird populations
Enrichment of water bodies through fertiliser run off
Loss of woodlands to development or to arable or pasture
Lack of coppice management leading to a reduction of specialised species
such as butterflies
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