Thursday, 11 June 2020

Monday, 13 April 2020

North of England Raptor Forum

NERF’s ‘Most Wanted’

‘The price of success is hard work, dedication to the job at hand and the determination that whether we win or lose we have applied the best of ourselves to the task at hand’.
Vince Lombardi 1913 – 1970
The thoughts, as expressed by Lombardi, exactly identify the characteristics that NERF looks for in the individuals who are awarded the NERF Certificate of Appreciation. All of the recipients have demonstrated their total commitment to protecting birds of prey in the North of England.
The dedication of two legendary Raptor Workers (Bill Hesketh and Bill Murphy) is recognised by NERF
The history of ornithology is littered with explorers who traveled the globe identifying new species, in the days when travel was all but impossible. There are biologists, statisticians, scientists and all manner of academics who bring both old and new avian information to us almost daily. Our bookshelves groan under the weight of their combined literary output. Whist we acknowledge and celebrate the work undertaken by this group of ornithologists we must never forget that the academic world of ornithology is under-pinned by a vast network of millions of ‘ordinary’ birders. For more than a century birders who have collectively spent countless hours, voluntarily surveying and monitoring birds whilst keeping meticulous notes to be shared with the rest of the birding community. A handful of these ‘ordinary’ birders achieve legendary status amongst their peers and NERF is fortunate enough to have two such legends within its ranks.
The names Bill Hesketh and Bill Murphy are synonymous with monitoring and protecting birds of prey in the Forest of Bowland. It is impossible to overstate the fantastic contribution that they have made to our collective knowledge over five decades. Not only have they collected a vast wealth of data they have touched the lives of all of us who know them.
Mick Demain is an extremely talented wildlife artist, a member of NERF and he is also the RSPB Warden working on the United Utilities / RSPB Reserve in the Forest of Bowland. Here Mick recounts his relationship with the Bills.
“I first encountered Bill Hesketh and Bill Murphy, affectionately known as the two Bills, on a long sweeping windswept fell on the eastern edge of Bowland, they approached me and introduced themselves and the conversation lasted no more than a couple of minutes before we parted, the date was 10th May 1992 and although we didn’t know it at the time it would be eighteen years before our paths crossed again and this time we would go on to become great friends.
In 2010 I became involved with the RSPB in Bowland and in 2012 I became RSPB seasonal warden at which time I adopted a team of volunteers, including the Bills who had a great knowledge of Bowland and its birds. Their experience, going back fifty years, has been invaluable to the RSPB.
As the years have passed the friendship has grown and they have been a massive help to me with the fieldwork and great companions on many walks into remote areas to check and monitor sites. I can’t envisage a day when the Bills will not be here to help for they have become a part of Bowland and certainly for me it won’t be the same without them.
These two guys have put in countless hours at a considerable cost to themselves and the RSPB owes them a massive debt of gratitude.”
We all owe them a debt of gratitude and it is with great pleasure that we award the Bills NERF Certificates of Merit.
NERF
April 2020
Dr. Cathleen Thomas, PhD
Project Manager, RSPB Hen Harrier Life Plus Project

Monday, 3 February 2020

Help Bees By Not Mowing Dandelions

Help bees by not mowing dandelions, gardeners told. Plants provide key food source for pollinators as they come out of hibernation

Each dandelion head has up to 100 individual flowers. Photograph: Janek Skarzynski/AFP/Getty Images  

