Category Archives: Friends of Adel Wods

Sunday, 9th June 2024: litter picking and working on Adel Moor

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor, Leeds, on 9th June 2024
Adel Moor on 9th June 2024 – two Friends of Adel Woods in the distance

Another lovely morning spent in Adel Woods, litter picking and working on Adel Moor with David Preston our local Parks and Countryside ranger.

We had one person litter picking today, and she gathered one and a half bags of rubbish.

Six of us worked on the moor with David, focusing on the bottom or western end.

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor on the 9th June 2024

We had a very successful morning on the moor, cutting back tree branches from around the edge of the moor to give the heather a chance to thrive, and removing saplings and seedlings – a job made much easier with the use of our own and the council’s tree poppers. For more information about the work we have been doing on Adel Moor, see our blog entry for Saturday 25th May.

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor on 9th June 2024
David Preston with four happy Friends of Adel Woods

ABOUT FRIENDS OF ADEL WOODS

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one weekend morning a month to carry out various jobs or ”work parties”, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to help preserve our special woods, enjoy fresh air and exercise in the woods and make new friends. If you would like to take part in our activities, just come along to one of our work parties or get in touch by leaving a comment on this website.

Our next events

Our next work party will be on Saturday the 20th July when we will be litterpicking and clearing scrub from around the Buck Stone. Details of the meeting place will be given on the homepage of our website shortly and via our email mailing list shortly.

Our next educational event will be on Sunday the 21st July from 2 to 4 pm, when Steve Joul, our expert naturalist, will be leading a stream and pond life safari. Again, more information will be given on our website and via our email mailing list.

Both of these events are suitable for children, provided that they are accompanied by a responsible adult.

Friends of Adel Woods and Adel Moor.
Adel Moor on 9th June 2024: bilberries in the foreground, and heather in the background.

Thursday, 30th May 2024: our Annual General Meeting

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor on 21st April 2024
Friends of Adel Woods on Adel Moor on 21st April 2024

This evening we held our Annual General meeting, attended by seven members of our committee and one Friend, with apologies from two members of our committee who were away, and two Friends.

  1. The minutes of last year’s Annual General Meeting were approved.
  2. The Chair gave a report of the past year’s activities and thanked the committee and all volunteers for the work done. His report can be read below.
  3. The Treasurer presented the Income and Expenditure account for the year. The funds held on 31st March 2024 were £88.82. Since then a grant of £159.96 from Alwoodley 2030 has been received giving a current balance of £248.78.

    Thanks were given to Rob Hall for auditing the accounts.
  4. Rob Hall was re-elected as auditor for the forthcoming year.
  5. All the existing members of the committee chose to remain in office. Roger Gilbert was elected Chair; Judith White was re-elected Treasurer; Sue Chambers was elected as minute secretary.
  6. All present unanimously gave a vote of thanks to David Preston for all the work he has done in Adel Woods and with Friends of Adel Woods in the last year.
  7. The Chair proposed votes of thanks to Judith White and Stephanie Clarke, who will shortly be leaving Alwoodley, for all the work they have done as Treasurer and Secretary respectively, and as committee members and members of Friends of Adel Woods over the last fifteen years. This was unanimously approved.

The Chair’s Report

We are just about to complete our fifteenth year of FOAW and in the last year we have had a successful year with many work parties and educational walks and talks.

Work Parties

Repairing the Stairfoot Lane steps on 30th September 2023

Starting with work parties, we have had 18 work days comprising:

  • 13 mornings of litterpicking
  • 7 mornings working on Adel Moor – removing bracken, brambles and saplings.  Three of these took place on a Wednesday.
  • 1 morning on Adel Pond and ditches with David Preston
  • 2 mornings on Adel Bog, one with David Preston and one with David and Heather Wagstaffe
  • 5 mornings of path clearing – including repairing the Stairfoot Lane steps
  • 1 morning clearing scrub and bracken from around the Buck Stone
  • 2 days of nest box cleaning and surveying with Steve Joul
  • 1 morning of mowing the cricket meadow and learning to scythe with Leeds City Council ranger, Rachel Todnor.

