Cromwell Bottom Wildlife Group
Chairman's
Report 2013 -2014
The past year has been a great for the reserve. After a
slow start and cold spell to 2013 everything kicked into gear and started to
bloom. Orchids had their best year ever with an estimated 600 + of different varieties,
and with a new species found for the reserve in the Broad Leafed Marsh Orchid.
Birds also had a good year with Goldfinch, Robin, Sedge and Reed Warblers,
Wren, Willow Warblers, Little Grebe, Herons, Dunnock and Goosander. All the
Tits, Whitethroat, not forgetting the King Fisher. All have had at least 1
brood and some breading twice. We had a drop in from a Little Egret, Buzzards
flying over as well as Red Kites. Frogs had a bumper year; at one time the
ground looked as though it was moving there were so many. Newts also had a
productive year on the pond dipping day, one scoop netted as many as 37.
Dragonflies numbers were down though
plenty of Brown Hawker, a few Common Darter - one male, one female, Broad
Bodied Chaser, one 4 spot Chaser, this may be due to the weather as we had a
very cold spell in the spring and the larvae may have been killed off, it also
may have been the habitat, which we are looking into with a view to improving
the area they breed in. A good showing of Red darter but not much else,
Damselflies had a fair year.
On the work side we made a wheelchair
access to the bird feeding area, cut the 3 hay meadows and the south facing
bank on Tag loop, started the reed cutting, put up more bird boxes including the Sparrow
farm area in the hope of encouraging Tree Sparrows back to the reserve. Unfortunately
these were vandalised but will be put
back as soon as we can. The bird viewing area was also destroyed but this has
been replaced and expanded. We also built and installed a floating raft in the
hope of getting Terns to nest, everything else has used it at one time or
another except Terns but of course that's nature!
Up and coming work for the winter
months will be continuing the reed cutting. The Woodland Trust have given us
900 trees to plant a hedgerow and the Rotarians have obtained the same amount
of trees from the same trust for us and most of these have been planted with
help from the children of Field Lane school in Rastrick. These in effect are
replacements for the thinning we are doing to various areas of the site in line
with Calderdale Countryside Dept.’s tree management policy. We have had a
second supply of trees this year so if you fancy helping us plant a hedgerow
keep your eyes on the blog as we have a tree planting day to arrange, it will
be coming up soon so we would like to get everybody, especially families
involved
Various groups are now using the reserve
for educational purposes, Kirklees
Collage, Crossly Heath School, Field Lane School and Lloyd Bank. Around 20
volunteers from Lloyd Bank are giving a days work in May, we are also mentoring
special needs individuals and their carer’s and hope to encourage more to come
over the next few years.
One of the projects we want to visit
is to reline the two Newt ponds we have and try to keep some water in them.
This will be very expensive, the large pond will cost around £4000 to £5000 and
this will be one our objectives for next year, however we are looking at a way to keep water
in there by topping up from another source as a temporary measure until the
money becomes available to complete the project. We will also be putting in
wheelchair access and a pond dipping platform on the bottom pond as well as
seating for all to enjoy.
In September 2013 we had our first
open day which was a huge success. We collected over £400 and after costs gave
us a profit of £230, it was so productive we will be having another one on the
21st of June which is
the longest day of the year. In the evening there will be a solstice walk
around the reserve so please make a note in your diary and remember to bring
your wallets and purses, for those who didn’t make the last one there will be a
refreshment tent as well as stalls selling pictures, books, raffles +other
events and also there will be live animals to hold courtesy of Cath Grammer and
friends. We look forward to seeing you all there.
On the money side we have been given
a grant of £302 through the Co-Op - voted for by your good selves and we thank
you all for doing this, it will go towards the pond liner. The main highlight
was a grant of £3000 from Lloyd’s Bank which was secured again by yourselves
voting for us. The committee cannot thank you all enough for your help, this
has made a big difference to the way we work. It has provided us with laptop /
projector and screen which we have used already to give presentations to other
groups, we will also be purchasing a
printer so we will be able to print regular newsletters, also pond dipping
equipment and small binoculars for use by children on the reserve as part of
our desire to get young people engaged with nature as they will be the ones to
take over when we are no longer able .
As some or all of you may know we had
already started buying tools and equipment for our work groups for use on the
reserve that was until we had a break in, the thieves cut a hole in the
fencing, tore off a metal sheet in the
Green shed opened the roller shutter doors and cut the lock off on the
container and then stole almost all the new tools and equipment we had
purchased, sum total of £920 luckily we have insurance and are in the process
of getting some of it back .
