VOLUNTEERS needed to help canal wildlife

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A CALL has gone out for volunteers to join a spring campaign to help wildlife along Britain’s waterways. The Canal & River Trust says there are great opportunities for millions of people to help endangered species. 

With spring around the corner, the charity is preparing the ground for the year ahead and is calling on volunteers to help the many much-loved and endangered species that rely on the historic canal network that connects countryside with towns and cities.

It is hoping to attract some of the nine million people in England and Wales who live within a 10-minute walk of a waterway.

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The Canal & River Trust is calling for some of the nine million people who live near a waterway to help wildlife by volunteering. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
The Canal & River Trust is calling for some of the nine million people who live near a waterway to help wildlife by volunteering. PHOTO: SUPPLIED

The appeal, championed by presenter and TV personality, Ranvir Singh, emphasises the vital role volunteers need to play in sustaining these centuries-old routes for boats and the vital spaces they provide for both wildlife and people.

She said: “The Canal & River Trust cares for an amazing 2000-mile network of navigable canals across England and Wales. These precious places, with their narrowboats and history, are at the heart of numerous communities, bringing nature and free-to-access green space to the doorsteps of millions. We’re saying that nature and your canal need you and are calling on people to make a difference by volunteering to do something local towards a global priority.

“These waterways provide a home for some of the nation’s most vulnerable and characterful species. They connect cities and town to rural countryside, farmland and forests, giving wildlife a chance to expand from place to place and allowing flora and fauna to flourish in nature-depleted areas. If you love nature and you’re thinking about how you can make a difference in all seasons, come along and find out more at one of the Canal & River Trust’s welcome sessions.”

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Canal champion Ranvir Singh is joining the Canal & River Trust in calling for volunteers. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
Canal champion Ranvir Singh is joining the Canal & River Trust in calling for volunteers. PHOTO: SUPPLIED

Last year more than 4500 people volunteered at the Canal & River Trust, contributing nearly 740,000 hours and helping to maintain habitat for otters, water voles, kingfishers and herons as well as the ducks, fish, insects and invertebrates that are a common sight across the canal network.

With species decline and biodiversity always near the top of the news agenda, people have the chance to make a big difference in their local areas, with volunteer opportunities to create new wildlife habitats, remove invasive weeds, clear up damaging plastic waste and help the Canal & River Trust safeguard these important and historically rich places.

Nine million people in England and Wales live within a 10-minute walk of the Canal & River Trust’s waterways, but many don’t realise that the locks, bridges, aqueducts and towpaths, together with the habitat for wildlife, are looked after by a charity. The Canal & River Trust is saying that canals can be a first port of call for people wanting to help nature on their doorstep.

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Volunteers make a huge difference, supporting the Canal & River Trust to achieve more. For those who want to get involved, a series of volunteer welcome sessions and training will be running in February, with volunteers able to get on the ground within weeks and a host of seasonal roles available throughout the year. 

The call for volunteers comes as the Canal & River Trust has run a winter-long fundraising campaign to raise much-needed donations to help its 250-year-old canal network stay resilient to the storms and intense seasonal weather brought about by climate change. This winter, Storms Bert and Darragh have already caused costly damage, bringing down hundreds of trees across the canal network, while January has seen sections of towpath washed away in the north and flooding in the East Midlands.

Christine Mellor, head of volunteering at Canal & River Trust, said: “Volunteers contributed nearly three-quarters of a million hours to our canals last year, making a massive difference to the work we are able to carry out. While volunteering on the canals is thriving, the task of keeping our navigable network open and alive is mounting. Battered by storms and floods and eroded over time, our canals are in great need of support. With volunteers’ support, donating their time, knowledge, and skills, we are better able to turn the tide and keep our canals available for local communities and for wildlife. If you are interested, make 2025 the year you do something for nature and for your local community.” For further information and to find out how best to get involved visit: www.canalrivertrust.org.uk/volunteer

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