Paths

September - the earth moves for John and Clare

1st September

John was rather taken with the sight of a large patch of Creeping Thistle that had gone to seed. Clare enjoyed them too as they were outside the Meadow. This patch is a favourite one for butterflies. More fungi are appearing as autumn gets closer. Clare has heard that all fungi are edible, but some of them only once. John has made a new gate to give access through the mud barricades, which are now finished.

Thistledown

Please feel free to contribute identification info

4th September

Clare helped John raise the first roof panel for the shepherd’s hut to see how it will look. He realised the main supporting beam needs to be slightly raised. Clare continued her fungi discoveries.

The Turin Shroud fungus (this is not a real type of fungus, however Clare was taken by the face she could see), or possibly Larch Bolete…

…which appears to have a smiley face on the underside

6th September

Barry kindly lent us his ATV so that we could collect logs from the Wetland and the Pit Wood, while Paul recovers his confidence with hauling. To this end, Eilidh and John managed to persuade him to wear his collar again and walk round with it on.

And the film title is?

8th September

Robbie cut logs and started felling conifers in the Pit Wood; he also removed the two trees that were inside the story-telling circle. Robert helped to haul dumpies of logs out to where we can load them into the trailer.

9th September

We borrowed some sheep again to graze off the meadow. Having brought the logs home, we filled the second shed, with a little help.

Yan tan tethera pethera pimp…no we haven’t lost our mind, just trying to count the sheep. This old method may still be used by some shepherds. After a dispute because of fidgety sheep, we settled on twenty-five, which is figgot (20) and pimp

10th September

We returned the Groundhog. Clare spotted a trio of tree stumps on the Wetland, each of which was sporting a crop of fungi.

Possibly Honey Fungus

11th September

John raised the roof beam on the shepherd’s hut and managed to cut his finger rather badly.

12th September

More fungi

There is a particularly fine crop of Fly Agaric in the Scrub

We think this might be The Blusher

This looks likely to be Turkey Tail or Coriolus Versicolor

Anyone recognise this one?

14th September

The trail camera caught a fox in the Orchard by the bonfire.

One of the bee colonies has been much beset by robber bees. Clare has followed all the advice available - blocking the entrance so only one bee can get in at a time (the guard bees have more time to deal with invaders), putting a glass sheet in front of the entrance (presumably the robbing bees bash their heads against it while the resident bees can reroute around it), sticking leafy branches in front of the hive (to confuse the robbers - “This doesn’t look like Kansas anymore”), covering the whole hive with a wet sheet for a couple of days (the robbers then think the hive has disappeared or become ghostly and give up); all of these were to no avail. What worked? Would you believe smearing the hive liberally with Vicks Vaporub. The robbers gave up. They can, however, breathe more easily. As of course can the bees who are no longer under threat.

15th September

We are planning to dig out a couple of ponds on the Wetland, so we spent some time marking them out. We are going to use two areas that are already wet, remove some of the rush and dam one edge of each.

One of the Spindle Trees is looking particularly autumnal.

Yet more fungi.

The underside would suggest this is a waxcap of some kind

16th September

Mike arrived to help John fix the first of the roof panels on the shepherd’s hut. Both were pleased with the result. Clare is in awe of what John is doing - he hates heights. The proliferation of fungi this year extended to the inside of one of the sheds.

Panel 1

Panel 2 on the way up…

…and being fixed in place

Ready for panel 3

Inside the shed. Possibly a Tawny Grisette

Inside the shed. Possibly a Tawny Grisette

17th September

Clare helped with the fixing of the last three roof panels with a certain amount of lifting and a lot of encouraging.

18th September

All the panels are now firmly fixed in place. We moved the ponies to the Meadow for 48 hours so that their hooves would chop up the sward a bit, in preparation for sowing wildflower seeds. We started stacking logs in the log shed at Liddells which we had emptied over last winter.

Chop, chop!