Gardeners should avoid mowing over dandelions on their lawn if they want to help bees, according to the new president of the British Ecological Society.
Dandelions – which will start flowering in the UK this month – provide a valuable food source for early pollinators coming out of hibernation, including solitary bees, honey bees and hoverflies.
Each dandelion head contains up to 100 individual flowers, known as florets, which contain nectar and pollen. There are 240 species of dandelion in the UK.
Prof Jane Memmott said: “If dandelions were rare, people would be fighting over them. Because they’re common, people pull them out and spray them off and all sorts of horrible things. Just let them flower.”
Memmott, who took over as president of the BES at the start of this year, is also a professor of ecology at the University of Bristol.
She said gardeners should avoid planting too many “pompom shaped” flowers, such as old English roses and dahlia, because they focus so much of their energy on producing petals and have very little nectar and pollen. “As a rule, if you can see the pollen and nectar parts of a flower without pulling back petals, then it’s OK for pollinators,” she said.
Carrots that have flowered, or “bolted”, and onions in unkempt vegetable gardens are also some of the best plants for pollinators.
“People are a lot tidier than they used to be. This whole business of keeping your lawn clipped and pulling the weeds out is part of some British obsession with tidiness,” Memmott said. “If you look back at old pictures, people weren’t as tidy. I think bohemian untidiness is what we’re aiming for – you don’t want it to look like neglect.”
Leaving the grass to grow 8-10cm (3-4in) tall means clovers, daisies, self-heal and creeping buttercup can also flower. “You can’t personally help tigers, whales and elephants but you really can do something for the insects, birds and plants that are local to you,” said Memmott, who encouraged gardeners to halve the amount of mowing they do.
The global mass of insects is falling by 2.5% a year and many could be extinct within a century, according to a global scientific review last year.
The charity Buglife encourages people to leave a strip of garden that is cut only once in autumn and once in spring. “An awful lot of lawns, especially in older houses, will be built on old meadows so wildflowers come up quite quickly. In a new house they might take a bit longer as they could have had a turf put down,” said Paul Hetherington, the director of communications at Buglife.


Help bees by not mowing dandelions

Wednesday, 8 January 2020

Hen Harriers Again © Mark Avery


Poor old Duke

Mark 9 Comments
We are often told that Hen Harriers depend on grouse moors for their survival – this is a big lie rather than a small one. The fact is that Hen Harrier breeding success over a long period of time (in England and Scotland) and survival (as measured by the lack of survival of satellite-tagged birds by Natural England) is very poor on intensively-managed grouse moors.
But those are large-scale analyses (and obviously powerful because of that), so let’s just illustrate what that actually means on the ground in one corner of the English uplands.
Let’s have a look at the Forest of Bowland Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, whose logo happens to be a Hen Harrier. It’s not a random choice, this area has been at times the stronghold of this bird in England. Although it’s difficult to believe these days (when some recent years have seen a complete absence of breeding), there have often been double-figured numbers of Hen Harrier nests here in the past. And that’s why part of this area is designated by the UK as a Special Protection Area for birds under the EU Birds Directive. The Bowland Fells SPA qualified for this designation by holding significant proportion of the UK breeding population – 13 pairs over a period of years.
There are many landowners in this area but the three largest are United Utilities plc (what used to be called a water company – which owns part of this catchment to maintain water quality and which does have a few days grouse shooting on its land each year but cannot remotely be called a grouse moor), the Abbeystead Estate (owned by the Duke of Westminster) and the Bleasdale Estate (owned by businessman Jeremy Duckworth).
The land ownerships are roughly in the following proportions:
Estate% of HHSAs by area% of Bowland Fells SPA by area
Abbeystead1647
United Utilities7034
Bleasdale910
The rest58
Abbeystead Estate is a famous grouse moor – it holds the record for the most Red Grouse shot in a single day in the UK. Can you guess how many Red Grouse were shot by eight ‘guns’ on 12 August 1915?
Did you guess 2929? That’s more than 350 dead birds for each shooter – what sport eh? But those were the days when Abbeystead was owned by the Earls of Sefton, the Grosvenor family acquired the moor in 1980.
You’d think that a famous grouse moor, owned by His Grace the Duke of Westminster, usually the highest ranking UK-born individual in the Sunday Times Rich List, and the most recently created Dukedom in the UK, with a wealth of £10bn, would be in a perfect position to demonstrate the value of driven grouse moors for Hen Harriers – particularly at this former stronghold for the bird, and particularly because of his large land holding.
But poor old (actually, rather young) Duke of Westminster. No nesting Hen Harriers on Abbeystead this year despite there being five successful pairs on the adjacent United Utilities land (where the birds are guarded by volunteers organised by the RSPB and United Utilities). His Grace must be gutted. All that prime Hen Harrier habitat in an area whose very logo is the Hen Harrier, all those gamekeepers looking after the Hen Harriers and not a thing to show for it.
Maybe there’ll be lots next year, although recent history suggests not, as I am told (by local, experienced, raptor workers) that the last time that Hen Harriers nested successfully on the Abbeystead Estate was 2003 – so don’t hold your breath! All but one of the successful Hen Harrier nests in the last decade in Bowland has been on the United Utilities land.
So in passing we must note too, that the other large grouse shooting estate in Bowland has been unlucky in attracting and keeping safe Hen Harriers too – the Bleasdale Estate’s last reported successful Hen Harrier nest was in 1993. In fact, Bleasdale Estate has been unlucky with its breeding Peregrine Falcons too in recent years (see a disturbing video here).
It’s a shame that being very rich, and owning lots of land in a prime location doesn’t seem to guarantee the riches of successful Hen Harrier nests. I’d recommend that His Grace and Mr Duckworth get in touch with the RSPB team operating locally to discover the secret of getting successful Hen Harrier nests in the Bowland Fells. But until they do, can we hear a little less about how great are driven grouse moors for the threatened Hen Harrier, please?
For all sorts of reasons, I’d be delighted if you would give your support to this e-petition.

