Lincolnshire Rivers Trust Newsletter Spring 2015 Facebook Twitter Website Lincolnshire Rivers Trust Spring 2015 Welcome to our first ever newsletter! We are a new freshwater conservation charity with the aims of protecting, enhancing and restoring Lincolnshire's rivers and wetlands for all to enjoy! We have been busy over the last year recruiting our first staff member: Fiona McKenna - Project Officer, hosting the Witham Catchment Based Approach Partnership (a DEFRA backed initiative) and getting our first projects off the ground. There is a lot to update you on, so sit back and enjoy our bumper newsletter! Fundraising Update: As a registered charity we are always looking for ways to raise funds for our work. If you visit our website you will find links to our Give as You Live scheme, ebay for charity, Paypal donation page and our Recycle 4 Charity page where you can register and order envelopes to send off your old ink cartridges and phones to raise money for us. We were also nominated for Waitrose Lincoln Community Matters and Asda Lincoln green token schemes in 2014. If you would like to help us raise funds please get in touch. We appreciate any help. The "Wonderful Witham" Video: Late last year we commissioned wildlife film maker and underwater specialist Jack Perks to create a snapshot of the Witham catchment, it's wildlife, people and the issues it faces. Click on the picture above to go to our YouTube channel and watch the video! Members of the Witham Partnership feature in the film and many helped with organising the video shoot too, a huge thank you to everyone involved. Premieres of the film took place in Grantham, Boston, Sleaford and Lincoln with support from local councils and the University of Lincoln. The film was well received and we gathered feedback on the issues in our catchment that matter to the people who live here. Big Lottery Funded Riverfly Project Volunteers Needed: We have secured funding from the Big Lottery Awards for All fund to start up a Riverfly Monitoring project in our catchment. Our project will follow the standardised methods set out by Woolly Witham WI Partnership Project Launch: The Lincoln WI group have kindly knitted us some educational materials in the form of two woolly rivers! One river is an example of what makes a river healthy and provides a home for many species of wildlife. The other one is an example of many of the issues our rivers are currently facing. Our supporters have also been knitting fish, flowers and butterflies to line our rivers. Thank you to you all! We are having a launch event in Lincoln at The Collection on Saturday 28th March from 11am-4pm. Stokes Coffee shop have kindly allowed us to use a space for free, so come and chat to us about rivers, meet the talented WI ladies and stay for a drink or something to eat in the café! the national Riverfly Partnership. This involves taking kick samples from a watercourse and recording the most sensitive riverfly species on a regular basis.We are currently looking for volunteers who can dedicate one hour a month to collect invertebrate samples in a local watercourse within the Barlings Eau catchment (pictured below). If you live nearby and are interested please get in touch! Full training will be provided by a very experienced Riverfly trainer and full kit will be provided free of charge. Training days will take place on Saturday 25th July and Sunday 26th July 2015 at Sudbrooke (near Nettleham) Village Hall. Please contact Project Officer Fiona : lincsrivers@gmail.com or phone 07895423983 # Lower Witham: The Lower Witham is lacking in natural refuge areas for fish so we are taking part in a pilot project in partnership with the Witham Tattershall Group and the Environment Agency (EA) to address this. Gabion baskets filled with woody material have been securely installed at suitable locations in the river - as shown in the pictures above. One basket has a covered roof the other two are uncovered so the EA will monitor their use to see which design the fish prefer. We will post updates on our website as they become available. News from members of the Witham Partnership Sleaford Opportunities: LRT have been successful in gaining funding from Natural England to undertake an Urban Opportunities Study in Sleaford. This involved gathering existing data from the area, meeting with stakeholders to discuss current issues and opportunities for projects with multiple benefits and employing a consultancy to undertake detailed walkover surveys of the river corridor and to map the opportunities. Clear Environmental consultancy have done a great job and we will make the maps available on our website in the near future. Alongside this project we also commissioned the Wild Trout Trust to undertake an advisory visit to the town through their Trout in the Town initiative. As many of you will be aware Sleaford used to have a very healthy wild brown trout population, but they have suffered from historic pollution events and low flows. We are working with local stakeholders and the Witham Partnership members to design habitat restoration projects on the Slea following on from the recommendations of both the Wild Trout Trust and Clear Environmental consultants. Sleaford Navigation Trust and the Slea RiverCare group have been very supportive and volunteer help will be vital to the success of any projects. This work fits into the wider work of the Witham Partnership as similar studies are being carried out in Grantham and Lincoln