We won the panel game

Clare is concerned that John might have misunderstood her request for steps to get into the hut

20th September - Green Gym Day

We were delighted to welcome eight volunteers today, including three new recruits. Many thanks to Mark and Gill, John W, Tim, Barry, Sally, Jane E and Pat, and apologies to all for the paucity of photographs recording all the stupendous effort that went into the day. Clare was engrossed in seed sowing and rather forgot her role as recorder. By 3pm we had ticked all our tasks off the list - wall repair, adjusting the tubing to trees in the Top Strip, felling and logging after some of the damage in the wake of Storm Aileen, path weeding, clearing brambles and ivy out of the roadside wall and sowing wildflower seeds on the Meadow. Within seconds of tidying away at the end, the rain set in.

John, John and Sally seem to have an opinion about Barry’s lunch

The discerning amongst you might spot that the stakes are now secured outside the tubes rather than inside as we had done mistakenly before

The painstaking work of making small holes in the meadow and inserting pinches of seed

Weed free path

While we were all working, these ladybirds were indulging in their own choice of exercise. This gave rise to a question in the group as to the collective noun for ladybirds. Barry came up with ‘a Bangkok’! **

Bramble and ivy free wall, and this only shows a small section of the whole length that was cleared

A limb off the oak near the Wetland

A large limb off a dead tree in the Pit Wood. It’s good to leave dead trees as a habitat for insects and birds

This is the Ash from which it fell

** If you don’t get Barry’s joke, try saying the name of the insect with a Bronx accent

21st September

Eilidh began to prepare William for receiving a bit - she coated a stick with molasses. Once William realised he liked the taste, Eilidh managed to position the stick in his mouth to replicate how the bit will be. Both ended up very sticky.

Yum

A sticky bit!

There are still butterflies around. This Comma is on Purple Loosestrife in the Meadow

22nd - 26th September

John has been working on the panels that will fill the spaces below the roof on the shepherd’s hut. John and Clare finished sowing the last of the seeds on the Meadow; this included introducing our own Yellow Rattle seeds to the top quarter where the plant has yet to get established.

27th September

The first day of a week’s machinery hire. John is creating his own version of two radical movements from the Civil War and seeking to make an even platform for the hut. The first job was to make a drain behind where the hut will go.

The Digger in action

The beginning of a drain

The Leveller in action

Clare spotted this Red Admiral enjoying the late summer sun while she was on her way to reposition the trail camera

Our very own version of the Lambton Worm

Not quite a red carpet for the ponies, however we added the final touch to the extended mud barricades

28/29th September

Clare had spotted a lot of acorns in the Pit Wood and set the trail camera hoping to catch either a badger and/or a jay collecting or eating them. The camera picked up lots of activity, sadly most of it by grey squirrels although the very first capture was of a badger, even if you don’t get to see much of it. The sound is quite striking! We think the bird darting behind the tree in the fourth video, is a Jay.

29th September

Robbie arrived to dig out the first of the ponds. On the way he dug a trench for a new land drain near the spoil heaps by the Meadow. He also cleared some of the grips leading in to the pond to help with the water flow. John cut down and logged a couple of trees at the top of the Pit Wood.

The axeman cometh

30th September

Robbie finished the larger of the two ponds, adding an island with a Heron perching stone. He then moved on to work on the second pond, excavating this, creating another small island with Heron perch and establishing a roadway at the dammed end and had this all finished by early afternoon. And this from someone who was out carousing the night before - pretty impressive! John cut down more trees at the top of the Pit Wood to let light and space in for the younger planting. He also finished the drain Robbie had dug yesterday, making a French drain that is filled with gravel.

Looking north; Heron island left of centre

Looking south with opened up grips allowing for easier water flow

The spindly looking trees will not need to put on so much growth to reach the light

Robbie in a hole of his own making

The smaller pond with Heron perch and opened grip

Finished! This shows the new roadway with the Meadow in the distance. Delightfully for us, Robbie is as excited about the new ponds as we are. All we need now is quite a lot of rain.