Tuesday, 24 December 2019

How to go green this Christmas

Christmas is a joyful time of gathering with loved ones and giving gifts. But it’s also a time of excess: mountains of food, gallons of eggnog and piles of presents swathed in inordinate amounts of wrapping paper. With a growing awareness around the dangers of single-use plastic and climate change, are there ways to make your Christmas more sustainable? How can you put the green into gifting?

Here are some top suggestions for small changes that could make a big difference to the planet this yuletide. We’re dreaming of a green Christmas – are you?

1. Use recyclable wrapping paper

Each Christmas we’re getting through around 8,000 tonnes of wrapping paper. That equates to approximately 50,000 trees. But that’s ok, paper is recyclable, right? Wrong. A lot of festive wrapping paper is laminated or covered in metallic coloured shapes, glitter and plastics which can’t be recycled. Luckily, there’s a simple test to determine whether your paper is a goer. Simply scrunch a small square of it in the palm of your hand. If it scrunches up it can be recycled; if it doesn't and springs straight back then its destined for the rubbish tip. To play it safe, opt for brown paper or old newspaper, glammed up with a bit of reusable ribbon.
There’s a simple test to determine whether your wrapping paper can be recycled. Simply scrunch a small square of it in the palm of your hand. If it scrunches up it can be recycled; if it doesn't and springs straight back then its destined for the rubbish tip.

2. Ditch the sticky tape

Try using biodegradable string or raffia to secure your wrapping paper, rather than plastic tape. And if you get given gifts wrapped using sticky tape, make sure you remove it from all the wrapping paper as it can make the paper hard to recycle.

3. Cut back on presents

Present giving is an integral part of Christmas, so we’re not suggesting you give it a miss this year. But what about giving less? Talk to your family about taking a Secret Santa approach, so you all give and receive one quality gift that is really wanted. (And try to buy locally when you can to support small businesses and reduce your carbon footprint.)

4. Give charity gifts or experiences

Another great way to reduce waste is to buy experiences rather than physical items. What about a wine tasting? Cinema vouchers or a night in a shepherd’s hut? And charity gifts are lovely too: sponsor a water vole for an animal lover or give a goat to a Rwandan farmer.

