Newsletters
september 2011
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The leaves on the elder trees are just starting to turn yellow indicating that autumn has caught up with Stover. Horse chestnut and beech are usually the next trees to don their autumn colours. For the next month the Country Park will be laden with fruits, seeds and nuts. Blackberries are in abundance and are starting to ripen, and the red rowan berries and black elder berries in particular stand out around the Park. The consumers will start to fatten themselves up before hibernation or migration and, at the same time are dispersing the plant seeds. Foxes and badgers will take advantage of the abundance of blackberries, which show up in their droppings. Squirrels will start to bury their food and some resident birds are already making preparations for the winter. Marsh, willow and coal tits along with jays will start to store acorns and nuts in a variety of places throughout the woods, which they will eat during the winter when food sources are scarce. A single jay will store hundreds of acorns over the autumn months. They have excellent memories and are able to locate most of their stores. Some acorns however are forgotten or are not needed, and these will grow into oak trees if conditions allow. The robins have now resumed singing after their summer break. During September the last of the young robins get their full plumage and will sing to defend their territories which they will need to survive the winter. Tawny owls are at their most vocal in September as pairs set up territories for the spring. Two pairs of nightjar bred on Stover’s heaths this summer. One pair fledged a single young from the first brood and two from the second. The second pair’s nest remained unlocated. The adults will have now left Stover to migrate back to Africa. The great autumn bird migration is now underway with the swifts having already left. Keep an eye out for flocks of swallows, house martins and sand martins as they start to mass ready to head south. As these migrants leave, our winter residents start to arrive. The black-headed gulls started to get their winter plumage in August (they lose their black heads!). Juvenile moorhen and coot can be seen on the lake as they move through Stover to disperse. Kingfishers and herons were recorded on several occasions last month. The mandarin ducks and shelduck have remained on Stover Lake throughout August. Adders basked in the sun on the heath on the hotter days of August and grass snakes were seen swimming in the lake. Young newts will start to leave the lakes and ponds this month. Now that the breeding season is over many animals are now foraging and feeding in preparation for winter. Badgers extend their setts in September and their young become independent. Young weasels will also start to disperse along with young mink. The latter rarely have territories of their own and so move around the countryside. To avoid meeting adult territory holders at night, when they are hunting, young mink will hunt during the day making them easy to spot. There have been several seen in the marsh during August. Keep an eye out for dead shrews on the paths in the woods. Unfortunately, autumn is the peak time for adults to die as they only live for just over a year. Harvest mice are usually associated with arable farmland. However, Stover has a healthy population that make their ball-shaped nests in the reeds in the marsh and amongst the tall grasses in the meadow areas. They continue to breed well into October and the young from these late litters that survive the winter form the majority of next years breeding population. As the vegetation dies down during the autumn the breeding nests become more visible. Hedgehog’s breed well into September and will become more visible in daylight hours as they actively feed to put on weight before the winter. |
On sunny days there are still plenty of butterflies and dragonflies about. The second generation of Stover’s butterflies is now on the wing and as many species hibernate it is vital to have a late supply of nectar in order to survive. That is why the late flowering plants such as fleabane, heather, scabious, ground elder, mint and yarrow are so important for many insects. Ivy flowers in the autumn and produces berries in the Spring; providing nectar and pollen at just the right time for hibernating insects to build up their reserves.
Fleabane— a late flowering plant Southern, common and migrant hawkers are now on the wing. The most abundant dragonfly seen during September is the common darter along with emerald and azure damselflies. Many grasshoppers and crickets are continuing to sing.
Common Darter Dragonfly Keep an eye out for the varieties of fungi, which are starting to appear around the Park. The Chairman and Vice-Chairman of DCC visited Stover in August in light of the Country Park being awarded the Green Flag by the Civic Trust for the eighth year running.
Chairman’s and vice-chairman’s visit to Stover celebrate A bronze working event was held on the pinetum during August. Using charcoal produced in Stover Park the group smelt tin and copper ores using methods dating back to the Bronze Age to cast a bronze axe head. Attendee’s then worked on their own pre-cast axe; hammer hardening, polishing and decorating.
. Bronze Axe Head The Stover Volunteers Days commence again in September after the summer break. On Sunday 25th September we will be working in the lower wood clearing an area of rhododendron. All are welcome – future dates along with details regarding guided walks and children’s activities can be found on the Autumn Events Programme. |