September 2017 - "Haul Paul!"

1st September

After a long pause, Paul returns to log-hauling training.

4th September

More path maintenance in Top Strip. Logs sawn and stacked in log shed ready for 2018.

6th September

Paul hauls some more. More path maintenance.

7th September

Clare and John set the bees from the unviable hive free on the Meadow. The queen travels up to the Top Grazing clinging on to the back bumper of the Land Rover. Having failed to spot her inside the hive, at least Clare could see that she was indeed smaller and thinner than expected and therefore likely to have been a drone-laying queen. Yet more path maintenance and work on the roadway by the top gate.

13th-16th September

Still more path maintenance; strimming in the Top Strip.

Paul hauling in fine style

Refurbished path in the Top Strip

This miniature forest was growing on the old path chip

Getting ready for next winter

More path refurbishment

16th September

We say goodbye to Snippets who leaves for Tarset pastures. Paul goes to Codlaw for pony boot camp while we go walking.

22nd September

46 Guelder Rose planted as hedging in the Orchard.

25th September

William the pony arrives.

27th September

Would you believe more path maintenance? It's a long path.

28th September

Site prepared for Field Maple Mel has grown and donated. Juniper maintenance on Crag.

 

Juliet brings William

Guelder rose hedging in the Orchard

August 2017 - Proper use of the hay shed

2nd August

Hay shed completed!

4th August

Roadway finished and the trailer has new mudguards. 

5th August

Path maintenance in Top Strip - weeding and strimming.

6th August

Same again.

7th August

More chip laid on Top Strip path; more strimming; area around sheds temporarily fenced and walkway into shelter started. 

8th - 9th August

More work on walkway into shelter. 

11th August

Chris Bates from Oakwood and Howden Recycling delivered a trailer load of gravel for the walkway and the hollow beside the new roadway. Walkway finished and fencing of that strip completed. Harebells found on Top Grazing right up close to the road boundary wall. 

12th - 14th August

Posts and rails fixed for area in front of sheds.

15th August

The Great Leveller - all was going well in John's post and rail eyes until Clare came along with her spirit level and everything changed. Or rather she insisted everything had to be moved. We're both rather pleased with the result. We found a Horntail Wood Wasp in the log shed - an insect neither of us had seen before.

 

In the spirit of living levelly

In the spirit of living levelly

He knows Clare was right all along

He knows Clare was right all along

I think we all agree this looks very fine. And level.

I think we all agree this looks very fine. And level.

Horntail Wood Wasp. Photo by Billmcmillan (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Horntail Wood Wasp. Photo by Billmcmillan (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

18th August

Railings round sheds complete. Clare not railing any more.

23rd August

Log clearing from Top Strip ready for Paul to haul. Brash removed and piled up ready for Green Gym Day

24th - 25th August

At last we had enough dry days in a row to cut the Wildflower Meadow. Tom came in with his tractor and cut and turned the hay, John strimmed and Clare resumed her Grim Reaper role for the occasion. John also strimmed in the Orchard in readiness for hedge planting.

Hey! Hay!

Hey! Hay!

Hay in the making

Hay in the making

The Grim Reaper reappears. Any improvement on last year's scythe action? 

The Grim Reaper reappears. Any improvement on last year's scythe action

27th August

Tom turned the hay again. We cleared brash from the Top Strip ready for the chipper. More path maintenance in the Top Strip. Clare discovered that one of her four bee colonies had laying worker bees and was no longer viable. Roe deer seen moving from the Scrub to the Pit Wood at 3.30pm - so much for them being crepuscular.

To everything, turn, turn, turn. There is a season, turn, turn, turn!

28th August  

Hay in.  Having rowed up the hay it was baled, transported and stored in the newly built hay shed.

So 1 cut meadow = 19 hay bales = 1 full hay shed +2 happy ponies + 2 very tired adults.

