Saturday, 11 February 2017

All Change at Moor House - Upper Teesdale

There have been recent changes in staffing at Moor House –Upper Teesdale NNR over the recent months; you may already know that Chris and Heather McCarty both retired at the end of September after over 30 plus years of service between them. 


Emma King has successfully completed her Natural England HLF traineeship and gained accreditation in Environmental Conservation from Warwickshire College. Her hard work and commitment has been recognised and she has been employed on a short term appointment as a Reserve Warden working at both Teesmouth and Moor House-Upper Teesdale NNRs where her duties include outreach, education, volunteer management and general estate duties as well as continuing to learn about the respective NNRs' natural history and their required management.
 
 
There’s also a new face around - Phil Swaile - who is on part time loan at present from the Newcastle Office.  His help is much needed and appreciated for day to day running of the NNR and estate tasks.
 
Martin Furness

I was until recently on temporary promotion as Senior Reserve Manager, but now I have been successful in securing the role full time.  This is a great opportunity and it is also a great responsibility to manage one of the UK's best botanical and upland NNRs, along with continuing to manage the other fantastic North Pennine NNRs of Muckle Moss, and Derwent Gorge and Muggleswick Woods.
The job of Senior Site Manager is the job I’ve wanted to do since I was at school, not just managing an NNR, but specifically managing Moor House.  Way back in the late 1970’s a family friend, Jim Parkin, was the Nature Conservancy Council Warden for Moor House and actually lived in the Warden’s house there.  So once or twice a year my family and I had trip up Moor House. It seemed to take ages from Appleby in our Austin 1100 crawling up Hartside Pass eventually getting to Garrigill and then an even slower crawl along the rough track eventually getting to Moor House itself.
It was a great place.  Jim had two daughters, younger than me and my brother, who would take us off to explore the mini limestone gorges of Rough Sike and Moss Burn.  We even swam in them.  We must have been a bit harder them days.

Jim would show us mist netting birds; some of the special plants; how he recorded the weather data;  and many other things.  He was a real inspiration to me.

In those days there were some more unusual additions to the staff at Moor House - Mick the pointer dog for work on grouse, and Betty the fell pony to transport materials around the NNR.  There were no quad bikes then.  It was a busy place with all research being undertaken and the field lab full of people in white lab coats.

Jim eventually moved on to manage other NNRs, but his knowledge and enthusiasm inspired and stayed with me - this was what I wanted to do!

My enjoyment and learning of natural history continued through living and playing in the countryside around Appleby, but by the time I was 16 mopeds and the usual things that young lads get up to took my interest.  The careers advisor never quite got what I meant by conservation work and managing nature reserves, so I left school at 16 to do a 6 month YT Scheme working on HGVs and then drifted into the local manufacturing firms in the early days of  electronics industry, but I was still out and about in the countryside and local fells learning about natural history.

Eventually in 1992 I was made redundant and it was time for a change of direction to what I really wanted to do. I contacted Terry Wells, the then Warden at Moor House, to do voluntary work and enrolled  onto a National Diploma in Land Use and Recreation, a brilliant vocational course with three northern colleges -  Newton Rigg, Kirkley Hall and Houghall Colleges, all specializing in agriculture, forestry and other land based industries.   Students spent each term at a different college, including a 6 month placement, over the three years of the course.  You got a real grounding in conservation, recreation, and practical land management over the whole of the north of England.

This had fired my interest for further study and I got a place at Edge Hill University to undertake a BSc in Field Biology and Habitat Management.  Again I had chosen right, another three years of learning more in-depth ecology, field biology skills and principles of habitat management.  I undertook my dissertation on the macro-invertebrates of three streams on Moor House and finished up with a first class degree.

 
Leaving in May 1998 I spent nearly a year applying for jobs and labouring for a local builder.  I looked forward to Tuesdays after getting home from work for the postal edition of CJS (Countryside Jobs Service) to look and request another job application and spend the other evenings applying for them.  I thought I was not going to get anything, then eventually I got the opportunity to work as a Estate worker for Scottish Natural Heritage at Forvie NNR, about 15 miles north of Aberdeen.  It is a beautiful coastal NNR – extensive coastal heath, with large dune system and the estuary of the river Ythan, where I managed tern and eider duck nesting colonies and undertook estate maintenance duties. It was a short term summer contract of six months, but they managed to find more work for me and a promotion for another year.  Then in the summer of 2000 I saw the advert for a Reserve Manager at Moor House-Upper Teesdale NNR, I couldn’t believe it, so I applied, got an interview and the rest is history and I’ve been here ever since.

