Sunday 22 December 2019

Season's Greetings

December 2019


Our road repairs detailed in last month’s blog didn’t last very long. Two days of constant, heavy rain washed out our valiant efforts. Never mind, the Wednesday Conservation team’s first job in December involved a trip out to Ebchester (a National Trust Reserve on the River Derwent). A field at one end of the reserve belonging to Northumbrian Water had been strimmed the day before by some of Gibside’s rangers. Our task was to rake the grass cuttings and dispose of them. Being such an efficient group, we were finished by lunchtime.

Before - looking down towards Sewage Treatment Plant!
Hard at work
After



The following week saw the team in Snipes Dene cutting back our old foes, Western hemlock and rhododendron bushes. The sides of an old wagonway were cleared first, then spreading out into the dene more rhododendrons were cleared forming brash piles with the cuttings.

Rhododendrons just visible behind the birches

Sun just peeping over Snipes Dene
Waggonway


December 18th, our last session before Christmas brought below freeing temperatures, resulting in a heavy frost. It takes more than a bit of frost to deter some of our team even if we are raking leaves on the bank alongside The Avenue.
Frosted field in front of The Orangery
Frosted oak leaf
Leaves blanket the bank side of The Avenue

Raking in progress

Cleared
Holly


Christmas Pudding



So that’s it for 2019, have a great Christmas and best wishes for 2020 to all our readers.

Wednesday 27 November 2019

From Rhoddie Bashing to Road Repairs

October - November 2019


October saw the team working around the Octagon Pond on a couple of occasions. One of the first tasks was to rake up grass which had previously been strimmed along one edge of the pond. On our next visit the Wednesday conservation team were tasked with cutting back trees, mainly birch, from one side of the pond to improve the vista looking up towards The Banqueting House. Destruction in the name of conservation – we were in our element.

Raking grass at the Octagon Pond
Fly agaric
Fungi growing on tree stump
Assessing the scale of the job at Octagon Pond

Almost complete
Still some work to be done
Clear view

From the other side of the pond towards The Banqueting House

In the mists of late October, the team could be found rhoddie bashing along the “serpentine path” which leads up to The Column to Liberty. The rhododendrons in this area are prolific and were encroaching on the path sides. Cutting them back quite severely enabled a new path edging to be created using silver birch trunks.

Low cloud hangs over The Orangery
Through the mist
Cutting back the rhododendrons

New path edging
Fungi growing on fallen tree trunk


Early November brought our first frost of the season. The day began with a little breaking and entering as the keys to the tool store were missing. This necessitated the removal of the door before our work could begin. Once access was gained, we became a team of road menders. Like many roads elsewhere, the roads and paths of Gibside have become pothole ridden. After clearing the ice and water from the potholes the task of filling them could begin. This involved transporting wheelbarrow full of stone chippings to each site, filling the holes and tamping the chippings down.                     

Breaking and entering

Thinking about it!

Frosty grass on Park Fields
Brushing water out of pothole prior to filling it.
Finished - can you see the join?

Finally a bit of Autumn colour

Monday 7 October 2019

September 2019


Twenty five or so cattle bunched together in Park Field putting up enough insects to attract swooping swallows that were absent from the rest of the field.


I was having an early wander. Of course, Gibside is primarily for the public but it was lovely to potter around by myself before the visitors arrived and when the rest of the team were already at work elsewhere.

Attacking the Himalayan balsam on Ladyhaugh
Before - silver birch surrounds the hazel plantings
The team hard at work - West Woods


It had obviously been a while since I last visited the lower West Wood track. It now has a number of exercise installations known, apparently, as West Wood Workout. They’re a bit like climbing frames for big people. Not tempted to give it a try, I sat on a seat on the other side of the track listening to the wind in the trees and enjoying the woodland light.


The rest of the team had passed through this way earlier and tidied up the Den Building Area. I caught up with them in time for a tree stump sit, a cup of coffee and conversation where they were working at clearing self-seeded birch and sycamore around hazel planted a few years back.

Bronze Shieldbug nymph 
Ladybird
Shaggy parasol

As quiet and people-free as my wanderings had been, I only saw and heard the occasional bird. I thought I might at least have spotted a roe deer or startled a brown hare – but not today. There was a buzzard, though, and a red kite overhead as we worked. It would be a rare occurrence not to see and hear them in West Wood. And there were badger diggings edging the upper track. This is often the case. Tracks work as well for badgers to get around as they do for humans, and the narrow margin of cut grass beside the track is ideal for rooting about in.

Hypogymnia physodes

Hoverfly - Syrphus ribesii

Raking grass on The Avenue bank


We’d had two weeks of clearing birch, sycamore and other growth to eliminate competition for the hazel. It’s quite an enjoyable task, but hard, tiring work. The following week, we got the easier job of feathering the lime trees by the Walled Garden that is, removing the epicormic growth. Epicormic growth is the suckers that shoot out from the bark close to the base of the tree. Whilst we were doing that, three young grey squirrels innocently played above our heads and around our feet, looking cute. But that won’t save them.

Lime tree showing epicormic growth


Feathering the lime tree


Almost complete
Honey fungus at base of tree
Honey fungus




Young squirrels hunting acorns
Steve Wootten & Phil Coyne