An early morning walk through Burley Old never fails to hit the spot, it's such a wonderful woodland, and without a doubt my most visited forest spot. This morning I mused on how much this parcel of much loved enclosed woodland, one of the New Forests' oldest enclosures, has changed over the last 40 years, and yet amongst all the changes how timeless it's feel remains. Love it.
Saturday, 31 July 2021
Wednesday, 28 July 2021
Camel Green
Our walk along Highland Water was particularly lovely this morning, especially through Camel Green...it's one of those forest spots where the magic of the woodland is most pronounced. We stopped awhile by the stream, we were out early and had the woodland to ourselves...sublime! I took the opportunity, as I frequently do, to take some time to connect and run through some Awens. Lately I've taken to running though a couple of yoga poses (ragdoll, transitioning to mountain, a couple of forward bend/tabletop/forward bends, finishing in mountain) beforehand, and have found then beneficial in my focusing and breathing pre chant. I love the calm clarity afterwards, especially your hearing, as if you're listening to the woodland in super high definition. A standing mediation in a beautiful, and beautifully lit, woodland with the earth below me, sky above me and water running at my feet...perfect.
Tuesday, 27 July 2021
Sea of oak
Tens of thousands of tiny sapling oaks carpet the floor of Brinken Wood, they're quite the sight. I hope they're to left to their own devices, I like the idea of a dense thicket of juvenile oaks, I'll watch their progress with interest.
Monday, 26 July 2021
Sunday, 25 July 2021
Fletchers Water
I've got grainy video of our children swinging out over what was a fairly broad, and for the most part straight, forest stream, deep enough in parts to make swinging out over it safe-ish, though not deep enough to pose too much of a risk. We spent many happy hours wandering and exploring it's banks and wider environs, often returning to the car wet. Then ten years ago they restored Fletchers Water to it's pre-Victorian course; I'll admit that at the time I wasn't happy about the change, though now naturalizing so beautifully, it's a really lovely stretch of forest stream. Agreeable as the old Fletchers Water was, you'd not recognize it as the same place.
Saturday, 24 July 2021
Friday, 23 July 2021
Thursday, 22 July 2021
Summer woodland
Sad as it is to see leviathans fall, time and the elements have opened up Burley Old beautifully. Fallen trees have created holes in the canopy, below where the woodland floor has subsequently greened, the effect, a wonderful patchwork of woodland glades.
Wednesday, 21 July 2021
Avon Water crater
When they restored this section of Avon Water between Holmsley station and Wootton Bridge, the new course of the stream cut through what I believe to be a Second World War bomb crater (it exhibits all the characteristics and is adjacent to the old railway line, which would've been a wartime target). The restoration has brought the old bomb crater to life. The crater used to be seasonally wet, though for the most part quite the dank lifeless hole, now it's part of a rich and verdant developing wetland/carr woodland environment. You'd be surprised at how many World War Two bomb craters pock the forest, not all of them the result of the enemy either.
Labels:
Avon Water,
bomb crater,
Holmsley Station,
New Forest,
stream,
wootton bridge,
WW2
Tuesday, 20 July 2021
Monday, 19 July 2021
Lakewood
The underlying Eocene clays have traditionally ensured that the Highcliffe area has been wet, crossed by rivulets, pocked with ponds, generally soft under foot and prone to standing water during the wet seasons. Before settling on Highcliffe-on-Sea one of the village's names was Slop Pond, you can understand why they changed it, even if the latter is descriptively appropriate. Lakewood is one of the remaining ponds; a good sized pond with a small island, one half surrounded with what's left of the woodland the pond was set in up to the 80's housing expansion, the other grass and open mature/veteran trees, nice. Recently some local fishy folks have cleared the pond out of clogging mud, detritus natural and otherwise, and choking flora; they've restored the banks and restocked the water with good sized fish which lurk just visible in the murky waters. A nice spot to visit on our local walks. An amazing nature oasis.
Sunday, 18 July 2021
Church Bottom morning
The weather wizards had forecast scorchio for the entire day, so Geoff and I got out walking early this morning, and by 0700 we were over 3 miles out into the Chase. The mist still hung in the folds that empty into Church Bottom, and already it was hot enough to have me sweating. We did 11.7 miles overall, beginning at Vitrell Gate, along the Ackling Dyke, descending through Church Bottom, crossing the Ebble Valley, up over Stoke Down, along the Old Shaftesbury Drove, back down to the Ebble Valley retracing our outward route back to Vitrell Gate. It was a good move too, getting out early, by the time we got back to the car around 10.00 and it was sweltering.
