GreyShuck

joined 2 years ago
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A £3m regeneration scheme in Ilford will reopen access to the "almost forgotten" River Roding, developers say.

The Ilford Arrival includes a new bridge, pocket park, riverside walk and the rewilding of a local golf course, which the Mayor of London's office hopes will open up long-neglected public access to the River Roding.

Funding was granted by the mayor last August through the £12m investment scheme the Greater London Authority's Civic Partnership Programme (CPP).

 

Thousands of water tests to identify potential harmful pollution in rivers, lakes and estuaries in England have been cancelled in the last three months due to staff shortages, the BBC has learned.

The Environment Agency confirmed the cancellations after campaigners showed us internal emails and documents with plans for extensive cuts to monitoring programmes.

The cancelled tests are for so-called inorganic pollutants - substances such as nitrates and phosphates that can indicate sewage or agricultural pollution.

 

On former farmland and private estates, landowners, farmers, and local communities are working together to bring wildlife back — beavers to rivers, wildflowers to meadows, and balance to ecosystems long degraded.

But this progress is fragile. And today, it’s under threat.

The Labour government is considering a rollback of Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) legislation — one of the few hard-won environmental policies that asks developers to leave nature in a better state than they found it. If proposals now under consultation go ahead, small developments — which make up nearly all of England’s planning applications — will be exempt. The consequence? A loophole big enough to erase 215,000 hectares of potential habitat recovery in just ten years.

 

A previously unknown population of critically endangered native white-clawed crayfish has been rescued from dry riverbeds in Leeds.

The Environment Agency’s fisheries team carried out the emergency rescue after a member of the public reported seeing crayfish in distress in the Burley in Wharfedale watercourse.

Water levels were critically low due to ongoing drought in Yorkshire. When the team arrived, they found shallow pools separated by dry stretches of riverbed.

 

Wales continues to exceed its national peatland restoration target, restoring over 3,600 hectares of damaged peatland – the equivalent of more than 3,600 rugby fields – in just five years.

This nature-based climate action is estimated to deliver an emissions saving equal to taking 6,840 cars off the road.

The milestone was achieved through the National Peatland Action Programme (NPAP), funded by Welsh Government and delivered by Natural Resources Wales (NRW), alongside a wide network of local and national partners. Originally set a target of restoring 3,000 hectares by 2025, the Programme has gone 20% beyond that – reaching 3,600 hectares thanks to a fifth-year boost in delivery.

 

Wildlife campaigners have welcomed a voluntary ban by Cornwall Council on plastic flying rings to protect the county's seals.

Council member Rosie Moore proposed the voluntary ban on the sale, purchase and use of such rings, which was passed unanimously by the council on Tuesday.

The ban follows similar moves by other councils across England and Wales, as well as retailers such as Tesco and Sainsbury's volunteering to stop selling the toys, which can cause fatal injuries to seals.

 

A record number of Purple Emperors has been recorded at the Knepp Estate in Sussex, as the species – and many other butterflies – enjoy a prolific summer in southern England.

Ecologists at the rewilding project counted 283 individual Purple Emperors on 1 July – the highest single-day total ever recorded at the site, which is a national hot-spot for the species.

The species, once in steep decline during the 20th century, has been gradually returning to Knepp since 2001, when Isabella Tree and her husband, Charlie Burrell, transformed the former farmland into a nature-led rewilding estate.

 

Naturalists say it has been an “outstanding” summer for butterflies and other flying insects after last summer’s dramatic decline. Here are some of your sightings so far this year

 

Derbyshire Wildlife Trust’s Wilding Chesterfield project has received £245,000 in support from The National Lottery Heritage Fund to aid nature’s recovery in the town’s urban spaces and make it a priority for the people who live there. 

The latest State of Nature Report, released by the Trust in June, lays bare the reality that many of Derbyshire’s landscapes are fragmented, degraded, and struggling to support wildlife.

With urban wildlife under increasing pressure, the Wilding Chesterfield pilot project aims to turn the town’s streets into homes for the species that were once thriving there, such as hedgehogs, bats, swifts, and the Big Five pollinators: flies, wasps, bees, butterflies and moths.

 

One of the UK's rarest birds has bred on a nature reserve near Hull for the first time in its history.

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust (YWT) said a juvenile bittern was spotted at North Cave wetlands last week, marking the first time the species had ever bred on its site.

Bitterns, which make a distinctive booming call, were once extinct in the UK but returned in the 20th Century.

 

A grassland habitat could double in size as an old farming approach is set to be used to boost biodiversity.

Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust's proposal for the Greystones Farm nature reserve, external in Bourton-on-the-Water involves reinstating a traditional beef herd for grazing.

The trust said this change will help to increase the area of farmed land that also benefits nature, supporting farmland birds such as yellowhammers.

 

Sea swimmers have suggested brown flags could be used on beaches to indicate pollution in the water.

Members of the Bluetits sea swimming group said the flags would be especially useful to tourists who may not know how to check the water quality at beaches they visit.

Janet Shephard, who regularly swims at Perranporth in Cornwall said: "We get red flags if you can't see because of the sea conditions and I think we need brown flags for pollution."

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 9 points 3 months ago

a skiff that they had managed to build with canvas and ropes that they had brought with them, and wood that they had cut in the forest where they had hidden ; they had made this boat waterproof by means of a thick layer of tallow. These prisoners, from Arras to the wood in which they had hidden near the coast, had walked only at night, using the moon and the stars to guide them. The administration of the Navy tested the canoe made by these four prisoners; 6 men embarked, steered it with oars and held the sea without a drop of water entering.

