Memories of Essex Wildlife Trust

Butterfly on purple flower

Julia Byczynski

Memories of Essex Wildlife Trust

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Fiona Agassiz

In 2005, the Brentwood and Billericay (B&B) Local Group was approached by Warley Place reserve to see what might be done to stabilise the old conservatory. This is the only standing part of Ellen Willmott's once grand house.  An initial donation of £5000 was given by Phyllis Gregory, whose father was taught horticulture by Ellen Willmott. He then went on to work at Kew and RHS Wisley. Another £1000 was donated by the Great Warley Conservation Society.  The Local Group wrote an appeal letter  to all B&B and Havering members. These very generous donations helped to achieve the required total of £33,000.  An incredible feat. A grant was also obtained by EWT Head Office. The Local Group found a suitable  contractor, and work was completed in April 2006.

Warley Place nature reserve

Warley Place nature reserve

Shirley Jonas 

Reminiscing about the Art Exhibition which I helped run at Thorndon visitor centre for 4 or 5 years in the 2000s.  We sold lots of pictures and raised money for the Local Group. One year, I can remember one picture being stolen but I didn't mind too much because it wasn't terribly good! 

Darren Tansley

I've worked for the Trust for nearly 18 years and one of the most striking memories was seeing the first beaver dam in Essex for 700 years at Spains Hall after 18 months of preparation for the release of this iconic mammal. I am still blown away by what these rodents have achieved in a few short years on that site and how much it has helped relieve flooding to the village downstream. I never imagined I would be part of a project like that when I switched from being a touring and recording musician in my 20s and 30s to a career in nature conservation.

Beaver dam

Beaver dam

John Allen

Organising my first plant sale at the Thorndon Visitor Centre in 2009 and taking over from the successes of the late great Bill Tidmus I wanted to get away from the general perception of "cheap and cheerful" charity sales - I was in it for the money! In those days we did have the cake/ home baking stall (thanks to Shirley Jonas and Co.) and the craft stall of Olive Baldwin And Thelma Wilson -  all of the required standard! We did also have some top quality plants, one of which was a large pot (very big instant garden border size) of Day Lily. I suggested to helper "X", (a valued and respected volunteer) that we did not let this treasure go for less than £10.00. 

   Later in the day "X" came up and reported the sale of this item.

  "Oh! Good, for how much?

  "X" said, "£2.00"!!

  Perhaps I am "a man who knows the price of everything, but the value of nothing" (Oscar Wilde).

  The sale was a great success.

Peter Rowe

I joined in 1969 after visiting Fingringhoe Wick, and being impressed with the idea of having nature reserves in the Colchester area. At that time you could walk right down to the sandy beach and have a swim if you wanted to. It was great to see sand martins nesting. It was the first time i heard nightingales and learn about all the winter visiting seabirds. I went on to have a family and often walked the reserve with my children as they grew up. Its astonishing  and heart warming to see how the Trust has grown and flourished, and one of the few things that have improved in my 80 years. 

View from Fingringhoe Wick nature reserve

View from Fingringhoe Wick nature reserve

Joan Westover

Reflecting on Kate Gibbs who looked after the Trust's Watch Group for youngsters in Blackmore. She was a biologist. She ran nature expeditions for the children. I can remember her creating plaster of paris moulds of deer prints which they found when they were out & about. Fascinating for the children.  

Paula Closs

Remembering fondly Jim Jarmy MBE who died earlier this year. In the 1990s, he was volunteer warden at Warley Place. He used to manage the working parties as well as the Spring Bulb Spectacular as it was in those days. He was a lovely man.

Spring flowers at Warley Place nature reserve

Spring flowers at Warley Place nature reserve

Thelma Wilson 

Visiting Stondon Massey Church as a Local Group in Summer 1998 to see the long-eared bats come down into the church from the belfry and fly around to warm up before going outside.  We had torches and could see them sitting high up, and peering down with their big eyes and lovely big ears.

John Harpole

Spotting an adder while volunteering at Langdon.

Adder

Adder

Olive Baldwin

Thinking back to the time, in the 1980s, when Warley Place had one open weekend a year, in April, with a tea marquee.  It always seemed to rain and one year there was snow on the ground, and we stood on straw in the tent when serving tea and cakes, and the lady in charge cheerfully and shamelessly watered the milk (full cream then!) because we were running out. 

Wendy Norris

One of the first memories I have is going with the children to Fingringhoe Wick for a pond dipping session. Such fun and my husband who was a sailor thoroughly enjoyed watching the boats in the waters around the site. a great day out.

View from Fingringhoe Wick nature reserve

View from Fingringhoe Wick nature reserve

Judith Robson

Today I volunteer at Abberton, helping out with the education team - but my memory is not concerning volunteering, it goes back almost the full 65 years!

As a young child I was taken by my father to Fingringhoe Wick. I think this would have been around 1960/61 as the site was not yet open as a reserve, and possibly was at the stage when the then ENT was purchasing it. My dad was a early member and very involved in the establishment of the Trust with a group of like-minded naturalists . There were no bird hides, just piles of gravel and rusting machinery left over from the works and a few overgrown paths. There was a dilapidated bunkhouse (where future work parties sometimes stayed overnight) and the beach with a jetty and a boat wreck. Today this wreck, in front of Robbie's Hide, has all but disappeared.

We thought it was a wonderful place, wild but not quiet, as the marshes were full of the sound of bird calls. It seemed to be the ideal place for a nature reserve and I remember many discussions at home about the possibilities for its use and the expansion of the Trust. The Wick was so different from where we lived at that time, opposite the ancient Pound Wood in Daws Heath which in the future was to become another Trust reserve.

A later memory concerns that of the devastating fire which swept across the Fingringhoe site in September 1972 as a result of stubble burning on the adjacent farmland. We were all so upset to see the blackened remains of the swathes of scrub and nature trail and the area took a few years to recover. I think this experience helped bring about changes in local laws and eventually a ban on stubble burning.

All this seems so long ago... but thankfully new generations have stepped up to expand the work of EWT, to encourage interest and to keep more corners of Essex for nature. You can still hear the birds call on the Fingringhoe marshes, and long may they remain.

Dean Williams

I love working for the trust and making a real difference for nature with a fab group of staff and volunteers working toward the same goal. I'm lucky that at Chafford Gorges Nature Reserve the site is relatively young and there has been lots of restoration works here, which are really satisfying. We have restored many, many hectares of biodiverse Calcareous grassland here, with our success borne out from the orchid counts every year, numbers increasing and orchids spreading to new areas of the reserve every year. 

We have removed over 20 skips worth of building waste and fly tipping as well as 440 litres of rubbish fortnightly for the past 8 years, Which has really made the site a more inviting place for people and wildlife. 

We have installed trails and interpretation boards around the whole reserve to link all the areas together, as well as steps and rope rails to make traversing the old quarries easier. 

Too much to write in here but some of the best days of my life are spent here at Chafford Gorges Nature Reserve.

Dean Williams with volunteers at Chafford Gorges

Dean Williams with volunteers at Chafford Gorges

Share your memories of Essex Wildlife Trust

We’re celebrating 65 years of Essex Wildlife Trust. Write down your highlights and memories over the last six and a half decades. Let’s look back at all we’ve achieved together for wildlife.

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