Monthly Archives: May 2022

Thursday, 26th May 2022: our Annual General Meeting

Our AGM took place this evening.

The chair delivered a report on the last twelve months’ activities – see below.

In the treasurer’s absence, the secretary delivered the treasurer’s report. As at 31st March 2022, FOAW held funds of £475, of which approximately £157 will be spent on insurance in July. The chair said that a further £70 or so will be spent on mini-mattocks which members have found very useful when working on Adel Moor.

After the chair’s and treasurer’s reports, appointment of the officers and committee took place.

All the committee members and officers stood for re-election and were duly re-appointed. In addition, two more people, Steve Joul and Sue Chambers, agreed to join the committee, bringing the number on the committee up to eight out of a possible ten.

Roger Gilbert was re-appointed chair; Judith White was re-appointed treasurer; and Stephanie Clarke was re-appointed secretary. Rob Hall agreed to act as auditor.

The committee members are now: Roger Gilbert; Judith White; Stephanie Clarke; Rob Hall; David Hampshire; David Smith; Steve Joul; and Sue Chambers.

A vote of thanks was passed for the work of Steve Joul, who retired from Leeds City Council in March, and David Preston, who was Meanwood Valley Ranger for three years, and has been appointed full time ranger as Steve’s replacement.

David has been assigned to work with Friends of Adel Woods four days a year and will probably work with us on tasks which FOAW can’t do on their own – eg tasks which need machinery rather than hand tools. He said that he will also be doing a lot of work with corporate groups. We discussed plans for work on Adel Moor, Adel Pond and Adel Bog and Adel Crag. David will also be able to assist with applications for grants for tools and the like.

The Chair’s report

Our last AGM was on the 26th May 2021 in the middle of a covid 19 lockdown.  At that time, we hadn’t had any FOAW events since 13th December 2020. So our first event in 2021 was on the 25th July, shortly after what was dubbed at the time “Freedom Day”, the 19th July!

Friends of Adel Woods working on the Stairfoot Lane steps on 25th July 2021
Working on the Stairfoot Lane steps on 25th July 2021

On the 25th July we litterpicked; repaired the Stairfoot Lane steps; removed a fallen tree from the path by the stream and created some drainage channels; and Steve Joul and Roderic cleared the drainage channel by the picnic area.

Since July we have had a further fourteen events – thirteen “work parties”  and one birdsong walk.  I have adopted the term “work parties” since David H used it to describe what we do: it sounds better than “task”, or “chain gang”! Our work parties have included the following:

  • seven mornings of litterpicking
  • two mornings of raking mowings off the orchid meadow (after it had been mown by Steve Joul)
  • three mornings working on Adel Moor – removing bracken, brambles and saplings
  • one morning on Adel Pond
  • one morning on Adel Bog
  • three mornings of path clearing
  • a day and a half of surveying and cleaning nest boxes
  • one morning of working on the hospice woodland, including removing a large tree which had fallen across the footpath

The birdsong walk took place on the 8th May.  It was led by Steve Joul, and attended by twenty four people, raising £53.50 for FOAW funds.  We saw or heard 19 species of birds. You can find out more about all these events by reading the entries on this blog.

Adel Moor: birdsong walk in Adel Woods on 8th May 2022.
Birdsong walk in Adel Woods on the 8th May 2022

Nature notes during the year

The blog entry for July 2021 asked:  Is Stairfoot Lane carpark the most fragrant part of Adel Woods?  This was not a ridiculous question.  There is a beautiful, fragrant, yellow azalea just below the carpark.  It blooms in May and was still in bloom last Saturday and it casts a wonderful fragrance around the area. To find it, start down the steps leading down to the stream; after the fifth step, turn onto the path on the left, and the azalea is about 25 yards along. There is also a large lime tree in the Stairfoot Lane carpark and it will be coming into bloom and exuding a sweet fragrance in the next few weeks.

