The Wood is sweet……

John Clare, the poet, knew what he was talking about when describing his nineteenth century rural world, although even then he was concerned about the changes taking place.  I wonder what he would have made of the present ‘lockdown’ and the restrictions  that have been placed on all of us. Jubilee Wood has remained open for those of us allowed our daily dose of exercise, and provides both peace and space to relax in as well as a source of fascination for those of us interested in the natural world. The plants, birds, reptiles, amphibians and mammals that occupy the wood are carrying on as normal, in fact they’re no doubt benefitting from the reduction of air pollution and noise.

Weather

It’s been officially the driest May since records began in 1896 and perhaps we should now be thankful for the wettest February in 150 years, as the trees are still looking healthy and hedges have been flowering well, and the pond is staying at  a decent level. With the total rainfall in England just 17 % of the average for May and the UK having its sunniest Spring since 1929 the weather has actually been worth talking about.

Pond Wildlife

Water plays host to some amazing creatures and visiting the pond is always a highlight for us on our walks around the Wood, and the dragonflies and damselflies have been prolific there over the last few weeks. It’s interesting that these ‘Jurassic visitors’ which have been around for millions of years, don’t live for very long, not much more than a year and that’s assuming they don’t get eaten by predators either as an egg, a nymph or an adult. They’ve certainly adapted well to all the changes they’ve encountered. The common blue damselfly is also seen on a daily basis at the pond, and can be identified by its beautiful bright blue colour, small thin shape and its similar shaped pairs of wings. They also hold their wings closed when at rest and their flight is much less purposeful and weaker than the stronger and bigger dragonflies which will often engage in territorial combat on the wing. The wing muscles of dragonflies are attached directly to the wings rather than the thorax  allowing them to move each wing independently, which means they can hover like a helicopter, fly backwards and perform hairpin bends at extreme speed…….no wonder they’ve survived for so long.

Dragonflies are a great indicator of water quality , as they only choose clean environments with plenty of oxygen in the water to breed in, and looking at the clear water in the pond and the welcoming mixture of plants it maintains, you can see why it’s such a popular place for them.

Broad bodied chaser dragonfly
Broad-bodied Chaser Dragonfly

Pond Snails

Keeping the water clean by scavenging on detritus and decaying organic matter is a job for another inhabitant of the pond, the freshwater snail. There are more than 30 kinds in Britain and our snails in Jubilee Wood pond can sometimes be seen floating upside down on the surface of the water while  taking in air through the opening of their lungs on the underside of their body, performing a sinuous dance as they move around. The sex lives of the pond snails is fascinating for those who are interested in such things and a link to more information will follow at the end of this blog as this author doesn’t quite feel up to the task at the moment…..perhaps ‘lockdown’ is having more effect than I thought!

Water boatmen

Common and widespread in Britain, this brown bug with a body the shape of a boat can be seen in our pond, swimming with its long oar like legs and coming up for air at the water’s surface. The various species of boatmen are difficult to tell apart from each other but all are herbivorous, eating algae and detritus within the pond. During warm weather the adults may even take flight so watch out for them over the next few days.

New Additions

The wood has a new and very attractive addition…..a sheep hurdle made from one of the young Ash trees in the wood. Michael has made a beautiful job of it and you can see it on the left in the top corner of the wood if you walk clockwise from the entrance. He’s hoping to do a workshop on making them  once the present restrictions are no longer in place so check out the website at the bottom of the blog if you want to do some research. Thanks to Michael for this information and for actually doing the work in this sweltering heat when most of us just want to collapse in the shade.

Ash hurdle in wood
Ash hurdle on Jubilee Wood boundary

Maintenance

Michael has also managed to keep the grass pathways tidy, aided by the acquisition of an old ride on mower which allows for selective height cutting in different areas. The hot weather has slowed down the growth of the grass and an abundance of rabbits try to help him as much as possible. Unfortunately they seem to be getting their energy from vegetables being grown on the adjacent allotments  but at least they’re sharing them with the Muntjacs.

Some images of the Wood in May 2020

Hopefully, the next few weeks will be more comfortable  for many as our exercise time increases and meeting with loved ones becomes a possibility, although restricted by social distancing. The Jubilee Wood is always there for a quiet walk and chance to recharge the batteries so I hope you’ll be able to enjoy it, but if you haven’t been able to, here are some reminders…..

Pathway Jubilee Wood may 2020
Dog Rose May 2020
Buttercups on pathway Jubilee Wood

pondexpert.co.uk Pond Snails in Your Pond

Making a Cleft Sheep Hurdle

Our paper boy’s on the front of the Observer magazine! It’s Himesh…

Our paper boy's on the front of the Observer magazine! It's Himesh...

Himesh (Patel) featured in this Sunday’s Observer Magazine – photos below and the full article from the Observer website: https://www.theguardian.com/global/2020/may/10/himesh-patel-it-felt-odd-making-a-show-about-a-pandemic


The former EastEnders actor talks about shooting a pilot on a deadly virus, telling British stories with a difference – and how playing a bit part as a pigeon changed his career

Sam Wolfson
Sun 10 May 2020

The so-called “curse of EastEnders” – the struggle for soap actors to transition into more prestigious dramatic roles after leaving the show – always weighed heavily on the mind of Himesh Patel.

So when he decided to leave the soap in 2016, after nine years playing Tamwar Masood, he knew whichever role he chose next would be critical in breaking typecast, perhaps even defining the rest of his career. He went to a friend whose theatre company, withWings, took inventive musical adaptations to the Edinburgh fringe. That year they were doing Le Bossu, a retelling of The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Patel mentioned that he wanted to get out of his comfort zone and do some theatre.

