Mellis Common Nature Reserve

Mellis Common nature reserve Suffolk Wildlife Trust

By Steve Aylward

Mellis Common nature reserve Suffolk Wildlife Trust

By Steve Aylward

Mellis Common nature reserve Suffolk Wildlife Trust

By Steve Aylward

Mellis Common nature reserve Suffolk Wildlife Trust

By Steve Aylward

Mellis Common Nature Reserve

It’s hard not to be taken aback by the sheer scale and prettiness of Mellis Common. Framed by cottages and farm houses it is a place that has changed relatively little over hundreds of years.

Location

Mellis Common, Mellis
Diss
Suffolk
IP23 8DW

OS Map Reference

TM100746
A static map of Mellis Common Nature Reserve

Know before you go

Size
59 hectares
z

Entry fee

Free

Grazing animals

Seasonal cattle grazing.

Please refer to the link in walking trails below for more information.

Walking trails

Do’s and don’ts when walking with livestock       
Informal paths cross the common. Can be muddy and uneven in places. Soft even in summer. During grazing electric fencing encloses some areas. Please don't walk on the Common when the grass is tall as this will damage the crop.

Access

Not suitable for wheelchairs.

No drone flying without express permission.
(Permission will only be granted in exceptional circumstances)

If you'd like to visit this reserve as a group, please contact us in advance.

Find out why we ask you to keep your dog on a short lead at most of our reserves and why this is important for wildlife conservation. Why we ask dogs are kept on a lead

Dogs

On a lead

When to visit

Opening times

Open at all times

Best time to visit

April to July

About the reserve

While many great commons were enclosed and lost forever, Mellis somehow escaped this fate and now provides a glimpse of what large parts of the county used to look like. If the land itself is the same – the Hodgkinson’s 1783 map of Suffolk depicts an outline of the Common that is entirely recognisable – the same is also true of the management techniques used to look after it. 

Farmed by the common-rights holders using traditional hay cutting and grazing for centuries, the Trust continues to manage in largely the same way today; ensuring the site retains its fragile blooms and abundant wildlife. In summer rare plants such as green-winged orchid, sulphur clover and adder’s tongue fern flourish, while the abundance of small mammals also makes the site a favourite hunting ground for barn owl and tawny owl.

Once a source of clay for building; the Common is awash with ponds and wet depressions that add to the variety of plant and animal life including great crested newt.  The western end of the Common is botanically poorer due to the fact that it was ploughed and farmed more intensively during World War II but is still culturally interesting – residents tell stories of how local children would police the gates that used to enclose cattle, earning pennies from the passing traffic. 

In all there are some 239 acres of registered common land in Mellis, owned jointly by two so-called Lords of the Manor (Suffolk Wildlife Trust and Lt Col and Mrs W A Spence), and the site’s importance to the rural landscape is recognised by its designations as a Conservation Area, a Special Landscape Area and a County Wildlife Site. 

A good place to start any walk around the Common is from the village’s eye-catching red phone box, now complete with stained glass windows, but it is worth noting Mellis is no ordinary reserve. This is not a place of tracks and trails, but a living breathing farmed landscape to be explored and enjoyed – something captured so beautifully by the village’s most famous resident, the late, great Roger Deakin.  

Contact us

Suffolk Wildlife Trust
Contact number: 01473 890089

Environmental designation

County Wildlife Site
Local Wildlife Site (LWS)
Special Areas of Conservation (SAC)

Location map