Wroxham Broad
The broad is home to the Norfolk Broads Yacht Club.[2] Visiting boats are not allowed to land, but navigation is allowed.
Coordinates: 52°41′55″N 1°25′7″E / 52.69861°N 1.41861°E
There is a locomotive at the Bure Valley Railway in Norfolk which is named after Wroxham Broad.
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.[3]
Close to Wroxham Broad stands the early 18th century Broad House, a Queen Anne style estate house and formerly the seat of the local land-owning Trafford family, more recently a 'boutique' hotel.