Dawson City Clay Pits

Reed warbler

Chris Gomersall/2020VISION

Dawson City Clay Pits

Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust

Dawson City Clay Pits

Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust

Dawson City Clay Pits

Two disused clay pits with associated reedbeds, wetland habitats, species-rich grassland, scrub and pasture.

Location

East Marsh Road
Goxhill
Barrow-upon-Humber
Nearest postcode DN19 7NQ

OS Map Reference

TA 130 253
A static map of Dawson City Clay Pits

Know before you go

Size
16 hectares
P

Parking information

Parking available at Goxhill Haven

Grazing animals

Cattle and sheep

Walking trails

Access along the Humber Bank eastwards for about 1km; the reserve is the second pit on the right and the entrance is by the stile at the north-west corner

Access

Access for wheelchairs along the flood bank

Dogs

No dogs permitted

Assistance dogs only

When to visit

Opening times

Open at all times

Best time to visit

January to December

About the reserve

The reserve consists of two disused clay pits with associated reedbeds and adjoining scrub and pasture. The pits are particularly important for a wide range of birds, not only as a breeding site but also as a migration staging post.

There are 108 species of birds recorded on the reserve with over 20 species breeding, including reed and sedge warblers, water rail, garganey and, in the past, bittern. Snipe are regular visitors. Migrant waders include green and wood sandpipers, redshank, greenshank and ruff. Numbers of surface-feeding ducks, such as shoveler, teal and mallard, are at their greatest in late winter and early spring. Vagrants have included spoonbill, green-winged teal, Bewick's swan, little bittern, red-crested pochard and pectoral sandpiper.

A 9 hectare (23 acre) block of old pasture was added to the reserve in 1991. This is a good area for curlew, the numbers of which in winter are often in excess of 200, and for other waders, especially when the fields are flooded in winter. The reserve extends to part of the foreshore, from where both passage and wintering waders may be seen.

Management consists of grazing with cattle and Hebridean sheep, cutting of the wet grassland, annual hay-cutting of the species-rich grassland, and some scrub management.

Nearest postcode DN19 7NQ. Please note - postcodes are for the nearest registered address as we are unable to get postcodes for nature reserves.

Location information

Dawson City Clay Pits location

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Environmental designation

Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI)