Tollesbury Wick
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599 acres, Owned
Grid ref: TL 970 104 (click for O/S map)
Last updated 21/7/2006
This is a rare example of an Essex freshwater grazing marsh, worked for decades by traditional methods sympathetic to wildlife and now owned by Essex Wildlife Trust. Wildlife is abundant in the 600 acres of rough pasture, borrowdykes, sea walls, wet flushes, pools and saltmarsh.
Large areas of rough pasture suit small mammals such as field vole and pygmy shrew. In winter, they in turn attract hunting hen harriers and short-eared owls.
Dry grassland on the slopes of the sea walls supports a wide variety of insects, including butterflies, bush crickets and grasshoppers. In spring spiny restharrow, grass vetchling, slender hareÕs-ear and many other wild flowers can be found in ungrazed areas.
Borrowdykes trace the inland edge of the sinuous seawall for its entire length. Common reed, sea clubrush and fennel pondweed are typical plants of these brackish areas where reed warbler and reed bunting nest in spring, and heron and little grebe search for food. Wet flushes, dykes and small pools in the pasture support aquatic plants such as water crowfoot, and breeding populations of dragonflies and other aquatic species.
Golden plover, lapwing, brent geese and wigeon feed or roost on the winter-wet grassland.
On the other side of the seawall, and within the reserve boundary, creeks, salt marsh and exposed mud support typical communities of coastal mud-dwelling invertebrates, coastal birds and salt marsh flora. Scattered shingle spits have yellow-horned poppy, and also a small breeding colony of little terns.
The main pillars of management are water level control and getting the right level of grazing to create suitable conditions for birds and other wildlife.
Visiting
Follow the B1023 to Tollesbury via Tiptree, leaving the A12 at Kelvedon, then follow Woodrolfe Road towards the marina and car park at Woodrolfe Green.
Bus services run to Tollesbury from Maldon, Colchester and Witham.
Accessible at all times along the footpath on top of the seawall.
May for birdsong; July for saltmarsh colours and for insects; winter for wildfowl and waders.
Sheep ticks can be a problem in AprilJune: keep out of the long grass or wear light-coloured (so the ticks can easily be seen) long trousers for protection.

