Lets Get Buzzing National Pollinator Award 2016
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2011: Problems for Pollinators: Bad News for BeesWhat we were hearing both internationally and nationally wasn’t good. Bee colonies collapsing and bumblebee numbers falling were now stories from home. We knew that this was both an urgent problem and an opportunity to make a difference. We started planning our long-term projects to include key features for bees as well as including plants for pollinators in our planting plans. We made our Habitat Highlights project this year. We took the Top 10 of our habitats from the survey and told everyone about them with a new interpretation panel, a QR-code guided walking wildlife trail. (all linked to our biodiversity web site)
Why build one bug hotel when you can open a chain? So we did. These five star establishments are situated in schools and estates across the town. 2014-2015: Our Biggest Push for Pollinators: The DUO ProjectNow, please listen carefully - this is where the story gets really interesting… We took all we had done so far and overlaid it on a high-definition aerial photograph (supplied by Monaghan County Council) of Monaghan Town and environs. We had our ‘Highlight Habitats’ and our Greenway - and now we were looking for routes between them. Problem: In between our ‘best bits’ were houses - and lots of them. Opportunity: Almost all of them have gardens.
Solution: The Dispersed Urban Orchard or DUO Project. Our horticulturist sourced fruit trees from SeedSavers - lots of them (so we got a good deal) - and included heritage varieties originally from our neighbours in Co. Armagh (ever tried an 8-Square?). We advertised Fruit Trees for a Fiver: Come and pick them up from us in Monaghan shopping centre. All you have to do is be a Monaghan Town resident and (crucially) tell us where you live and commit to planting it there. It was so successful we had to hold a second weekend selling trees. We could now map the progress of what we believe is a unique network of long-term, stable habitat of benefit to pollinators (as well as other bugs, birds and people too). |
2012: Plants for Pollinators : Planting PlansHave we mentioned how lucky we were having a dedicated horticulturist on the Monaghan Town Council Team? Not only that, but one committed to conservation, too. This was invaluable to our drawing up of planting plans that not only looked the business but did the buzzness as they included wonderfully pollinator-attractive plants such as Napeta, Poppies, Mint and Stonecrops - all very tastefully done.
2013- 2014: Pedalling Pollination: The Ulster Canal GreenwayOur very own Greenway- have you been? If you’re visiting Monaghan Town, we’ll have to insist that you do. 7km of beautiful mixed use trail following the route of our disused Ulster Canal. Now, while the canal may never have been a commercial success (it lasted less than 100 years of trading) it has now become our finest asset for people - but also for many other species. Identified as a key resource in 2010, we now saw our opportunity to enhance and maintain a wildlife corridor of 7km from end to end. One day it will help us link Lough Neagh to the Shannon, but that’s a story for another day. We worked hand-in-hand with Monaghan County Council who had the foresight to engage a biodiversity expert to draw up ways to weave wildlife into solid plans and oversee these plans implemented. So, between our Outdoor Classrooms and QR-coded trail markers, you can look out for exposed embankments that we left unvegetated for solitary bees. Humble wayside characters like pignut and cow parsley keep our hoverflies happy. The former lock-keeper’s cottage has a new garden now. Best of all, we have stable long-term linear habitat that will never be threatened by unwise development.
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2016: Now we’re Buzzing: Joining it up and Pushing On |
Líon na Bearnaí for Bees is now a key mantra for MTT and its volunteers. We have stable habitat areas and corridors but we’re not done yet. For example, along the Greenway we will be creating ‘copses’ with humble but important species of trees and shrubs including hawthorn and willow - Monaghan Mens’ Shed have volunteered to do this for us. We will have to maintain our solitary ‘bee banks’ and go for full occupancy of our bug hotels. We will need to keep including nectar-bearers in our planting plans. We will encourage the maintenance of early wildflowers like dandelion and clover. We will work with MNCC to select street trees of best benefit. Our new(ish) bypass offers opportunities for meadows yet untapped and we’re hoping Combilift (a major new business here) will elevate our ambitions. We will fill lawn areas of estates with copses of native trees (less mowing too!). We have our DUO but now (seeing as we have their details) we will be encouraging all these householders to undertake wildlife-friendly gardening initiatives kicking off with such projects as Dandelions: Love Em and Leave Em Bee ™.
That’s our story, but only so far. Thanks for taking the time to hear it, we hope it was interesting. Do please come and have a look. We’re here for the long haul and we hope our pollinators will be too.
Monaghan Tidy Towns would like to gratefully acknowledge the support of Monaghan County Council in this project. We are especially grateful to Nial and Carol. The professional and voluntary work of Denis Flannery (Horticulturist), Joe Shannon (Ornithologist) and Billy Flynn (ecologist) is acknowledged here. Thanks to all the residents of Monaghan Town for sticking with us; whatever species you may be.
That’s our story, but only so far. Thanks for taking the time to hear it, we hope it was interesting. Do please come and have a look. We’re here for the long haul and we hope our pollinators will be too.
Monaghan Tidy Towns would like to gratefully acknowledge the support of Monaghan County Council in this project. We are especially grateful to Nial and Carol. The professional and voluntary work of Denis Flannery (Horticulturist), Joe Shannon (Ornithologist) and Billy Flynn (ecologist) is acknowledged here. Thanks to all the residents of Monaghan Town for sticking with us; whatever species you may be.