5. Trawl the charity shops

As well as sticking to local businesses for your present shopping, you should check out the local charity shops. You can often bag a bargain in the form of designer clothes or the latest bestseller. Not only are you cutting down on waste, your money is going to a good cause too.

6. Send e-cards

We all love receiving cards through the post, but the sad truth is that most Christmas cards end up in the bin in January. Have you thought about sending e-cards instead? Many companies let you design your own and no trees need to be harmed. Alternatively, cut up last year's cards and reuse them this year. Give those robins a second outing! If getting creative’s not your thing, be sure to buy recycled and then recycle any you receive.

Which washing machine cycle is worst for the environment

How choosing the right washing machine setting could make a difference.

7. Recycle your tree

Although they might seem less wasteful, fake trees are not the answer. They last longer, sure, but that’s because they’re mostly made from plastic, which isn’t recyclable. It’s a much greener option to opt for a real tree (as long as it’s from a sustainable source), as it will actually help to remove carbon from the atmosphere while it’s alive, and then recycle it after the big day. If your local authority doesn’t recycle then find a garden centre that does.

8. Put waste food in the compost

Each year we throw away fridgefuls of food that we just can’t squeeze in. Try to cut down on the shopping this year (do you really need brandy butter AND brandy cream?) and put any uneaten food scraps in the compost, not the bin.

Could you buy all your clothes second-hand?

People are buying more of their clothes second-hand because of worries about waste.

9. Go crackers for reusable crackers

It’s hard to imagine Christmas without the annual battle for cracker victory and, of course, the colourful paper hats. But crackers are pretty wasteful: many are coated in plastic which makes them impossible to recycle and the plastic toys inside invariably end up in the bin (who needs another miniature yo-yo?). Thankfully, there are lots of sustainable options on the market now: ones with cardboard casings and plastic-free toys, crackers that bang when you pull them but don’t tear open so you can refill them and use them year after year, and natural linen crackers that will look beautiful on the table and will last a lifetime.

10. Ban batteries

Many gifts and toys exchanged at Christmas require batteries, and that’s bad news for the planet. Batteries contain toxic chemicals (an environmental hazard), they don’t biodegrade and are difficult to recycle. Try to avoid buying battery-powered toys (after all, there’s nothing better than a good book), and where it’s unavoidable source some rechargeable batteries.

Are fake plants bad for the environment?

Peter Gibbs investigates the trend for fake turf and artificial plants.

11. Choose solar-powered lights

For some streets, Christmas lights have become seriously competitive. It’s all about having the brightest display and the biggest inflatable Santa hanging from a drainpipe. But all these bulbs – as fun as they might seem – are burning through electricity and having an impact on our environment. Instead, think small, subtle and solar-powered.

Sunday, 29 September 2019

Gardening That helps The Environment Radio 4 Programme © BBC

How you can save the environment through gardening

We’re used to taking an uptight, corseted approach to gardening: keeping hedgerows, borders, lawns and pots neat and tidy and weed-free. But as “rewilding” projects have proven, letting nature reclaim the land means a huge boost for wildlife. And with insects (nature’s “glue”) in decline across the planet, and air pollution rife, it’s never been more necessary.

But what if your outdoor area is tiny? Or you don’t have a garden at all? Fear not, we have tips for turning even the most miniscule of urban spaces into a haven for nature to save the environment.

1. Plant a window box

You may not have any outside space of your own, but you’ll likely have a window or two. So, rig up a window box and scatter some wild flower seeds. Bees are fond of colourful, tubular flowers like foxgloves and love lavender, borage, catmint and buttercups. (What could be nicer than the scent of lavender wafting into the room?) Our buzzing, stripy pals are also partial to the pink blooms of chives. Add this to your window box and you’ll always have the herb on hand for cooking with too.

