← All Spectacles
Fauna · Lydney, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom

Wild Boar Piglets — New Forest England

The free-roaming wild boar (Sus scrofa) of England's Forest of Dean and the occasional individuals in the New Forest produce their most engaging wildlife encounters in May and June when sows lead striped piglets ('humbugs') through the woodland — the piglets' bold longitudinal stripes providing camouflage in dappled forest light for the first 3 months of life. The Forest of Dean near Lydney and Parkend in Gloucestershire has the most accessible and most studied population, and early morning drives on the forest roads produce sow-and-litter encounters from vehicle windows at 20-metre range. The wild boar's ecological role — rooting, disturbing the soil, creating bare-ground patches that benefit rare plants, and dispersing seeds — is directly visible as the root-ploughed forest floor in the boar's wake, and the animal's combination of complete wildness and surprising tameness in habituated populations creates one of England's most primal woodland wildlife encounters.

When
Jan — Dec, peak May — Jun
Best viewing
Drive slowly along Forest of Dean roads at dawn in May–June to find wild boar sows with striped piglets foraging at close range. A wholly wild yet remarkably accessible encounter on English soil.
Category
Fauna
Status
Peak season

About this spectacle

In May and June, the Forest of Dean's woodlands come alive with one of England's most intimate wildlife encounters: wild boar sows leading their litters of striped piglets through the dappled understorey. The piglets — nicknamed 'humbugs' for their bold longitudinal stripes — use that patterning as camouflage among shafts of morning light filtering through oak and beech canopy. Early morning drives along the forest roads near Lydney and Parkend regularly bring visitors within 20 metres of a sow-and-litter group, the family rooting and shuffling unhurriedly through the leaf litter. The forest floor itself tells the boar's story: great churned swathes of soil, bark-stripped ground and rooted-up patches reveal where the animals have been at work. The combination of complete wildness — these are unenclosed, free-roaming animals — and the surprising habituation of this population gives the encounter a raw, primal quality rarely found in lowland England. Listen for the soft grunts of sow-to-piglet communication and the rhythmic thud of snouts working the earth.

When to go

Jan — Dec, peak May — Jun

Getting there

Nearest airport: BRS. Nearest city: Gloucester.

Booking options

Goyova doesn't process bookings directly. When you tap "Plan this trip" in the app, you'll see options from our partner providers — accommodation, tours, transport — with affiliate links where applicable. See our affiliate disclosure for details.

For Your Phone

Download Goyova.

Available on Android now. iPhone coming soon — we're in App Store review.

Get it on Google Play Coming soon App Store