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Why Not Come To The Garden Party This Saturday?


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Fleet Pond Society will be having a Garden Party this Saturday, 13th June 2009, from 11:30 am to 3:00 pm at:

“Grasmere”, 35 Chestnut Grove, Fleet

The pictures above and below are of this very beautiful setting which overlooks the pond.

There will be alot on offer including

  • delicious teas and homemade cakes and sandwiches
  • plants and garden sundries
  • books and a drawing competition
  • skittles, a coconut shy and a football game
  • bric-a-brac and ‘guess where the treasure is?’
  • many more stalls
  • raffle with great prizes (drawn at 2:30 pm)

All the proceeds of the Garden Party will go to the upkeep of Fleet Pond Nature Reserve. See also previous post  ‘Garden Party In June’.

Picture credits: Cathy Holden

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Volunteer Event This Sunday, 14 June

Fleet Pond Society organises and runs a series of volunteer conservation activities at the Pond. The next conservation task is this coming Sunday, June 14.

The plan is to follow up on the work by the O2 volunteers to upgrade the footpath from Gelvert Bridge to Coldstream Glade.

If you have never been before and fancy trying it, please just turn up (details here) or else give Colin Gray a call on 01252 616183, who will be delighted to provide additional information.

O2 Volunteer Event in May: New Pathway

The cheque

Cathy Holden writes:

Funding for the upkeep of the pond is an ongoing problem and so the society was thrilled to receive a £1,000 donation from the Conservation Foundation.

It came about through Jo Howard, an employee of O2 who lives in Fleet and enjoys her walks around the pond. Jo spoke to our chairman, Colin Gray, regarding making a bid under the O2 ‘It’s Your Community’ scheme for a grant from the Conservation Foundation. They decided that the repair of the pathway between the Gelvert Stream and Coldstream Glade would be an ideal project (see map on About page above for locations).  Jo submitted the idea and was thrilled when the Foundation agreed to donate £1,000 to the Society to buy the materials required for the job, with Hart District Council making up the shortfall of £375.

However, not satisfied with just organising the funding, Jo also arranged a group of fellow employees from O2 to provide the labour!

So on a sunny morning in May about 16 keen volunteers from O2, along with several members of Fleet Pond Society and the Hart Council Rangers responsible for the nature reserve gathered at the site.  The rangers had already marked out where the edges of the footpath were to be, so the first job was to dig a trench either side of the pathway for the wooden supports to go in. Following on from this, nineteen tonnes of a mixture of sand and stone had to be shovelled onto the liner and raked out to within one inch of the top of the wooden planks on each side of the path.  This was very hard work but everyone got down to it with much light-hearted banter.

Spreading the sand and stonesPicture: Spreading The Sand And Stones

During the morning we stopped work whilst the photographer from O2 got everyone organised for a photo of the presentation of the cheque (picture at the very top). After this, lunch beckoned and people drifted off to spots around the pond to eat their sandwiches, or to enjoy lunch at a local pub.

Flattening the pathPicture: Doing Some Flattening!

Once lunch was over it was back to laying the last of the sand and stone mixture, after which it was compacted with the flattening machine – which everyone wanted a go at (picture above).  This was followed by the top dressing of gravel, which also had to be raked to a very smooth finish and compacted (picture below). As well as the pathway the team filled a few of the large dips in the track leading around from Coldstream Glade towards the field.

On goes the gravelPicture: On Goes The Gravel

The Society and Rangers would like to thank Jo Howard and her O2 team for their work and initiative on this project and the Conservation Foundation for their generosity.  It was very hard going, but everyone put their backs into it and the enthusiasm and laughter throughout the day made the task seem all the lighter. Many of the visitors enjoying a walk round the pond in the sunshine stopped to chat and were very impressed and appreciative of the hard work being put in by the volunteer team.

Picture credits: Cathy Holden

End of the dayPicture: At The End Of The Day

Decision on Waterfront Park: Part One Won!

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In case you have not yet heard, the Secretary of State followed the Inspector’s recommendation to dismiss the appeal.

The summary of the conclusions is here and the full details can be found here.

For local press reporting of this decision (Get Hampshire) see here.

Please note that this is unlikely to be the end of the story.  The appellant has the right to challenge her decision and, she says, should the applicant come up with a more acceptable design including open space on site she might be minded to be more sympathetic.

For background, please see the earlier blog post ‘Fleet Pond Nature Reserve Under Threat‘.

Picture credit here.

Butterfly Of The Month: June – The Small Heath

Small Heath

Peter Martin writes:

With a wingspan of about one inch (25 mm) and rather dowdy colouring, you may find this butterfly rather difficult to spot. At Fleet Pond, it is more likely to be seen on the Dry Heath or along the footpath that borders it. Its wings are a very pale golden colour, with the exception of the hindwing undersides which are shades of both pale and dark grey. The forewings have small “eye” spots close to the tips. When settled they sit with their wings closed and may even tuck their forewings behind their hindwings, which helps them to blend in with their surroundings.

Green or yellow eggs are laid singly on meadow grass and fescues during June. After a fortnight, the green caterpillars emerge and normally feed on the grass tips at night. The best way to see them is to check grassy areas with a torch during the hours of darkness – a task only likely to be tackled by keen entomologists!

The caterpillars, while still fairly small, hibernate during the winter, although they may feed on very mild days. After resumption of normal feeding in the spring, they pupate by late April and emerge towards the end of May or early June. This brood flies until early July.

There is a second brood that results from over-wintering eggs that can be seen flying during August and September. I have normally seen only one or two Small Heath butterflies at Fleet Pond but, when leading a “guided walk” there in 2005, I was surprised to see a group of five flying around each other, making the most of the sunshine. They have a rather “drunken” pattern of flight, which may help you to identify them.

Male butterflies establish a territory by perching on the ground and waiting for a female to come along. If another male comes into the territory, they engage in prolonged aerial battles to claim possession. Generally, the larger-winged butterfly wins and the smaller flies off to establish another territory.

If you see a female flying back and forth over a fairly small area of ground, she may be trying to gain the interest of a perching male. Having attracted her mate, the female lands and the male advances with a series of head butts. After mating, the female avoids other male territories. When laying her eggs, the first hundred or so are green, but the later ones are yellow. We do not know why this change of colour takes place.

Visit the blog in July for information about the Small Tortoiseshell.

Peter Martin acted as author for a booklet entitled “Blackwater Valley Butterflies” which contains photographs of all 32 species found in this area together with information about their life cycles. Copies are available for £2.50 plus £1.00 p.p. from Blackwater Valley Countryside Partnership, Ash Lock Cottage, Government Road, Aldershot, Hants, GU11 2PS. (Cheques should be made payable to B.V.C.P.).

Picture credit here.