St Michael’s Church at Christmas

St Michael's Church at Christmas

Church Restoration

The work at St Michael’s Church is now complete and the church has re-opened, the first service being the Primary School’s Christingle Service last Friday 14th December.

The north aisle window and plaster has been repaired and restored. The opportunity was taken, at the same time, to repair the north aspect of the chancel arch which had moved significantly, leading to a need to carry out stonework repair, employing a stonemason.

In view of all the plaster dust etc, it was decided to arrange for a thorough ‘spring clean’ (can you have one in December?), and this has included attention to high places in the church, not reachable by our normal cleaning.

Family Carol Service

Our Carol Service (aka ‘Carols and Blankets’) takes place next Saturday (December 22nd) at 6pm. This year, as the result of a suggestion, there is one addition. Mince pies and mulled wine will be available BEFORE the service, as well as after. Furthermore, John DeVal will be adding hot chocolate to the drinks. So come along from 5.30pm onwards to warm up your vocal chords.

The service will follow the usual format of favourite carols, interspersed with readings (biblical and secular). The biblical readings will remind us of the events of the birth of Jesus, whilst the secular readings include authors such as Dylan Thomas & Charles Dickens. Appropriately for this year when we mark the centenary of the end of World War 1, there is a reading sent from the trenches. Glen Page (who has been singing at St Michael’s for over thirty years) will sing a couple of solos, and we welcome back Stephen Barber as organist.

The collection will be given to the charity ‘Crisis at Christmas’.

Don’t forget to wrap up warm – there will be some blankets at church if you need one. However hearty singing always seems to banish the cold!

Midnight Communion

Our ‘Midnight Communion’ at St Michael’s takes place on Christmas Eve, starting at 11.30pm. The service will be led by the Vicar, the Revd Mandy Flaherty.

From Michael Keck

Anti social behaviour – fly tipping

19/12/18

Back Lane – Great Gidding

Fly tipping, one of the scourges of modern day rural living where the less gifted feel a need to off load their junk or somebody else’s building waste on public highways,

Fly tipping is becoming a big problem not just the cowboy builder chucking stuff out on the road but also lorry loads dumped in gateways, old articulated trailers stuffed full of rubbish and abandoned in laybys and country roads.

What to do

If you witness fly tipping or come across the result of…………. call it in. Huntingdon District Council have an online reporting system, its easy to use and takes a few minutes. You can have it as an app on your smart phone, be clever report it straight away. Don’t wait for  someone else to do it.

For the record this was reported by using the HDC app this morning.

http://www.huntingdonshire.gov.uk/environmental-issues/fly-tipping/

Crap of the day

 

 

Help us celebrate the end of WW1

Help us celebrate the end of WW1

Great Gidding Commemoration – All are welcome to help us remember, 100 years on, those who died and to celebrate when the guns fell silent at the end of World War 1.

On Sunday 11th November Starting at 6.00pm at Great Gidding Village Hall

To honour those who fought and lost their lives and to mark the day 100 years ago when the guns fell silent at the end of the First World War.

Lighting of our beacon 6.00pm

With poems, readings and songs from WW1 we remember those from the Parish who lost their lives at that terrible time.

‘Battles Over’ Celebration (approx) 6.45pm

There will be a bar serving wine, beer and soft drinks (at almost WW1 prices) and free hotdogs (including vegetarian option).

St Michael’s Church closure

St Michael’s Church will be closed for the foreseeable future. At the moment the church is full of scaffolding and therefore inaccessible.

St Michael's Church Great Gidding closed for repairsRestoration in the north aisle being carried out

This is to enable the appropriate work of restoration in the north aisle to be carried out, arising from damage to the plaster as a result of the lead theft. This involves the removal and re-plastering of the wall. This work will take up to six weeks.

At the same time, the opportunity has been taken to remove the cracked plaster from the north side of the chancel arch, so as to expose the stonework behind and determine what work needs to be carried out to rectify the situation with the movement here.

Health and safety

This work obviously creates a dusty atmosphere. Additionally, when the plastering begins, this introduces plaster dust etc into the atmosphere, which not good for anyone to inhale. Therefore health and safety decrees we shut the church until such time as everything has been resolved and building is safe to use..

