LOOK AT OUR NEW WEBSITE PAGES! www.withymead.org Bird Song ID Sat 25 Apr. 10am – 12 noon ACCTion for WILDLIFE! APRIL / MAY 2015 No.8 'Newsletter of ACCTion for WILDLIFE! (The Anne Carpmael Charitable Trust). Conserves our wonderful but declining local wildlife, & inspires others too. Owns and manages Withymead Nature Reserve and Little Meadow Reserve, Goring. Hosts Forest School, runs Wildlife Club for children, puts on events & courses. MARCH / APRIL SIGHTINGS AT WITHYMEAD - Dog Violet Oak Beauty Moth Otter and cub ‘An Otter cub! ‘Great news as although making a welcome comeback, Otters are still very sensitive to waterborne chemicals; they largely wiped them out last century. So female otters live just now for about 3 years but...they only become sexually mature at this age too, so the cub is very special :-) Brimstone, Peacock, Red Admiral, Comma, Small Tortoiseshell butterflies; Large Red Damselflies. Chiff Chaff, Cuckoo, Sedge Warbler Apr. 23: Cetti’s Warbler still calling: Withymead NR. EVENTS: Withymead Nature Reserve LODDON LILY Open Days – All Sundays + Bank Holiday Mondays in April & May 11 am - 5 pm Teas /cakes available NEW! Cream teas beside the river* 2.30pm – 5pm (*except 10 May) Loddon Lily Open Days Please drop in to relax and take in the beautiful surroundings and the Wildlife, not least the Loddon Lilies - Withymead NR has the largest remaining population of this native and nationally scarce flower (thousands, a VERY POPULAR!!! Our busiestbeautiful sight) related to the Snowdrop. Cakes and tea / coffee are ever day so far was 19 Apr. 2015 available in the Study Centre through the car park from 11am – 1.30pm; NEW! Cream Teas are served on the new landing stage by the river 2.30pm – 5pm. See photo – above, left Thank you to Fiona and Rebecca who are helping serve teas on the landing stage, Fiona for two days + to Helen and Michelle for manning the Study Centre on 10 May in the afternoon. We are looking for more volunteers please - please get in touch, especially for 10 May 11am – 1.30pm :-) All money raised on Loddon Lily Open Days will be used to fund our new exciting, very large pond and water feature in the Study Centre garden. Thank you to Gerry and Robert who have planned and excavated the pond + built a wooden dam for it - this pond is going to be on two levels with seating to view the freshwater life close up at eye-level. This is especially great as the lower half of the pond will be host to a small population of native fish - Roach. More watery fund-raising…Monday 4th May – Withymead Open Day & South Stoke Fair. We are having an ACCT ion for WILDLIFE! stall that day. Thank you to those who have made or donated craft items for us to sell to raise funds for native pond plants for our new ponds. Withymead has a good, healthy population of amphibians (and reptiles) and these animals are severely declining elsewhere - it makes sense to boost them here and native pond plants will really help them. For the first time frogs have laid eggs in the new larger pond in the Study Centre garden – see photo below. We had a Withymead 'Special' volunteering session + craft event on 18 April - we had a great time making things – see photos .SAT. 2 MAY - another chance to make craft items at our regular monthly VOLUNTEER MORNING, along with other tasks. It'll be FUN! We will be potting up plants into our donated planters for sale at the Fair and making bubble-print writing paper sheets, decorating terracotta pots with clay animal faces, making animal mini-clipboards and pebble animals. CRAFT DAY PHOTOS Say Hello to Froggee at Withymead by the Wishing Well. If you shake hands too she’ll sing you 3 songs, then you can make a wish and throw a coin in the Well – all funds raised will be used to fund our big POND PROJECT (see above) to help Froggee and friends. OUR FIRST EVER FROG SPAWN IN OUR NEW PONDS!!!!! We are allowing our amphibians to find the ponds naturally to avoid spreading disease and invasive non-native, aquatic plants FROGGEE THE JELLY protects the eggs but is permeable so lets oxygen in and carbon dioxide out SPONSORED WILDFLOWER BOUQUETS - thank you to the donors. 