As part of the project, it is planned to build an educational path in the Torfowisko Serafin reserve, Łyse municipality, Ostrołęka district, in order to protect natural habitats: Transitional peatlands and quagmires, lipiennik Loesela Liparis loeselii and glossy hookworm Hamatocaulis vernicosus. The educational and didactic path will consist of footbridges with didactic platforms equipped with educational boards and benches in the reserve and the observation tower by the reserve. The construction of the path will serve to direct tourist traffic, which will contribute to reducing human pressure on the natural environment in this valuable natural place. In addition to limiting the negative impact of tourism on the reserve by organizing pedestrian traffic, the path will enable conducting broadly understood education (teaching classes, observations, etc.) raising knowledge about the protection of the most valuable elements of nature. The planned educational path will follow the footprint of the currently existing footbridge in this area. The investment will be carried out on plots belonging to the State Treasury (Dz. No 362, 363, 21271/1). The side section of the footbridge will be shortened so that it does not pass through the plots of natural persons. A footbridge with two-sided barriers will limit the possibility of users going down to the reserve. The teaching platforms will be equipped with benches and baskets. Educational and didactic boards will be installed on the platforms and on the footbridge. The work will take place in the autumn-winter period, using handheld tools and small equipment ensuring the minimum possible interference with protected natural resources. The construction of the educational path is included in the Local Development Plan of the Ostrołęka District for the years 2021-2030. Its creation will contribute to the implementation of strategic objective 3: ‘Promote and enhance the tourist and recreational attractiveness of the county’, specific objective 3.3.: ‘Improvement of the natural environment’. In addition to the construction of an educational and didactic path, the project provides for conservation activities in the Natura 2000 site for the natural habitat of transitional peatlands and quagmires, the lipiennik Loesela Liparis Loeselli and the shiny hookworm Hamatocaulis vernicosus. These activities will consist in mowing expansive plant species, in particular willows, birch and reeds, as well as regrowths from previous treatments, along with the removal of the harvested biomass from the area of operation.