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Narborough Railway Line
This disused railway embankment is a small haven for butterflies and moths in summer, and home to chalk grassland – an internationally important habitat.
Tilton Railway Cutting
Tilton Railway Cutting is a little slice of ancient history! A real-life Jurassic world (except with no dinosaurs), this reserve is managed as much for its geology as for it’s wildlife, 200…
Narborough Railway Line
Chalk grassland such as this is unusual in Norfolk and provides both an easy walk and fascinating wildlife.
Spring time walk down Success Railway
Join us as we take a social and gentle circular walk along Success Railway and Herrington Burn.
Bishop Monkton Railway Cutting Nature Reserve
This sheltered stretch of a former railway line is a hidden haven for butterflies, moths and other insects. It reveals its simple splendour only to those who go looking for it.
Swindon Wildlife Group – Nocturnal Wildlife on the Old Town Railway Path
Neil Pullen leads a night walk along the Old Town Railway Path.
Phase One of HS2 railway given Royal Assent
Today, one of the largest construction projects in Europe, and potentially one of the most environmentally destructive, has been given the green light to be built.
Brown argus
The Brown argus favours open, chalk and limestone grasslands, but can also be spotted on coastal dunes, in woodland clearings and along disused railways.
Lock Lane
Once used as a tip for ash from the railways, Lock Lane now provides a valuable habitat for a variety of wildlife.
Strategic Ecologist – Future Nature Wildlife Trust Consultancy
Help deliver biodiversity improvements at landscape scale and support nature’s recovery on the UK’s largest railway region
Hedgerow
Hedgerows are one of our most easily encountered wildlife habitats, found lining roads, railways and footpaths, bordering fields and gardens and on the coast.