Shropshire Council sent this bulletin at 16-09-2021 11:30 AM BST
Valuing our peatland – the boggy/soggy bits of the AONB
Peatland is a wetland habitat with waterlogged soils made of dead and decaying plants. It’s hugely important as it acts as a carbon store, is a great habitat for wildlife, and can play a vital role in water management.
For centuries, peatland has been cultivated, drained and degraded. Once dry, peat easily erodes and releases carbon dioxide making it one of the biggest sources of greenhouse gas.
With greater emphasis on land management for carbon storage, more attention is being paid to the restoration of peatlands. Retaining water, rather than encouraging it to runoff will help restore our peatlands.
Local pockets of peat
Peatlands in the Shropshire Hills have perhaps been overlooked in the past, since they are mainly highly modified (as pasture or forestry) or otherwise small areas of ‘pockety’ peat.
Over the last six months, we have been developing our understanding of local peat deposits and have mapped 3700ha of known peatland (predominantly shallow or soil with peaty pockets), 37 UKSO (UK Soil Observatory) deep peat sites, 9 turbary commons (these are places where peat was once dug), over 800 marsh/mire sites and 2600ha of land that is thought to be predominantly peaty.
This desk-based exercise has identified peat sites and turbary commons that are not recorded on maps, suggesting the extent of our peat is under recorded. Taken together, we estimate that by area this amounts to 7.8% of the AONB.
Only a small proportion of this percentage (under 500ha) is in positive management. But there’s potential to restore much more to achieve local carbon capture, link to other priority habitats to help nature recovery and to improve water quality and flood mitigation.
Project plans
The Defra Nature for Climate Peatland Grant Scheme aims to start the process of restoring 35,000ha of degraded peatland in England up to 2025. We have submitted a bid to the Scheme for an 18-month Discovery Phase which will focus on work to break-down the barriers to peatland restoration and enable us to develop plans for active restoration in the future.
The grant will fund the development of a new Shropshire Hills Peat Partnership, pay for a dedicated Project Officer to engage and consult with landowners about potential restoration projects, and fund the necessary hydrological and ecological surveys which will inform restoration proposals delivered under stage two of the fund.
If our bid is successful the project will begin in November this year and will be a major step forward in the restoration of our most important carbon store. For more information please email Mike.Kelly@shropshire.gov.uk
Grants for farm projects delivering public benefits
In July, Defra launched a new 3-year funding programme aimed at farmers and land managers in England’s Protected Landscapes (AONBs and National Parks).
The Farming in Protected Landscapes programme is additional Government investment to enable Protected Landscape bodies, farmers and land managers to work closer together to deliver bigger and better outcomes for the environment, for people and for the area.
The Shropshire Hills AONB Partnership is administering the programme locally. We have over £700,000 available to distribute this financial year to one-off farming projects which demonstrate benefits to climate, nature, people and place.
With over 900 farm holdings registered in the AONB, this is an exciting opportunity to support local farmers to help deliver public benefits in the Shropshire Hills landscape such as rewetting upland peaty soil, or reducing soil erosion, working to protect an important archaeological feature or improving public access.
Projects must support at least one of the Programme outcomes as well as priorities from the Shropshire Hills AONB Management Plan and Nature Recovery Plan. These are highlighted in our local priorities document which also gives example projects to help applicants formulate their ideas.
Over 60 people joined us on two webinars in August to hear more about the programme and opportunities. The recording is available to view here. The first batch of applications will go for approval to the Local Assessment Panel in October.
The Programme is open to farmers, land managers and landowners (including from the private, public and charity sector) with land within the Shropshire Hills AONB, and applications must be for land that forms part of the farmed environment or an agricultural holding.
Applicants are being supported by our Farming in Protected Landscapes Adviser, Alison Jones. For more information about the programme please visit our Farming in Protected Landscapes webpage
A summer of adventure in the Shropshire Hills
Over 60 Young Rangers have taken part in a range of outdoor activities this summer from canoeing and rock climbing, to habitat mapping and building a pond dipping platform. The programme offers 12-16 year old's opportunities for exploration, learning and adventure as they work to achieve their John Muir Award. Four groups have been set up in the Shropshire Hills and much of the activity takes place locally so that the young rangers are involved in the countryside on their doorstep. This autumn/winter activity programme is being prepared and will include getting involved in the local CPRE Shropshire hedgerow project.
Green Leaders is the second strand to our youth engagement work, which launched this summer. It's a conservation, campaigning and leadership project for young adults, aged between 17 - 21, who live in or close to the AONB. Participants can get involved in a range of activities through campaigns and projects, and build on their knowledge of the Shropshire Hills landscape, its management and issues. It's a great opportunity to meet like-minded people and develop new skill. We hope that participants will become advocates for the Shropshire Hills AONB, and play an active role in representing young people's priorities and concerns on the AONB Partnership.
