Are dogs now more under control in Foots Cray meadows?

Back in February, North Cray resident, Jacky Cook, raised concerns about dog attacks on the Swans.

Swan

“At Five Arches Bridge, Foots Cray Meadows, there have been an increasing number of incidents of attacks by dogs not on leads and, therefore, uncontrolled in this area which has become a serious hazard to the river wildlife and other users of the meadows.

Last week, a swan was attacked by two Staffordshire Bull Terriers, both owners, were on the bank shouting to call their dogs out of the river and away from the swan but neither dog took any notice.

As usual it’s a minority spoiling it for the majority. If you see any such behaviour or incidents and have a camera to hand please take photos  and report it to the police.

This is a wonderful area for walking and dog walking and it should not be allowed to be turned into a free for all with out of control pets spoiling it for everyone else and of course to the detriment of the local wildlife.”

Jacky Cook.

The Friends of Foots Cray Meadows then reported the follow up from the local policing team.

Below is a message from The Cray Meadows Safer Neighbourhood of Bexley Police with some healthy proposals to the recent issues. posted 27/02/2015

from : Lorraine.Pinkerton@met.pnn.police.uk
Date : 25/02/2015 – 16:25 (GMTST)

Subject : Cray Meadows – Inconsiderate Dog Owners

Dear all,

The Cray Meadows Local Policing Team have recently been receiving reports regarding the inconsiderate and irresponsible behaviour of certain dogs/owners who use Foots Cray Meadows.

In response to these reports I would like to advise that I am currently engaging with a Wildlife Officer from Sutton Police Safer Partnership, in connection with the “LEAD Initiative” . This initiative is aimed at irresponsible dog owners regardless of breed or social background. This initiative works through engagement, intervention, prevention and where needed, the enforcement of irresponsible dog owners. I will be asking a member of the “lead team” to visit our offices as soon as possible to discuss how this can help.

As part of this initiative I will be seeking permission from Bexley Council to erect new signage at the location and “Coming To Notice Letters” will now be sent to owners of dogs if they come to our notice. We will also take action by way of control orders, and advising the Registered Social Landlords of the owners addresses where appropriate.

I am also liaising with a representative from Battersea Dogs & Cats Home in London. I hope to run a joint Community Engagement Event aimed at encouraging dog owners to be more responsible. Free microchips will be provided, along with ID tags and advice to members of the public. This will be a good opportunity to remind owners about their responsibilities for their dogs around wildlife as well as helping owners to fulfil their legal obligations by having their dogs microchipped by 2016 and having a tag (which is already law).

In the meantime your Local Policing Team will endeavour to provide additional patrols in the area and engage with and advise dog owners accordingly. I have also requested that the mobile park wardens employed by Bexley Council, pay particular attention to the area around Five Arches Bridge and report or deal with any incidents accordingly.

As regards community involvement in this issue I would like to ask that if you are a witness to, or are a victim of any of such behaviour in the future that you report this to the police, as this will enable officers to investigate any offences and take action(s) as appropriate.

I will keep you up to date of any further developments.

Regards,

PC 427 Lorraine Pinkerton
Cray Meadows Safer Neighbourhood Team
Email – craymeadows.snt@met.police.uk
Tel – 020 8721 2292

 

 

Important Information for Dog Owners

 When Visiting Foots Cray Meadows

Please take the time to read the following, it may improve your experience and save you and your dog from harm.

 Foots Cray Meadows is an oasis for people, dogs and wildlife and all can enjoy the Meadows side be side if we keep in mind a few points and issues.

·         Exercising my dog on the Meadows – with over 90 hs of open meadows, woodlands and riverside walks, away from main roads it’s the perfect place to walk your dog.

·         Do I have to keep my dog on a lead? No, however, owners must be in control of their dogs at All times, if that means you need to keep your dog on a lead then it is your responsibility.

·         But my dog is friendly.  You know your dog, but be aware of other park users, especially those without dogs who may be nervous of them.

