Blog: Water Works project

Whooper Swans Cygnus cygnus grazing on winter wheat on Cambridgeshire Fens winter - David Tipling/2020VISION

November: As we move towards winter, various bird species are arriving, to stay with us for the next few months; whooper swans have been spotted, and firm favourites, the stonechats have also appeared.

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Lorna Parker stand behind a container of sphagnum moss, holding handfuls and smiling to camera

New Ways with Moss

The next phase of sphagnum moss farming trials at the Great Fen continue with new planting methods - Restoration Manager Lorna Parker charts the evolution

Sphagnum Moss

Wet farming in a drought

Drought threatens success but teaches valuable lessons for future development.

Great Fen video inside the virtual peatland pavilion

The Great Fen at COP26

The COP26 summit proved an exciting opportunity to bring the Great Fen and the Water Works project to an international audience. We take a look at how we featured over the two weeks.

Volunteers planting sphagnum moss at Water Works

And then there was moss!

The long-awaited planting of the sphagnum moss, the final wet-farming crop we are trialling in our Water Works project, is now underway.

Sphagnum Moss

Summer at Water Works

Project Manager Kate Carver talks us through the exciting leaps forward for the crops, the science and the people of our peatland paludiculture trials.

Water Works wet farming test beds

Water Works Presented to Global Audience at RRR2021

In March 2021, the Water Works partnership was honoured to be invited to present at the Greifswald Mire Centre virtual conference, RRR2021, focused on renewable resources from wet and rewetted…

Martin Parsons loading and removing unwanted sallow that cannot be burnt on peat

My Year as Great Fen Voluntary Officer

The arrival of Christmas 2020 marked the end of Martin Parsons' tenure as Great Fen Voluntary Officer. So what did that involve and what has he been doing?