Archive for the ‘Wildlife’ Category

On love, life and Libertine

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Ok, I might have lied about the love bit. Well, I definitely lied about the love bit but the rest…

I am a serial volunteer. For some reason I’m always offering to do stuff. For free. Don’t get me wrong, I love doing it, after all what’s not to like. It’s a brilliant way to get to know new people, learn new things, network and all those other great things. For instance, I just helped out with Get Writing 2010 (Brought to you by the wonderful people at Verulam Writers’ Circle) and am dead chuffed to be able to say I’ve been promoted to Operations Manager for this year. (#GetWriting2011 or #GW11 on twitter).

I’m currently helping to judge a short story competition too, which is proving challenging as they’re all good!

Add to that all the wildlife volunteering I’ve got lined up over the summer and you are starting to see the ‘life’ picture.

‘But!’ I hear you cry, ‘where does that leave Libertine? (And, of course, the other backburner novel you keep teasing us with)’

You’re right too. I’m almost done with the judging bit, the wildlife stuff fits into a schedule (which I am planning) and Get Writing 2011 is just starting out. So I’ve made a decision.

I am not going to volunteer for anything new until Libertine is complete.

No, really, I mean it.

I am fully committed to the jobs I’ve taken on, as everyone knows I’m a multi-tasking grafter.

But.

For once in my life I’m putting my project at the top of the list. Let’s face it, Libertine’s got wings so if I don’t do it she’ll probably fly there anyway.

 So, if I haven’t already said I’ll do it, well, I won’t do it. Honest.

A whirlwind couple of months!

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Phew! What a busy couple of months I’ve had. After the great response to the VWC tree at the Festival of Trees I was invited to help out with the organisation of the group’s Get Writing 2010 conference. Naturally I jumped at the chance.

The event is on Saturday February 20th, just a couple of days away now, and promises to be a fantastic day. We have several guest speakers, ranging from published writers such as Adele Geras (with over 90 titles to her name!), to editors and agents. There will be a range of workshops for delegates to nurture their skills, some delegates will be pitching their work to the editors and agents and there will even be a book signing area at lunch time. I can’t wait, it’s going to be hard work but great fun.

Meanwhile I have started some badger surveying, sadly delayed due to the snow. We found a fantastic sett which is so perfect that I will be using it to train the Stevenage Tree Wardens on how to identify badger signs. The site will also be used as a Field Studies Centre so I will be helping out with some other survey work soon.

 Talking of the Tree Wardens, I will be starting the Whomerley and Monks Wood survey in the next couple of weeks, which I am very excited about. There will also be a Big Bio Event in June which I will be getting involved with, watch out for more details about that soon!

The big personal news was my graduation. I will get the photo’s downloaded soon, but what a fabulous day I had. All my life had built to that moment, and I honestly thought at one stage that it wasn’t going to happen but I kept fighting. The author Philip Pullman was awarded an honorary degree at the ceremony and gave a very inspiring speech. Me being me, whilst I was on stage I went up to him and shook his hand, I feel very proud to be able to say I graduated on that day.

So, what about the writing? Well, Libertine is coming along beautifully and proving very popular. I have written up to chapter 12 and am now rewriting those first chapters, to get them absolutely right before I press on. The plot is planned and I have researched several locations. I will be getting a personal behind the scenes tour very soon at Forty Hall in Enfield, which I’m really looking forward to.

As well as Libertine I have decided to rewrite Alex’s story completely. The theme will be similar, Alex will be getting a new name and the setting will be very Steampunk. There’s a lot of research to be done, but I’m starting to get my teeth into it and I have written an opening scene, starting to get to know my new female lead and male support character. It will be very different to Libertine, that much is certain!

 Just this week I had a new idea which is developing nicely, but I’m not giving anything away on that one for now.

I think that sums things up for now, I should be able to blog more often again, having got the busy period out of the way!