John approves

Paul approves

29th August

Liddells is a wonderful place to be when there's a great sunset, as there was today. Tim captured this one.

30th August

John fixed shuttering in place for the paths into the sheds. Clare failed to take a photograph of this momentous development in our attempt to upgrade the shed area.

 

May and June 2017 - 3 surveys and a new trail camera

2nd May

Squirrel trap set in Pit Wood. Paul bucked John off twice. John knows this was his own fault, having disregarded advice that he was using an unsuitable saddle which was causing Paul discomfort. The resulting injuries, including to pride, and especially to the fingers of his right hand, meant wearing a splint for two months and a severe reduction in working capacity. Clare was not amused.

6th May

Wildflower survey, tawny owl out in Pit Wood. 

7th - 14th May

Time spent clearing spilt gravel from top grazing and setting up two new hive stands in apiary

15th May

Bird box survey: 13/33 in use. 

14th May - 28th June

Paths strimmed in Top Strip, Orchard to Pit Wood and Orchard to meadow; Thistles cut on Top Grazing (27th June); 3 Willows planted (from Sylvia) on Wetland in area of main pond; Rush released by digger all removed from Top Grazing and holes filled; arena strimmed. 

19th May

Bird survey - John and Keith.

17th June

Rails for enclosing sheds area bought at Mart Sale. 

20th June

One of the bee colonies swarmed into the middle of a Hawthorn and Clare and Barry faced the challenge of collecting it. Happily the bees are enjoying their new home with Barry.

23rd June

Trail camera placed S edge of Pit Wood; deer filmed 4.31am. 

24th June

Violas and Scarlet Pimpernel planted on spoil heaps near Meadow; Field Poppy planted in Meadow.

John apparently enjoying the Bird Cherry blossom however that squirrel trap suggests he might have deadlier things in mind

The swarm is the dark patch in the top of the hawthorn

For your further education, these are roe deer droppings

February 2017 - marking the arrival of Juno

3rd February

John rode Paul again; John helped with path, sawing log edging/step edging. 

14th February

Bird box (27) put on oak at north west corner of NE Strip for Valentine's Day; flower survey carried out. 

17th February

Last of the Corsican Pines felled in Top Strip. 

19th February

20 Field Scabious and 10 Snake's Head Fritillary planted on Meadow to mark birth of Clare's first grandchild Juno, born 18th February!

20th - 27th February

Arena fenced off. Grey squirrel seen on wall at west end of Top Grazing. 

23rd February

Bundles of Willow cuttings collected from Wenda and Matthew at Codlaw. 

24th February

Willows planted in triangle at east end of Pit Wood, near ponds at west end of Wetland, south of bottom driveway and in bower for bird-watching. 

27th February

We were told that 7 woodcock had been seen flying out of Pit Wood on shoot day at the end of January.

Kissing's in fashion

January 2017 - Bluebells in memory of Heather Lindsay

6th January

Bird and flower survey. 

9th January

c60 Larches planted with Mel and Neil's help; mostly in the verge and top strip.

14th January

A pair of treecreepers on the Oak with the barn owl box. Yesterday and today we began making 12 more bird boxes with offcuts from the shed's construction. 

16th January

Woodpecker heard drumming in NE strip. 

23rd January

Remaining (c40) Larches planted in Pit Wood (S edge and western border) and 5 Horse Chestnuts (grown at home from conkers) in SW corner of Pit Wood. Path in Top Strip extended approx 2 metres eastwards over rock outcrop. 

27th January

3 more Corsican Pines felled in Top Strip; paths extended approx 3 more metres east. 

28th January

200 Bluebells planted at W end of Top Strip in memory of Heather Lindsay; 3 new open-fronted boxes erected in Top Strip and one moved from Corsican Pine to a Larch in Top Strip. 