500 wildflower bulbs were planted (special thanks to Shirley for this) at Withymead Nature Reserve. Visitors & wildlife will benefit in future from a beautiful display of Snakeshead Fritillaries, Wild Daffodils, Native Bluebells, Wood Anemones, Wild Garlic, Lesser Celandine, Common Mothers Day planting Star of Bethlehem . Some Wild Daffodil are flowering now! BLUEBELL UPDATE - 12 people planted 500 native Bluebells along the Ridgeway Trail at Withymead last autumn - they are starting to flower At the ACCTion for WILDLIFE! monthly volunteer session on Saturday 2 May (10am - 1pm) we will be removing Spanish Bluebells at Withymead - this introduced species is hybridising with native Bluebells, threatening their survival. The UK has more than 50% of the world's Common Bluebell so we have a special responsibility to conserve them. VOLUNTEERS – THANK YOU Thank you to Robert for numerous jobs including repairing the board walk and small bridge, Isaac for mending the reciprocating mower, Mike & Bill for a beautiful job strengthening and finishing hurdle fences + donating & planting native tree saplings, Tom & Lisa for supervising the bonfire at Little Meadow + cutting nettles, Shirley, Heather & Robert for all sorts of Thanks to Isaac for mending and servicing machinery for over 3 years now. wildlife gardening jobs with the Monday Morning Brews Club, Helen for biodiversity project help, Fiona & Kathy for newsletter production; Chance for invaluable help with book-keeping; Will for help weekly, Tiegan for Honeysuckle monitoring, Kim for publicity. DONATIONS We are very grateful to the Dorothy Holmes Charitable Trust for the generous £1,000 for conservation and education. Thank you to Elaine and Lisa for lovely Frog craft items; Tom and Mike for tree saplings; Peter for a lot of new safety goggles, planters, snow / ash scoops, storage boxes and many other needed items; Mike R for lovely taxidermy specimens; Steven and Neil for paving stones; Alan for children’s seed kits; John S for the mini clipboards to sell on the Craft stall; Claire and Jamie for various useful items; Martin for becoming a Friend of ACCT; Bill for bug houses; Joyce and Brian for a rose for the Pet Memorial Garden; our anonymous donor for generous match-funding for our new bat and bird sponsorship project (see page 6) Mike planting the tree saplings alongside the hurdle fence he and Bill made. Tubes in Bill’s bug box from last year – Leafcutter bees and mason bees have used them. Wallingford Green Gym completed a programme of work on ‘Tara's Piece’- part of Withymead NR in March, preparing ground and sowing Cornfield Annual seed - these should really brighten up the Ridgeway National Trail in summer. A small plaque was unveiled on the fence which they constructed, to thank them. They also very positively tackled a big tidying and clearing job in the work area on the following session too! It was a great job National Trails Volunteer Work Day Thank you to the hard-working and cheerful National Trails team who enabled the cutting and clearing of the last part of this year's Reed Fen cut. The rare Reed Fen’s 5 sections are cut on rotation, conserving the habitat and resulting in plants coming back from the seed bank; quite rare Yellow Loosestrife has bounced back like this giving quite a yellow 'forest' of them. THIS LEADS TO THIS ACCTion for WILDLIFE! volunteers at Little Meadow Clearing brash and varnishing the benches. Thank you so much for the great turn-out in March!!! This clearing of the old meadow cuttings is crucial for boosting the new flower growth see the Cowslips and Lesser Celandine at the meadow now – beautiful! Several Snakeshead Fritillaries are flowering too BIRD NEWS Blue Tits are nesting in the box with the camera again at the back of the Study Centre. Two Teal s were using Reed Fen section 2 recently - we knew these have been at Cholsey Marsh but this is our first record at Withymead in the last three years. To encourage Starlings we are offering a limited number of FREE NEST BOX OFFER nest boxes for this species to individuals and groups in the local community – within a 10-mile radius of Goring. If you can show that the area you intend to put the box up in is Starling-friendly please contact us with a request. The boxes are ‘woodcrete’ – a mix of sawdust and concrete with good thermal insulation . Starling numbers have plummeted - they need nest sites in summer and fat-feeders help in winter. A good supply of invertebrates close-by is crucial especially when they are nesting. Garden and ‘lawn-care’ pesticides (and others used in the countryside) hit them hard. To encourage them don’t use insecticides – Starlings will naturally remove leatherjackets etc. from lawns, aerating + fertilising them . You then have the pleasure of wildlife-watching. Thanks to Joe for raising these lawn issues. A gloriously-glossy pair of Starlings in breeding condition was at Little Stoke recently WILDLIFE CLUB NEWS: These amazing poems were written by members of our Wildlife Club below: Matthew reached 1000 points to achieve his Wildlife Art Badge and prize. Here he is being presented with his prize by Toby Look at the Spring… I look around and what do I see spring is coming, setting nature free Because the trees are changing, the leaves are emerging quite new. The animals are playing and the skies are now blue. The flowers are smiling, the bushes are green. The birds in the sky in flocks are now seen. The berries are orange the blossom is cream the world has unfurled to reveal a dream, of new life and hope, of the coming freshness and heat. And the smells in the air are amazingly sweet. By Abigail C Look Outside Look outside and see the trees, See the flowers swish in the breeze. But this could change in a year or two If polluting is all we do. We’re responsible for the world outside So polluting should be a crime. If the world can’t help itself, What’s the point of all your wealth? Help me and I’ll help you To show the world what we can do… By Beth HELP BATS AT WITHYMEAD by sponsoring bat boxes: 2 for the price of ! Special Offer – 10 sponsorships available. sponsor 1 box for £27 and we can buy and put up 2 !! Bats are quite rare now because they need lots of insects in their habitat and insecticides have reduced these. We have 5 bat species at Withymead as we have insects but…they need roosting and breeding places that are safe and stay the same temperature. A mystery donor will match-fund your donation – you can name your boxes and write the names on them yourself – offer comes with a Gift BAT GREETINGCARD explaining how bats have been helped. Bats at Withymead NR: Pipistrelle Soprano Common Pipistrelle Daubenton’s Bat ‘Woodcrete’ bat boxes made of wood and concrete Brown Long-eared are good for bats – they use them 10 times more Bat than wooden boxes. The boxes at Withymead are Noctule Bat old, wooden ones which need replacing SPECIAL BAT BOX SPONSORSHIP SCHEME – help bats at Withymead with the generous help of our mystery donor Common Pipistrelle An easy way to help bats at home is to nail up old planks at head height with small batons behind so that a tiny space (2 cm – as wide as your thumb) is left for bats to roost and rest (they don’t fly continuously all night). ACCT ion for WILDLIFE! forum update - the forum now has 10 members - a great place to share wildlife sightings, thoughts and ideas. Please join up - it's free and secure - none of your details appear online except your chosen user name - most people choose a nick-name in fact. To join visit www.withymead.org - press on the FORUM button at the top of the home page and follow the instructions which are detailed on the 'How to join the group' thread. If you have any problems get in touch and we can help - one thing I discovered is that when you're first asked to choose a 'user name' this is not your name on the forum but your email address and you can use your existing one. Thank you to Sarah for setting up and moderating forum. STUDY CENTRE DEVELOPMENTS - thanks to Will and Robert, the aquaria are now in place and beginning to be populated with native wildlife. Thanks to the Basildon Country Neighbour Association's generous donation; a set of Wildlife Guides are being purchased for the Study Centre library, plus 5 small mammal traps for monitoring. Repeat surveys will be carried out at Withymead and Little Meadow THE STUDY CENTRE AND WILDLIFE GARDEN is open on Monday and Wednesday mornings from 9am -1pm for members of the public to drop in, view the exhibits including the new, live wildlife , use the library and microscopes and discuss Nature Conservation. Robert is creating a new professional paved surround to the Centre reusing old slabs donated by Steve & Neil – it’s level and will be mud-free in wet weather: VOLUNTER ROLES – Can you help boost biodiversity and wildlife enjoyment / education locally? This year we would like to accelerate the development of the Study Centre and grounds volunteers are very welcome to help with gardening, maintenance, planning – you may be able to develop