What does the Landscape Recovery team do?
Our Landscape Recovery team work to rejuvenate land of low wildlife value, improving the land by restoring lost habitats, and in the process helping to reconnect people with nature.
Ian Jelley
Director of Landscape Recovery
Ian leads our excellent teams within the Landscape Recovery Department that focus on making more space for nature and helping people to take action for wildlife on their land. We work collaboratively with farmers, landowners, Government Agencies, utility companies and local authorities to enable nature’s recovery at a landscape scale.
Find out more about our Director of Landscape Recovery
Expertise
Karl says: "I am passionate about leadership, and the impact people can have when we all work together effectively. Nature should be for everyone, and everyone can play their part in bringing our wildlife back. The natural world is at the heart of everything, it helps us grow our food, provides clean air, supports our mental and physical wellbeing and so much more. Not to mention it being awesome in its own right! As a senior leader within the charity my role is about bringing people together to achieve more through collaboration, working in partnership and supporting my colleagues to thrive in their roles."
Why Warwickshire Wildlife Trust?
Ian says: "I love my job. The climate and ecological emergency is the biggest threat facing humanity and helping to lead a local response to a global problem motivates me every day. I work with some inspiring people and get to experience the wonder that our natural world has to offer as part of my job. I’ve worked in this sector for nearly two decades and it’s never been more exciting than what we’re doing now. The scale of the challenge is matched by our ambition."
Caz Bailey
Sherbourne Valley Project Manager
Caz provides leadership to the team and oversees the delivery of all sub-projects, ensuring that high quality outcomes are delivered, and the project is effectively managed on time and to budget.
Find out more about our Sherbourne Valley Project Manager
Expertise
Caz has been working in the Nature Conservation sector for nearly 20 years. During that time, she has worked for serval different charities including three Wildlife Trusts, the National Trust and Butterfly Conservation. She has also spent time working in the private sector for an ecological consultancy. These roles have focused on a wide range of activities including site management, surveying and monitoring, and community engagement and have all had project management as a large part of them. She gets excited about data and using that to analyse and make informed decisions.
Why Warwickshire Wildlife Trust?
Caz says: "It’s not a job, it’s a purpose. I feel very proud to work for WWT and genuinely feel like I can make a difference for the greater good. For my specific role, I love co-ordinating and pulling all of the aspects of projects together. I feel very privileged to be part of such an exciting project, which involves a wide range of partners and is positively benefiting so many people’s lives as well as the environment"
Gina Rowe
Landscape Recovery Development Manager
Gina develops existing and new landscape scale partnerships and makes new contacts to deliver more restoration and creation of habitats across the county. She develops the Trust’s Agricultural Advice work. Gina also co-hosts the Warwickshire Avon and Tame Anker Mease Catchment Partnerships. She works with the Landscape Recovery team to apply for funding and resources to deliver projects for 30 by 30.
Find out more about our Landscape Recovery Development Manager
Expertise
Gina says: "I am interested in all wildlife, habitat management and creation, and work with many partners to achieve joint successes for wildlife. I lead on Partnership development, liaison and support and deliver practical tree identification training courses for both winter and summer. I have a reasonable generalist wildlife identification, with more knowledge on some birds, and love walking and wildlife watching, locally and across the UK. I've worked for over 10 years on Catchment Partnerships, Local Biodiversity Action Partnership and Plans, and Living Landscape scheme development."
Why Warwickshire Wildlife Trust?
Gina says: "I joined the Trust to make positive differences for wildlife, through securing resources for project delivery, and through influencing a range of stakeholders and partners to adapt how they work and impact the environment. I enjoy working in a well respected charity which can address many wildlife issues, and engages people to learn more about wildlife and how they can take action to tackle the negative impact that humans are having on many species and habitats. My role enables me to develop new approaches and links, and to use my knowledge and contacts to progress wildlife restoration projects across the county, working with many partners who are equally committed to restoring habitats and species."
Susan Hartland-Smith
Tame Valley Wetlands Manager
Susan delivers the Landscape Recovery agenda across Tame Valley Wetlands Nature Improvement Area (NIA) through the Tame Valley Wetlands Landscape Partnership, River Blythe SSSI restoration, the River Cole Vision and other developing landscape areas.
