Teme Valley Musings, May 2020

No Mow May! No, it isn’t a political slogan left over from last year, it’s the rallying cry of the wildflower charity Plantlife in an effort to increase the amount of nectar and pollen available to pollinating insects. (Although it did, weirdly, coincide with the departure of a certain Prime Minister in 2019.) This project …

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Teme Valley Musings, April 2020

Calling all computer whizzes with an interest in wildlife! The Teme Valley Wildlife Group has recently had a plea from the county butterfly conservators for records of butterfly sightings in the Teme valley area. We know that our beautiful, quiet valley is home to many birds, mammals, plants and insects, but those who strive to …

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Teme Valley Musings, March 2020

One of the Teme Valley Wildlife Group’s 2017 Sunday outdoor meetings was expertly led by David Graham, Knighton-on-Teme’s parish footpath officer. He has a keen interest in local history and showed us, in addition to old meadows, marshy places and Worcestershire’s oldest tree, a deserted village and a disused canal tunnel. I was reminded of …

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Teme Valley Musings, February 2020

My topic for this month is the garden bird-box. Over the past twelve months I’ve been asked a number of times how to site different types of bird-box, so I’ve put together some information, mainly from RSPB and Wildlife Trust leaflets, to try and guide people who have either made or bought a bird-box and …

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Teme Valley Musings, January 2020

At the beginning of last year we were blessed with a series of sunny, bright days; just the thing for an early start to visiting The National Garden Scheme’s open gardens. The draw in January and February is that familiar, shy, winter favourite, the snowdrop. Not a native of these shores, it seems at home …

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Teme Valley Musings, December 2019

December signals the close of the year and I have spent some time looking back over 2019. It began with my sixtieth birthday and has been dotted with visits to gardens and wildlife habitats in places as diverse as Dartmoor, Kent, North Wales and the Cotswolds. Sunny weather and blue skies have brightened every month, …

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Teme Valley Musings, November 2019

This month my topics are habitat loss and biodiversity. They go hand in hand because of the adaptation plants and animals have had to make to live in different habitats. It is worth remembering that many of the special habitats, hay meadows, hedgerows and heathland for example, are man-made, and that those adaptations have taken …

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Teme Valley Musings, October 2019

Last month I wrote about climate change and this month I thought I would follow with the theme of species extinction. The interplay between global warming, habitat loss and species extinction is still imperfectly understood but has certainly been brought to the fore recently. We know that many species are in danger and some are …

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Teme Valley Musings, September 2019

At Easter the potential risks of global warming were brought into sharp focus when climate change protesters took to the streets to raise their concerns. They called for less carbon dioxide to be emitted into the earth’s atmosphere and for Britain to lead the way in bringing about world-wide change. The Government passed legislation to …

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Teme Valley Musings, August 2019

Back in February I enjoyed a circular walk up and around the Brown Clee hill. At 540 metres above sea-level, this is the highest point in the whole of the Midlands.It was a gloriously sunny day, and approaching from Abdon on the north side of the summit, the walk was a particularly fine one. Along …

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