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Community Quiz

Reydon Community Quiz – March 2024 Report

For our March quiz, we welcomed Charlotte Clark of Southwold Library as our guest quizmaster.

We were entertained by Charlotte’s light-hearted and enjoyable quiz, and particularly enjoyed learning some new facts about pineapples!

Scores were once again very close this month: in third place were ‘What, No Broadside?’ with 132 points; in second place ‘What the Ecc ‘ with 134 points; and winners once again this month, ‘Three’s Company’ on 136 points.

Together with proceeds from the raffle, the evening raised £282. This was donated to FoSL (Friends of Southwold Library) and presented to Charlotte there and then. The fabulous work she and the rest of the Library team do is hugely appreciated by the local community, so we are delighted to help support them.

An e-mail of thanks for our February donation was received from the team at the VHC, and this was shared with the quizzers.

Many thanks to all who support our Community Quiz, it is hugely appreciated.

The next quiz will be held on Friday, 19th April. 

The May quiz is cancelled, so the April one will be the last one until the autumn. There is sometimes space for another team, so do contact me if you are interested in joining us at ahumphry@talktalk.net.

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Blyth Valley and Southwold Wildlife Group: March report

The Lowestoft Kittiwake Project

The March meeting of the Blyth Valley and Southwold Suffolk Wildlife group welcomed Rupert Masefield from the Suffolk Wildlife Trust to tell us about the local Kittiwake Project. Many people will be aware of the great numbers of kittiwakes nesting in Lowestoft, and Rupert discussed both the bonus of a nature success story, and the nuisance that this abundance of birdlife has brought with it.

Kittiwakes are of the gull family, but they are smaller, and spend their winters in the harsh northwest Atlantic waters. They come ashore in spring to nest, usually on tiny cliff ledges, and raise their two chicks. They feed exclusively on fish and sand eels, and each parent takes it in turn to fly out to sea for food, covering huge distances over three to four days. Kittiwakes are in serious decline globally, but numbers are increasing in Suffolk, and Lowestoft has become a centre of breeding. No-one really knows why, but kittiwakes first started to move into the town in the 1950s, and their numbers have continued to increase.

The smell of large amounts of guano and the noise of so many birds has caused a nuisance to town dwellers, and over the years many measures have been tried to persuade kittiwakes to leave public buildings and move to artificial sites. However, some measures, such as netting, were potentially harmful to the birds. As a result, the Suffolk Wildlife Trust has brought together local interest groups to form the Lowestoft Kittiwake Partnership, aiming to find safe solutions. There is to be a Kittiwake Officer, who will work with local people and businesses to keep kittiwakes safe and reduce the problems with nesting on buildings. The offshore ‘kittiwake hotels’ you may have seen were constructed by a windfarm company as mitigation measures for sea birds. Decoy kittiwakes are being used to encourage nesting activity, and it is hoped that with time, these will be inhabited by these attractive but vulnerable birds.

Our next meeting is on Thursday, 11th April, 7.30pm, at the Southwold Arts Centre IP18 6JP. There will be a brief AGM, followed by a film, ‘Secret Rivers – The Waveney, Part Two’, featuring Paul Heiney. There will be refreshments. Admission free.

Penny Mansfield

Contact us at swtblythvalley@gmail.com.

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