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.
This disused railway embankment is a small haven for butterflies and moths in summer, and home to chalk grassland – an internationally important habitat.
Chalk grassland such as this is unusual in Norfolk and provides both an easy walk and fascinating wildlife.
Narborough Bog is a unique reserve for Leicestershire and Rutland; over 6,000 years old, this reserve is a hotbed for wildlife in suburbia, with habitats including fen meadow, wet woodland and…
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…
Join us as we take a social and gentle circular walk along Success Railway and Herrington Burn.
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.
Scrub and grassland habitats on a stretch of disused railway line.
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.
Disused railway with areas of scrub and grassland.
Limestone grassland stretching down to saltmarsh - home to butterflies, rare plants and wading birds.
The once-common pochard is now under threat because its populations are declining rapidly. The UK is an important winter destination for the pochard, with 48,000 birds visiting our wetlands and…