Saturday, 30 January 2016

The past 12 months in one whirlwind post

Hello! 

I have not disappeared off the face of the Earth, despite the fact I have not written a post in over a year! 

It has definitely been a very busy 12 months and hopefully I can summarise it all in a few paragraphs and then share some of the few photos which I have taken over the last year. 

I'll work my way through in chronological order so I don't confuse myself! 

December 2014 I finished my traineeship with Kent Wildlife Trust. It was a great experience and I learnt so many skills, however, the Trust didn't have any vacancies and there weren't that many opportunities in the area, so I was still jobless. I was determined that I needed to carry on getting more experience, so I stuck with pub work to earn money and continued to volunteer with KWT. I had a great time, I accompanied the Land Management Advisor on numerous site visits, including solar farms in different parts of the country. All very interesting stuff. 

Roe deer in between solar panels


A small group of us decided to have a little competition and started our wildflower diaries in January 2015 - writing down plants we saw when they came into flower. This was so educational - it meant we all carried our wildflower key with us wherever we went and I could actually identify quite a few new plants!

In February the Trust took on some work which they needed an extra pair of hands to carry out. I very happily put myself forward to carry out the work which I would be paid for. Hoorah! My first paid bit of conservation work. This then led the Trust to take on a few more extra bits of work which I was also to carry out, meaning that I had a few little paid projects to work on. Two of these projects were mainly bird surveys, but also included water vole surveys and habitat surveys. The bird surveys meant very early mornings but it was so worth it when we heard a nightingale and grasshopper warbler in the same bit of scrub. 

In the middle of all of this, mum and I went on a little trip to Suffolk. We found a lovely cottage which allowed dogs that was really close to the RSPB Minsmere reserve. The cottage was gorgeous and only a fence and ditch separated the end of the garden from a lovely bit of marshland. Every morning we looked out of the upstairs bedroom window and watched the resident barn owl hunting. It was incredible! Our daily routine consisted of a lovely long walk with Bracken, followed by a trip to Minsmere, followed by a 2 minute walk down to the local pub, The Eel's Foot Inn, which was so friendly and welcoming. We had a number of fantastic sightings including bitterns, otters, marsh harriers, whooper swans, Dartford warblers, red deer, a spoonbill and so much more! 
We also went to Southwold and stocked up on Adnams Ketchup - yum!!   

Bracken by the Minsmere sign

One of 3 otters we watched for about 20 minutes

By Southwold pier

Southwold beach huts

Amazing starling murmuration

Red deer


Spoonbill looking gorgeous amongst the glinting water

The best views of a bittern! 

Magically lit reedbeds

'our' resident barn owl


In addition to the bits of paid work I was doing, I also volunteered to carry out some breeding wader surveys for the RSPB. More early mornings! Highlights included hares, cuckoos, a water vole, a whinchat, nightingales and many other lovely birds. All the while avoiding roaming ponies and herds of cattle. 




At KWT we also took on another project carrying out a National Vegetation Classification (NVC) survey at a privately owned meadow near Walmer in Kent. This was in June/July and the weather was absolutely gorgeous! This was one of my favourite projects because there was such a wealth of plants and insects and the couple who owned the meadow were the best hosts, bringing us cups of tea and scones and so much enthusiasm and friendliness! It was absolutely idyllic and we had such a lovely time. We have become good friends and I took my moth trap along a few weeks later and we caught lots of different species! 


Ele hawk


Our local pub re-opened under new management so I managed to get myself a job there behind the bar. It is a special pub because it is also a cycling cafe and bike workshop. It was great to be part of its re-opening and now it is just going from strength to strength (possibly due to having prosecco on tap!). There are so many different things that go on, including Friday film nights, bridge afternoon, bike maintenance classes, yoga classes and many bike themed events. I also run guided nature walks and bike rides from the pub and also moth mornings. I even have my own blackboard section for writing the walk/bike rides sightings! 

The Miller

Big headed poplar!



In August I bought a macro lens for my camera so I could take better photos of moths and other stuff too. It set me back a few hundred squid but it was so worth it! 