·         Do I have to clean up after my Dog?  It is against the bylaws to allow your dog to foul any part of the Meadows, dog bins are provided. Not only is dog mess unsightly and unpleasant, but it can contain pests and illnesses that can spread to children and other dogs.

·         Can I be fined for not clearing up after my dog ? Yes, enforcement officers can issue on the spot fines in parks as well as on the highway.

 ·         Can dogs go into the lake and river? Dogs are allowed to enter the river down stream of Five Arches, but are not allowed in the lake or the river further upstream (towards Penny Farthing bridge), this area is a designated nature reserve- please see signs.

·         How can my dog disturb wildlife? Even when dogs do not chase wildlife, their very presence will affect many species, breeding birds such as the kingfisher, moorhens and other water fowl are most at risk from disturbance in and around the lake and river.

The area is now so popular with dog walking and the number of dogs is so high, that the disturbance to wildlife is now a significant threat to some species.

·         I can’t stop my dog going in the water or after wildlife! It is your responsibly to control your dog.

·         Is my dog at risk? dogs are sometimes attacked by the swans, especially when they have young to protect, even a large dog can get into trouble in the water when faced with a swan. Dogs can also catch certain illness, some serious, from the water.

RememberYou are responsible by law to control your dog. If in doubt put your dog on lead, keep dogs out of the lake and the up stream of the river and away from the swans and please, pleaseclean up after your Dog.

And finally …. The Meadows is fantastic place to bring your family and (if you have one) your dog, so please enjoy your time here and helps us keep Meadows special for everyone to enjoy and for the wildlife to flourish!

http://www.footscraymeadows.org/page14.htm

How is dog (and owner) behaviour in the meadows now?

photo by:
Posted in Foots Cray Meadows, Parks, Rivers | Leave a comment

Woodlands Farm summer wildlife events announced

Woodlands Farm on Shooter’s Hill is running a number of wildlife survey events this summer. Ffi/to get involved please contact:   “Hannah Forshaw – Education Officer” <education@thewoodlandsfarmtrust.org>

Sunday 7th June – Pollinator survey.  This will be done before, during and after the farm’s summer show event.

Tuesday 16th June – Amphibian survey.  3pm. The last in our series of pond surveys of the dipping pond

Wednesday 24th June – Meadow plants survey.  3pm.  This will be a survey of our hay meadows. As not part of the national survey this year we will be coming up with our own method.

Wednesday 1st July – Bat survey.  9.30pm.  Please let Hannah know in advance if you are interested in attending this.

Wednesday 8th July – Dragonfly Survey, 11am.  As part of dragonfly week we shall see what dragonflies/damselfies we can see!

Thursday 16th July – Bat survey.  9.20pm.  This is a provisional date at present.

Hopefully we can also do a butterfly survey as part of the Big Butterfly count. Date tba, possibly during the first week in August.

Hannah Forshaw, Education Officer

Posted in Bats, Bees, Butterflies, Dragonflies and Damselflies, Education, Plants in Bexley, Recording, Reptiles and Amphibians, Welling, Woodlands Farm | Leave a comment

Wildlife photos from Foots Cray meadows

The North Cray Residents Association website includes photos of local wildlife (including Grass Snakes).

http://northcrayresidents.org.uk/natureslides/natureslides.html

 

Posted in Foots Cray Meadows, Grass Snake | Leave a comment

North Cray residents oppose public open space sell off.

Letter to local residents from the North Cray Residents Association

Dear member

This is to further update you on Bexley’s plan to possibly sell off two pieces of Highway land in North Cray:  that outside No. 95 The Grove and a long strip running along St James Way/North Cray Road.