29th January

3 more bird boxes put up - Elder at West end of Orchard (wren); Hawthorn near gate on W wall of Pit Wood (flycatcher); Sycamore on N side of glade near path down to spring (flycatcher). 

30th January

John rode Paul on the Top Grazing unaccompanied; Clare made several more metres of path in top strip - steps down.

It was cold!

Mike with a miniature John on his shoulder

Snippets makes sure Paul comes to no harm

October 2016 - new friends for Paul

1st October

More work on wall repair (2).

2nd October

Wall repair (2) finished!

6th October

More path laid at west end of Top Strip. 

7th and 9th October

Fencing added on top of Crag in readiness for sheep on Top Grazing. 

10th October

Paul pulled his first log! Part of Meadow wall knocked down by local farm traffic - trailer came unhitched and crashed into the wall. Farmer very apologetic and set to repair it tomorrow. 

13th October

Wall repaired. 

17th October

71 sheep from local farmer John arrived to eat theirs hearts out on the Top Grazing.

18th October

Mike P helped John take down and log a Corsican pine in the Top Strip. He loved it and wants to do more!

20th October

Bill, horse logger and woodsman, came to help advise with Paul and logging. 

24th October

Sox and Snippets, Exmoor ponies, arrived to graze the Wildflower Meadow. 

Remember the Plum blossom...

Harnessing Paul's strength

"Go straight ahead..."

Sox and Snippets

July 2016 - conkers, newts and queen bee cells

1st July

Tynedale Community Choir included Liddells in their Singing Walk and picnicked on the trailer on the Top Grazing. 

4th July

Becky rode Paul for the first time in the arena at Codlaw. 

6th July

Paul returned to Liddells. 

7th - 10th July

Strimming west end of Top Strip. 

11th July

First Horse Chestnut grown from a conker planted at west end of top strip. 

13th July

Second Horse Chestnut planted as above. Corsican Pine by top wall felled. 

14th July

Common newt found in chip pile. 

14th July - 4th August

Brashing and thinning in Top Strip; west end path re-chipped and extended and weeding 6" either side. 

19th July

No queens but 5 queen cells. 

Becky and Paul getting to know each other

June 2016 - moving day for the bees

3rd June

Green Gym: Mel, Barry and Sally helped: chipper hired - all chip in Top Strip dealt with and pile west of Meadow. More thistles removed from Meadow. 

5th June

Tim saw a Small Heath butterfly on Liddells - a first.

7th June

Bees moved to apiary; Paul second and much improved lunging session; fox seen on Meadow; Paul walked down through Scrub on newly opened up path and back and then escaped back along this path through unclosed gate!

8th June

Grey squirrel on west wall; 2 deer on Top Grazing; Paul long-reined down path through Scrub and back. 

9th June

Clare completed thistle removal on Meadow and environs - 40 bags filled!

8th - 10th June

Much potting on of wildflower seedlings for planting out 2017. 

10th June

Paul has a saddle!

21st June

Paul long-reined to Codlaw for a week's assessment re exercise and training needs. 

22nd June

Keith came to conduct our third bird survey:  family of redstarts in the orchard!

24th June

2 Common Blue butterflies on spoil heaps west of Meadow; meadow pipit seen on Meadow!

May 2016 - Northumberland Wildlife Trust Meadow visit

During May - more maintenance work on path west end of Top Strip - logs used for southern edge. 

2nd May

International Dawn Chorus Day - Clare did a breeding birds listen. 

5th May

Naomi Waite (NWT meadows specialist) walked over Liddells and found Adders-tongue fern in the Meadow. Janet made her first visit to meet Paul with a view to mentoring John. 

7th - 14th May

Janet looked after Paul. 

21st May

Steve Leigh, a barefoot trimmer, came and managed to trim Paul's forefeet. Lots of time spent moving Beech and Rowan logs and brash and ongoing logging and stacking. 

26th May

Clare started removing nettles from under Hawthorns on meadow and then began tackling the Thistles. Evidence of roebuck fraying on many saplings and the Spindle Trees. 

