The Esher Commons covers over 4% of the Elmbridge Borough, 360 hectares - that's 800 full size football pitches! The run from Esher to Cobham, Oxshott to West End and are said to date back to Medieval times. they have a rich variety of habitats including plants, animals, heathland, grassland, scrub, woodland and a variety of wetlands. The Esher Commons are considered so special for wildlife that in 1955 it was designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).
Sadly though, with the loss of traditional management such as grazing and cutting one of these habitats, heathland, is disappearing: the UK has lost 90% of its heathland in the last 200 years, far greater than the loss of tropical rainforest. The Esher Commons are no exception; species of rare wildlife and plant life have already disappeared as open grass and heathland have declined. Elmbridge Borough Council has a legal obligation to conserve and enhance the SSSI, achievable by restoring grass and heathland on the Esher Commons. This means restoring grass and heathland to areas which are at present, mainly pine. To ensure the future protection of this site, the Esher Commons SSSI Management Plan has been produced and approved by Elmbridge Borough Council and Natural England (formally English Nature) with support of The Forestry Commission.
The Esher Commons SSSI Management Plan sets out a schedule of works, which will take place on the Esher Commons over the next five years.
Works will include:
If you would like to be kept up-to-date with the latest management works taking place on Esher Commons SSSI, |why not register for the Countryside Newsletter.
If you would like to read the full Esher Commons SSSI Management Plan please see below. Due its size, the Management Plan has been split into five sections, all of which are available to download in Adobe Acrobat format below:
Amended 1:40pm Monday 7 March 2005 to include correct version of Map 10
There is also a display of these maps in the Civic Centre, High Street, Esher.
If you cannot view these documents, Adobe Acrobat reader can be downloaded for free from the |Adobe Website