All posts by Michelle Salter

Ecoplugs in action on Fleet Pond island

This short film shows how the team are using Ecoplugs to control tree growth on islands in Fleet Pond.

When you cut down leaf trees, they quickly start to sprout again. An Ecoplug provides an effective way to deal with this. By inserting the plug into a stump, you can kill the tree and stop regrowth.

Ecoplugs reduce the use of chemicals by 90% compared to traditional methods of treating felled leaf trees.

Here the team are using them to control tree growth on one of the islands. They’re applying Ecoplugs to fresh wood immediately after felling. The plan is to prevent regrowth and allow reeds to become established on the island.

Conservation work at Sandy Bay

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This week the team has been cutting back scrub and bramble along the Gelvert Stream as it runs into Sandy Bay. The left bank has been left with cover.

Controlling scrub in this area will allow different types of plants to grow, and by letting light on the water, we can try and increase the diversity of aquatic plants in the stream.

Come Spring, we will see plenty of new growth.

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Manky Mallards and Ganky Geese

Blondie
Blondie

Michelle Salter writes:

This year, chicks have done surprisingly well at the pond. We’re not sure what to put this down to, it could be the addition of the islands creating new habitats, or perhaps some of the predatory mink were scared away by the dredgers.

Whatever the reason, our baby ducks, geese, swans, moorhens and coots have thrived. One family of mallards was noticeable as it contained a single white chick amongst the brood of eleven. Blondie, as we have called her (or him) is growing up nicely along with her siblings.

Blondie with her ten siblings
Blondie with her ten siblings

The appearance of Blondie led me to go online to research the incidences of ‘mallard mongrels’ and I discovered they’re a fairly common occurrence. Domestic breeds of duck have bred with wild mallards for years. Many wild birds have the genes of domesticated birds in their ancestry. The rogue gene can suddenly produce a chick with an unusual feature or colouring amongst an otherwise normal brood.

Growing up nicely
Growing up nicely

I came across the disrespectful terms ‘Manky Mallard’ and ‘Ganky Geese’ to describe this phenomenon. I think this is an insult to the much maligned mallard and got at goose, so I’m renaming these unique birds Marvellous Mallards and Glorious Geese.

Blondie nearly full grown
Blondie nearly full grown

Blondie is a beautiful duck. Her rogue gene may have come from a Pekin duck, which is a domesticated farm duck, bred for meat and egg production. The Pekin is pure white with an orange bill and orange legs.

We hope Blondie will grow to full size and one day rear a brood of her own on Fleet Pond.

A gallery of Marvellous Mallards can be found here.

Photo credits: Vicki Jull and Michelle Salter

Galleon up for grabs!

Wooden Pirate Galleon
Wooden Pirate Galleon

**Galleon has now been taken by a local guide group**

Would anyone like our beautiful Carnival galleon? We have nowhere to store it, so it will be chopped up if we have no takers.

Loving care has gone into its creation, and we’d love it if a local group could make use of it, perhaps a scout, guide or school group?

(We would need to unbolt it from the trailer.)

Please email Michelle@FleetPondSociety.co.uk if you’re interested in taking the galleon off our hands.

Pirate Galleon
Pirate Galleon

One Big Thing for Nature

Chris Packham at Fleet Pond
Chris Packham at Fleet Pond

 

Fleet Pond Society patron, Chris Packham, makes an eloquent plea for individuals to take action, following the recent State of Nature report, in a guest blog post for the RSPB.

One Big Thing for Nature: guest blog post from Chris Packham

Sir David Attenborough launched the State of Nature report at the Natural History Museum, London on 22nd May 2013. The report was compiled by 25 wildlife organisations, working alongside scientists, to produce a stock take of Britain’s nature. It revealed that 60% of the species studied have declined in the past 50 years.

The full State of Nature report can be found here.