Island 2000 Trust Blog

Archive for July, 2008


Hair of the Mouse
Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

You might remember a few weeks ago we were off to try out Simon’s hairtubes to see if we could find evidence of Dormice at a site. Well, one of the tubes turned up a few strands (and all the peanut butter bait was gone) so something must have crawled through. Here’s a microscope image (not great as it’s taken by pressing the digital camera into the eyepiece and trying not to wobble). It does seem to show typical Dormouse hair structure - closed oval cells (the dark blobs). It’s not exactly conclusive, but interesting.

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The Children’s Guide to the Isle of Wight Launch
Friday, July 25th, 2008

Sat 12th July saw the launch of the first ‘Children’s Guide to the Isle of Wight’. It was held at Quay Arts in Newport and was endorsed by a Royal visit from Queen Victoria no less.

The Children’s Guide is a candid and colourful book written, illustrated and edited solely by Island Children and reflects their views about the places they like the most, the places they like to eat and the things that they most like doing on the Island.

For any visiting family the guide gives a real insiders view about what makes the Island special and what you might like to do on your visit.

There were two activities on offer, you could make a badge showing your favourite place on the Island and then pin it to our giant Island map. Book designer Jonathan Ward also ran a book making workshop so that you could make your own personal guide book. Our very own Master Chef , Charlotte Ager, made us a beautiful cake to celebrate with too.


Dame Ellen MacArthur sent the team a message of support,
“Hello Everyone, I just wanted to say that I’m really, really sorry that I haven’t been able to come along to cut the cake today and congratulate you on your great Guide. I love all the colourful drawings! I really enjoyed reading it and there were a lot of things I didn’t know before so I learnt a lot and I am looking forward to using it to discover new places on the island. Aren’t we lucky to live on such a great island! Hope to see you all soon, Ellen”


The guide costs £5 and can be brought from Island outlets or directly from Island 2000 with free P&P, follow this link to buy your copy and take a peek at some of the pages: Children’s Guide
Any profits from sales of the guide will be reinvested into future projects and publications for Children on the Island.

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The Children’s Guide to the Isle of Wight
Friday, July 11th, 2008

Available now! For more information or to purchase online with free delivery please see the Children’s Guide page here.

The Children\'s Guide to the Isle of Wight

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We Want enough Golden Fur to make a Coat
Friday, July 11th, 2008

Here you can see us baiting the Dormouse hair-tubes with crunchy peanut butter and taping them up in likely spots - places where there is plenty of tangled cover with fruit, nut and berry-bearing species and honeysuckle in particular. We’ll be back in a week to check for little hairs and naked mice.priorybayhotel-049

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Mrs. Slow
Friday, July 11th, 2008

Here are some nice pictures of a female Slow Worm we found while surveying a site in the south of the island. You can tell it’s a female by the quite marked narrowing of the abdomen and also by the ‘neck’ formed by a slight narrowing behind the head. Mr. Slow is in the background.iowpearl-028

iowpearl-029

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Discomfitting the Dormouse
Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

This is our latest homemade bit of kit thanks to Simon’s ingenuity. It’s a new and improved Dormouse hairtube. When we’re surveying for Dormice we generally try to find evidence of them feeding on hazelnuts. But of course if there are no hazel trees then we’ll find no nuts, but there may well be Dormice tittering at us from the undergrowth nonetheless. So, we use temporary nest tubes - just day shelters we can tie up in likely spots and check in the day when any animals that may have made use of them from the night before will still be in there snoring.  This can take a while to get results but is if you like the ‘industry standard’. As a quicker supplement to this hair tubes are often used. These are lengths of plastic drainpipe baited with peanut butter (we think they prefer crunchy) and cut to allow 2 strips of sticky tape to run across the diameter. The theory is that the hungry/greedy Dormouse will squeeze under the tape to get to the bait and in doing so will leave behind a few hairs stuck to the tape. We then come along and check any hairs under a microscope to see which mammal they might be (could be mice or voles too). It sounds like an instrument of torture but the tape’s not that sticky, so they don’t come out bald.  The trouble has been that clever Dormice can just as easily run across the top of the tape, so Simon has devised a tube where there is sticky on both sides and the tube is positioned so that the tape is vertical and the animals have to squeeze past one side or the other come what may. Good thinking. We’ll be testing these out this month.

Dormouse Hair-tube

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