Team Wilder Really Wild Lockleaze

Green Thornycroft green wildflower meadow

Really Wild Lockleaze

Really Wild Lockleaze

Really Wild Lockleaze

Lockleaze is an urban housing estate in Bristol, BS7. There are a lot of ex council houses, some privately owned, some council owned and some owned by housing associations, including Abri housing association. The area has quite a diverse population, traditionally working class and is known to hold good community events, to bring people together. Like many other wards of Bristol, there are levels of deprivation and crime. Lockleaze sits on the fringe of Stoke Park and a railway line, boasting beautiful scenic views of Bristol and large green spaces with high biodiversity. Many local residents care about the neighbourhood and have a strong will to welcome nature locally, to improve the area for the residents and wildlife together.

Lockleaze Neighbourhood Trust is "a resident-led organisation that exists to support residents to achieve positive change for themselves and their community". They are a small dedicated team of residents, volunteers and staff who strive to benefit the people of Lockleaze. 

Really Wild Lockleaze is an amazing, productive and influential project that is tranforming the many green area's to benefit the community and wildlife together. We will show what an urban community can do to help nature and at the same time enrich our own community."

Really Wild Lockleaze green logo

Really Wild Lockleaze

Really Wild Lockleaze are:

  • demonstrating what an urban community can do within streets and gardens
  • creating a blueprint for other communities to follow
  • being community led
  • keeping the community connected

They are taking action in response to local resident concerns around nature and the increase in local house building. A community climate action plan was created in 2020 with the community in 2020, through the Bristol Climate and Nature Partnership scheme.

Lockleaze is well placed for a nature project – in particular enhancing the nature corridor between the railway and Stoke Park. There are 66 acres of greens and verges locally, currently mown with some trees and lots of large gardens. So there is huge potential for the community to make a difference and get involved.

Attracting nature to streets and gardens in an urban community

Housing Greens 

Lockleaze is blessed with many local green spaces between the houses, a post war design that makes sense! These housing greens are used by local children to play, a green space to enjoy with huge biodiversity potential. Houses face the greens, so are therefore very visible and hold huge potential to increase local pride and sense of belonging.

A local resident who cares about nature and saw the potential in improving the green for nature and the community invited neighbours to a community meeting on the green. Together, they listened to ideas and made a plan for habitat creation. It was clear and important that ideas came from the community.

Suggested ideas to improve the greens included: wildflower patches, fruit trees , fruit bushes, herb beds, bulb planting. They also wanted to keep space for local kids to play. Community events were held to add the habitat, also equiping residents with skills to create habitat space in their gardens. Local support and encouragement increases confidence and goes a long way.

Permission had to be granted through the council to do this - as they have contracts to manage the housing greens. 

Verge Hogarth Walk

Really Wild Lockleaze

Adopt a verge model

Really Wild Lockleaze wanted to promote the huge benefits of verges for wildlife and give the community power to make a difference where they live. They focused on a species - the small blue butterfly, which has confirmed sightings nearby, north of the railway. This locally known species appeals and it made sense to create a small blue butterfly corridor between the known sightings and Stoke Park, which is a huge area managed for wildlife. 

A resident who lives on Hogarth Walk was keen to plant wildflowers on the verge, which is located where they wanted the corridor to be and also near the Sports Centre, where a lot of habitat was also being created. 

A small blue butterfly rests on a grass stem, with its wings held closed above its body. The undersides of the wings are a dusky silver-blue, with small black spots

Small blue © Vaughn Matthews

Attracting the small blue butterfly is bright blue in colour and loves sunny, grassy habitats including gardens. They're usually seen May to October. You can attract these gorgeous butterflies by planting nectar-rich boarders for feeding and climbing ivy and shrubs for overwintering insects. It's super important to support their whole life cycle though, like RWL did, by planting wildflowers to support the caterpillars who feed on kidney vetch, clovers, restharrow, common bird's-foot trefoil and related plants.

ADVICE: Focusing on a known local species increase local appeal and ownership.

To make this process easier and more sustainable long-term, RWL came up with and trialed 'adopt a verge'. Giving local people the power to plant up verges outside their houses with a view to supporting wildlife. 

Sports centre meadow creation

Really Wild Lockleaze

Local sports centre

Most towns and urban areas will have a sports centre where people come together for sport and other community activities and events. The location of the sports centre in Lockleaze is known to most residents and is situated between the railway lines and Stoke Park - holding huge potential to link to the two areas and expand the green corridor. What an inspiration and influential location! It was also highlighted at a community meeting, that this sports centre held huge potential for wetland and pond areas as the marginal land around the sports centre had a lot of run-off from the sports pitches and buildings. 

Actions for nature carried out:
Pond creation
 â€“ deeper more permanent than the existing wet areas.
Wetland wildflowers planted to increase diversity.
Tree planting - thickened hedges as well as plating a community orchard and small woodland.
Wildflower meadow planting - an impressive 160 m2! Using Emoorsgate seeds.

All actions carried out were suggested by the community and carried out by the community at local events with help from Eric, the Avon Wildlife Trust Community Ecologist. Ownership and long term benefits of these actions are managed locally and pass on skills to expand green corridors locally when installed in local gardens. Local support, confidence and joy from connecting with nature and doing your bit locally strengthens local pride, biodiversity and creates social connections. 

Residents gardens

All of the comunity work is enhanced when gardens are known to be part of the local ecology. A bird flying over Lockleaze will not know that gardens are owned by different people or organisations! They simply view the area. All small actions for nature make a huge difference collectively and community spirit, social connections and green corridors are nurtured. 

Ways to encourage wildlife gardening at home:
Tree giveaways x250.
Nm Mow May x 124.
236 residents planted 1m2 of wildflowers in their gardens.
How to videos for Lockleaze gardens
Lockleaze wild mile map on website (layers)

Team Wilder is action!

Verge wildflowers sign

Really Wild Lockleaze

Creating a Communty Plan to take over green space

Really Wild Lockleaze are working hard to create a blueprint for other communities to take over greens and adopt verges where they live. It brings long term ownership with benefits for residents, wildlife and the local council/land owners who manage the green space.

  1. Find a resident champion
  2. Door-knock to get more people involved
  3. Hold a community meeting
  4. Communicate the plans locally
  5. Submit to the council

 

Really Wild Lockleaze Greens half way thorugh report

Really Wild Lockleaze

Who else has been involved?

Lockleaze residents – the main focus has been here!
Lockleaze Neighbourhood Trust run the Really Wild Lockleaze project.
Lockleaze Sports Centre.
Bristol City Council – Highways land, Housing land, Parks and Community departments. One tree per child scheme. The Stoke Park Ranger.
Avon Wildlife Trust – Eric the Community Ecologist.
Stoke Park community groups.
Local housing association: Abri.
Bristol Nature Climate Partnership – climate funding and support (Lottery funded).
Lockleaze green gym – ran by the Trust for Conservation volunteers.

If you would like to get involved or find out more - contact Lockleaze Neighbourhood Trust.

Lockleaze Neighbourhood Trust logo

Lockleaze Neighbourhood Trust

Resources

An illustration of a community garden

(C) Hannah Bunn

Be part of Team Wilder

All actions for nature collectively add up and creates life for people and wildlife.

Sign up to Team Wilder

Share your actions for nature, like Tom by sharing and tagging @avonwt on social media and

Log your actions for nature on the map