Appeal for Carmarthenshire churchyard fungi

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James McLaren James McLaren | 10:43 UK time, Thursday, 21 October 2010

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The National Botanic Garden of Wales (NBGoW) is asking for help in assessing Carmarthenshire's fungus populations in churchyards.

Waxcap fungi

Waxcap fungi

Unlike open country and farmland, churchyards don't tend to be intensively managed and are unaffected by agricultural chemicals. Hence, species of fungus such as waxcaps, fair clubs, spindles and earth tongues can thrive in this particular habitat.

Bruce Langridge of NBGoW said: "There are more than 400 churchyards in Carmarthenshire but only a few of these are rich in these colourful fungi.

"Waxcaps, fairy clubs, spindles and earth tongues only really come out in the autumn and we haven't got time to visit every churchyard. So we desperately need the help of church wardens, vicars, ministers, deacons, people who mow the cemeteries or even dog walkers who pass through... to let me know if they think they've seen these things."

Either Langridge or another local expert will attend sites to identify the fungi, log them and offer advice on their continued conservation.

Bruce Langridge can be contacted on interpretation@gardenofwales.org.uk or 01558 667162.

Natur Cymru launches £1,000 writing challenge

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James McLaren James McLaren | 09:30 UK time, Thursday, 21 October 2010

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Natur Cymru has launched this year's £1,000 writing challenge.

The challenge is to write 1000 words on a subject of topical environmental or wildlife interest in Wales which inspires you. The winner will receive £500 donated by WWF Cymru, which is sponsoring the competition for the third year. A runner-up will receive a place worth £500 on the nature writing course at Tŷ Newydd, the National Writers' Centre.

Anne Meikle, head of WWF Cymru, said: "WWF Cymru is delighted to have sponsored this year's Natur Cymru writing competition. It has given budding writers the opportunity to explore and promote such exciting and important topics as wildlife and the environment. We hope reading such talented work will enthuse others into discovering the wonders of nature and some of the threats which they face."

"Natur Cymru is the quarterly magazine the flies the flag for the wildlife and nature of Wales. The purpose of the competition is to stimulate debate and encourage contributions from anyone with a passion for our natural world in Wales," said Natur Cymru's Huw Jenkins.

The judging panel will be looking for the originality of content, use of plain language in either English or Welsh, and the piece's engagement of the reader.

The competition is open to anyone who subscribes to Natur Cymru apart from employees of the magazine, WWF or Ty Newydd. Articles, along with illustrations (if any), are to be submitted by email to info@naturcymru.org.uk by 31 March, 2011. The winning articles will be selected by a panel of judges including Gillian Clarke, the National Poet of Wales, and published in the Summer 2011 edition of Natur Cymru.

Dog days

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Roy Noble Roy Noble | 13:33 UK time, Tuesday, 19 October 2010

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Dylan didn't come with any certificates, so we can't lay claim to a pedigree lineage. Noble Junior bought him, online, from a place in Lincolnshire. I suspect it was a puppy farm and although he was dubbed a Border Collie, I have to say his mother must have had the odd Friday night liaison with a good-looking and smooth barking greyhound.

Dylan does all the things a Collie is supposed to do, he likes us all to be neatly in the same room of an evening,nicely penned in, but he has long legs all right and is pretty fast when he hits the over-drive button. I did think he was a Lurcher, but a knowing doggie person has suggested that he's a throw back to an older Collie breed, so now we boast about that.

Anyway, I don't care if he is a mongrel really. I have a lot of time for mongrels. They're loyal and clean around the house. Actually, most of the south Walians are mongrels when you think about it: they came from all over to the iron and the coal during the Industrial Revolution.

Roy Noble with Dylan

Roy Noble with Dylan

Dylan, to his credit, has changed my personal habits. This dedicated couch potato is taken for walkies every morning now and we are regulars 'up the Cwm'. The Cwm is a a dead end valley, or corrie, crowded and pock-marked by coal mines and diggings in the days of industry. Now it is an attractive Country Park sweeping down from the harsh rocky ridge where the peregrine falcons nest, through woodland and walkways,to the lake that takes you towards the village of Cwmdare.

I am now a doggie groupie. I know all the dogs , and their owners, who lay claim to their patch every morning. We all follow a set pattern - well, until a fortnight ago. Something strange happened.

Dylan, as usual, bounded from the car, heading for his favourite bush to do... well, you know, what dogs do. However, he hesitated, cowered back towards the car and wasn't keen to hit his usual trail. I thought he was just going through a funny phase, until, over a period of days we came across several owners whose dogs had reacted in the same way. This lasted for over a week.

So, what scent had the canines picked up? Was it a wild animal, or was it something else, deeper, older and not discernible to the human instinct? After all, up in the furthest curve of the Cwm there is an ancient grove of alder trees, near the pathway stone that has on it a roughly hewn Celtic drawing.

If you enter the grove of trees, minding the mud as you go, you'll find it serene, quiet and contemplative, even in the gentle breezes that caress the branches. It was there, it is said you see, that the ancient Druids met. Maybe, just maybe, a gust had brought the old days back, fleetingly... and Dylan and the pack had picked the ancient scents. Who knows?

Roy

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