Below are links to the marked up drawings provided to me this week by the Parks and Open Spaces department.  In their covering letter they say that this proposal is at an early stage, no final decision on the disposal of any sites has yet been taken, and that even if the principle of disposal were to be agreed by full Council at its meeting on 4 March the sites will be subject to detailed technical evaluation and further public consultation before any decision is taken (at this meeting Bexley agreed the recommendations for its 2015-16 Budget and the debate can be seen on its web cast).  Bexley’s reason for possibly selling off the open spaces and highway land on its current hit list of 27 sites is to reduce maintenance costs.  Its argument is that “Slightly reducing the number of green areas for which we are responsible will allow us to maintain a reasonable level of grounds maintenance, to provide facilities within the parks and a diverse landscape with a range of habitats for biodiversity”.

http://northcrayresidents.org.uk/image/groupmail_links/95_the_grove.pdf

http://northcrayresidents.org.uk/image/groupmail_links/st_james_ncroad.pdf

How significant are the maintenance costs for the small patch of grass verge outside No. 95 The Grove – especially as I understand that local residents in the area more often than not cut the grass on their verges whilst doing this for their own front garden?

How significant are the costs for maintaining the beautiful strip of highway land lying between St James Way and the North Cray Road (close to the High Beeches Conservation Area), with its mature trees and Spring plantings made over the years?  What would be the effect on this as a habitat if it were to be sold off and perhaps developed in some way?  What would be the effect on the visual environment of the people living in St James Way or driving along the North Cray Road?

What might be included in any future hit list?  We are extremely worried about this, too, particularly if it were to include further sections of the grass verges with mature trees that run along both sides of the North Cray Road.  We lost our Village when the dual carriageway was built some 30 years ago and so this makes these grass verges and mature trees even more special to local people.

Bexley selling off any of these pieces of highway land is not acceptable. Nor would adopting, as an alternative, any savage ‘scorched earth’ approach to reduce maintenance costs.  Have a look  a look at the following Link which shows the appalling way in which Bexley reduced its maintenance costs on the banks of Wyncham Stream in Sidcup:-

http://www.bexleywildlife.org/residents-revolt-over-council-carnage-on-banks-of-wyncham-stream-new-row-as-council-describes-heavy-handed-management-of-sites-of-importance-for-nature-conservation-as-tree-maintenance/

We must all be on our guard against any similar budget-driven activity here in North Cray.

Jean Gammons
Secretary

Posted in Foots Cray Meadows, Save Our Green Spaces Campaign | Leave a comment

First Red-eyed Damselfly of year, whilst ‘BBC’ puts Danson in third place

A single male Red Eyed Damselfly (Erythromma najas), my first of the year for Bexley, was seen on algal mats on the south side of Danson Park lake this afternoon, May 28th. This adults of this species precede those of the Small Red-eyed Damselfly which also occurs here. The lack of blue on the sides of abdominal segment 8, and the lack of ante-humeral stripes, were diagnostic.

Bird specialist John Turner had flagged up Broad-bodied Chaser Dragonfly in his Danson list for August 2014, which is fairly late for this species to be on the wing. Today I finally saw my first specimen  of it here, a male, in the backwater at the north west corner of the lake, indulging in its typical behaviour of repeatedly coming back to perch on the top of the same stick poking out of the water.

Male Broad-bodied Chaser (Photo: Ralph Todd).

Male Broad-bodied Chaser (Photo: Ralph Todd).

This takes the confirmed Odonata list for Danson to 13 of the 18 species known to occur the Borough of Bexley, with Foots Cray Meadows on 15 (with at least 2 more species likely) and Crossness at Erith Marshes on 14. Thames Road Wetland has 12 so far.

There was also a single Large Red Damselfly nearby. John Arnold has also seen the latter at Danson since I first recorded it here a few weeks ago. It would seem that it is not very numerous at this site.

Chris Rose 

Posted in Crossness Nature Reserve, Danson Park, Dragonflies and Damselflies, Erith Marshes, Foots Cray Meadows, Recording, Thames Road Wetland | Leave a comment

FotS Danson wildlife walk

Six members plus a friend joined me as leader on this late spring wildlife walk organised by Friends of the Shuttle, the wildlife/environment action group in the park, looking primarily at plants, damselflies and birds.

