Friday, February 24, 2012

A breath of fresh air in Kings Norton Civic Garden





 A breath of fresh air in the Civic Garden
The Laurel has now been cut back


The Civic Garden is the formal strip of park which lies behind the graveyard of  St Nicolas Church in  Kings Norton.

This year you will see changes which seek to restore some of the garden's former glory.

The friends group wanted to recognise the contribution of the Birmingham Civic Society, which in 1920 purchased the land and donated it to the City for recreational purposes.  They also found money from donations to landscape it.  Noteable people of the Civic Society at that time were members of the Cadbury, Chamberlain and Calthorpe families.



Southern view of the Civic Garden
 The Old Grammar School (left) and St Nicolas (right) just peeping through

The Friends of Kings Norton Park, working with Birmingham City Council, hope to replace the stone benches, six each 9ft long and an additional curved bench.  Work on thinning out the wooded areas and over grown boarders to allow in more light has already begun.

We also plant a small orchard of fruit trees with historical relevance.  This will capture past times and give and allow sharing to take place.  You will be able to sit comfortably in a peaceful area and pick a fruit to eat.

We have a designed a new interpretation panel, will have a neater rail along the Pershore Road installed,  reshape the grasses and weed and enhance the far border.

Please let us know what you feel about this area and share your memories and photograps with us.

email:  info.foknp@gmail.com

Photos taken by Lynn Horsnett
February 2012 

Friday, February 10, 2012

Wiggerly Bulb Planting

There's a worm at the bottom of the garden and his name is wiggerly woo, woo woo!

It was our first really sunny day in 2012          ( Friday 13 January) when the small people from Kings Norton Nursery brought their teachers to help plant bulbs on the car park edge to break up a bland area with a band of bright yellow and purple.  

Steve Hinton demonstrated which way was up and how deep to plant - we all learnt and laughed.  The  children excitedly dug with tools and hands, they planted, covered and patted, explored the textures of the earth and marvelled at wiggerly woo's (the common name for garden worms apparently).

Thank you to Gemma and her staff for making the effort to join us - we really do want the next generation to grow up with a love of the park and recognise that is their open space to share and enjoy.  

Thanks Kids, it was a very refreshing experience.

So much to look forward to in 2012

2012 should be our year of  the realisation… when all our community discussions will be seen in birth of a new children’s play area and a resorted Civic Garden.

PLAY AREA...

The Play Area will be built in 2 phases, the 1st phase has began.  The chaps contracted to carry out the work are ensuring our plans are transferred safely from paper in to a fully accessible interesting facility for all our children.   They managed to overcome their first real challenge which was to ensure the path around the mound needed to graduated in such away it was not too steep and there were no scary drops either side.

The mound will represent a Camp ruin, a type of fort and settlement in one. This should be exciting and educational.  The style will reflect the Roman pathway through the area to Metchley Fort,  and the camping out of an army of 5,000 Royalists, led by Queen Henrietta on behalf of her husband Charles I during the Civil War.

Phase I should be completed by Easter and Phase 2 will follow shortly, including improvements to the car park.   Some of the equipment in the play area will be refreshed, the Caterpillar has been saved and moved, and there will be new pieces too.

Apologies but we couldnt avoid the play area being entirely closed for a short while but I am sure you will agree it will be worth it.
CIVIC GARDEN

You will also see change to the upper formal Civic Garden area which lies behind the St Nicolas Church.  We wanted to recognise the contribution of the Birmingham Civic Society in 1920, when they purchased the land and donated it to the City so that we could use it for recreational purposes.

We hope to replace the stone benches, have an additional curved bench, thin out the wooded areas to allow in more light and plant a small orchard of fruit trees with historical relevance. We hope to see more bins, neater signs, reshaped grasses and enhanced borders.

Look out for the official opening date of our play area.

We would welcome your comments on the improvements once they are made.

OTHER THINGS

Lots more of spring colour on the way, better car park surfaces, the beginnings of the development nature corridor along the River Rea - you may notice a change in the grass cutting programme after March.