Therefore, if for any reason, you require access to the church, please contact John DeVal first on 01832 293417.

This closure means:

Evensong on Sunday 21st October is cancelled
The 11am service of Holy Communion on Sunday 4th November is moved from St Michael’s to St John’s Church, Little Gidding.

St Michael's Church Great Gidding closed for repairsRemoval of the cracked plaster from the north side of the chancel arch

A busy apple pressing day September 2018

A busy apple pressing day September 2018

A lovely sunny morning welcomed the various pressers and extractors of apple juice to Manor Site Farm laden with apples from gardens, allotments and a paltry amount from the Jubilee Wood apple trees.

Using the community apple press and apple pulper the crew soon got to grips with the process. Some apples were juicy some were a little dry, some were a bit tart some were sweet. The blending of cooking apples, dessert apples and wild crab apples will have created some unique tasting apple juice and for the brave, cider!  About 20 litres of  juice was pressed some destined for the Demijohn and fermentation and possibly cider or rank apple juice. The result will be a tasting at the 2019 Wassail (date tbc)

A great mornings entertainment with refreshments thrown in. Still plenty of time for parishoners to use the equipment in their own backyard  for this autumn.

Jubilee Wood September 2018

Jubilee Wood September 2018

Autumn approaches but the wood is still full of leaf even if there are some early signs of yellowing in some of the trees.

John Keats’ poem To Autumn with its famous first line:

Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness

always makes me think of cooler mornings and watery sunshine on the fluttering patches of reds and yellow as the trees lose their leaf chlorophyll.

As daylight hours shorten and the temperature cools, chlorophyll begins to decrease and the orange and yellows (carotenoids) that have always been there start to show through. However, the reds and purples,(anthocyanins) aren’t present in the leaf through through the growing season but develop in late summer. When the autumn days are bright and cool and nights are chilly then the leaf colours are at their best.Now is the time to start walking through the wood on a regular basis to watch the colours of the shrubs and trees changing.

It’s also the time to pick the last of the blackberries, although many are already passed their best. Folklore has much to say about the humble bramble but one story I particularly like warns against the picking of its berries after the 29th September, also known as Michaelmas. On that date, so the legend goes,Lucifer was cast out of heaven and landing on the prickly bush cursed the shrub and its fruit, so anyone picking the fruit after that date risked stirring up the devil’s anger. Of course, it’s also a good way of remembering that most blackberries are past their best by the end of September so if you want some fruit for free, and to avoid the devil’s anger, get picking!

Which brings me nicely to the Apple juicing  event on 29th  September at Manor Site Farm where the wonderful crop of apples enjoyed by most of us this year can be pressed to make  apple juice which also freezes well. Come and enjoy some time together with fellow growers and/or tasters. All the details regarding on the village website, www.thegiddings.org.uk.

I think  Keats would approve of such things:

by a cider press, with patient look, Thou watches the last oozing, hours by hours.

Hopefully the Gidding pressing won’t take quite that long!

The Wood Wanderer

Jubilee Wood August 2018

Jubilee Wood August 2018

August weather has been a little more familiar than the heatwave we’ve experienced over the last couple of months but as always, nature adapts and familiar sights are in the wood even if they are a little earlier in the season than we would expect.

Look out for the  Robin’s Pincushion (see photo) which is  a gall caused by the larvae of a tiny gall wasp, Dipoloepis rosae and is very common in hedgerows and woods. It is usually found on Dog roses (Rosa canina) and gets redder in the autumn, but this year it  seems to be maturing early and can be easily recognised. Each gall has many grubs inside it which feed on the gall tissues throughout the winter and emerge during the spring as adults.

Look around and you’ll see that the  wood is full of other interesting things at this time of year too. Fruits and nuts, fascinating seed heads and of course, the ever present wildlife which really appreciates the cover provided for them are just a few things to watch out for.

Why not have a wander around and see how the wood is changing with the progress of the season,  you won’t be disappointed!

The Wood  Wanderer.

Jubilee Wood July 2018

Jubilee Wood July 2018

Although it’s  been a very dry and hot month, the trees in the wood appear to be coping although the lowering of the pond level shows just how much the water table has gone down so they must be digging deep with their roots.

