Tuesday, 18 September 2018

All cleared up

Heather and I made sure there was almost no sign of the party the next day. Just the embers gently burning in the firepit.


Was so lovely to see everyone there. We will do something again before too long. Maybe bluebell time next year? See you in May!

Jasmin and Pawel made a movie.....


Thank you all for coming to Silver Wood!

Lots of people came, some from quite a long way away! It was lovely to see you all, we had a great time, and hope you did too. We took some photos.....





















Saturday, 1 September 2018

Party on!

The weather looks good and the Silver Wood is waiting for you!




Follow the arrows




And we will see you at the end of the path !




Things to bring; well, nothing essential really. But its a wood (brambles, mud etc), so old clothes obviously. There are some benches (aka bits of wood) to sit on but feel free to bring camping chairs if you want. We seriously need to off-load our home made cider and there will be a continuous kettle boil for tea but if you want to bring other drink then please do. I have been letting my inner GBBO free so we have some cake and Heather is making a tray of her lovely cheese scones so we are well provided with nice things. But we can light a fire if you want to BBQ (self-burn only) and bring more cake is a pretty good rule for life. Oh, and don't forget to print out the map......

See you soon!

Wednesday, 22 August 2018

Looking forward to seeing you!

Heather and I are looking forward to an afternoon in the woods with friends, neighbours and colleagues. Hope it stays dry and if it does, that you can find us! Instructions on driving and suggestions about where to park are here and if you want to try public transport, see here

But when you have found Old Park Wood, you need to find our little patch, Silver Wood, and then the clearing where we will be. There are three entrances to the wood and I suggest you use either the gate and main ride off Roundwood lane or the footpath entrance by Colliers Green school. Both are marked on the Google map here. Best not to use the entrance on the main A262 as there is no useful place to leave your car there. 

When you have parked near the yellow lines and have found the entrance then follow the blue path in the satellite image below, Silver Wood is outlined in red and the clearing is the yellow patch. Past experience tells me that it is probably best to print this out and bring it with you 😅



If you do get lost then fear not - there are no bears!

And we do have mobile phones although connections are not brilliant. Mine is 07766 252347....  Good luck!

Tuesday, 12 June 2018

Sunday June 10th - summer is here


It was beautiful in the woods today. The bluebells are now in seed and doing really well in the rides I cutback last winter


Other flowers are now out including common spotted orchid and birds-foot trefoil (AKA eggs and bacon plant),
Foxglove,


and honeysuckle.


Preparing for a charcoal burn next weekend I noticed that something had been burrowing underneath the oil drums. Whatever it was, it had clearly made itself a nice nest and food cache








Wednesday, 30 May 2018

Making legs for a chair

Not the best movie you will ever have seen but I had fun doing this. Three steps to bodging a chair leg - first axing out the billet from the log, second sitting on the shaving horse and using a draw knife to get the billet approximately round and third using the pole lathe to get it to final shape. Then its just a matter of doing the same for all legs, spokes, rungs and inserting them into a chair seat - easy!



A year in Silver Wood


I’ve been meaning for ages to keep a diary of our time in the wood. Same as Ive been meaning to catch up on those emails, repair the window on the shed, replace the missing button on my jacket etc etc. Guess its not going to happen. So instead I went though my photos by month and put together this kind of collage. Its funny how similar the photos are in any given month across the 15 years or so we have had the wood. Seems like we and the trees are in sync; a rhythm that I wasn't really aware of but makes sense in retrospect. Anyway, here it is

January – flaming birch and burning chestnut

After Christmas I’m really keen to get back into the wood and although it doesn't happen so very often a crisp dry day is the loveliest way to start the year. Sunsets come early and as the sun dips the tops of the birch light up and for a brief moment they can really seem to be alight. 




By now we have usually used up any firewood I had carefully stacked up at home in the Autumn. Christmas sees the last of the store up and so its off to the wood to collect some more. I try and keep a rotation ready for use – after felling, the chestnut gets stacked in long logs for at least two years but the birch for only one as it decays so quickly. Then I cut to long billets, about twice the length we will use, split and stacked in the wood for another year, covered if possible. Then it's a final cut to size and split again if large before loading up and taking home to be stacked again under cover. Ideally the now pretty dry logs are brought into the house for another month or so before use. So in total at least three years drying after felling.



My moisture meter – great wood geek present from Heather! – suggests that when they leave the wood the logs are around 25-30%, around 20% when brought into the house and between 15% and 20% after a few weeks indoors. Good for both the open fire and the – DEFRA approved, super eco-friendly, please keep your hands off Sadiq! – woodburning stove.



February – must get to the woods more often….

Seems like we don't go to the woods very often in February. Family stuff often takes a weekend or so, and then it rains and sometimes snows.



But that's no excuse! We have a management plan for the wood (see xxx) developed with the help of Kent Wildlife Trust and the Smallwoods Association, the objective of which is to increase biodiversity by having a range of habitats. To do this we try to get an acre or so coppiced every other year and I manage the rides, keeping the edges scalloped. Without this the canopy closes, little light reaches the forest floor and little other than fungi grows there. It is in winter that we can work in the woods and I try to widen at least 50m of ride every year. It isn’t that much – but its hard work!



March – last chance for felling

Having failed to do as much as I had planned, March is inevitably the month when there is a race to get as much work done before spring means the wood leaps into life and chainsaws are banished for another six or seven months to allow the flora and fauna time to do their thing.




The main coppicing effort is done by Peter Tweddell and his team. It takes three or four of them the best part of a week to coppice, stack the poles in situ and gather the brash. Later in the year the poles get moved up to roadside where they are collected and then transported to his store before being kiln dried and sold as premium firewood (http://www.bertieswoodfuel.co.uk). The stack of poles from just a half acre is quite something




Meanwhile, my task is much more modest. I try to keep the ride canopy open and scallop the edges so that there is a rich range of ground cover from the mosses up to the saplings. This allows flowering plants, which bring insects, that attract the birds, that nest in the young trees and so the cycle continues



Pretty much everything gets used. The poles are stacked for either craft or firewood, the thinner poles are used for charcoal and the brash (tree tops) is used mostly to fire up the charcoal kilns or is stacked as a wildlife habitat. I often see wrens and robins around the old brash stacks, presumably after the insects that gather there. Having said that, some of the brash gets burnt in the wood; either for warmth, cooking or because of irresistible arsonist tendencies (that would be Heather mostly….)



Its pretty hard work but satisfying



April – first shoots

The very first sign of spring on its way is usually the tips of bluebells emerging and wild honeysuckle in leaf. But this can start as early as February and I know spring is really with us when the chestnut leaf buds start to open



Its only a matter of days before the trees are truly in leaf. This is what the coppiced area looks like one year after it was cut




Such a lovely time of year




and Heather emerges too!



May – life explodes

It never fails to amaze me! After a slow start from February through to end of April, suddenly in May everything takes off! Wood anemones are first out of the pack



alongside primrose


violet,


wild strawberries,


bugle,

and then the bluebells



As well as the Bluebells and the Heather we also have Jasmin


And then the butterflies, here a male orange tip, start emerging



as does the bracken


and friends!





June – wood becomes jungle

A lovely month. The leaves are fully out now and the canopy closes over. Underneath the trees its dark and cool and not much grows



whereas in the areas that have been coppiced there is an absolute proliferation of young trees, ground cover of all sorts, bracken and bramble.


the birds are really active now, especially in the coppiced areas. I’ve stopped all tree felling but do try and clear any poles left lying on the ground and stack them for firewood




July  -  making stuff

Over the summer when in the woods I’m mostly making stuff. Often lots of different things in a day including greenwood working, carving, charcoal making and smoking (food not fags). Summer actually isn’t the best time to smoke fish. Its best when the idea weather is crisp, dry and cold so that the smoke cools down. But here are some photos anyway. 



I fire up a small portable woodburning stove, attach some aluminum ducting pipe and run this into a little cabinet I made. Its all a bit Heath Robinson, but it works!


I’ve smoked fish, prawns, cheese and chicken. Fish works best but cheese is surprisingly good and the prawns either delicious or too salty to be edible. Need to work on that. And I wont be trying chicken again anytime soon.


of course, it is all so much better when you have caught the fish too. Which I sometimes do, in the nearby River Teise. Wild brown trout get gently put back but the stocked rainbows come straight out and into the smoker. Fabulous!



August – colliers and candlestick makers

The nearest hamlet, with a school, is Colliers Green. The collier referred to in this old name is almost certainly a char-coal maker rather than coal-miner. I use a couple of steel containers, originally for apple juice, with holes pierced in the base to burn wood that is too small for firewood


Each 45 gallon drum reduces to about a third in terms of volume of charcoal. Its excellent stuff – much quicker to light than the briquettes you can buy at the petrol station and hasn't travelled half way around the world for the BBQ




A good burn gives 4-6 bags full and I guess I do 4-6 a year. As well as the BBQ we use it on the open fire too – it burns super clean and very hot. Sometimes I have a helper or two with the coal-making


And sometimes not only colliers but also candlestick makers




September – greenwood work

I don't do this as often as I would like as it takes time but I have made some tools that would have been more familiar in the middle ages including a shaving horse and a pole-lathe. I’ll try and put a video of these in use on the site.




The pole lathe is used to make legs for furniture – half of the job.


The old term for the woodworkers in the chilterns who did this for Windsor chairs at a huge scale was bodgers. Hence the term for a job only part completed. Anyway, I bodge away when I can and make small table


and chairs and stools




and I also have a go at carving spoons from time to time



October – time to eat

 October brings beautiful colours


The wood fills with the gentle thump thump of chestnuts falling. It's a bit of a pain (literally as the shells are prickly!) collecting enough as they are much smaller than the Italian or Spanish ones you can buy, but they are good to eat.


I roast them in the wood and we take them home to roast on the fire or cook with sprouts and chicken or pheasant. Lovely. To be honest though, anything eaten in the wood tastes better than it should


Everything is preparing for winter. The squirrels and birds are eating everything and anything they can and all the underwoods people start gearing up for more firewood collection



November  - fun guy !

Old pun but…  this is a more fungi



than this


But I do enjoy November and wielding the chain saw as soon as the leaves fall. Time to re-start the wood management. Seems odd at first to encourage biodiversity by felling trees but I think you can see over the year that it really does work



December – digging for gifts

We have had all sorts of fun days with other wood owners – wood archaeology, woodland management, bird and fungi walks and more. But one that I especially liked was when we had a local metal detecting group in.


they found all sorts of stuff. Loads of shotgun cartridges of course, the odd coin, some toy cars and most interestingly some ammunition including live rounds probably from planes in the Battle of Britain in WWII. Very sobering


I was delighted but the detectorists were sorry not to find treasure or gifts from the past.


The last task of the year for me is to collect some birch from the wood which I do just before Xmas to make decorations. We really like the hanging Christmas tree but I’ve made all sorts over the years



So that's it. A year in the wood