ESSAI PHOTO: Hickling Broad and Marshes

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Hickling Broad is the largest in East Anglia, with a 1,500-acre nature reserve in the Upper Thurne River system.

The site is controlled through the Norfolk Wildlife Trust, which has placed farm animals and semi-wild ponies on the ground to help you, allowing flora and fauna to thrive. Other wildlife species come with the ash crane, butor, bearded swamp and Cetti falcon, as well as a lot of rare machaon butterflies hatching here in the spring.

In January, the rod is cut for advertising use, turning so that the earth is cut in a five-year cycle.

You can worry about Hickling Broad through volunteering. There is a diversity of voluntary vacancies that can be had in a variety of other capacities. See the list and bureaucracy of applications here.

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