Page 29 - br-june-2022
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June 2022                                                                           June 2022

       BERE REGIS WILDLIFE AND                                                              Flowers Barrow
       ENVIRONMENT GROUP                                                                      Rusting tank hulks, contorted and blasted,

                                                                                            poke through the brambles amidst the shell holes
       Now the weather has warmed up it’s a wonderful time                                  while up on the ridge, blood red and ragged,
       of year to be out and about and spot the wide range                                  the warning flags flap on their white painted poles.
       of  wildlife  interest  in  and  around  the  village.  Whilst
       much of the hawthorn and other tree blossom is over,                                 Down in the valley, broken and battered,
       the white flowers of the Guelder Rose are still out and                              marred by the ravage of training for war,
       Elderflowers  are  about  to  bloom.  The  trees  and                                roofless stone buildings, tortured and tattered,
       hedgerows are at their most wonderful, freshest and brightest green, wildflowers     stand empty, untended and nurtured no more.
       are emerging in the meadow areas at May’s  Wood, birds are incredibly active
       foraging for food for their young, trout are to be seen lazily feeding in the stream     Out on the ridgeway, windswept and open,
       and the dainty white flowers of Water Crowfoot have appeared above the river
       from  their  long  strands  of  green  weed.    Ragged  Robin  and  Purple  Loosestrife   the grasses writhe gently in a rhythmic display,
       should soon be seen in the areas we have managed along the riverside walk.           exposed to sea breezes, the thistle seeds loosen
                                                                                            and their silky, soft down then bears them away.

       The Cuckoo                                                                           Riding air currents, upsurging and rising,        Unusual Pets -
                                                                                            raven and buzzard scan landscape below,           Amoeba
       Whilst you are unlikely to easily spot a cuckoo you may have already heard one.
       They  are  about  and  may  on  occasions  be  heard  from  around  the  village.    swooping and soaring and effortlessly gliding,
       However, the surest way of hearing them is by visiting Wareham Forest – it seems     twisting and swerving to evade mobbing crow.      I have a pet amoeba
       to be a favourite haunt.
                                                                                            The track on the ridge, once rutted by oxcarts,   which I keep inside a jar
       The old nursery rhyme sums up the cuckoo’s behaviour well - The cuckoo comes
       in  April. She sings her song in May. In the middle of June she changes her tune     follows the path of an ancient Celt way,          but  as  yet  I  haven't
       and in July she flies away,                                                          up to the earthworks whose gullies and ramparts   seen it,
                                                                                            sculpt the chalk of the skyline high over the bay.
                                                                                                                                              it's  much  too  small  by
       What’s happening on the fields on Wild Woodbury?                                     High on its cliff top, exposed to the rainstorms,   far.
                                                                                            the hillfort, a refuge in times long ago,
                                              Spring is definitely had an impact on         is reclaimed by a landscape of ridges and hillforms,   To see my pet amoeba
                                              many  of  the  22  fields  at  Dorset                                                           well  that’s  my  greatest
                                              Wildlife  Trust’s  Wild  Woodbury.    Not     of sheltering valleys and wild heathlands below.   hope
                                              much  on  the  fields  that  were  under                                          Chris Nother
                                              grass,  but  those  that  had  crops  of                                                        but  it  costs  a  lot  of
                                              barley wheat and maize are putting                                                              money
                                              on quite a show.
                                                                                                                                              to buy a microscope.
                                              The annual plants, that would under
                                              farming  conditions  be  sprayed  out                                                                     Chris Nother
                                              by  herbicides,  are  making  quite  an
                                              appearance  from  the  seeds  that
                                              were  lying  dormant  within  the  soil.
                                              We are used to Poppies, Cornflower
                                              and Corn Marigold that are sown on

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