For Mike, this project was a case of serendipity, pure and simple. “It all fitted perfectly, it was the right time and everything — it was fantastic,” he says.
Of his conversion from ‘lone operator’ to gregarious partnership activist, he says of the Douglas Catchment Partnership that his motto is now “‘Stronger Together’.
“Everyone I have met has been amazing and the passion they share to improve the catchment is so infectious,” says Mike. “A really fantastic group of individuals and organisations working together for the betterment of our rivers.”
Meanwhile, Mike continues his work on the Friends of Tawd Valley river committee, and working with the Wild Trout Trust, and the local group has now achieved Silver level accreditation with the Trout in the Town network.
“The weir removal is a massive one,” says Paul, of Mike’s progress so far. “He has gone from ‘concerned of Skelmersdale’, on his own, really frustrated, to getting a big weir removed.”
“These are gnarly projects, and they don’t happen automatically. In terms of speed, I think it will almost be unheard of — the turnaround is usually seven or eight years or more, so to get it done within a couple of years of WTT’s original Advisory Visit is quite amazing.”
It is worth pointing out that helping people make connections like this forms a significant part of the Wild Trout Trust’s work. Not just Paul, but all the staff on the ground are busy quietly hooking up people into their respective networks of river menders — when they are not doing their best to help fix rivers themselves.
As for Mike, he is now involved in a lot of other ‘watery’ projects with the Friends of Tawd Valley, such as the creation of a wetland scrape next to the community orchard, which is a joint project with West Lancashire Borough Council Ranger Service, and aims to filter surface water run-off before it reaches the river.
Other projects include riverfly monitoring, and completion of the Freshwater Biological Association’s Priority Habitat Survey — all of which will no doubt add to the future success of the Wild Trout Trust’s ‘Trout in the Town’ network.