Archive

  • Kissing under the Mistletoe

    19 December 2019

    Kissing under the Mistletoe

    Do you still embrace the custom of kissing under the Mistletoe at Christmas time? Mistletoe is one of Britain’s best-known plants but it’s becoming increasingly rare. As well as being steeped in tradition and folklore, Mistletoe provides an important winter food source for birds like the Mistle Thrush.

     
  • Future of transport in Sussex - please help

    18 December 2019

    Future of transport in Sussex - please help

    Please could you take a couple of minutes to send in a response to ask for transport which gives us all a cleaner and healthier future.

     
  • Soil - the biodiversity underworld

    18 December 2019

    Soil - the biodiversity underworld

    Soil is an amazing thing. Without soil we wouldn’t eat much, yet so many of us still see it as just dirt. Healthy soils store more carbon than the world’s oceans, and they are one of the most under publicised, wildlife-rich habitats on the planet.

     
  • Snow Bunting

    17 December 2019

    Snow Bunting

    The Snow Bunting, the planet’s toughest songbird, living in the Arctic Circle for much of the year. In the winter, you may be lucky enough to spot one of these plucky birds on a Sussex beach.

     
  • Queen's Park School go wild in the woods

    16 December 2019

    Queen's Park School go wild in the woods

    Queen’s Park School enjoy forest school sessions at The Deneway Nature Reserve

     
  • Tree Dressing Delight

    12 December 2019

    Tree Dressing Delight

    Families sang Christmas carols around the 300 year old oak tree at Woods Mill nature reserve last weekend

     
  • The naming of things

    11 December 2019

    The naming of things

    Nomenclature is the science of naming, with rules and systems for organising species and giving each one an official two-part title. But there is also an art to the naming of things and often a sense of magic, especially when it comes to common names. These are bestowed by everyday people with no rulebook in sight, and are often steeped in folklore.

     
  • Oil on Sussex beaches

    10 December 2019

    Oil on Sussex beaches

    One aspect of our seas has greatly improved in recent years - oil dumped by shipping…

     
  • 12 Days of Wild Christmas

    10 December 2019

    12 Days of Wild Christmas

    Get closer to nature this Christmas, with our winter wildlife challenge

     
  • Gnats All Folks!

    08 December 2019

    Gnats All Folks!

    This year I have been carrying out a survey of the invertebrates of the saline lagoons at Rye Harbour and am currently in the process of identifying the samples collected during the summer.

     
  • Regenerative agriculture and landscape innovation

    06 December 2019

    Regenerative agriculture and landscape innovation

    There is an urgent need to find high impact, landscape scale, community based solutions to the climate and biodiversity crises. With around 70% of UK land designated as farmland, many eyes have naturally focused on the farming world to come up with the solutions.

     
  • Creating landscapes that provide the riches in variety that people and nature need

    05 December 2019

    Creating landscapes that provide the riches in variety that people and nature need

    Guest blog by Chris Sandom, Senior Lecturer University of Sussex about how we create landscapes that people and nature need