
Download our trail map here to help plan your visit.
This reserve proves wonderful things happen when we work together for nature – come to this former quarry to witness wetland wildlife in all its glory.
We use a PayByPhone system. Please pay upon arrival using the PayByPhone app, this can be downloaded in advance. Our location number is 806300
What was once a sand and gravel quarry is now a thriving wetland wildlife haven. At the heart of this growing reserve is a flourishing reedbed where Bitterns boom, Brown Hares leap and Marsh Harriers swoop.
Langford Lowfields is a wonderful example of what happens when we work together to support nature. The reserve is a partnership between the RSPB and Tarmac, that showcases wetland habitat creation and provides much-needed habitat for threatened wildlife.
As well as being a blueprint for rewilding industrial sites, this Nottinghamshire nature reserve is home to a host of ever-changing wildlife spectacles, featuring an all-star cast. Spring is breeding season and an ideal time to see and hear the iconic Bitterns alongside 10 species of noisy warblers. Summer sees the reserve alive with colourful wildflowers and Hobbies zipping after their dragonfly prey. In autumn, wildfowl flocks begin to gather and wading birds drop in to refuel on their long journeys south. Cold winter days bear witness to ghostly Barn Owls and Starling murmurations, which twist and turn through the skies.
We manage Langford Lowfields primarily for the benefit of the wildlife that uses it and the reserve will continue to develop and expand as time goes on. The reedbed that sits at the heart of the reserve is the largest in the East Midlands and with parts of the site having been restored by Tarmac as recently as 2018, the reedbed features a diverse range of habitats from bare muddy islands through to mature stands of reed.
Key reedbed management tasks include the planting of reed seedlings during the summer and the cutting of older reed during the winter. The reedbed is complemented by areas of grassland, scrub and a woodland. Work in the woodland is focused on increasing diversity and on giving the oak trees more room to spread, whilst the thorny scrub blocks are managed to ensure a mix of age structures, supporting as many insect and bird species as possible.
Please pay upon arrival using the PayByPhone app, this can be downloaded in advance. Our location number is 806300.
15 spaces.
Situated off Cottage Lane.
There is a height restriction barrier of 2.2m.
Bicycle rack.
There is one Blue Badge holder space available. This is situated 50m from the entrance to the public footpath bordering the reserve, but 850m from the entrance to the internal visitor trails. There is no charge for Blue Badge holders or RSPB members.
No toilet facilities on-site.
The nearest public toilets are in Newark-on-Trent around 5 miles away.
No baby changing facilities on-site.
The nearest public toilets are in Newark-on-Trent around 5 miles away.
A surfaced footpath, 800m in length, runs from the car park to the Beach Hut (the visitor welcome hub), but please note that severe winter flooding often means the surface is eroded and uneven in places. Pushchairs have successfully been used on the mown grass Visitor Trail around the reserve during drier conditions.
A surfaced footpath, 800m in length, runs from the car park to the Beach Hut (the visitor welcome hub), but please note that severe winter flooding often means the surface is eroded and uneven in places. During drier conditions the mown trails around the reserve itself have been used by wheelchairs and mobility scooters (we ask people using the latter to not cross the Floating Bridge and Boardwalk), although again, the surface can be uneven in places, with some sections of the Visitor Trail narrowing, dependent on vegetation growth.
No toilet facilities on-site.
The nearest public toilets are in Newark-on-Trent around 5 miles away.
BBQs are a fire risk, endangering other people and the precious wildlife and habitats here. They are not permitted on the nature reserve at any time.
Sorry, dogs are not permitted on the nature reserve (except assistance dogs), due to the sensitive wildlife and habitats here.
Assistance dogs are welcome in all parts of the reserve.
We use a PayByPhone system. Please pay upon arrival using the PayByPhone app, this can be downloaded in advance. Our location number is 806300.

Download our trail map here to help plan your visit.
Check out which species we've seen at Langford Lowfields recently.