2. Don't bother mowing

If you're lucky enough to have some lawn, you might feel a bit embarrassed to sit on your hands and watch it go to seed, sprouting dark patches and thick tussocks. But leave it a few months and soon the space will be a biodiverse patchwork of wild flowers and different grasses – attracting a plethora of butterflies and other six-legged friends. Meadow grass, buttercup and dandelion all provide favourite seeds for a whole range of birds too.

How gardening can be hard on the environment

Tools and utensils used in gardening aren't very eco-friendly.

3. Install some house plants

As well as creating a haven for wildlife, plants have the added benefit of reducing carbon dioxide levels (through photosynthesis). They also help to diminish airborne dust and levels of certain pollutants like benzene and nitrogen dioxide. Fill your home with plants and know that you’re doing your bit for the environment!
Fill your home with plants and know that you’re doing your bit for the environment.

4. Build a bee and bug B&B

In the UK there are over 250 species of bees, the vast majority of which are solitary. Some of them nest in holes in walls, pieces of wood and old vegetation. So, you can give a boost to their habitat by constructing your own bee hotel from wood and hollow plant stems, affixing it to a wall or fence or popping it on your balcony.
Construct your own insect hotel from wood and hollow plant stems and affix it to any external wall or fence.

5. Cut the pesticides

It’s time to go organic. The first step to encouraging insects and birds into your garden is to ditch all pesticides, weed-killers, fertilisers and slug pellets. To stop slugs ravaging your veggies simply crush up egg shells and sprinkle them around the base of your plants instead.

6. Make a hedgehog run

We don’t mean chase a hedgehog, but rather speak to your neighbours about creating a pathway between gardens and properties so that hedgehogs and other creatures can happily pass from green space to green space. We know that joining up bits of land is crucial for the safe passage and proliferation of wildlife – so get the neighbours on side and cut some hedgehog-sized holes in the bottom of your fences, or even take out the odd fence panel. This way you get to keep your privacy but welcome wildlife.
Your houseplants reduce carbon dioxide levels and improve the quality of the air we breathe.

7. Make your own mini pond

All life needs water, so the best thing you can do with a small or urban space is to create a pond. It doesn’t have to be large – even a washing-up bowl will do. Add plant life and, before you know it, you’ll have frogspawn, pond snails and dragonfly larvae aplenty.

8. Pull up paving

Think about hauling out those paving stones and putting down some turf. If your plot is simply too small then another option is to opt for gravel, and scatter some insect-friendly plants like lavender amongst the stones. And there’s always the option of planting some wildflower pots if you can’t bring yourself to say farewell to the flagstones.
"Which way to the next garden?"
Plant herbs and edible greens in your window boxes so that you can also get nutritious food whilst being kind to the environment.

9. Think vertically

A clever way to introduce plant life when you have limited space is to encourage some climbers. Ivy, honeysuckle, passion flower, jasmine and wisteria are all wonderful plants for wildlife, and many don’t even need a trellis. Unlike a bare fence, a climbing plant provides space for birds to nest, butterflies to hibernate and bees to shelter from the rain.

10. Attach a bird box

A nest box is an excellent substitute for a tree hole, and much needed in areas which are lacking in the latter. Why wait? Get one rigged up! For tits, sparrows and starlings the box needs to be between two and four metres high up on a tree, wall or fence. It’s also important to make sure it’s facing between north and east to avoid strong sunlight and wet winds.

Why gardening on social media is not all it seems

There is a wide gulf between real gardens and those portrayed on social media.
To stop slugs ravaging your veggies simply crush up egg shells and sprinkle them around the base of your plants.

11. Borrow a pig

Animal disturbance can help to turn over the soil in a garden and uncover all the dormant, natural seeds. So, if you have the space, what about putting a pig in there for a week or two? An animal also means poo, which is a natural fertiliser and will help attract dung beetles. If a pig’s out of the question (and let’s face it, for most of us it will be), try rooting around in the soil with a garden fork instead and contact a stables - they usually have free dung they're trying to dispose of.
Link to website

Wednesday, 17 July 2019

The Little People