Wilder Worcestershire 2.0

Wilder Worcestershire 2.0

Worcester by Paul Lane

Julie takes a look at our exciting new project to support communities to help nature in their neighbourhoods...

Wilder Worcestershire: Neighbourhoods Nurturing Nature. That’s a lot of alliteration for one project but then it’s going to be a lot of amazing improvements for nature in Worcestershire. We have three years to turn a vision into a reality using funding from both The National Lottery Heritage Fund and the Trust itself to involve communities in conservation and creating better spaces for both nature and people. 

There are three of us in the project team. There's me - Julie Grainger - I'll be leading the team after previously working with communities as part of the Trust’s Monkwood and Green Farm project. I'm joined by ecologist Connor McGoldrick and (soon to join us) ex-teacher Lucy Thirkell. We'll be liaising with communities to learn more about how people want to help nature in their neighbourhoods before supporting them to establish new groups and begin their steps to taking action for nature to make a Wilder Worcestershire.

The question might be 'what is a wilder place?' According to my Collins dictionary:

Wild animals or plants live or grow in natural surroundings and are not looked after by people.

Wild land is natural and is not used by people.

There is a theme here that seems to imply that our human species shouldn’t be involved in wild spaces. But I think we all now realise that we have spoiled, trampled and besieged nature to a point where it needs help and support to maintain any kind of wilderness.

On another note, Collins tells us that Wild behaviour is uncontrolled, excited or energetic. I like the sound of this but at my age I’m not sure I can completely achieve any more.

So where does Wilder Worcestershire originate and where is it going on its route to improve areas for wildlife? Well, once upon a time back in 2023 there was a report called the State of Nature and it told us that nature is continuing to decline at an alarming rate in the UK. A significant contributor to this decline is the disconnection between people and nature. Our new project builds on the amazing progress made by the original Wilder Worcester team to focus on the urgent need to tackle the biodiversity crisis and reconnect communities with nature in Worcestershire. It aims to support community-led action, with a focus on youth (ages 13 - 25) and underrepresented communities and will encourage collaboration among a diverse range of stakeholders to create a positive impact on the county's natural heritage.

Over the next three years, we will focus on the River Salwarpe to River Severn corridor, encompassing Droitwich, Fernhill Heath, Worcester and Kempsey, where a quarter of the population of Worcestershire live. This corridor features diverse natural landscapes, hosting vital habitats and species outlined in the Worcestershire Biodiversity Action Plan. It is rich in opportunities to support and encourage local communities to take action for nature.

Wildflowers near buildings by Paul Lane

Wildflowers near buildings by Paul Lane

The document we are using as guidance will be the aforementioned Worcestershire Biodiversity Action Plan, sometimes called the Worcs BAP (not a bread roll that you would eat with a certain kind of local condiment). This document identifies 17 habitats and 26 species, or species groups, which are of particular conservation priority in the county. Each individual Action Plan gives an overview of the status of the habitat or species in Worcestershire, identifies threats to it and current areas of work or activity being undertaken by partners. The plan then presents aims and objectives for the conservation of that habitat or species over the 10-year lifespan of the BAP. The idea is that the Wilder Worcestershire project will be able to work in communities on areas that they are interested in, which can vary from a specific habitat such as hedgerows to a specific species such as brown hairstreak butterflies. Maybe it could be a series of plant pots full of pollinator-friendly plants outside every house in a street? Or a pile of dead wood for invertebrates? The possibilities are endless!

What I think I love most about this job is that I get to talk to people about their nature stories and celebrate in their conservation successes no matter how big or small, whether they spent £1000s on equipment and landscaping or £2.50 on a packet of seeds from their local supermarket. If you're not doing anything for nature right now but would like to, then please get in touch. We are genuinely interested in your ideas and experiences and can support you to take action or can put you in touch with others who share your vision or have their own stories to tell...then we can all become wild!

 

Julie Grainger is Trust's Wilder Worcestershire Project Manager and is inspiring, helping and supporting communities to take action for nature on their doorstep.