Green Hairstreak butterfly photographed on Adel Moor in April 2022
Green Hairstreak butterfly photographed on Adel Moor on 17th April 2022 by Joseph Worrilow

I am also pleased to be able to say that Green Hairstreak butterflies were spotted on Adel Moor again last month – the third April in a row. They are not a rare butterfly nationally, but locally they were previously only known in this area on Otley Chevin.

Steve Joul

In March 2022, Steve Joul retired from Leeds City Council and we wish him a very long and happy retirement – and a retirement where he continues to be involved with Friends of Adel Woods!

Steve has worked with Friends of Adel Woods since the group was formed in July 2009 and his first event was to lead a walk around the woods on 4th August 2009 to establish the kinds of tasks which FOAW can usefully carry out.

Friends of Adel Woods with new nest boxes they have mad in January 2010
Making nest boxes in January 2010

Since then he has been a regular mentor, leading us on many work parties, in particular:

  • making nest and bat boxes in 2009 and 2010, and helping us to put them up
  • teaching us how to make Christmas wreaths which we made each year until lockdown
  • helping us to survey and clean the nest boxes each year
  • improving the Stairfoot Lane steps
  • guiding us and helping us with work on Adel Moor, Adel pond and Adel Bog
  • working on the orchid meadow.
A fungal foray in Adel Woods, Leeds,  on 27th October 2013
A fungal foray: 27 October 2013

He has also led numerous walks and talks over the years including:

  • birdsong walks
  • bat walks
  • nature walks
  • newt safaris
  • tree walks
  • wildflower walks
  • a small mammal safari
  • fungal forays
  • how to carry out a habitat assessment
Friends of Adel Woods Inspecting a nest box in Adel Woods in January 2020.
Inspecting a nest box in January 2020

So, on behalf of all at Friends of Adel Woods, I want to say a big thank you to Steve for all he has done for us over the years.

But all is not lost! He has continued to work with FOAW as a volunteer since he retired – and this evening he has joined our committee!

David Preston

Another reason that all is not lost is that Leeds City Council has appointed David Preston as a full time ranger to replace Steve, and he has been assigned four days a year to work with us.

Installing the interpretation boards in Adel Woods in March 2021
Completing installation of one of our interpretation boards: March 2021

You may well know that David was Ranger for the Meanwood Valley for three years, funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, when he did a lot of fantastic work up and down the Meanwood Valley, including Adel Woods.

We are delighted that David will now be working with us, and already has a list of “work parties” lined up for later in the year. We are looking forward to working with him.

So finally…

All that remains is to thank our committee for all the work they have done over the past year. Likewise to all our amazing volunteers. Friends of Adel Woods would not exist with out the committee and volunteers.

Thank you too for Old Leo’s Rugby Club for letting us use their car park over the last year.

Let’s look forward to another year of fun, laughter and friendship.

Friends of Adel Woods on the 16th April 2022
Friends of Adel Woods: 16th April 2022

Sunday, 15th May 2022: litterpicking and working on Adel Moor

Friends of Adel Woods clearing brambles and bracken on Adel Moor on 15th May 2022
Adel Moor: 15th May 2022

A fine day, and we had a wonderful turn out of eleven Friends: one ready to litter pick, and ten to work on Adel Moor.

Adel Moor is the last remaining heathland in Leeds, and as such is an important habitat, and home to plants like heather and bilberries, and a population of common lizards. Left to itself, it will quite rapidly turn into birch and oak woodland and lose what makes it special. So over the last twelve years, Friends of Adel Woods have carried out a lot of work on the moor, and so have Leeds Parks and Countryside Department with the help of various corporate groups. We have improved the condition of the moor and it is in a reasonable state at the moment, though there is still a huge amount of work to do.

We set to work clearing brambles, bracken, rosebay willow herb and saplings from the heather. In the past, some of the invading trees were cut down rather than dug out. In effect they were coppiced and the remaining trunks have vigorously sprouted many shoots. Frequently, what looks from a distance like a small bush or sapling has a large trunk at the base and is very difficult to remove. Undeterred, one of our Friends successfully tackled some of these larger trees.

