Abandoned RAF base where military vehicles go to DIE with tanks that once carried Britain to WWII victory left to rot

AN Abandoned RAF base that is the graveyard of tanks that liberated Europe has been left to rot.

RAF Folkingham in Lincolnshire is home to the rusting remains of combat vehicles from WWII and the Cold War.

AlamyAn abandoned RAF base has been left to rot[/caption]

AlamyIt is now a graveyard home to the rusting remains of combat vehicles[/caption]

AlamyTanks, beach-landing vehicles and trucks are slowly falling apart[/caption]

The graveyard has been untouched since 1963 and now tanks, beach-landing vehicles, and trucks slowly fall apart.

Vehicles line the 6000ft runway and are slowly being swallowed by bushes as the site goes to waste.

Most have also been guttered as their parts are used for replacements.

Urban explorer Steve Vernon, 36, said going to the runway was “eerie” and the vehicles were stretched along the runway as far as he could see.

He told the Daily Mail: “Seeing all those old trucks and tractors lined up next to each other in the middle of the countryside is bizarre.

“It is in the middle of nowhere and it was very cold. I wasn’t sure I was supposed to be there so I was very careful not to disturb the vehicles.”

The airfield was opened in 1940 and initially used as a dummy airfield with fake planes and personnel to distract from RAF Spitalgate just a mile away.

It was then used by the RAF and US Air Force for airborne units, including being used as a take-off point for soldiers being dropped into Italy and D-Day in 1944.

After the war it became a ballistic missile base until it was closed and sold to private ownership in 1963.

Vernon found WWII-era vehicles lining the runway including a DUKW amphibious truck, mobile pump engines, and various military trucks.

Other pieces of agricultural machinery including tractors, bulldozers, JCBs, and earth-movers.

The vehicles are all owned by Nelson M Green and Sons Ltd who store the decommissioned vehicles for sale of the spare parts.

AlamyThe graveyard has been untouched since 1963[/caption]

AlamyAn urban explorer said going to the runway was “eerie”[/caption]   

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