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Essex 100 - 3/20 - Leavings Traditional Geocache

This cache has been archived.

Mr Crow: [:O] After 7 years and almost 4,000 visits I've decided to archive part 3 of the Essex 100 series. It's time to let someone else breathe fresh life into this lovely coastal walk.
Thanks Essex 100/3 and Goodbye.
The cache has been removed.
[:O]

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Hidden : 8/5/2009
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:

A cache trail around Tollesbury Wick Marshes.

The full description of this cache trail and a PDF file may be obtained from Tollesbury Wick Marshes Cache Trail.

Extracts from the Visitor Guide to the Tollesbury Wick Marshes Nature Reserve.

The reserve, 600 acres of coastal grazing marsh, sea walls and saltings, shows how traditional coastal farming with grazing livestock can encourage a superb variety of wildlife. The whole area lies within the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) major agri-environmental scheme, the Essex Coast Environmentally Sensitive Area (ESA). Its conservation importance has attracted both national and international designations.

The reserve is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), and forms part of the Mid-Essex Coast Special Protection Area (SPA) for wild birds and a Wetland of International Importance/Ramsar Site, in particular because of its overwintering birds. Its estuarine and unusual marine communities on the fringes of the reserve form part of the Blackwater Estuary National Nature Reserve (NNR), as well as part of the Essex Estuaries Special Area of Conservation (SAC). It became an Essex Wildlife Trust reserve in 1993.

The grazing marshes at Tollesbury Wick were reclaimed from the sea by the construction of the sea wall. To the inside of the sea wall is the borrowdyke (a long ditch dug out to provide material for the sea wall), and to the outside is a narrow fringe of saltmarsh and expanse of mud and shingle.
The origins of the sea wall go back probably to the late Middle Ages. It was clearly marked on the Chapman and Andre map of 1777, and firmly consolidated by the 1860s. This was followed by the construction of the Tollesbury and Kelvedon Light Railway, which eventually opened in 1904. Remains of the terminus at Tollesbury Pier are still visible in the south west corner of the reserve. Its proposed development as a yachting centre did not occur and the branch line closed to passengers in 1951.
Two years later the 1953 floods prompted further raising and strengthening of the sea walls. Other features of historical interest include ancient man-made mounds and Second World War constructions. In spite of all these developments that have come and gone, traditional grazing with sheep and cattle continued, until, that is, the pressure for arable land saw 146 acres drained, ploughed and levelled. Fortunately, most of the marshes survived and now Essex Wildlife Trust has reinstated them as an example of one of the best grazing marshes in Essex, aiming to combine good farming with good conservation. Since 2000, the Trust has built up a flock of Shetland and North Ronaldsay Sheep. It now also owns a suckler herd of Shetland cattle, an endangered traditional breed that, like the sheep breeds, is ideally suited to the rough grazing on the marshes.

If you have a dog then it must be kept under strict control because of the risk to grazing livestock and the disturbance to wildlife.


The Leavings Hard
Across the creek is Great Cob Island and the RSPB reserve of Old Hall Marshes beyond. The creek is likely to have more boats than birds in summer. At other times it is a vast larder for waders like Redshank, Grey Plover, Curlew and Dunlin, and wildfowl like Shelduck, Brent Geese and Goldeneye.
Looking landward, across the borrowdyke, the first marshes are rather uniform - the 146 acres which were levelled, drained and grew arable crops for 15 years before being put back to set aside and then returned to marsh.
Skylarks will be overhead in the nesting season to test the spots in your eyes, but will be nesting on the ground with Lapwing, Redshank and Meadow Pipits. The populations of voles which build up here attract overwintering predators like Hen and Marsh Harriers and Short-eared Owls, alongside the resident Barn Owls and Kestrels. These nearby fields are taken for hay in rotation and then grazed to provide a short grass sward for the large wintering flocks of Brent Geese and Wigeon.
Dogs must be kept on a lead or under close control from the kissing gate onwards, because of grazing livestock and to prevent disturbance to wildlife.
 

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

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Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)