All species will have been affected by this unusual summer weather but on the positive side the wood has been full of butterflies and moths, some of which haven’t been recorded there before. We’re very fortunate to have enthusiastic and  knowledgeable volunteers who come to the wood to trap and record moths on a regular basis and they are always pleased to welcome people and explain what they are doing if you’re interested. Although they often have to come at short notice, due to the weather conditions, they came this month and  recorded over 75 different sorts of moths of all shapes and sizes , the most interesting of which was an Ear moth. Sadly it isn’t shaped like an ear, but a new moth which was recorded, the Magpie moth, which flies during the day doesn’t look like a magpie either! Always good to have a first and it shows how the wood  is encouraging more diversity as it grows.

It will be interesting to see the effects of this unusually long period of drought which often aren’t apparent for months to come. Let’s enjoy the warm evenings while we can and trust to nature which is far better at adapting than we are.

The Woodland Wanderer

Useful links

http://mothscount.org/text/27/National_Moth_Recording_Scheme.html

http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/22115362

Magpie Moth caught on camera by the Woodland Wanderer.

Jubilee wood – June 2018

Jubilee wood - June 2018

June is bursting out all over in the Jubilee wood!

The trees have exploded into life, their leaves forming a canopy of green in every shade nature can manage. The flowers on the fruit and hazel trees have already started to form into fruit and nuts (see photo below) but the elder flower and privet are still blossoming and feeling the warm air with the sweet scent as you pass by.

Bee orchid

The flowers at ground level are also putting on a wonderful display, so look down as well! Michael was the first to find the elusive but very beautiful Bee orchid flowering (see photo below). The common orchid is now spreading in the wood and if you look carefully along the small paths of the wood you might still see some in flower. The oxeye daisy is now colonising the wood and as a grassland perennial it flowers from May to September so we can enjoy it for many weeks to come. Along with other flowers they attract all sorts of pollinating insects including bees, butterflies and hover flies, so they look wonderful but also have an important job to play in the complex interactions of our environment.

Meadow Brown

This recent spell of sunny weather and flowering plants  has brought out so many pollinators, that as you walk around the wood you can’t help notice the Meadow Brown (Manila jurtina)  butterflies as they dart about. They are small, yellow orange and brown and the forewing has a black spot at the tip but the hind wing is brown, grey and cream. It’s one of our most widespread butterflies and often close their wings when they settle.

Great British Bee count

You can help another pollinator by joining in the Great British Bee count at friendsoftheearth.uk as  the data they collect will help to monitor how bees are doing. It’s only going for another week so you’ll have to be quick but it provides you with a handy identification chart and lots of information about our busy friends. I was relieved to find that it’s an easy and free App to download!

The Shepherd’s calendar

As our great local poet, John Clare, said  about this wonderful month of June in his poem The Shepherd’s calendar, June

Now summer is in flower and natures hum
Is never silent round her sultry bloom
Insects as small as dust are never done………

And in celebration of another much maligned insect, the spider, he conjures up a wonderful picture…

Where it’s silk netting lace on twigs and leaves
The mottled spider at eves leisure weaves
That every morning meets the poets eye
Like faireys dew wet dresses hung to dry

Ok, so you might not believe in fairies but you have to admit there’s a certain type of magic in nature and we have a bit of it right on our doorstep in the Jubilee Wood.

The Woodland Wanderer

Useful links

https://butterfly-conservation.org/50/identify-a-butterfly.html

https://www.bumblebeeconservation.org/red-tailed-bumblebees/early-bumblebee/

https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/blog/2017/06/nine-wild-uk-orchids/

 


 

 

Apple Juicing Saturday

Apple Juicing Saturday

On Saturday the 29th September we will have a community apple crushing, pulping, squeezing, pressing event using the community pulper and press. Collect your apples and rinse your receptacles. Whether its just juice or cider, the container you use does need sterilising. If you are a serial wine or beer maker then you will know the drill.

Quantity of apples, how long is a piece of string. You need lots, a washing basket full or two good bucket fulls to get any quantity. If we get a good crowd, 10 or so then quartering apples, pulping then bagging them up for the press becomes an easy flowing task.

Location – in one of the sheds at Manor Site Farm – it then becomes a weather resistant event.

Refreshments provided but happy to receive extras.

Time – 9am so that’ll be 10am Gidding central time.