Thursday 13 July 2017

Prof Iain Stewart revealed as charity’s new president

Plymouth University academic and TV geologist Professor Iain Stewart MBE has been revealed as the new president of top local conservation charity Devon Wildlife Trust.

Prof Stewart is only the third person to take on the honorary role since the conservation charity was founded 55 years ago in 1962. His appointment was made after a unanimous decision by Devon Wildlife Trust’s 15 strong Board of Trustees. He succeeds Prof Ian Mercer CBE, the eminent conservationist who had held the position from 1985 until his death in September 2016.

Prof Stewart spent a recent visit to Devon Wildlife Trust’s Wembury Marine Centre finding out about the work the charity does for local people and nature. Prof Stewart spoke of his new role as The Trust’s president:

“It’s a tremendously exciting opportunity. Wildlife conservation is fresh territory for me and it’s going to be a big learning curve, but it will allow me to indulge myself in all the things I loved as a kid – the natural world and a sense of adventure.

I thought a lot about whether to take this role up with Devon Wildlife Trust. I said yes because the charity is local to me. They are right in my neighbourhood. But I also said yes because for a lot of people wildlife is an entry point to something much bigger. There’s an overlap between people who are interested in wildlife and issues in my working world such as climate change.”

The geologist, who is Director of the Sustainable Earth Institute at Plymouth University’s School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, joined pupils from Coombe Dean Secondary School, Plymouth on a guided rockpool safari to discover the wildlife which lives in Wembury’s many tidal pools. Among the group’s finds were shore crabs, pipe fish and cushion stars. Prof Stewart said:

“Spending time with these young people you can see there’s loads of energy, it’s just buzzing. One of the best things about this kind of event is that it provides really simple excitement from being outdoors and exploring nature. It’s the kind of thing I did as a child and I also did it with my kids on this very beach. You get the sense that the children here today don’t think they are learning science, they are just having fun, which is fantastic.

Devon Wildlife Trust is an exemplar as to how you can combine good science and a passionate membership, with effective decision making. I’m proud that I am now to be a part of it.”

Devon Wildlife Trust’s Chair, Dr Peta Foxall, joined Prof Stewart on his visit and welcomed the news of the appointment. She said:

"I am delighted that Iain has accepted the Board’s invitation to become President of Devon Wildlife Trust. Iain’s knowledge and expertise as a geologist and his infectious enthusiasm for the subject means that he will be a great ambassador for the work of the Trust.”

Harry Barton, Devon Wildlife Trust’s Chief Executive, spoke of the role Prof Iain Stewart would now take up. He said:

“I’m absolutely delighted about Iain’s appointment, as I am sure will be our 31,000 members and our many other supporters. Iain is a brilliant communicator and has turned audiences on to geology all over the world through his TV series, such as How Earth Made Us. I have no doubt that he will be a wonderful advocate for our work too.

Wildlife and wild places remain Devon’s best assets but they face some serious pressures today. I’m so pleased that Iain has agreed to become our president and help us champion their cause.”

Prof Stewart was born in East Kilbride, Scotland and studied geography and geology at Strathclyde University. He came to Devon in 2004 to take up a teaching and research post at Plymouth University. He was later appointed Professor of Geoscience Communication, believed to be the first position of its type in the world.

He lives in Plymouth with his partner Paola and two teenage daughters. In a profile piece with the Sunday Telegraph in 2010 Prof Stewart described his favourite Devon haunts as Dartmoor, the waterfalls at Lydford Gorge and the county’s wonderful beaches.

Prof Iain Stewart, Devon Wildlife Trust’s new President, at Wembury Marine Centre, near Plymouth
 Prof Iain Stewart, Devon Wildlife Trust’s new President, at Wembury Marine Centre, near Plymouth
Prof Iain Stewart, centre, with Devon Wildlife Trust’s Chair, Dr Peta Foxall, and Devon Wildlife Trust’s Chief Executive, Harry Barton.
Prof Iain Stewart, centre, with Devon Wildlife Trust’s Chair, Dr Peta Foxall, and Devon Wildlife Trust’s Chief Executive, Harry Barton.

Wednesday 12 July 2017

Counting on Butterflies with the Butterfly Conservation

Mid-July already and I must say there have been plenty of bees a-buzzing but the butterflies seem to have been few and far between up to now around my North Devon patch.

