All posts by David Pottinger

Sunday Volunteer Task – 8 January 2012

Colin Gray writes:

“I hope you all had a happy Christmas and are well nourished and ready for the next few tasks.

In January we will move our activity up to the Dry Heath.  There is a good supply of birch scrub and saplings thriving there which needs to be removed.  We will have the ‘Lazy Dogs’ tools available for the easier ones but some growth is on old stumps so they might have to be cut.

The target area is adjacent to the footpath that starts just north of the picnic site (through a gap in the bank) and runs towards the car park.  If we can find it under the regrowth there is an old fire site within easy drag distance.”

Hope to see you there and all new volunteers are very welcome!

Further information on the Sunday volunteer tasks (including where to meet etc) is available here.

Blog Review For 2011

WordPress (who we use to publish this blog) have prepared a report on Fleet Pond Blog for the past year, 2011.

It has some very interesting facts and figures!

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Syndey Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 24,000 times in 2011. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 9 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

And here’s a graphic showing where our readers come from!

Click here to see the complete report

Hart DC Restores Marshland At Fleet Pond

Louise Greenwood, the Fleet Pond Countryside Ranger, writes:

Hart District Council Countryside Services have dramatically restored areas of Fleet Pond.  With the aid of a Higher Level Stewardship (HLS) grant, Fugelmere Marsh has been reclaimed from the encroaching scrub and trees.

While walking around the pond you may have seen a lot of work going on in Fugelmere Marsh and lots of logs in the main car park. The marsh area had become encroached by trees and scrub, these were cut down, and the timber is going to be sold locally as firewood.  Although the cleared area looks quite barren now, this allows water and light to penetrate the ground, marshland plant seeds are lying dormant under the soil in the seed bank waiting for spring.

Reedbeds are a successive habitat, if left unmanaged the habitat is lost due to the encroachment of trees and scrub from the surrounding woodland, these create shade as well as drawing up the water from the wetland. The scrub and trees were cut down and removed, then the ground was mulched and scraped to help stop the trees growing back.

Livestock are going to be grazing Fugelmere marsh as of next year. Hart District Council installed a new grazing enclosure around Fugelmere Marsh. The fence is similar to that of Wood Lane Heath and Coldstream Marsh. The livestock will graze any regrowth from the scrub coming back, ensuring the marshland stays as an open habitat.  Grazing maintains a mosaic of vegetation that is important for a wide range of wetland species.

Hart District Council have also created 3 new scrapes in Fugelmere Marsh.  Creating scrapes is important in the restoration of marshland habitats, as digging down into the soil brings the seed bank to the surface. The edges of the scrapes are then graded which provides a great feeding surface for wading birds.  The scrapes have deeper areas so will hopefully retain water for most of the year providing a perfect habitat for amphibians, dragonflies and other pond life.  The value of scrapes is perfectly shown in Fleet Pond’s recently restored Coldstream Marsh, which after being created has had many exciting and rare species turn up, such as the creeping fen pillwort which is a red data book species until now not seen at Fleet Pond since 1964.

These are exciting times ahead, everyone is poised in anticipation, what species will turn up in the newly restored habitat in Fleet Pond?

The above is a Press Release from Hart District Council.