Together with Friends of the Itchen Estuary supported by the Maritime Volunteer Service, Southampton National Park City (SNPC) set about mapping the riverbank to spot opportunities for interventions that would encourage biodiversity. Image of the boat journey in the Lower Itchen, mapping areas where nature interventions could take place. In 2022 SNPC put out a public consultation on priorities for their work, and the top priority identified was to work towards a clean River. Since then, Friends of the Itchen Estuary and Southampton River Rights movement have sprung up - the former to promote citizen science led campaigning and the latter to work towards a collaborative charter for the Rights of Southampton's Rivers. Image of the Bristol Harbour floating ecosystem, where wetland plants are rooted in a floating biomatrix In 2025, one of the ecology officers at Southampton City Council mentioned a project in Bristol harbour where floating ecosystems have been installed, and this provided the inspiration for imagining the River Itchen and her potential to be something other than a boat navigation strip or industrial waste dump. As well as submission to the Local Plan, the document has gone to the HIWWT, the Wessex Rivers Trust, ABP and Southern Water Services. There is money for net zero and for biodiversity net gain that can be accessed through development contributions. The tide is turning as evidenced by the SCC motion on rights of rivers. This proposal aims to take the proactive measure of submitting a plan directly to decisions makers - follow Southampton National Park City and the Southampton River Rights website for reporting on any progress.
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3/9/2026 0 Comments River Itchen - Origin StoryWe showed a film recently: “I am the river, the river is me” - the story of an encounter between members of two indigenous tribes (a Maori tribe in New Zealand and an aboriginal tribe from Australia) as they travel down the Whanganui River. Various rituals are shared, and many conversations reveal the deep attachment of the Maori to the river and the natural world around them. How it nurtures and soothes them; how its recent pollution has hurt the river and them; how they have fought (successfully) to gain legal personhood recognition for the river. The Australian aboriginal tribe had lost their river to industrial processes, including a huge dam, and were mourning its loss and eager to find out how they, too, could bring back the life-giving river they had lost. |
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