Illustration of our Amazing Grazing animals.

Amazing Grazing appeal: Help our herd

We need to raise £120,000 by the end of April to scale up our Wilder Grazing programme and bring more land back to life! Every hoofstep - and every penny - makes a difference for Kent's wildlife.

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Kent Wildlife Trust is the county’s leading conservation charity, driving innovation to fight the climate and nature crises. We have over 31,000 members and volunteers, manage over 9,000 acres of land and influence much more. Together with our partners, supporters and grazing animals, we transform habitats, restore and protect species and bring ecosystems back to life across the county and beyond, to benefit wildlife and people. 

What we do in Kent

We want to restore 30% of land and sea by 2030 through our Wilder Kent 2030 strategy
Two flying chough

Goal 1 - We defend and restore

We'll continue to develop nature-based land management practices, while giving wildlife a voice through our campaigns and communications.

Goal 2 - We inspire and collaborate

We cannot deliver #WilderKent 2030 on our own. To inspire others, we will increase our engagement with communities, businesses and stakeholders to reach a larger, more diverse range of people.

Ecologist

Goal 3 - We strengthen and grow

We will innovate through continual learning from national and international best practice, and create and share it. This will allow us to become a more resilient, demonstrably impactful and sustainable organisation.

frog
Dale Sutton/2020vision

Dive into nature

Join us in creating a Wilder Kent. We can’t do it without you.

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Help us deliver Kent’s 30 by 30

We're committed to realising the global target of 30% of Kent's land area in management for wildlife by 2030. Here are our goals:
  • 0 %

    of Kent's land and sea showing increased climate resilience & bioabundance

  • 0 x

    doubling the hectarage of our landholdings, creating quality wildlife habitats

  • 0 %

    of Kent's population taking action for nature

Our Campaigns

The stream and green banks at Ham Fen, Kent.

We work to raise awareness of the issues affecting wildlife

We campaign for positive change for nature and people and helping local communities to save special places for wildlife. We welcome the support of Kent's communities with these campaigns - together we can work to protect wildlife now and into the future.

A bison calf at Blean in Canterbury.

Work with us

Looking to align your business with a local charity that has a global impact? We're changemakers, but we can't do this alone - we need your support.

How you can support us

Our Blog

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Farming through natural systems with Iain Tolhurst MBE of Tolhurst Organics

Iain Tolhurst NBE is a pioneering organic farmer and owner of Tolhurst Organic Farms. This farm has made quite a name for itself because it is able to feed 350 families on 14 acres of what is classified as poor quality agricultural land up to now, without any government subsidies. He manages this land with minimal external inputs to the farm. This means no chemical fertiliser or pesticides. He also does this without any livestock or external fertility from animals. Nearly 20% of his farm is trees and an additional 40% set aside for green manure. So how does he do it?

A row of people at the UNEP World Environment Day event in Brussels

A Darent Valley farmer's World Environment Day experience

John Dinnis of Filston Farm (part of the Darent Valley Farmer Cluster) wrote this blog about his experience at World Environment Day in Brussels with Defra and UN delegates. The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) wanted a farmer to attend - a farmer who works directly on the land and who could give their perspective on the challenges and advantages of being involved with a water quality or river restoration focused project. By the sounds of it, he had a great (if unexpected!) day - read on for his experience.