too by our partners. Boston has also had similar studies in the past through the Lincolnshire Waterways Partnership, we are investigating how to build on from these in the future. Working With Young Plumbers: In December Lincolnshire Rivers Trust and the Environment Agency ran an event in conjunction with 30 trainee plumbers on the pollution problems that mis-connections can cause for urban watercourses. The talk demonstrated how trade professionals can identify wrong connections and the practical measures required to rectify them. Opportunities will now be looked into for extending this training to other colleges in the catchment as well as circulating guidance to builders merchants. For more information: http://www.connectright.org.uk/miscon nections If this is something you or your college/workplace would like to get involved in get in touch: Lincsrivers@gmail.com Anglian Water's Latest Recruit: Anglian Water has recently strengthened its Catchment Management team with the appointment of Kelly Hewson-Fisher as Catchment Advisor based in Lincolnshire. Kelly has a strong Lincolnshire farming background and 12 years of experience as an ADAS Agricultural Business Consultant. The role of the Catchment Advisor is to work in partnership with farmers, landowners and communities to achieve sustainable agricultural production whilst maintaining the quality of water resources. Kelly will strive to complement the wide range of existing environmental initiatives and organisations in Lincolnshire; working with farmers to deliver measureable improvements in water-quality. If you have any events you would like Kelly to attend, please contact her on 07802 856663 or KHFisher@anglianwater.co.uk. A better Dunston beck for wildlife and the local community: Local residents of Dunston, supported by the Wild Trout Trust have completed a section of in stream habitat improvements. Lincolnshire Rivers Trust are also supporting this project by volunteering at the work parties and publicising them too. This important work will help to improve the aesthetic value of the stream for local people and protect the wild trout populations that live here. The third work party took place on Sunday 22nd March 9am- 1pm. Dates for the next ones are still to be arranged. Please contact Matt Parr on 07903 662389 if you are interested in helping. Where do fish hang out on the Lower Witham? The Environment Agency has produced its latest map of fish distribution on the Lower Witham. Data showing fish density from Boston to Lincoln was collected in Summer 2014 using a boat equipped with hydroacoustic sensors. The bigger dots represent locations where the density of fish is greatest and this helps to hi-light the spots where lack of habitat is a limiting factor for fish. Lack of habitat in this stretch has been identified as one of the priority issues for the partnership and we are hoping to deliver projects in 2015 that will help to target this. These include a project to add additional fish refuge value to Canal and River Trust Moorings and proposals to construct off-line fish refuges. Watch this space for further news. Partnership helps to protect Upper Witham from serious pollution incidents: The Environment Agency and the Campaign for the Farmed Environment delivered an event to raise awareness of serious pollution incident on farms in one of the Witham most sensitive catchments. The Lincolnshire Rivers Trust was also on hand to lend support. The Upper Witham catchment has in recent years suffered from some serious pollution incidents that have done a great deal of damage to the sensitive section of river here. 35 farmers received practical advice on how to reduce the likelihood of having a serious pollution incident and also how best to respond if they do. The event took place on 8 December. Having a spill kit on site is a great preventative measure for farms and small businesses. For further information please go to: https://www.gov.uk/government/collecti ons/pollution-prevention-guidance-ppg Upper Witham Habitat improvement: Environment Agency works are complete on the Upper Witham at Easton Lane, Little Ponton, and Syston which have involved installing woody material in the form of logs and brushwood mattress to create fish refuge, scour gravels clean and create valuable areas of marginal habitat benefitting not just fish but general riverine biodiversity. These works help to slow the flow locally reducing the speed of water which can aid flooding by storing water in the headwater regions. Working with the University of Lincoln at Riseholme: The University of Lincoln and the Environment Agency have been exploring options to develop a demonstration farm focusing on diffuse water pollution. The long term goal is to be able to show case techniques to local farmers that both minimise diffuse pollution in an economically viable way for farming. Initial areas of work are focusing on the use of cover crops to reduce nitrates in groundwater but it is hoped that further research and demonstration ideas will be developed in due course and as more partners become involved. For current information on the Witham Partnership, our map of known issues, project ideas and meeting minutes see our website: http://lincsrivers.co.uk/?page_id=171 Contact Fiona McKenna: lincsrivers@gmail.com 07895423983 Copyright © 2015 Lincolnshire Rivers Trust, All rights reserved. Our contact details:lincsrivers@gmail.com
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