Full moon (Flower Moon) rising over Stodmarsh Nature Reserve and Stodmarsh in May 2020. The new tower hide can be clearly seen on the far left, by the lakeside, lit by the very last rays of the setting sun behind me.
From wiki....Stodmarsh National Nature Reserve lies in the valley of the Great Stour river, between Westbere and Grove Ferry, in the county of Kent, and forms part of the extensive Stodmarsh SSSI[2] area that includes the adjacent Westbere Marshes.
The reserve consists of a number of different habitats that are important for wildlife:
A large area of open water at Stodmarsh Flooded gravel pits at Westbere Extensive reedbeds Alder woodland and carr Water meadows and rough grazing at Grove Ferry Stodmarsh is designated as one of only 35 "spotlight reserves" in England by Natural England in the list of national nature reserves in England. This is not strictly speaking a "natural" habitat – the area around Grove Ferry has been restored to wetland habitat by English Nature (now Natural England) and the areas of open water came about as a result of the flooding of areas used for gravel extraction or undermined by mining subsidence.
The Stodmarsh NNR and the area around Grove Ferry have become famous for attracting rare and endangered bird species. A species list can be found on the website of the Kent Ornithological Society.
The Stodmarsh NNR now forms a central and ecologically important feature in the Kentish Stour Countryside Project and is an important site for the protection and encouragement of critically endangered aquatic mammal species such as the European otter and the water vole.
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