The Sherwood Forest Trust is a small charity that covers the ancient royal boundary and current
national character area of Sherwood Forest. Its aims are based on conservation, heritage and communities but also include tourism and the economy. Nottinghamshire County Council and
Forestry England jointly manage the ancient remnant of forest north of the village of Edwinstowe, providing walks, footpaths and a host of other activities. This central core of ancient Sherwood is a
Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) called
Birklands And Bilhaugh, NNR and
Special Area of Conservation (SAC). It is a very important site for ancient oaks, wood pasture, invertebrates and fungi, as well as being linked to the legends of Robin Hood. During the
Second World War parts of Sherwood Forest were used extensively by the military for ammunition stores,
POW camps and training areas. Oil was produced at
Eakring. After the war, large ammunition dumps were abandoned in the forest and were not cleared until 1952, with at least 46,000 tons of ammunition in them. Part of the forest was opened to the public as a
country park in 1969 by Nottinghamshire County Council, which manages a small part of the forest under lease from the
Thoresby Estate. In 2002 a portion of Sherwood Forest was designated a
national nature reserve by
English Nature. In 2007
Natural England officially incorporated the Budby South Forest, Nottinghamshire's largest area of dry lowland heath, into the Nature Reserve, nearly doubling its size from . A new Sherwood Forest Visitor Centre was authorised in 2015. In August 2018 the
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) opened the new development with a shop and café, having been granted permission to manage the woods in 2015. Part of an agreement with Natural England was that the land where the existing 1970s visitor centre was located would be restored to wood pasture. Some portions of the forest retain many very old oaks, especially in the portion known as the
Dukeries, south of the town of
Worksop, which was so called because it used to contain four ducal residences, as well as a number of other country estates. The
River Idle, a tributary of the
Trent, is formed in Sherwood Forest from the confluence of several minor streams. Image:Sherwood forest park.JPG|View of the Forest looking northeast Image:Sherwood Forest - panoramio (3).jpg|Sherwood Forest File:An area of heathland within Sherwood Forest - geograph.org.uk - 6357738.jpg|Oak Tree Heath, Sherwood Forest File:Sherwoodglade.jpg|
Birch trees in Sherwood Forest ==Tourism==