Great Start to 2023!

Great Start to 2023!

My 5th blog documenting my time with MWT as a student intern.

Well, January has gone extremely quickly for a change, perhaps because I have been so busy! It has acted as a reset for me as I think I have now found my motivation again after a lull over the holidays.

January has indeed been a month of Wallabies for me with a visit from BH Wildlife Consultancy. I also held a large team meeting to discuss the survey and poster I had been creating.

Ben and Katie Harrower were hired by MWT to conduct a thermal imaging survey by drone of the Ballaugh Curraghs. They were absolutely fascinating to watch and talk to. I feel lucky that I was able to go out with them for a day, but I wish I was able to spend more time with them. Because of the weather conditions they were only able to survey the Curraghs late at night when I unfortunately had to work! Surveying at night with thermal imaging is also easier as less of the land is heated by the sun making the fauna more distinguishable. More areas were planned to survey such as other areas where wallabies had been sighted and Laxey where there are complaints about the feral goats, but again, due to high winds during the days they were here this was not possible. Hopefully they will be able to return again in the future to find out more as the findings (which will be made available to the public later this year) were very interesting.

As for my survey, after my meeting I now plan to write up a short survey to see what the landowners surrounding and within the Curraghs feel about the wallaby population. They are the people living most closely with them and so their input will go along nicely with the report.

MM

The other projects that I am working on are going very well. I have been spoilt in the data provided on my feasibility project for freshwater pearl mussels and hope to finish the write up in February.

I have been working on my practical skills this month as well while continuing working with the fabulous midweek muckers on ditch and fence line clearance. I have also been tree planting with Andree along the Mountain Mile by the Goose Neck. We will continue this over the next few weeks.

We had a whole team meeting on health and safety requirements at our classroom at Ardwhallan this month, it was nice to listen to a big team discussion on the matter and I will be more vigilant now as a MWT representative!

Coming up in my placement: I will soon be starting to develop some visuals and graphics for the Manx State of Nature document which has been collated so far by Clare. She has been doing such an amazing job and I look forward to helping out with some of these final flourishes. I am also enrolled on a short course run by the UN on Environmental SDG (Sustainability development goal) Indicators. This course will help me learn more about data collection and environmental monitoring – an area that really interests me and that I hope to venture more into.

As usual, be sure to follow my Instagram page for more updates @rachels_placement and feel free to send any questions to rachelsmith@mwt.im