Ludwell Life

A peaceful fragment of countryside, rich with wildlife, in the middle of the city

Welcome to

Ludwell Life

Ludwell Life is for everyone who cares about Ludwell Valley Park. So whether you walk there, exercise your dog, sit on one of the benches enjoying the view or just like knowing such a special green space is there, Ludwell Life is you!

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About

Ludwell Life exists to enhance and protect the Valley Park. It is there to encourage people to enjoy - and share their enjoyment of Ludwell. We have over 1,500 people in our Facebook Group and over 230 are signed up for our bi-monthly newsletter.

Please enjoy exploring our new website, let us know any changes or additions you would like, what you would like to know more about, and how we could better enhance and protect Ludwell Valley Park

How to help

Ludwell Life is involved in a range of activities in Ludwell Valley. We get involved with conservation tasks arranged by Devon Wildlife Trust which manages the Park. This can be anything from planting trees and wildflowers to hedge laying. Ludwell Lifers also do the mundane but essential job of litter picking, usually as they walk round the park.

Ludwell Life has taken the lead on developing the community orchard, which we started on back in 2016 and so far has 36 trees, all local varieties. We have also funded and helped put up bird and bat boxes.

All this is only possible because people get involved, helping to protect and enhance the Park so we can all benefit, we can all enjoy it.

Activities

Devon Wildlife Trust (DWT) manages Ludwell Valley Park. Year by year they are doing more and more to enhance it, to make it more wildlife friendly and more attractive for us. Sowing wildflower seed, laying old hedges, encouraging a wider range of plants and so more birds, butterflies and other insects.

DWT runs monthly conservation working groups covering all six of the Valley Parks, but we also get involved in Ludwell tasks whenever we can help. There is a Community Orchard which we are gradually expanding each year, planning new trees in January or February. There is also a pond, or, more correctly, a scrape, in Butchers Field, where we have put in a variety of pond plants and where frogs, dragonflies and boatmen have already been seen.

Do look through these pages for pictures and more details.

History

Beautiful abundant Devon countryside loved by residents for thousands of years.

Ludwell Valley is a place people have been drawn to since the neolithic period. It has been continually used and occupied for 6,000 or even 7,000 years. There is nowhere else in Devon that can say this!

It has long been, and is still, a working farm. In the past, most fields were used to grow crops and the hedges were kept low, in contrast to today, with the hedges managed for wildlife and most fields turned over to pasture for the cattle.

In 1983 the City Council took the far-sighted decision to designate it as a Valley Park, intending to protect it and giving us, the public, access to most (although not all) fields. It is one of six Valley Parks in Exeter, of which Ludwell is the largest.

Ludwell Life News

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From the ashes


In the face of devastating disease what is to happen to our ash trees and the wildlife which relies on them? Devon Wildlife Trust’s Pete Burgess explores what we’re doing to ensure nature’s recovery when the mighty fall.

Ash trees occupy a strong presence in our lives, even if this sometimes escapes our notice. The numbers alone are impressive: there are an estimated 80 million ash trees in the UK. In Devon, woodland where ash is the dominant tree species covers around 11,000ha, or more than 20% of all the county’s broadleaved woodland. Then there are the 1.9 million ash trees outside of Devon’s woodlands, many of them in parks, gardens and in our hedges.

Despite this strength in numbers our ash trees are however facing a threat which puts its very future in Devon and the UK at risk. This scourge is ash dieback which, latest estimates predict will mean the death of more than 90% of our ash trees.

Happening now, near you


If you think this Domesday prediction will take decades to happen, think again. Ash dieback is happening now. As just one example, we’ve found the disease in ash trees in all of the Valley Parks. Its malignant influence will be felt everywhere that ash is. In places where the tree dominates the landscape the impact will be dramatic.

Nor will the losses end at ash. The interconnectedness of the natural world means that the tree’s disappearance from our towns and countryside will be felt by a host of other wildlife. From bluebells to bullfinches, ferns to flycatchers, it’s thought that more than 1,000 species have come to rely upon ash trees.
The scale of such losses can make us feel hopeless. But that’s not the Devon way! We, along with other experts in the ‘Devon Ash Dieback Resilience Forum’, plan to act.

Ways forward


Using the collective experience gained from large tree losses before – think of the storms of 1987 and 1990, and Dutch elm disease before them – we know there are simple things we can do now to reduce the long term impact of ash dieback. Here are some of our plans.

