Tag Archives: Meanwood Valley Trail

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

Sunday, 23rd January 2022: surveying nest boxes, part 2

Today we completed our survey of the nest boxes in Adel Woods. We started the survey on Sunday the 9th, when we surveyed about two thirds of the boxes. (You can find out what we discovered that day by clicking here.)

This morning we met at 10 am at the Slabbering Baby entrance to Adel Woods at 9.55 am. Steve Joul drove his landrover down to the Slabbering Baby and we set off up the Meanwood Valley Trail, past the pond, to nest box 35, which was the next nest box to be cleaned when we finished on the 9th. It was a pleasant morning and there were five of us, including Steve.

Having cleaned nest box 35 we made our way down the Meanwood Valley Trail to the Seven Arches, cleaning another fourteen nest boxes, finishing with box 39, to the right of the path. We then put up nearby two more nest boxes donated by Rob and Tina, having numbered them 50 and 51.

What we discovered

Like many of the nest boxes we surveyed on the 9th, most nest boxes contained two nests – one from Spring 2020, and another on top of it from Spring 2021. This was because we were unable to clean and survey the boxes in January 2021 due to Covid 19.

People are often surprised that great tits and blue tits don’t simply re-use an existing nest, but they don’t even though it clearly takes a huge amount of time and hundreds of trips to make a tit nest from moss and grass. No doubt there is an evolutionary advantage to raising chicks in a new nest as the old nests are often full of fleas and mites which would harm the young brood.

Friends of Adel Woods: nest box on the Meanwood Valley Trail
The remains of a tit nest from 2020 judging by its condition. Note the many grubs, and that the nesting material is largely reduced to dust.

Nest box 35, the first we surveyed, also contained 7 unhatched eggs, so the likelihood is that in Spring 2021 the nest was wholly unsuccessful.

We found two nest boxes which had been used by nuthatches. You can always tell a nest box has been used by nuthatches before opening them because nuthatches fill all of the gaps in the nest box, particularly around the lid, with mud. The nest inside is totally different from a tit nest in that it is made of bark chips and looks like a bowl of bran flakes!

We were amazed to find in one nest box a hibernating noctule bat. Needless to say we immediately closed the nest box and put it back up without cleaning it. Perhaps we shouldn’t have been surprised because we found a hibernating noctule bat in the same nest box in January 2020, so it was probably the same individual. What was interesting was that the nest box had also been used by nuthatches to bring up a family in Spring 2020 or 2021 – so it was a bit like a timeshare!

Noctule bats are the UK’s largest bat and you can find out more about them on the Woodland Trust’s website here.

We have one particularly large nest box which is about 45cm deep which is supposed to be for treecreepers or starlings. We have never had treecreepers or starlings in it, though we have found tit nests in it in the past – which makes you wonder about young fledglings having to fly up to the exit hole to leave the nest! In 2020 we found a tit nest and a mummified squirrel in the box. This year we found about 30 cm of dried leaves in the box, so it had clearly been used for nesting by a squirrel.


Several nest boxes contained bird droppings on top of the nesting material, indicating that they had been used for roosting since the last breeding season. Several contained moth larvae which chew the wood of the nest box and create a very tough spongy material in which they pupate. It also tends to glue the lid of the nest box shut!

So that is it for another year. When walking through Adel Woods this Spring, keep an eye out for our nest boxes and take a few minutes to watch from a distance and see who is using them. Pretty well all of the nest boxes you see will be used.

Sunday, 9th January 2022: surveying and cleaning the nest boxes in Adel Woods

Surveying nest boxes in Adel Woods on 9 January 2022
Retrieving nest box number 5, near Devil’s Rock, Alwoodley Plantation

It is 12 years since the Friends of Adel Woods made and put up our first nest boxes in Adel Woods under the tutelage of Steve Joul, senior ranger with Leeds City Council. Since then we have surveyed them every year – except for last year when we were in a Covid 19 lockdown. This year, your correspondent was intrigued to find out how our feathered friends have fared without their annual spring clean in January 2021.

Most of the nestboxes are the tit boxes which you can see high up in trees throughout the woods. However, we also put a number of robin boxes out of sight within thick holly bushes – not a pleasure to survey! Robin boxes differ from tit boxes in that robins like to nest in a box with a large open front. This means that they have to be placed somewhere hard to find, to keep them safe from predators like magpies, woodpeckers and squirrels.

It was rather “parky” as we met in Old Leo’s carpark at 10 am, but fortunately the weather warmed up surprisingly quickly and we had a very enjoyable and successful day. In the morning there were eight of us including Steve.

We followed our usual route, heading along Crag Lane towards King Lane and taking the first turn left into Alwoodley Plantation where we surveyed our first boxes. We then made our way through the plantation, turning left at the practice rugby ground to come back to Crag Lane. We then continued along Crag Lane to the picnic area surveying nest boxes along the way.

By then it was lunchtime and we broke off for lunch after returning along Crag Lane and cleaning and surveying “Tina’s nest box”, a woodcrete nest box near the entrance to Old Leo’s car park.

Friends of Adel Woods surveying Tina's nestbox near Old Leo's carpark in Adel Woods
Surveying Tina’s nestbox near the entrance to Old Leo’s carpark

After an enjoyable lunch break, five of us resumed our survey, making our way down the Meanwood Valley Trail from the picnic area towards Adel Pond. We finished as dusk fell at about 4.20 pm.

Friends of Adel Woods: Nestbox survey on 9th January 2022

So what did we discover?

In all, we surveyed twenty two nestboxes today. Most of the tit boxes had been used. Of the three robin nest boxes we surveyed, only one had been used for nesting – by a pair of great or blue tits!

Blue tits and great tits nest once a year and do not re-use old nests and so, as expected, we found that most of the nestboxes contained two nests, one (from Spring 2021) on top of an earlier one from 2020.

We were surprised to find that most of the lower nests from 2020 had been “processed”, presumably by insects, almost to a kind of dust. The photograph below shows the difference between the condition of the earlier nest (on the right) and last year’s nest (on the left).

Two nests in a single nestbox – the one on the left from 2021 built on top of the one on the right from 2020

As is usual a number of the nestboxes contained one or two unhatched eggs – as in the photograph above. The nest on the left also contained a number of droppings, indicating that the nest box has been used for roosting by adult birds since the breeding season.

One of the things which we find each year is that tits like to use coloured man-made fibre in building their nests. In the photograph above, we can see blue, green and white fibre, but we also found plenty of bright orange fibre in other nests. We speculate that these fibres must have been collected from lost tennis balls, or possibly discarded clothing – though we have never found that number of tennis balls, or much clothing with those colours!

Usually we find one or two nuthatch nests, but none of the nestboxes surveyed today had been used by nuthatches in 2020 or 2021. Nuthatch nests are very different from tit nests as they are made from bark chips – looking rather like a bowl of bran flakes – rather than moss and grass. And it is usually possible to tell from the outside that a box has been used by nuthatches because they seal up any gaps between the lid and the box or in the sides of the box with mud.

There were two sad finds, reminding us that life in the wild can be harsh. One nest box contained twelve unhatched eggs. Another contained the skeletons of eight well developed chicks. Presumably, in each case the adult tits had fallen prey to a sparrowhawk or suffered some other sad fate.

We are completing our survey on Sunday the 23rd January. See our website for details! In the meantime, here are some photos of today’s activities.

Saturday, 11th December 2021: litterpicking and path clearing

Friends of Adel Woods: path clearing on 11th December 2021
Cutting back holly on Crag Lane

A lovely, mild day, and a great morning to enjoy the fresh air in Adel Woods.

We had a turn out of eight Friends and two of us, Chris and Mary, set off litterpicking. The rest of us set off to cut back holly, brambles and other vegetation which was encroaching on footpaths. This is something that we have had very little chance to do since the beginning of the corona virus pandemic in March 2020.

We started off on the diagonal path leading up into the Plantation from Crag Lane, and then moved on to Crag Lane itself, making our way from Old Leo’s car park, all the way to the picnic area.

En route, David and I made a detour on the path which runs along side the practice pitch to remove a rather large fallen branch.
Horse riding on Crag Lane in Adel Woods on 11 December 2021
Crag Lane: 11 December 2021

Crag Lane is a bridle path, and we did our best to remove a number of branches which were growing across the way at a rider’s head height.

A great morning’s work. Thank you to all our wonderful volunteers. And a merry Christmas to all our readers!

friends of Adel Woods in Old Leo's carpark, Leeds
Our merry band of path warriors! Old Leo’s car park.

Sunday, 25th July 2021: it’s good to be back!

Friends of Adel Woods in Stairfoot Lane Carpark: glad to be back!

Our first Friends of Adel Woods event since 13th December, and the first after so-called Freedom Day (July 19th), when most of the covid 19 restrictions were removed.

Would anyone turn up? There was no need to worry: eleven of us came, full of enthusiasm, to help Steve Joul with a range of tasks in the woods. Even better, the forecast thunderstorms did not arrive, and it was a beautiful day.

Four of us set off to pick up litter – and picked up lots of broken glass around Adel Crag before dispersing to pick up litter around the picnic area and in the beech wood.

The Stairfoot Lane steps, Adel Woods, Leeds
Repairing the steps from Stairfoot Lane carpark down to Adel Beck

The rest of us set off to the steps down from the carpark to Adel Beck to repair a couple of the steps and to clear mud from the rest of them. We last did this eighteen months ago in January 2020 (Oh, those innocent days before covid!) and in parts they were turning into a muddy bank – caused in part by the activity of some very energetic moles!

As we worked on the steps, the two Davids went to remove a tree which had fallen across the path along the side of the stream. Having sawn the trunk into three, they then got a passerby to move the trunk for them!

Adel Woods 25 July 2021
The path by the Adel Beck, Adel Woods

Having cleared the tree, the two Davids set about creating some drainage channels to stop the path turning into a quagmire whenever it rains.

Meanwhile, back at the steps, some of us were still removing mud and repairing the second step, while Steve and Roderic had moved to Crag Lane to clear a drainage pipe near the picnic area.

All in all, an excellent morning’s work.

Thursday, 27th May 2021: Annual General Meeting

We held our Annual General Meeting this evening by Zoom. All the current committee members stood for re-election and were duly appointed.

Roger Gilbert was appointed chair, Judith White treasurer and Stephanie Clarke was appointed secretary. Rob Hall agreed to check the annual accounts.

The constitution provides for a committee of 10 members.  Currently, we have six committee members, so we are keen for new volunteers to join the committee. If you are interested in joining the committee and having an input into the work done by Friends of Adel Woods please put yourself forward – you can do this by contacting Roger Gilbert by posting a comment on this website. The duties of the committee are not onerous.  In a normal year we have about four meetings when we decide on our program of work, discuss and approve fund raising and expenditure, and deal with the matters which arise from time to time.  

The Chair’s review of activities from May 2019 to May 2020

Our last AGM was on the 9th May 2019.  We couldn’t have an AGM in person in May 2020 due to Covid 19 restrictions and it has been put off until today.  So we have two years to review.

May 2019 to May 2020

From May 2019 to May 2020 we carried out the following:

  • eight litterpicking mornings
  • three mornings working on Adel Moor
  • two mornings working on Adel Bog
  • four mornings of path clearing including repairing the Stairfoot Lane steps
  • one morning clearing mud and debris from Adel Pond
  • one morning working in the hospice woodland
  • two days of nest box cleaning and surveying with S Joul
  • one day when David S and I replaced a missing nest box by the bridge below the pond – this particular location being a popular one for nuthatches to nest in.

In addition Steve Joul let a very successful Fungal Foray in October.

We also had a stall on the village green in August when Kibitz played.

In addition it is worth saying that 2019 was our tenth anniversary year and we celebrated this with a meal at the Olive Branch attended by 58 people, and the sale of a FOAW 2020 calendar which sold 50 copies.

Friends of Adel Woods; 2020 calendar
The Friends of Adel Woods 2020 Calendar

Our last event in this year was the path clearing in March 2020.  However, we had a great discovery when Lisa and Andy Worrilow found a colony of green hairstreak butterflies on Adel Moor – hitherto the only colony in the Leeds area was on Otley Chevin.

May 2020 to May 2021

Our activities were severely curtailed from March 2020 due to the Covid 19 lockdown.

We were not able to have our AGM or our annual birdsong walk in May 2020.  We did, however, manage to have some events from May 2020 to today.

