Spring bird song (9 May)
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Spring bird song (9 May)

Learn how to recognise birds from their songs and calls on a guided walk at NWT Cley Marshes.

By Norfolk Wildlife Trust

Date and time

Fri, 9 May 2025 10:15 - 13:00 GMT+1

Location

Cley Marshes Visitor Centre

Coast Road Cley next the Sea NR25 7SA United Kingdom

Refund Policy

No Refunds

About this event

PLEASE NOTE DATE CHANGE FROM 2 MAY

Call notes and songs are often the best way to recognise birds. Join David North on a walk through Cley's varied habitats and discover how to tell a singing reed warbler from a sedge warbler. Listen to the wild voices of lapwings and redshanks and enjoy a world of bird sounds on a walk around NWT Cley Marshes. Walk length approx 3.5 miles including 1 mile along shingle.

As an event attendee, you will be eligible for free parking.

Accessibility

Please contact us at events@norfolkwildlifetrust.org.uk if you have any specific needs or requirements in order to make your experience of this event more enjoyable.

Important Information – please read our event refund policy below:

Tickets are non-refundable unless the event or activity is cancelled by Norfolk Wildlife Trust. In the event that Norfolk Wildlife Trust has to cancel an event or activity due to low numbers, extreme weather conditions or other circumstances beyond our control, we will inform you at the earliest opportunity and will offer a full refund. Please check our website www.norfolkwildlifetrust.org.uk for event updates.

Photo credit: reed warbler - Elizabeth Dack

Photo credit: lapwing - David Savory

Tickets

Organised by

Norfolk Wildlife Trust is the oldest Wildlife Trust in the country. The purchase of 400 acres of marsh at Cley on the north Norfolk coast in 1926 to be held ‘in perpetuity as a bird breeding sanctuary’ provided a blueprint for nature conservation which has now been replicated across the UK. Our vision for Norfolk: where the future of wildlife is protected and enhanced through sympathetic management and people are connected with and inspired by Norfolk’s wildlife and wild spaces.