The finished steps leading down from the Stairfoot Lane carpark to the stream.
Thank you BTCV, you have done a fantastic job!
The finished steps leading down from the Stairfoot Lane carpark to the stream.
Thank you BTCV, you have done a fantastic job!
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David and I popped out
this afternoon to put up the last nest box which we made on 22 January.
This one was made to BTO dimensions and was not as deep as the the rest which we made to RSPB specifications. In consequence the metal entrance hole plate did not go over the entrance hole and we had to redrill it.
It is just off the Meanwood Valley Trail, below the cricket ground.
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Thank you to BTCV for the fantastic work they are doing in putting some steps into the path down from Stairfoot Lane car park to the stream. This is an established footpath which has fallen into disrepair over recent years.
This picture, taken at the beginning of a four day project, does not really do justice to how steep this footpath is.
This work is being done
at the request of FOAW and Leeds City Council is providing the materials and BTCV the labour.
This picture is taken at the beginning of day 2 of a four day project.
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A big thank you to George who took the smaller TV’s to the tip today and other stolen property with them to the police station.
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An extraordinary 14 Friends – an extraordinary number and 14 extraordinary people – took part in an ad hoc litterpick this morning and made a really good job picking up many bags of litter. Thank you to everyone – the woods look a lot better than before, and I am sure that the hedgehogs, squirrels and other animals in the woods really appreciate the improvement!
Someone had generously dumped 3 old televisions at the side of Crag Lane which we decided to leave till a later date.
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Seven of us spent
the afternoon putting up 19 nest boxes along the Meanwood Valley Trail and a bat box (with the batboxes we put up last year).
We put up 1 robin box, 1 starling box and 17 titboxes – with a variety of sizes of entrance holes.
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An enjoyable morning
making 19 tit boxes under the expert tutellage of Steve Joul!
A big thank you to Leeds City Council for providing the wood, to Andrew Jellings for cutting the planks to the correct size, and to Ian Hamilton for drilling all the holes.
But chiefly a big thank you to everyone who turned up and made the morning a great success.
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A very happy and enjoyable
afternoon surveying the boxes which we put up in January. Of twelve boxes inspected, eight had nests in them
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I know the lyrics are
slightly wrong, but we had a great morning making Christmas garlands and yule logs under the tutellage of Steve Joul. Even your reporter, who only managed to hammer in one nail when making bird boxes in January, was able to complete a very presentable garland which is now hanging by the front door.
Thanks are due to Old Leo’s Rugby Club who gave us the use of their bar and tea and coffee making facilities.
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Diane Gregory of
West Yorkshire Bat Group gave a wonderful talk on bats to an enthusiastic audience of Friends.
There are 17 or 18 species of bat in the UK of which two, the common Pipistrelle and the Noctule, are known to frequent Adel Woods – we know because we saw and heard them on our Bat Walk with Steve Joul on 14 August (see the blog entry for that evening). If you go into the woods in Spring and Summer you will have the thrilling sight of them flitting around at the margin of the trees and open spaces. If you are really lucky you may well have them in your garden. At Eccup reservoir you may well see a third species, Daubenton’s bat, which hunts over water. However, you won’t see any bats at the moment, because they are all on sab-bat-ical – hibernating until the Spring!
Bats are a really important indicator of the health of our environment and wildlife – they are the top predators of common nocturnal insects, and are very sensitive to such things as landscape change, intensive agriculture, pesticides. Unfortunately, the bat population in the UK has declined by about 75% over the last 100 years. The Friends have started to help bats by putting up some bat boxes last January. We want a healthy bat population in Alwoodley!
All bats are protected in the UK and it is illegal to disturb a bat roost. You may well have bats in and around the crevices of your house. If you do, count yourself lucky, though the chances are that you will not know because they are very unobtrusive creatures – you can get about 200 Pipistrelle’s into a shoe box!
Should you find a bat in distress, or want to do some work on your house and think that you have bats living there, contact the National Bat Helpline 0845 1300 228 or the Bat Conservation Trust http://www.bats.org.uk/ who will help you and give you advice on how you can carry out your work while remaining within the law.
Our next bat event will be in the Summer when – with Diane’s help – we shall investigate whether the bat boxes we put up last January have attracted any bats.
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