The astute among you will have noted that the list totals thirty two activities, not eighteen. This is because on many of our work parties we do both litter picking and some other activity – such as path clearing or working on Adel Moor.

Joint Events with Alwoodley 2030

Friends of Adel Woods working on the orchard in August 2023
A joint work party from FOAW and Alwoodley 2030 in August 2023

In addition, Friends of Adel Woods supported two events organised by Alwoodley 2030: in August 2023, clearing scrub from around the young fruit trees planted in the former rugby practice field; and in January this year, pruning and clearing scrub from around a mature apple tree in Copper’s Field behind the Buckstones.

Educational Events

Friends of Adel Woods bat walk in August 2023
David Preston shares some fascinating facts about bats

We had four educational events in the year May 2023 to April 2024.

  • In June last year, we took the opportunity of a band concert on Alwoodley Village Green to have a stall to promote awareness of our work.  Thank you to Judith, Stephanie and Tamsin for helping with that – and to Daddy Kool the ice cream man who helped us to put up the gazebo in a strong wind.
  • On the 1st September, Leeds City Council ranger, David Preston, led a very successful bat walk.
  • On the 8th October our committee member and local naturalist, Steve Joul, led an equally successful fungal foray.
  • And on the 5th May Steve led our annual birdsong walk when we saw or heard twenty five species of birds including a willow warbler.
Friends of Adel Woods birdsong walk 2024 in May 2024 in Adel Woods
A birdsong walk in Adel Woods with Steve Joul in May 2024

We are grateful to David and Steve for leading these walks. I know from the messages I receive after these events that people really enjoy them.

Grants

Friends of Adel Woods tree popper
The Friends of Adel Woods’ tree popper

We received two grants this year:

  • In August, Alwoodley Parish Council gave us a grant to enable us to purchase a tree popper, a fantastic tool for removing saplings from Adel Moor and Adel Bog.
  • In March this year, Alwoodley 203 gave us a grant to purchase four top of the range nest boxes.

We are very grateful to the Parish Council and Alwoodley 2030 for their generosity.

And Finally…

Thanks are due to our committee and volunteers for all the work that they have done over the last year. We are looking forward to another year of fun, laughter and friendship.

And thank you again to David Preston and Steve Joul for leading events over the last year, and to Leeds City Council Ranger, Rachel Todner, who mowed the cricket meadow and taught us to how to use a scythe.

About Friends of Adel Woods

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one morning a month to carry out various jobs or ”work parties”, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to help preserve our special woods, enjoy fresh air and exercise in the woods and make new friends. If you would like to take part in our activities, just come along to one of our work parties or get in touch by leaving a comment on this website.

Friends of Adel Woods and nest box survey in January 2024
Friends of Adel Woods prepare to survey and clean nest boxes in January 2024

Saturday, 25th May 2024: another successful morning of litter picking and restoration work on Adel Moor

Last night, after yet another day of heavy rain, I went to bed thinking that today would be a wash out and nobody would turn up for today’s Friends of Adel Woods event (I know that I tend to go on about the weather in these blog posts but, in my defence, we do live in the UK, and we have just dripped through the wettest Autumn, Winter and Spring for years).

It was therefore a bit of a shock when I drew the curtains this morning and it was a beautiful day with not a cloud in sight.

Even better, we had an excellent turn out of thirteen volunteers (including yours truly) for today’s work party: two for litter picking, one for a bit of litter picking and working on the moor; and another ten of us working exclusively on Adel Moor.

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor on the 25th May 2024
Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor on the 25th May 2024

The litter pickers worked mainly around the area where houses on the Buckstone estate back on to Adel Woods, and around the children’s play area on Alwoodley Village Green. Fortunately, there wasn’t a huge amount of rubbish to pick up but they picked up a couple of bagfuls.

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor on the 25th May 2024
A view across Adel Moor on the 25th May 2024

On Adel Moor we continued the work we have been doing for almost fifteen years – removing tree seedlings, young saplings and brambles – concentrating today, as on 21st April on the lower western end of the moor.

