Congresbury Moor is the historic name for part of the wetland known as Northmarsh that served Congresbury as common land until Enclosure in 1813 (note: The Enclosure Acts were a series of radical laws in England that allowed the privatisation of common lands and started the agricultural revolution). Situated south and west of the Strawberry Line the Congresbury Moor Reserve now lies within the Biddle Street Site of Scientific Interest (SSSI).
Most of its fields are managed as “rough grassland” with a non-intensive level of cutting and grazing. There are some wetland wildflowers like Fleabane and Cuckoo flower, as well as moorland birds like Snipe and Stonechat and due to the high numbers of small mammals, kestrels and barn owls also breed here. Otters pass through and Roe deer can sometimes be observed from the Strawberry Line, which gives a good view over the Ten Acre field.