He came back to me and said, ‘Cool, well, I can offer you the role of a pigeon.’”

Most actors who had spent their lives being watched by 8m viewers, four nights a week, would be unwilling to start again at the bottom rung of acting. (The pigeon was a bit part.) But Patel, now 29, leapt at the chance.

And, honestly, playing that pigeon, for so many reasons, was one of the most important things I ever did. I remember that feeling being side of stage as the lights went down – that fear was so visceral. Then, as the run went on, it slowly ebbed away. It let me become a more extroverted performer, which set me up for what came next.”

What came next was a starring role in Danny Boyle’s counter-factual caper Yesterday, in which Patel stars as Jack Malik who, after a freak thunderstorm, is the only person on earth who remembers the music of the Beatles. Malik becomes a star overnight, plays Wembley with Ed Sheeran, and is hailed as the greatest songwriter of his generation. The film transformed Patel’s life with similar force. His follow-up roles have all screamed prestige: leading turns in Armando Iannucci’s sci-fi spoof Avenue 5 and the BBC’s adaptation of Eleanor Catton’s The Luminaries, the 2013 novel, set in the New Zealand goldrush.

He’s recently arrived back from Chicago, where he shot the pilot for HBO’s adaptation of Station Eleven, the Emily St John Mandel novel about, eerily, a flu pandemic that wipes out 90% of the world’s population. When Patel started shooting, he was most concerned about how freezing Illinois gets in January. Then, as more news came from China, the strangeness of the situation started to sink in.

The episode we filmed was the beginning of the outbreak. It felt incredibly odd, making a show about a global pandemic, and now here we are.”

The oddest moment, he says, was finding out that production of a series about a pandemic was now on hold because of a pandemic.

We meet on a weekday lunchtime at a pub in Islington, London in that eerie period before the enforced lockdown when pubs and restaurants are still open but people are furiously washing their hands and firing evil glares at anyone clearing their throat. The pub has posters declaring that the toilet doors have been jammed open so you don’t have to touch any handles. It means the faint sound of ablutions can be heard throughout our conversation.

Patel arrives straight from the photoshoot, an experience he tentatively enjoyed. His parents own a newsagents in the small village of Sawtry, near Cambridge, and he likes knowing that they’ll get the papers in one morning and see photos of him looking suave. He hasn’t always been a fan of Sunday supplements. As a teenager, he had to help out his folks by doing the local paper round. Weekends, he says, were always the worst.

The papers were full of magazines! So I’d have to walk up the hill, then go back down, and then go further up the hill because you can’t carry them all at once.”

His childhood days were crammed.

As well as school and the paper round, he went to several different drama schools. He giggles when I ask what it was that set apart the kinds of kids he met at those after-school classes.

We were all a bit odd, mimicking things we’d seen on telly, creating these little pop-culture storms within our own lives. Maybe some of us were quite attention-hungry, but we were alive with this energy. It’s the antithesis of a maths lesson. It’s about play.”

He was 16 when a new executive producer on EastEnders, Diederick Santer, began an overhaul of the families on the soap to make it “feel more 21st century”. That included introducing a Pakistani family on the show, the Masoods. Patel was nervous in the audition for Tamwar Masood and thought he’d ruined his chances when he told producers he didn’t really watch the show. But they saw something in him and, once on board, he went about turning Tamwar into one of the most unusual characters in soap. He was removed and analytical. He existed almost outside the show, a kind of geeky flaneur who saw the absurdity of Albert Square in the same way the audience did. In a show that’s always been about dramatic bust-ups and big acting, Patel played against the action: quiet and pitying, often lingering in the back of someone else’s family crisis. Patel quickly became a fan favourite. His character’s marriage to Afia Khan (Meryl Fernandes) won the pair Inside Soap award for best wedding.

His parents, though proud, were also insistent that the paper round must continue. “Those were the days,” he says.

I’d be, like, ‘It’s the weekend, I’m trudging round the village in the rain, why am I having to do this?’ But I look back on it fondly. It was important for me to be on national TV and be doing a paper round at the same time. It was just a daily reminder of being brought back down to earth.”

By his mid-20s, Patel was beginning to look at the career paths available to him.

There’s a thin line between being on a soap and being a celebrity. You often see people from EastEnders going to do I’m a Celebrity or Strictly – which is great if that’s what you want to do. But from going to a lot of these awards ceremonies, it wasn’t somewhere I was ever going to enjoy myself.”

He said the decision to leave was both easy and scary.

I’d been doing it since I was 16 and it was all I’d known as an adult. It was a leap of faith. I remember on that last day I drove out the gates that last time, and I just thought: here we go, let’s see what happens.”

His certainty about wanting to do something more than Strictly is the result of his particular upbringing, he says. The closest town growing up was Huntingdon, in the heart of John Major’s old constituency. (Patel’s mother would always point out his house when they drove past.) He didn’t have any traumatic experiences of racism growing up,

but there were very few people who looked like me and there is a part of you that you consciously or subconsciously dilute in order to fit in. There are a lot of feelings that I grew up with that I later started to realise I wasn’t alone in feeling, and that perhaps there’s something to be done about that.”

His adolescence left him with a dogged feeling of responsibility – to make it easier for the next generation of kids like him. He talks about “responsibility” a lot.

I suppose it’s the responsibility, as someone British, to say: ‘This is also British, the story that I’m telling you about my parents, or Indian soldiers that fought in the world wars.’ These stories are also British. At a time when people want to limit the idea of Britishness, physically speaking, I think I’d quite like to broaden it.”

He gives the example of Britain’s colonial history in India, something he feels mainstream Britain has never properly wrestled with.

We watched a lot of Indian movies growing up, and every now and then there’d be one about British rule, but I never really learned about that in school. So there was a disconnect between these films I was watching, set during a very turbulent time in India’s history, and school, where we might be taught that Gandhi was a liberator, but not what he was liberating from.”

He’s not angry at people who haven’t taken the time to learn that history, he says, but he sees his role as bringing those stories to them. He talks about watching Saving Private Ryan in history class, how it brought to life a war he would have otherwise struggled to imagine.

One of the most powerful ways of finding out about stuff is TV and film. If I can, in my current position, get the ball rolling on some of those stories then I’d really like to do that.”

(He says he has writing and acting projects in the works that would fulfil that brief.)

It’s a sense of duty that imbues much of Patel’s life. Even when we’re talking about The Luminaries, in which he plays Emery Staines, a young prospector, conversation veers back to the importance of minority stories in national history. During the six months he spent in New Zealand filming the show, which will air later this year, he was impressed by the public’s understanding of a wide range of historical events.

I fell in love with the culture. For a country that was a colonial outpost, as it were, they’ve really made efforts to integrate the indigenous Māori culture. The country is not without its troubles, but we went up to Waitangi, where the British signed a treaty with the Māori, and even just tiny gestures, like the signs being both in English and in Māori. A lot of people who I met who were not of Māori descent were just as aware of that history, which was commendable.”

One concrete change he is trying to make is through his membership of Bafta, which was heavily criticised for all-white shortlists in a number of award categories. Patel was one of several actors who offered alternative shortlists in protest:

The oddity for me is how an amazing film such as Parasite did so well and yet none of the actors got nominated.”

I ask whether he ever feels annoyed having to hand over his annual Bafta membership fee (not cheap at £495), when the awards fail to recognise diverse talent again and again. Does there ever come a point where the institutions themselves should be left to fail?

I know some people feel like that, but I don’t think I’m there yet because the impact of things like the Baftas is still huge. I grew up in a rural place, naive to how a lot of the industry works. For me watching the Baftas was a big deal. When Slumdog Millionaire won all those awards I thought, wow it’s relevant on that level. So now I’m a member I want to change things from the inside.”

Patel has a persistent seriousness about him. His manner is more that of an activist: dogged and thoughtful. The paper round, the pigeon, the desire to make movies that get shown in a classroom… it all reflects a person entirely uninterested in flashness. We all want to be seen as compassionate, but surely he has moments of indulging his new wealth and celebrity? What’s been his most lavish purchase?

Mmm, well recently I kept seeing Teslas everywhere, so I did have a brief look at their website kind of going, ‘Well, it’s good for the planet isn’t it?’ But it is still very expensive. And I live in London, so I don’t need a car.”

Instead, he says, he bought a new camera.

My dad always had cameras around. I like the very quiet way of saying things through photography. There’s something about the ambiguity, and the silence of a photo…”

I am convinced, with the sombreness of this remark, this is the real Himesh.


Spring into Summer

Nature has an incredible way of overcoming what are seemingly insurmountable difficulties, the grass that grows through tarmac, the hedges that burst into leaf after being shattered by flail hedge cutters, the birds that are willing to return to an environment that was once so hostile it threatened their very existence. When the times are tough, as they have been for everyone over the last few weeks as the corona virus ravages across the globe,  it’s reassuring to put anxieties to one side and simply watch a red kite stretching its wide wings as it floats in the sky or a silent barn owl slicing through the dusk as it searches for its supper. The Wood can offer us a place to relax in as well as wonder as we observe the ever changing and adaptable ways of nature.

What’s happening in the Wood?

The Jubilee Wood continues to show signs of bursting into life, with green shoots emerging on the hawthorn trees and brambles, and one of the crab apples around the central area is already flowering, if somewhat half heartedly at the moment. The glossy, elongated, arrow shaped leaves of the Wild Arum, Arum maculatum, can be seen around the bottom of the hedges, often with attractive dark spots on. Some people know it better as Lords and Ladies, ‘cuckoo pint’, or Jack in a pulpit and it’s distinctively shaped flower has not surprisingly led to many names with bawdy associations.The flower is designed to attract flies for pollination and its fruit, which is a spike of bright orange berries can be a common sight in woodlands in autumn, but like many wild berries these are toxic to humans.

Arum maculatum

The leaves of the low growing Speedwells, Veronica persica and Veronica chamaedrys, are also all around the wood and as its name indicates, it was seen as good luck when seen on journeys. In Ireland in years gone by, ‘speed you well’ was even sewn into clothes as a good luck charm to protect against accidents. Introduced to this country from Asia by the Victorians, the common names for speedwells include ‘bird’s eye’, cat’s eye, and Farewell. The bright blue flowers brighten up the darkest of woodland corners and it won’t be long before they are flowering.

The newts are back (if they ever went away)

On the amphibian front, the first newts have been seen in the pond which is full to the brim after the continuous rain and grey skies of February. With the lack of cold weather this winter some people are wondering if they did much hibernating at all. Fortunately March has been much drier and the warm days of sunshine have been a relief to those of us who have had to keep at home. The occasional sharp ground frosts have made surfaces slippery but at least the paths around the wood are finally drying out although it doesn’t take much rain to make them soggy again. The previous dark, waterlogged areas under the hawthorn and blackthorn are disappearing and muntjac are making the most of the young trees for cover.

New Identification Sheets

Identification sheets Jubilee wood
Identification sheets in pondside arbour

Five new identification sheets have been added to the folder in the arbour , so once people can get out and about again there will be an opportunity to put a name to what you’ve found there. Thanks to Michael for ordering them and making an excellent holder to keep them all together and protected from the weather.

Summer time

As I write this, the clocks have been turned forward to remind us that it’s officially British Summer Time and those of us who have been waking up early will certainly be aware that the birds don’t worry about man made time constraints. What can be more uplifting than hearing a dawn chorus as the sun starts to rise?! Perhaps tired new parents suffering from sleep deprivation might not agree but on the whole, it’s a pretty wonderful experience which doesn’t cost anything and can be enjoyed by all of us. Ready to nest, the birds are making use of the many bird boxes in the wood and perhaps before very long there will be fledglings, who with any luck, will also be joining in the dawn chorus this time next year…..

As we wait to see how the next weeks unfold, perhaps we can start to appreciate rather than resent this opportunity to slow down, an opportunity to observe and listen to the sights and sounds of nature, the Wood will be there waiting for all of us, providing us all with a wonderful place to just be.

www.wildlifetrusts.org – useful activities for all the family

2020-02-18 Minutes of Parish Council meeting

GREAT & LITTLE GIDDING PARISH COUNCIL

Minutes of Great and Little Gidding Parish Council Meeting

Held on Tuesday 18th February 2020 at Great Gidding Village Hall

PRESENT:  Cllrs Hodson, Dear and Pudney, County Councillor Gardener and Parish Clerk

146.19              Chairman’s Welcome – Cllr Hodson welcomed those present to the meeting

147.19             Apologies were received:

                        Cllr Hill – Holiday

                        District Cllr Alban – ill health

                        Cllr Valderas – resigned 15th February 2020

                        Cllr Hebb – resigned 18th February 2020

148.19             There were no member’s declaration of Disclosable Interests for items on the Agenda

149.19              There was no Public or Press present.

150.19              To confirm and accept minutes of the meeting held on 21st January 2020  

                        Cllr Dear and Cllr Pudney proposed and seconded, and signed by Cllr Hodson.                       

151.19             Matters arising from those Minutes that will not be discussed as an agenda item.

                        Cllr Hodson enquired of District Cllr Gardener if there had been any further information regarding the communications mast proposal – it had been noted that Elton village proposal had been rejected again, due to the exclusion zone relating to Sibson Aerodrome.

                        Clerk advised that the planning application for the rear of Fox and Hounds PH (replacing wall with fence) had been refused.

                        Clerk asked Cllr Gardener’s advice as a resident had notified that there appeared to be people living in the barn adjacent to 21 Mill Road (copy of planning application attached relating to that site) – Cllr Gardener said that Huntingdon District Council Planning Department should be informed to enable them to investigate.

                        Clerk also advised Cllr Gardener that she was still awaiting a response from Highways Department and/or Footpath Officer of Cambridgeshire County Council regarding the Jitty Footpath enquiry – she was advised to remind them and copy in Cllr Gardener.

152.19             COUNCIL ISSUES TO NOTE:

To receive reports from Councillors:

County Councillor Gardener – he had been on the panel when Cllr Hill presented the Gidding’s bid for the Local Highways Initiative Bid and a decision should be known on or about 10th March 2020, he will contact us with the outcome.

He advised that the 2020-2021 Local Highways Bid has been brought forward to be made between April and May 2020 (see email).  Funds associated with this bid are to be increased by £200,000.  There is also to be a general increase to Highways funding.

He updated on a meeting held to discuss the A14 between Ellington and Thrapston as there had been a significant increase in traffic through adjacent villages.  Highways England plans to improve junctions along this part of the A14 before 2030.

The works along the A14 and other roads around Huntingdon continues, with the viaduct over the railway to be removed by 2022.

The A428 works will continue to 2022.

There has been an increase in Council Tax of 1.59% plus 2% to Social Care.

Cambs County Council will gradually change their vehicles to electric power.

Cambs County Council are making a £15million investment to change their buildings to non-carbon fuels

(See https://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/council/briefings/cambridgeshire-matters-newsletter-january-2020

https://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/council/briefings/member-newsletter-february-2020    for further details regarding above).

Cllr Hill had submitted a written note to advise that his presentation to the LHI Bid panel was made on 3rd February and he believed the proposal was “well received”.

Cllr Dear – potholes in Chapel End near to Mill Meadow – Clerk will complete an online report to CambsCC Highways.

Cllr Pudney – nothing to report

Cllr Hodson – nothing to report

153.19             FINANCIAL MATTERS:

                        a) to note Barclays Bank statements

b) to note the Budget control statement – Cllr Hodson advised that the budget looked good and answered general questions regarding the spreadsheet.

Clerk advised that the Reserves bank account received £31.92 interest.

Clerk advised that the Precept had been approved.

c) PAYMENTS AND ACCOUNTS – to approve and sign cheques in respect of the following:

1) J R B Enterprise Ltd              Dog waste bags            £74.10 (11.90 VAT)    

2) J R Trolove – Clerks working hours for December    £xxx     (no VAT)

3)  to approve Clerk’s hours worked between 1st and 31st January

154.19             Recreation Ground update

                        Decision to replace swing seats – Clerk had prices for 2 x different seats and will contact Wicksteed.  Cllr Pudney asked that all 4 seats be replaced.

                        Decision to install safety matting under spaceship roundabout – Cllr Hodson advised that 4 tiles would be needed at a price of £18.00 per tile plus pegs required and proposed purchase of these items, Cllr Pudney seconded.

