A small, beloved footbridge within the county of Norfolk has been dismantled twice solely to get replaced by “native fairies,” based on village lore, in a long-running dispute between a coastal English village and the Nationwide Belief, a conservation charity.
The bridge, which gives a pathway to beloved salt marshes on the English coast, had been used for greater than 50 years till the Nationwide Belief took it down final yr, citing security considerations.
Villagers obtained no warning of the plans to take away a vital route, mentioned Ian Curtis, a resident campaigning to have the bridge changed.
“There was an outcry within the village — ‘they’ve took our bridge down, we will’t get on the marsh!’” Mr. Curtis mentioned. He mentioned the Nationwide Belief, which owns the salt marshes, was being heavy-handed, and in contrast the dynamic between the Stiffkey villagers and the group to that of peasants and the “lord of the manor.” “It’s medieval instances, that’s what it’s like right here,” Mr. Curtis mentioned.
For locals and vacationers alike, Norfolk’s salt marshes are a haven for wildlife watching. The twisting muddy creeks, flooded every day by the tide, are a conservation space for breeding birds and shellfish like blue-shelled cockles. With out the Stiffkey bridge, which stretched over a tidal creek, guests might get stranded within the marshes due to altering tides.
After the bridge was dismantled in February 2022, a alternative one was erected one evening in July. Mr. Curtis defined that fairies, lengthy thought to have lived within the salt marshes, have been to thank. Weeks later, the Nationwide Belief took it down, saying the Crown Property and Pure England known as it harmful, in what Mr. Curtis described as a daybreak raid. A second makeshift bridge appeared quickly after.
Duncan Baker, a member of Parliament for North Norfolk, mentioned that the twice rebuilt “fairy bridge” was a thriller. “Nobody in the neighborhood is aware of” who rebuilt it, he mentioned.
And if anybody did, none have been saying.
For Mr. Baker, the ultimate straw within the dispute was the Nationwide Belief’s refusal to launch an engineering report that the belief mentioned had been the premise for its determination to take away the preliminary bridge.
“It’s a David versus Goliath scenario,” he mentioned. “An unlimited group has successfully eliminated a bridge, completely unprepared for the sentiments of the villagers who’ve been so upset by this.”
The Nationwide Belief mentioned it had no selection however to take away the bridge as a result of coastal erosion had made it unsafe. It mentioned that its unbiased structural engineer would attend a gathering with the area people in November to elucidate why the bridge was taken down.
“Additional widening of the channel and the age and situation of the bridge meant that our solely choice was to take away it on security grounds following specialist recommendation,” the charity mentioned in a press release. It added that it understood that the bridge’s removing was a explanation for concern for the group, and that it was dedicated to changing it by subsequent fall, which was “as quickly as we virtually can.”
Within the meantime, the second fairy bridge continues to be standing — for now, not less than.