A major river restoration project was completed on the River Glaven at Hunworth in North Norfolk in August 2010. The work was a partnership effort between the landowners, Stody Estate, and Wild Trout Trust, Environment Agency, Norfolk Wildlife Trust, River Glaven Conservation Group, Professor Richard Hey, University College of London and the Centre for Environment Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (CEFAS).
The project took place on a 400-metre reach which, at sometime in the distant past, had been straightened and moved to the edge of the floodplain, probably for the purposes of milling. The project involved restoring the river’s natural form by putting back pools, riffles, and meanders, narrowing the river and reconnecting it with its flood plain. The restoration was designed and closely supervised by Professor Richard Hey, a professional fluvial geomorphologist recently retired from the University of East Anglia.
“Rivers like these small chalkstreams simply don’t have the energy to restore their natural form once it has been disturbed by man,” said Professor Hey. “It would take the river literally thousands of years to recover if it was left to nature, but with careful planning and by working with the river’s natural processes, this can be reduced significantly, to a matter of a few years.”