There is still a lot of work to do, but today the heather and bilberries were looking great. It is not easy to remember what the moor looked like in the early days of Friends of Adel Woods, and so here is a photograph of our treasurer, Stephanie, working on the moor on the 24th May 2011. It shows just how much our Parks and Countryside rangers, and Friends of Adel Woods and other groups have achieved over the years.

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor on the 24th May 2011
Working on Adel Moor on the 24th May 2011

Our volunteers did an excellent job in very warm conditions and, once again, our trusty tree popper did excellent service in speeding up the removal of unwanted saplings.

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor with a tree popper on the 25th May 2024
Man conquers nature – with a tree popper!

Another really enjoyable morning and here are some of our happy volunteers!

Friends of Adel Woods working on Adel Moor on the 25th May 2024
Tired and happy volunteers after a good morning’s work!

ABOUT FRIENDS OF ADEL WOODS

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one weekend morning a month to carry out various jobs or ”work parties”, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to help preserve our special woods, enjoy fresh air and exercise in the woods and make new friends. If you would like to take part in our activities, just come along to one of our work parties or get in touch by leaving a comment on this website.

Our next events

Next Thursday, the 30th May, we will be holding our Annual General Meeting. All are welcome, so if you would like to attend, please get in touch by leaving a comment on this website. The only pre-requisite for attending is that you care about Adel Woods and would like to help to maintain them.

  • Our next work party will be on Sunday the 9th June when we will be litterpicking, and working on Adel Moor with Leeds City Council ranger, David Preston, from 10 am to 12 noon. 
  • Our next educational event will be on Sunday the 21st July from 2 to 4 pm, when our expert naturalist Steve Joul will be leading a stream and pond life safari.

Further details are given on our homepage and will be sent out via our mailing list.

Sunday, 5th May 2024: a birdsong walk in Adel Woods with Steve Joul

A pleasant morning for the Friends of Adel Woods annual birdsong walk with Steve Joul.

We met in Alwoodley Village Green carpark at 6.55 am. Even while waiting we had a good sighting of a heron flying overhead, and heard and spotted Judith’s favourite bird, the chiffchaff, and heard a great tit.

From the carpark we made our way to the south west corner of the village green where we heard a male blackcap singing and after a vigilant search were able to see him singing at the top of a very tall tree -perched far higher than Steve has seen a black cap previously as they are usually seen a few metres from the ground.

Friends of Adel Woods on Alwoodley Village Green looking for a blackcap on 5th May 2024
On Alwoodley Village Green: where is that blackcap?

We next made our way round the western side of the village green (the wet bottom end!) and through the woods to the track leading down to the cricket club.

While making our way through the woods we saw or heard a number of species of bird – stock dove, robin, wood pigeon, wren, coal tit, magpie, blue tit, jay, dunnock, song thrush and nuthatch.

Having emerged onto the track we saw a pair of greylag geese flying overhead towards the east, and had a fleeting glimpse of a pair of sparrowhawks also flying a eastward at high level. We also heard a song thrush calling from somewhere on the other side of the cricket pitches.

Friends of Adel Woods: birdsong walk in Adel Woods with Steve Joul on the 5th May 29024
Listening to birdsong on Crag Lane

With the cricket pitches on our left we made our way up to Crag Lane, passed behind the Rugby Club clubhouse, where we heard a redpoll, and turned northwards up the path by the side of the disused rugby pitch into the plantation.

Friends of Adel Woods; birdsong walk on the 5th May 2024
Making our way from Crag Lane up to the Hospice Woodland

At the plantation we turned left and walked past the southern side of the hospice woodland to Stairfoot Lane, spotting en route some goldfinches.

At Stairfoot Lane, we heard several times the descending call of the willow warbler, a song we haven’t heard on our birdsong walks for a few years.

Friends of Adel Woods listening to a willow warbler on Stairfoot Lane on the 5th May 2024
Listening to a willow warbler on Stairfoot Lane, near the Hospice Woodland

We crossed Stairfoot Lane into the mountain-biking tracks and listened to the loud, repeating song of the song thrush.

