Sunday 23 August 2020

Little by little

 We might have returned to working on the Commons, but we must still observe social distancing rules, and strict restrictions over the number of people working at any one time. Unless we can arrange for each working party to double as a wedding reception, we must still restrict our numbers at each session to rather less than the usual average of attendees. In order to continue providing people with the opportunity to volunteer here, when we have more people than permitted willing to attend a session, some of us are dropping out from some sessions. In a typical act of self-sacrifice, your usual correspondent was the first to do so, and accordingly this account of the latest session is clearer, better illustrated and makes far more sense. Have no fear, in order to try to meet Natural England’s exacting timescale for the completion of the work for maximum environmental benefit, there is a scheme afoot to possibly run sessions each weekend, allowing people to still turn out fortnightly.

The Commons are of course a Local Nature Reserve, so included today are a couple of pictures of wildlife from them. First up is a Stock Dove, very recently deceased on School Common. There was no sign of it having been predated, so perhaps it was a victim of the previous day’s gales. 

Team Leader Julie co-led today’s session:

Margaret and I arrived on Saturday planning to tree pop Alders...only to be faced with dozens of Himalayan Balsam flowers waving to us!! So we dealt with as many if those as we could before Grizzly munched them.... then progressed to the Alders. Over the last few weeks loads have been removed...

There are still plenty to be popped before next time though!!

However, HB and Alders removed, Grizzly managed to clear a good area for tomorrow’s work party.

Happily Mr Toad was unharmed by the work done:

I went home happy with my mornings work and sat having a cuppa...I ran my hand through my hair and out popped a very unwelcome guest:

I hate spiders 🙈 and screamed like a girl!!! Now I know why I normally wear a tight fitting hat - yuk urgh !!

 

We had a really good morning for the main event on Sunday. It went very well and everyone was very happy to be back on the Common. We met at the site as agreed and stood in a distanced circle while I explained how it would all work. A jogger went past and said we looked like we were just about to start a Tai Chi class! “Cloud Hands” everyone..

 Anyway, no time for such things we were soon up and running - some reassuringly familiar photos... 

The sheets were filled and guided to the dump site where the winch was used to pull the sheet over. Luckily the reed, cut yesterday, was dry and relatively light - it was all very effective and efficient.



The atmosphere was very relaxed and there was the familiar chatter and laughter across the site. At half time we all had a break - unfortunately with our own refreshments as we are not allowed to provide tea and coffee - and everyone sat or stood and had a drink. It was noted with the ‘couples’ sat together and ‘singles’ separate that it resembled a strange speed dating game!



We hadn’t tipped Noel out of his wheelbarrow - honest!

Then it was back to work - everyone reunited successfully with their own numbered pitch forks!

A very successful session leaves half of area B looking very smart.

Hopefully we will tackle more of this area in two weeks’ time.


Here's the message of thanks, from all the team leaders:

To all volunteers,

We hope that you are all keeping safe and well.

Following on from a 'trial' work party with six people last weekend, we have today held a hugely successful work party involving 11 volunteers in total.

Over the two weekends we have cleared half of the reed from Area B on the Warren Road end of the site (and a large number of small alders and more Himalayan Balsam!).

A massive thank you goes to the Volunteers who attended today for their help and enthusiasm and we are pleased that you felt safe and happy with the procedures now in place for our work parties.

Take Care,

Regards, Julie, Margaret, John, Kevin, Denise and Sue

Saturday 15 August 2020

Unlock!

 

In these cliché-ridden times which are it seems unprecedented, let’s hope that this is not the ‘new normal’, but merely a temporary phase. Like so much else, volunteering for NWT on Southrepps Commons has been on hold, with the minor exception of a few bits of urgent maintenance able to be done by one person, or a couple from the same household.

Nature of course has been having a high old time during the spring and summer, as it always does. The cessation of volunteering work actually had little effect on the Common, as it was during the period when the place is more or left to its own devices. Swifts screamed overhead as usual, and swallows disported themselves with gay abandon. Sadly, the bird species most associated with the reedbed were even less noticeable than recent years; a worrying decline. We had no reports of sedge warblers, a reed warbler sang only briefly for a couple of weeks in July, and we may have only had one pair of reed buntings (although a juvenile was spotted on 13th August, so they have been quietly busy after all). On the plus side, around 100 glow worms were lighting the darkness. Butterflies have been numerous, although not so many species as usual have been noted. This Painted Lady turned up in pristine condition at the start of August, probably having migrated here from somewhere over the North Sea. It’s the only one I found, so presumably was self-isolating.

NWT has naturally been cautious about letting volunteers loose in numbers, but now work has recommenced to kick start the new cutting season, using groups of no more than six volunteers. Today there was a working party, but not as it used to be, oh no. The first area to be dealt with was Area B, the bit leading from Warren Road, furthest from Lower Street. This is cut every other year, and in its two years of freedom it grows rampantly, and clearing it is hard work. This year the job has had to be broken down into stages spread across three days.

The first task was to remove as many alder saplings as possible, to prevent them being coppiced by the mower, as this sets up problems in later years. Two stalwarts from the same household set about the task with the trusty ‘tree popper’ on Thursday, setting the scene for stage 2…

It is always essential to create a site for the material to be dumped, but this time that site needed extra care and room, as we have to ensure people dealing with the dumping are kept to a minimum and properly distanced. So that took up a lot of the second session, on Friday. At the same time, a significant portion of the area's vegetation was cut, and left where it fell, ready for…

Today’s third session, when six volunteers turned up earlier than usual (to avoid the heat, which didn’t materialise, but the humidity was uncomfortably high nonetheless), to transfer the cut material to the drag sheets prior to being winched down to the dumping site; all with fewer people than usual involved, and all keeping their distance from each other. The work is always quite energetic, so keeping a safe distance from heavily breathing colleagues was essential.

The first surprise was finding this frog on the first drag sheet to be laid out; did it hop on immediately, or had it been wrapped up in it for the last few months? If it had been, it was probably equally surprised!

We were joined for this session by George, the NWT warden for Southrepps Commons, so that he could satisfy himself that the work was being done safely. His extra muscle power was also very welcome, even though he is officially on holiday!

Here we are, eagerly waiting for the signal that the winch was ready for the first pull:

Winchman John was in his rope-handling element:

And we’re off! This is evidence that your correspondent does sometimes heave on bits of rope, although it appears in the opposite direction to Sheila. Note the interested spectators:

We usually create quite tall heaps, but that requires a couple of people helping to turn the sheets over in close proximity to each other, so that’s not possible at the moment. We therefore have had to make a lower, more spread out heap, but neat, we think you’ll agree.


One of the other casualties of the changed working arrangements is the lack of supplied catering; everyone must provide their own refreshments. A scurrilous rumour circulated that your correspondent had not brought squash as claimed - hiding behind a pile of cut grass won’t have helped:

At this point it is customary to have a photo of the assembled team enjoying the socially close refreshment break. It’s part of the pleasure of volunteering, but for now it’s a smaller and socially distanced affair.

We were very pleased with our efforts, and George was too. It might have been only possible for far fewer volunteers than usual to work, but with the tasks spread across three days we still managed to make an excellent start to cutting the area. Here’s how it looked at the end of the session: