Last Chance Saloon

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Six of us turned out this morning, with some of us looking very nicely tanned, so good holidays had been had. Marcus, Steve, Martin, Dave, Mark, and Paul.

We had a dilemma – do we replace the youth area under the bridge?

These are the things that we needed to consider.

1, what if it gets used for undesirable activities? Turned into a drug den?

2, what if it gets smashed up again?

3, we are allowing a very small percentage of youth to spoil it for the youth in general, which means this tiny element has won.

4, one of our founding pillars is “a path for everyone”, and we don’t really want to start excluding groups.

So we decided to tentatively go for it one last time.

Firstly, we made some super-strong benches out of 6×2 inch timber, with 120 mm screws through the top and steel brackets on the underside.

We then cemented them in place after lugging the bottom of the legs.

Whilst I hate to say, but if anyone tried to kick these in, there is serious risk of injury. So let’s all appreciate it for what it is, a place for the youth to sit, out of the rain, and away from annoying adults.

If it gets broken again, then that’s it. We are going to give this a 6-month trial, and if it works out, we will do more under the other two bridges.

We broke off at half-time for bacon rolls and a caffeine boost. The bacon rolls kindly supplied by Pauline via buy-me-a-coffee, and they were superb, so thank you very much.

The smell of the bacon seemed to bring everyone out. We had so many people either walking or cycling past today, and everyone was eyeing up our brunch.

We then strimmed the path back so people can walk in pairs and have an actual conversation.

We’re going to do some major thinning-out in the autumn.

Nowhere near enough sunlight is getting in, and consequently, nothing is growing. Even the nettles and bramble have given up!

We strimmed around the benches so people don’t get their legs chewed off whilst enjoying a sandwich and a cuppa.

And we cleared some of our entry points for easy access.

It just makes it as easy as possible for everyone, regardless of ability.

Someone has tried to have a small bonfire at one of our triangles.

I think a bushcraft course is needed. This was never going to work!!

The naughty squirrels have moved our Berrybanks picnic bench again, due to it raining or wanting to be hidden in the woods.

We might just leave it, rather than get into a game of cat-and-mouse with it. The more it gets dragged about, the more chance of it falling apart. Maybe we might install a bin in the little squirrel den??

I will litter pick around it and then see if the squirrels start using the new under-bridge benches, or continue to use this one. If the former, then we can pull it back to where it should be.

Lastly, the gift that keeps on giving is still being as generous as ever.

This is actually two weeks’ worth, apart from around the Berrybanks bench, so really I shouldn’t be complaining.

Next one is Friday at Dunchurch, doing a quick bench repair and then strimming. Then back in Cawston next week at the birdfeeder clearing, strimming southwards the first week and northwards the second week.

Until then!

Paul

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From Plumbers to Carpenters

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Last week we came dressed as Italian plumbers, this week we put on our carpenter outfits and decided to do some woodwork. Ian, Reece, Mark, and Paul turned out on a low numbers day. Various members of the team are on holiday, and others have more pressing commitments, like working to earn actual money!

Our three oblong benches were starting to “flex” a bit, so needed something doing to them. Of course, I had the job of chief photo-taker, so left the guys to figure out exactly what was needed.

We have a bit of rot on the last bench, so we will be stripping that out probably in July at some point, but a very successful first half of the session and all three benches no longer “flex” when we sit at them.

At half time, I rustled up some bacon rolls to keep us all fed and caffeinated.

Today’s brunch was sponsored by Jacquie via an amazing buy-me-a-coffee donation, that will keep us in bacon until the end of the year. Pauline has also done a buy-me-a-coffee donation, so we get a double hit of bacon rolls this month. Thank you both so very much.

The second half of the morning was pushing back the path so people can walk side-by-side and not get their legs chewed off by critters lurking in the long grass.

We did about 300 metres in the 40 minutes left, which would be 600+ metres if we were just strimming for the whole morning.

We also have some nice wildflowers starting, and a whole load about to pop.

This is what it’s all about – humans and nature living side-by-side.

Dunchurch Bridleway

Ian, Ruby, and Paul met up last Friday, and we cleared a load of dead trees around our picnic bench.

I know that standing dead wood is good for nature, but when it’s all tangled above the picnic table, it’s possibly not so good for humans if it falls. We want to turn this area into a decent glade in the autumn. We can see how quickly the path is being encroached, and we will get into this on the next session.

We litter-picked a good 1.3 km of the path and mostly found plastic sheeting from the warehousing.

Muggins also had to hand-pull the bramble under the benches because the strimmer was back where we started, but a good morning.

Great views of open farmland.

And loads of wildflowers pushing up.

It really is a decent place to walk, cycle, sit at a bench and just feel at one with nature, or join us on our workdays add to this amazing place.

Next week we’re at the Bear Bridge putting in our dry youth area. We are massively concerned that we are creating something that leads to a load of unintended consequences, so we will tread very slowly and monitor before we roll out further youth areas.

At the moment, when it rains, the youth try to drag our picnic benches under the cover of the bridges, which is not great for the benches.

Let’s see if we can all work together…

Until then!

Paul

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Fixing the Waterworks

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Seven of us turned out today, and we decided that we wanted to be plumbers.

After looking at the problem, Marcus and Ian quickly decided that maybe plumbing wasn’t their game after all, and headed off southwards, quickly followed by Martin and Paul, who quickly headed off northwards. This left Reece, Dave and George to wrestle with the water, which really is like trying to herd cats.

We have a damp bit, and it’s just a bit irritating for walkers, so we did our usual trick of trying to pipe the water under a sort of bridge.

Well played, Reece, Dave and George. We could hear the huffing and puffing from quite a distance. Hopefully, it will dry out and everyone will be happy.

Something for my fellow geeks…

I haven’t really been following where the blog’s viewers are coming from because WordPress changed the World map to a wishy-washy colour, which just looked rubbish.

However, they have turned up the contrast and made it look all pretty again. If it’s blue, they have looked at us…

There are two places that, for well over a year or so, I have been trying to engage and give us a view. Svalbard and Estonia. Despite following various blogs and YouTubers from both places, no bites yet.

Nice to see that someone from Armenia has popped in over the last 30 days. I had to look it up on a map. East of Turkey and south of Georgia, west of that big white blob in the middle around the Caspian Sea that is Iran and a lot of the ‘stans, although we have had Pakistan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan tuning in 251 times between them.

Having read a little Armenian history, I really wish that I hadn’t.

On a lighter note, we have now had a total of 131 countries tuning in, which warms my geeky little heart a bit.

Right, that’s the geeky bit over with, let’s get back to it…

We had a strimmer fail on us last week, and by hook or by crook, I managed to get a refund and use that money to buy the same model that was being heavily discounted, so much so that I bought two.

We now have five strimmers, three hedge trimmers, one pole saw and 18 battery packs. We also have a petrol brush cutter for heavy work in the autumn.

This paid dividends today with about 600 metres strimmed back.

It just keeps it nice and open with a width that means walkers and cyclists can share without pushing each other into the undergrowth. And I personally like to be able to see what is ahead of me when walking. I don’t want Fungus the Bogeyman jumping out at me and giving me the collywobbles…

We broke for our usual coffee and had a rather nice surprise. Andrew and Liz, who have made loads of bird-boxes and super-strong benches, made us some delicious cakes.

It’s days like today, where everyone is being so generous and nice, that make you think, “yeah, the World ain’t such a bad place after all”.

And talking of being generous, we have decided to give the naughty squirrels one last chance under the Bear Pub bridge.

This is the last chance. If this gets wrecked like the last seating that we made out of pallets, then that will be it. This is a place to get away from adults, but not get too far out to be isolated. If it works, we can do the same under other bridges.

Please don’t spoil it for yourselves.

I think that’s about it. We are back on the Dunchurch trail on Friday, and back up the Potford Dam end next week. Please come along if you want to join in, or just want to share a cuppa and a chat. I’m the most introverted and geeky person out there, and I spend most of my life avoiding people and situations. If you feel the same, you will fit in perfectly.

Until next time!

Paul

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Ants in your Pants

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Six of us turned out today with the promise of a bacon roll. Steve, Matt, Reece, Dave, Martin, and Paul (we also had a cameo from another Dave who was interested to see what we get up to). We came armed with strimmers because all we can do at the moment is keep the path edge pushed back.

The thing that really is starting to become evident is that our strips, or margins, are simply not wide enough. The wildflower-rich grass is squeezed between scrub and the path edge. It’s not a problem, we can manage the scrub in the autumn and create deeper scallops.

I needed a little help, so I visited a railway path managed by Warwickshire Wildlife Trust.

The grassy bit is so much wider. This gives us a bit of a plan for later in the year.

We also need to be coppicing 10% of the trees every year on a rotational basis. We have far too many trees that look like beanpoles because they are all fighting for the same space.

It’s going to be a busy winter!!

We’re strimming to stop the vegetation encroaching onto the path.

It just makes it a far better walking or cycling experience, and means that people can enjoy the views, rather than having to watch where they are walking all the time. The woods are in the background of the third picture. Somewhere that I would truly love to get my hands on…

We broke for the aforementioned bacon rolls.

Scranelicious.

We also strimmed around the benches. Remember that each bench is supposed to be a little oasis in a sea of gently waving wildflowers.

We can kinda see that starting to shape up even now. And we have a load of rosebay willowherb pushing up, so the height will be there very soon.

The grass is as close to the ground as possible because the last thing that anyone needs is critters going up trouser legs and biting the fleshy skin on the back of their shins, or worse, getting ants in their pants.

It’s a good place to be if we keep wildlife and man in their lanes. It’s when these two come out of their lanes that things start to get messy.

Lastly, we litter-picked 1.6 miles of the trail.

A pretty empty bag, which is very pleasing.

A good morning with a lot of ground covered.

Dunchurch Bridleway

Just me and Ian on this last Friday and we went back to the start and carried on just knocking the path back.

We’re just making it about 1.5 metres wide and not bothering the nectar-rich wildflowers and wildlife on the rest of the path.

There’s plenty of space for man and nature to share together and not get in each other’s way.

We broke for coffee and biscuits and enjoyed the views.

Photo number three is the woods, again.

There is an AllTrails path that takes people along the greenway, then along the bridleway, and back through the woods, as a decent circular walk. Click the AllTrails link to see it.

Next week we are back down Berrybanks doing a bit more rainwater management.

Until then!

Paul

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Schoolboy Error!

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Six of us turned out today as a rag-tag group of wannabe lumberjacks. Reece, Ian, Matt, Steve, Martin, and Paul. Actually, that is a total fib – none of us wanted to be playing at lumberjack stuff after the first five minutes of a very frustrating and incredibly testing hour.

We made a fatal mistake when putting in the bench donated by Jacquie two weeks ago. We forgot to look up and make sure there was clear air above it.

So of course, the inevitable happened…

We had three choices: move the bench a couple of feet north, cut the whole tree down, or lop off some of the overhanging branches.

We chose what we thought would be the easiest option.

Oh my days!!! It took four of us a whole hour to finally bring the stubborn brute of a branch down. As you can see, there is very little way to get any downward pressure on the saw blade. And when the thing finally dropped, I narrowly missed getting splattered all over the path by it.

It’s using muscles in such an unnatural way that was killing us, and having to constantly look up as a shower of sawdust came down like confetti and got into literally every orifice, was murder on our necks.

But it’s done now and hopefully no more poo on the bench!!

We broke for a really very much needed coffee and a rather nice selection-box of chocolate biscuits.

Martin and Steve had been strimming southwards before the break, so I joined them afterwards, while Ian, Matt and Reece cut back a few low-hanging branches and dug out an annoying stump.

It feels almost criminal to be strimming the wildflowers on the edge of the path, but to leave it means man and nature are constantly colliding rather than living in harmony with each other. It does highlight the need for us to push the scrub further back so that the wildflower margin is much wider. A job for September.

I couldn’t help but admire the views from where we were working.

Just being there and connecting with nature, the whole fellowship thing within the group, the volunteering aspect, and the making a huge difference to the local infrastructure is pretty mindblowing. If someone told me that I would have been doing this 20 years ago, I would’ve laughed in their face.

I had a window of time on Monday, so I did a bit of a solo session. It looked like some baffoon had jumped all over our picnic bench in the birdfeeder clearing, so I re-stained it and also covered up the cement dust on the new “friendship triangle”.

It makes it so much more inviting when the benches are clean.

I noticed that some kind soul had put some fat balls in the feeder, and that prompted me to feed myself.

Decent coffee, a good book, bacon, egg, and solitude were all that I was after. Strangely, a conveyor belt of people seemed to come past. I must have looked a right sight sitting there like Stig of the Dump with my nose in my book as my food was gently cooking!!

The last bit of the day was a quick 2-mile litter-pick.

We really cannot complain about that. Someone had left a Domino’s pizza box at one of the friendship triangles up towards the northern end. I’m just happy that people were able to sit at our benches and enjoy food.

For me, sharing coffee and food, whilst chatting and stuff, I dunno, it just seems like something our ancestors would have done some 300,000 years ago. It just feels right.

Maybe I’m just a bit of a weirdo…

Dunchurch Bridleway

We cleared it to the end, so the connection of both the Cawston and Dunchurch communities are good.

A rubbish YouTube of the western end (the sunlight was not liked by my phone camera).

And that is about it for this week.

Next time we are at Dunchurch on Friday at the most easterly point, and then at Cawston next Wednesday pushing on at Potford Dam. Come along and say hello, share a coffee, bring biscuits and we will love you forever!!

Until then!

Paul

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How many benches must blokes build?

We had a team of five today – Paul, Marcus, Steve, Ian and Martin. This week, for a bit of variety, we put in three little benches instead of one big one.

They are located just south of the access by Carroll Close. Come and give them a try (but give the Postcrete time to set hard first). We were reminded that putting one bench in is relatively easy, but getting three in a neat and symmetrical pattern is a bit harder. After digging and re-digging six holes we think we got it about right. We put one in first and measured from that. One of the group even uttered the words “datum point” which sounded really technical.

The total cost to the group was precisely £0.00. That’s thanks to Clive and Vicki who both donated via the “buy-me-a-coffee” link, which paid for the Postcrete; Paul’s neighbour Andy who donated the wood; and his friend David who cut the posts to size with a very impressive mitre saw. Oh and the nearby stream which provided the water for the Postcrete.

We do like to put in benches in groups as it helps to make the Greenway somewhere for people to meet socially. We had a discussion about the name of this bench cluster. We have settled on “The Friendship Triangle” which sounds very nice and doesn’t have the negative associations of “The Love Triangle”!!

It was a beautiful spring morning. If you’ve not been down the Greenway lately, this is a great time to visit.

Xylem volunteer day

Big thanks to Raj and her team from Xylem for a really productive day volunteering on the Greenway. We hope they had as much fun and companionship as the regular team do.

Tasks performed included:

  • making insect dens (lots of them) from old branches lying up on the banks
  • cutting ivy off trees
  • litter picking
  • cutting back brambles etc

A big THANK YOU to you all!

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How Many Blokes Does it Take to Build a Bench?

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We had a super donation from a lovely lady called Jacquie this week in the form of a bench, and enough buy-me-a-coffee hits to pay for the postcrete to fix it into the ground, and then bacon for our “first workday of the month” scran for easily the rest of the year.

Thank you so much, Jacquie.

Eight of us wildlife heroes turned out on this super sunny morning. Marcus, Ian, Martin, Steve, Matt, Reece, Dave, and Paul, and after lugging all of our gear onto the path we split into two groups. The first group had to go and get the bench and the second group had to find a good location for it. Not sure if we had done much wildlife stuff at this point.

The bench had been taken apart and restained, so we had to rebuild it.

The old joke – “how many blokes does it take to build a bench” was pretty forthcoming…

I won’t mention how many attempts – what happens on the greenway stays on the greenway…

But we eventually got there, and the bench now sits in a pleasant little clearing with decent views down the path.

What a beautiful spot to sit and watch the butterflies as they dance in the shafts of sunlight, and listen to the constant chorus of birdsong.

Whilst the five of us wrestled with the bench and bags of postcrete, Steve, Marcus, and Ian carried on with the strimming to stop the vegetation doing a triffid-like invasion of the path.

We can now see how the zones are starting to work. Path, short margin, wildflower-rich grassy margin, scrub, and trees, as we move towards the edge.

In my mind, the wildflower bit needs to be much wider, so we will be pushing the scrub further back in the autumn. But, oh my days, it’s such a nice place to be.

We enjoyed a caffeine boosting cuppa and flapjack quite late in the morning.

I keep saying it – it’s so good to bond, with coffee, shared food, and rolling up our sleeves and just getting on with the tasks.

I did a quick YouTube to try and show where we are at.

It makes me feel as proud as a peacock that we have created this. Honestly, it was an unofficial rubbish dump when we first started some 16 years ago.

And even the gift that keeps on giving has stopped being so generous.

Brilliant news!!

Next week, we are at Potford Dam, grubbing out brambles from our new scallops and we get to see what Marcus has up his sleeve… On Friday, we are on the Dunchurch path, keeping the connection working.

And next week being the first workday of the month can only mean one thing – BACON!!

Thanks for reading and thank you to all of our patrons and buy-me-a-coffee donations. It really does keep the show on the road.

Until next time!

Paul

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More Stumps and Creating a Flop Zone

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BECOME A PATRON:

We have costs that we simply cannot avoid. Insurance, running this blog, tools, timber for bench repairs, screws and wood-stain, wildflower seeds, etc, etc… I try so hard to recycle and reuse so much stuff, and I am forever begging local businesses for donations (which is pretty tough with me with being a bit of an introvert). If you like what we do, please consider becoming a patron. Just £3, £4, or £5 a month makes so much difference if enough people donate. Thank you. www.patreon.com/cawstongreenway

Six of us turned out on a very wet morning. It had been raining all night, and we were lucky to not get a good soaking today. Matt, Ian, Marcus, Steve, Reece, and Paul donned our wildlife superhero capes and set about with the tasks for the day.

Ian started by knocking back the overbridge entry point.

The view from the bridge shows how puddled up it has become.

Reece, Marcus, Ian, and Steve then set about creating the 12-inch buffer between the path edge and the wildflower-rich grassy areas.

This is to stop the path edge vegetation from flopping onto the path and forcing everyone to walk in single-file, which is not exactly conducive to having a conversation.

We did about 400 metres today, which is pretty good going in the wet, and because we are on top of it, it’s all new growth, so there is not the fight back that we get with aged coarse grasses.

Me and Matt opted for the ache-inducing stump removal.

Ian’s son, David, made a new handle for a spare Zubat blade with his 3D printer. This is amazing. The possibilities are endless!!

The saw is extremely sharp, but it was still really hard work.

We had to leave the stumps quite high, but if we drill a load of holes in the tops, nature will help them to rot down.

A welcome cuppa and flapjack was desperately needed to rebuild our energy.

This, of course, presented an excellent opportunity for me to try out my new joke…

Why did the chicken go to the gym?

To work on its pecks…

The groans were scaring the wildlife…

The short grass and the longer margins next to it are starting to take shape.

It’s quite hard to show in a photo, but hopefully we get it so that each bench feels like a little oasis in a sea of gently swaying wildflowers.

I’m going to do a wildflower survey soon. Just to try and see what we have at this point in the year.

Our water management seems to have coped with the rain and is actually doing what it is supposed to do.

We have one last bit to get sorted.

We know how to fix it, so not a worry.

I also did our weekly litter-pick.

Not bad considering it’s the Easter school holiday.

Dunchurch Bridleway

We pushed back the path that leads to the Solstice Coffee Shop, and also westward along the bridleway. Over 400 metres covered by Ian, David, and Paul.

A group of people from the The Ramblers came past and were really happy with what we were doing.

“The cat’s pyjamas” is how one of them described it!

The next one is at Potford Dam, where we have a bench to put in.

Until then!

Paul

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We Were Stumped Today

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BECOME A PATRON:

We have costs that we simply cannot avoid. Insurance, running this blog, tools, timber for bench repairs, screws and wood-stain, wildflower seeds, etc, etc… I try so hard to recycle and reuse so much stuff, and I am forever begging local businesses for donations (which is pretty tough with me with being a bit of an introvert). If you like what we do please consider becoming a patron. Just £3, £4, or £5 a month makes so much difference if enough people donate. Thank you. www.patreon.com/cawstongreenway

Eight wildlife heroes turned out this week. George, Steve, Dave, Ian, David, Martin, Reece, and Paul. We had a task on our hands that has been on the “To Do List” for about five or more years. We cut back a load of hawthorn trees ages ago and fully intended to come back and “tidy up” the stumps.

They have bugged me ever since.

Cutting back (pollarding) Hawthorn trees not a good idea because they will produce a lot of spindly growth that is difficult to manage and really unhealthy for the tree. Branches become interlocked and start rubbing against each other, leading to infection and disease.

I have always thought that if someone was unfortunate to come off their bike, they could end up doing a faceplant right on top of the things.

And aesthetically, it doesn’t look great.

We have also started pushing the edge of the path back by about 12 inches. We need a buffer between the path and the wildflower-rich grassy zone.

It stops the path from becoming narrow and also allows the vegetation to flop at the end of the summer and not come onto the path. Nothing worse than nettles brushing against your shins.

At half-time, we broke for coffee.

We had a bit of a French flavour to our break this week. Lovely biscuits and a lovely view up, down and to the side.

We have had kids playing and making dens.

This really warms my heart. We want the trail to be open to everyone, and this is so good to see.

We also litter-picked.