Iron prominent

Red admiral

Willow beauty 

The lovely female oak eggar moth in the photo below, laid her eggs in the trap. 20 of them! They were like little tiny birds eggs - 1mm in diameter with a hard shell! I did some research and it appeared they would take about 20 days to hatch, so I kept them in a yoghurt pot until they hatched 20 days after they were laid! I bought a 'bugdorm' and collected some bramble which is one of their preferred food plants. I have kept feeding them and they have grown from approximately 5mm to about 4cm in length! They should have overwintered as a 3rd instar caterpillar but it has been so warm that they haven't and I've been able to find plenty of bramble to keep feeding them.



Teeny tiny!



Having a good old munch!

Eating and eating and getting bigger and bigger!!


Later on in August we took the moth trap on holiday to France where we stayed with my Auntie in the Dordogne. We got some excellent moths and not quite so excellent hornets. We also went canoeing down the Dordogne river where we saw lots of kingfishers, which had been taking lessons from kestrels... They had learnt to hover before diving instead of sitting on a sticky outy branch! 

Lobster moth face

Lobster moth

Leopard moth

Gypsy moth / long eared bat

Oak hook-tip on the perspex laid over the image in the book! 

Canoeing along the Dordogne

Passenger on my canoe - banded demoiselle 


Mum and I got very brief views of the black-winged kite which had taken up residence nearby. They are typically a bird of Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia but has more recently established populations in Spain, Portugal and even more recently Southern France!! 

In September I started a new job as a Secondary School Science Teacher! A completely new venture and one which I have survived so far! I was really hoping that I was going to be able to keep up conservation work too, but clearly I was disillusioned about how much work teachers had to do! 

Subliming iodine


I did still find the time in September to go back to the meadows at Walmer to help with a bit of practical habitat management. From the NVC data and just from looking at the habitat it was clear it needed some management, so following the management plan we had written, we took some of KWT's meadow management machinery to the meadows at Walmer. It was a great weekend of cutting hay and raking it up. We also sowed a section of bare ground with wildflower seeds which will hopefully help to increase the diversity of flowers there. We were once again treated to more scones and tea and delicious lunch and of course lovely company.    

Wasp spider 


Sowing the wildflower seed

October, November and the first 2 weeks of December were consumed by teaching then at Christmas, we took Bracken, lots of food and all the Christmas presents back to the cottage in Suffolk! The cottage is joined to another which is owned by the same lady. We also rented the other cottage for my Auntie, cousins and my cousin's fiancĂ©e. We had a lovely time and sat outside at the Eel's foot Inn on Boxing Day after our walk, it was like the middle of Spring!!  

Cosy by the fire at Christmas

I hope this hasn't been so long that you've given up half way! I really miss writing blogs and reading other people's too! Maybe life will become less hectic and I'll have more time for things like this! 

Thanks for reading :) 

Monday, 19 January 2015

A Reflection on the 'Basics' of Climate Change

Hello all, regular readers and new readers...

Last week I started an online Future Learn course which anyone can take part in. For those who haven't heard of this, people who sign up to the course are advised to spend a certain amount of time each week studying the chosen subject and the learners are provided with different kinds of learning materials e.g. a video lecture of about 4 minutes or an article to read. Discussions on each sub-topic are encouraged and at the end of each week a small test is taken and then all members of the course are invited to reflect upon what has been learnt and also other things such as themes of the week, difficult aspects of the topic, interesting information any further research.

