Earlier this year, I found myself in a car with a couple of Trust colleagues, sandwiched between two container lorries, queued up at port security. Not the usual way to enter a Lancashire Wildlife Trust nature reserve! Having signed in, we travelled around an industrial estate and what we found when we parked up was a hidden gem. We had come to Seaforth Nature Reserve hidden within the Port of Liverpool.
The reserve was created in the 1960s as part of the building of Seaforth Dock and consists of two lakes, one seawater and the other freshwater. The lakes are divided by a dyke and are an unusual setting for a nature reserve, originally surrounded by infill and rubble which is now grassed over. This is not though reflected in the extent of the birds and other wildlife that can be found there. Its setting at the mouth of the River Mersey acts as a magnet for many different bird species.