We are sharing some recent photographs taken on a walk by Fiona Walberton, our Treasurer and one of our Committee. She was following the footpath between Tilford Road and Waverley Lane in the valley of the lower Bourne stream.
We launched our Garden Watch after Easter with a bird survey and have now extended the Watch to include vertebrates – mammals, reptiles and amphibians – and butterflies. With continued support we shall include further surveys. We are much encouraged by the response to date and intend to publicise further the survey beyond our members and friends.
During the restrictions on our activities required during the Coronavirus lockdown the Bourne Conservation Group is looking for ways to maintain contact with our Members and Friends, and if possible to make our work known to a wider range of people One way we can do that is through our local Garden Watch.
The Bourne Conservation Group has had to move swiftly to respond to the Coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic and to the latest Government regulations and guidelines. Other organisations with which we work locally such as Waverley Council, Natural England, Surrey Wildlife Trust and RSPB have all cancelled volunteering effort and group activities. Our Group has in a similar way stopped all work sessions until further announcement. BCG is in a difficult position as two thirds of our regular attendees are over 70 as well as a number of our Friends. Nothing that we do as a group must jeopardise their health and safety or indeed that of any of our members.
Sadly, the Farnham Walking Festival for this year has been cancelled and that of course includes the two walks due to be led by BCG members.
Fortunately, as a result of our work over the winter, our core sites of the Crossroads, Middle Bourne Lane Garden and the Old Churchyard are all in quite good condition although there are always a few seasonal tasks to be done. The photo of the heather bank in Middle Bourne Lane Community Garden shows plants in bloom which is providing good sustenance for the bees.
The heather bank in Middle Bourne Lane Community Garden
Our Committee will review the situation again during April in line with the latest guidelines and will then decide what activities if any can be planned. Our Members and Friends will be updated by email as soon as there is any change or please follow our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/bourneconservation.org.uk/ . We shall also post updates on our website.
The Farnham Walking Festival is being held between 16th
May and 7th June this year. Our Group continues to support it and is
leading two walks, as follows:
As our Members and Friends know, there is a referendum about
the Neighbourhood Plan on 12th March.
The Bourne Conservation Group recognises that each vote is
entirely a matter for the individual. As a Group, however, we encourage
everyone to use their vote and to vote YES. We are not alone in adopting that
approach: the Farnham Society have produced a leaflet which will be posted
through letter boxes next week.
The Bourne Conservation Group (BCG) took on
responsibility ten years ago for maintaining the Old Churchyard in Vicarage
Hill. This peaceful and historic site had fallen into neglect and become
overgrown with invasive plants. Working at all times in consultation with the
Vicar and Churchwardens to safeguard the many graves of former parishioners,
BCG has cleared and restored the site so that it is now welcoming to visitors
as well as wildlife.
Having once again been invited by
the Farnham Society to participate in the September Heritage Open Days
programme, we decided to offer a slight variation on the walk that we last did in
2015: “The Bourne – Change in the Village”.
On the due date (19th
September) the weather was good and sixteen walkers and a Jack Russell met up
with Richard Sanders and Noel Moss outside St Thomas’ Church at 2.00pm. Having
heard about the geology of the area and the building of the present church from
Noel, the group moved on to the Old Churchyard where Richard described the social
changes that took place at the end of the nineteen century which had been so
well recorded by George Sturt.
With the kind agreement of the
owners, the group entered the garden of Vine
Cottage, Old Church Lane, where Noel read a passage from Memoirs of a Surrey Labourer about George Sturt and Fred Grover
working together in the garden on a damp afternoon. The tour stopped at the cottage
Little Willows, where Fred and Lucy lived for a while, and at the end of Sturt
Walk before moving on to hear a reading
about William Cobbett playing with his brothers on the slope below
Middle Bourne Lane.
Farnham celebrated in style and looked back on a fantastic year for Farnham in Bloom at the Farnham in Bloom Community Awards evening organised by Farnham Town Council held at Squires Garden Centre on 10th October.
The contribution made by the Bourne Conservation Group was recognised and we were represented by Martin Angel and David Dearsley, who are shown receiving our certificate from the Mayor Farnham, Councillor Pat Evans.
We congratulate the many organisations and individuals who won awards and the hundreds of people who contributed to the town’s success.
Our AGM is a chance to meet other members in a relaxed setting and to take part in a discussion about conservation issues of importance and interest to our group AND, most importantly, to enjoy really good tea and cakes afterwards. We hope to see many members and friends there.
The time is 2.30 pm on Sunday 1st September – the place is 19 Stream Farm Close.
The essential business is to elect a committee for the next year and to adopt the Financial Statement.
If any member would like to stand for election to the committee, please contact the Secretary. There are two vacancies.