Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Mitcham Common. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Mitcham Common. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2019

Acid Grassland Restoration at Mitcham Common

A busy few days at work and getting ready for Extinction Rebellion week which is starting this weekend. We spent Thursday on Mitcham Common looking at the next stage of the acid grassland restoration project. It was good to inspect the areas we worked on in early 2017 and to see how the restoration has been successful. In the future when Beddington Farmlands restoration is complete and the area is open to the public, a 'Wandle Valley Metropolitan Park' will be created, a 1000 acre contiguous green space between Mitcham Common and Beddington Park with the Farmlands at the centre. In turn the 'Metropolitan Park' will form the coreland of the Wandle Valley Regional Park which is 15 miles long. At the moment our local bird and wildlife group neglect Mitcham Common but as the group grows in the future as the whole area opens up it will be great to start collecting more data on the whole area. 

 Acid Grassland Restoration in late 2016/2017 More HERE
 The same area as above, today  
 After we cleared the area, the Common Green Team scraped the top and mounded the top soil up (right of pic) to create/expose a sandy substrate for the acid grassland to establish itself 
Wandle Valley Vista Point looking over Seven Islands on Mitcham Common 
Another thing that caught my eye at work this week was this wall in someone's garden- my favourite kind of living wall, natural, incidental with a diverse selection of lichens and ferns etc.

OTHER POSTS ON MITCHAM COMMON (Including the Ring-necked Parakeet Roost, Rare Fungi and local specialist plants and White-letter Hairstreaks ) 

Saturday, 28 May 2016

The week that was- a few highlights

Beddington Farmlands 

 Male Gadwall, there's about 6 or 7 Gadwalls hanging around the farmlands and also saw a female flying round at height being chased by males who were snapping at each other in the air  (a bit like Mallards were doing earlier on in the season). Hopefully they'll breed. There was a Wood Sandpiper in the week and a couple of Black Terns last weekend. 
 The evenings have been cool and my moth traps have been playing up too so its been pretty dire on the moth front. Had a few the other night and a few bits and bobs including Treble Lines (above), Pale Mottled Willows, Shuttle-shaped Darts, Common Wave, Eudonia angustea, Flame Shoulder, the first Vine's Rustics for the year, the first Square-spot Rustic yesterday, Lime-speck Pug, Heart and Dart, Light Emerald, Tachystola acrowantha and Cydia unicetana in the grass around the hide (I think)
 Female Eristalis inticaria- a sexually dimorphic bumblebee minic with a yellow scutellum. Unlike other bumblebee mimics the hind leg is half black and half yellow. In the wildflower meadow that we planted. A few other hoverflies around. Had Large White, Peacock, Small Tortoiseshell and Orange Tip this morning. 
 The bird group wildflower meadow - dominated now by Oxeye Daisy (where did the Yellow Rattle go??) 

Mitcham Common
 Been doing quite a bit of work on Mitcham Common recently, mainly tree maintenance but hoping to get some scrub clearance and habitat management work- removing Buckthorn and scrub and re-creating acid grassland. Hoping to spend some more time on Mitcham Common over the high summer to check out what about and different to the farmlands- its all part of the same contiguous space (now being called The Wandle Valley Metropolitan Park). Here's a link to Mitcham Common natural history info: MITCHAM COMMON
 Adder's-tongue Fern - a local speciality 

Local wildlife gardening (holding back the plague) 
 We re-planted the entrance to the farmlands with the species that survived the onslaught last time we planted it up. This time Acanthus spinosa and Euphorbia sps- they were the ones that survived the dogs and droughts and vandals and lack of the council coming to water them etc. Those bastard council people were supposed to be sending Youth offenders to keep the bridge painted and clear the rubbish from the footpath. As usual with all community biodiversity projects it is the council that drop the ball- too busy milking their alliances with big business round here. God knows what its going to be like when all the green spaces go over to a private company next year- all depends whether that company is run by compete capitalist arseholes (probably will be if they won the carve up race to get the contract) or by a benevolent green space management company (who wouldn't be anywhere near the privatisation war).  
 Been trying this out- leaving areas of long grass in the mowed lawns on the drip lines of trees - so they are naturally kept more watered 
 A good little habitat for inverts- looks okay I reckon too. Just left the areas were the daffs and other bulbs were earlier in the year. 
 One of the Aliums in the obs wildlife garden- what's going on with that second head?
The old Californian Poppies - keep coming up and flower for a long time- these are such an easy win for a bit of colour in hostile urban environments. Not sure what that other stuff coming up is- something we planted- will find out when it flowers. 

