Using Starlink to track bison
Another very important use of Starlink at Heather Corrie Ranger station has been tracking our bison. Our bison rangers need to track bison to keep an eye on their welfare and their tracking collars report back to a base station which need an internet connection. In searching for a solution, we found that trees are a blocker to 4G mobile data and the best way to keep an eye on their whereabouts was to use a Low Powered High Gain Network (LoRaWAN) network which connects their collars to the tracking solution online. We have 3 transmitters on this network and these are used in conjunction with Starlink to report on the location of the animals.
What's next for Starlink?
Our success at the Blean had us asking where else Starlink could help? One of those discoveries was at Sevenoaks Nature Reserve and Visitor Centre where we’ve recently rolled out Starlink to replace the aging copper cables going into the reserve. Openreach quoted us over 35k to upgrade the area and put in fibre optic but with Starlink we paid little to nothing in comparison and now all visitors to Sevenoaks are getting fast internet speeds from our Starlink service.
In the future, we’re considering putting in a Starlink connection at Oare Marshes as we plan services at the Watchtower, and we also have a roaming Starlink satellite to help our teams get internet connection wherever they go. They can take it to events, presentations and webinars and take payments in the middle of nowhere. You don’t even need a plug because it can be run off a solar battery. And before you ask – yes this works in winter and in up to 40cm thick snow too.
How does the technology work?
Rather than run the satellite connection ourselves, we work through a managed provider known as Orbital. They manage the equipment, can fix it when it goes wrong and manage it day-to-day so we don’t have to. Orbital provide us with the Satellite unit, connected to a special broadband router which manages the connection. Our Network Security Partners then add a firewall to this, and then connect our Meraki Wifi.
We are proud to be pushing the boundaries of technology within our reserves, with more to come soon!
We’re safe in the knowledge that Starlink have 5,500 satellites orbiting the earth at any moment. Which means that if one goes down, we have access to another. We don’t have to worry about low latency or being disconnected – it just always works!
If you’d like to ask any questions on how we use Starlink at our reserves. Please contact James Millsom-Mills at james.millsom-mills@kentwildlife.org.uk