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Bridgewood :
Weblog : "New Glade and Middle Ride pages"
New Glade and Middle Ride pages
Posted by Tanos on Fri 30 Jan 09, 5:46 PM
I've written pages about the
the Glade and Middle Ride. They're mostly links to existing pictures and text, but they show how both parts of the wood developed during 2008.
Since these pages will evolve over time, I've cut and pasted the text of them here for future reference:Bridgewood Glade
The Glade is located at the centre of Bridgewood, halfway along the
Middle Ride.
I'm using it as the "base of operations" and will be the
place I'll set up any temporary structures like marquees for events.
During my initial survey in February 2008, I made this
360 degree view of the Glade. You can
see it was already quite open when I started working on it, with widely
spaced "full-size" trees or "standards" and little
undergrowth.
The first tree that I felled was near the centre of the Glade, and it's
stump is now the nominal dead centre point of the wood. The stump reappears
on several later photographs and is only about 8 inches in diameter. I did the
felling by hand with a bowsaw, but most of the subsequent work was done with a
chainsaw, including cutting the tree up into logs in the summer.
Armed with the chainsaw, I went round the perimeter in a widening spiral,
felling the standards into the centre of the Glade so they didn't get tangled
or hung-up in the trees still standing. You can see the centre of the Glade
here, partially cleared in June.
I had to clear some thickets and small trees of hazel in the Glade and
whilst widening the other tracks and rides, and this is the best
firewood of the trees being felled this year. Firewood has to be left to dry
for several months - ideally a year - and I stacked the larger logs under
corrugated iron sheeting to keep the rain out and on some galvanised iron to
keep them off the ground.
Most of the smaller branches were dragged off into
the undergrowth and allowed to rot down, as this provides an important
habitat for invertebrates, which in turn feed the birds and small mammals.
The wood stack continued to grow in size, and the second
photograph also shows a prototype (BDSM) rickshaw I co-opted for moving some
of the logs during the "pick up sticks" phase.
In the autumn I ended up with branches, logs and trunks lying and
overlapping across the Glade. As well as these pictures, I also
put a short video
on YouTube showing the Glade and Middle Ride. I began by
cutting up the branches, and dragging them
to the sides of the Glade to form a perimeter. This got them out of the way,
but should also protect the surrounding undergrowth and thickets from
being trampled. To provide a sharp boundary, I then cut the trunks up into
three foot sections and rolled them to the edge.
With this all done, by the end of the year I had an area of 1000 square
metres cleared. I made
another video for
YouTube showing a 360 degree view from the centre of the Glade.Bridgewood Middle Ride
In the first year, I've been establishing woodland tracks called
"rides" which are wide enough to be open to the sky. In the past,
a ride was a track open enough to be ridden on horseback, but
now they're good forestry practice as they let sunlight in to dry them out,
can be grassed over, and their edges
promote wildlife. The Middle Ride is the longest, running from the entrance
diagonally to the north east corner, and it's the one that's received the most
attention since it passes through the
Glade at centre
of the wood.
These pictures show what the route of the Middle Ride was like not long
after it was marked out. In the left hand picture you can see two of the
green-topped marker canes used to lay the route out. In both pictures, some
of the shrubs blocking the way have already been cut down to ground level,
and you can see where the undergrowth is starting to be trodden down.
To be properly open even when the trees are in leaf requires
cutting trees and shrubs back themselves, as shown in the left hand picture,
where hazel trees have been cut down to let in more light.
You can also see a short
YouTube video of
the Glade and south east Middle Ride, which shows this stretch near
completion. Before this point
though, some of the stretches could be cleared at ground level by raking out
the undergrowth, such as the part of the ride to the north east of the Glade
shown in the right hand picture.
Widening the ride also requires cutting down full size trees
("standards") in some places, and the picture shows one
immediately after felling. I made a
video for YouTube of
this tree coming down.
Edited Tue 6 Apr 10, 11:13 PM by Tanos
Comment by Raegan on Fri 30 Jan 09, 11:08 PM:
I've been following the posts about Bridgewood and watching the YouTube links and wanted to say that it's looking brilliant and you've obviously put a lot of hard work into it. I particularly liked the video where the camcorder went for a walk through the woods as it really helped to visualise what it's like there.
I'm not particularly interested in pony play or open air BDSM personally but I can appreciate the value of having some woodland to call your own. It looks like it's shaping up to be a beautiful space.
I was wondering whether there were any plans to include a space for gardening and vegetable growing or if that is not something you were interested in. Comment by Tanos on Sat 31 Jan 09, 2:09 AM:
Reagan wrote:
I've been following the posts about Bridgewood and watching the YouTube links and wanted to say that it's looking brilliant and you've obviously put a lot of hard work into it. I particularly liked the video where the camcorder went for a walk through the woods as it really helped to visualise what it's like there
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Thanks 
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I was wondering whether there were any plans to include a space for gardening and vegetable growing or if that is not something you were interested in.
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I'm not a great gardener, and planting non-woodland, non-native species loses you points with local councils and the Forestry Commission (especially since they might spread out into the wood). However, Bridgewood has several plants with edible fruit or nuts, including brambles, hazel and possibly some of the fungi. Ben Law's Woodland Way book has also inspired me to think about planting native fruit trees at some point.
(I welcome comments and feedback, although I don't guarantee to show
them all
and they won't appear immediately. My
contact
details page provides other ways of getting in touch.)
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