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News

 

Events

 

Jun 2013 right left

     

Guided Tour of Enniskillen Castle

Saturday 1st June
Enniskillen Castle Museums
Normal admission rates apply

Car Boot Sale

Saturday 1st June
Mount Stewart
Car £5, Van £10, Trailer £15

Mid Ulster Vintage Rally

Saturday 1st June
Springhill, Moneymore
Adult £5, Child £2

Volunteers’ Week

Saturday 1st June
Various see table above
Free

Strangford Lough Maritime Festival

Saturday 1st June
Various
Various above

Himalayan Balsam Control near Mary Peter’s Track

Sunday 2nd June
Lagan Valley Regional Park near Mary Peter’s Track
Free

Nature Reserve Management – Getting Behind the Scenes

Sunday 2nd June
Murlough NNR
028 4375 1467

Book4 Tea Week

Monday 3rd June
Castle Ward
Normal Admission, Members Free

04
05

What Nature Does for Northern Ireland

Thursday 6th June
The MAC (Metropolitan Arts Centre) Belfast
Free

Wild about Nature – Bats

Friday 7th June
Castle Ward
No Charge. Donations Welcome

Summer of Cultures: National Archaeology Day

Saturday 8th June
Enniskillen Castle Museums
Normal admission rates apply

09
10
11
12

Septic Tanks – all you need to know

Thursday 13th June
BEAM Social Enterprise Centre, Maydown Works, Derry / Londonderry
Free

14

General Maintenance

Saturday 15th June
Musgrave Community Vegetable Garden, Lisburn Road, Belfast
Free

Living History – Medieval Food

Saturday 15th June
Enniskillen Castle Museums
Normal admission rates apply

Orchid Walk

Saturday 15th June
Portstewart Strand
Adult £2, Child £1

Big IF Belfast

Saturday 15th June
Botanic Gardens, Belfast
Free

Walk into the Past

Sunday 16th June
Castle Ward
Normal Admission, Members Free

Fathers Day Fun

Sunday 16th June
Crom, Fermanagh
Normal Admission, Members Free

Planes, Trains and Automobiles

Sunday 16th June
Mount Stewart
Normal Admission, Members Free

Everyday Heroes

Sunday 16th June
The Argory, Moy
Normal Admission, Members Free

17

Maximising Social Value

Tuesday 18th June
Skanios building Newtownards Rd, Belfast
Free

Spotlight Special

Tuesday 18th June
Blackstaff Studios, Great Victoria Street, Belfast
Free

Introduction to Ladybirds

Wednesday 19th June
Murlough, Co Down
£10

’Helping you strike while the incentive is hot’

Thursday 20th June
Ramada Plazza, Shawsbridge Belfast
Delegate rate £75 per person + VAT to attend, see above

Giving & Receiving: Arts Council of Northern Ireland Gifts

Friday 21st June
Enniskillen Castle Museums
Normal admission rates apply

Summer Outing to Rathlin Island

Saturday 22nd June
Rathlin Island
Free

Living History – Guided Tour of Enniskillen Castle

Saturday 22nd June
Enniskillen Castle Museums
Normal admission rates apply

Garden Fete

Saturday 22nd June
Mount Stewart
Normal Admission, Members Free

Summer Solstice Celebrations

Saturday 22nd June
The Giant’s Ring
Free

Saturday Events at Dunluce Castle

Saturday 22nd June
Dunluce Castle
Adult £2, children/seniors £1, children under 4 go free

Archaeology Road Show

Saturday 22nd June
Down County Museum
Free

Feast Day at the Nendrum Early Christian Monastery

Saturday 22nd June
Nendrum Castle
Free

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24
25

Beyond the Horizon – Managing Natural Capital for Future Prosperity

Wednesday 26th June
Belfast Harbour Commissioners Office
Free

Tackling Transport

Thursday 27th June
Sustainable NI Unit 5B, Castlereagh Business Park, 478 Castlereagh Road, Belfast
Free

