
Tom and I did not have a break over the festive season, so we went away last week. With cold, bright weather all over the UK, it was a good week for a wee holiday, and we happened to have chosen a very good place to go to. We went to the Wick.

This is Tollesbury Wick, a fascinating area of the Essex marshes.

We had never been to Tollesbury, nor indeed to Essex, and did not really know what to expect.

We were completely blown away by – and fell in love with – this beautiful and intriguing landscape quite unlike the landscapes that we know and love in Scotland.

A saltmarsh is one of those definitively liminal places, continually hovering between earth and water, a little like the Doirlinn, perhaps, shifting with each tide.

On our daily walks around the sea wall, we saw marsh harriers hunting, and golden plovers pottering about in salty pools with their lapwing friends. I became foolishly excited by the sight of an egret (a bird that has not yet made it north to Scotland), was pleased to test my duck-identification-skills on a pochard, and enjoyed the gaggling rise and fall of many different types of geese.


The Wick is a carefully managed landscape, with channels of salt water both let in and kept at bay.

The sea provides this salty landscape’s energy and its lifeblood. And yet it is the force that threatens it as well.

Home to many important and rare species of birds, plants and insects, this is also a landscape to whose management domestic livestock are crucial. The marsh-grazing sheep of Mell and Wick farms thrive here.


Staying in a converted hexagonal radar tower (about which I’ll say more later) gave us an opportunity to really enjoy the Wick – from every possible angle!

Each day brought another marvellous sunrise and sunset across the wintery marsh . . .

And we loved the way the stark angles and shadows of Bradwell power station (decommissioned) shifted back and forth, telling the time of day.


Tramping for miles around the wick each day was an unexpected joy. Just turn to the left or to the right and you’ll find two different, equally fabulous circular walks!


Tollesbury itself is a great place, with lovely welcoming people, who made us feel quite at home.

A real place, a distinctive place, with a strong sense of itself.

We enjoyed our time in Tollesbury, around the Wick, and the wider Blackwater estuary very much indeed.

Of course we went there for a reason, about which I can say nothing just yet. . .

. . . but of which you’ll learn in time.

Thank you, Essex, for a great week of R&R
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Photos and commentary are fantastic. Thank you for sharing, and I can’t wait for more
that was quite a surprise landscape! Have never seen anything like it. Thank you for a wonder full tour.
It is remarkable that the landscape and the bird life is very similar to some of my favourite Norfolk places to walk. We regularly see egrets, lapwings and plover on our walks from Blakeney to Morston. There have also been barn owls and even a spoonbill! I can’t wait to hear more about your adventures ‘down sarf’. Hopefully no untoward incidents with Bob and Bran, although I am sure there was plenty of mud to play in.
This was a holiday which, for once, did not include a bonus trip to the vets! Hurrah!
Phew! That is excellent news, well done dogs for staying out of trouble.
What a splendid holiday! And thank you for sharing the beauty of the salt marshes with us!
It’s a really lovely place! I love the marshes and the vast skies. Glad you enjoyed your visit to this part of the country.
Thanks so much for sharing…the place puts me in mind of Magwitch and Pip 💗
Glad you had a nice break. What I want to know is did Bob get presents or coals in his Christmas stocking? Also has he behaved himself on holiday?
Take care
Bob says he is trying his best to be a very good boy – and is happy that on this trip – for the first time in a very long time – he did not have to meet a new vet
Apparently they have made it north…..
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-67939606
I stand corrected! Bring on the egrets!
Wow! what a fascinating place – thank you for sharing.
P.S. Egret – some years ago Saw one near the monument on the route between Fort William and Mallaig – didn’t ask if it was resident, or, like us, just a visitor – and now, there has been one on the local water (Mid Staffordshire) for sometime 🙃
the egrets are coming!! I must keep my eye out
Love Tollesbury, we stayed at the Hexagon, the first radar tower, in your pictures, [twice). In the depths of winter and mid summer. The area is so special, like nothing else. The red boat was accessible on foot when we were there. The echoes of the birds on the estuary was magical 😍
BEAUTIFUL… BEAUTIFUL- I WANT TO GO THERE!
Nothing like that environment where i live in California- outside of Sacramento, U.S.A.
I would travel immediately, if possible.
Thanks for this, as I can see a goal ahead!
nancy paterson
Not on the ocean, but lots of saltmarshes around the SF Bay. And lots of saltmarsh restoration in process.
One of my favorite walks is Hayward Shoreline – so much sky and saltmarsh and water and alllllll the birds! Good trails for walking and biking.
Another favorite is a smaller estuarial/tidal creek saltmarsh MLK Jr Shoreline in Oakland.
Farther south along the Bay – Don Edwards Nat’l Wildlife Refuge. They just (purposely!) broke a levee in December to let the tides in.
And more!
Magical places to walk.
Fascinating thank you