Purchase of farm just over county border near Rushden is unique opportunity for Wildlife Trust

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“I am very excited by the opportunity Strawberry Hill provides us and look forward to creating something really special here”

The purchase of a farm just over the county border near Rushden which has been left to rewild for 25 years is one of the most exciting land acquisitions in the history of the Wildlife Trust for Beds, Cambs and Northants.

Surrounded by arable farmland, the 150-hectare Strawberry Hill at Knotting Green in Bedfordshire, is a unique opportunity to save a site rich in nature and create a wild visitor destination.

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In the 1990s an enlightened farmer gave up sowing crops and turned his land over to nature, Strawberry Hill has now been transformed from arable fields to the largest area of scrub and young woodland in the region.

Strawberry HillStrawberry Hill
Strawberry Hill

A bird survey has shown healthy populations of nightingales, willow warblers, whitethroats and garden warblers with habitat ideal for turtle doves.

With a farmhouse, barns and outbuildings and ample land, the site also presents an ideal location for a high-quality nature-based visitor attraction, with room for a visitor centre, café, nature trails, education facilities, offices and forest school training centre.

Brian Eversham, WTBCN CEO, said: “The first time I saw Strawberry Hill I knew we had to save it - such an amazing place, on a scale we can rarely achieve in lowland Britain.

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"Five times the size of an average nature reserve with 370 acres of flower-rich grassland, amid naturally-developing hawthorn and blackthorn, out of

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Strawberry Hill

which rise magnificent old oak and ash trees, and the biggest stand of mature burred elm that I’ve seen.

“So I am very excited by the opportunity Strawberry Hill provides us and look forward to creating something really special here in the coming months and years.

“In order to give the trust time to raise the funds to purchase the freehold of the site, it has initially been bought by the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation and Julia Davies of We Have the Power with help from some generous philanthropic lenders.

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"We are extremely grateful to these partners who have ensured that the site is safe from being returned to intensive agriculture, giving us the time to raise the funds needed through grants and an appeal.

"We will soon be embarking on a research and development project, engaging with local stakeholders and the community to ensure that we create a site which attracts new audiences without impacting on the species present.”