On my walk-abouts and in my garden I have seen one Green-veined White, Peacock, Speckled Wood and Orange Tips early on in May and over the past couple of months have spotted a Brimstone, Green-Veined White and Large/Small White, a couple of Red Amiral, one Peacock, Small Tortoishell, Meadow Brown, Heath Brown, a few Comma, a Skipper and a couple of Six-Spot Burnet Moths! Earlier today I got a record shot of a Ringlet.

On reflection I suppose that's not bad really but they are in so few numbers especially as the Buddleia (aka Butterfly Bush) has been flowering in my garden for a couple of weeks now, so I am hoping they arrive on mass in the next couple of weeks in time for the Butterfly Conservation Big Butterfly Count which this year is from 14th July-6th August. It's a fun thing to do especially for a family with budding young naturalists as they can learn to recognise different species using an illustrated butterfly chart or or free mobile phone app.

The big butterfly count, is a UK nationwide survey aimed at helping assess the health of the environment. It was launched in 2010 and has rapidly become the world's biggest survey of butterflies. You can show your support by signing up HERE

Sir David Attenborough, President of Butterfly Conservation, Alan Titchmarsh MBE, Nick Baker and Mike Dilger, Vice Presidents of Butterfly Conservation and the actress Joanna Lumley OBE have given their enthusiastic backing to the project and will support its launch and operation.

Before setting out on your quest to count or photograph butterflies it is also useful to know the different habitats and food plants favoured by individual species.

Comma -  Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus
 Comma - RHS Garden Rosemoor, Great Torrington, North Devon  2 July 2017
Meadow Brown -  Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus
 Meadow Brown - RHS Garden Rosemoor, Great Torrington, North Devon 2017
Large White (Female) -  Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus
 Large White (Female) Welcombe, North Devon 1st July 2017
Large Skipper -  Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus
Large Skipper - Welcombe, North Devon 1st July 2017
Peacock -  Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus
 Peacock - My Garden North Devon 24th May 2017
Green-veined White Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus
 Green-Veined White - My Garden North Devon 1st July 2017
Speckled Wood - Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus
Speckled Wood - My Garden North Devon 28th May 2017
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Article/Photos copyright Pat Adams (All Rights Reserved)

Monday 10 July 2017

Book signings by local Devon author, Liz Shakespeare

Readers who enjoy books with local settings will have the opportunity to buy signed copies this summer. North Devon author Liz Shakespeare, whose latest book has recently been featured on BBC TV and radio, has a busy summer ahead visiting many South-West events.

Liz has become well-known as an author who brings to life the people, history and landscapes of Devon. She was born and brought up in Bideford and has a long Devon ancestry which she feels has given her a good understanding of Devon and its people.

Her most recent book, The Postman Poet, is a novel telling the true life story of Edward Capern, a humble Devon postman whose poems, written while walking the rural lanes of North Devon on his daily round in the mid-19th century, won plaudits from the Prime Minister and the support of the biggest literary names of the day. Liz drew on historical research and details in the poems to tell the extraordinary story through Edward’s eyes as he struggles to support his family, a story that captures the opportunities and inequalities of Victorian North Devon. Alongside the novel, she has published a selection of Capern’s poems, and in recognition of his commitment to social justice she will be donating £1 to the Northern Devon Foodbank from the sale of each copy of this book.

Historical research was also the inspiration for her previous books, The Turning of the Tide, a true story of a young Clovelly mother confined in Bideford Workhouse, Fever: A Story from a Devon Churchyard, and The Memory Be Green: An Oral History of a Devon Village. All Around The Year, is a collection of twelve poignant stories, deeply rooted in the Devon countryside, and each linked to a month of the year from January through to December.

North Devon Author Liz Shakespeare

Liz will be signing copies of all her books at the following events:
  • Magpie Marquee at the Mid-Devon Show on 22nd July
  • Dunster Country Fair on 26th July
  • Launceston Show on 27th July
  • Woolsery Show on 31st July
  • In the Crafts and Gifts Marquee at the North Devon Show on August 2nd
  • Okehampton Show on August 10th,
  • Dartmoor Folk Festival on August 12th and 13th
  • Chagford Show on August 17th,
  • Holsworthy Show on August 24th
  • Clovelly Crab and Lobster Festival on September 3rd
Further details of Liz’s books can be found on her website www.lizshakespeare.co.uk
  North Devon Author Liz Shakespeare