Friends of Adel Woods: birdsong walk in Adel Woods
A female mallard paddling around in a pool amongst the mountain bike tracks

Whilst standing among the bike tracks, listening to the birdsong, and contemplating a very large hole with dirty water and rubbish at the bottom, we had the astonishing sight of a female mallard dropping down through the canopy of the trees and landing in the pool a few feet in front of us. She seemed unphased by our presence, and she was still paddling around happily as we left.

We made our way down past the bike tracks to the Stairfoot Lane carpark and then back along Crag Lane to the Village Green by 9.15 am.

It was a fantastic morning’s birdwatching and birdlistening, and in total we saw or heard twenty five species of birds – not bad for two and a quarter hours. They were in alphabetical order:

  • Blackbird, several seen and heard
  • Blackcap, male and female seen separately, several males heard
  • Blue Tit, several seen and heard
  • Carrion Crow, several seen and heard carrion on
  • Chiffchaff, several males seen, several males heard
  • Coal Tit, single heard
  • Dunnock, several seen and heard
  • Goldfinch, single seen and heard
  • Great Spotted Woodpecker, single heard
  • Great Tit, several seen and heard
  • Greylag Goose, pair seen and heard
  • Heron, single seen
  • Jay, several seen and heard
  • Magpie, several seen and heard
  • Mallard, duck seen
  • Nuthatch, several heard
  • Red Kite, single seen
  • Redpoll, single heard
  • Robin, several seen and heard
  • Song Thrush, several seen and heard
  • Sparrowhawk, pair seen briefly in flight
  • Stock Dove, pair seen
  • Willow Warbler, single male singing
  • Wood Pigeon, several seen and heard
  • Wren, several seen and heard

About Friends of Adel Woods

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one morning a month to carry out various jobs or ”work parties”, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to help preserve our special woods, enjoy fresh air and exercise in the woods and make new friends. If you would like to take part in our activities, just come along to one of our work parties or get in touch by leaving a comment on this website.

Our next events

Our next work party is on Saturday the 25th May when we will be litter picking and working on Adel Moor.

Our next educational event is on Sunday the 21st July 2024 when Steve Joul will be leading a pond and stream life safari.

Friends of Adel Woods pond dipping in Adel Pond Leeds.
Pond dipping at Adel Pond with Steve Joul

Saturday, 16th March 2024: litterpicking and path clearing

Today, despite a further month of seemingly daily (or nightly) rainfall since our last event, Spring seemed to be almost here. It was a mild, dry day and the sun actually came out at midday!

This morning’s activities were litterpicking and path clearing. We met in the Stairfoot Lane carpark at 9.55 am and although we had a slow start, in the end thirteen Friends turned up – five litterpicking and eight working on clearing paths. And it was really great that we had three first-timer Friends, two of whom were young people!

The path clearers made our way to the picnic area near Adel Crag and trimmed back holly which was narrowing the entrance to the Meanwood Valley Trail and then made our way down the trail.

Friends of Adel Woods and the Meanwood Valley Trail on the 16th March 2024
The Meanwood Valley Trail viewed from the picnic area in Adel Woods

About fifty yards down the trail, a large birch tree had fallen across the path. It was too big for FOAW to deal with, but three of us removed branches which obstructed the path and trimmed back some of the branches from the “top” of the tree to reduce the weight pushing the trunk towards the ground.

Friends of Adel Woods working on the Meanwood Valley Trail on the 16th March 2024
The birch tree lying across the Meanwood Valley Trail

We have notified Leeds CC’s forestry department about the tree trunk.

Friends of Adel Woods working on the Meanwood Valley Trail on the 16th March 2024
After clearing part of the birch from the Meanwood Valley Trail

After working on the tree, we joined five other members of our team who were pruning back holly further down the Meanwood Valley Trail.

Friends of Adel Woods working on the Meanwood Valley Trail on the 16th March 2024
Friends of Adel Woods working on the Meanwood Valley Trail
Friends of Adel Woods working on the Meanwood Valley Trail
Clearing holly from the entrance to one of the side paths

We don’t have any photographs of the litterpickers, but between them they picked up three bags of rubbish which was a great achievement.

A big thank you to all who took part today and helped to look after our woods.