As most of you will of seen, the
recapping of north loop has commenced and is due for completion in September /
October time, we have been in discussions with Hugh Firman (Conservation
officer and Robin Dalton from Calderdale countryside Dept) about how this area
is to be restored when complete and have a first draft to be submitted to the
powers that will make the decision at the end of April, and as soon as a
decision is made we will let you know.
Hopefully next year we will have the
chance of giving presentations in the new Cabin which is due next year as a
visitor centre. Any donations are welcome towards this and if you know of
anybody wishing to donate to a good cause please let them know about us.
To finish I would like to thank you
all on behalf of the committee for your support and to all who have put in
their time and effort to restoring the reserve and hope you will continue to do
so, and to all of you who have given donations thank you very much. The
tasks that need doing are great but with your help we can achieve them .
Yours Graham
Chairman
Chairman's Report 2012 - 2013
May I start by thanking everybody for their
efforts this year, from the "Last of the Summer Wine" crew and all
those who have given a day or more of their time to those who have donated bird
food and/or money, as well as verbal support and well wishes. It all helps to
know that what we are doing is appreciated.
Over the last 12 months, our membership has
steadily risen, and we are now at 57 paid members, as well as associated
members. This is of course excellent. However, we would like to see more. All our
membership fees go to feed the birds in winter and provide materials to help us
carry out our various projects.
At this point I would like to give a special
thank you to two people. First, Robin
Dalton from the Calderdale Countryside department, who is our guide, mentor, sounding
board, benefactor, referee. Without Robins
help half of what we have achieved would not have been possible. Second, when we started the group, we didn't realise what paperwork was
involved in doing so, and we made a few mistakes. Luckily, we had a young lady
to help and guide us, and our thanks go to Mags Bryson for keeping us on course
and, I hope, continuing to do so.
We have had a great year and have achieved a
lot, and on that note I would like to do a quick run-through of the year since
the last AGM.
April The membership opened, we had our first piece
in the local newspaper, we finished planting over 900 trees, and the goosander
had 11 young.
May Dragonflies/common sandpiper/whitethroat
and warblers were seen. We also had a water shrew on the lagoon margins, and we
prepared the areas for the memorial stone and bench seat – the bench seat was
kindly donated to us by Roy Barron.
June The first moth night
we had planned had to be cancelled due to bad weather. Marshalls donated and placed a stone on the
prepared area on the
wettest day of the year (Hebden flooded that day), and we started to expand the
feeders. Three of us did a newt count in the wheel wash, again, on a very wet
Saturday evening and counted approx 215. The solstice walk took place which I
hope will be an annual event and is included in
the Wild-side magazine for this year.
July The rerun of the moth
night was a great success. Thirteen turned out for a great evening. "Welcome"
signs were put on the entrance gates, and we started to prepare the areas for
the bridge between the lagoons.
August A quiet month. However, we started to build
the screen on the feeders and the steps down to them (which, I might add, have
gone from strength to strength). This is being
enjoyed by all especially I am happy to say - children.
September We expanded the screen
and put in seating. We had an Open Day at the Brighouse Library. The little
grebes had 4 young, which was a late brood, and the bench seat was fitted.
October We revised our Constitution
on advice from Mags Bryson – thank you, Mags. We prepared the bridge for the
lagoon, had a kingfisher at the feeding station, the first redpoll of this season
on the 10th of the month (I had the 11th in the sweepstake, which I believe was won
by Mike). Not all was good, though – we had our camo netting stolen as well as
bird feed. The hay meadows were cut a little too late this year, but with the wet
weather, we weren't able to clear it all off, but then we learn from our
mistakes. We put up the information board.
November The bridge between the lagoons was completed,
we had our second Open Day at Kershaw's Garden Centre with Santa, and the first
sightings of waxwings in Brighouse.
December The grass was cut on the weir bank and removed.
Road signs were finally erected. The Bailey Bridge sides were fenced in, and
the gate opened 12 months ahead of our initial prediction. Thanks to Calderdale
Waste Management and Bob Wilkinson in particular.
January We were blessed with good weather yet again
for the work party when we installed the steps on the river side of the path
between the lagoons.