In September we spent a day raking mowings from the Orchid Meadow after Steve and a volunteer, Jim, mowed it. We also had a morning in December when we extended the northern boundary of the meadow. I should say that the Orchid Meadow has been a great success after all the work which FOAW and Steve have done on it.  See the pictures on the blog for June 2020.

In October we had a morning of dredging Adel Pond, working on the ditches draining into the pond, and Judith cleaned out the Slabbering Baby.

We also had a day in the Autumn path clearing, but I don’t seem to have put a blog entry or have any photos!

Other notable events are the installation of the new interpretation boards – Adel Moor, Alwoodley Crag, and Buckstone Road entrance and the planting of a new orchard in the practice rugby field.

The Interpretation boards: in June, David Preston helped some of us choose sites to place them.  In September, we helped Steve Joul clear the  sites and mark them. In March David and his colleagues installed them for us – and they look wonderful.

David Preston putting the finishing touches to one of the new interpretation panels in Adel Woods

Steve has planted ten fruit trees – eight apple and two conference pear trees – in what used to be the practice rugby ground to the north west of Old Leo’s clubhouse..

Oh, and I should say that the Green Hairstreaks were seen on Adel Moor in April, but we are concerned that they may not have been able to breed before the rather wet weather we have had in the last month.

Apart from that, I have put some entries in the blog about ring necked parakeets in Leeds and murmurations of starlings, badgers and yellow hammers

One thing is clear is that Adel Woods has been a very popular recreational spot during the lockdowns – as evidenced by the large number of extra paths that have appeared for the first time in the last year.

Thursday, 11th June 2020: our new interpretation panels.

Interpretational panel to be installed near Adel Crag, and on the path down to the Slabbering Baby

As part of the Meanwood Valley, Wilderness on your Doorstep project, funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, three interpretation panels are going to be placed in Adel Woods – similar in style to the one by the Slabbering Baby.

Today, David Preston, the Meanwood Valley Ranger, met with FOAW committee members, Roger, Judith and Rob, to agree the siting of the new interpretation panels – which we are hoping will be installed in the next few weeks.

Adel Woods   Meanwood Valley
Pointing to the proposed siting of an interpretation panel by the path leading down to the Slabbering Baby

There are two designs of panel. The design shown at the head of this post will be placed on the path from Buckstone Road down to the Slabbering Baby and on Crag Lane near Adel (or Alwoodley) Crag. The other will be placed on Adel Moor.

The interpretation panel to be sited on Adel Moor

We agreed the panel on Adel Moor will be installed at the north eastern corner of the moor, where various paths converge.

Let’s put it there!

The moor is looking very good at the moment, and it hasn’t been abandoned during covid-19 lockdown. One of our committee members has been pulling bracken, and David Preston will be strimming areas where the bracken has suppressed all other plant life.

Choosing a position for the third panel. Who is that old codger on the extreme right? Oh, it’s me!

We agreed to place the final interpretation panel at the junction of Crag Lane with the path leading up to Adel Crag.

Adel Crag; Alwoodley Crag
Adel (or Alwoodley) Crag 11th June 2020

We are looking forward to seeing the new interpretation panels in place in the next few weeks.

Sunday, 15th March 2020: litterpicking and lumberjacking

Friends of Adel Woods, the Meanwood Valley Trail
Clearing the Meanwood Valley Trail

In these days of corona virus frenzy, your correspondent was not sure if anyone would turn up today, but we had a healthy group of nine of us.

friends of adel woods   the meanwood valley trail
The Meanwood Valley Trail – after (from the opposite direction)

Four of us litter picked and picked up seven or eight bags of rubbish, while the rest of us went down to the Meanwood Valley Trail, just south of the cricket pitches, to clear away two birch trees which had fallen across the footpaths, and to cut back holly.

Friends of Adel Woods:  path off the Meanwood Valley Trail
Clearing a path off the Meanwood Valley Trail

We have had so much rain in recent months that the Meanwood Valley Trail was in many places a 15cm deep quagmire. However, the weather was fine and we had a lovely morning of teamwork, conversation, birdsong and even some sunshine at times!

Friends of Adel Woods 15th March 2020
A happy band of workers