At the event after leading wildlife walks around the reserve, Gwent Wildlife Trust thanked guests, including local community representatives, supporters, volunteers and staff, who had contributed to the acquisition and restoration of this beautiful 33-hectare site.
Sitting within the eastern Gwent Levels, tucked below Magor and Undy, Bridewell Common was acquired by Gwent Wildlife Trust (GWT) in 2020 thanks to an incredible response to a short fundraising appeal. The reserve has been closed to the public until spring this year, while a series of major restoration and safety works were carried out.
Bridewell Common sits within the Magor and Undy Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), lying upon peaty ground which has the potential to support a more diverse plant-life than elsewhere in the more clay-heavy parts of the Gwent Levels. This vast wetland landscape, stretching from Cardiff in the west, to Chepstow in the east, has been shaped by humans over millennia, giving rise to a landscape that is nationally important and recognised for its diverse community of rare aquatic plants and invertebrates.