The gift that keeps on giving. Would be nice to earn some womble wages now and again, but never found so much as a 20p piece…

We need to use this time of the year to work out where our next glades will be. Ideally, we want about 15 metres of open space with the scrub cut right back and the majority of the trees on the edge laid into a hedge. We need young trees that are easy to manage. There is no point trying to chop back a 50-year-old oak tree when we have young hawthorn and elder everywhere.

If we have a mature tree, we can build the glade around it by cutting back to the south of it. That way, the tree will complement the glade without blocking out a load of sunlight.

We can mark the areas using what3words so we know where to come back in the autumn.

I’m really happy with how we are looking. The amount of footfall was good today, with people walking and cycling past, so it is getting used.

Sadly, some idiotic squirrel decided to break our bench on the Dunchurch Bridleway bit, so a quick repair was required.

I didn’t want to leave it until our Friday workday because it’s the school holidays and I didn’t want to risk bits going walkabout whilst we wait until we are there.

Super day today, it really does feel like somewhere special.

On Friday, we are strimming back the path to Solstice Coffee Shop, and next week we are at the Cawston Bridleway bridge removing a couple of stumps and strimming the path edge northwards to where we got to today.

Thank you to all of our patrons and people buying us a coffee. It really does help.

Until next time!

Paul

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We Rebuilt Our Picnic Bench

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BECOME A PATRON:

We have costs that we simply cannot avoid. Insurance, running this blog, tools, timber for bench repairs, screws and wood-stain, wildflower seeds, etc, etc… I try so hard to recycle and reuse so much stuff, and I am forever begging local businesses for donations (which is pretty tough with me with being a bit of an introvert). If you like what we do please consider becoming a patron. Just £3, £4, or £5 a month makes so much difference if enough people donate. Thank you. www.patreon.com/cawstongreenway

Seven of what I would like to call wildlife superheroes turned out today, but we were far from doing wildlife stuff. Marcus, Ian, Reece, Martin, Steve, Matt, and Paul set about fixing our picnic bench.

The more we take these apart, the more we realise what an absolute rubbish buy they were. They are definitely designed for very occasional garden use. But hey-ho… We will not be beaten.

It ain’t perfect, but we ran out of time and just wanted to get it all screwed together so no more bits would go missing. It needs a tiny bit of TLC but it is fully functional again.

We first put these in, in September 2023 so effectively we have had 18 months use out of them. The other one is now on the Dunchurch Bridleway after we totally rebuilt the frame and turned it into a 4-seater. This one is probably 50% rebuilt frame, so it is slowly becoming more suitable for our purposes.

A pretty good morning putting our collective minds together to work out how to fix it.

Martin, Ian and Marcus headed northwards to clear a fallen tree.

We have had an incredibly generous gift from JR TREE CARE in the form of saws.

These bad boys cut wood like a hot knife through butter. Thank you so much for these, Jamie. They will make a huge difference.

We broke for coffee and flapjack at half-time.

Enjoyable conversations and lots of stuff in the pipeline. Marcus being absent from the photo is a bit of a clue…

Here is a nice message that Martin received a couple of weeks ago.

Hi Martin, hope you have been doing great this week. Joshua and I just went out for a walk near our home where you work. I saw a few cute benches there, I guess they are what you were working on the other day?

Pathway was much tidier and cleaner too. 🙂 thank you.

It’s always nice to get a bit of feedback.

Dunchurch Bridleway

I thought I was on my own this week, so I made a pack-up for just me, which consisted of, one Cumberland sausage, one egg, and one rasher of bacon.

I also brought a book that I am currently reading. It was my intention to really get some use out of the facilities that we provide, as an end user.

Dave appeared on his bike and I was cursing that I had not brought more food. I did offer to go halves on what I had, but Dave was OK, I hope…

Riddled with guilt and burdened with a deep sense of shame, I chomped through my delicious breakfast, before we carried on staining the benches and strimming the path up to the last set.

To make up for my extravagant breakfast folly for one, I felt a bit of self-flagellation was needed.

So I litter-picked the whole path, and felt the guilt instantly lift from my shoulders.

The trail is looking pretty good.

The first three hundred metres is a working bridleway that the farmer uses for access to his fields, hence the deep ruts, after that it becomes a tad narrow in places, but we have a plan in September to push it out a bit more and create glades around some of the mature trees. We like the width to be such that people can walk two abreast so they can have conversations and stuff.

Another fantastic week of us blokes bonding and eating decent food (well, me eating decent food)…

Next one is just north of the Cawston Underpass.

Until then!

Paul

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