John Walker wrote:
A lot of work has been done over recent years to get the water levels and grazing to
a suitable level to provide the right habitat for breeding waders and wildfowl on the site,
with Lapwing Redshank and Teal now breeding and raising chicks, sedge , reed warbler and reed buntings breeding
in the reed filled ditches, and the many pairs of skylark, and meadow pipits , this is proof the improvements made are working so lets remember how the site was some years ago and take a positive attitude to what it is now,
During the winter it supported large numbers of wildfowl with over a thousand pink foot geese, hundreds of wigeon,
teal, swans , curlew, lapwing, golden plover,and a few snipe etc. if it was to be returned to arable we
know what that will mean.
regards John
If more fields were to be created like Elm House Farm, Saltfleetby what a difference it would make for wildlife.