Friday, 16 July 2021
Common Broomrape
Common Broomrape (Orobanche minor), a plant which reflects beauty and ugly in equal measure. It's been a good year for them. The narrow strip of old woodland alongside Hinton Avenue has been full of Broomrape, usually you'll see a handful here and there though this year they've carpets small areas. I don't know if that's a good sign or not, Broomrape's a parasitic plant. It's an odd one too, no leaves, just a flowering spike protruding from the ground.
Labels:
Common Broomrape,
flowers,
Highcliffe,
Hinton Avenue,
Plants
Tuesday, 13 July 2021
Dog people
If you walk locally with a dog you'll quickly become 'dog people', a cadre of people who, for the most part, are known by their canine companion's name. Sometimes a nod, a wave from a distance, small talk or even occasionally longer exchanges bind us. I have to admit I dig it. Life's a collection of infinite stories, and I love to hear them. Through talking my community feels more alive somehow, populated now by real characters rather than a nebulous homologous neighbour, and many have a story they want to tell...and I'll listen. For another time maybe. For now though, I'd had a chat this morning with an elder who always stops and tells me her story through unconnected piece, like slowly doing a jigsaw. Anyway, as we wished each other a good day, she turned and said 'thank you for talking to me'. I told her that it was my pleasure. But, man, as I walked off emotion captured me, for this wasn't the first time, by far, that a local elder spoke those exact words...and every time they land like unintended punches. As for that short sentence to be common parlance, we must genuinely be losing our humanity.
Labels:
Chewton Common,
Dog people,
Highcliffe,
stories
Monday, 12 July 2021
Burley Old
The root bole in the centre background, seen from between the root boles of a recently toppled conjoined Oak and Beech, has been there for at least 30 years and is now entirely hollow. Walking land over an extended period of years allows a glimpse at forest time. The divided Oak and Beech were only slighted during late spring (the bottom photo was taken back in May), the oak falling and blocking one of the woods well used winding paths; in fact both trees were veteran trees of a good height, and have formed a formidable barrier in the woodland...and will do for decades to come. Some kind soul has cut through the tangle of roots, filled the hole and created a narrow passage through what was impassable mess, and now the woodland path flows once more. Nice.
Sunday, 11 July 2021
Saturday, 10 July 2021
Red Rise Brook
The forest has afforded me much respite from life's pressures of late. Of course nature always does, it's her way, she always gives you the space you need to unwind and the peace you need to think through stuff. Sometimes that aspect of the walk goes unacknowledged, whilst at other times you feel her soothing embrace so keenly, today it was the latter.
Thursday, 8 July 2021
Hidden paths
Walking the Common's myriad paths at this time of year you need to be a believer, to have faith that the path exists and you're not just stumbling off into the undergrowth. The annual excess of summer growth has choked the place with a sea of verdant bracken raising to 6 or 7 feet. I love it like this. Although, the downside is you're assured of a soaking if you walk here early in the morning or shortly after a downpour.
Sunday, 4 July 2021
Left behind
Spend any time walking in nature, especially the same roams regularly, and you quickly become acclimatized to her characteristic textures and forms, becoming more aware of anything out of place, especially anything man made. Geoff and I were storming through the open mature oak stands of Dames Slough Hill, when off at quite a distance something incongruous caught my eye. I stopped and backed up, and there tucked in the root flares of a mossy trunk was what looked like a yellow cane... you regularly come across coloured canes in the forest, part of, or remains of, some survey or other. Closer inspection identified this as a orienteering station post, minus station....no doubt left in err. It reminds me that although for 99% of our walks we have the forest, or at least the tract we're walking to ourselves, it all goes on in the forest.
Labels:
Dames Slough Hill,
New Forest,
Oak,
orienteering
Friday, 2 July 2021
Thursday, 1 July 2021
Regal fail
There was nothing regal about either of these deliveries through Royal Mail. Yesterday I received a vinyl album package marked 'Fragile' with a chunk taken out of it; the outer sleeve was mauled and effectively ruined, lovely artwork too, and the inner sleeve was ripped, though thankfully the vinyl itself was unscathed and played perfectly. Good job too, as the album has sold out! Unbelievable. Then this morning another package
arrived, a graphic novel I'd sough. My package arrived inside a cable tied Royal Mail bag, no explanation
or ought, the package in the bag covered in goo, upon opening the inner package I found the afore mentioned goo had leaked
inside.... and graphic novel too had been ruined whilst in the care of the Royal
Mail! Pretty rubbish.
Labels:
damaged goods,
graphic novels,
records,
royal mail,
vinyl
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