Within the Lower Waveney Valley and the Broads National Park, 381 acres of land is set to become a Worlingham Marshes nature reserve under our custodianship, with the support of a £1,999,832 grant from The National Lottery Heritage Fund to create a landscape-scale nature corridor on the Suffolk-Norfolk border.
Wildlife desperately needs habitats that are more expansive, ecologically-rich, and better connected with other natural areas and wild landscapes. The space that will become Worlingham Marshes nature reserve holds a key position within a corridor of wildlife-rich land in the Lower Waveney Valley, stretching from Beccles in the west to Oulton Marshes in the east, including Carlton Marshes – one of our existing nature reserves.
Under our care, Worlingham Marshes will be restored into a haven for wildlife - where the many rare and declining species that were once abundant here can thrive once again. Species such as lapwing and redshank will find a haven amongst the wetland scrapes and foot drains, woodcock will return to the wet woodland, and otters and water voles will use the restored network of waterways as corridors and breeding habitat.