Meadows were once
a defining feature of rural Ireland, bringing beauty, colour and a rich
biodiversity to our countryside. These
hay fields were populated by a diverse range of wildflowers such as clover,
buttercup, daisy, ragged robin, poppy, bird’s-foot trefoil and yarrow providing
an important home for bees, butterflies and other pollinators. However urbanisation, the use of
chemical fertilisers and intensive monoculture farming in the modern era has
eliminated much of these traditional grasslands leading to a collapse in the
numbers of native non-woody plants and a corresponding decrease in the insect
populations that fed off them as well as the rest of the interlinked organisms
of an ecosystem such as birds and mammals.
Surveys in
Britain have shown that the country has lost over 97% of its meadow habitat
since World War Two. Though no national statistics exists in Ireland,
nevertheless a similar situation probably occurs here.
Now the two Galway city-based branches of the Conservation Volunteers are coming together under the supervision of Padraic Keirns to develop an urban meadow in Terryland Forest Park. The project will involve first preparing the ground by cutting back the grass, before the sowing of yellow rattle which is known as the ‘meadow maker’ as it reduces grass growth as well as other native Irish wildflower species as devil's-bit scabious, crow garlic, ragged robin, oxeye daisy, primrose and poppy.
Now the two Galway city-based branches of the Conservation Volunteers are coming together under the supervision of Padraic Keirns to develop an urban meadow in Terryland Forest Park. The project will involve first preparing the ground by cutting back the grass, before the sowing of yellow rattle which is known as the ‘meadow maker’ as it reduces grass growth as well as other native Irish wildflower species as devil's-bit scabious, crow garlic, ragged robin, oxeye daisy, primrose and poppy.
Once the meadow
matures next year, volunteers will annually mow the grass using the traditional
hand scythes that will be provided by Michael Tiernan and the members of Cumann
na bhFear (Ballinfoile Mór Men’s Shed).
Anyone interested
in taking part in this important ecological project should assemble at 10am on
Saturday August 29th at the Quincentennial Bridge entrance to
Terryland Forest Park.
Further
information can be obtained from Brendan Smith at speediecelt@gmail.com
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