by Richard Neale ![]() |
Solar panels and orchids soak up the sun together at Plas Newydd |
We were there for two reasons. The first reason is pretty obvious: to find out how many common spotted orchids, northern marsh orchids and rarer greater butterfly orchids grow in the field. The second was that we were guinea pigs helping Rachel Dolan, the Trust’s new nature conservation intern on Anglesey, to find out how best to enable visitors to get closer to nature and help with our ecological monitoring.
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Our expert guides: Helen and Rachel |
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Not folk dancing, but this is us ready to count a 3 metre swathe across the meadow |
By a happy and somehow appropriate coincidence, the field has recently also become the location for one of the Trust’s solar energy arrays, producing electricity from sunlight; helping to reduce our fuel bills and atmospheric carbon emissions.
All being well, next year’s visitors to the Marquis of Anglesey’s ancestral home will be able to offer an hour or so of their time to help Rachel with this worthwhile and pleasantly relaxing orchid-counting task.
Oh, I almost forgot, I can’t yet tell you how many orchids are there. Finding the answer to this will mean that Rachel will need to return to the office and get out her calculator. My guess is that it’s in the tens of thousands.
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Northern marsh and common spotted orchids (or hybrids thereof) |
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Greater butterfly orchid |