About

During starling murmuration season, increased visitor numbers put a strain on our carparking facilities, access roads and neighbouring villages. Please drive slowly through Beckley and along Otmoor Lane and consider car-sharing if possible. Please use the designated carpark and do not block gateways or entrances. If you can, come early in the week, avoiding weekends and Fridays. We suggest getting to a viewing point an hour before sunset. There is a 45-minute walk from the carpark.  

Otmoor is a haven for wildlife in the heart of Oxfordshire. The visitor trail leads you alongside an expansive floodplain grazing marsh, home to wading birds and wildfowl all year round. Elsewhere in the reserve, hedgerows bustle with warblers and other songbirds, while the rustling reedbed adds to the immersive experience of being on the moor.

The 485 hectares of this reserve are carefully managed to provide rich habitat to our Lapwings, Redshanks, Snipe and more. One of the largest inland wetland complexes in the country, Otmoor is home to a huge amount of wildlife, rare species and impressive wildlife spectacles.

At a glance

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What to expect:

Spring

Look out for Lapwings performing their tumbling display over the fields. In the scrapes, Redshanks and Curlew probe for food, while Snipe perform their aerial 'drumming' display.

Summer

Grass Snakes and Common Lizards bask out in the early morning sun, while Cattle Egrets follow the livestock around the fields looking for insects and amphibians.

Autumn

Watch Redwings and Fieldfares feasting on the berries in the hedgerows and look out for Barn Owls hunting over the fields and Kingfishers fishing in the reedbed.

Winter

Watch the flocks of Golden Plovers and Lapwings as they perform aerial displays, evading a Peregrine or Marsh Harrier and listen out for 'whistling' Wigeon as they graze the grassland.

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