                        Cllr Dear reminded that toilet door lock needed replacing

Cllr Dear will find a contractor to weld cover for toilet unit pipework

155.19             Grass Cutting contract for approval and signature.

Cllr Hodson proposed acceptance and Cllr Pudney seconded.  Clerk will sign the contract to enable grass cutting to commence in early March.

156.19             Newsletter to parishioners – at a previous meeting Cllr Hebb had proposed a change to the Clarion format therefore Clerk had obtained comparative quotes for printing.  It was agreed that as Cllr Hebb would not be leading this project, no other Councillor wished to take it on and to continue with the Clarion but Cllr Pudney suggested to rename the Clarion as “Gidding News” – this was seconded by both Cllrs Dear and Hodson.  Cllr Pudney suggested enquiring if CARESCO would be prepared to include Gidding News as part of the bi-monthly Sawtry Eye, which is distributed around the Giddings and other local villages – Clerk will enquire at CARESCO.

157.19             Councillor training – Cllr Dear – move to March agenda

158.19             Correspondence received since 21st January 2020 (other than that discussed in agenda items above).  Correspondence will be available to view at the meeting, including the following:

                        1)  East Anglian Childrens Hospital, letter requesting support/donation – Parish Council does not wish to donate.

                        2)  Keep Britain Tidy – between 20th March and 13th April – as there had been recent litter pick sessions held in the village, it was not felt that another event should be organised at present.

                        3) Huntingdon District Council invitation to Huntingdonshire Town and Parish Council Conference – Wednesday 18th March at Burgess Hall, St Ives – Cllrs to advise Clerk is they require a place booking.                     

159.19             Items for decisions at next meeting: 

                        Training for Councillors and Clerk

                        Risk Assessment report – Cllr Pudney

                        Review of Asset Registers – Clerk

                        Clerk’s appraisal feedback – Cllrs Hill and Hodson

Appoint Internal Auditor and prepare for Audit – Clerk

                        Recreation Ground – review Hiring Agreement and Hire charges

                        Prepare for Election or Co-option of Parish Councillor

Preparation for the Annual Parish Meeting and Annual General Meeting of                                                      the Parish Council – Cllr Hill and Clerk                                   

160.19             Date of next meeting – Tuesday 17th March 2020,

starting at 1930 hours in the Village Hall, Great GiddingMeeting closed at 8.35PM

November 2019 Parish Council Minutes

GREAT & LITTLE GIDDING PARISH COUNCIL

Minutes of Great and Little Gidding Parish Council Meeting

Held on Tuesday 19th November  2019 at Great Gidding Village Hall

PRESENT:  Cllrs Hill, Hodson, Hebb, Dear, Page, County Councillor Gardener and 1 member of the public

99.19                Chairman’s Welcome – Cllr Hill welcomed those present

100.19             To receive apologies and reasons for absence:

                        District Councillor Alban – ill health              

101.19             Member’s declaration of Disclosable Interests for items on the Agenda –

                        There were none.

102.19              Public & Press participation session with respect to items on the Agenda –

The member of the public was interested to hear of any developments regarding the proposed installation of the mast in Main Street and was advised that this matter would be discussed later in the meeting.

103.19              To confirm and accept minutes of the meeting held on 15th October 2019

                        Acceptance confirmed by Cllr Hodson and Cllr Valderas, signed by Cllr Hill

104.19             COUNCIL ISSUES TO NOTE:

Cllr Hill advised that no further correspondence has been received regarding the mast.  Last indication from Noel Oliver at Harlequin was that they were looking at “alternative options”.

Cllr Hill advised that a Village Hall committee had been formed – see 113.19

Cllr Hill advised that Cllr Pudney was researching risk assessment policies for the Parish Council and these would be circulated for review prior to the January Parish Council meeting.

To receive reports from Councillors:

County Cllr Gardener reported that he attended the meeting at Huntingdonshire District Council Planning Department with parishioners, including Cllr Hebb, where it was indicated that this application would fall under permitted development rights.  Cllr Gardener had also enquired of Cambridgeshire County Council’s Highways Department if they had been made aware of the proposed application.  They had not, and requested sight of any future correspondencedue to the proposed location on the grass verge adjacent to the footpath alongside Main Street.

 Cllr Gardener advised that a section of the new A14 would open on 9th December.  Also that permits were now required for trailers entering CambsCC waste disposal sites.

County Councillor Gardener and member of the public left the meeting at this point.

Cllrs Hill, Hodson, Hebb, Valderas, Dear and Page had nothing to report.

104.19             FINANCIAL MATTERS:

                        a) to note Barclays Bank statements

b) to note the Budget control statement

c) PAYMENTS AND ACCOUNTS – to approve and sign cheques in respect of the following:

1)  CGM Group – grass cutting in August/September £261.94 (43.66 VAT)

2)  CGM Group – grass cutting in October                  £261.94 (43.66 VAT)

3) Manor Farm Tree Services – fallen ash trees          £720.00 (120.00 VAT)

4) Donation to British Legion – Section 137               £25.00    (no VAT)

5) J R Trolove – Clerks working hours for August        £xxx        (no VAT)

6) HMRC tax in respect of August salary                    £16.40    (no VAT)

7)  J R Trolove – Clerks working hours for September £xxx       (no VAT)

8) HMRC tax in respect of September Salary              £5.80 (no VAT)

9)  to approve Clerk’s hours worked between 1st and 30th October – signed by Cllrs Hill and Hodson

9) Precept for 2020/21 – Proposal to accept and complete return.

The precept will remain at £11, 052.  This was proposed by Cllr Hill and seconded by Cllr Page

105.19             Cllr Hill proposed renewal of the contract for internet and telephone provision, due for renewal in January, which had been guaranteed to remain at the same amount for the next 18 months.  All Councillors agreed and Cllr Hill will implement this.

