Great Ridge Wood

51°07′37″N 2°06′04″W / 51.127°N 2.101°W / 51.127; -2.101 Great Ridge Wood, formerly also known as Chicklade Wood,[1] is one of the largest woodlands in southern Wiltshire, England. Mostly within the parishes of Boyton and Sherrington, and entirely within the Cranborne Chase and West Wiltshire Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, it lies on a chalk downland ridge above the River Wylye. To the south are the villages of Chicklade and Fonthill Bishop, while to the north are Boyton, Corton, Sherrington and Stockton. To the east of the wood, on the same ridge, lies another large block of woodland, Grovely Wood.

Part of the Great Ridge Wood near Chicklade

A Roman road runs from east to west through the centre of the wood,[2] and it has two ancient monuments within it.[3] In recognition of its nature conservation importance, the wood is designated by Wiltshire Council as a County Wildlife Site.

  1. ^ Osbert Guy Stanhope Crawford, Antiquity (1928), p. 175)
  2. ^ Thomas Codrington, Roman roads in Britain (1919), p. 249
  3. ^ Great Ridge Wood at wiltshire.gov.uk