Ranworth Broad and Marshes

Ranworth Broad floating visitor centre surrounded by reeds with little pink flowers.

Ranworth Broad Visitor Centre credit Tom Mackie

The winding wooden boardwalk at Ranworth flanked on either side by lush green trees and plants

Boardwalk at Ranworth (credit: Richard Osbourne)

An osprey in flight with its huge white and brown wings

Osprey in flight (credit: Peter Cairns/2020VISION)

Ranworth Broad and Marshes

Wind your way along a boardwalk through wet carr woodland to arrive at our floating Broads Wildlife Centre. Enjoy views over Ranworth Broad and discover more about Norfolk’s Broadland wildlife and history.

Location

By car: NWT Ranworth Broad is close to the village of Ranworth in the heart of the Broads. 6km north of Norwich, turn left off the A47, into B1140 and go into S Walsham (right turn). In Ranworth look for signs for Broads Wildlife Centre Car Park (right turn).

By train/bike: the reserve is a 25 minute cycle ride from Salhouse and Acle stations which have regular train services to Norwich, Great Yarmouth and Sheringham. Cycles can be taken on trains on both lines, although booking is recommended.

If travelling by bus, please check times and routes online as they change frequently.
NR13 6HY

OS Map Reference

TG 360 146

View on What3Words

A static map of Ranworth Broad and Marshes

Know before you go

Size
136 hectares
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Entry fee

Free, donations welcome
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Parking information

There is a signed NWT car park a short walk from the boardwalk. Limited closer disabled parking is available off Broad Road.

Walking trails

Boardwalk to viewing platform and visitor centre. See map below for more details. For further information ask in the visitor centre.

Reserve map

Access

Paths on this site are access grade 1. Please visit our Accessibility page for more information.

Dogs

No dogs permitted
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Facilities

Visitor centre
Bird hides
Toilets
Shop
Disabled parking
Accessible trails

When to visit

Opening times

Reserve: Dawn till dusk, every day, all year round.

Visitor centre: Easter - end of October: 10am - 5pm.

Best time to visit

All year round

About the reserve

A magnificent, ancient oak stands sentinel at the start of the boardwalk. This accessible wooden pathway ambles through the wet carr woodland before opening into reed fen. At the trail’s end sits our small, floating visitor centre with its thatched roof. Inside you’ll find interactive displays, a gift shop, and fantastic vistas across Ranworth Board. 

This short walk allows the experience of being deep in a reedbed, with reed warbler and Cetti’s warbler nesting close to the boardwalk. It is also excellent for seeing close-hand many of the unusual and interesting plants that grow in Broadland habitats. Royal fern, decades-old tussock sedges, orchids, and six-foot-tall marsh sowthistle are found here, and many other fenland plants.  

The picnic benches outside the visitor centre are a fantastic place to sit any time of the year. Spend an early spring morning listening to the dawn chorus or seeing common tern returning after their arduous migration back from Africa. Multiple pairs nest on the special rafts provided in front of the visitor centre. Sit for a while and watch their noisy antics as they acrobatically plunge into the water to catch small fish. 

In summer, it is one of the best places in the Broads to spot the rare swallowtail butterfly and Norfolk hawker dragonfly. A pair of ospreys –  the majestic fish-eating bird of prey – have been known to spend the summer at Ranworth Broad, and we hope they will breed here one day. 

In winter, you can watch large gatherings of wildfowl from our raised platform, and hundreds of cormorants roost in the skeletal dead trees at the end of the broad. Many thousands of gulls roost on the broad, and at twilight they fall like snow, making a magnificent winter spectacle. Marsh harriers are present all year, and it is not uncommon to see a family of otters playing together along the edge of the broad.  

A new hide on Decoy Dyke is already proving popular for sightings of kingfisher zipping across the water. Great crested grebes, paired in their elegant summer plumage, can often be seen imitating one another in their elaborate courtship dance. Later in the summer, look out for their humbug-striped chicks catching a piggy-back from their parents.   

Much of the reserve is inaccessible on foot, so one of the best ways to enjoy Ranworth is by joining one of NWT’s watertrail boat trips. Various itineraries run from April to October, exploring Ranworth Broad and the River Bure.       

Contact us

Contact number: 01603 270479
An illustrated map of Ranworth

Seasonal highlights

Spring

Birds: common tern. 

Plants: early marsh orchid, marsh marigold. 

Summer

Birds: osprey. 

Invertebrates: swallowtail butterfly, Norfolk hawker dragonfly. 

Plants: common twayblade. 

Autumn

Birds: siskin, lesser redpoll. 

Plants: tussock sedge. 

Winter

 Birds: wildfowl, Cetti’s warbler, marsh harrier.