Life and death


We own and manage 50 nature reserves and large tracts of the six Valley Parks in Exeter. Where our ash is affected with the dieback disease, and it is safe to do so, we’ll let nature takes its course. This will mean dying or dead ash trees, but in turn they will offer a deadwood home to many species including fungi and wood
boring insects. This approach may also help us to locate the most resilient trees which hold the key to the future of the species in the UK.

Trees on boundaries, roadsides, or wherever there are people or buildings closeby will be treated as higher risk and we’ll be embarking on essential felling work this winter before the disease fully takes hold and makes the trees too unsafe to work on.

3-2-1 formula


Where affected ash trees are close to paths, roads, boundaries, power lines and other human infrastructure then we’ll have to remove them. But that won’t be the end of the story. Devon Wildlife Trust has signed up to the 3-2-1 formula. For every large tree felled we’ll nurture or plant three new trees (of other native broadleaved varieties), two for every medium tree and one for every small tree.

It’s an approach we are encouraging other to follow. Ashes outside of woodlands are unlikely to be replaced without your help! If you own or manage land locally we want you to follow the same approach. Devon needs more trees throughout its landscapes, from nurturing new hedgerow trees, through to new copses and woodlands.

Our aim is to help


We aim to be able to help you in the effort to replace ash with other trees. Devon Wildlife Trust has recently submitted a multi-million pound National Lottery Heritage Fund application – ‘Saving Devon’s Treescapes’ on behalf of the Devon Ash Dieback Resilience Forum. This five year project will focus on our stunning treescapes in the county, ensuring that we are replacing trees now that may be lost in the future as a result of dieback or the barrage of other pressures trees are facing. Devon County Council and Exeter City Council are key partners in the project which will ensure there is a concerted drive to replace lost trees in the
city.

Devon Wildlife Trust is planning to develop community tree nurseries where locally harvested seed can be nurtured and saplings and tree guards given to those who are willing to give trees space on their land.

There is a lot of support and advice on how, together, we can act in the face of ash dieback (see ‘What you can do’ below). The loss of this life giving tree will be significant. But the extent and longevity of the hole it leaves behind will be up to us all to fill.

Cause and effect


Ash dieback is a disease caused by a fungus called Hymenoscyphus fraxineus (previously called Chalara fraxinea). It is spread by the fungus’ spores. The first confirmed case in the UK was in 2012. Once the fungus takes hold an ash tree loses its leaves (usually in its crown first) and lesions can appear on its bark. Death of the tree follows. This can be swift – one or two years – in younger ash, or after several years of struggle for mature trees.

What you can do


Ash dieback’s effects will eventually be felt even by the oldest, sturdiest ash trees. It’s important that we preserve a record of these ‘special’ trees now. This spring and summer take a photo or make a video of your local/favourite ash tree and send it to us (email [email protected]) for our ‘ash archive’. Tell us where the ash is and, if you like, what the tree means to you.

For practical support on ash dieback and how to manage land with ash visit the Devon Ash Dieback Resilience

Forum webpages at: www.devonashdieback.org.uk

As most people will know, Exeter Golf and Country Club have put in an application to create a golf driving range/academy in the field behind 'In Focus' (the blind school).

Although not in the area managed by DWT, this field is still part of the designated Valley Park, so you may want to have a look at what is involved.

We understand DWT have objected to the plans as they do not consider sufficient evidence has been provided and it does not meet the policy set out in the Exeter Core Strategy.

You can view the application - reference 21/1676/FUL and submit any comments (by 5pm on 27th February) to: https://publicaccess.exeter.gov.uk/online-applications/ or e-mail [email protected]

Burridge Hill has an exciting new addition! Volunteers from Ludwell Life and Devon Wildlife Trust's Anya and Chris have today, 5th Feb 2022, planted a gorgeous young tree of the Quercus Rober species on the hill just by the entrance to the park from Parkland Drive. The English Oak, named 'The Ludwell Life Oak' - is a sturdy young sapling, just 5 years old. It will be protected by wooden uprights and wire fencing - keeping cattle and other potential risks at bay until it is is old enough for the structure to be removed. It now stands proudly against the skyline on Burridge hill, close to the bench, to be enjoyed by all. In addition to the new tree planting, Ludwell Life volunteers were thrilled to be presented with a Volunteer Award from Devon Wildlife Trust, to acknowledge their efforts and the input from the community group. To find out more about becoming a friend of Ludwell Life, visit our 'friends page.

If you would like to help out or just want to know more – please get in touch!