Coed Cadw (the Woodland Trust) cares for over 100 woods around Wales, with a total area of 1,580 hectares (3,900 acres). It offers free public access to nearly all of its sites. Find out more about them here.
- Find a Woodland Trust Wood to visit
- Coed Ysgubor Wen Coed Cadw's vision to create new native woodland in the last stronghold of the Welsh Princes
- Cefn Ila - The Woodland Trust unveils its vision to create new native woodland in the rolling countryside of the Usk Valley
- Maentwrog woodlands Six adjoining woodlands in the heart of the Snowdonia National Park with a total of 30km of publicly accessible paths, including the Woodland Trust’s own Coed Hafod y Llyn If you're visiting these woods, why not download and print out the special leaflet jointly produced by the six landowning bodies: map and site description
- Download our new bilingual guide on Restoring ancient woodland sites in English or Welsh. Between the 1930s and 1980s, thousands of hectares of ancient woodland were replanted, mostly with commercial conifers or a mixture of conifers and broadleaved trees. We now have time-limited opportunity to restore them.
- Meirionnydd Oakwoods Habitat Management Project. See how the Woodland Trust has helped to care for the ancient Oak Woodlands of Meirionnydd and has promoted skills vital in caring for landscape