Ann McCarter - Wildlife Adventurer

Ann McCarter - Wildlife Adventurer

Minera Quarry Nature Reserve © Simon Mills

Ann McCarter shares tales of her adventurously wild life and her husband’s wildlife legacy.

I was born six months before the War, opposite an extremely noisy rookery. As a child, I vividly remember visiting St Abbs in Scotland – there were thousands of seabirds along the clifftops, of course, but what impressed me most was a small yellow bird: a yellowhammer, which my Dad said was saying ‘a little bit of bread and no cheese’ just to me. Later, I was pushed off to boarding school in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by acres of fields, the River Lune, countless birds and wild flowers. When I subsequently went to University in Dublin, it was such a relief to be in a city small enough for the countryside to be within an easy bus journey – I’m definitely not a city person".

David and I both knew how important it was – and is – to financially support
wildlife and our local Wildlife Trust.
Ann McCarter

"After David and I married, we holidayed on Morecombe Bay. There, we began to learn the waders at low tide, and when Leighton Moss opened we got more ‘into’ birds. Soon, we started going on more exotic wildlife holidays, and I’ve been lucky enough to visit a lot of places in the world. I once volunteered to stay behind on Aldabra, north of Madagascar, in the middle of the Indian Ocean! I was there for about five or six weeks, getting to snorkel the second-largest coral atoll in the world – a truly terrific experience".

"My first visit to Africa became a major influence on a hobby I came to practise in North Wales, when a friend lent me his wife’s camera and long lens. That started me off doing all sorts of slideshows for local groups; and I went to Crete for several years with a botanical specialist who taught me flower photography. I’ve now lived in North Wales for 58 years and practised all the techniques I was shown back at home".

A quarry area now overgrown with vegetation, trees and other larger plants, but still with large bare patches of ground. To the left there is a steep rockface, with grasses growing everywhere. To the right hills and woodlands rise up to enclose the area. In the very far left background a town can be seen, along with fields fading into the horizon and meeting the clouds.

Minera Quarry nature reserve © Simon Mills

Minera Quarry Nature Reserve

Witness the incredible power of nature as it slowly reclaims this former industrial site.

Explore Minera Quarry

"David and I both knew how important it was – and is – to financially support wildlife and our local Wildlife Trust. The plants and animals surrounding us need a healthy environment to live in; whilst we and the generations who will follow us need wild places to go, where we can all take a break from busy life and breathe in fresh air. To this end, we’ve been Wildlife Trust members for many years; David made a donation towards Minera Quarry Nature Reserve and subsequently left a legacy; and I’ve pledged a gift to North Wales Wildlife Trust in my own Will. I know that I’ve been very fortunate in life; and consider it a privilege to know that my own passing will one day leave a unique, local, living legacy".

Ann McCarter

What will your legacy be?

Once you have provided for your loved ones, remembering North Wales Wildlife Trust in your Will helps keep your memories of our wildlife alive for future generations.  We need this support to ensure that the children of North Wales will be able to continue to enjoy their wildlife and wild places as they grow up and have families of their own.

Every gift in every Will, however large or small, makes a difference.

Leave a gift in your Will