About Friends of Adel Woods

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one morning a month to carry out various jobs or ”work parties”, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to help preserve our special woods, enjoy fresh air and exercise in the woods and make new friends. If you would like to take part in our activities, just come along to one of our work parties or get in touch by leaving a comment on this website.

Our next events

Our next work party will be on Sunday the 21st April when we will be litterpicking and working on Adel Moor from 10 am to 12 noon.

On Sunday the 5th May, our committee member and expert naturalist, Steve Joul, will be leading a birdsong walk – from 7 am to 9 am.

Further details are given on our homepage and will be sent out via our mailing list.

A birdsong walk with Steve Joul of Friends of Adel Woods on 14th May 2023
A birdsong walk with Steve Joul on 14th May 2023

Friday, 2nd February 2024: putting up two new nest boxes

Friends of Adel Woods putting up a tit box on the Meanwood Valley Trail
Putting up a nest box for blue tits on the Meanwood Valley Trail

When we surveyed the FOAW nest boxes on the 13th and 14th January, we found that three needed replacing, but only had one spare nest box to put up in their place. The committee therefore agreed to purchase two Schwegler tit boxes from Ark Wildlife. We purchased one with a 32 mm hole which is suitable for blue tits, great tits and nuthatches, and one with a smaller 26mm hole which is suitable just for blue tits.

They arrived yesterday and Steve Joul and your correspondent put them up this morning. We already have one Schwegler nest box near Old Leo’s clubhouse and we have been very impressed with it. It was donated to us in 2010 by our member Tina and it is very well designed and as good as new.

Friends of Adel Woods: a nest box on the Meanwood Valley Trail
The blue tit box on an oak tree by the Meanwood Valley Trail

This morning we put up the first nest box on the Meanwood Valley Trail about 100 metres north of the Seven Arches aqueduct. While there, we took the opportunity to have a look to see how the Seven Arches looks following work carried out by its owner, Yorkshire Water, to remove trees and brambles growing on the structure. A few weeks earlier, our local ranger, David Preston, and the Meanwood Valley Volunteer rangers had cleared scrub from the Scotland Wood side.

Friends of Adel Woods and the Seven Arches and the Meanwood Valley Trail
The Seven Arches photographed from the Scotland Wood side and looking good!

We put up the second nest box on the Meanwood Valley Trail just north of Adel Pond.

Friends of Adel Woods putting up a tit box on the Meanwood Valley Trail
Putting up a tit box on the Meanwood Valley Trail north of Adel Pond

The Schwegler nest boxes are made of a mixture of woodchips, concrete and clay and are long-lasting- expected to last for up to 25 years. We are looking forward to see how our new nest boxes have fared when we survey and clean them next January.

Friends of Adel Woods: snowdrops
Snowdrops by the side of Buckstone Road

On the way home afterwards it was a pleasure to see the snowdrops by the stream running alongside Buckstone Road.

About Friends of Adel Woods

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one morning a month to carry out various ”work parties”, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to help preserve our special woods, enjoy fresh air and exercise in the woods and make new friends. Please get in touch by leaving a comment on this website if you would like to take part in our activities.

Saturday 20th January 2024: path clearing and litterpicking

Sunrise over Alwoodley on the 20th January 2024
Sunrise over Alwoodley

A glorious sunrise over Alwoodley at 8 am, after several days of intense cold.

This morning, five of us met in the Stairfoot Lane carpark at 10 am. Although the weather had started to thaw, the carpark was still a dangerous sheet of ice.

Our goals this morning were path clearing and litterpicking.

Friends of Adel Woods clearing paths and litterpicking in Adel Woods
Clearing holly along the “middle” path

We all set off together to the steps down to the stream and took the path to the left about four steps down. As we went, we trimmed back holly and removed as far as we could branches which had fallen across the path.

Friends of Adel Woods clearing paths  in Adel Woods

Just before we reached Adel Bog, we found a couple of trees had fallen across the path. They were too big for us to tackle, but we removed branches which were not supporting the trees. As we did so, we found an old blackbirds nest among the branches.

