August on Hothfield Heathlands: Barn owls & volunteers

By August, floral glory has passed from the orchids (heath spotted, southern marsh and a few large hybrids) to the heather or ling. As ever, we hope for a protracted display of purple in the heathy areas, which is likely if the cool nights persist. Orchid seed is now ripening. Dust-like, dispersed on the wind, the seed contains no nutrients to support germination so needs a mycorrhizal fungus to supply nutrients from the soil to its roots. From seed to flowering takes three years or more.

 

 

Kent Wildlife Trust celebrated National Volunteer Week in early June, saying: “Our volunteers are at the heart of Kent Wildlife Trust’s work. With their time, skills, passion, and energy we reach more people and work at greater scale and pace. Their contributions help ensure that Kent’s natural spaces are preserved for future generations.” The words became deeds in early July when Abbie and Becky from HR and Volunteer Management at HQ brought cake, badges and certificates to the Hothfield team and celebrated 151 years of volunteering between fourteen long-standing volunteers - sitting in my case, I’ve now been enjoying researching and writing these articles for eight years. Recent recruits also received welcome packs. A great new initiative.

In mid-July we enjoyed the hospitality of Reserve neighbours Kim and Peter for their delicious annual barbecue, gazing across two fields and a tennis court they have re-wilded on the Reserve boundary. Always botanising, Rob Insall and I found an airy annual in the pea family, smooth tare, Vicia tetrasperma, with tiny mauve flowers in ones or pairs, lightly tangled and scrambling with stitchwort among sturdier prairie perennials.

Barn owl boxes have been in place for many years, replacing or supplementing natural hollow trees or roosts in buildings. Owls often use two boxes, one for roosting and one for the brood. Observers are now waiting for owlets to appear, anxious about cold wet weather and predators. As owl nests are always deep, chicks must climb up inside to the exit hole, which means they are already strong enough to climb onto a branch. We hope.

© Richard Burkmarr

Recent sightings on the reserve include the ever-present raptors, buzzard and kestrel, and fledgling birds in deep cover hiding from the above. Also gatekeeper, meadow brown, small copper, skipper, comma, marbled white butterflies, cinnabar moth caterpillars on ragwort, a four banded longhorn beetle and various demoiselles and dragonflies. But as volunteer David Rayner said, ‘The ragwort should have loads of small solitary bees, hoverflies and beetles but the flowers are bare. The lack of insects this year is astonishing.’  We all grimly agreed from our own experience. I hope that the grass I have left to grow long and seed in my garden is sheltering many insect and moth eggs to produce a new generation. A very pregnant lizard was seen basking on a causeway, and will by now have produced up to eleven live young, having incubated the eggs in her body. It seems that the Hothfield lizards are as happy basking on the new wooden causeways as on the old composite ones.

The highland cattle are back after a break browsing sweeter pickings than here, where the grazing is rough and tough, moor grass, sedges, a bit of heather, a bit of gorse. But never bracken. One of the reasons we need volunteers and their scythes!

See volunteering opportunities

Learn more about Hothfield Heathlands

September on Hothfield Heathlands

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Margery Thomas, Hothfield Volunteer and regular columnist looks at the lack of butterfly sightings in recent months, the work volunteers are doing to remove bracken and how this all impact the wider management of the last remaining fragments of heathland…

Nightingales at Hothfield Heathlands in June

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On 19th May one hundred years ago, the first outdoors broadcast by the BBC was of professional cellist Beatrice Harrison playing to and with nightingales in the garden of her Surrey home. Around a million listeners tuned in to the midnight broadcast, and…