Category Archives: Uncategorized

Saturday 20 November 2010: Mud, Mud, glorious mud!

 

 

 

 

 

A busy morning of varied tasks.

Scraping the mud off paths by the Slabbering Baby and along Crag Lane.
Litter picking – four bags of rubbish collected.
Clearing fallen trees from the woodland paths (see the Gallery).
Cleaning and surveying bird boxes.

Friday 19 November 2010: Planning

 

 

 

 

A meeting in the woods with Steve Joul and Roger Brookes of Leeds CC and Craig Spencer of British Trust for Conservation Volunteers to:

  •    clarify the route of rights of way and how they can be maintained; and
  •     to dentify tasks which BTCV can do for us because they are too big for a Saturday or Sunday morning.

A very productive morning.

 

Saturday 16 October 2010: Breakin’ rocks up here on the chain gang, breaking rocks up, serving’ my time…

Not actually breaking rocks, but uprooting saplings on Adel Moor to enable the heather to re-establish itself.  Apparently, there is so much heather seed in the soil that the moor will regenerate itself quite quickly.

While some of us were labouring on the moor, a team of four Friends led by Steve Joul were clearing reed sweet grass from the pond.

Another beautiful morning when we had great company and we went home for a hearty lunch with a sense of something worthwhile accomplished.

  “Friends of Adel Woods have branches everywhere!”

Sunday 19 September 2010: Ooh, how I love the rainy days…

Another bumper turn out on a grey wet morning.  Ten of us spent an hour picking up litter, and then most of us adjourned to do some path clearance and to clear vegetation off the slabbering baby.

A special thank you to Old Leo’s rugby club who offered us free tea, coffee and a bacon sandwich – an offer taken up and by several of us and appreciated by us all.

Monday 30 August 2010: Ecotherapy

It is amazing how a bit of work in the woods can rejuvenate you and improve your looks .

 

Notice how the lumberjack in this picture seems to have grown in stature and beauty (as compared with the previous picture) after clearing the paths.

Silver Birch seem to be falling like nine pins at the moment.  With this one, the top 30 feet of the trunk had snapped off and fallen across the route of the Meanwood Valley Trail (to the left) and the path up to the cricket ground on the right.  Believe it or not, this is the same spot as that shown in the previous picture – use the two trunks in a V shape in the centre of the picture as a reference point.

Thursday 14 August 2010: Batwalk!

Fifty nine (!) of us joined Steve Joul for a walk around the woods, culminating as dusk arrived, with a batwatch.  We were equipped with bat detectors and information sheets about the different species of bat which we might see.

It was a wonderful warm evening with a clear sky and as it was still too light for the bats to be active,  Steve took us up to Adel Moor where he explained about its importance as part of the Meanwood Valley nature reserve, and he showed us various mushrooms and toadstools on the way.  We then followed the Meanwood Valley Trail to the picnic area, arriving as it dusk fell.

There was much excitement when the first bat was seen, and even more when the bat detectors picked up the echolocation system of the bats as they flitted over head. The clear sky enabled us to get a very clear view of the bats.

The detectors pick up the sound of the bats and convert it to a pitch which the human ear can hear. It is very exciting to hear a loud clicking start on the detector, rapidly rise to a crescendo and then fade as a bat sweeps past.

Different species of bats echo locate using sounds of different frequencies and we were able to detect Pipistrelles, Britain’s smallest bat, whose signature frequency is about 50 kiloherz,  and Noctules, one of Britain’s larger bat species whose frequency is about 22 kiloherz.

After about half an hour at the picnic area, we moved to the practice rugby field.  There seemed to be fewer bats around here, but the temperature was noticeably cooler than in the picnic area, so perhaps there were fewer insects for the bats to feed on.

We benefited from three extra treats.  A firework display from somewhere on Stairfoot Lane at about 9 pm, and music from a wedding marquee on the rugby field – your correspondent particularly enjoyed a cover version of Something Tells Me I’m into Something Good, by Herman’s Hermits.  Finally at about 9.40 a chinese lantern floated by in the night sky – the first time Steve had ever seen one!

Thursday 5 August 2010: Clearing trees from Adel Moor

A big thank you to the British Trust for Conservation Volunteers who spent two days (at our request) pulling up trees from Adel Moor.  They did a fantastic job.

Adel Moor is the last surviving heath in north Leeds and a special habitat – lizards can be found basking there on a warm summer morning. The habitat is under threat because trees – particularly birch and oak – are moving in and taking over.  It is a constant battle to keep the trees at bay, but one worth striving to win.

The Friends will be spending two hours next Saturday clearing small saplings from the moor – much better use of time and effort to remove small trees now, than to allow them to mature to the point that we need to bring in mechanical assistance or poison them.

Sunday 18 July 2010: Litterpicking, way marking and clearing

A very successful morning litterpicking, marking the route of the Meanwood Valley Trail, and path clearance.   Here you can see a gate post near the Slabbering Baby.  Steve Joul painted an arrow on it 20 years ago. The arrow was still on the gate post, but hidden by 20 years growth of vegetation.  We cleared it and gave the arrow a fresh lick of paint.

Hopefully, fewer people will lose their way on the Meanwood Valley Trail in future!

Saturday 26 June 2010: Litterpicking, way marking and path clearance

Thirteen of us spent the morning litterpicking (seven bags of rubbish), and clearing and marking out the route of the Meanwood Valley Trail.

Thursday 24 June 2010: Orchid count and wildlife stroll

Steve Joul led 31 Friends around the woods, enabling us, as always, to see things with fresh eyes.  Here some members of the group can be seen examining an oak tree – but is is sessile or pedunculate? Click here to find out http://www.woodlands.co.uk/owning-a-wood/tree-identification/oak.php

It was a glorious summer evening,  combining learning with enjoyment!

Thanks again Steve!