Chris and Heather have been constant faces of the NNR and several others have come and gone over the years.  Chris has filled me with his passion and knowledge for the habitats and species of the North Pennines and beyond - and sometimes I still think ‘I’ll just run this past him’, but then remember it’s now me making the decisions which sometimes makes me think for a bit longer.
So there’s me, Emma and Phil at present and I hope that we’ll still do as much as we can for the conservation of the special habitats and unique species on the NNR.  We'll also continue to run the volunteer tasks and events to allow others to appreciate and get involved with what is special about  Moor House - Upper Teesdale NNR and beyond. 
Martin Furness
Senior Reserve Manager
 
 
 

Thursday, 5 January 2017

Looking back on 2016 – a tribute to our volunteers
 
We've had a very industrious 2016 with our fabulous volunteers who have given much of their time, energy and enthusiasm to help us look after Moor House – Upper Teesdale NNR.  Together we have achieved tremendous results.  Our volunteers bring with them such a vast amount of knowledge, skills, experience and ideas, making them an invaluable resource.  They are also our friends. We wholeheartedly mean it when we say that we couldn't possibly manage the Reserve without them. 
 
 Here's (some of) what we got up to in 2016:
 


We helped North Pennines AONB Partnership with a number of practical jobs around Bowlees Visitor Centre.
 











We cut the rushes on Widdybank Fell, to reduce their vigour and make room from the special plants that grow there.
 








  


 
We assisted with the  rush plots treatment experiment by cutting some of the rush plots with a reciprocating pedestrian mower.














We undertook tree guard maintenance checks to see how our young trees were growing, under Cronkley Scar.












We cut the rushes on Widdybank pasture.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
We made regular checks of the rabbit proof exclosures on Cronkley Fell that  protect our rare plants.
 
We repaired fence lines at Derwent Gorge to keep the sheep out of our ancient woodland.
 
We tackled an old tree, toppled by the wind.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
We litter picked between Low Force and High Force.
 



We repaired more fence lines at Derwent Gorge - including one across the river! 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 



We put a new NNR sign at Dufton YHA.
 
We cut back the junipers along the footpath to High Force.
 
 
We rebuilt over 10metres of wall at Moor House.
 



We jointly hosted 'Wild Wedensdays' and  'Bowlees Discovery Club' (our wildlife club for 5-11 year olds) with the North Pennines AONB Partnership. 
 
We delivered our 2016 events programme.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
About volunteering at Moor House – Upper Teesdale NNR
We have three key groups of volunteers: our weekly practical volunteers, our monthly practical volunteers; and our Green Guides.  The weekly and monthly practical volunteers help us with key estate management and habit management tasks – such as fencing, walling, scrub clearance, rush cutting and tree guard maintenance.  Our Green Guides patrol along the footpath between Low Force and High Force, and also at Cow Green (at weekends during April to October).  They meet and greet the public, provide information, litter pick, and are our eyes and ears about the Reserve.  They also help to deliver our events programme and assist with both school visits and our wildlife club for 5-11 year olds.  We are very flexible with what our volunteers want to do and often there is overlap between the groups.
 
We are also implementing a volunteer gardening rota at Wynch Bridge End Cottage for 2017 and we’ve just embarked on a new garden project, here at Widdybank Farm, our Reserve base.
 
 
Many of our volunteers have been volunteering with us for over 10 years but there is always room for new volunteers!  If you are interested in joining us, please get in touch.  Whatever amount of time you have to spare, be it on a regular basis or just as and when it suits you, your time would be fully utilised and very much appreciated. 
 
 
For more information call the Reserve base on 01833 622374 or email: Emma.King@naturalengland.org.uk
 
 
Emma King

Reserve Warden