Andover conservation volunteers celebrate 10 years

Author: Jonathan RichardsPublished 20th Nov 2020
Last updated 20th Nov 2020

The Anton River Conservation Association (TARCA) is marking its tenth anniversary in helping to look after and care for Test Valley’s nature reserves.

The association is made up of volunteers from Andover and the wider area and, alongside Test Valley Borough Council officers, help to ensure the reserves, and the species who call them home, continue to thrive.

Since 2009, when the group was first created, thousands of volunteers have spent time conserving a number of reserves that are loved and regularly used by residents of the town. Combined, volunteers have contributed more than 11,000 hours of their time to sites including Anton Lakes Local Nature Reserve, Rooksbury Mill Local Nature Reserve, Ox Drove Meadow, Harewood Common and Ladies Walk.

To celebrate the occasion, a special commemoration ‘TARCA’ bench was commissioned last year for the Anton Lakes reserve. The bench has been carved to show a trout and an otter, just two of the members of wildlife which can be regularly spotted at the nature reserve. The artwork has now been unveiled with chair of TARCA, Kate Savage and secretary, Mervyn Gist, after the bench was completed by late local artist, Richard Austin.

Community and leisure portfolio holder, councillor Ian Jeffrey, said:

“Anton Lakes is one of the best-loved features of Andover and it’s a fantastic haven for wildlife, and for our residents who love to come down and make the most of what it has to offer. This was highlighted during the national lockdown earlier this year, and with the restrictions that are currently in place. Green spaces and access to wildlife is absolutely vital, and that’s why I’m so grateful for the work that TARCA has done across the town, and further afield. "