You can get involved in many different ways contact us at:   info.foknp@gmail.com

Photos taken by Lynn Horsnett 
February 2012



What were we up to in 2011?

A very quick tour of 2011

We accomplished the amazing feat of transforming 3 dowdy rose beds, about to be grassed over, into well stocked shrub beds of sustainable all year round colour.  The coldest start to year hampered our first attempts to plant up but in contrast, the warmest end to year allowed us to bask in sunshine whilst we added winter pansies and spring bulbs.  We had fun at our own events and joining in other groups’ activities and conferences, as well as exploring the rich history of Kings Norton.

But I would say that 2011, has really been the year of the Consultation… we have had fascinating conversations with hundreds of you, at the Farmers Market, Kings Norton Festival, in our park and other green spaces, planting trees on the nature reserve, at The Fields Millennium Trust magical event and the Fold Christmas fete.  We also undertook a programme of visits to local community groups, nursery, infant and junior schools.

Like all good tours, we have to thank those involved so... lets say thanks to everyone who has contributed  in anyway and their own way.   You may have talked about us, shown us opportunities, provided an encouraging word, visited us for a quick chat at one of our community stalls, joined our email list or got your hands dirty… whatever it was, thank you!

Special thanks Sue Amey, Northfield and Constituency Parks Manager and Steve and Adam our Lickey Hub Rangers, who have each gone out of their way to steer us in the right direction and take part in our activities.   Especially, in these very difficult economic times, when council jobs are being lost, workloads are increasing and pay is reducing, it would have been so easy for them to have become despondent.
Also thank you to PCSO, Andy Ryan who is committed to working closely in our community and Sarah Royal from BOSFA for some wonderful training.

BIG THANK YOU TO THE COMMUNITY FOR SUPPORTING US!
Without you talking to us, we would be merely guessing how our community feels and wants.  We would much rather find out and try to get some of your ideas incorporated in any improvement plans. We will do our best but have learnt that our aspirations need to be matched with what we can realistically be achieved at any one time, and that that it is highly dependent on what funding and support is available!


Monday, December 5, 2011

Touches of Winter Colour







Winter touches of colour (wine, pink and gold) have been integrated into our shrub beds.  They were provided by Sue Amey,  Northfield & Edgbaston Constituency Parks Manager.  Special thanks to Darrel, DNA Pet Supplies on Wychall Road, who gave us a substantial discount on stainless steel long handled trowels and short handled forks, they were really good quality and just the ticket for this event.  You are a star Darrel!  


Following our meeting on Saturday 3 December, Dinny Weston, Lucy Horsnett and I joined Sue to weed and plant the 3 lower shrub beds.  The soil was light and moist, the sun was shining and the air fresh, as Sue commented, 'excellent gardening weather'.   Dinny pointed out the physical work, following our earlier consultation on the draft plans for Kings Norton Children's Play Area, struck a fine balance.  Lucy has regularly tended to the beds and was moved to see how her hard work was blossoming.    



As we planted, a small child, no more than 4 years of age, whose thoughts left his cycling fun, rode over to thank us for 'making our park look so pretty'.  A passing family also took the time to stop and say how grateful they were for our endeavours, after which, an elderly gentleman,  out for a stroll, thanked us for adding colour, and remarked 'hey you land ladies are still doing a good job, but where are all the men?''  We were finished in about an hour, satisfied it was a job well done.  


Why not have a stroll past and tell us what you think?  


You can get involved too - before the snow sets in, we aim to put in our early flowering spring bulbs.  If you recall last year, the snow hindered progress and the bulbs were stolen!  We aim to hold our bulb planting activity in the New Year, possibly on Friday 13 January 2012 at 11.30am to allow local nursery and school children to join in.  The date does suggest we may just be tempting fate!


The lower shrub beds have been formerly adopted by the Friends of Kings Norton Park, so whether you are female or male, we invite you to pick a weed or two as you pass by.  If you aren't sure which ones are the weeds, please play safe and join us on the 13 January. 


