Photo by Chloe Hilton
Hello readers! My name is Chloe and I am one of the new 2026 conservation trainees. Before stumbling upon the traineeship, I had recently finished my degree in Zoology and was working as a Membership Recruiter for the Trust while volunteering with various organisations to gain some more hands-on conservation experience.
In the last couple of months, the breadth of practical skills and experiences we’ve developed has been overwhelming (in a good way). We’ve undergone first aid training, fence repair, deer fence construction, ragwort pulling, habitat pile building, leadership training, vehicle inductions, brushcutter training and had the chance to absorb so much specialised ecological knowledge from all kinds of people via osmosis. That makes writing about just one experience incredibly difficult to narrow down!
Something that has been very new to me as the course has progressed is surveying. Despite my academic background, getting involved in surveys is something I hadn't done before joining the Trust as a trainee. Therefore, getting involved in the dormouse survey at Ribbesford Wood in the Wyre was a once in a lifetime opportunity - and it felt like one.
We met up on a well-maintained track and learnt about the reasons behind our surveying before heading off into the woodland to find our first line of boxes marked on the map. The boxes were set out in neat lines across the various sections of woodland, interspersed with additions after new boxes had been added to the same area. Despite the use of neon paint markers on nearby trees, I found it difficult to spot the next along the line, so I was very grateful to be paired up Catharine, an ex-trainee with more experience (and better vision).
It took lots of no-shows, birds and empty wood mouse nests to find them, but eventually, Catharine and I were lucky enough to be the first of the group to find what looked at first like a wood mouse nest (a jumble of unstructured leaf litter) but ended up holding three dormice!