For those not taking the course and who haven't heard of this type of online learning, the following link will give you a taster of the kinds of courses you can embark upon.. https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/categories

Climate Change: Challenges and Solutions - Week 1

1. Key Scientific Principles that explain Climate Change                                                            

  • An example: the greenhouse effect - greenhouse gases such as water vapour, carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide act like a 'blanket' around the Earth and prevent heat from escaping from the atmosphere into space. 
  • An interesting fact: Without the 'greenhouse effect' the planet would be about 30 degrees Celsius colder and would make the Earth uninhabitable to most lifeforms. 
  • The human effect: human activities such as burning fossil fuels is changing the concentrations of the greenhouse gases and this along with many other human led processes will have consequences.... Earth will become warmer, weather conditions will change dramatically, sea ice will melt indefinitely, sea levels will rise and crop growing will shift to accommodate for changes in atmospheric gases. 
  • A great diagram explaining the simpler aspect of the greenhouse effect:

A layer of greenhouse gases – primarily water vapor, and including much smaller amounts
of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide – act as a thermal blanket for the Earth, absorbing heat and warming the surface to a life-supporting average of 59 degrees Fahrenheit (15 degrees Celsius).
climate.nasa.gov/causes/ [accessed 19/01/2015]


2. Climate System Feedback Mechanisms

  • Water Vapour - this feedback loop operates within the climate system and forms part of the water cycle. The water cycle brings together all the key components of our climate system. The flow diagram below is my understanding of the water vapour positive feedback loop depicted in the simplest way possible. 
























  • Ice albedo - albedo was a new term for me entering into this course. 

Ice and snow have a high albedo and therefore reflect heat radiation back towards space. The ocean has a low albedo and absorbs heat radiation.

http://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/climate-solutions/global-warming-feedback-loops


  • Radiation  - I couldn't find a really simple flow diagram of this NEGATIVE feedback loop so I hope this explains it correctly....
 

The three illustrated feedback loops act within a system, alongside many others, to regulate the climate to a particular state.


Other things to contemplate....

Important themes - the difference between climate and weather "The difference between weather and climate is a measure of time. Weather is what conditions of the atmosphere are over a short period of time, and climate is how the atmosphere "behaves" over relatively long periods of time."  -  (http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/noaa-n/climate/climate_weather.html#.VLz4oCusX0c

Difficult aspects - in the video explaining feedback loops, the radiation feedback mentioned the Stefan-Boltzmann effect and this law is quite confusing and difficult to understand for my non-physics minded brain!! I think this website http://www.global-climate-change.org.uk/1-2-3.php is probably quite good at explaining it but it is over my head completely!

Most interesting aspect of week 1? - This is my first Future Learn course. The first week was very interesting as a whole - otherwise I wouldn't have been motivated to continue learning or to write this blog post!

Further research - The term albedo prompted me to read outside the course material as did Stefan-Boltzmann. In the last article the term 'troposphere' was mentioned and this led me to research all the different layers of the Earth's atmosphere.


I hope my regular readers haven't minded this 'unusual' post (you may have a few more to put up with!) but I do hope to finish off my post on my visit to Southern Spain which will include a few more photographs :)

I also hope that anyone who may read this from the Future Learn course has enjoyed the post and will feel welcome to comment below :) 

Friday, 14 November 2014

Part 1 of my Come Back to Blogland!

5 months! I can't believe it has been that long since I last posted and even that post was about my trip to Cornwall which was in March! I do have a partially finished post with more photos from Cornwall but I have decided to do a couple of posts with a few photos from each month since April. Perhaps I will actually post this one... If you are reading this then obviously I have!

April

Naughty stoat at Elmley Marshes - most likely looking for a little water vole critter - Just pop my head in..

...maybe look a bit further....

Woooops fell in!

It's okay everyone... I'm okay!

Cute wood mouse in Perry Woods 

Spring colours 

May

Beautiful colours in National Trust owned Emmett Gardens

Speckled yellow moth at Emmett Gardens

House martins building a new nest on our house... they went on to have 2 successful broods!

Green hairstreak butterfly!!!! At KWT reserve park gate down

Male banded demoiselle at Stodmarsh NNR

Side view of this spectacular male banded demoiselle

This one is for you Ragged Robin :) 

Stay tuned, you never know, I may even post again during next week. To anyone who reads my blog thanks for not giving up on me and welcome to any new readers! I miss having the time to read all your wonderful blogs!

Hopefully I will share some photos from my little backpacking trip around Southern Spain next time!