a part of the complex as your own project - please get in touch. The Monday Morning Brews Club meet each week from 10am - 1pm but Wednesday or Saturday mornings are possibilities. The Study Centre and grounds will be a community facility for Wildlife enjoyment and education. Monitoring at Withymead Nature Reserve – adopt a patch to call your own You are invited to choose a small area at Withymead Nature Reserve and call in once a month for about an hour to generally survey it – we’ll provide you with a map, simple chart and guidance. All you do is record simple wildlife happenings of note – for example what wildflowers are present and how many – you don’t need to know anything at all to start this – you can photograph plants you don’t know and work with us. We are carrying out conservation work and planting at Withymead and need to monitor how the wildlife is faring – all information is valuable to chart progress and enable changes to be made if necessary. For example, from our observations – wildflowers and butterflies are increasing but we now need to record these changes formally from season to season and year to year. Anybody can record useful information and will learn all sorts of interesting things about wildlife as they go along – this would be a good role to share with family and / or friends (including children of 8 years and up) or do on your own individually. Saturday mornings would be a good time to do the surveying – contact us to find out more. We’re hoping to recruit a team of people – this should be an interesting social group too Bird Box Scheme volunteers – two or more volunteers are needed for this interesting job.. This will involve an annual check on the bird boxes, (This will involve climbing ladders), recording occupancy success, basic cleaning and repair, and monitoring occupancy of sponsored boxes around the reserve and the wider environment. This will include Little Meadow, Tara's Piece, and other properties where boxes have been placed. Included in this will be maintenance of a register of donors and the production of an annual report to donors of boxes. Quarter Master / Mistress Are you an organised, resourceful, person who can track down supplies for volunteer projects on the reserves – this will be an important role Thank you to New Volunteers this month Many thanks to Kim and Joe who have volunteered as Publicity Officers – this is already making a big difference! Thanks and welcome to Marja who has joined the Monday Morning Brews Club and already contributed to Wildlife gardening in the Study Centre grounds and in the Pet Memorial Garden. WHAT’S HAPPENING SOON... Dates for your Diary and to book( BE -Booking Essential) Loddon Lily Open Days – in April and May, every Sunday and Bank Holiday Monday; 11am – 5pm. Cream teas on the landing stage 2.30pm – 5pm. Saturday 25 April 10am-12noon Bird song ID talk / walk with Mike Rogers BE Saturday 25 April 9.30am – 12.30pm – Withymead ‘Special’ volunteering session – join Sonning Common Green Gym completing the well path , tee-pee and path marking. Drop-in event Frday May 1 – dusk ‘til late - Regular monthly Moth Night. Drop-in event Saturday 2 May – 10am – 1pm ACCTion for WILDLIFE! Monthly Volunteer session with Abingdon Green Gym joining us Landscaping around the Study Centre and Wildlife gardening . Monday May 4th 11am – 5pm – Loddon Lily Open Day + ACCTion for WILDLIFE! Craft stall at Withymead Nature Reserve. 11am – 5pm Tuesday May 5 - Withymead ‘Special’ volunteering session – join Wallingford Green Gym building dry storage areas for equipment. Drop-in event Thursday May 21 - Withymead ‘Special’ volunteering session – join Sonning Common Green Gym building dry storage areas . Drop-in event Saturday 23 May 10am – 2pm - Invertebrate Monitoring Event at Withymead NR with Ivan Wright, Shotover Wildlife BE Saturday 30 May 10am-12noon Club-tailed Dragonfly event Little Meadow BE ACCTion for WILDLIFE! Charity No. 1102152 Contact us at Withymead Nature Reserve, Bridleway, Goring on Thames, Oxfordshire, RG8 0HS Tel: 01491 872265 or 01491 875357 (Mobile No. 07553 112447) www.withymead.org Email: acction-for-wildlife@hotmail.com (NB – double ‘c’) or info@withymead.org for info. & to receive email newsletters monthly. Newsletter Team: Fiona Kathy Dot Keith Newsletter team: Robert, Dot, Keith, Fiona, Kathy, Jake
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