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Welcome to the Eastern Moors blog site. In recent months this has been updated so that wardens, volunteers and supporters can now write blogs, submit photographs and comment on Eastern Moors topics. Please click on an appropriate tab above to get involved. If you are unsure how to post a picture, article or comment then please look at the Users Guide or email us.

Monday, 6 October 2014

Bolving - what's that all about?

There are not too many interesting things that have come out of Devon but one of them is bolving. 
Bolving is the art of reproducing the sound of the rutting deer stag in the hope of getting a response from the real animals out on the Moor.

Here is an example of exactly that:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3OB_PBTjfw

The art of bolving has slowly been spreading north and now it has reached the Derbyshire Eastern Moors.  What we now need is a clear Derbyshire champion to set the standard by which all others in the area will be judged.

On Saturday 11th October, Eastern Moors will be hosting their first championship.  The idea is for everyone to go out onto the Barbrook dam facing out into the Moor.  One by one participants, drawn by random, will be able to make their call and try and get a response from our local stags.  Bolving will be judged on the volume, quality and reality of each call and the response received from the wild stags. The winner will not only receive a signed certificate but will also receive a voucher for 2 for a meal at the Grouse near Longshaw.  Have you ever had such an offer for an entertaining  early evening? 
We start at 5.30 and after 2 hours you still have time to do whatever you normally do on a Saturday night!

Here is a short video of the real thing.  Not all these red deer are on the Eastern Moors but they all sound roughly the same:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iU2lGQRZrq0

In addition there will be a display about our red deer on Big Moor and a decorated antler competition.  Deer thrash the bracken, heather, grass and moss with their antlers at rutting time to show their frustration and some of it gets lodged on their antlers making them look particularly rediculous.  Can you or your family replicate this action?

We may have a tug of war so that instead of all the pushing and shoving associated with the rut we will be moving in the opposite direction. This depends as much as anything on the weather!

Hot soup will be provided at Barbrook Cottage and you will get chance to meet similar individuals with an interest and passion for our biggest wild mammal 





Wednesday, 1 October 2014

Red deer on Big Moor

The rutting season is now well and truly under way. Lots of noise but not too much action as yet.  
One short walk from the Owler Bar / Longshaw road revealed 7 stags all within a radius of about a mile.  Some have already got a harem but others are still on the prowl.  A few of them are still not quite old enough to challenge the big boys, but I reckon they just like to annoy their elders and keep them on their toes!

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10152455861304022.1073741868.643444021&type=1&l=c0baa32a6a


Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Leash Fen cattle pens construction



Staff and volunteers have been working hard throughout August to replace some very ageing sheep pens on Leash Fen with new pens for sorting cattle. This reflects the change of grazing on the estate with a switch toward cattle who leave a higher sward height than sheep. 

Firstly, the old pen structure had to be removed:



Although it was quite dilapidated, there was a lot of timber and quite a bit of concrete, so some of the posts required quite a tussle or pull with the Land Rover if we were feeling lazy! There was a lot of sledgehammer and bar work to smash the old rails off:



We ended up cramming two skips full to the brim, with some amazing skip tetris from Peter: 



A modern contractor would have done this all with a tractor – but we used our hardy team of volunteers, and a giant post basher! It was hard work – the ground was very hard due to dry weather. But one post at a time we gradually got them in:  



Once the posts were in we could start railing up: 



There was quite a lot of grumbling about “bendy nails” and “duff hammers”.
 



Gradually the pens start to take shape. The gates are meshed at the bottom so that the cattle don’t trap their hooves:






The pens are just about finished now. It's been an interesting project, we've learnt a lot as well as getting a good workout from the post basher and honing our hammering skills.

Monday, 18 August 2014

Volunteer Dragonfly Walk



Today (Monday 18th August), Roger Temple led a group of Eastern Moors volunteers on a dragonfly walk around Ramsley Reservoir and Jack Flat. The volunteers identified many species of dragonfly and damselfly, including the Common Blue, Azure and Emerald damselflies, and the Common Darter, Black Darter and huge Common Hawker dragonflies. A grass snake and an adder were even spotted! At first, there were concerns over if the weather would affect the amount of dragonflies flying, but it brightened up in time for a lovely lunch watching dragonflies at Jack Flat. A plant was found that puzzled us all, which was later identified as Sneezewort!

Claudia Smith, work experience

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Connecting with Nature through Volunteering

Behind the stunning landscapes and happy visitors to the Eastern Moors, is an activity that quietly continues, less known but highly prized. That activity is volunteering.

The Eastern Moors Partnership, a joint initiative between the National Trust and the RSPB, manages the site, looking after it for people and wildlife.  They are a small team with a tall task, one which they cannot do alone if they are to make the Eastern Moors a place that can 'look after itself'. Volunteers however, can help them to achieve just that.

Adult Volunteering
Volunteering on the Eastern Moors comes in all shapes and forms. Ecological monitoring for those who enjoy venturing out across the bog in search of bog asphodel and sundews, stumbling over tussocks in the hope of glimpsing a camouflaged curlew nest and searching the skies for whinchat and the crags for ring ouzels.  Hardy volunteers braving all weathers building dry stone walls, bracken bashing and pulling up ragwort during mid-week work parties. With visitors to the moors being a high priority, imaginative volunteers help create innovative events and activities and ensure the moors are accessible for all.

Family Friendly Muck In Days
Recognising the valuable contribution that people of all ages can make to the upkeep of the Eastern Moors, Muck In Days offer family friendly volunteering where up to three generations have been known to spend their precious weekend tree felling, pond surveying and spreading heather seed across the moors.

Youth Rangers
Within an age that so often gets bad press, teenagers full of enthusiasm and energy get stuck in as Eastern Moors Youth Rangers. Proudly donning their badges as official volunteers, they know their ongoing contributions are recognised and valued.

Turning up once a month on a Sunday afternoon the Youth Rangers get stuck in to tasks that have included ripping out redundant post and wire fencing, pulling up ragwort and surveying wildflower meadows.  Tasks directly deliver the Eastern Moors Management Plan, ensuring their efforts are never tokenistic, but real.  In return for their commitment, Youth Rangers receive training in the skills of a countryside ranger, including navigation, leading guided walks, wildlife surveying and running events.  Sessions deliver 'on the job' experience which the young people can transfer to other areas of their lives such as developing their academic and future career profiles.

The Youth Rangers are a great bunch of youngsters with similar interests and a shared enjoyment of spending time outdoors.  Carrying out tasks which involve team-working, enable the young people to develop their personal and social skills, form friendships and enhance their knowledge and awareness of the natural world, and in turn become better connected to nature.

Guardians of the Moors
The Eastern Moors, a place high above the city of Sheffield, proudly looking over the rural Peak District, inspires community ownership.  The Eastern Moors Partnership can only ever do so much to look after the site, but it is the people who live and work nearby and spend their time enjoying the site's benefits, who naturally become the guardians of the moors.  Making sure the Eastern Moors is protected and celebrated for its endless recreational possibilities, its value as an upland habitat for wildlife, a carbon sponge developing its capacity to hold carbon dioxide within its peat depths, a site teaming with cultural heritage.

Volunteering is at the heart of the Eastern Moors, and with nature deficit disorder banded as the 'illness of the 21st century', for adults and young people alike, local outdoor volunteering may well be just the tonic to help people reconnect with nature, benefiting both people and wildlife.

If you would like more information about becoming a volunteer on the Eastern Moors email enquiries@easternmoors.org.uk. You can also visit our website www.easternmoors.org.uk, 'like' us on Facebook www.facebook.com or add your photos to Flickr www.flickr.com/easternmoorspartnership