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Welney Wetland Centre is a wonderful day out to explore the great outdoors. Free entry for Blue Peter badge holders Welney Wetland Centre (WWT) is one of over 200 attractions around the UK that ...
And now I know that it also puts on the greatest of swans and geese shows. Welney Wetland Centre (01353 860711; wwt.org.uk/wetland-centres/welney) open daily, times vary but at least 10am-5pm.
Now rangers and volunteers at the Welney Wetland Centre site are carrying out a census to get a clear picture of the winter swan population. Winter swan count under way. Video, 00:00:32Winter swan ...
You are in: Cambridgeshire > In Pictures > Photo Galleries > Events > Welney Wildfowl Centre The £3.5m Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust at Welney highlights the life, culture and habitats of the fens ...
Just 30 minutes from Ely, Welney is famous for its nature reserve, Welney Wetland Centre. Nature and wildlife lovers from all over the country come here to marvel at "one of the most magical ...
The bird is one of 26 raised at the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT) Welney Wetland Centre in Cambridgeshire, and released into the wild last summer, from where they migrated as far as Portugal ...
has already started to see the arrival of the whooper swans from Iceland at its Welney Wetland Centre, near Wisbech. Emma Brand, marketing and events officer, said: "The recent cold weather in ...
Family outings can cost a fortune, but you can enjoy a free day trip to a Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (WWT) centre if you snap up a complimentary ticket from the WWT website. But hurry, there’s limited ...
The Welney wetland nature reserve, on the border of Norfolk and Cambridgeshire, counted 21 cranes in 2016 and that has risen to 33 this year. Some of the 33 cranes that have made the Wildfowl & ...
Matt Baker and Charlotte Smith head to Welney Wetland Centre in Norfolk for World Wetlands Day, uncovering the vital role these habitats play in supporting a host of bird species. Show more Matt ...
Emma Brand, of the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT) Welney Wetland Centre, said: “They’re all able to fly and they go out on the washes. “They’re picking up seeds, small insects ...