By C:
Whether in honour of the summer solstice, or
because new site-warden had been advised that our traditional midsummer task at this location does
not appeal to some of our volunteers, today we were initially awarded two tasks
at Mowbray Fields:
- The annual orchid count
- Repair work to the boardwalk
The second task, we were told, involved “taking
away the chicken wire and replacing with fencing staples”. So a wire-cutter and hammer job: much more appealing
to a certain mind-set!
Snipping wire before levering it off with the hammer |
Knocking in staples - note the alternative use of coffee mug to hold supplies |
Either way, today’s menu made for a change
from hedge-care and fence-care. Both of
those boil down to ‘vegetation clearance’, ie weeding, but on a larger scale
than in a garden. Today’s tasks were
more to do with the ‘nuts & bolts’ of site management. In the case of boardwalk maintenance:
literally attending to the site hardware.
In the case of identifying and plotting flower-species on a map:
generating some of the data which makes for an evidence-based site-management
plan – or at least evidence-informed
eco-management.
“It’s quite wet/boggy in places so wellies
are a must I think!” the site warden had warned in advance. It would also have helped this particular
volunteer if she had remembered in time that one of her wellies had sprung a
leak, therefore a new pair required. (Why does one always have to buy two boots,
if it is only one new boot which is needed?)
More to the point, for those volunteers who
were up for orchid-counting (and had remembered their wellies), was the
difficulty of seeing the flowers above the level of the water in places. South Oxfordshire has been a little soggy of
late – with some quite spectacular thunderstorms, including one big hit: on a biogas plant.
The Mowbray-Fields fill-pond was therefore once
again doing its primary job of preventing local flooding. This, for example, would have to be logged as
‘No orchids observed in this sector’:
The flowers might have been there, holding
their breath; but we couldn’t see them, so the score would remain a big round
zero – like when the England football team are playing. Are Green-Gymmers tempted to pretend in
such circumstances? Yes, especially when
there is rivalry between teams of orchid-counters. Thus far, scientific integrity has
always prevailed.
This year, however, no such scenario could
have arisen. Volunteers began, as usual,
with a tutorial in orchid identification:
Then they disappeared from view of the rest
of the team, as they looked for the best point from which to begin their
survey.
Meanwhile, the boardwalk-repairers were
beginning to think, “We need to get silent
hammers!” as well as engaging in some competitive hammering (counting the number of blows it took to sink a staple). As the morning wore on, and
more hands were engaged on hammering, it was visually not the most interesting event to record, but it did sound “like a drumming workshop – for beginners”:
Accessing the fill-pond area of the site, for the orchid count, was
always going to be difficult, with the luxuriant growth there has been this
year:
Sadly, the explorers had eventually to
conclude that it was simply too wet underfoot for the surveyors to get safely
on to site. Very frustrating, because
from the path, one could see that the orchids were there ...
there was just no way to get closer to search
for those specimens which were not growing quite so tall.
Instead, a third task was hastily arranged. Guess what?
Vegetation clearance!
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