Plum tree in blossom in the Orchard...

and a different fragrance - evidence of a fox

April 2016 - primroses, Paul, paths

5th April

Primroses and Marsh Marigold out in Pit Wood. 

9th April

Disastrous meeting with farrier - Paul reared, took the gate off its hinges and careered into the barbed wire fence. 

22nd April

Bee shed constructed with Mel's help.

During May continued maintenance work on path west end of Top Strip - logs used for southern edge. 

One of the new ponds proves fruitful

Evidence of fruitfulness

Tadpoles

Kissing still in fashion (Thanks to Tim for these three photographs)

Snow on the hills

March 2016 - little drummer bird

1st March

Roadside Beech trees trimmed by Mark. 

2nd - 5th March

Owl box made. 

6th March

Chip from top strip bagged; owl box put up on Oak overlooking wetland; first woodpecker heard drumming in Scrub. 

8th March

Barn owl seen hunting over Wetland, tantalisingly close to owl box!

13th March

Hal and Beth came to help - clearing, splitting and clearing Rowan logs from the quarry and pulling brash out; Beth planted Cinquefoil by the picnic stone on the meadow. Dead woodcock on meadow. Logs stored in Shed No. 3 (Shed No.1 repurposed as tool shed.)

19th March

John bought 50 posts from the Mart Sale to use for path edging (brought to Liddells 20th).

During March Clare worked to remake path east of Top Strip, laying membrane, relaying chip and edging with stones from Liddells. Beginning of construction of shed for apiary. Or, as acute observers will realise, Shed No. 4.

Wednesday 30th March

Pair of pied wagtails on the top grazing. 

Don't they look better

Ready for splitting

But who made the owl box's maker?

Gathered winter fu-u-el

Cinquefoil

August 2015 - summer shedding

3rd, 4th and 5th August

Preparing for Green Gym days - hauling brash out of Top Strip. 

7th August

Green Gym: Tim, Sally, and Rachel: more Top Strip path; weeding around Meadow trees; Hawthorns brashed in Meadow; chipper. 

8th August

Green Gym: Mel, Sally, Jane E, Pat, David: more path; more weeding/brashing in Meadow and round Sally's trees; tree-felling; chipper.

12th August

Perseid meteors seen from Top Grazing. 

13th August

John dismantled shed from Mike D and it was trailered to Top Grazing to become a log shed. 

Application (2) to Countryside Stewardship

20th August

Preparing site for log shed - levelling, making base; 7 trees felled in Top Strip; clearing site for shepherd's hut; thistles taken out of planted section of Meadow. 

26th August

Mel came to help and we erected the log shed. It awaits roof and guttering. 

John not leaving a twig unshredded

Clare usually taking photographs, so good to have proof she works too

And here's what she helped to achieve

It's not a proper Green Gym Day without a picnic

Mel in a vital role

Shed erection stage 1 complete

Mel reckoning his role might not be so vital

Brashed Hawthorns on the Meadow

Putting the world to rights no doubt

John and power tools - a match made in heaven

Birds and bugs welcome here

July 2015 - a partridge on a boundary wall

2nd July

Grey partridge on south boundary wall. 

6th July

We lined and back-filled second and larger wet area in meadow and planted Yellow Iris, Mints, Monkey Flower, Ragged Robin, Purple Loosestrife. 

8th July

Brashing Meadow Hawthorns and brashing at east end of top strip; clearing at west end of Top Strip; completed rabbit proofing meadow. 

6th - 27th July

Work on Countryside Stewardship application. 

13th July

We built the bonfire for Lughnassa.

25th July

Green Gym Day - path at west end of top strip started, 30 metres completed, with Mel and Tim.

27th July

Brash hauled out of Top Strip and some clearing in quarry. 

Building bonfires is proving to be one of Clare's favourite activities. Here's one in progress...