Some of the plants of interest that I had hoped to point out were unfortunately in the process of being run over with the Council contractor’s tractor-hauled mowers, so no sign of Subterranean Clover flowers, and even the Lesser and Slender Trefoils were not evident near the lakeside route we took. Gone-over Clustered Clover flower heads were examined, an uncommon plant in London but quite common in parts of Bexley. A Knotted Clover was found in flower after the meeting. Meadow, Creeping and Bulbous Buttercups were compared, the latter displaying its reflexed sepals and propensity to thrive amongst Daffodils planted in grass where it can flower before the bulb’s leaves fully die back and the whole lot is cut down. The umbellifers Cow Parsley, Pignut, Fool’s Watercress and Hemlock Water Dropwort were compared and it was pointed out that some of these carrot family plants are perfectly edible whilst others are poisonous.  The differences between Smooth and Spiny Sow-thistle were looked at. Flag Irises were out in profusion. The only other native Iris, the Stinking or Gladwyn Iris, was on the dam wall, probably planted or a garden escape.

The bright yellow flowers of Flag Iris gracing the margins of Danson lake. (Photo: Chris Rose)

The bright yellow flowers of Flag Iris gracing the margins of Danson lake. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Various small Speedwells were in flower. The trick of reversing binoculars to create a makeshift magnifying glass, new to those present, was used to examine the attractive small white, violet-streaked flowers of Thyme-leaved Speedwell. Another, from the ‘arboretum’ area, identified after the meeting from a collected specimen, was the creeping perennial Heath Speedwell (Veronica officinalis), not a plant I’ve recorded in the park before from my rather hit-and-miss botanising of the site. The showy China-blue flowers of Germander Speedwell, which has a distinctive row of hairs down each side of the stem at 180 degrees to each other were near the south-east corner of the lake.

There was now a large amount of Ragged Robin in flower by the rock garden pond, along with Watercress, Brooklime (another kind of Speedwell) and Mimulus.

Ragged Robin is proliferating around the rock garden pond at Danson Park. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Ragged Robin is proliferating around the rock garden pond at Danson Park. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Lesser Stitchwort, which I don’t recall seeing at Danson before, was in flower near the woodland at the west end of the park.

The changeable weather and surprisingly stiff, quite cool breezes were not ideal for Odonata activity, but quite a few Common Blue, Azure and Blue-tailed damselflies were active in long grasses around islands of trees in the otherwise mown area north of the lake. Some pairs were in tandem, so breeding is underway. I caught a male Common Blue to show the club-shaped mark at  the top of the abdomen, as distinct from the square ‘U’ shape of the male Azure. After everyone else left the sun came out for bit longer for a while and I found a Large Red Damselfly, the first (Large) Red-eyed Damselfly I’ve seen this year and my first Broad-bodied Chaser for the site.

Only two butterflies were seen, both Speckled Woods, though a male Common Blue butterfly was in the Old English Garden after the meeting. It was explained that the powder blue butterflies now often seen in gardens in the area at this time of year are primarily the Holly Blue, though Common Blue can turn up.

Some of the birds seen were a Jay, Stock Dove, Grey Heron, a confiding Robin with a  damaged leg, Tufted Ducks, 2 Cormorant, a Great Crested Grebe and 3 Swift. There was a discussion of hybridisation between Mallards and various domesticated ducks, often leading to male Mallards with a rather ‘harlequin’ look to them.  To round things off, a Pied Wagtail was fluttering about on mats of algae at the end of the lake catching insects.

We didn’t get to see quite the array of things I’d hoped for, but like most sites, the more you visit, the more you get out of  it.

Chris Rose

Posted in Bexley, Bird watching, Butterflies, Danson Park, Dragonflies and Damselflies, Friends of the Shuttle, Invertebrates, Old English Garden, Parks, Plants in Bexley | Leave a comment

Guide to caterpillars

Butterfly Conservation charity has published a guide to Caterpillars.

Download the PDF file .

The guide can be downloaded here: https://app.box.com/s/cd6v8qyuwejlj834ecsrtf7yz0uro5p9

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Save Our Green Spaces Campaign questions protection of trees

SOCSC raises Freedom of Information request to question the future of the trees in the parks earmarked for sale.