28

Living History–Medieval Siege Machine Models

Saturday 29th June
Enniskillen Castle Museums
Normal admission rates apply

Living History at Green Castle

Saturday 29th June
Green Castle, Carlingford Lough
Free

Path Repair

Sunday 30th June
Lagan Valley Regional Park at Moreland’s Meadow
Free

Jazz in the Gardens

Sunday 30th June
Mount Stewart
Normal Admission, Members Free

Four Seasons Walks – Summer Bounty

Sunday 30th June
Murlough Nature Reserve Keel Point, Dundrum, BT33 0NQ
Normal Admission, Members Free

      
 

The Humble Bumblebee 20 April 2012

TAKE on the plight of the bumblebee by planting their favourite flowers in your garden

Watching bumblebees buzzing around colourful clumps of flowers in the garden on a warm and sunny day is always enjoyable. Their furry rotund bodies and continual endeavours in search of nectar secure their place among our most endearing and compelling insects.

They also have fascinating social lives and play a crucial role in the overall health of our environment because they are prolific pollinators. Indeed, according to Anthony McCluskey of the Bumblebee Conservation Trust, it is perhaps all too easy to underestimate the valuable ecological role played by bumblebees and this is why it is so important that strenuous efforts are focused on their conservation.

There is still much to learn about the natural history of bumblebees but what we do know is that all is not well with our populations and already two species in the UK have become extinct in the last 70 years and others have declined dramatically. Bumblebees are among the flagship creatures of our countryside and are also important from an economic standpoint, with their pollinating activities vital to agriculture and food production. In other words, should our bumblebees disappear, the whole ecosystem starts to collapse with potentially dire consequences.

“The main reasons for bumblebee declines are habitat loss and agricultural intensification, and this is why the focus of so much of our conservation work has been on trying to protect and restore flower–rich landscapes,” McCluskey explains. “In order for bumblebees to thrive we need more patches of wildflowers in field corners, margins, gardens, waste ground and roadside verges.”

There are 19 species in Scotland but in most areas only six are at all common and widespread – the white–tailed, buff–tailed, early, garden, common carder, and red–tailed bumblebees. All are attractive, but the red–tailed bumblebee is particularly so because of the striking contrast between the red on the tip of the abdomen and the shiny blackness of the rest of the body. Another gem is the common carder bee, so named because it knits grass and moss together to make its nest on the ground.

Most bumblebees have a similar social system to honey bees that incorporates workers, drones and a queen. However, instead of the many thousands of individuals found in a typical honey bee hive, bumblebee colonies usually only comprise a few hundred individuals at most. Another key difference is that each colony exists for less than a year and dies out in autumn, with only the young mated queens surviving over the winter in readiness for starting a new colony the following spring, which is often sited underground in a mouse or other hole. A particularly interesting and related group are the cuckoo bumblebees, which like their avian namesakes are social parasites that lay their eggs in the nests of true bumblebees.

The Bumblebee Conservation Trust is keen to see more farmers and landowners doing positive things by managing their land sympathetically for bees. Simple steps can make a big difference, particularly the timing of cutting and grazing of fields in order for plants to flower and produce seed. In the north of Scotland and the Western Isles, for example, the Trust is endeavouring to save one of our rarest species, the great yellow bumblebee, by working with farmers and crofters to raise awareness of its habitat requirements and the types of flowers that will help it survive.

While populations of most bumblebee species have been declining, we can make a big difference by having plants in gardens that bumblebees can use for food. McCluskey says careful planning for a succession of bee–friendly flowers can bring real benefits. “It is important to have suitable flowers from the start of bumblebee active season right until the end,” he says. “For spring, the best are heather, mahonia and lungwort. In early summer, allium, thyme and meadow’s cranesbill are all good, while in late summer lavender, aquilegia, campanula, borage and scabious are attractive.

“Bumblebees are essential parts of our ecosystems, as well as being great pollinators that help us produce a huge variety of food. The good news is that it is easy for gardeners to help bees by making a few changes that should see their gardens buzzing throughout summer.”

www.bumblebeeconservation.org

 

 

 

 

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