May 2015 - evidence of a green woodpecker on the land

4th May

Bird box survey

4th - 29th May

More planting, majority in meadow. 

10th May

Jonathan made his first visit. 

14th May

Keith helped with this year's bird survey

14th, 15th and 21st May

Tim began helping us think about a website

18th May

Mel came to help with digging the pond/wet area.

21st May

We planted Willows for the bird-watching bower on the wetland.

23rd, 24th and 25th May

Much work in the Pit Wood - paths - strimmed and brashing started; re-strimming of path in top strip and brashing at west end. 

25th May

Nick visited and offered to help map the history of the land; we was of a mind that there might possibly have been ancient woodland here; we heard a green woodpecker in the Pit Wood. 

29th May

Andrew from Cottage Garden Flowers in Bingfield came to see the site; he has donated some Lady's Bedstraw plants. 

Please use your imagination to see this as a woven bower in years to come, encircling a binoculars-wielding Clare

Nick identified some of our trees as Red Oaks, pointing out the 'pins' or 'whiskers' on the tip of each lobe, and the red base of the stalk

April 2015 - lots of planting and more Green Gym days

Ongoing work to flatten the Meadow. 

2nd April

Forget-me-not, Wood Anemone and Primrose planted in the Top Strip. 

6th April

(Easter Monday). Wood Cranesbill planted in Top Strip. 

7th April

White Violets planted in Top Strip. Ponies collected and taken to Geltsdale. Campion planted on grassy bank in SW corner, Alchemilla and Wild Strawberry planted on Crag. Bendy Larch in NE Strip felled; stile built at western end of Top Strip. 

8th April

Purple Violets planted in top strip; Larch felled in NE plantation. Pied wagtails on top grazing.

10th April

Green Gym: Pat freed more trees in Pit Wood; Tim planted Teazel and Honesty on spoil heaps west of Meadow; Sally planted Leopard's Bane, Monkshood and Dame's Violet in Pit Wood near the spring; John made a stile into the Pit Wood; Clare did more Meadow flattening!

11th April

Green Gym: Mel and John felled the second bendy Larch in the NE plantation; Sally planted Bladder Campion, Solidago and Yellow Loosestrife on spoil heaps in the Top Strip; Clare and Sally started the Ramsons Ramble at the far end of the Top Strip path; Clare continued to hone her mattock management skills on the Meadow. Mel and John planted one Rowan and one Birch from Sally. Stoat hunting at east end of the Crag base.

13th April

John rotovated the eastern quarter of the Wildflower Meadow and 2 paths from the gate to the stiles in the north fence. More work on these paths and banking up the edges of the wet areas in the Meadow. More mattocking.

Seed mix (Sweet Cicely, Garlic Mustard, Wild Carrot, Wild Parsnip and Weld) scattered in Scrub, on Top Grazing and along eastern edge of Meadow. 

17th April

We decided to distribute the plug plants around the Meadow by delineating several circles laid out with string and apportioning the plants between them.; Foxglove and Hedge Woundwort planted under Hawthorn stands on Meadow; Wood Sorrel planted in Top Strip and more Geranium Sylvaticum. Brash on paths. 

18th April

More path brash in Meadow; 3 circles planted, one by entrance; Plantains to ward off serpents and serpent-like thoughts planted in quincunx and triangle either site of gate; tray of Sweet Cicely seedlings planted on north edge of Scrub; discovered bank of Cowslips on spoil heap west of Meadow. 

19th April

Trip to Egglestone Hall Gardens to buy 3 Spindle Trees, 1 Wild Cherry, 1 Damson and 1 Rowan. 

20th April

1 more circle planted; Wild Cherry, Damson, Rowan planted. (NB we were to discover later that planting specimen trees on a meadow is Not a Good Thing, so we had to move them!)

22nd April

Bird box survey.

23rd April

Eastern quarter of Meadow seeded. 

24th April

2 more circles and 3 Spindle Trees planted.