Berwick Crescent

Berwick Crescent

Colin Rowland
Head of Parks and Open Spaces
London Borough of Bexley

Dear Colin
BEXLEY COUNCIL’S PROPOSED SALE OF 27 GREEN SITES
I am writing on behalf of the Save Our Green Spaces Campaign (SOGSC) set up by Bexley Natural Environment Forum (BNEF) to campaign against Bexley Council’s proposed sale of 27 parks and other green spaces in the borough.

Bexley Council’s website states that “Trees are an important natural asset and contribute to the quality of the urban and rural environment” and that they “ play an important role in the ecological system and can filter noise and pollution”. It goes on to say “As a matter of principle, the Council is concerned about the amount of unjustified pruning and felling of trees that takes place”.

SOGSC and BNEF welcome the Council’s commitment to trees in the borough. In the light of these statements, we would be interested to know (under Freedom of Information legislation) a) the number and type of trees on each of the 27 green spaces identified for sale; and b) how the Council proposes to protect these trees if the sites are sold.

I understand that the Council recently conducted an audit of trees in the borough and therefore assume that this information is readily available.

I look forward to hearing from you.
Yours sincerely

Mandy Stevens, SOGSC

Posted in Bexley Council, Save Our Green Spaces Campaign, Trees | Leave a comment

Thames Road Wetland work on a grey May day

It was a grey day at Thames Road Wetland yesterday (May 25th).

An overcast afternoon at Thames Road Wetland. (Photo: Chris Rose)

An overcast afternoon at Thames Road Wetland. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Whilst there were a lot of Azure Damselflies, and some Blue-tails, they were all perched on grasses or nettles and not flying. There wasn’t a lot of avian action either. A Common Whitethroat was seen. Reed Warblers were vocalising. A pair of Coot on the ‘lake’ had 2 chicks. A Cetti’s Warbler called frequently. There was the usual procession of Carrion Crows heading south/south-west in the early evening, with a stream of some 57 at one point.  10 Swifts were screeching high over the site late on.

The highlight was only the second Grass Snake I’ve managed to photograph at the site. Hiding under a piece of tile with its head under its body, it didn’t move while I took the picture below and covered it over again.

Grass Snake at Thames Road Wetland. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Grass Snake at Thames Road Wetland. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Work done included:

– Manual re-cutting with shears of management paths along which vegetation has shot up since my last session, and adding cut material to potential Grass Snake egg-laying heaps.

– Clearing some vegetation around existing Lizard basking sites.

– ‘Weeding’ around Hop Sedge and Square-stemmed St. John’s-wort in the western draw-down zone, particularly to keep down Common Reed growth.

– Checking on two Alder saplings recently planted and clearing rank vegetation from around them.

– Clearing a patch and planting another 8 Marsh Sow-thistles to make up for losses elsewhere, possibly due to Water Vole burrowing or grazing.

– Scything off top growth of small Giant Hogweed plants on the  Sewer Pipe Embankment.

Chris Rose, volunteer Site Manager. 

Posted in Grass Snake, Reptiles and Amphibians, Thames Road Wetland, vegetation management, Volunteering | Leave a comment

SINCs fly-tipping shame

Fly-tipping anywhere is lamentable, but here are some current examples from Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation in Bexley ….

Bursted Woods, 23rd May.

Bursted Woods, 23rd May.

River Cray, By-way 105, 25th May. This will take up several person hours of volunteer river-keeper time to deal with by the time we have got a boat or other kit to the site and back.

River Cray, By-way 105, 25th May. This will take up several person hours of volunteer river-keeper time to deal with by the time we have got a boat or other kit to the site and back.

River Wansunt by Thames Road Wetland. Criminals have now dumped 3 motorbikes/scooters in Crayford rivers in the past few months.

River Wansunt by Thames Road Wetland. 25th May. Criminals have now dumped 3 motorbikes/scooters in Crayford rivers in the past few months.

And a child's baby buggy just for good measure ....

And a child’s baby buggy just for good measure ….

All photos by Chris Rose.

Posted in Bexley, Bursted Woods, Cray Riverkeepers, Crayford, Environment, Fly-tipping, River Cray, River Wansunt, Rivers, Thames Road Wetland | Leave a comment