A blackbird's nest in Adel Woods
A blackbird’s nest in Adel Woods

When we reached the Slabbering Baby, we went down to Spring Hill bridge and made our way back along the path alongside the stream all the way to Stairfoot Cottage.

Friends of Adel Woods clearing paths and litterpicking in Adel Woods
Clearing obstacles along the path by the stream

While we were making our way along the paths, Peter picked up a bag of litter.

Friends of Adel Woods clearing paths and litterpicking in Adel Woods

Thank you to all who took part this morning!

About Friends of Adel Woods

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one morning a month to carry out various “work parties”, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to help preserve our special woods, enjoy fresh air and exercise in the woods and make new friends. Please get in touch by leaving a comment on this website if you would like to take part in our activities.

Sunday 14th January 2024: FOAW annual nest box clean and survey: part 2

The Seven Arches aqueduct, with a fallen tree in the foreground.

A lovely day for part two of our annual nest box clean and survey. This morning we had a team of six and we decided to complete our survey by starting at the Seven Arches and making our way up the Meanwood Valley Trail.

When we reached the Seven Arches we found a huge tree had been blown over by the recent high winds, but were rewarded by a fine view of the aqueduct following recent clearance work carried out by David Preston and his team of Meanwood Valley Volunteer Rangers.

The morning session….

This blog post will focus on what we found during our work today. You can find a lot of information about the purpose of cleaning the nest boxes, the birds that use them, and the kind of things we find, in yesterday’s blog entry, which can be found here. 

This morning we cleaned and surveyed twelve tit boxes and one treecreeper box.

Of the twelve tit boxes, ten contained tit nests (of which three at least were blue tit nests), one contained a nuthatch nest, and we don’t seem to have made a record of what we found in the twelfth. The treecreeper box contained a lot of leaves indicating it had been used by a squirrel for roosting.

A nuthatch nest in one of our woodstone boxes

Nuthatch nests are very different from tit nests. Nuthatches will use tit boxes but usually plaster around any gaps with mud, and rather than using moss, grass and feathers as nesting material, nuthatches use material chips of bark, so the nest looks like a bowl of branflakes! The nest we found today was sparse and there was not a lot of material so it is possible it was not completed. You can see a better example of a nuthatch nest in one of our wooden nest boxes photographed in January 2019 here.

The treecreeper box is a bit unusual.  Treecreepers are so called because they creep up the side of tree, looking for bugs to eat. They nest high up in small gaps behind the bark of trees, and the tree creeper nest box is intended to offer something similar to the gap behind bark.  It is about twice the depth of a tit box, and the entrance is on the side of the box, near the bark of the tree. We have found a tit nest in our treecreeper box in previous years, but this year we found a lot of leaves indicating that it had been used for roosting by a squirrel. You can see a photograph of the treecreeper box here

One first this year was that we found a large amount of “sawdust” in box 39, and a large hole in the back of the box. Since the back of the box was against the trunk of the tree, the hole could not have been made from the outside by a woodpecker and it must have been made from the inside by a woodmouse.

Looking expectantly to see what will be in the box!
Cleaning one of our nest boxes
Inspecting the job!

We retired for lunch, a piece of Christmas cake and a comfort break at about 1.25 pm.

The afternoon session….

Re-energised after lunch, and raring to go!

This afternoon, starting from just below the Slabbering Baby, we made our way up the Meanwood Valley Trail and surveyed the final seven nest boxes – six tit boxes and one robin box.

The robin box had not been used. The tit boxes had all been used though one nest appeared not to have been completed. One nest contained five unhatched eggs and another four unhatched eggs. However, since great tits lay seven to nine eggs and blue tits eight to twelve eggs, the nests may well have been successful.

Cleaning nest box 29 at the Slabbering Baby
The nest and four unhatched eggs in nest box 42
Measuring the entrance hole on one of our wooden boxes

Friends of Adel Woods made and put up our wooden boxes under the tuition of Steve Joul in January 2010 and January 2011. We also purchased and put up a number of woodstone boxes in 2013. The woodstone boxes are made of a mixture of cement and sawdust. The advantages of woodstone boxes is that they do not rot and are usually easier to clean. On the other hand, they are very heavy!

