Breite Oak Tree Reserve
The Breite Oak Tree Reserve is a nature reserve sitting on a plateau atop Sighișoara, Romania. The largest grassland plateau in Europe, the Breite Reserve has attracted visitors for hundreds of years. It is commonly regarded as one of the largest, most representative and well-preserved wood-pastures with hornbeam and oak trees in Central and Eastern Europe.
History
The Breite is a culturally modified forest that carries the local Transylvanian Saxon culture over eight centuries. Both in terms of natural heritage and as a lineage of Sighișoara, the Breite is unique in value in Europe. It has been used by the local communities for centuries, as pastureland and for pannage, but also as a source of wood and as a place for recreation. The oaks from Breite are the oldest living things in Sighișoara; some of them are said to have been present at the foundation stone of the fortress settlement and survived the tumultuous events in the history of Transylvania, from wars and changes of sovereignty, to fires and earthquake.During the communist era attempts were made to turn the plateau into an airport and arable land, still visible in the drainage ditches that run through the area. There were also plans to create a Dracula-themed park there, but these were abandoned due to local protests.
After 1998 the area was increasingly abandoned, which led to it being overgrown quickly, especially by willow and hornbeam. This only stopped after its admission in the Natura 2000 network, which resulted in the suppression of uncontrolled regeneration, the resumption of controlled grazing and other types of management.