Tues 18th Aug 2020 – Heritage Week plans
Hi, We will be displaying this poster around Shannon Town to promote this Sunday’s heritage week event.
Hi, We will be displaying this poster around Shannon Town to promote this Sunday’s heritage week event.
We have made a promotional film for Heritage Week. Which is now included on the Heritage Week website:
https://www.heritageweek.ie/projects/shannon-town-community-wetlands
The film had to be made that day and submitted to the Heritage website. So it was great what we managed to achieve in such a short timescale. Well done to Olive and John !
The committee of the Shannon Town Community Wetland have had their first post Covid open air meeting at the wetlands on Thursday last. A draft Biodiversity and Management report commissioned by Clare County Council regarding the wetlands was the focus of discussion. The report gives us a good baseline indication of the current biodiversity and is crucial to planning for the future management of the wetlands. Of note are two rare plants which were identified during the survey. These are Bristly Oxtongue and the Celery Leaved Buttercup. Also decided was to plan for two Heritage Week projects this year. These are a family fun day on Water Heritage Day on Sunday 23rd August when children will become nature detectives and a short video about the wetland restoration project. To ensure that government recommendations about outdoor events can be adhered to it will be necessary to register for the event. We will shortly post information about registration.
A few of us (Ruairí, Greg, John, Tony, Congella and myself) met with the ecologists Fran Giaquinto and her colleague Phoebe (I’m afraid I don’t know her last name) on site this morning.
As we are working with the Clare County Council to develop a biodiversity plan for the wetland.
We gave them a brief overview of what has been done so far and they then went on to walk over the site taking an inventory of everything that they saw there.
They have said that they will send us their report later together with recommendations for the future management of the site and will meet with us to discuss the same.
As a few of us were there to continue work on removing the willows we particularly asked them about their recommendation as to the best way to manage this on an ongoing basis. Their advice was that doing the work now may be counterproductive as by loosening the soil around the roots we are creating ideal conditions for more seeds to seed themselves.
Their recommendation at this stage is to cease pulling the willows now and then at the end of August do an intensive clearance by hand.
This could possibly be accomplished as part of a Heritage Week event and thereafter the willows could be kept under control by a single cut with a machine in the Autumn.
We will await their report to get further details but for now it seems that we should not do any more clearance until we hear more.
Thanks to everyone who has helped so far. Don’t put away your forks yet we will need to press them into service again in August. I’ll be in touch again as soon as we have the report from them.
Carmel Shaw and her partner Jimmy took these amazing pictures of dragonflies a few days ago. Thanks for sharing.
I was there yesterday and saw 20 or so dragonflies in the far pond mating and laying eggs.
Great weather again as Olive, John, Tom and I removed more willows.
Olive, Tom, John and myself spent a fruitful hour or so this morning digging out the young willows. We marked out squares using bamboo and maintaining a 2m safe distance worked in pairs to clear these areas of willows.
We started with some trepidation as the ground is so hard. But after marking up two square areas we got stuck into the work and the willows, having surprisingly small roots, came up fairly easy with minimal digging.
And after an hour or so we had quite a haul of young willows ready to go to the green waste area of the Shannon Recycling Centre. A good job all round!
Olive e-mailed me these photos from Carmel Shaw. The second is a yellow flag iris and the first is possibly a type of daisy. Can someone identify it?
While so much of the wetlands is currently dried, caked mud looking more like a scene from a desert the swallows still find stretches of water to drink on the wing. Lovely. These are the first swallows I’ve seen this summer. 🙂
And here are a few photos 🙂
Was sent sent lovely photos of the wetlands by Jacquie Murphy that were taken by Eoghan Birchall.
Good luck in the forthcoming photo competition Eoghan 🙂