The AFLA team

Friday 27 January 2012

Website updates

Our website has been updated with project details for Lynwood (Ascot), a new elderly care development in Berkshire.  Check out http://www.afla.co.uk/EL/lynwood.html for full details

Other projects - housing and children's play areas -  will be uploaded shortly.  More detailed news and pictures to follow.

Wednesday 18 January 2012

Snowdrops flowering

In our garden here in Bristol, the snowdrops have been threatening to flower for a week or so.  Last week’s hard weather stalled their flowering but today’s mild air seems to have encouraged the flowers to open.

Out in the countryside, flowering is likely to be later this month and every year we try to visit a wood with lots of snowdrops.  I have found south facing slopes to be particularly good and such locations certainly flower earlier than more shaded north facing spots.


Seaside planning success

Last week we heard good news from two of our projects, both of which, coincidentally, are located by the seaside. 

Firstly, our landscape design for the Gara Rock development was passed by South Hams District Council.  The site is partially within the South Hams AONB and our design had to respect the local landscape and ecology, as well as creating pleasure gardens for hotel guests and visitors.  Our proposals aim to give visitors a concentrated experience of coastal plants and flowers, all set within a sheltering framework of Devon banks. 
The second project is a private residence in Clevedon, Somerset that overlooks the Bristol Channel, with views across the water as far as Cardiff and Barry.  The waters of the Channel are always changing due to tide, wind and cloud cover.  The views from the garden benefit from an elevated position, though this is a down side, as the exposure is enormous.
In fact, both sites are subject to high winds and salt spray, which will make the establishment of new plants problematic.  Our planning package included 15 year management plans to ensure that our original vision is achieved.  The challenge now is to get those plants growing.

The sketch (left) shows our concept at Gara for sheltered paths passing through overhanging hedging - how long will that take to establish?  Locally distinctive thrift, crown vetch, bluebells and foxgloves will be planted into the hedge banks, as well as interesting little plants such as navelwort and stonecrop.

Winter Pattern

The mild November and December ended with heavy rains and wild winds.  In the wake of the extreme weather, new patterns were left behind in the landscape, to replace the colourful fabric of autumn.

On the river bank, leaves, straw, branches and human debris were left high and dry by the floods, many metres above the now clear low water.  The thatch of debris points horizontally downstream but won’t last long. Straw and twigs are carried away by rooks and crows and only the plastic rubbish will remain come springtime.
Under foot ripples of rich silt cover bank and field.  Footprints of water birds lead to and from the water but otter footprints seem to run parallel with the river.  Sometimes, the remains of their meals can be found high and dry.  Last winter I found the head and tail of a small jack pike.  This winter I found the heads and tails of spent salmon on the banks of the Wye.  I have the dried head in our little museum of natural history.  The salmon were left to decay.

These patterns of debris are temporary.  The grass grows lush through the silt, fed by nutrients borne by the river.  Strand lines of leaves are dragged below ground by earthworms.    Bones get gnawed and dragged away by God knows what.  Come summer, the scene will be a picture of pastoral heaven.
In the woods, the last lingering leaves were blown away, stripping the billowing cushions to lines of vertical grey trunks.  Young ash trees are particularly striking because of their smooth bark.  With low winter light, the structure and framework of trees can be seen and appreciated.

Tuesday 3 January 2012

What happened to the River Kennet?

As an avid angler, I am drawn, hypnotically, to the sight or suggestion of water. A row of willows or alder trees may signify a ditch or a stream or river.  A group of willows may be merely a damp spot or a lake.  Each indication has to be explored.

Before Christmas, I visited the beautiful village of Manton near Marlborough.  From the Ordnance Survey map I knew the River Kennet ran through the village and having fished the river downstream at Kintbury and at Aldermarston, I was keen to see what the upper river looked like.
I was shocked by what I found.

I have read about the effect water abstraction has had on rivers in the south and have seen ‘winterbournes’ dry in the summer, but nothing prepared me for the sad sight of the river bed.  Not a single drop of water.  No rivulet running.  No water weeds. No insects.  No trout or minnows hovering in crystal clear water.  Just rocks and old bricks and a ‘private fishing’ left high, dry and irrelevant.  Scandalous.
The cause of the problem appears to be excessive abstraction from the underground aquifer that feeds the river.  Ultimately, poor and inefficient use of water can be to blame.

Who knows what the duration of the problem will be. There may be no permanent return to flowing water in this part of the Kennet and it will become a ‘Winterbourne’, flowing only after a winter of rain and disappearing again in summer.

Some solutions that we can do as individuals are anything to reduce water consumption.  In the garden we can collect and use rainwater, we can spread mulches over our soils to help the ground absorb water and reduce evaporation from soil in summer, we can use low water demand plants and lawns.  We should stop laying driveways that are impermeable.
There are campaigns to raise awareness:


Bristol Water has a number of good tips on how to save water:

The Guardian covered the issue in December:

Winter colour


Like many people this Christmas, we spent time on the roads, visiting relatives and friends. My wife and I share the driving, which gives me time to look at the landscape outside.   

One of the things that I love about this time of year, deep mid-winter, is that almost all of the old leaves are gone from the trees the hedges. The bones of the landscape are laid bare for all to see. On cloudy days, the colours of the woods and trees are muted to a range of browns, with shades purple from dormant buds or old berries.

Beneath the trees there are swathes of orange of dead bracken tops. Occasionally, there is a real splash of colour from fallen apples, collected at the base of trees. On our journey, we saw yellow piles of wild apples in the countryside, but also red apples in built up areas.

All disappear by spring, eaten and covered up by grass and vegetation.