logo
Construction of new £1m fish pass in Mildenhall gets under way

Construction of new £1m fish pass in Mildenhall gets under way

BBC News11-02-2025

Work has started on a new £1m eco-project which will enable the free flow of native wild brown trout, eels and coarse fish in a river.The Environment Agency has started the construction of a new fish pass in the River Lark at Turf Lock in Mildenhall, Suffolk – one of just 200 chalk streams in the world.The three-month project will see two weirs removed, which have been impeding the fish and eels' ability to access habitats for spawning and foraging upstream.Natural limestone boulders will be used to create a fish passage known as a rip-rap rock ramp, which provides shelter for fish.
Lou Mayer, the environment programme manager for the Environment Agency, said: "It's fantastic to see work beginning on this important nature recovery project."Chalk streams are an incredibly valuable natural resource which the Environment Agency is working hard to restore and protect."
The project is part of the Brecks Fen Edge and Rivers Landscape Partnership Scheme and is supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. It has been facilitated by Suffolk County Council, local councils, the Environment Agency, Anglian Water and Natural England.Philip Faircloth-Mutton, Suffolk County Council's cabinet member for environment, communities and equality, said: "Suffolk County Council is proud to support excellent partnership projects such as this, that deliver meaningful, and lasting outcomes to protect and enhance Suffolk's biodiversity through the restoration of our valuable chalk steam habitats."
During the construction of the new fish pass the footpath on the north side of the River Lark will be closed - from the bridge at Mill Street to the access track adjacent to the cricket field. An alternative route will be established and signposted.
Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Waste company excepts partial liability for Calne smell
Waste company excepts partial liability for Calne smell

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Waste company excepts partial liability for Calne smell

A waste management company has accepted partially responsibility for the smell that has dogged a Wiltshire town in recent Waste Solutions' admitted that one of its sites, the Lower Compton landfill, had been "identified as one of the sites in the Calne area which may be contributing to odour issues".At a heated public meeting in the town attended by Wiltshire Council, the Environment Agency and Hills, more than 40 attendees were given the opportunity to question representatives from the various company also announced that it has been served with Section 36 order, which say it has to remedy the situation by the end of July. Residents have complained regularly about the smell, which has been described as "eggy", "gassy", "stagnant" and "sulphurous", in recent months, with the odours often lingering over the town in the early hours of the a sign of the severity of the issue, the Environment Agency said it had received more than 600 complaints in April and May. 'Completely unacceptable' Simon Allen, waste operations director at Hills, apologised to the local community."We accept that we are responsible for some of the odour in Calne," he said."We've accepted entirely through the recent odour complaints, that what we have done, in places, hasn't been good enough."We're working with the Environment Agency. They've served an enforcement notice to ensure we complete the final capping."If I knew 100% what was causing this, and I could fix it, I would. I don't want to be here listening to all these complaints." Ben Shayler, area environment manager for the Environment Agency said that he sympathised with local residents."I completely understand the problems that are being experienced in Calne, and I really feel for the residents", he said."It's completely unacceptable the levels of odour that we're experiencing at the moment."Local councillor Sam Pearce-Kearney said "it was good that Hills' have taken responsibility" and added he is "confident" the issue will be resolved by late summer.

Tourists could soon visit this former prisoner of war camp
Tourists could soon visit this former prisoner of war camp

The Independent

time21 hours ago

  • The Independent

Tourists could soon visit this former prisoner of war camp

Nene Park Trust has acquired Norman Cross, the world's first purpose-built prisoner of war camp, located in Cambridgeshire, from a private farmer to preserve it as a site of historical significance. The site, near Peterborough, contains the remains of approximately 1,770 French, Dutch, and German soldiers captured during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. The trust aims to conserve the area and open it to the public, offering a historical and green space for visitors. The camp, which operated from 1797 to 1814 and housed around 7,000 French prisoners, functioned as a self-contained town with barracks, offices, a hospital, school, marketplace, and banking system. The acquisition was made possible through £200,000 of grant funding from Historic England and £50,000 from the National Lottery Heritage Fund, with the goal of sharing its green space and unique stories for generations to come.

Site of first purpose-built prisoner of war camp saved by Historic England funding
Site of first purpose-built prisoner of war camp saved by Historic England funding

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • The Guardian

Site of first purpose-built prisoner of war camp saved by Historic England funding

The French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars saw thousands of enemy prisoners incarcerated in the UK; so many that the Admiralty, with responsibility for their welfare, had to devise swift solutions to cope with rocketing numbers. One was the construction of what was reputedly the first purpose-built prisoner of war camp, sited on the Great North Road in Cambridgeshire – far from the sea so prisoners could not easily escape back to France. Assembled in four months using 500 carpenters and labourers, the camp, south-west of Peterborough near the village of Yaxley, housed 7,000 mainly French prisoners – mostly low-ranking soldiers and sailors, with some privateers – at its peak between 1797 and 1814. Now the historic Napoleonic Norman Cross prison depot site, which contains the remains of the camp, has been saved for the nation after being bought by Nene Park Trust with £200,000 grant funding from Historic England and £50,000 from The National Lottery Heritage Fund. The Norman Cross site became the prototype for the further development of military prisons. Functioning as a self-contained town – with barracks, offices, a hospital, school, marketplace and banking system – the prison element measured about 250m by 270m and was designed around four quadrangles. Each had four two-storey wooden accommodation blocks for prisoners, as well as latrines, an exercise yard, two turnkeys' lodges, a store-house and cooking house. There was also a prison hospital. Battles were being fought in Europe, the Caribbean, north Africa and the Indian Ocean. An estimated 200,000 soldiers and sailors were captured and brought to the UK, the majority French, but also Dutch and other nationalities. Their welfare was the responsibility of the Transport Board of the Admiralty, and they were held in a network of prisons, prison ships, parole depots and land prisons. Norman Cross was the first of three purpose built inland 'depots', with the others at Dartmoor and Perth. Prisoners were allowed to make products – including artefacts such as toys, model ships and dominos sets carved from wood or animal bone – to sell at a regular market. Many such items were excavated during a visit by the Time Team TV show in July 2009. The last prisoners left in 1814 and the camp was dismantled two years later. A memorial to the 1,770 prisoners who died there, mainly due to disease including Typhus, was erected in 1914. There is no public access to the site, but there are plans to enable visitors to explore the area, while ensuring that the land is farmed sympathetically to preserve the archaeological remains beneath. Paul Chamberlain, an author and historian, said: 'This acquisition will enable more of the story to be told for future generations and provide us with a better understanding of a lost town that had a significant impact on the region over 200 years ago.' The heritage minister, Baroness Twycross, said: 'The remarkable stories of those held in what was the first purpose-built prisoner of war camp should be remembered now and in the future.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store