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"I love to think of nature as an unlimited broadcasting station, through which God speaks to us every hour, if we only will tune in."
- George Washington Carver

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Friday 28 October 2011

The Twite Recovery Project

Towards the end of the summer, I was asked to produce a video for the Twite Recovery Project which is a joint venture between RSPB and Natural England to help halt the decline of our "Pennine Finch". This video has now gone live on the Pennine Prospects You Tube channel and is currently being used to encourage local landowners to become involved in the project.
Pennine Prospects aim is to support the regeneration of the South Pennines. The company is owned by the key local authorities, water companies, Natural England and voluntary/community sector and is focused upon protecting the built, natural and cultural heritage for the benefit of the area’s residents.
The loss of upland hay meadows in favour of "improved" silage fields has been one of the key factors in the decline of the Twite throughout the South Pennines.
The Twite has bred in the uplands of Britain for at least 8 thousand years. However, over the last 14 years, numbers have nosedived by over 90% in England, and now there are only about 100 breeding pairs, living in about 20 colonies - mainly in the South Pennines. Most seed-eating songbirds feed their chicks on insects, but Twite and their chicks are unusual in feeding almost entirely on seed. The Twite Recovery Project is working with farmers and landowners to help restore and maintain hay meadows close to the moorland edges where the Twite nest, thus providing essential food sources for this charming little bird, in an effort to help reverse its fortunes and save it from further decline

http://www.pennineprospects.co.uk/

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