I’m
back for another instalment of my ramblings, since my last post I have been
thinking of something to say I think I have settled upon the thought that there
is both space for people and wildlife.
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| Bluebells in the woodland at Red House Park, Great Barr |
Last week as part of my Training placement
with The Wildlife Trust for Birmingham and Black Country I visited Quinton
allotments which is one of the Nature Improvement Area (NIA) projects that the
B&BC Wildlife Trust has been involved with implementing. In a nutshell the
NIA focuses on using a landscape- scale approach to nature conservation that
aims to create, enhance and restore existing habitats while improving the
linkage between such habitats via wildlife corridors. I haven’t explained it
that well but please check out the B&BC Wildlife Trust Website to find out
more. Anyway, it was my visit to Quinton
allotments that inspired this post because not only was I surprised by the size
of the allotment and the valuable space it is for wildlife in an urban area. I
was really overwhelmed by the community spirit that the Allotment holders had
and their enthusiasm for making the allotments a space for wildlife – a place
that can be used by both people and wildlife. During my visit I saw butterflies
such as Peacock, Speckled Wood and several male Orange tips, as well as hearing
singing/ calling Goldfinches, Greenfinches, Chaffinches and a Dunnock. I really
enjoyed seeing how the allotment holders had utilised recycled materials such
as using glass bottles for borders and my favourite was a disused toilet as a
plant pot.
It
seems that occasionally people find wildlife a bit of an inconvenience, for instance
at the moment with the dawn chorus. I know some people don’t appreciate being
woken up at stupid o clock in the morning but I personally find it useful it’s
an alarm clock that you can’t switch off but it’s much better than the annoying
ringtone that is my morning alarm. Whenever I hear a Wren singing I always
think of the time when I was stuck in my bedroom revising from a forest of
lecture notes about animal behaviour wishing that I was out in the field
observing it for myself.
By seeing people at the allotments
appreciating and co-existing with wildlife (apparently the Woodpigeons eat well
from sown seed). It made me think of how
we can all do something to make space for wildlife for example in my garden my
mom has put up many bird feeders, even a window feeder does the trick. We also
made an ‘insect hotel’ it didn’t cost anything we used odd materials we already
had and my mom did a good job at asking people if we could have stuff like plastic
pipes and pallets out of their skips. I also tried to convince my dad to let me
convert the garden shed into a bird hide needless to say I was unsuccessful.
I also monitor birds visiting my garden by doing The BTOs Garden Birdwatch. I was nervously waiting for birds to appear on Saturday morning my garden was empty, the feeders were bare. Armed with my Binoculars and sipping my cup of tea I patiently waited for birds to arrive on the feeders. At one point the only thing I had to watch was a cat staring up at the feeders gulp!. In an hour I had x2 Greenfinches, 1 Woodpigeon, x2 Chaffinches, 1 Great Tit, x2 Dunnocks, 1 House Sparrow and 3 Robins. I wasn’t surprised by the small amount of birds that had visited within the hour compared to usual considering the time of year. I have seen many signs of birds collecting nesting material probably the best example is the magpie that has been taking off with the bristles from our front door mat.
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| Hopefully spiders will live here and not surprise me in my house |
These ideas might not be ground-breaking and you have probably heard about
them before but it’s only because they work in that they are beneficial to both
people and wildlife. In the case of the
window feeder birds are getting fed and I am getting wildlife coming to me in the
comfort of my own home, lazy wildlife watching what is wrong with that?. But I do
feel that the value of wildlife and the natural environment is often under estimated.(Rant
Alert) These days it seems like everything
has to have a price tag and sometimes it seems like wildlife is considered to
cost too much, surely
the benefit that our green-spaces and wildlife provide
to our well-beings is priceless and
worth appreciating?.