The eyes of the world will be on the UK in a few weeks’ time as world leaders gather for the COP 26 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow.
Action on climate change is integral with AONB purposes to conserve and enhance the landscape. The AONB network nationally is working to see how it can be most effective in this work.
Since AONB organisations are small and most don’t manage any land directly, the emphasis is on the influencing role we can play – in policies and strategies, projects and activity of partners, and in affecting public behaviour.
A group of staff from different AONB teams are collaborating through a programme looking at agriculture, nature-based solutions, buildings and development, sustainable tourism and transport, and renewable energy. As well as looking at what works, good examples and evidence, this work will make recommendations on further action, and roll out training and awareness among AONB teams and partnerships. Some of this will be shared on Twitter next week, during Landscapes for Life week.
We need governments to commit to bold action at COP26, but this will need to be matched by action at regional and local levels, by companies, community organisations and individuals. It’s a good time to ask in all these contexts of our lives whether there’s more we can do? Among many resources available on climate action, here is some excellent material on the importance of public engagement - https://climateoutreach.org/about-us/theory-of-change/
New partner projects with exciting volunteering opportunities
Delve into the past on Clee Liberty & the Long Mynd
Over the next three years, the Our Common Cause project will be working to conserve and enhance the heritage of commons and commoning, here in the Shropshire Hills, but also on Dartmoor, in the Lake District and the Yorkshire Dales.
Coming up are two local launch events to explain the project and ways to get involved:
The activities planned for the Long Mynd and Clee Liberty will help us to delve into the past, understand the historic features better and preserve and document them for the future. The volunteering opportunities can be as hands on as you like and are suitable for all ages and abilities.
Funding from the National Heritage Lottery is enabling ‘Our Common Cause’ to work with 12 upland commons in four of England's national landscapes. Here in the Shropshire Hills, the project will focus on three upland commons; the Long Mynd, Stiperstones and Clee Liberty.
Opening the Ark - spreading biodiversity beyond the lychgate
A new project has been launched in the Shropshire Hills which will see the fantastic biodiversity found within churchyards and cemeteries spreading back out into our towns, villages, verges, gardens and school grounds.
Caring for God’s Acre has received funding from Defra via the Green Recovery Challenge Fund (until March 2022) to work with burial ground managers, communities and conservation partners, to increase biodiversity within burial grounds and to radiate that diversity out into the wider community. Burial grounds contain our oldest trees, our rarest lichens and fungi, and precious wildflower meadows, which are in serious decline throughout the UK.
Opening the Ark will plan, organise, manage and deliver a programme of activities and public facing events with a specific focus on nature-based volunteer involvement and participation which will go towards reversing this trend of habitat loss and species decline.
This will include focused volunteer conservation task days at burial grounds, churchyards, cemeteries and at local community spaces throughout the AONB as well as running nature discovery days, events and community training days – all focusing on nature and increasing the rich biodiversity found within the Shropshire Hills.
For more information and details of how you, your churchyard or your community can become involved, contact Mick Clifton at Caring for God’s Acre on 01588 673041 or email mick@cfga.org.uk
Stepping Stones between the Stretton hills & Stiperstones
The Stepping Stones Project has also been awarded a grant from the Green Recovery Challenge Fund to continue their work connecting habitats between the Stretton hills, Long Mynd and Stiperstones.
Stepping Stones supports environmental activities by local farmers, landowners, community and volunteer groups within the project area, and is helping these groups to identify opportunities for using the funds to support their conservation work.
Programmes of work for the creation of wildflower meadows, hedgerow and tree planting, the conservation of curlew, dormouse and small pearl-bordered fritillary have been identified and are being worked up in detail for funding support.
Some of this will be undertaken or supported by a Stepping Stones volunteer team and by other volunteer groups. To keep in touch with the project’s activities and find out about volunteering opportunities please email charlie.bell@nationaltrust.org.uk
The project is also working with the Upper Onny Farmers Group to develop a programme of farm demonstrations and specialist workshops to support local farmers and landowners. The events programme aims to encourage farmers to learn from other farmers’ experiences in managing land in environmentally friendly ways that also benefit the farm businesses.
The first farmer event will focus on hay meadow creation, restoration and management at the end of September. The programme encourages farmers to collaborate and explore ways by which the management of their farm holdings can result in wider landscape-scale environmental benefits for wildlife, water quality and carbon capture.
This is an exciting new project with CPRE Shropshire to create and restore local hedgerows. There are lots of opportunities to get involved with planting and identification, as well as guided walks, talks and workshops. The project is also working with Forest Schools and young adults, and we have helped to put together hedgerow themed educational resources. For more information about the project and activities see https://www.cpreshropshire.org.uk/hedgerow-project