Page 14 - Bumblebee Conservation Trust Buzzword Magazine July 2020
P. 14

How volunteers


       support the UK’s


       bumblebees



       Jack Reid, the Trust’s Outreach and
       Volunteering Officer, supports all our
       volunteers who do not live in or near one of
       our project areas. Here, Jack provides a brief
       insight into how our volunteer team have
       adapted to supporting bumblebees during
       COVID-19.
       The Trust’s national volunteering scheme    patches in their gardens, an area to
       has grown to 1,100 registered volunteers,   grow wild for bumblebees.
       who support our work to conserve the        Another volunteer Betsy Vulliamy,
       UK’s bumblebees in different ways. Most     spread the word on how to create
       frequently, this support is through delivering   welcoming bumblebee nesters
       talks or workshops to members of the public,   (below), encouraging people to
       lending a hand at gardening shows, or       give bumblebees a home in their
       simply sharing their love and enthusiasm for   gardens – and people very quickly
       bumblebees.                                 started doing the same!
       In March, the Trust made the difficult decision
       to halt its volunteering outreach activity, in   To create a bumblebee
       order to prioritise the safety of our volunteers   home visit www.
       and wider public. While this meant that     bumblebeeconservation.org/
       our volunteers couldn’t take on their usual   bumblebee-nests/ or visit
       activities, many found creative ways to
       continue to support bumblebees!             www.bumblebeeconservation.
                                                   org/volunteering-opportunities/
       Some Trust volunteers have continued to     for voluteering information
       safely deliver talks through online meeting
       apps like Zoom, providing basic bumblebee
       ID training.
       Others, like Andy Beebee (top right), have
       created a display to offer bumblebee-friendly
       wildflower seeds, some they had already, and
       some from their own gardens, to members of
       the public on their daily exercise, encouraging
       people to garden for bumblebees.
       Many of our volunteers have been in touch to
       tell us how they’ve been creating wildflower
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