What they are describing there is a Currach.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 31 points 3 months ago (5 children)

I would imagine that it is linked to the rainward side of the Urals, which I would imagine have more cloud and so would promote a selection for improved Vitamin D production, as with Ireland.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 4 points 3 months ago

A hornet has spent most of the week sizing up my shirt rail as a potential nest site. Persuasion hasn't worked, so I have ordered a screen for the window.

I was only called in for one problem at work over the weekend, which was easily resolved,. Spent the rest of it sorting out the shed, pottering in the garden and reading.

In a week and two days I will be off on a regular holiday with friends for a fortnight. It always seems a long slog between Xmas and this one, so really looking forward to it.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

From this strand of SF, Dennis E Taylor's Bobiverse books are by far the most compelling. It has been a while since I found something that was as unputdownable. I don't know that they are technically the 'best' in terms of literary merit or anything though. I'd say that Dan Simmons Hyperion probably wins on that front.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 2 points 3 months ago (3 children)

I've just started Iain M Banks' Use of Weapons, it would be that. I'm catching up with some SF this year and am alternating the Culture novels with others at the moment.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 1 points 3 months ago (2 children)

There is a window for "Where were you when...?" questions, I think.

  • Kennedy? Nope.
  • Moon landing? Just about.
  • Challenger? Yep.
  • Princess Di? Yep.
  • 9/11? Yep.
  • Lockdowns? Whatever...

I think that I am drifting past that window nowadays.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 4 points 3 months ago (5 children)

I was working today because I had basically forgotten that it was a bank holiday. Anyway, no interruptions, so I got a lot done, AND I now have day of TOIL.

Tomorrow and Sunday will be gardening, sorting out the shed and stuff like that.

I will then probably stay under the duvet and read on Monday, unless the weather is good and I feel particularly enthusiastic, in which case there is a walk that I have been considering for most of the winter. That might be the day.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 17 points 3 months ago
  • Worked for their local team, and was quite happy to challenge/push back on unreasonable top-down asks.
  • Quite happy to admit they didn't know stuff and asked for advice and ideas - and, of course, credited the appropriate team members for things that worked, but took responsibility themselves if things didn't go well.
  • Displayed authentic emotions and enthusiasm for the work, rather that present a bland corporate mask.
[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 6 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I'm peripatetic - I move between 3 different offices in a typical week, plus occasionally WFH. So:

  • Coastal heath, birch & oak woodland, the sea off to the side and a nuclear reactor in the background. In the autumn we'll get a starling murmuration in the later afternoon.
  • A small stretch of rough grass and a river wall, with the top of a couple of abandoned military buildings over the top of that. The occasional hare or barn owl will pass by.
  • The lawn and occasional ornamental trees of a moderately-sized country house with a shallow valley and more woodland behind that.
  • A tussocky lawn, a couple of larch and a spectacular old oak, then a mixed alder and ash covert with a small stream behind that. Hares, a great spotted woodpecker and the occasional stoat put in an appearance.
[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 4 points 3 months ago

Current place: basically nothing. It's an old house with thick joining walls. It's great The only time we hear anything at all is when they poke the fire, since this is on the joining wall.

Previous place: we had a neighbour who clearly had some issues with noise on one side. We are naturally quiet people, with no kids or pets or anything, and we don't have the TV on loud but she would start pounding on the wall when, for example, we were emptying the dish washer and putting stuff back in the cupboards at 9-10am, or a dozen other normal activities at normal times of the day. Meanwhile, we had someone on the other side who was working from home some of the time and we'd get him shouting down the phone most of the day at times (my wife got most of this, since she was at home most days) and watch loud sport stuff in the evenings.

The peak, though, was when Mr work-from-home was doing some renovation work in a bedroom. Either removing plaster or knocking a wall through or something involving hours of extremely loud hammering. Well, that came straight through to us and clearly Ms sensitive-to-noise could hear it as well, so that set her pounding on the wall, presumably thinking that it was us. There was a day when we were just sitting there listening to deafening hammering on one side and pounding on the other. At least my wife had some noise-cancelling headphones.

It was a nice place otherwise, but I'm very happy that we moved.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 14 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Beautifully shot and some fine performances all round. Very much a character-based one though. Don't go into it looking for action or fast-moving plot.

[–] GreyShuck@feddit.uk 5 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)
  • The Studio - First episode - seems fun, but too similar to The Franchise just at the moment, and without the subtle wit of that one.
  • The Righteous Gemstones - part way through season 4. This season lacks the coherence of the previous ones and seems to be be relying on continuous gross-out humour to make up for that. There was a natural end point with season 3. I will give this another episode, but may abandon it there.
  • Adolescence - I completely agree with those who say that it isn't the kids who need to see Adolescence, but the parents. I found that there was some heavy-handed moralising in eps 2 & 4, but 1 and 3 were intense and excellent and all of them were technically impressive.
  • The White Lotus - another compelling season of the wealthy and damned paraded for our judgement. Fine performances from Posey, Issacs and Goggins particularly.
  • The Residence - I wasn't sure about episode 1. It seemed to be trying too hard and not nearly as funny as the director seems to think, but episode 2 was much improved. I'll continue.
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