Category: This and that


Municipal Dreams's avatarMunicipal Dreams

By 1944, 1 million British homes had been damaged or destroyed by German bombing.  Lewisham alone had lost over 1600 dwellings in the first wave of the Blitz in 1940 and would suffer heavily again as the V1s and V2s rained over London in June 1944.  There are those in the Excalibur Estate in the borough who feel they are the victims of enemy action once more.

Back in 1944, Churchill gave his ‘word that the soldiers, when they return from the war and those who have been bombed out …shall be restored to homes of their own at the earliest possible moment.’

Hector Murdoch's homecoming, 1946 Hector Murdoch’s homecoming, 1946

To fulfil this pledge, the 1944 Housing (Temporary Accommodation) Act was passed, earmarking £150m for an emergency programme of temporary housing.  Aircraft factories which, in these closing days of the European war, might move to peacetime production were tasked with the construction of…

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Epithets

gillians's avatarPlant Heritage

The Garden Library at RHS Garden Wisley is hosting a rare opportunity to see original botanical artworks on loan from the Cyclamen Society. The twenty five portraits on display feature in the recently published Genus Cyclamen: Science, Cultivation, Art and Culture  edited by Brian Mathew which also has on its cover this digital image of a 17th C  engraving from Naawkeurige beschryving der aardgewassen by Abraham Munting (1696)

Cyclamen print © Martin Denney

As part of my work as a volunteer in the library I was given this wonderful tome of c. 600 pages and asked to provide a couple of descriptive lines on each of the paintings which would be used as a crib sheet for visitors to the exhibition.

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In so few words there was little point in describing the plants so beautifully depicted in the paintings, but an explanation of the species epithet for each of the plants seemed a…

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Guest article by Elizabeth Grey

Mothering Sunday is fast approaching, this year falling on 30th March. If your mum or granny is a keen gardener, there’s plenty of scope to get her a much more interesting present than the typical flowers, chocolates, perfume or smellies, and a gardening related gift is something that can be treasured for years to come.

Even if your mother has a shed bursting with much-loved gardening tools and there’s not room for another cutting in her garden, there are still a wide selection of thoughtful green-fingered gifts which she will be delighted to unwrap.

For the gardener who likes to read

Mr_McGregor's_garden_at_Hill_Top_Farm_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1264402Mr McGregor’s Garden at Hill Top Farm, Cumbria

If your mum enjoys curling up with a book or magazine, consider treating her to a horticultural read so she can carry on immersing herself in her passion even when it’s not possible to be out in the garden.

Beatrix Potter’s books are some of the most charming children’s books ever written, and if you have fond memories of reading Peter Rabbit with your mum as a child, Marta McDowell’s Beatrix Potter’s Gardeners Life might be an ideal gift. Beautifully illustrated, the book explores the link between Potter’s Lake District gardens and her work.

Slugs are the bane of gardeners’ lives, so this book about 50 Ways to Kill a Slug is a good fit for a gardener who enjoys a humorous look at dealing with one of their least favourite molluscs.

A gardening magazine subscription provides your mum with a year round source of inspiration and the chance to discover what’s going on in some of the country’s most interesting gardens. Subscriptions can come with added bonuses, for instance, if you subscribe to The Garden magazine you get membership of the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) and all the benefits which that brings.

For the gardener who likes to explore

chelsea physic gardenChelsea Physic Garden. Photo credit: Karen V Bryan

The UK is very lucky to have so many beautiful and unusual gardens, and taking your mum to visit one of these can create treasured memories as well as being an enjoyable day out. Many gardens also put on special child-friendly fun and learning days, which can be a wonderful day out for three generations – perhaps you could surprise your mum afterwards with a framed photo showing her introducing her grandchildren to her favourite hobby.

In London, the Chelsea Physic Garden in home to over 5,000 plants, many of which have a medicinal purpose, that flourish in the Garden’s mild microclimate. It’s a refreshing retreat from the capital’s hustle and bustle, and hosts regular family days throughout the year.

The Trebah Garden in Cornwall is rated in the top eighty garden globally, and is somewhere that no keen horticulturalist should miss out on visiting. Some highlights include the water garden, which in late spring is carpeted with Arum lilies; the hydrangea valley, which covers two acres of riverside garden with unusually vivid flowers; and its own secluded private beach, complete with complimentary buckets and spades.

For the gardener who likes bees

beePhoto credit: Andreas.

The worldwide decline in bee numbers is cause for concern as they pollinate about a third of all food crops, while 90% of all wild plants need insect pollination to survive. As a result, many gardeners are trying to make their gardens havens for bees in order to reduce this trend.

If your mum is one of these gardeners, a bee box would be an appreciated and thoughtful gift. The boxes, which are often attractive features in their own right, give shelter to solitary bees like the Red Mason and Leaf Cutter.

Bees love traditional British garden plants like roses, lavender, hollyhocks and edible herbs. So if your mum has space in her garden, one of these plants is a good gift. Pots of edible herbs are a particularly good choice if your mum also enjoys cooking, or is gardening is a small space.

For the gardener who likes to entertain

Photo credit: Kew on Flickr

There’s little more enjoyable than inviting friends over to take afternoon tea outdoors or spending a warm night relaxing in your garden with wine, food and good company. If your mum loves to host garden get-togethers there are plenty of entertaining accessories that make lovely gifts. Prices on these start at pocket-money levels, and there’s often a selection of matching goodies, so it’s easy to buy a set of gifts from all the family.

