Volunteer Spotlight - Carol McStravick
Say hello to Carol, our PR & Communications team volunteer based in our office at Bewick House.
Say hello to Carol, our PR & Communications team volunteer based in our office at Bewick House.
Once considered a weed of cornfields, the common poppy is now in decline due to intensive agricultural practices. It can be found in seeded areas, on roadside verges and waste ground, and in field…
Meet our Wildlife Watch and Wilder Wardens volunteer, Poppy Bye.
15 Dartmoor ponies arrive in Norfolk this week, ready for their new role as conservation grazing animals on Norfolk Heathland.
Poppy plays with molehills, watches deer and birds, and nestles in the trunks of ancient trees to get in touch with her roots. Poppy's father was an inspirational Restoration Officer at the…
With her sketchbook, Carol loves to get lost in the detail of the shore’s wildlife, plants, textures and fossils. And she always comes away feeling enriched.
Carol loves watching the rituals of the birds at Rutland Water, especially at the feeding station that she helps to maintain as a volunteer. She loves to lose herself in her own personal episode…
This big, beautiful fungus is a common one that can often be spotted popping out of trees.
Join the warden on this children's Wildlife Watch event and learn all about the ponies that live on site and how they help conservation.
As its name suggests, the shaggy inkcap, or 'lawyer's wig', has a woolly, scaly surface to its bell-shaped toadstools. It is very common and can be seen at the road side, in…