Martin Mere is far and away the best nature reserve in North West England and
probably in the top 5 in the country. It's just an awesome place and an
example of how a modern day nature reserve should be run.
Martin Mere stands alone in a Premier League of one member. Most other nature
reserves in the North West are in the championship, a few in division one.
Pennington Flash is in the National league. That's the difference. There is
permanently habitat management happening at Martin Mere and surveys take place
every day, from avocet monitoring to NVC habitat surveys. The results are
there for all to see. The meadows that for centuries have been the abode
of waders, wildfowl and raptors are more impressive than ever and they are now
joined by one of the largest reedbeds in North West England, second only to
Leighton Moss in terms of scale I believe. Today I walked for 9km (6 miles)
without leaving the reserve and there was still more that I could have seen.
There is just masses of habitat.
However, it's not just the wild areas that are impressive. I arrived today at
10am to find queues at the entrance, virtually all families waiting to get in.
I regularly bring my granddaughter here for the day and we don't even go into
the wild areas, save perhaps the Discovery hide were we sometimes sit and an
have our lunch. This hide has windows almost down to the ground with
small chairs where toddlers can sit and see wild whooper swans, ruff,
black-tailed godwits and a whole host of wildfowl at point blank range. But this is the only hide which is like this. All other hides are proper birder hides.
Apart from the collection which is impressive enough, there is a large
playground near the entrance, a second playground with a new paddle and play
area, a canoe safari attraction, a good cafe and an education centre, plus
annual events to attract kids, such as rubber duck race, mud fest, downy duck
days and Santa's grotto. Coach loads of excited kids arrive throughout the week from schools and groups
such as brownies and cubs. At lunchtime I nipped out to my car to get my
sandwiches. When I came back to the entrance the queue was still there and
just as long. It's a popular place.
Yet at Martin Mere wildlife and conservation is always at the forefront. You
never forget that you are in a nature reserve where wildlife is the
priority. Even the new paddle and play area has miniature sluice gates
so that children can allow water to build up behind them and release it when
it gets too full. Education is massive at Martin Mere.
However, once you leave the main building and the collection area you are
completely immune to all of this. I wandered around the hides and wild areas
today for miles and just saw a handful of people, all kindred spirits, birders
or photographers. There are no families walking out to the Tomlinson hide, and
not many birders either. It's just you and the birds. At this hide, or the Ron
Barker hide or on the reedbed walk you wouldn't know that there were so many
people so close. You can't see or hear them, you can't even see the pens which
hold the collection.
Meanwhile, I was at Burton Mere Wetlands the other day, a flagship reserve of
the RSPB in North West England and found the new cafe closed, with a note
informing me that they can't get the staff to operate it. I wonder why that
is?