Escape Plans
 As I'm going a bit mental having to deal with the ravages of this Tory hell and the unstoppable force of Capitalism carving up all the green spaces and a hopeless situation at the farmlands for the foreseeable future I thought its time to become an ecological refugee and split my time between doing whatevers possible round here and disappearing for lengthy periods to Eastern Europe and beyond (the other side of the Capitalists plague).  I'm pretty sure within a decade or a generation they will have been overthrown and would have had a system overhaul with people and nature taking a higher priority- it really is heading to the pits of hell in the UK with the right and left polarising and Im pretty sure that is going to translate into less safety on the streets, worsening state for biodiversity and for opportunities for naturalists/ecologists, socialists and financial and personal misery for more and more people. Nobody will fucking listen though and join forces to do something about this- my whole experience at Beddington has shown there's just a load of small community groups fighting each other, the council (the monkey rather than the organ grinder) rather than focusing on causing tangible inconvenience to corporations, the directors and their developments. There's very little community within the naturalist community either (most of them are insular minded and working alone competing and sneering at others, engaged in nothing but using nature for hedonism and nihilism or funding a diluted version of the capitalist value system - I've given up contacting other groups to join forces). Anyway fuck the lot of them, I've made my million, paid off my mortgages and got ongoing sustainable projects ticking over from working in natural history in a sustainable way (it really is easy to build nature and people minded businesses/ communities, that provide good incomes and good meaningful work and good conditions,  all it requires is a good group of focused and committed comrades- the catch is there aint many of them). Chaos and hardship will bring the necessary change for everyone else- fuck them all (nature is incredibly resilient with the potential to bounce back within the blink of an eye of whatever humans can throw at it- once the tipping point  has passed, it will fall off the edge for unsustainable communities very quickly). Heading out with Holly (below) in the summer- sometimes one person is all the community you fucking need! :-) 

Wednesday, 30 July 2014

Hayday- Mitcham Common

 Hay cut. Meadows are being managed to increase biodiversity.
 Juvenile Green Woodpecker
 Sparrowhawk
 Rosebay Willowherb
London Hay

Had to look at some tree work in Mitcham Common today and took the camera along. Interesting management of Mill Green meadows- hopefully we can get the same kind of management at the farmlands meadows. Mitcham Common is basically the north part of the Regional Park in this area- its an extension of the farmlands- quite different habitats and interesting wildlife. 

Saturday, 10 November 2018

Fungus Foray with Fabrice on Mitcham Common

Attended a fungus foray this morning. Here's a few pics with some common name ids (over simplified) 
 Local fungus guru- Fabrice talking about a Common Puffball 
 Searching the Heather on Mitcham Common for local rarities 
 Waxcap sp
 Waxcap sp 
 Field Blewit 
 Horse Mushroom 
 Clouded Funnel
 Club Fungus 
 Poplar Fieldcap
 Knight sp 
 Oysterlings 
 Fiery Milkcap 
 Trooping Funnel 
Lethal Dapperling - this one is poisonous 

Tuesday, 6 December 2016

Acid Grassland Restoration at Mitcham Common

Currently working on an acid grassland restoration project on Mitcham Common. In contrast to the works that are going on in Beddington Park we are sensitively selectively felling areas of dense scrub to allow natural regeneration of the acid grassland which has declined due to scrub encroachment. Due to access and storage restrictions excess brush is being incinerated and all cord wood being processed.









Monday, 8 December 2014

Mitcham Common Parakeets




Did a rough count of the parakeets on Mitcham Common yesterday. About 3000 or so. Not as easy to count them this year as the roost appears to be spread out over a wide area. The largest numbers have moved to near the petrol station.
One of the flight lines takes them over the farmlands- been over 2000 on some of the counts recently.
There's certainly a lot of them.

Saturday, 2 July 2016

Butterflies etc

Spent this morning in bikers and horse field and a once round 100 acre. Despite the breeze there was still a lot of butterflies and insects around. 1 Small Copper, 6 Ringlet, 10 Meadow Brown, 30+ Essex and Small Skippers, Red Admiral, 2-3 Comma (been rare this year), 10+ Small Tortoiseshell, 4-5 Large White, 5+ Small White and good numbers of Marbled White (40+) . 

Lots of juvenile birds around.

In the afternoon, met up with Omar, a University of Plymouth, Environmental Science student (my old course, graduated in 1997) to have a look at invasive species on site. Had a look at the Himalayan Balsam and Goat's Rue. Saw Hobby and Cuckoo along the parkside and a load more butterflies. 

 Marbled White- about 40+ of these (an increasing local population) 
 Ringlet from above 
 Ringlet from below
 A rather sudden emergence of Essex and Small Skippers- not always easy to tell apart. The black tip to the underside of the antennae is the best feature but often I think I can see a faint black tip on some so not sure what that means? 
In addition to the physical differences Small Skippers lay their eggs within Yorkshire Fog grass and Essex Skipper avoid Yorkshire Fog and usually select either Cock-s-foot or Creeping Soft-grass. Small Skippers spend up to eight months as a caterpillar but Essex Skippers remain within the egg and only spend three months or so as a caterpillar. Both emerge as butterflies in June and July (only one flight season) in grasslands. 
 Great Pied Hoverfly Volucella pellucens  A few of these today
 Evening Primrose- quite a clump of this on bikers 
Common Grape Vine- a clump growing near Mitcham Common foot bridge- as far as I know this is the first time recorded on the site?