106.19             Cllr Hebb had attended a Village Hall Networking meeting, which she found extremely useful and informative and, as a result, proposed that the Parish Council join Cambs ACRE, this was seconded by Cllr Hodson.  A cheque in the sum of £57.00 was signed at the meeting.

107.19             Planning application – full details available at meeting

 Reference: 19/02052/HHFUL            

Demolition of existing conservatory and single storey side extension. Proposed single storey replacement orangery extension.
Site Address: 16 Gains Lane Great Gidding Huntingdon

Cllrs agreed there were “no observations either in favour or against the proposal”.  Clerk will submit the return to the Planning Department.       

108.19             Recreation Ground updates:

Annual Safety Inspection – Clerk proposed that Wicksteed be instructed to carry out the annual safety inspection – Cllrs agreed.

Cllr Hill will remove the broken part from the multi-gym equipment.  It was agreed that several of the tasks highlighted in the last safety inspection had been addressed and resolved.

109.19             Grass cutting contract for 2019/20:

Clerk had obtained 3 quotes for the cutting of the Recreation Field and the Green (between Luddington Road and Winwick Road) and shared details with Councillors (copy attached).

Cllr Hebb requested Clerk to enquire if Bradgate (one of the contractors) would reduce their price, and report back to the December meeting to enable a decision to be made and a contractor to be appointed.   The Clerk had misread the email from Bradgate and was to present revised figures.

110.19             Clerk shared a summary of incidents of burst pipe/loss of water supply, dating back over 10+ years, and correspondence with Anglian Water (copy attached).  Cllr Hill,  as a result of a discussion with former Parish Councillor Hayden, will write to Anglian Water, copy to be sent to Environmental Health Department of Huntingdonshire District Council.

                        Cllr Hodson advised that there was water running constantly from a drain outside the Old Chapel and this has been running for some weeks – Clerk will complete online report to Anglian Water.

111.19             Cllr Hebb had circulated her thoughts on communications between Parish Council and parishioners (copy attached).  As a result the following actions will be taken:

                        Minutes – will be added to theGiddings.org.uk (village website) with immediate effect, starting with October 2019 approved minutes.

                        Facebook – a “closed” group has already been set up by Catalyst Design.

                        Clarion – needs to be updated and renamed.  A bi-monthly A5-size document is planned: this will be used to raise the profile of all groups/organisations in the villages, seek advertisers and parishioners to submit articles, include children’s item, in addition to Parish Council matters.  Cllr Hebb will compile and edit this communication, production will start in early 2020.

                        Clerk was asked to produce a Clarion, ready for distribution in early December – articles should be submitted by 30th November to enable editing, printing and distribution.

112.19             TO DO list – the most recent version was shared with Councillors (copy attached).  No further actions required at present.

113.19             Cllr Page reported that the Village Hall sub committee has been formed, members are Cllr Page (Chairman), Cllr Hebb (Vice Chairman), and Cllrs Dear, Pudney, Valderas.

                        Administration and Village Hall bookings remains with Parish Clerk and Cllrs Hodson, Hill and Parish Clerk are bank mandate signatories.

                        Meetings will be held monthly, the Trustees meeting will remain bi-monthly.

                        Cllr Page advised that the electrician will complete required works in the Parish Office and the Village Hall tomorrow (20th November).

                        Door locks will be changed, therefore new keys and a keysafe to be installed in the Parish Office.

                        Bookings on the website – Clerk requested to advise Committee of all bookings and update village website immediately.  Cllrs Page and Hebb will request Catalyst Design (village website host) to enable them to post items on the website.

                        Cllr Hill requested that he and Cllr Hodson be sent copies of meeting minutes, a copy to the Clerk for filing, and a copy on the village website.  He reminded that the Constitution needs to be signed and dated as soon as possible.

114.19             Correspondence received since 15th October 2019 (other than that discussed in agenda items above) was made available to view at the meeting, including the following:          

  1.  Citizens Advice Rural Cambs – request for financial support/donation  
  2. CambsCC funding – Innovate & Cultivate Fund -details and deadlines
  3. Neighbourhood Watch – cyberhood watch campaign – Cllr Hodson will obtain a supply of “Little Book of Scams” for distribution.
  4. Cambs & Peterborough Authority – bus service review survey – Clerk will display the poster adjacent to the bus pick up point.
  5. Huntingdonshire DC – Adoption of Local Plan to 2036

115.19             Items for decisions at next meeting:

Grass cutting contract – appoint contractor for 2020 season

Cheques required to transfer funds (in respect of Games Club (Section 137) and Orchard Project) to Village Hall and Charities account

Remembrance Day/Poppies/VE Day event – parishioner’s request

                        Clerk’s salary review for 2020/21(in accordance with Financial Regulation 4.4)      

116.19             Date of next meeting – Tuesday 17th December 2019,

starting at 1930 hours in the Village Hall, Great Gidding    

Meeting closed at 21.25

December Jubilee Wood

Bird box Jubilee Wood

December is traditionally the time for looking back over the year before looking ahead to the new one, which will undoubtedly be better and shinier with all the New Year’s resolutions we’ve so carefully made. The effects of too much eating and drinking can easily fool us all into making promises to ourselves that are harder to keep than to make!

However, weaving back through the Jubilee Wood memories of 2019, a tapestry of happy and interesting activities has been built up and stored on many a smart phone. Events such as pond dipping, creating art from nature, the making of hay and celebration of the summer solstice are just a few of the community get togethers that have taken place in the wood. The weather favoured some and not others but even that was always a useful reminder that we still can’t control that part of nature. After a dry spring, a mixed summer and a very wet late winter, inky black stretches of water can now be seen underneath the hardy hawthorns, and the pond has risen to new heights in an attempt to break its banks.