Cleaning out one of our woodstone boxes
Winding up at 4.30 pm

In summary

Yesterday and today we surveyed and cleaned out forty one nest boxes – thirty six tit boxes, four robin boxes and one treecreeper box. Apart from one nest box, for which we do not seem to have made a record, all of the tit boxes were used last Spring. One of the tit boxes was used by a pair of nuthatches. None of the robin boxes had been used by robins, but two had been used by tits for nesting and two by squirrels for roosting. The treecreeper box had been used by a squirrel for roosting.

Thank you to everyone who helped over the weekend: thanks to Steve for letting us use his ladder; and thanks to Andrew who transported the ladder to Alwoodley!

About Friends of Adel Woods

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one morning a month to carry out various jobs or “work parties”, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to help preserve our special woods, enjoy fresh air and exercise in the woods and make new friends. Please get in touch by leaving a comment on this website if you would like to take part in our activities.

13th January 2024: day one of the FOAW annual nest box clean and survey

Friends of Adel woods surveying nest boxes
Ready for action!

A fine but cold day for day one of our annual survey and clean of our nest boxes in Adel Woods. At 10 am we had an amazing turnout of nine people - and later on twelve when three more people joined us in the woods!

We have thirty eight tit boxes and four robin boxes in Adel Woods, so we had our work cut out! Tit boxes are the familiar nest boxes with a round hole in the front. Robins will not use tit boxes and prefer a box with a large opening at the front (as shown below) placed near the ground – or not to use a nest box at all. 

We need to clean the nest boxes because tits and robins do not re-use nests from previous years. In 2021 we were unable to clean out the nest boxes due to the covid lockdown and when we surveyed the nest boxes in January 2022 we found that in Spring 2021 nests had been built on top of the previous year’s nests. This probably happens all the time in natural nesting holes, but it is not a good start for young chicks because the old nesting material is frequently full of fleas and mites, and sometimes is very wet.

Friends of Adel Woods; robin nest box
A robin box made by Friends of Adel Woods – note the large entrance.

Our morning’s work

We set off down Crag Lane and then up the “diagonal” path on the right hand side of Crag Lane, just before Old Leo’s car park. We paused at the entrance to the path to have a look at some Yellow Brain fungus (see yesterday’s blog post) and then started work cleaning our first nest box, number 17.

FOAW’s tit boxes have three different sizes of entrance hole. The two larger sizes, 28mm or 32mm, allow access to blue tits, great tits or nuthatches. The smallest entrance hole, 25mm, permits access only for blue tits. Coal tits may use nest boxes, but prefer a nest box only a metre or so above the ground so they do not use our tit boxes which are all at least three metres from the ground.

Nest box 17 seemed to contain two typical tit nests made of moss and grass – a great tit nest containing two unhatched eggs, and, on top of it, a blue tit nest containing one unhatched egg. Blue tit and great tit eggs look very similar, but great tit eggs are slightly bigger (17.5mm x 13.5mm) than blue tit eggs (15.6mm x 12mm).

Friends of Adel Woods repairing a nest box in Adel Woods on 13th January 2024
Replacing the damp proofing on box number 17

We have covered all our wooden tit boxes with damp proofing plastic to keep them dry. This has been very successful over the years, but the plastic gets holes where pecked by the birds and this year we had to replace or patch up many of the nest boxes.

Friends of Adel Woods: surveying nest boxes in Adel Woods. Tit nest.
A typical tit nest made of moss, feathers and grass found in box 18

This morning we surveyed eleven tit boxes and two robin boxes. Ten tit boxes had nests inside them, and one a partly built tit nest. Some had one or two unhatched eggs concealed in the nesting material but since great tits lay seven to nine eggs and blue tits eight to twelve eggs, we infer that most of the nests were successful even though some eggs did not hatch. One nest contained the skeleton of a fully formed bird – probably a chick, but perhaps an adult. One contained a sweet chestnut shell, indicating that after the tits departed a wood mouse moved in for a while.

Turning to the robin boxes, one contained lots of leaves and had clearly been used by a squirrel for roosting, while the other contained a partly formed tit nest.

