Coastal saltmarshes are loud with the purrs of dark-bellied brent geese (photo by Nick Appleton) 1/3
Ducks, such as wigeon are already turning their thoughts to breeding (photo by Liz Dack) 2/3
The only splashes of green come, appropriately, from the holly and the ivy (photo by Liz Dack) 3/3

Wildlife in December

As the year closes there is still plenty of wildlife to see in the Norfolk countryside. Now is the time for watching waterfowl. Coastal saltmarshes are loud with the purrs of dark-bellied brent geese from Siberia. Freshwater marshes echo with the yaps of Icelandic pink-footed geese, many thousands of which spend the winter here. In the Yare Valley in Broadland one of the country’s only flocks of taiga bean geese is best seen in midwinter.

Ducks, such as wigeon, pintail, goldeneye and teal, are already turning their thoughts to breeding and are displaying in marshes and on lakes throughout the country. Among the flocks of whooper and Bewick’s swans at Welney in the Fens, thousands of male pochard may be seen.

A stroll through a Broadland fen on a clear day in December may be rewarded with an encounter with a handsome Chinese water deer or simply with the sight of the sun shining through the glassy red berries of a guelder rose. In the woods almost all the trees, even the beeches, have lost their leaves by now. The only splashes of green come, appropriately, from the holly and the ivy.

Upcoming events

Lady of the Reeds - Emma Turner Exhibition, Hickling Broad and Marshes
Fri 19 Apr 2024 - Sun 19 May 2024
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Susan Lambourne: How the land lies, Cley and Salthouse Marshes
Wed 24 Apr 2024 - Tue 07 May 2024
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Wilder Communities - Managing, restoring and creating parish and community ponds, West Runton Church Hall
Thu 25 Apr 2024
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Hickling wildflower identification, Hickling Broad and Marshes
Thu 25 Apr 2024
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Spring migration - how it happens and what to expect, Cley and Salthouse Marshes
Thu 25 Apr 2024
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