Donna Nook National Nature Reserve

LOCATION

SALTFLEETBY ST CLEMENT, LINCOLNSHIRE

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Our View

Donna Nook NNR covers more than six miles of Lincolnshire’s coastline and borders the Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe NNR (see below) to the south. The reserve consists of sand dunes, slacks and inter-tidal areas, and silt from the River Humber has resulted in extensive mudflats and saltings, attracting much rare and important wildlife. The reserve is very rich in bird life: 47 species of bird breed regularly and the area is famous for more uncommon passage migrants and rarities; over 250 species have been recorded in total. Large flocks of terns, particularly sandwich tern, are a feature of late summer. The lagoons are home to coot, little grebe and moorhen, reed bunting and meadow pipit, and snow buntings are regularly seen in the winter. Donna Nook NNR has one of the largest breeding colonies of grey seals in the UK. For much of the year the seals are out at sea or hauled out on distant sandbanks. But in winter, the seals give birth to their pups near the sand dunes, a wonderful wildlife spectacle attracting hundreds of visitors.

Donna Nook National Nature Reserve
Saltfleetby St Clement

Features

About the area

Discover Lincolnshire

Much of the fenland around the Wash has been drained of its marshes and reclaimed as highly productive farmland. Further north, the coastline, with its sandy beaches, has been developed to accommodate the holiday industry, with caravans, campsites and the usual seaside paraphernalia. The main resorts are Skegness, Mablethorpe, Cleethorpes and Ingoldmells. Inland, the chalky margin of the Lincolnshire Wolds offers an undulating landscape of hills and valleys, designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

Lincoln, the county town, is dominated by its magnificent cathedral. Most of interest in the city is in the uphill area, Steep Hill, ascending from the River Witham; the Bailgate spanned by the Newport Arch, and the Minster Yard with its medieval and Georgian architecture. Boston, on the banks of Witham, was England’s second biggest seaport in the 13th and 14th centuries, when the wool trade was at its height. There are market towns all over the county still holding weekly markets, including Barton-upon-Humber, Boston, Bourne, Brigg, Crowland, Gainsborough, Grantham, Great Grimsby, Holbeach, Horncastle, Long Sutton, Louth, Market Rasen, Scunthorpe, Sleaford, Spalding (the centre of the flower industry), and the elegant Edwardian spa resort of Woodhall Spa.

 

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