A CLARE-BASED nature sanctuary has been announced as one of the winners of the National Lottery Good Causes awards.
Lough Grainey Nature Sanctuary, a not-for-profit community organisation dedicated to preserving a vital area of wilderness in the Lough Grainey valley, protecting its biodiversity, rewilding and restoring its ancient oak forest, and helping children and adults to reconnect with nature, won the National Heritage award.
The team of the Lough Grainey Nature Sanctuary were delighted to receive Good Causes funding that allowed them to conduct a bat presence survey and to install a NatureCam trail camera on the land of the Nature Sanctuary, to study the wildlife without disturbance.
Marina Levitina, PhD, chairperson of Lough Grainey Nature Sanctuary, said, “Rewilding and nature restoration is one of the aims of our project, it is about giving the land back to Nature and allowing Nature to restore herself with minimum human intervention.
“At the time of the global climate emergency and biodiversity crisis, when we are losing so many species of plants and animals, with one in every five of the assessed species in Ireland being threatened with extinction according to a recent report, we need to ensure that the few existing places of wilderness and wildlife corridors are protected.
“Our nature sanctuary is such a place, and it needs to be protected for all its beauty and for the vital habitats that it provides to wildlife.”
“All of us are completely interconnected with Nature. We are part of it, we are not separate from nature. A healthy and sustainable community includes not only humans, but also all the plants, trees and animals, the healthy soil and pristine waters, rivers and lakes that we depend on for our health and well-being.”
“We are already observing such an abundance of wildlife here at the Nature Sanctuary! We are also restoring the oak forest, by planting native trees and helping natural regeneration of native woodlands. Trees ensure stability of the global climate by absorbing and restoring carbon. Currently, only 10% of Ireland is covered with forests, and only 1.2% is native woodlands. We need more trees!”
An area of immense natural beauty and huge ecological value, Lough Grainey valley in East Clare is the setting and birthplace of the most famous poem written in
the Irish language, The Midnight Court.
Named after the ancient Irish Sun Goddess Grian, it is home to some of Ireland’s most endangered species of animals and plants, including the hen harrier, blue-eyed grass, and marsh fritillary butterfly.
There are precious stands of old oak trees, such as the majestic Bunshoon Wood, a remnant of the ancient oak forest of Brian Boru.
For further information and to find out how you can help, visit the LGNS website at www.loughgrainey.org