Work Day On The Marshes
Last Sunday I took part in my first volunteer work day for the Friends of Tottenham Marshes – clearing an area of scrub to make space for beehives. I barely knew a soul, so it was a confusing day of forgetting peoples names, not knowing where to sit for lunch and generally being the one constantly having to play catch-up. To add to the confusion it was a shared work day with Lea Bridge Conservation Volunteers, who seemed to completely outnumber the Tottenham lot and who I constantly mistook for them. The confusion didn’t matter one bit though as LBCV were a friendly bunch and I think I’ll be joining in with some of their work days in the future.
The area of wooded scrub we were working in was chest deep in nettles and brambles which we mainly cut down using tools with the satisfying name of slashers. The work was sweaty, stingy and thorny but with about a dozen of us working it wasn’t so bad. The picture above shows the area I was working in – wish I’d taken a “before” picture as you can’t really tell from this how much vegetation we shifted. Blackcaps sang all around us as we worked, and not long after we started someone found a nest with two blue eggs in it. It was a blackbird nest, possibly already deserted as it is so late in the year – the eggs were cold. We left it and it’s tree untouched though, just in case.
The day was hot and sunny and I was glad to be working under the shade of Hawthorn and Elder scrub. Out in the bright sunshine a small work party dug over and prepared a flower bed outside the meeting rooms, and there in the fresh turned soil was a tiny newt.
After a leisurely lunch by the banks of the river we went back to the clearing and worked with pitchforks to pile up the vegetation we had cut back. Those tall compost piles will provide a wonderful invertebrate habitat, quickly rotting down to take up less and less space, until it is time to put in the bee hives. We’d got most of the work done before lunch so there was a chance to lean on our tools and look around, a few of us discussing wildlife on the marshes and identifying trees and shrubs in the clearing. Many were laden with fruit, like this bird cherry.
The bank I had been working on was smothered with cascades of fat, sweet sunwarmed brambles which I had spent the morning eating greedily before cutting the thorny branches back. Before calling it a day we combed the remaining bramble thickets and were rewarded with a tasty wild grown treat.
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Oh..what treasures u found that day! Thanks for taking me with u and showing me around!
Well thank you Dawn for coming over to read! And yes, that’s a good way to put it – finding lovely things like that nest, the newt and the berries is just like finding treasure. It is treasure, more than any bauble could ever be.
This day must have been very satisfying for body and soul! Such work would be so much fun with immediate results to be seen! Love the photos!
Oh I certainly felt like I’d worked hard that evening – a satisfying feeling if ever there was one. And yes, seeing that clearing emerge from all the vegetation was great. Seeing the hives set up there will be even better!
You got some great shots. Looks like a great activity to participate in.
Hi Carver! I really enjoyed it and can’t wait for the next work day.
Looks like it was a great day. Particularly when you’re gifted with delicious blackberries!
The blackberrries were a bit of a highlight, yes!
How lovely that people like you are willing to do something like this especially for bees as they are in so much trouble right now. I have to say that I flashed back to childhood following my grandfather as he cut brush around the cabin and we too were rewarded with berries and I loved to find those little newts..Wonderful Nature Notes post Bird. Thank you..Michelle
Michelle, thank YOU for sharing this memory! It’s a lovely thing when we can spark each others memories and imaginations like that even though we may be in different parts of the world.
…and the thing is, I LOVE manual work, always have. I really enjoyed myself, and knowing that I am taking part in a project that will benefit bees in their hour of need made it doubly rewarding.