If you, your group or organisation wish help out or sponsor a planting project or any other project, please email us at info.foknp@gmail.com


Lynn Horsnett
Chair  FoKNP

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Friends of Kings Norton Park
Our green open spaces, share an abundance of natural wonderments, from shimmering silver birches, bronze beeches to  grand oaks,  from whispering grasses to warbling reeds,  babbling brooks to  meandering rivers and  feathery, furry and amphibian friends.  Each reserve has woven its own distinctive character of little gems to form the rich environmental tapestry we are so fortunate to have upon our Kings Norton doorsteps.
Crossing West Hill Road at Camp Lane, and glimpsing the rhyme of the River Rea as you walk up to meet the beginning of Kings Norton Park, it is just long enough to distract and arouse you from your slumbering stroll, through the former mill lands and pools of the nature reserve.  It is just far enough to prepare yourself for the rush of sweet acreage, which still bears signs of ridge and furrow and the gentle freshness that breezes around you as you step from tarmac to grass.
The Park, like the reserve, displays pockets of naturalness and nurture, but threaded within the Parks curves, rises and plains, are reminisces of arable farms, orchards and harvests, royal battles and lives of the workers fleeting through.   The stories live on in text of the page, snap of the image, memories of the aged and the limbs of our youth.  The Park and its playing fields are ours for our time, to escape from the strains and stresses, to care for and share with, to gift to the future.
The major focus for Friends of Kings Norton Park group has been exploration through conversing with many fascinating folk.  We have unearthed such a rich and diverse range of interesting angles to the Park and we have begun to feel what our green spaces mean to people. 
Our first project was thrust upon us; ‘Save the Shrub Beds’ or be grassed!  Our campaign, after two icy- false starts, resulted in a hugely successful planting event.   Those now relaxing on nearby benches can absorb a bouquet of colourful, sweet scented shrubs.  
Other projects will concentrate on enhancing the River Rea Corridor so a dreamy stroll can continue right through the park, and hopefully, playing fields, to the Kings Norton Toll House, which proudly sits on the Worcester/Stratford Canal Side.  Through initial discussions with Phil Evans and Amanda, our ideas will be planted up as trees, reeds, iris and wild garlic, etc.  Our invaluable resources, Rangers Steve and Adam, and Sue Amey, Constituency Parks Manager, are guiding us on how to encourage a desirable wildlife habitat… so far we know there is little owl, red polls, kingfishers, willow warblers and bats along this stretch, baseline surveys may show us further interesting delights.  The first signs of this natural corridor will be seen through the shoots of a small meadow as the mowing regime is slightly altered.
Other more structural changes are planned, which are equal value to our community, the resurfacing of Kings Norton Playing Fields Car Park, will be a huge improvement on the potholed surface which now lies beneath.   The cost of this will be met with Section 106 monies, as will refurbishments to the Parks, car park and children’s play area. We visited nearby school and nursery children, and hopefully the architects will include some of the dreams of the children.  We should also see some additional benches, bins and repairs to canal feeder bridges.  This work will take place during the cooler months for as long as funding continues to flow.
A reporting process, Parks Watch Scheme, which is a joint initiative involving, KNNR, The Fields Millennium Trust, local PCSO Andy Ryan and the Parks department, will be put in place in 2012.
We have many groups and ind\ividuals to thank you are probably one of those people… so, thank you, and please do continue to support us!
If you would like to join our group, and for all other enquiries, then please email us at: info.foknp@gmail.com
Lynn Horsnett ~ Chair, Friends of Kings Norton Park



Sunday, July 10, 2011

Kings Norton Festival '11~ Park Consultation





A great day at Kings Norton Festival, a really well organised event, where we met some very interesting and keen new members!  We had a continuous flow of enthusiastic visitors to our stall - we hardly had time for coffee!  Consultation for the park and playing fields was our main theme with people happy to chat about their likes and concerns, as well share their ideas and wishes for both open spaces.   We will feed back views into the wider exercise, which should result in us acquiring an upgraded children's play area, resurfaced car parks as well much needed extra bins and benches, by this time next year.    Our group visits, meetings and events are on going, so please do email us to find out how you can get involved.