The detailed ceiling of St Mary's Church - Huntingfield, Suffolk

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The detailed ceiling of St Mary's Church - Huntingfield, Suffolk
Lavenham , Suffolk, England, UK
~ Helmingham herbal and bestiary.
Place oforigin/Published: Helmingham, Suffolk
Date: ca. 1500
A British Churchill tank from the 79th Armoured Division practices using a Churchill Ark bridge setter to scale a sea wall - Saxmundham, Suffolk, England 11th March 1944. Photo : IWM
Very thin spoon I made out of an offcut from some cherry I found near Ipswich, Suffolk.
The RSPB has re-wetted 120 ha of former arable peat at Lakenheath Fen, creating new habitat for declining breeding waders including Northern
13/03/2026
The RSPB has completed a major peatland-restoration project at Lakenheath Fen, rewetting 120 ha of drained fen on the Suffolk-Norfolk border.
The restored area – equivalent to 168 football pitches – was formerly arable farmland. By retaining rainfall and installing a network of dams, ditches and sluices, reserve staff have raised water levels to recreate a mosaic of fen and wet grassland.
The work is designed to benefit breeding waders, notably Northern Lapwing, Common Redshank and Eurasian Oystercatcher. UK breeding populations of lapwing have fallen by 63% since 1967, while redshank and oystercatcher have declined by 45% and 21% respectively since the mid-1990s, largely owing to habitat loss.
Birds return to restored wetlands
Lapwing have already been recorded on the newly restored peatland, alongside Western Marsh Harrier and a suite of large waterbirds including Great, Little and Western Cattle Egrets and Grey Heron.
Lakenheath Fen lies within The Fens, a landscape that once covered 400,000 ha of eastern England. Less than 2% of this original wetland remains, following centuries of drainage for agriculture. Nationally, an estimated 80% of peatlands are degraded.
Beyond its importance for birds, peat restoration has climate benefits. Although UK peatlands cover only about 12% of land area, they store an estimated 3.2 billion tonnes of carbon. Rewetting prevents further carbon loss from oxidising soils.
Win-win for waders
The RSPB says long-term management will focus on maintaining suitable breeding conditions for waders, with further restoration planned if funding allows.
Nature Reserve Manager Dave Rogers said: "These peaty soils will all be lost in The Fens in the next 50 years unless we rewet them. Their benefit to us and wildlife is huge. They are brimming with potential to help threatened wildlife and are a natural solution for storing carbon; so, it's a win-win all round.
"By taking this action for nature and through careful long-term management of the newly rewetted land by our staff and volunteers, we know it's just a matter of time until we see threatened wildlife species reappear here – and indeed the Red-listed lapwing that has already been seen on the peatland has proven that point.
"The reserve will work hard to boost population numbers by providing a protected a place for these species to live, feed and breed in. And we can't wait to see it!"
August 13, 2024 - Liz Truss, the Conservative ex-prime minister of the UK (who famously did not outlast a head of iceberg lettuce) abruptly left an event in Suffolk where she was discussing the US elections and promoting her book, after activists lowered a beautiful lettuce banner behind her while she was expressing her support for Donald Trump.
Truss later said the prank was “not funny”, and that Led By Donkeys, the group behind the prank, were “far-left activists” who used the stunt as a means to “intimidate people and suppress free speech”. [video]/[article]
Church Street, Suffolk, Virginia.