NEW CLIENT: APPLE DAY

The Evaluator is delighted to be working with a new client, Apple Day.

The Apple Day project is being run by Larksfoot CIC (Community Interest Company) who are based in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The CIC operated out of Leighton Hall.

You can see more about Larksfoot here and more about Leighton Hall here.

The project is an educational programme centred around the heritage of Apple Day.

Apple Day was initiated by Common Ground (you can read more here) on 21 October 1990 at an event in Covent Garden, London, and has been celebrated in each subsequent year.

Common Ground describe the day as a way of celebrating and demonstrating that variety and richness matter to a locality and that it is possible to affect change in your place. Common Ground has used the apple as a symbol of the physical, cultural and genetic diversity we should not let slip away. In linking particular apples with their place of origin, they hope that orchards will be recognized and conserved for their contribution to local distinctiveness, including the rich diversity of wildlife they support.

Apple Day being celebrated in October is connected to how August – November is usually the biggest time of year for apples, during the autumn season, especially in the Northern Hemisphere.

The team at Larksfoot are working with groups of children aged 4 to 11 who will take part in educational activities, regarding apples, linking back to the Victorian heritage of the site. At the end of the programme there will be a celebrational day that links to the 20th of October Apple Day, which historically used to be important in the AONB North Pennine area.

We are looking forward to evaluating the outcomes, which are targeted around enjoyment, play, fun and heritage and will also encourage people from lower income backgrounds to participate.

 

NEW CLIENT: ADDERS UP

The Evaluator is delighted to be working with a new client -Adders Up.

Based in the North Pennines Area of National Beauty, this three-year project is funded by The National Lottery Heritage Fund and Northumbrian Water Branch Out Fund.

Adders, also known as Vipera berus, are a crucial part of the ecosystem.  Like many species, they face numerous threats from habitat loss, climate change, and human activities. The North Pennines National Landscape team, running the project, work to conserve and enhance the natural beauty of the area and will use their expertise to carry out activities designed to protect a species under threat. A recent survey that monitored adder sites across the UK, suggested that all small adder populations could be extinct by 2032.

Using groups that have the same landscape in common – such as walkers, runners, bird watchers and photographers, the project will raise awareness of Adder habitats and misconceptions, helping them to thrive. The project will also develop community events to promote the conservation of adders across various mediums, involving Volunteers, Artists, Landowners, Farmers, Vets and also Parents and Children to learn, share and disseminate knowledge which supports the conservation of the land and the species.

The Adders Up project hopes to change attitudes towards the adder through conservation and engagement activities and also events (open to all) and will focus on nature recovery and helping people to make an emotional connection with nature.

We are looking forward to evaluating the impact that this project has on people’s attitudes to conservation and the adders themselves.

You can find out more about the Adders Up project and how to get involved here.