We
talked to Lizzie Barker, Director of Creature Candy and full-time ecologist,
about her love for bats, wildlife and giving to charity:
Q.
Do you have a memorable bat experience?
My
first encounter with a bat was pretty memorable, as Im sure it is for most
people. It was a brown long-eared bat we had uncovered during some roofing
works and I remember thinking how beautiful, delicate and innocent it looked. I
was shaking with excitement and that feeling stayed with me for several days.
Brown long-eared bats are still to this day my favourite bat and is one of the
reasons why I chose this species for my first product design.
Q.
Do you deal with bats a lot during your job as an ecologist?
As a
consultant I specialise in bats but most of my survey work involves encounters
with foraging bats during emergence surveys, or encounters with bat droppings
during building inspections. There are very few opportunities to see bats close
up in their roosts or to handle them. If we do find bats we always keep disturbance
levels to a minimum and only handle bats if absolutely necessary. It’s always
such a pleasure to find a new roost and I still get that excited feeling in my
tummy whenever I see one, whether close up or flying in the sky. They are
simply magical creatures.
Q.
What other species do you frequently deal with?
I
have to deal with lots of other protected species in my job, including great
crested newts, dormice, reptiles, water voles, otters and badgers. Most of my
work is focused around bats though which is how I like it.
Q.
What is the greatest threat to bats in the UK?
The
populations of our UK bat species are unfortunately under threat now due mainly
to loss of foraging and roosting habitats, largely as a result of building and
development works. As a consultant ecologist, part of my job is to survey
buildings, structures and trees that are due to be subjected to development or
remedial works. Our role is vital to ensure bat roosts are not unknowingly
destroyed and bats are not harmed in the process. We also provide guidance and
support on how to best mitigate for such development works and often create
many new bat roosting spaces as a result. However, it shouldn’t just be left to
the consultants and developers to create new roosts. I think we can all do our
bit for bats and encourage them into our gardens and roof spaces. Just some
simple wildflower planting would help attract insects, and the bats (and birds)
will follow. Simple!
Q.
What made you make the jump and set up Creature Candy?
On a
daily basis I work side by side with British wildlife charities and often ask
them for guidance and reassurance. They work tirelessly to conserve our
threatened species and help raise awareness. I felt the need to give something
back and so I came up with the idea of Creature Candy. My primary aim was to
raise money for British wildlife charities, however I also wanted to raise
awareness of our declining species and offer information to my customers about
the species and the charities their donations will help support. We provide
fact sheets about each of the species, charity membership forms, and there is
also descriptive text on each product. It was also really important to me to
try to change people perceptions of bats from dark black silhouettes with fangs
and red eyes, to the beautiful charismatic and unique creatures they are. I
hope our brown long-eared bat illustration has achieved this.
Q. Why did you choose bats, bees and moths to focus your designs around?
The
challenge of changing peoples opinions of bats via an illustration and some
text was my main motivation for the bat design. I also know the charity (Bat
Conservation Trust) very well and admire the wonderful work they do. Supporting
them was a no brainer for me. Bees and moths have a wonderful elegance to them
and they are both incredibly important in our ecosystem. Getting people to
understand them, understand their habitats and encourage them into their
gardens imperative. They also look really beautiful as illustrations on our
products. However, we are not just stopping at bats, bees and moths, we have
lots more design ideas in the pipeline. Watch this space!
Q.
Why did you decide to donate 10% of sales to charity?
Creature
Candy is not just about British made products with pretty designs on them. It’s
also about education, inspiring people and giving something back. Our wildlife
charities operate on such small budgets and without donations from individuals
and businesses, both small and large, they wouldn’t be able to operate at all.
It gives me the greatest pleasure handing over cheques to them at the end of
the financial year.
Q.
Apart from buying a bat themed product from Creature Candy,
what more can people do to further bat conservation?
Learn
and get involved. The Bat Conservation Trust website offers lots of advice on
creating habitats for bats and encouraging them into our gardens. Planting even
the smallest area of wildflowers or putting up just one bat box will contribute
to the wider picture and help conserve British bat species. Donations to the
BCT and purchasing Creature Candy bat products is also very helpful too!
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