Sculthorpe Moor East Anglia UK
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Nigel
Middleton is a raptor man.
Specifically, he has a passion for the marsh harrier.
‘Marsh harriers and I are .......’ His voice trails
away in a shrug of affinity. In which case, he now has a dream
of a job and it has all come about quite quickly.
The train of events started less than two years ago. He had
long been a volunteer for The Hawk & Owl Trust, a charity
active in the UK and to some extent overseas which strives
to ensure that birds of prey survive in the wild for future
generations to enjoy. It was founded in 1969 amid concern
about population decline through the use of pesticides, egg
robbery and other factors and today it works to conserve all
raptors and their habitats in the face of mounting human pressures.
Known originally as the The Hawk Trust, it added the Owl in
1988 to reinforce the point that owls are also birds of prey
and one of its main concerns.
In his study of marsh harriers, Nigel had for years being
treading the paths and river banks of the Wensum valley where
a string of small moors and fens make appropriate habitat
far enough from the madding crowd to support a modest population
of these large but shy creatures. He studied their habits,
their terrain and their diet.
He spent time particularly in the area west of Fakenham, walking
the embankment of the old railway line which once ran to King’s
Lynn, where it passes close to the river and the fringing
wetland. And he began to see that marsh harriers were nesting
in small reed beds within a mostly wooded area called Sculthorpe
Moor.
Not knowing where to start to gain access, he knocked on the
doors of the nearest houses and one was answered by a man
who turned out to be a trustee of the Francis Beckham Trust
which administered the 15 hectare (37 acre) Moor on behalf
of Sculthorpe village.

Sculthorpe Moor, like several patches of moor and common along the valley,
had been given to its parish as supposed compensation for
the Enclosures in the 1700s. It wasn’t much good agriculturally
of course because it was so wet but the villagers had to make
the most of it, digging peat, cutting reed and sedge and coppicing
the ancient woodland.
That all gradually faded away in modern times and although
in the mid 20th century there was still some reed cutting
- and hardly any trees on the site according to aerial photographs
- scrub gradually crept into the reed and sedge over the following
decades as cutting and maintenance ceased.
But as the doorstep conversation continued, serendipity dropped
by because Nigel was then told that although the land was
let for shooting for another year, the tenant had that very
weekend asked if he could relinquish the lease a year early.
Immediately, Nigel rang the chair of The Hawk & Owl Trust
and suggested that the land become a nature reserve.
‘She thought it was a wonderful idea’ he says.
The Trust didn’t have any bird reserves at all but if
ever there was patch of land with the credentials to be the
first, this was it. It was already part of the Wensum Valley
Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and had barn owls
in some numbers. More particularly, it was and remains the
only place in the Wensum Valley where saw sedge occurs in
any quantity.
Now, saw sedge is important and not only for its use in making
the ridges of reed thatched roofs (reed, though more durable,
is too inflexible for that role). Its other importance is
that its sharp and abrasive leaves make ideal defensive habitat
for ground roosting hen harriers. They were still to be seen
on the Moor in the 1980s though by the early 1990s, they had
gone, giving up on the place as surviving sedge became degraded
and encroaching scrub reduced the protective area. But with
careful management, that habitat value could be revived.
The upshot of the chance doorstep conversation was that The
Hawk & Owl Trust firstly tendered for the shooting lease
without, it would be fair to say, any intention of shooting
anything, and having thus got control of the land, they negotiated
a 25 year lease which gave them a base from which to attract
funding.

And the Trust would need plenty of that for capital items
such as boardwalks, bridges and an education/information centre
to go with the habitat restoration work if the nature reserve
was to reach viability. But first and foremost, the reserve
would need a warden to orchestrate the work and plan long
term management.
Nigel of course was their man. Not only did he have Norfolk’s
wetlands in his blood - his great and great great grandfathers
were part of the Cox family, reed cutters and wherry owners
of Barton Broad; he has also studied countryside management
at college and university.
‘The only way the Trust could employ me was to create
a project which could attract funding’ he says. ‘But
they still had to start without even that, employing me for
six months using Trust funds in order to get things going
and in the hope of then securing long term funding.’
It was in October 2001 that he took the leap of faith, packing
in his job which at the time was agricultural fitter and starting
work at Sculthorpe. Not long afterwards, funding of his salary
for three years came through from the Walter Guinness Trust
and the H B Allen Trust.
One of his first tasks was to write a management plan which
he did with Cambridgeshire-based raptor expert Dr Roger Clarke,
a long time friend and colleague. The plan was submitted to
English Nature who accepted it and then funded a five year
wildlife enhancement scheme which paid for continuing works
including scrub clearance.
By February 2002, an acre of sedge had been cleared - and
burnt because it wasn’t much use for anything else.
Thereafter Nigel started working on more grant applications.
A further £25,000 - the maximum permitted for any single
cause - came from the Countryside Agency’s Local Heritage
Initiative and that triggered another application to Nationwide
Building Society from which Sculthorpe also received the maximum
award, of £5000, which helped pay for the production
of a video on the reserve which is now available.
The first section of boardwalk went down on August 25th. 2002
and within a month 200m had been completed. Since then, it
has snaked further through the woodland on the northern side
of the site, built by volunteers from the Fakenham Area Conservation
Trust (FACT).
A central part of the plan of course is the restoration of
those reed and sedge beds. The sedge will be harvested on
a three year rotation to provide young, vigorous and saleable
growth - and habitat - while the reed, which here has little
commercial value because of its limited area, will probably
be cut sufficiently often - and again in rotation - to keep
it free from scrub, though it will have some on-site uses
such as making screens around the hides.

The on-going plans - for completion of the boarding, the education
centre, a tower hide, wind turbine, compostible toilets -
will be the subject of an application to the Heritage lottery
Fund and EU Objective 2 funding. A wader scrape with observation
hide, funded by the Internal Drainage Board, King’s
Lynn Consortium, will be created and there is already a dragon
fly pond. There are also schemes available through The Hawk
& Owl Trust for individuals and companies to support this
reserve. Once everything is in place, revenue raising educational
courses will be run, including such things as dawn chorus
tours, moth hunts and the skills of fen and woodland management.
The whole project will get the Royal seal of approval on 10th
September when it will be officially opened by the Princess
Royal.
But this will not be any sanitisation of a wild place so much
as the restoration of a condition to which wildlife had already
taken. Sedge and reed beds are two of Britain’s man-made
landscapes and have been around more or less since man first
needed permanent accommodation. As is the case here, and in
the Broads further east, the wildlife has taken to it on that
basis.

The Moor will certainly retain that slightly primeval feel of
wetlands in general and carr in particular with alder and
birch standing in water for much of the year. Even the marsh
harrier’s wing beat, with a bit of imagination - and
upturned wing tips or not - has something of the pterodactyl
about it if cinematographic recreations are to be believed.
The thick nettles on the riverside fringes, though probably
more a product of man’s intervention than historical
feature, add to the sense of wilderness while at the same
time making fine habitats for damsel flies, dragon flies and
butterflies. There are water voles in the river and otters,
too, although the chances of seeing them are slim.
And already, the boardwalk has had a wildlife spin off, attracting
voles who use it as a shelter under which they build their
nests, only to emerge and make instant meals for the barn
owls - tough for the voles maybe, but then it’s a jungle
out there.
But it’s also a jungle which is open to the public.
Go and see it.
Contacts:
The Hawk & owl Trust, local organiser, John Lee 01485
528088
FACT - Geoff Fletcher 01328 86164
Nigel Middleton email:
* available from Edgar Spelman, Booksales and Publicity Department,
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