February We finished the lagoon
walk with two steps at the canal side. We fitted
another shelf on the bird screen, and Kershaw's Young Gardeners planted bulbs,
which is part of our strategy to encourage the next generation to get involved.
March Finally for this year, we have
constructed a pontoon/raft to try to encourage common terns to nest, and we
have built nest boxes for a tree sparrow farm, again to try to encourage tree
sparrows back to the reserve. Both projects will be placed on the reserve ASAP.
In
addition, we have had over 55,000 hits on the blog, which is an incredible
amount in such a relatively short space of time and from all over the world (I
believe Mike is keeping a log). I hope it's another indication that we are
getting things right. We have also had visitors to the reserve from all over
the north of England , and
even one couple from Lowestoft , who thoroughly
enjoyed their day out with us.
You may have
noticed that work has now commenced on the north loop area of the reserve, For
those of you who don’t know what’s going on, this area was originally a gravel
pit and was then used for refuse disposal. When this came to an end it was
capped with clay and then with soil. This was to be a metre in depth, however
it is only 100 mm in places, this has now to be recapped at a rather large cost.
This should be completed by this time next year, and after a settlement period will
be opened up to the public; however, the date for this is under discussion. Gas
wells will have to be put on the area as well as ways of removing the leachates.
We will also have some input as to what goes back on north loop as regards wild
flowers, trees, habitat, etc. in conjunction with Hugh Firman, who is the Conservation
Officer for Calderdale, and Bob Wilkinson, who is the Waste Management Officer
responsible for the recapping project. We will keep you informed as
and when we know what is happening.
Last but by no means least:
I would like to give special recognition at
this point to one of our members. She is one of our unsung heroes who clears
the rubbish that other, shall we say, inconsiderate people, leave behind on the
reserve – which gives us the chance to concentrate on the other things. So it
gives me great pleasure on behalf of the Committee – and it was unanimous – to
award Ann Lane
with lifetime membership of the Group, which in our opinion is totally
deserved. Thank you, Ann, for all your
efforts.
Yours Graham
Projects for the coming year
In the late autumn of 2013 we will be working on the lagoon. This
is quite a complex area, and we have already started to monitor the state of
the water with regular pH-level checks, which are at the moment fairly neutral.
The amount of dissolved oxygen is also being monitored; however, it seems that we
don't have many nutrients, and we will continue to monitor this as well.
We also have the problem of willow encroachment, and if we don't
do something soon we may well lose the lagoon altogether as we have with Lagoon
2. However, Lagoon 2 has now become its own special habitat – a rare wet woodland
– but it will still need managing. We have started to cut pockets of open areas
in this lagoon to encourage amphibians.
The reeds are
also encroaching on Lagoon 1, and these will need to be cut back in small pockets.
This will be done on a 7-year cycle. As
for further monitoring, we will be doing a moth survey to see which areas of
the lagoon support which types of moth. This will then give us an indication as
to where to start cutting. There is also a problem with swamp stonecrop (Crassula helmsii). This is an invasive weed from Australia
and New Zealand ,
and extreme care will have to be taken not to spread this to other areas. The sphagnum bog needs a great deal of work
to bring it back to its former glory – more work than we can handle by ourselves.
One of our aims is to get species back that have been on the
reserve but are not there at the moment, one being willow tit. Other projects
will include tree sparrows, and we are in the process of building a farm for
this species, to be erected shortly. We are hoping for the return of yellow
hammer and wall brown butterfly. We are also trying to encourage terns to nest
by building a raft, which is almost complete and will be placed in the centre
of the open water as soon as possible. Bat boxes will be erected, and grass
snake monitoring will be carried out.
There is much more to do, such as on the river path. This needs a
lot of work to make it usable all year round, not just in dry weather. The path
to the tree walk needs opening up with steps down to the "pixie wood"
path. This will provide another circular walk.
We will also be thinning out some of the saplings that are
taking over parts of the orchid areas. Of course, all these projects will take
place only if weather permits. If we have a
summer like 2012, the 1-year plan could end up being a 5-year plan.
4 comments:
Fantastic, really great to hear the plans for next year, cant wait to see the reserve this time next year! Great work everyone!
Thanks Andy your comments are appriciated. yours Graham
I would like to thank everybody for all the hard work that has been done and will continue to be done at Cromwell. It is a great place to visit and the future plans for it means it will be even better. It is one of my favourite places to wander around.
Thank you M/b nice to know what we are doing give's pleasure and is appriciated. yours Graham
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