The Local Nature Reserve (LNR) at Rye Harbour was established in 1970 by
East Sussex County Council (ESCC) under the National Parks and Access to the
Countryside Act of 1949. In November 2011 the management responsibilities were
transferred to the Sussex Wildlife Trust.
The 465 hectares (1149 acres)are generally flat and low lying with no
natural feature above 6m. and entirely within the Dungeness, Romney Marsh and
Rye Bay SSSI (9,137ha.). The high points are the crests of shingle storm ridges
built up over hundreds of years by the combined action of tides and storms. The
low points are the sheltered areas between the ridges where saltmarsh developed
on the regularly inundated land.
The influence of the sea has been greatly reduced during the last one hundred
years by man-made sea defences. In addition, the naturally high water table has
been lowered by a drainage system emptying into the rivers. These two factors
have enabled a traditional agriculture of grazing with some arable. The loss of
wetland has been partly offset by the extraction of the largest shingle ridges,
creating pits. Within the Nature Reserve there are many habitats resulting from
a variety of soils; a gradient of salinity; varying degrees of exposure to wind
and flooding by the sea; water level; and different management practices. The
main habitats can be broadly described as: intertidal; saltmarsh; reclaimed
saltmarsh; drainage ditches; shingle ridges; sand; marsh; pits; scrub and
woodland. Consequently there is a great variety of species with 3,300 recorded
so far. These include more that 150 that are considered rare and endangered in
Britain.
The area also contains considerable historic interest with military
fortifications from the 16th, 19th and 20th centuries, a lifeboat disaster and
evidence of man's early and continuing efforts to defend the land from the sea.
This flat, open and historic landscape, with its low level of development,
proximity to the sea and network of footpaths is popular with visitors. It can
provide a very special experience. There is a good network of footpaths that
enables much of the Nature Reserve to be visited from access points in Rye
Town, Winchelsea Beach and Rye Harbour. There is a small, unmanned information
centre in the car park at Rye Harbour, but our main centre, at Lime Kiln
Cottage, is opened on most days by volunteers (10am-4pm). All five bird
watching hides are accessible to some wheelchairs and provide visitors with a
close view of much wetland wildlife.
Video tour of the Pillboxes I photographed for my final images.
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