Ranworth Broad Norfolk
A haven for wildlife and superbly managed by Norfolk wildlife trust.
UFO over Ranworth Broad, Norfolk ENGLAND
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The Maltsters Pub - Ranworth Broad - The Broads TV
This video from The Broads TV features Kevin Hunt, proprietor of The Maltsters traditional pub at Ranworth Broad on the Norfolk Broads
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The Maltsters is only a few feet from the Staithe on Ranworth Broad where there is free mooring for 24 hours. But note that there is a 24 hours only policy at the moorings, meaning that you can moor for the day and night, but you must then move on. You can return after a further 24 hours.
The Maltsters is a Punch tenancy that serves many local beers, although they only have 3 on at any one time. The pub itself is a light and roomy traditional pub that also has a classic pub menu as well as a few specials offering a good range of different food.
Ranworth Broad. This house was actually floating on the broad.
Video taken with my DJI Flamewheel while on our boating hoilday on the Norfolk Broads
An afternoon at Ranworth Broad Norfolk
This Broad and floating visitor centre is accessed via a Board Walk . There’s ample parking behind the church and it’s just a short walk down to it.
You can go upstairs in the visitor centre and look out over the Broad at the many different species of birds. There’s also a boat trip which lasts just under an hour. I haven’t yet been on it so unfortunately don’t have any information about it but it looks really good and I’ll be doing lots of different boat trips soon.
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I’ve lots of different clips from around the local area.
If you like what I do, then perhaps you would consider subscribing to my channel. If you click the ????, you will get notified when I upload new clips.
Feel free to share any of my clips to your Facebook accounts.
You can also follow me on Instagram at New_name_same_me
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You’ll then be able see the other Instagram accounts I have including igersNorfolkBroads
Strumpshaw Fen/Ranworth Broad
Strumpshaw Fen
UFO over Ranworth Broad, Norfolk. August 22nd 2009.
9pm. Saturday 22nd August, 2009. Ranworth Broad, Norfolk Broads. This is NOT an afterburner from an F15 out of Lakenheath or Mildenhall. There was NO sound and there are no id strobes to identify it as a Military/Civilian Aircraft. It passed over us at an indeterminate height (but appeared to be at an estimated 2000 feet) West to East. Shortly after losing the vid visual (and dropping the cam) the object accelerated rapidly and disappeared from sight within seconds. Verified sighting by 5 adults and two teenage children. For the 'sunlight reflection brigade .... the SETTING Sun was to my LEFT as I filmed this. If THAT was even a 'silent' aluminium plane then the side that I filmed would have been in shadow???
Maltsters at Ranworth The Hill, Ranworth, Norwich NR13 6AB
#mrwongsdayoff #fatlesdrinks #pub #pubfood #pubgrub #scampi #jerkchicken #steakandkidney #steakandkidneypudding #chips #chipswitheverything #beer #instabeer #thebroads #villagepub #englishfood #eeeeeats #instafood
A Warm Day at Ranworth ~ Norfolk Broads Holiday Vlog Ep4
Ranworth Broad is really two Broads the main one and open to boats is really Malthouse Broad but mistakenly and more commonly referred to as Ranworth. In this vlog we visit the Norfolk Naturalist Trust Nature Reserve as a bid to find a little shade as the temperatures touch the 30s.
Music
Numinous Shine
by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Suonatore di Liuto
by Kevin MacLeod
(incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons:
By Attribution 3.0 License
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Please watch: Cycling and Best View in Derbyshire | Cycling Vlog Ep45
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Norfolk Broads - Ranworth
After staying overnight at South Walsham Broad we went to Ranworth and after a short wait managed to get in at the staithe.
Ranworth Surgery on Look East
Norfolk Broads Places to visit near Salhouse Broad Winter 2012/13
Norfolk Broads (Web sites and QR codes are on the clips and you will need annotations switched to use the menus)
Salhouse Broad on the Norfolk broads is a good starting location, for visiting other nearby place, such as Fairhaven Water gardens, Wroxham Barns and Ranworth
Land and Water - Promotional video from Hoveton Broad, Norfolk
lazy afternoon on malthouse broad
norfolk broads holiday in blazing sunshine
Places to see in ( Wroxham - UK )
Places to see in ( Wroxham - UK )
Wroxham is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. The civil parish of Wroxham has an area of 6.21 square kilometres. The village is situated within the Norfolk Broads on the south side of a loop in the middle reaches of the River Bure. It lies in an elevated position above the Bure, between Belaugh Broad to the west and Wroxham Broad to the east or south east. Wroxham is some eight miles north-east of Norwich, to which it is linked by the A1151 road.
The village and broad lie in an area of fairly intensive agriculture, with areas of wet woodland adjoining the broad and river. For the purposes of local government, the parish falls within the district of Broadland although the river, broad and their immediate environs fall within the executive area of the Broads Authority. On the northern side of the Bure is the village of Hoveton, often confused with Wroxham.