Find out more about our Tame Valley Wetlands Manager
Expertise
Susan says: "I would describe myself as a generalist. I know a bit about a lot of things. I really enjoy learning about nature so I have never settled on a specific area of expertise and have ended up gathering all sorts of knowledge through my life.
If pushed for a subject, I know more about plants than anything else. They tend to stay in the same place compared to a lot of our other wildlife so it’s easier to study them… I’m fascinated about how everything in nature is connected together and how the smallest things can have the most important role."
Why Warwickshire Wildlife Trust?
Susan says: "I’m the kind of person who needs to do a job they love. Working for a Wildlife Trust means that I get to be involved with nature conservation at a grassroots level (excuse the pun). My job encompasses the restoration and creation of habitat for wildlife to recover and thrive. Knowing that the job I do can make a real difference to our landscape is why I go to work. Not only that but I also get opportunities to engage with people from all over our region and help them to discover nature on their doorstep."
Tim Precious-Li
River Catchment Restoration Manager
Tim manages the River Catchment Restoration Team, leading on delivery of habitat creation and restoration across Warwickshire on multiple externally funded projects with a range of stakeholders including Environment Agency and National Highways. A key part of our work is engaging with landowners and working to make farms and land holdings outside of Trust Reserves wilder places and more resilient to climate change.
Find out more about our River Catchment Restoration Manager
Expertise
Tim says: "I have a degree in Environmental Science from Plymouth University and worked in Ecological Consultancy briefly before joining the Wildlife Trust movement. I have worked in river restoration for 12 years delivering habitat creation and enhancement projects on reedbeds, ponds, rivers and wetlands. I specialise in natural flood management, pond creation and water vole conservation but enjoy working on many habitats as river catchments are not limited to rivers and bogs! Woodland, grassland, and farmland management is a key part of catchment restoration work and I enjoy creating restoration plans and getting out in the field with teammates, volunteers and contractors to put these into place."
Why Warwickshire Wildlife Trust?
Tim says: "I am particularly interested in the relationship between food production and wildlife; The Wildlife Trusts are in a unique position to help recover wildlife across our landscape with our local knowledge, ecological and land management expertise, and partnership working. 71% of all land in the UK is agricultural. It’s evident that where and how food is produced is one of the biggest human-caused threats to species extinction and our natural world.
Working with landowners and farmers to understand the countless benefits that a land rich in wildlife with diversity of habitats provides to society is something I believe is essential in safeguarding life sustaining biodiversity and is one of the main reasons I continue to work for Warwickshire Wildlife Trust. Clean rivers, clean air, healthy soils and a stable climate are not optional."
More from the Landscape Recover team
Living Landscapes and Planning
Gina Rowe - Landscape Recovery Development Manager
m: 07740 082550
Jennie Johnson - Planning & Biodiversity Officer
Dunsmore Living Landscape Project
For all enquiries regarding the Dunsmore Living Landscape Project, please call 024 7630 2912.
Lucy Hawker - Dunsmore Living Landscape Scheme Manager
m: 07818 579 302
Sherbourne Valley Project
Caz Bailey - Sherbourne Valley Project Manager
Alexander Jones - SVP Natural Heritage Officer
Charlotte Ridpath - SVP Cultural Heritage & Community Engagement Officer
Chloe Rose - SVP River Restoration Officer
Tame Valley Wetlands Landscape Partnership Scheme
For all enquiries regarding the Tame Valley Wetlands Landscape Partnership Scheme, please call 016 7547 0917.
For more information about the Tame Valley Wetlands Partnership Scheme, please visit www.tamevalleywetlands.co.uk.
Su Hartland-Smith - Tame Valley Wetlands Manager
m: 07864 70356
Andrew Apanasionok - Water and Habitats Specialist Officer
m: 07587 550077
Eddie Asbery - Tameforce Development Officer
m: 07703 192200
Emily Reilly - Project Support Officer
m: 07471 033679
Helen King - Willow Tit Assistant Project Officer
m: 07464 486278
Habitat Biodiversity Audit (HBA)
For all enquiries regarding the HBA, please call 019 2642 2197.
Jon Bowley - Senior Local Wildlife Sites Surveyor
Gareth Price - GIS & Phase 1 Officer
Camille Newton - Local Wildlife Sites Surveyor
River & Catchment Restoration
Tim Precious-Li - Rivers & Catchment Restoration Manager
m: 07464 486 277
Jake McAllister - River & Catchment Restoration Officer