Friends of Adel Woods: a blackbird nest  at the base of a tree in Adel Woods
A blackbird nest at the base of a downey birch

One of the most exciting finds was made by Steve Joul when he found a blackbird nest near the ground at the back of the tree on which nest box number 8 was hanging.

Friends of Adel Woods nest box survey on 13th January 2024
No report on our nest box surveys is complete without a photo of Steve climbing a ladder!
Friends of Adel Woods: rotten nest box material full of larvae and maggots
Nest box material well and truly processed by insects and containing larvae or maggots
Friends of Adel Woods surveying nest boxes in Adel Woods on 13th January 2024
Viewing “Tina’s nest box” – a posh Schwegler box near Old Leo’s clubhouse

We continued working till about 1.20pm when we adjourned for lunch and a piece of Christmas cake. We had surveyed the nest boxes in Alwoodley Plantation, the boxes on the path running north adjacent to the disused rugby pitch, and the nest boxes on Crag Lane behind the rugby clubhouse.

Our afternoon session

Five of us resumed work at about 2.30pm and surveyed the nest boxes along Crag Lane from the rugby club to the picnic area, and then started to make our way down the Meanwood Valley Trail. surveying and cleaning nine nest boxes – eight tit boxes and one robin box.

The robin box contained a tit nest and leaves on top of it suggesting that a squirrel had used it for roosting. Of the tit boxes, seven contained a nest, and one contained moss which looked very fresh suggested that it may have been put there this year, even though it would be early for tits to start nesting.

Friends of Adel Woods surveying nest boxes in Adel Woods: nesting material containing orange man-made fibres.
A tit nest made in part with man-made fibres – probably from tennis balls

One of the striking features which we always find in tit nests is the use of man-made materials – probably the covering of green, yellow or orange tennis balls – to make the nest.

Friends of Adel Woods: witches butter fungus and hairy curtain crust fungus in Adel Woods on 13th January 2024
Black “witches butter” fungus and hairy curtain crust fungus on a tree stump

A propos of nothing we found these excellent examples of fungi this afternoon.

Friends of Adel Woods: surveying nest boxes  in Adel Woods on the 13th January 2024
Time for a cup of tea!

We finished work at 4.35 as it was getting too dark to see.

In summary, during today’s survey we found that all the tit boxes were used. The nesting material in some tit boxes was dry, but in some it was very wet indeed – perhaps not surprising in view of the recent months of seemingly relentless heavy rain. Fortunately, today we spruced up twenty one nest boxes for this year’s broods.

Several of the nests contained droppings, indicating that the nest box had been used for roosting, as nesting birds do not defecate in the nest and clean out droppings from chicks.

Thank you to everyone who helped with today’s workparty!

To read more, have a look at tomorrow’s blog entry for day two of our annual nest box survey and clean.

Friends of Adel Woods were formed in 2009 to help maintain Adel Woods and encourage people to enjoy them. We meet one morning a month to carry out various jobs, and we also put on educational events.  We are a very friendly group and welcome new members who want to make new friends and enjoy getting out in the woods.

Friday 12th January 2024: preparing for our nest box survey

Friends of Adel Woods: clearing path in Adel Woods on 12th January 2024

In the recent storms. a large number of trees in Adel Woods seem to have fallen over, or lost a branch. This one had fallen across the entrance to the path near Old Leo’s which leads up into Alwoodley Plantation – the path where we usually begin our annual nest box survey, due to start tomorrow. So a quick trip out to clear the fallen timber.

Friends of Adel Woods: Yellow Brain, latin name tremella mesenterica in Adel Woods

While there, I came across this spectacular fungus – which was very wobbly when the branch was moved. An email to Steve Joul revealed that it is Yellow Brain, latin name tremella mesenterica. Tremella is latin for wobbly jelly, and mesenteric means middle intestine. It feeds on another fungus, peniophora, that causes the branch to be rotten.

Further up the path there were further obstacles – a fallen branch and holly growing across the path. There were also cleared to allow Steve to carry his ladder up the path!

Friends of Adel Woods clearing paths

All ready for tomorrow!

Friends of Adel Woods: path clearing in Adel Woods