The SINT-SIXTUS WOODS
Start: at the public car park, on the corner of Canadaweg and Leeuwerikstraat
Distance: 4,5 km - Max 1,5 km paved road - wear appropriate shoes when hiking in wet weather.
Waymarked: yes
A waymarked trail in the woods nearby the Sint-Sixtus abbey, with distant echoes of World Wars 1 and 2. Besides Dozinghem Military Cemetery, which reminds us of World War 1, the woods house a concrete floor slab of a V1 launch base - the best preserved base, in fact, in all Flanders. The base was, in fact, never used as World War 2 was almost over when it was set up. The story of the V1 base is described on a local information panel.
The Canadabos (Canada wood) hosts mainly common oaks and chestnut trees, which are over a century old. In some places, you may encounter chestnut trees, common ashes, birches, sweet cherries and mountain ash berries. The bushery consists primarily of hazel trees, European bird-cherries, Guelder roses, elders and black dogwood. Don?t miss the rare two-style hawthorn, medlar and wood roses. Just like the Sint-Sixtus wood, Bardelen wood and Dozinghem wood, the Canada wood is part of a highly fragmented complex of woods extending over 220 ha. The wood, grasslands and fields are an excellent biotope for many rare animals. The palmate newt, alpine salamander and green and brown frog, for example, adore the lazy pools, while the woods are home to precious birds like golden
orioles (the male in bright yellow, the female in olive green feathers). Moreover, the largest population of deer in the Westhoek region lives in the Sixtus woods. Notice also the hills of the protected red wood ant, a type of ant unique to these parts.
At the end of the walk you can go to the right, across the Nonnenstraat, to spot the remnants of a water reservoir built during World War I alongside the military railway that ran inland from the coast to the hospitals along the frontline. The place was deforested during the First World War to provide room for the railway. After the war, the track was removed and the wood was replanted.
The eastern part of Dozinghem wood includes a 2.5 ha part of wood especially for children/youngsters to play in, away from the main paths.