Balloon Releases – Time to let go

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

I recently was at an event where hundreds of school children were each given a balloon to release. As they drifted up into the sky the crowd clapped and everyone ooh’d and aah’d and told each other how wonderful a moment this was. My heart sank. I stood there wondering how much damage these balloons would cause to the environment. I refused to applaud such irresponsibility.

A couple of days later I received a link on twitter which showed pictures of the most polluted place on Earth. Among that list was the North Pacific Gyre, where a garbage island has gathered as a result of natural wind and water movement. The island is building, but it isn’t a perfect desert island, it’s a grotesque opposite causing the death of wildlife and the destruction of the ecological balance in the area. This is how ‘wonderful’ our actions are.

I wonder if there are labels from balloons somewhere in there. I wonder if they can be read at all. I wonder how the people on those labels would react if they were taken there and realised that we have all played a part in this. That carrier bag that you just couldn’t catch as it blew away, the condom you flushed, the lilo that burst and you allowed to float away and yes, even that balloon you released in the 70’s as a child (and yes, that includes me).

 Between us we can do something about it. We can stop adding to it, we can volunteer to collect other people’s rubbish, we can support campaigns to change attitudes. It would take hours and money to remove what’s there, even then, where on Earth would we put it? I would love to think that Governments would unite to address such a problem but that would take a miracle.

 Meanwhile, if I can just ask you to think. Have a look at these links. Let them seep into your mind and hopefully you’ll remember to refuse that carrier bag, hang on to your litter and refuse to support the next balloon release you come across.

Article on Environmental Graffiti.com about the North Pacific Gyre

http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/featured/north-pacific-gyre-million-tons-garbage-growing/14477

Marine Conservation Society (MCS) – Don’t Let Go Campaign – action against balloon release

http://www.mcsuk.org/mcsaction/pollution/b alloons

 

UK Rivers network – includes text of MCS leaflet

http://www.ukrivers.net/balloon_fact.html

Herts Canoe Club – Litter Pickers Extraordinaire!

http://www.hertscanoeclub.org.uk/5.html

The power of passion when RAG saw red

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

This morning I spent a few hours at Roebuck Wood in Stevenage litter picking and cutting back some Hawthorn.

I hadn’t really visited the woodland before, having only walked alongside on the footpath. Why is it, sometimes the nearer a place is, the less likely you are to visit? I now know that I’ve been missing out.

 Chatting with Brian, the Chair of the Roebuck Action Group (RAG) I’ve learned that Dick Turpin used a path through the woods before staying at the Roebuck Inn whilst en route to London. There are trees which are centuries old, lots of ancient woodland indicators and also areas of recent planting, carried out by RAG around ten years ago.

 This combination of differing habitats makes this a wonderful woodland for wildlife, easily accessible with lots of nearby car parks, a network of footpaths and also a cycle path alongside.

 I was quite shocked to learn that this wonderful urban space was once threatened, seen as a piece of land only worth money. It is next to the Stevenage Borough football ground and a planning application was put in to remove the woodland completely.

Brian and a group of local residents weren’t having any of it! They formed RAG, fought back and won. As a result the wood is now managed for the benefit of the community and wildlife and is protected from planning threats in the future.

I am always impressed with individuals who try to make a difference. When those individuals join forces incredible things can be achieved. It is a wondrous fact of humanity that inspiration ripples from one person to the next and RAG is a clear demonstration of this.

Happily nowadays RAG and the council are working together and the site is an important area for the biodiversity in Stevenage. As a Tree Warden I’m looking forward to visiting again next time there is a work party needed.

Brian, and team, I applaud you. If only more individuals took responsibility and didn’t always assume that it was someone else’s job the world would be a much better place.

Wildlife? In Stevenage?

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

In recent weeks when I have told people about the roles I have taken up in Stevenage I have had the same reaction over and over. Those who don’t live in the town and only visit for the Leisure Park, the gym, or just to pass through to get somewhere else always seem to write it off as an ugly, bland new town.

