Paul Loughnane has been awarded a British Empire
Medal in the New Year's Honours for services to nature conservation in Wirral.
For the last 20 years, Paul has led the management work on New Ferry Butterfly
Park, Cheshire Wildlife Trust's popular community nature reserve next to
Bebington station. Without such management, the value of the Park to
butterflies and bees would be much less than it now is. For the last 11 years
he has been the Park's secretary. For at least 25 years Paul has been a
key person in Wirral Countryside Volunteers, for much of that time serving as
secretary and organising the various tasks undertaken by the group. Paul is an
expert hedge-layer and scytheman, and skilled at other woodland conservation
work such as coppicing and tree planting. His skills have benefited many sites across
Wirral, including Thornton Wood in Dibbinsdale, Gilroy Nature Park, the Wirral
Way and Big Meadow at Willaston. He is always keen to share those skills with
others and runs regular training days in scything and hedge laying, often using
New Ferry Butterfly Park as a base. Scything keeps the grasslands rich in wild
flowers by removing long grass, while hedge laying creates a thicker hedge,
making good shelter for all sorts of wildlife. Somehow he manages to do this on
top of a full-time job!
Charlotte Harris, CEO of Cheshire Wildlife Trust,
said "We're thrilled to hear of Paul's richly deserved award after 25
years of dedication to wildlife across the Wirral. Volunteers are the bedrock
of the conservation movement and not least the Wildlife Trusts, who themselves
were founded by keen amateurs a century ago. "The best results for
wildlife can often be achieved when time is dedicated to understanding a site
and its habitats, and Paul's work demonstrates this superbly at New Ferry
Butterfly Park with the continued successes there not only for biodiversity,
but for involving the local community too.
"Paul's ongoing commitment to rural skills
like hedgelaying and other crafts mean that traditional methods of managing our
countryside are being kept alive as well, an added bonus in our increasingly
technological rural environment."
To see Paul and his colleagues in action, come to
New Ferry Butterfly Park on Sunday 12 January, between 9.30 a.m and 4 p.m, when
they will be maintaining the Park's hedges - but expect to join in! Full
training and equipment available. For details see www.wirralwildlife.org.uk or ring 0151 645 8937.
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