Solar powered garden lights have quickly become a must-have garden accessory, and fairy lights create a particularly special atmosphere when they’re interlaced around a trellis panel. For anyone sitting outside after dark, citronella candles are an essential accessory to repel bugs. Ones that come in brightly coloured buckets make a feature out of a necessity.

If you really want to splash out on a mother’s day gift, a garden swing seat adds a touch of luxury and style to any garden and is always popular with guests. Wooden swing seats are suitable to be outside in all weathers, so your mum can turn the seat into a permanent focal point, or even hang the seat from a plant-covered pergola.

Thanks to Elizabeth for some great ideas – you can follow Elizabeth on Twitter https://twitter.com/ej_grey

Old School Gardener

 

Tamara Jare's avatarMy Botanical Garden

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Early spring flowers take all attention , they are first, after all. Modest they might be, but they evoke the primordial feelings about the cycles of year and life. Beginnings are always sweet, as all spring flowers are. But they can be toxic, like mezereon, small bush from the forest rim. When summer comes,  its simple sweet smelling flowers will vanish till the next year. And then the cycle will begin again. Sweet smell and poison, spring and winter, life and death, again and again…….. 

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Daphne_mezereum_-_Köhler–s_Medizinal-Pflanzen-050.jpg ‎(438 × 591 pixels, file size: 113 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg), from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Daphne_mezereum_-_K%C3%B6hler%E2%80%93s_Medizinal-Pflanzen-050.jpg

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Municipal Dreams's avatarMunicipal Dreams

In 1971, the Hulme Crescents were thought to represent the best of modern social housing.  The planning principles which inspired them were intended not only to provide decent housing but to honour and foster community.  The construction techniques which built them had seemed to promise mass housing on a scale and at a pace which would finally eradicate the scourge of the slums.

Hulme-Crescents

If only briefly, this excitement was felt by residents as well as politicians and planners: (1)

I went for a walk with my granddad before the Crescents started to get bad. And they were wonderful places. Full of really new ideas and loads of hope for the people living in them. People talked to each other. And I can remember laugher with a family that lived in them. They asked me and my granddad in for a cup of tea. Showed us round the strange way the…

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shinealightproject's avatarShine A Light

Hello! We are members of the Teenage History Club from the Ancient House Museum in Thetford.

We have spent two days in February Half Term at Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse working with the team from the Shine-a-light project choosing objects to star in a new display.

thc trip

As we jumped out of the minibus and made our way to the huge warehouse that is home to the Norfolk Collections Centre (NCC) our first impressions were different across the group from that of entering another world, like Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory to it  feeling ‘very cold and interesting’.

To start the day we had a tour of the building with Ann-Marie who is the Project Officer, we were shown lots of very interesting objects from a Mammoth Skull to Posture Chairs.

thc in freezer

Here we are outside the Freezer. We learnt how objects are packed with acid-free tissue paper and then wrapped in layers…

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greenbenchramblings's avatargreenbenchramblings

Last week a wild wind phenomenon hit our allotments and left a trail of destruction in its wake. A “funnel” tore its way across the plots and it flattened sheds in its path. It moved sheds from their bases. It took the roofs off others. Anything light was scattered about, compost bins, water butts and cold-frames.

In the first pair of pictures half of the felt from the shed roofs had been torn off typical of the minor damage to many sheds. Others like the one in the third photo had been blown from off its base and it collapsed in a heap, with the contents crushed inside. See if you can see which bit is which.

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Others fell off their bases and landed on their sides remaining almost intact while others lost their roofs which took off like kites.

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On our own plot there was little damage. We…

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Spring has sprung

Municipal Dreams's avatarMunicipal Dreams

In 1978 the chair of Manchester City Council’s Housing Committee described the Hulme Crescents development as an ‘absolute disaster – it shouldn’t have been planned, it shouldn’t have been built’. (1)   By that time, the estate was already a byword for the failure – worse, the inhumanity – of sixties’ mass public housing. That reputation has lingered long after the demolition of the Crescents in 1994.

This won’t be a revisionist piece but let’s at least look a little more closely at what went wrong.

The Crescents The Crescents

As we saw when we looked at the city’s early municipal housing in Ancoats, Manchester was the ‘shock city’ of the Industrial Revolution.  Hulme was also the home of many of those first industrial workers.  In 1914, a Special Committee of the City Council reported a population of 63,177 living there in just 13,137 homes, 11,506 of which lacked baths or any laundry…

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gressenhallfw's avatarGressenhall Farm and Workhouse

As I’m coming to the end of my traineeship this will be my final blog entry! Over the past 17 months I have had such a fantastic time here at Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse and I can’t put a figure on the amount of brilliant moments and opportunities that I have been part of. Everything that I have done and all the wonderful people that I have met will always stay with me.

Out of all of the experiences and projects I have been part of the one that I am most proud of is the Centenary Wood Rejuvenation Project. The woodland, located behind the main building at Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse, was planted in 1989 to celebrate the Centenary of the County Council. But since then not much has been done to it in terms of management, and so it was far too linear and close together to be…

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