The Factory venue has teamed up with Boom Artists-a spin-off from the UK's fastest growing festival Boomtown Fair, and they have been busy programming a season of cutting edge music events that are set to change the face of live music for the local area. This first series of events is called Saturday Night Live and they run from October through to December. You are invited to experience quality live Ska, Reggae, Dub, Funk and Hip Hop through The Factory's state of the art sound and lighting rigs. Make way for headliners Babyhead, The Skints and Dr Meaker, plus legendary DJ Ed Solo is coming to play out the season's finale. Featuring alongside these established artists are handpicked rising stars from across the South West, all bringing their unique sounds and styles to The Factory. Please check out Skata Tones, The Dead Betas, Jamie Mead, Shire Roots and Blazenstein, Cut Capers, The ASBO Disco and DJ Wonka. The Factory will also be running competitions for acts who want to join some of these line-ups and news of these will be appearing on 'The Factory Petroc' Facebook page.
Thursday, 17 October 2013
Monday, 7 October 2013
River restoration making a splash!
A project which aims to improve the water quality and wildlife of a
Westcountry river has made a splash in East Devon.
The project is a joint initiative between Devon Wildlife Trust and the
Sid Vale Association. It is based on a six mile stretch (plus
tributaries ) of the beautiful and popular River Sid upstream from
Sidmouth.
Devon Wildlife Trust's Scott West is leading the project: 'Many people
know and love the River Sid. It's somewhere that local communities walk,
play and live beside. It's also a key component of what brings tourists
to this wonderful part of the world. What the project is aiming to do is
to ensure that the river remains as a special place for and people and
wildlife. That means looking after its water quality and making sure
that it can continue to support a wide diversity of life.'
After six months of the project Scott has certainly got to know the
river intimately having achieved an impressive amount of work which has
included:
- Walking the entire length of the river and its main tributaries , not using its banks but actually in the river in waders!
- Taking surveys of invertebrate life (typically mayflies and waterbugs) from along the river as a means of evaluating its water quality status.
- Conducting a series of 'electro-fishing' surveys of the river - whereby fish are temporarily immobilised by an electric current (this is only done under consent by the Environment Agency).
- Consulting with and advising ten local major landowners regarding land management and its impact on the river
Scott underlined the project's potential 'It's also an opportunity to
see how positive management on the Sid can lead to healthier rivers not
just here but across East Devon. We plan to take the lessons learned on
this one small river catchment working with local landowners and
enhancing riverside habitats and then apply them to other rivers.'
The River Sid already supports an amazing amount of wildlife including
such iconic species as kingfishers, otters, brown trout and damselflies,
but Scott believes it could to support more. Scott said, 'This river has
the potential to support other well-known but threatened species,
perhaps the best example would be migrating Atlantic salmon. This river
and other rivers like it would once have contained good numbers of
salmon. Local people recall seeing them in years past. Our ambition is
that the Sid and its neighbouring rivers might one day support species
like this again.'
The project is not only targeting the lives of the rivers wildlife,
instead it is also engaging local communities through an ambitious
education programme. Devon Wildlife Trust's Education Officer Paul
Martin has been working with two local schools - Sidbury Primary and
Sidmouth Primary - on a series of 'river days'. Paul explained: 'On
river days we take groups of local children out to the River Sid. We
assign them stretches of the river and ask them to explore them
recording the wildlife that they find. The idea behind the visits is to
get the children more familiar with their local river, to appreciate its
beauty and to learn about the wonderful life it supports. The children
certainly seemed to have enjoyed the experience!'
The project's encouraging start bodes well for its next phase. Scott
West explained, 'These initial months have been about understanding the
river, its wildlife and the pressures upon it. It's also been about
recognising the potential areas in which good local management can make
a really positive impact. The next steps are threefold. First, to offer
clear advice to local landowners on how they can play their part.
Second, to address some of the physical barriers which face migrating
fish, so for example introducing fish passes (ladders or pools) to help
them overcome weirs. And lastly, to restore habitats along the river's
banks - one special area we hope to tackle is the introduction of
fencing to prevent cattle from entering the river.'
Photo: Kingfishers are just one of the species being helped on the River Sid. Copyright Chris Root |
Monday, 23 September 2013
Reptile restoration work making a difference
A leading South West charity is working hard to improve the lot of the region's
reptiles and amphibians.
Species including adders and common frogs, slow worms and toads may not always enjoy
the best public profile but, says Devon Wildlife Trust, they are a vital part of our
wildlife and one which faces an uncertain future. Over the past 18 months The Trust
has set about improving several of its own nature reserves specifically to cater for
the needs of these special animals.
Thanks to generous funding from Biffa Award - a multi-million pound fund which
awards grants to community and environmental projects across the UK - work involving
Devon Wildlife Trust and its volunteers has been taking place at the charity's land
at Bovey Heathfield and Chudleigh Knighton Heath nature reserves (both close to
Bovey Tracey), and Lickham Common and Ashculm Turbary nature reserves in the
Blackdown Hills.
Devon Wildlife Trust's Steve Hussey commented: 'We are concentrating our efforts on
reserves where we know there are existing populations of amphibians and reptiles.
What we've been doing is ensuring that we can offer them tip-top conditions in which
to flourish.'
The work for reptiles and amphibians has included:
- Digging two new ponds, while improving seven others. The ponds are providing homes and breeding places for amphibians including frogs, toads and newts, as well as hunting places for grass snakes.
- The installation of ten artificial hibernation (known as 'hibernaculum') nests to allow reptiles including sand lizards, adders and grass snakes to survive the cold winter weather.
- The construction using decomposing plant material of three heaps which provide egg laying places for grass snakes.
- Bracken clearance and scrub removal at each of the four nature reserves designed at checking the spread of plants which threaten to shade out areas used by reptiles to bask in.
The effectiveness of the project is being monitored through a series of surveys.
These surveys should provide an accurate picture of the distribution of reptiles and
amphibians on the four nature reserves, as well as revealing how effective the work
has been in encouraging rises in their numbers.
Steve Hussey commented: 'It's still quite early in the project to draw firm
conclusions about how much difference we are making, but the signs are encouraging.
At Bovey Heathfield nature reserve, for example, one recent survey revealed large
numbers of smooth newts in a pond which had been re-dug by the project team.'
Steve continued: 'The winter ahead will see further work done for reptiles and
amphibians on Devon Wildlife Trust nature reserves. We're delighted that funding
from Biffa Award is allowing us to make a positive difference to such well-known but
struggling species as adders and toads.'
Photo: Common Lizard copyright Chris Root |
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