Orchard
A visit to a traditional orchard reveals gnarled old trunks of fruit and nut trees bursting with blossoms and young leaves in springtime, with wildflowers and insects populating summer’s long…
A visit to a traditional orchard reveals gnarled old trunks of fruit and nut trees bursting with blossoms and young leaves in springtime, with wildflowers and insects populating summer’s long…
Join Suffolk Wildlife Trust and foraging enthusiast, Jon Tyler, for an evening of foraging and wild cocktail sampling
Charlie, our Wild Learning Officer, has been busy in Woodbridge helping the community get closer to wildlife...
Practical hands on advice for ways to create space for wildlife in your setting.
Natural England Reserves Manager Harry Tucker tells us about some of the work being undertaken on the Suffolk Coast.
The once-common pochard is now under threat because its populations are declining rapidly. The UK is an important winter destination for the pochard, with 48,000 birds visiting our wetlands and…
Suffolk Wildlife Trust and Bury Water Meadows Group have been working in partnership to enhance the River Lark and adjacent habitat in No Man’s Meadows, Bury St Edmunds.
Suffolk Wildlife Trust is to host a Nature Summit at Dance East in Ipswich on Friday 7 June from 5pm. The first of its kind in the county, the theme of the evening is ‘Creating a Wilder Suffolk’…
The bee orchid is a sneaky mimic - the flower’s velvety lip looks like a female bee. Males fly in to try to mate with it and end up pollinating the flower. Sadly, the right bee species doesn’t…
This unassuming orchid is easily overlooked. It is found patchily across the UK, but has been declining for decades.
The pyramidal orchid lives up to its name - look for a bright pinky-purple, densely packed pyramid of flowers atop a green stem. It likes chalk grassland, sand dunes, roadside verges and quarries…