Saturday 27 June 2020

Regeneration

June 2020


As the National Trust continues with its phased reopening, we made a second visit. Although work for we volunteers still isn’t an option, we nevertheless went on a Wednesday. Terry and Mary from our Wednesday team had gone for the same reason. After fourteen years, it’s habitual. It had been a long time, so there was some catching up and general nattering to be done as we processed down Ice House Dene, along the riverside and to the head of Snipes Dene. Opportunities to reminisce about jobs done and exclaim about what had changed were many. We’d been absent for little more than three months.


Apples in the Walled Garden
Poppies

Poppy seed head
Path along riverside
Terry & Mary in "civvies"

Thigh deep, a solitary fly fisherman stood in the river. We’ve rarely seen any sizable fish in the Derwent, but the resident otters must be eating something, so maybe he was in with a chance we thought. Indeed, two hundred metres downstream fish were jumping. That suggested a coffee stop and a snack. We occasionally acknowledged the splash with a glance and a lifting of the head. Maybe we should have taken a greater interest, but fish – we have to admit - are something else we know little about. Anyway, we had talking to do – catching up talking, not fish catching talking. The giant leaves of butterbur got a mention in passing. It’s good to see it there in its place by the river.

Butterbur leaves
Fisherman 

For some reason butterbur is one of those things that always brings pleasure – like the sighting of roe deer or red kite or moschatel. And it’s not even good looking. A new growth of Himalayan balsam got a passing curse. Attractive as it is, it’s a pest and one we ordinarily devote a great deal of time trying to eliminate. Not this year though: it looks set to have a successful season.

Himalayan balsam - not yet in flower
Ferns

Horsetails

Lunch was scheduled for the bench at the top of Snipes Dene. Clearly the socially distanced five of us weren’t going to fit on it, but it acted as a waymark – always useful when walking up hill. We used to find red bartsia here, but not today. Maybe it was a bit too early; maybe it had finally succumbed to the mowing of the track edge. The National Trust favours neatness even in the wild.

Snipes Dene today is densely wooded. A few years back – 2011 to 2013 our survey records show - we made regular visits to monitor regeneration following removal of the Forestry Commission’s commercial timber crop. In the first season we recorded only thirty-one species, and few of those were present in any number – with the exception of seedlings and saplings of the felled western hemlock which was doing its best to recolonise. Over those years, and a few that followed, it was defeated by lines of rangers and volunteers moving across the hillsides like forensic search teams pulling the interloper out.

With a little extra tree planting to help speed diversity, Snipes Dene has returned to native woodland, and now looks more like its designated status of a Site of Special Scientific Interest.

Snipes Dene, now a dense woodland
Hedge woundwort

Hedge woundwort

Common spotted orchid

Germander speedwell

Back in 2011, foxgloves were a significant and pleasing feature of early Snipes Dene regeneration, and there they are again in great number over in that part of West Wood laid waste by more recent felling. So that’s promising.

Bugles

Foxglove

Foxgloves in West Woods
Helleborines
We can't get back to work yet!


Steve Wootten & Phil Coyne

No comments:

Post a Comment