Page 25 - br-aug-2020
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August 2020                          August 2020


 Dorset my Dorset   BERE REGIS WILDLIFE AND
 Dorset, my Dorset, the county where I was born   ENVIRONMENT GROUP
 With green fields and watercress beds and fields of golden corn
 I love your pretty villages, cottages with thatch
       At  the  time  of  writing  the  fine,  warm,  sunny  weather
 You have a charm all of your own, no other county can match   has  returned.  Please  do  your  bit  by  topping  up  your
       bird bath or if you haven’t got one put out a saucer of
       water  for  birds  and  hedgehogs.  They’ll  appreciate  it
 The Swanage train bustling along,
 past Corfe Castle on the hill   and  you  will  have  the  joy  of  seeing  more  wildlife  in
       your garden.
 Countless pebbles on Chesil Beach,

 the view from Portland Bill
 Water sparkling with silver light, the   May’s Wood
 harbour that Poole can boast   Last month we described some of the wildlife that can be seen in May’s Wood
 Lovely walks along the paths of   and  the  associated  wild flower  areas  and  we  make no  apology  for  describing
 your beautiful heritage coast   more  about  what  wildlife  is  there.  In  the  words  of  two  well-known  Dorset
       ecologists,  this  is  now  an  exceptional  area  for  wildlife.  Much  has  been  said
       recently  about  the  importance  of  bringing  back  nature  to  create  a  ‘Living
 The countryside reflects in Dorset   Landscape’ and we now have a wonderful example of this for the benefit not
 folk, kindly and full of mirth
 Friendly, smiling and contented. I’m   only for wildlife but also the wellbeing of people. The meadows and woodland
       are buzzing with a wide range of insects and as you walk along  the edge the
 glad Dorset gave me my birth
       meadow masses of grasshopper jump before you. At the time of writing over 10
 Ferries leave, taking people away from Weymouth and Poole Quay   butterflies  could  be  seen  within  about  2  metres  including  –  Marbled  White,
 It’s lovely to watch them from Evening Hill, sailing to sea   Meadow Brown, Gatekeeper, Large and Small Skippers, Peacock, Red  Admiral
       and Brimstone, a sight that has been missing in much of the countryside for many

       years.
 Time stands still in Dorset’s quiet lanes
                                                         The  wild  flower  areas
 And at Arne where the heath meets the sea               have   been   carefully
 Here all nature seems to be at peace
                                                         m a n a g e d    w i t h
 Where country and people live in harmony.               preliminary  ploughing  to
                                                         create the great show of
 Eileen Richardson
                                                         annuals  flowers  with  a
 The sun be up                                           sown   mix   including
                                                         c o r n f l o w e r ,    c o r n
 The sun be up and so be oi                              marigold, and  the white
 I see en shining in the sky                             corn  chamomile  (which
                                                         replaces the oxeye daisy
 But if I get up and there be rain                       which  flowers  earlier  in
                                                         the  season).  As  well  as
 I soon get back in bed again!
       the  sown  plants  other  native  plants  have  found  a  home  here  rather  than  on
 Eileen Richardson   intensively cultivated land.
        The  perennial  natives  notably  knapweeds,  wild  carrot  and  yellow  patches  of
       lady’s  bedstraw  were  sown  several  years  ago  and  have  become  well

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