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Eynsham's Nature Recovery Network! News

Massive support for restoring nature 26 Jan 2020 Hundreds of people came together in Eynsham Village Hall to find ways of protecting and restoring our local environment

Village Hall packed out

Over two hundred and fifty people came together in the Village Hall last week to share ideas about how we can value and enhance our wildlife and rescue the diversity that has been inexorably vanishing from our villages and countryside. Many more people have said they would have been there if they could. To receive more information and join our project, please sign up here.

Brimming with ideas and proposals

The ideas and suggestions were many and varied. They included planting a nut grove in the village, finding Eynsham’s 12 ancient mulberry trees and surveying for bats and invertebrates. Already six acres have been offered in Cassington for wildflower restoration and more in South Leigh. Both villages are following Eynsham’s lead to replicate the project there. Not only that, the scouts and the guides are taking up the project, and Bartholomew School is adopting it in answer to the students’ climate change concerns. Even the primary schools in the locality are getting involved. It’s a spectacular joining of forces all round!

Scruffy is good

For many people, the starting point is their own back garden – leaving ‘scruffy’ spaces for insects and animals, planting native trees and fruit trees to support insets and birds, wildflower patches to encourage pollinating insects and butterflies, and small ponds which provide habitats for many species. And of course, taking good care to let our ivy flourish!

What the meeting also revealed is that we have a wealth of knowledge in Eynsham – over 30 people with significant experience who are prepared to offer support to those of us who need a helping hand.

It is a wonderful illustration of the fact that, collectively, we can expand what each is doing to make the natural whole of Eynsham greater than our individual parts. The Parish Council and St Leonard’s Church are interested in mowing less and creating some wilder spaces. There is talk of introducing wildflowers into the churchyard and surveying the verges to understand whether wildflowers might have survived there.

Know our nature to protect it

The fact that over 70 people signed up to do surveys - wildflowers, bird, butterflies, bats, fungi, streams, ponds, hedges and trees - illustrates the understanding that we need to know what we’ve got in order to protect it. It is also a recognition of the fact that baseline surveys are important for monitoring the return of our wildlife and for providing evidence, should it be required, to protect our village in the future. Equally important, is the understanding that surveys are vital to preparing for success, particularly in planting wildflower areas.

Preserving our natural history

Sue Chapman brought to the launch pictures of amazing wildflowers along Chilbridge. The Lokens talked of the trees they'd planted along Oxford Road in the 1960s. Rupert Boulting is looking for the 12 ancient mulberries that are known to exist in Eynsham. Collecting all this historical knowledge is key to the project. Please share anything you might know on our nature map of Eynsham that will continue to hang in the Village Hall.

Gallery

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