25th April

Spoilheap planting.

27th and 28th April

Digger for roadway from lower entrance and ponds on Meadow.

29th April

Bonfire prep.

John helping to flatten the meadow

Pat - Tree-Freer in Chief

Result of rotovating

Bramble helping Tim plant on the spoil heaps

Sally planting in the Pit Wood

Ganymede and Anonymous awaiting departure

Specimen trees on the meadow

Meadow path

More meadow trees

Plug plants waiting to go in

Spindle Trees west of the Meadow

First Green Gym Day!

Our first Green Gym Day: Mel, Neil H, Jane E, Sally, and Thomas and Emily (grandchildren) chipped all the brash on the Top Grazing, bagged it, and spread it on the new path in the Top Strip. Large quantities of Hard Rush dug out of Wildflower Meadow and some tussocks removed. Field poppy and Black Medic seeds sown there and on Top Grazing. When we looked through our photographs later, we seemed to have more of people having lunch and making friends with the ponies than of any work done, except by Sally's grandchildren, however we did do a huge amount!

Not working party (Tim's photo and caption)

Still not working party (ditto)

Avoiding work party?

Neil's mattock management - at least one adult seems to have done some work

But the hard work prize goes to Emily (and her brother Thomas)

Evidence of work achieved 1...

2...

and 3

June 2014 - more planting in the meadow

21st June

Restrimming path in Top Strip; path creation in Top Strip. 

26th June

Yellow Rattle seeds grubbed into wildflower meadow; work on high seat in NE Strip. 

27th June

John and I went round with Mel on a wildflower survey. 2 cuckoos heard nearby. 2 very large clusters of peacock butterfly caterpillars in Top Strip. 

30th June

More Yellow Rattle seeds grubbed into western section of wildflower meadow. Pair of bullfinches on Meadow seen from high seat. 

Honeysuckle on the Wetland

Common Spotted Orchid in the Pit Wood

Ragged Robin on the Wetland

Peacock butterfly caterpillars on nettles

Early April 2014 - beaks and troughs

1st April

Pussy Willow in Scrub below Top Grazing; Larch in flower in Pit Wood. 

2nd April

Crab Apple moved from home to Orchard. 

4th April

Brashing and strimming on Wrigley Walk in Top Strip. Juliet Roger from the Moorland Mousie Trust visited to discuss the possibility of her Exmoor ponies grazing the land. All parties in agreement, they arrive the week after next!

6th April

Wrigley Walk now cleared along its length. A sparrowhawk flew out of the quarry area, a peacock butterfly was on the gorse near the gate. We saw swallows on the corner by Crag House on our way home. 

12th April

Fence on southern edge of Pit Wood repaired and hurdle into orchard. 

13th April

Brashing along southern edge of Pit Wood; water trough cleaned; 2 bumble bees on top pasture; moss in Nest Box 2

14th April

More brashing on southern edge of Pit Wood; bird boxes up in Pit Wood, verge and top strip; work on trough (much flooding!). Ladybirds everywhere, several bumblebees and peacock butterflies; hunting buzzard; Mel doing wildflower survey. 

15th April

More work on water trough; more bird boxes in Pit Wood; Wrigley butterfly survey; work started to clear southern tip of western boundary fence. Deer ran out of Pit Wood, across Wetland up Crag, over Top Grazing and jumped into top plantation. Wood Sorrell at west end of Top Strip. Butterflies (peacock). 

16th April

Wild Cherry blossom in plantation; trough finished; more work on western boundary fence (stapling complete); 5 bird boxes in top plantation. 

18th April

Moss in bird box 8; more moss in number 2; chiffchaff seen and heard in Pit Wood. 

Wood Sorrel emerging where brashing has let light in

Rainwater collection trough under construction (thanks Lynne & Richard for the photograph)

The leisurely position for fixing a bird box

Wild Cherry in blossom in the Top Strip