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Chapel-en-le-Frith Biodiversity Group is a group of volunteers acting to address the complex factors that affect ecosystems and wildlife habitats in Chapel-en-le-Frith. We welcome anyone with a love for nature and wildlife, interested in protecting our precious ecosystems. Membership is free for anyone who lives or works in Chapel-en-le-Frith or surrounding areas.
If you want to join dozens of other nature champions, become a subscriber by entering your email address in the box on the right and clicking 'subscribe'.
If you want to see what you're missing, here's a link to the web version.
Guest blog by Deborah Pitman
Autumn tones reveal themselves along the thinly wooded edge of Waterswallows Quarry, the wildlife haven just outside Buxton. The cliffs stand starkly majestic in the warm, mizzling air. We scan the water for a rarity.
The High Peak, it turns out, lies on the migratory path of a charming little bird: the Grey Phalarope. Just one paused its journey here at the beginning of October. The Grey Phalarope moves from nesting grounds in the high Arctic to winter warmth in the tropics. With only around 160 seen in the UK each year — most of them coastal — this inland stopover caused a stir.
Jason Adshead and I decided to go and take a look. At just 20cm long, it’s smaller than a blackbird. A beaming man passes us as we approach: “It’s tucked in on the far side.” Sure enough, we soon spot it scooting across the water, absorbed in its own world, almost exactly where he’d said.
| Grey phalarope, picture from Ron Knight CC BY 2.0 licence. via Wikimedia Commons |
Autumn’s levels of litter at Waterswallows are nothing compared with summer’s, but still too much. Nature is resurging after years of heavy industry. Wildlife has been coaxed back to the margins through tree planting and meadow creation — projects delivered by volunteers from the neighbouring NestlĂ© water-bottling plant. Fungi now cluster beneath the young woodland, mushrooms cheek by jowl with the litter that breaks down and disrupts the habitat.
The beautiful phalarope made the butterfly effect real — a single wingbeat inspiring something far larger. Chapel-en-le-Frith’s Biodiversity Group decided to act. This autumn’s clean-up follows the huge efforts of those who cleared the party debris left from summer nights. Around sixty volunteer hours, spread across four weekends, have seen bag after bag hauled from every corner of the site: car tyres, gas bottles, nitrous oxide canisters, plastic, glass, a whirligig washing line — everything, including a kitchen sink.
| Deb, Jason and Nic at Waterswallows |
| Our paddle board champion litter picker Nic! |
Litter is a complex issue to solve, but being part of the solution is a wonderful feeling. Chapel-en-le-Frith Biodiversity Group carry out regular litter-picks around the parish — and occasionally further afield, when a passing rarity points us toward a problem.
| Chapel Biodiversity Group volunteers with some of the litter from Waterswallows |
Now that we are well and truly into Autumn and Winter will be here before we know it, we've added a page on hibernation which is full of tips for things you can do (and not do!) to support hibernating insects, reptiles and mammals.
You can find the page on our menu above or just click here.