Friday, 27 May 2016

Work Party Tuesday 31st May 10am-1pm


Meet at the Redwood Drive entrance. 

We will continue to lay path gravel at the Cedar Way entrance to improve this access point.  There are also some rotten boards on the boardwalk to replace.

Tools and gloves will be provided along with half time refreshments.  Please contact Will Holland on 07827 820465 if you have any queries.

Monday, 2 May 2016

Nature Notes April

 
A month of mixed weather; wind, heavy rain, sunshine, sleet and hail.  Despite these conditions, activity and movement was apparent on site.

SIGHTINGS
Birds:   Carrion Crow, Jackdaws, Jays, Magpies, Sparrowhawk, Kestrel, Buzzards, Green/Great Spotted Woodpeckers, Wood Pigeons, Collared Doves, Common Gulls, Black-headed Gulls, Stonechats, Siskins, Blackcaps, Chiffchaffs, Willow Warblers, Blackbirds, Song Thrushes, Robins, Wrens, Goldcrest, Chaffinches, Greenfinches, Bullfinches, Goldfinches, Coal/Blue/Great Tits, Nuthatches, Treecreepers, Swallows, Sand Martins.
Mammals:   Wood Mice, Grey Squirrels, Roe Deer, Fox, Mole activity, Pipistrelle Bats.
Plants in flower:   Common Gorse, Flowering Currant, Catkins, Amelanchier, Bird Cherry.
Fungi:   Birch Polypore.
Pond Life:   Pond Skaters, Whirlygig Beetles, Stickleback fish, Frog
Butterflies:   Large White, Brimstone, Red Admiral. Small White, Orange Tip.
Insects:   Buff Tailed Bees, Hover Flies, Midges.
Reptiles:   Common Lizards.

Many bird species have pressed on with nesting, egg laying and incubation despite changeable weather and air temperatures.  Observations indicate the quantity of eggs being produced in a clutch of Blue Tit eggs were halved from the usual 10 to just 5.
A Sparrowhawk has been observed constructing a nest in a tree on the northern side of Kingfisher Creek.
Both Swallows and Sand Martins have been sighted in flight over the site on several occasions.
A Treecreeper has chosen the crete nesting box along Kingfisher Creek to rear young.
Several Common Lizards have been seen on the boardwalk on warmer days, but no reported sightings of Adders or Grass snakes.
Pipistrelle Bats airborne in warm dry evenings.

Nature Fact

Treecreepers nest in slender cavities in tree trunks or behind a flap of peeling bark on a dead or dying tree.  The cavity usually has two entrances, or rather, one of them acts as the emergency exit!  They scurry upwards on trees, searching for insects and invertebrate animals using their finely pointed down-curved beak.  Their eyes are large and protected by unusually prominent eyebrows for a small, slow-flying bird.