Friends of Adel Woods: removing saplings from Adel Moor, Leeds.  Man triumphant about digging up tree.
Man conquers tree!

Whilst the heather is in very good condition over a large area, in certain places bracken has overwhelmed it. Thus, at the moment, areas of the moor look devastated under a surface matting of last year’s dead bracken stalks. However, we know from experience that if bracken is removed, heather seedlings in the soil will sprout.

Friends of Adel Woods: removing dead bracken from Adel Moor on 15th May 2022
Surveying a pile of dead bracken before removing it from Adel moor

We gathered up as much of the dead bracken as we could and carried it off into the woods for composting with the brambles, saplings and other plants we had removed.

Friends of Adel Woods clearing brambles and bracken on Adel Moor on 15th May 2022
A view over Adel Moor: the bright green plants are bilberries, and the dark green-brown are heather.

At about 11.15 am we had a few drops of rain, but fortunately the weather held and we had a very enjoyable morning.

While ten of us were working on Adel Moor, our litter picker was beavering away elsewhere in the woods and picked up two bags of litter, including a number of glass bottles.

Friends of Adel Woods clearing brambles and bracken on Adel Moor on 15th May 2022
Some of our hardworking Friends!

Thank you to all who joined us this morning!

Sunday, 8th May 2022: a Birdsong Walk in Adel Woods

A dry mild morning, and at 6.55 am twenty four “larks” (some a little bleary eyed) joined Steve Joul for the Friends of Adel Woods’ eleventh “annual” FOAW birdsong walk. It would have been our thirteenth, but our walks in 2020 and 2021 were canceled due to covid 19.

Friends of Adel Woods, birdsong walk, Adel Woods
A flock of expectant “larks”

Adel Woods are part of land owned by Leeds City Council and they offer a range of different habitats where various species of birds, flora and fauna can be found. Steve took us on a tour through these varying habitats to discover what we would see and hear.

Setting off from Old Leo’s Rugby Club carpark, we headed north into Alwoodley Plantation, an area of woodland made up mainly of birch trees, beech trees, holly, sycamores and oaks, but also with a number of scots pine. From there we made our way to the area of open scrubland above the disused rugby field, where in the past we have often seen whitethroats (but sadly not today).

Adel Woods, Friends of Adel Woods, Hospices Woodland
The entrance to the Hospices Woodland, just off Stairfoot Lane

We then walked up to the entrance to the Hospices Woodland, just off Stairfoot Lane, a mixture of young native trees planted in about 2020. We walked through the woodland and back down to the disused rugby field, where we paused to have a look a a small orchard of ten fruit trees planted by Steve last year as a countryside ranger with Leeds City Council.

From there we strolled along Crag Lane and down the steps from the Stairfoot Lane carpark to Meanwood Beck. We made our way along the beck, a very peaceful spot where the only sounds are the babbling of the stream and the calling of the birds, to Adel Pond.

By now it was 8.30 am and we made our way back to Old Leo’s carpark, making a detour across Adel Moor.

On our travels we spotted or heard nineteen species of birds including:

  • jay
  • songthrush
  • woodpigeon
  • carrion crow
  • wren
  • magpie
  • chiffchaff
  • robin
  • great tit
  • dunnock
  • blackbird
  • blackcap
  • bullfinch
  • great spotted woodpecker
  • treecreeper
  • blue tit
  • red kite.

One species were were delighted to hear for the first time in a number of years was the willow warbler, near the entrance to the Hospices Woodland. We also had a surprise sighting of a pair of mandarin ducks on Meanwood Beck. The mandarins are an exotic species and this pair had probably come from Golden Acre Park.

We were hoping to see or hear a few more species, but birds like the chaffinch, pied wagtail, starling, nuthatch and feral pigeon, which we could have expected to be around, were lying low today.

Thank you to Steve Joul for leading us on a very enjoyable and informative walk – and thanks to all the “larks” who attended and donated to Friends of Adel Woods’ funds.

Friends of Adel Woods; birdsong walk; Adel Moor
Adel Moor