Jubilee Wood pond Dec 2019
Jubilee Wood pond December 2019

What went on in 2019?

The Jubilee Wood continues to be a place of quiet reflection for many as well as a fascinating place for anyone interested in nature and wanting to learn new things. The Huntingdonshire Fauna and Flora Society came and carried out a survey in June which is a useful benchmark regarding what can be found in the wood, and volunteers could help to build on the information by helping with a short survey in 2020 – watch this space for further details! The pop up events which took place throughout the year are a testimony to the generosity of those people who organised them and gave their time and expertise free of charge, as well as the interest that many of us have in learning something new. Perhaps for some of us it’s a case of revisiting things we had long forgotten, but sometimes that brings with it the memories of childhood pleasures such as the first time we went pond dipping or had different trees pointed out to us….. how many of us can recite different rhymes we learnt long ago about Oaks and Ashes or not casting a clout before May is out? According to the Friends of the Earth, half of the people in Britain who took part in a study couldn’t identify an oak leaf! Very unscientific as no details are given about the people who took part but perhaps we could all get more pleasure from nature if we understood a little more about it. The link to their tree quiz is at the end of the blog if you’re interested.

Pond dipping Jubilee Wood 2019
Pond dipping May 2019
Grass identification Jubilee Wood June 2019
Grass identifiction June 2019
Art in Nature Jubilee Wood August 2019
Art in nature August 2019
Holly Copse Jubilee Wood 2019
New Holly copse

What’s in store for 2020?

Looking forward to 2020 there will surely be many more fun and interesting events in the wood as long as people support this wonderful resource we have. Volunteers continue to manage the woodland by cutting back intrusive brambles and young hawthorn, and planting up new areas such as the holly copse.

You may have already spotted a couple of new additions as you wander around, especially if you’re a dog walker. The new dog pooh bin at the entrance should be a great help to dog owners, making it easier to keep the wood clean for everyone.  There is also a new …….art installation? or bird hide?…….. which has been created just off one of the main paths of the wood. A wonderful example of how waste material from the wood (in this case coppiced hazel) can be used to provide both a functional bird hide which fits in perfectly with its surroundings as well as something beautiful to look at. Anyone for willow weaving sculptures next year?!

Hazel hide Jubilee Wood 2019
Hazel screen

Finally, thanks to all the volunteers who, throughout the year, give their time to maintaining Jubilee Wood but especially to Michael who keeps the show on the road. Without his enthusiasm and hard work the wood could easily lose the diversity of species which is slowly but surely being built up. Sustainable woodland management allows a habitat to become a wonderful place, much loved by humans and of great benefit to plants and animals when managed well. Many people contribute in different ways to make our community wood a special place; making and positioning bird boxes, turning up on cold wet days with secateurs and strimmers to help manage the wood, cooking delicious cakes and soups for community events.

Hopefully, many more people will enjoy and share in the wood in 2020. Happy New Year.

The Wood Wanderer 

October /November in Jubilee Wood 2019

Winter maintenance work continues in the wood by hard working volunteers, with strimming around the pond and other areas, tidying up around the paths and hedges, and general clearing up where necessary. All these jobs improve the access and quality of the wood, and to help those of us whose identification skills are a little rusty, a selection of Field Studies Council laminated cards have been purchased with money raised from the Spring Plant sale and are now available to read and study in the arbour by the pond.

You say mushroom I say toadstool!

The frosty nights and chilly days in the last couple of days in November reminded us that winter is on its way. However, the relatively mild but wet weather over the last few weeks have encouraged many large mushrooms to emerge along the pathways in the wood, and got me wondering about the difference between a mushroom and a toadstool. It seems that there’s no real scientifically accepted difference and the terms can sometimes be used interchangeably for the same types of fungus, although the word toadstool seems to have a more negative association which is probably associated with folklore. Many fungi looked the perfect size and shape for a toad to sit on and as many toads were thought to be poisonous, the ‘toad stool’ was also considered dangerous to eat! Probably not such a bad thing, as we  have 14 species of poisonous fungi in the UK, so it’s very wise to leave them alone unless you know what they are as they can literally kill humans. You can often see where badgers and other animals have rooted around them and deer, rabbits, mice and squirrels as well as slugs and snails like tucking in to what is really the fruiting bodies of the fungus. Fungi can’t make its own food like plants by photosynthesis so produces enzymes which break down waste organic matter (like dead plants or animals) to be absorbed through fine threads, called the mycelium, and used for growth. We often can’t see the mycelium when it grows with roots of plants underground but it helps plants to improve their water and nutrient uptake and in return the plants provide fungi with sugars from photosynthesis.

What use are they?

Fungi also efficiently break down wood so are essential in our wood to help stop dead wood and leaves building up and then recycling nutrients back into the soil. There would be a significantly higher ground level amongst the trees in Jubilee Wood without them! With regards to other uses, not only are they used in medicines such as the well known penicillin, but also ‘anti-rejection’ drugs in organ transplants , and in many foods and drinks. Fizzy drinks, beer, wine, coffee and chocolate, as well as bread, cheese and [love it or hate it] Marmite, all depend on fungi. Not classified as either plants or animals, fungi belong to their very own group called a kingdom and have been around for millions of years, adapting to environments as different as the Arctic to the deserts and have even been found in space. Fungi are the heroes of recycling as we, as a species, wouldn’t be able to survive on this planet without them, so next time you walk around the wood and  see the humble mushroom[or toadstool],  just take a moment to think about how marvellous fungi are.