Wroxham Bridge was rebuilt in brick and stone in 1619 replacing a bridge built in 1576, which itself replaced an earlier, probably wooden, structure. It is considered to be the second most difficult on the Broads to navigate (after Potter Heigham) and a pilot station sits on the Hoveton side of the river to assist boaters for a fee: £6 per boat.
Wroxham Broad lies about one mile downstream from Wroxham Bridge. The broad has an area of 34.4 hectares and a mean depth of 1.3 metres. It lies to the west of the Bure, with two navigable openings between river and broad. The broad is popular for sailing and is the home of the Norfolk Broads Yacht Club. It is also an important habitat for broadland flora and fauna. Between 2000 and 2005 the island between the two channels linking Wroxham Broad to the Bure underwent restoration to stop erosion and improve the island's ecology, which had become degraded. The project was a joint initiative involving the Broads Authority, Norfolk Broads Yacht Club and the local landowner, Trafford Estates. Scrub was cleared and a stretch of piling installed, allowing sedge, reed and rush to grow back. By 2005 it was reported that more birds, including kingfishers, were nesting on the island and the rare Cetti's warbler was often spotted. Greater numbers of ducks including pochard and tufted ducks now wintered nearby and there was a greater profusion of wild flowers and marsh flora including orchids. During the course of the work, in 2004, volunteers came across an unexploded Second World War hand grenade in the dredgings, which had to be exploded by an army bomb disposal team.
Wroxham is often called the Capital of the Broads, an accolade that may with some merit be challenged by Hoveton, where the majority of local businesses and boatyards are situated, the first centre on the Broads for boating holidays and excursions from the late nineteenth century when expansion of the rail network had made access to the area easier. The East Norfolk Railway arrived in Wroxham and Hoveton between 1874 and 1876 and John Loynes started the first boat hire firm on the Broads at Wroxham where he moved the business he had started in Norwich in 1878.
Both Wroxham and Hoveton have several boat building and pleasure craft hire yards. Other local industries include the canning of soft fruits. Wroxham village had at one time – for much of the 20th century – its own public house (The Castle, in Norwich Road), four village shops (one in Castle Street and three in Norwich Road) and a primary school (in Church Lane), all now closed. A public library was built near Bridge Broad, a small broad near Wroxham Bridge, in the 1960s.
Barton House Railway is a miniature steam-driven railway (now two railways) large enough for passengers, with full size signal box and signals and a museum of railway artefacts, open to the public since 1963 in a large riverside garden in Hartwell Road. It is based on the Midland & Great Northern Joint Railway, which operated some of the train services in East Anglia before British railway nationalisation in 1947. The original railway runs on a 3.5 gauge track with a miniature steam locomotive. In 1979, work started on the 7.25 gauge 'Riverside' railway which ran initially with an electric engine and later with a steam locomotive. Barton House Railway is run by volunteers and makes donations from proceeds to local charities.
( Wroxham - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Wroxham . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Wroxham - UK
Join us for more :
The River Ant on the Norfolk Broads
A scenic travel on the River Ant by boat for the day before returning the boat to Horning on the River Bure; passing numerous windmills built in the Victorian era, most derelict and in various states of disrepair. The windmills were used to power water pumps that drained water from the surrounding marshlands back into the rivers, these days this being done by modern water pumping stations.
Many pleasure boats on the rivers, and yachts that have right of way, and also a great opportunity to see and feed some of the wildlife on the Broads, on the rivers predominantly being birds, mostly swans and ducks.
A leisurely cruise in that the speed limit is normally 5mph but on reaching Barton Broad (our destination) and starting the return journey, an inpatient motor cruiser passes us as speed on a stretch of water where the speed limit is only 4mph.
Early afternoon a stop at Toad Hole Cottage and the How Hill Nature Reserve to feed the ducks and have lunch then onto Ludham Bridge on the River Ant to feed the hungry swans and their young cygnets before passing under the bridge (maximum height 5 feet (1.5m) for the final leg of the journey back to the River Bure near Horning.
Having returned the boat we make one final stop at Potter Heigham to feed the ducks and swans before making our way back to Red Mill, a derelict Victorian windmill on Haddiscoe Island converted to a holiday home.
The River Ant filmed by me on a family trip to the Norfolk Broads.
For more information about the River Ant, visit:
Ranworth Broad south Walsham
Ranworth broad Norfolk Wildlife Trust boat trip
Three Broadland Preludes: I. Ranworth
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Three Broadland Preludes: I. Ranworth · Patrick Hawes · Various Artists
Fair Albion: Visions Of England
℗ 2009 Signum Records
Released on: 2009-11-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Ranworth Church
At the top of the tower of ranworth Church
Thrown in the norfolk broads
He just got what he asked for lol