Wednesday, 13 June 2007
Nature Fact
The Newt is one of the few creatures to be able to regrow a limb should they lose one. If these little animals can avoid being preyed on, they may live up to 20 years.
Site Management
The Guardian work party installed a larger kissing gate improving access to the dry heathland area for parents with pushchairs and the disabled in mobility chairs. An extra work party in early June assisted the D.C.C. Ranger with the placement of an Interpretation Board
Monday, 14 May 2007
Nature Watch
April began and continued throughout with splendid warm and bright sunny weather. The bog pool water levels dropped considerably during this period. The weather conditions were ideal in encouraging flying insects for the feeding of early broods of birds. Fledging as early as the first week of April was noted for Blackbirds, Robins, Song Thrush and Tit species. The call of a Cuckoo was heard on the 1st May at the Wet Wood. Adult foxes were very evident on site, playing and digging for worms during daytime. A Willow Warbler and a Wheatear were seen on the fringes of Slop Bog in a garden in Hazel Drive. New sightings of birds in this period in addition to last month are Tree Pipit, Jackdaw, Starling, Mistle Thrush, Herring Gull, Black Headed Gull, Stock Dove and a female Crossbill. Crossbills were recorded on Slop Bog several years ago but no further sightings have been recorded until this month. With the onset of a cooler wet period, food has been provided for the birds at the feeding stations. This is a crucial time for birds when feeding themselves and their young and providing food is a back up if live food is not in abundance.
New recordings of insects in this period in addition to last month are Comma, Orange Tip, Small White, Large White and Holly Blue Butterflies; Large Red Damselfly, Broad-bodied Chaser and Four Spotted Chaser Dragonfly; Cuckoo Bee, Common Wasp, St. Marks Fly, Crane, Green Bottle, Blue Bottle and Grey-flesh Flies; Green Tiger and Ground Beetles; Raft and Garden Spiders.
As for Reptiles and Amphibians, the warm weather has brought out Grass Snakes, Adders and Slow Worms so watch out for them on the paths and banks.
Recorded rainfall for the period was approx 30 millimetres
New recordings of insects in this period in addition to last month are Comma, Orange Tip, Small White, Large White and Holly Blue Butterflies; Large Red Damselfly, Broad-bodied Chaser and Four Spotted Chaser Dragonfly; Cuckoo Bee, Common Wasp, St. Marks Fly, Crane, Green Bottle, Blue Bottle and Grey-flesh Flies; Green Tiger and Ground Beetles; Raft and Garden Spiders.
As for Reptiles and Amphibians, the warm weather has brought out Grass Snakes, Adders and Slow Worms so watch out for them on the paths and banks.
Recorded rainfall for the period was approx 30 millimetres
Nature Fact
Green Woodpeckers have an amazingly long tongue that can turn corners inside a beetle's burrow enabling them to lick out their food.
Site Management
At the end of April, the Slop Bog Guardians work party assisted the D.C.C. Conservation Rangers with the construction of a footstep platform to ease access onto the boardwalk at the gate sited at the point adjoining the enclosure fence. Also, a further gate was installed into the fencing of the boardwalk to give safer access into the bog enclosure to the north for nature recorders and monitors.
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