Jubilee Wood mushroom November blog

Useful Websites

https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/trees-woods-and-wildlife/fungi-and-lichens/

https://www.growwilduk.com/fungi/why-fungi-matter

2019-10-15 Minutes of Great & Little Gidding Parish Council Meeting

Held on Tuesday 15th October  2019 at Great Gidding Village Hall

PRESENT:  Cllrs Hill, Hodson, Hebb, Dear, Page, Pudney

82.19                Chairman’s Welcome – Cllr Hill welcomed those present

83.19               To receive apologies and reasons for absence –

                        County Councillor Gardener – attendance at another meeting

                        District Councillor Alban – not available

                        Councillor Valderas – at another event.

84.19               Member’s declaration of Disclosable Interests for items on the Agenda –

                        There were none.

85.19                Public & Press participation session with respect to items on the Agenda –

There were none

86.19                To confirm and accept minutes of the meeting held on 17th September 2019

                        Acceptance confirmed by Cllr Pudney and Cllr Page, signed by Cllr Hill

87.19               COUNCIL ISSUES TO NOTE:

The Action Group (for the proposed application to install mast and base station) have suspended further meetings until there are developments or correspondence regarding this matter.  Carolyn Wilson, who was our contact at Harlequin (the company who were acting as agents for the developers) is no longer working for the company, details of her replacement have been supplied.

Gains Lane/Chapel End closed for one day – residents will be informed by letter and road signs in place

To receive reports from Councillors:

Cllr Page advised that the 30MPH sign was obscured by the hedge on the entrance to the village on Mill Road, from the direction of Little Gidding.

Cllr Dear – the gate to the byway (Bullock Road) will remain locked as hare coursers are trying to gain access.

Cllr Pudney – nothing to report

Cllr Hebb – a meeting has been arranged with the Planning Dept of Huntingdonshire District Council to discuss the proposed mast application, also in attendance will be County Cllr Gardener and members of the Action Group.

Drains did not get cleaned out where cars were parked in Main Street – suggests that a letter be sent to residents to enable volunteers to clean the street.

Cllr Hodson – nothing to report

Cllr Hill – had emailed Noel Oliver (replacement for Caroline Wilson at Harlequin) to enquire if there were any updates regarding the proposed mast site – to date no response.

Cllr Hill met with Karen Lunn of Highways Dept. regarding the Local Highways Initiative Bid – she viewed the various sites/aspects of the bid.  She will respond to the question if the Parish Council’s choice of speed sensor sign is acceptable.  She confirmed there is still uncertainty around the street lamp legislation, therefore it may be advisable to purchase and install a free standing post(s).

88.19               FINANCIAL MATTERS:

                        a) to note Barclays Bank statements

b) to note the Budget control statement (spreadsheet available at meeting)

c) PAYMENTS AND ACCOUNTS – to approve and sign cheques in respect of the following:

1)  Viking                                  Stationery                    £71.36 (£11.89 VAT)

2)  PKF Littlejohn                     external audit              £240.00 (£40.00 VAT)

3)  GG Village Hall                    rental of parish office  £1100.00 (no VAT)

4)  to approve Clerk’s hours worked between 1st and 30th September and 1st and 31st August (these were not available to view at the meeting – Clerk will email to Cllrs Hill and Hodson for approval).

89.19               Financial Regulations – update in line with recent NALC review

A copy will be emailed to Councillors and a paper record kept in the Parish Office.

Cllrs Hodson proposed the approval of amendments to Financial Regulations, seconded by Cllr Pudney, all Councillors agreed.

90.19               Grass cutting contract for 2019/20

Clerk advised that, to date, only one quote received from CGM (current contractors).  Will remind those already contacted and seek further contractors if necessary.

91.19               Tree removal – Chapel End Pond

                        Quotes received from:

Drayton Tree Care                   £950 + £190 (VAT) = £1140                

Manor Farm Tree Services      £600 + £120 (VAT) = £720

Global Tree Services                £950 + £190 (VAT) = £1140

Proposal to instruct Manor Farm Tree Services by Cllr Hodson, Cllr Hebb seconded.

92.19               TO DO LIST – spreadsheet of all outstanding tasks in the Parish – update and amend as necessary – there were no additional tasks added to the spreadsheet.

                        Clerk requested Cllr Pudney to photograph and identify exact site of any footpath problems to enable report(s) to be made to made to CambsCC.

93.19               Budget Forecast for 2019/20 and next 3 years

                        Propose Approval of Budget Forecast for 2019/20 – Cllr Hebb proposed acceptance, Cllr Page seconded, all Councillors agreed.

94.19               Risk Assessments –Cllr Pudney has made a start and will continue to compile information.  These will be submitted prior to future meetings for consideration and approval.

95.19               Correspondence received since 17th September 2019 (other than that discussed in agenda items above).

Separate list of correspondence will be available at the meeting, including the following: 

  1. EACH (East Anglia’s Children’s Hospital) – request for funding.
  2. Chorus Homes – invitation to Community Inspiration Awards event on 24th October (booking required)           
  3. Clerk advised that the Remembrance Day wreath has been delivered today, once date/time/venue of the Church Service are known Councillors will be advised – Cllr Page will attend the service if she is available.

96.19               Items for decisions at next meeting:

                        Approve precept for 2020/21

                        Clerk’s salary review for 2020/21(in accordance with  Financial Regulation 4.4)     

97.19               Date of next meeting – Tuesday 19th November 2019,

starting at 1930 hours in the Village Hall, Great Gidding    

Meeting closed at 21.22