Keeping in Touch
The WILDthings Partnership works with many other organisations to improve biodiversity in the Bath & North East Somerset area. The most recent newsletter, and a summary document featuring the work that is being carried out can be downloaded from below.
The
Avon Valley Partnership has recently become the
Avon Frome Partnership to reflect the wider subject area that now includes the
River Frome as well as the
River Avon and the
Bristol & Bath Railway Path. The Partnership aims to develop and deliver a programme of projects and activities to conserve such rich biodiversity and heritage and improve Access for All.
A Development Officer is based at Bristol City Council. For more details contact
Paula Spiers: (0117) 922 4325. The Partnership's new newsletter is currently in production, but you can download the last issue of Avon Valley News (spring 2007).
Avon Valley News 20 (3MB)
Summary Leaflet (793KB)
WILDthings Newsletter 2006 (6MB)
Focus on ...
Gardens
Is your garden good for amphibians, snakes, and lizards.?
These groups of animals need all the friends that they can get if they are to survive the perils and challenges of modern life. Gardens can be safe refuges for these animals and can be made even better with a little fine tuning of your gardening practice.
Make room for a compost heap. This will allow you to turn garden waste into rich compost as well as providing warm breeding grounds for slow worms and grass snakes. These animals will help you control slugs and snails organically.
Piles of woody waste from shrub pruning in a quiet corner are excellent cover for newts, toads and lizards in the summer and will eventually rot down into manageable compost, which can be used for your roses.
Piles of stones and rocks and dry stone walls will encourage amphibians and reptiles such as toads, newts, slow worms and frogs to over winter and in the summer linger to eat garden pests which could attack seedlings and vegetables.
If you are lucky your pond could be visited by grass snakes, attractive brown snakes with a yellow collar. Grass snakes are harmless to pets and people but will hunt garden pests and small pond creatures. Toads, frogs and newts may well breed in a garden ponds provided they do not contain goldfish which will predate them.