An Addition to Warren Glen

There being no work today I took the opportunity to go into Warren Glen to carry on with some of my historical research which at the moment involves checking on the ground for signs of features that are shown on old maps. I have recently started to use GIS software to overlay these maps on current satellite imaging which enables me to obtain lattitude and longitude from maps that are not marked and transfer this to GPS for use in the field.

Today my quest was rewarded by finding a feature that I feared had disappeared in a landslip and also to see my first reptile of the year.

adder_25_02_16A male adder freshly out of hibernation and yet to slough (shed its skin) for the first time this year. Although adders are said to emerge in March it is not unusual to see them in February, particularly males which tend to emerge a few weeks earlier than the females typically when the daytime temperatures rise above 8 degrees C.

How many legs?

Recent clearance work in the quarry has enabled easier study of the flora and fauna in this singular habitat. A sighting was made at the foot of the birch tree that stands alone in the quarry (now that it has been freed from gorse and bramble), and the sighting was another notable first for the Country Park. A brightly coloured Banded Centipede with distinctively striped legs was searching through the friable earth between the birch roots. It didn’t run away at speed when spotted, and this gave another clue to its identity. It was Lithobius variegatus, a species that is common in the western part of the country but seems to be absent from most of the eastern half, hence a record from the Country Park is worth having.

Lithobius variegatus

Sighting of a Stork at Hastings Country Park?

Did anyone see the Stork that has visited Hastings Country Park Nature Reserve? It has brought us a White Park calf and we are sure it must have been a Stork as there are no gooseberry bushes in the Country Park.

WP_calf_24-1-16Mother and calf are both fine and were moved this morning to Brakey Bank field where they can be monitored more easily.

WP&calf_24-1-16

Week 2 on the Firehills

How’s that for consistency!! We have pretty much cut the same amount again this week. This just leaves the green shaded area on the map to do which coincidentally is again about the same size.

Despite being a little colder the weather was good both days and drier under foot than last week. More of the same next week, please, and none of that white stuff!!

 

Is it a bird, is it a plane…

In such a quiet location as the Country Park extraneous noise creates a heavy imposition. The sound of airliners flying overhead seems much closer than their tens of thousands of feet in height. In recent weeks and months there has been a noticeable increase in the number of helicopters flying along the coast past the Country Park. Some of these flights are the Coastguard helicopter that is now based at Lydd, and their helicopter is immediately recognisable in its red and white livery when well lit, but if the sun is behind it and the colours are less visible then it can be more of a challenge to identify.xcw2ns

The best Volunteers in the World?

Sunday 3rd being a tad wet we settled for having a meeting to discuss our work programme for the coming year so this week was really the beginning of our New Year.
Starting as we mean to carry on we are tackling the last gorse block on the Firehills to be removed in the current scrub reduction. This was to have been the subject of a controlled burn as a joint training exercise involving East Sussex Fire and Rescue, the Ranger team and us volunteers in November but had to be cancelled at the last minute.
This is possibly the single biggest area of gorse that we have cut down in one go measuring 0.6 acre according to my GPS and working Thursday and Friday this week we have already reduced it by a third. See map below, the area inside the blue line shows how much we have cut. This was mapped on the ground with GPS.

It is amazing to see how far in to scrub that we find tennis balls, we should have kept a count over the years but it is also surprising how little litter we have found here particularly in comparison to when we were in the Quarry last year. The notable exception was the can in this photo.
Carlsberg_can
This prompted the obvious question. The best Volunteers in the world? Probably!

St. Stephen’s Day

A sunny Boxing Day stroll through the old quarry and along the top of Warren Glen was enriched by the sight of a kestrel hovering overhead, and a couple of Gorse Shieldbugs lurking in the undergrowth. It was good to see a lot of people enjoying the Country Park on a beautiful winter’s day, the car park hasn’t seen that number of cars for a very long time.

 

It’s Chriiiistmaaaas !

Happy Christmas and New Year to all Hastings Country Park volunteers and followers.
Our next scheduled day is 3rd January 2016, that’s 2 whole days to recover from New Year excesses!! It will be back to the Quarry to carry on clearing bramble regrowth to ensure that last year’s clearance work has the desired effect.

Spotted in the Quarry.

A foray into the old sand quarry during today’s very welcome sunshine found a couple of 7-spot ladybirds warming themselves, one on a leaf of wood sage and the other in gorse. As yesterday was the shortest day the sun is at its lowest point in the sky and the contrast of bright red elytra against green foliage shone out beautifully.

7-spot

Deck the Halls!

2:00 pm on Sunday 20th brought again Alex’s ever popular Christmas decoration event and was well attended again this year. The participants had the opportunity to make a wooden reindeer, large decorated fir cone, a decoration for their front door and a candle lit table decoration. Nearly all of the materials were either recycled or renewable.Decorations_2015_1

Everyone got stuck in, not literally, but there was plenty of glue involved! At three o’clock it was time to make the hot chocolate drinks and the event finished on time at 3:30. This just left us to clear away the tools and leftovers.

Big_reindeer