 Well, I want to say to them, open your eyes and ears! The place is teeming with all sorts of wildlife, from the ubiquitous verge bunnies, foxes, grey squirrels and muntjacs to the less expected.

Several of the woodlands are remnants of Ancient Woodland, although they have had plantations added (often referred to as PAWs). There are lots of hedgerows, which although they aren’t as dense and continuous as you would find in, say, Devon, they do provide habitat and food sources for a variety of species.

There are lots of existing records of bat and badger sightings, sparrowhawks and kestrels are known to nest in the area, buzzards are seen frequently and the occasional red kite has also been seen. Add to this the wide variety of other birds including jay, skylark, hobby and plenty of the more common species, the area has plenty to offer to the observant.

I have also spotted brown hare, weasel, pheasant, partidge whilst driving around the edge of the Knebworth estate on my way to work, and of course, there are also the roe deer to be seen in the park itself. One evening as I parked my car outside my block of flats I found myself in the middle of a conversation between two tawny owls, close enough to make out their silhouettes in the trees.

There is also a wide range of bug life too, plenty of butterflies around the woodlands and lots of moths too.

OK, I admit, with all it’s roundabouts and frankly rather stark buildings in the town centre Stevenage possibly wouldn’t win any beauty contests and it’s clipped verges don’t seem to offer much for wildlife other than those rabbits, but it’s all about knowing where to look. Believe me, it’s all out there.

I am about to start surveying one of the woodlands as part of the Tree Warden role, I’m hoping to come up with a study along the lines of the one I carried out for Hartham Common. If you fancy getting involved, whether you have expertise or not, drop me a line, I’d love to hear from you!

Will we never learn?

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Hot topic in the news today? Artificial trees, salt sprinkling boats, reflective discs launched into space.

 Have we not yet realised that all our attempts to battle against nature so far have failed to some degree, sometimes disastrously. We need to help nature do her thing, not try and combat the outcomes.

The biggest failing of all these projects is the notion that we are ‘saving the planet’. No, we’re not. We’re trying to save our own backsides from the destruction that we have inflicted on a living breathing organism. Whether you believe in Gaia or climate change is irrelevant, the science clearly demonstrates that something is happening and it’s big.

If we are to survive as a species we need to stop seeing ourselves as something special and recognise the limitations of our own ecology. We are just as likely to become extinct as any other creature and more fool us.

Nature spent millions of years designing her creations. Do we really, truly believe we can do better with our own technology?

So how can you justify rock concerts in the countryside??!

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Easy. Wherever there’s land supporting wildlife there is a landowner needing to finance it. Sadly there is always an economic impact where wildlife is concerned.

 Don’t get me wrong, I’m not suggesting for a second that the RSPB start opening reserves for Coldplay, far from it! Knebworth, however, is a heritage estate, independent of all the organisations. The cost of running such a property is phenomenal, the temptation to seek sources of income must place incredible pressure on the owners. For some properties like this, selling land for development is an easy option, resulting in loss of space for wildlife.

 When you think of it like that, a few days noise meaning the land is earning money is surely a better option. There will be some species that might move on, but others will stay, or return when it’s over. Unfortunately in the modern world not every landowner can put wildlife first at all times, which is why reserves are crucial.

 So what can we do? Support heritage estates by visiting them (and paying to get in, not just walking on free footpaths), join wildlife charities, volunteer…

 Actually the possibilities are only limited by your imagination. I’m trying to make a difference. Be the stone, don’t be the ripple.

Badgers and Trees and Wildlife generally!

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

I’m now officially the Badger Co-ordinator for Stevenage, and am also a Tree Warden with Stevenage Council.

I’m hoping to use the opportunities to really step up the focus on wildlife in the area. I will be visiting setts, collating records, surveying wildlife and hopefully getting people interested too.

 I made a difference at Hartham Common, the ripples are still going, I’m sure I can make a difference in Stevenage too.