A garden looks well maintained when it has a clear boundary between plant bed and paths. There are all sorts of suitable edging materials including a rustic look using lengths of logs or the more formal look using floor boards or brick edges. Friends of Mayow Park look after a herb bed we call The Triangle near the cafe and the old timber path edging is mostly rotted now.
This morning Mike and Alona used recycled floor boards to replace some of the rotted timber. We were happy with the outcome but could do with more boards to complete the task another time.
We also sowed seeds: lupins, sweet peas and nasturtiums. These, if they grow, will add colour when the forget-me-not and self-heal have finished flowering.
Established in 1993, the Friends of Mayow Park are people who are interested in and care about Mayow Park in the London Borough of Lewisham. Our members include dog walkers and joggers, parents,grandparents and carers with children, young people and retired people.
Monday, 8 April 2019
Saturday, 6 April 2019
FLOWERS in the Triangle bed
Photos taken today of the flowering plants in the Triangle bed, a space looked after by Friends of Mayow Park.
Rosemary
Self-heal (Prunella vulgaris)
Forget-me-not (Myosotis)
Rosemary
Self-heal (Prunella vulgaris)
Forget-me-not (Myosotis)
GARDENING IN THE TRIANGLE
By Pippa.
The triangle herb bed needs caring for as it has a prime spot near the cafe entrance to the park and if you are sat having a coffee outside the cafe you certainly will be looking at it and now hopefully admiring it. Full of Forget-me-nots (Myosotis) it is looking rather colourful now.
Look out for another attractive flower at the moment, common self-heal (Prunella vulgaris). Though its soft pink/ purple colour is muted compared to Forget-me-not, it plays an important role in attracting pollinator insects. Watch carefully and see bees flying to the flowers.
The dead brown stalks are gone and the herbs will be on their way up shortly. The rosemary is doing well and I saw the cafe staff taking snips today which is great - fresh herbs for their lovely food menu. This work is down to a few FOMP members but anyone can join our 'gardening club'.
It's very rewarding to transform an area like this in a short time.
The triangle herb bed needs caring for as it has a prime spot near the cafe entrance to the park and if you are sat having a coffee outside the cafe you certainly will be looking at it and now hopefully admiring it. Full of Forget-me-nots (Myosotis) it is looking rather colourful now.
Look out for another attractive flower at the moment, common self-heal (Prunella vulgaris). Though its soft pink/ purple colour is muted compared to Forget-me-not, it plays an important role in attracting pollinator insects. Watch carefully and see bees flying to the flowers.
The dead brown stalks are gone and the herbs will be on their way up shortly. The rosemary is doing well and I saw the cafe staff taking snips today which is great - fresh herbs for their lovely food menu. This work is down to a few FOMP members but anyone can join our 'gardening club'.
It's very rewarding to transform an area like this in a short time.
Friday, 5 April 2019
SPRING CLEAN TIME
28th
March 2019 and our planned Spring Clean in Mayow Park arrived. We were taking
part in the annual one-month-long national campaign organised by the charity
Keep Britain Tidy. https://www.keepbritaintidy.org/
This
community-led event aims to clean up litter from our streets, parks and
beaches. In particular, we are all aware of the huge amount of publicity about
single-use plastic, how it harms wildlife and makes an area feel unloved. For
our event, our focus was only on Mayow Park.
Today’s event included
our local Safer Neighbourhood team of police, our park keeper and one of his colleagues, five
pupils from year three of Our Lady and St Philip Neri primary school with their
class teacher Mrs Moss as well as FOMP (Friends of Mayow Park) volunteers and a
very well-behaved dog. The children met
the police and held their litter picking sticks high to show they were keen to get to work.
Children with their litter sticks at the ready |
Our park-keeper spends
just two days a week in our park but in those two days he can’t go into all the
wooded areas of the park to clear up tiny pieces of plastic and dumped items. Today’s
event was also aimed at helping him.
spreading out to seek out litter |
Armed with our litter
picks and big bin bags we all headed off .
The wooded space
parallel to Mayow Road was full of rubbish including empty fast food containers,
bottles, cans and general rubbish. Some of the spring-clean team stayed there for
most of the morning, removing as much as they could.
into the woods |
Others went into wooded areas around the park perimeter and along the meadow.
The children and
their teacher did their pick-up mainly in the open spaces, which at first
glance appeared relatively litter-free. Yet they managed to fill TWO large bin
bags with rubbish. The children commented on how many Haribo sweet wrappers and
empty packets they found. They had to leave us after roughly 45 minutes and return to school. Their help was invaluable.
When we all
gathered together at the end of the clean-up we were surprised to see we had
filled 15 bin bags with rubbish but we had not been able to recycle anything as
most recyclables were ‘contaminated’,
meaning too dirty to put into recycling bins. The police, with their
equipment, had also found two large knives which had been discarded in the woodland
running alongside Mayow Road.
Not buried treasure! |
Some of those involved in our event & bags of rubbish |
Thank you to
everyone who joined in today. The general feeling was that we had achieved
much, collected a lot of rubbish and helped to clean up our much-loved park. At
the same time it raised the question of why some people seem to feel it is OK
to drop litter.
We are aiming to
take part in the National Spring Clean again next year.
Time to sow
27th March
2019 was a cool spring day, but a good day for sowing seeds. Twenty two
children from a Reception class at a Sydenham primary school came with their
teacher and their teaching assistant to Friends of Mayow Park and help us sow
wild flower seeds in the mini meadow. The aim is to transform this semi-circular
space into a colourful, pollinator-attracting wild flower display this summer
and future years.
Scraping away the grass |
Wildflower seeds
don’t like competition from grass so the children scratched the soil and pushed
grasses aside which also helped to rake the soil to a crumbly texture.
The seed packs were
opened so the children could see differing colours and shapes. Colours ranged from light brown to dark brown,
to black and grey. Some seeds were very small while others were larger and easier
to pick out. They varied in shape too, some being round, others more oval.
Looking at seed shapes, size and colour |
Mixing the seeds
with sand meant it was easier to see where they would be scattered. In pairs, the
children took small handfuls of the sand/ seed mix and scattered their seeds in
their chosen sowing spot.
Sowing seeds mixed with sand |
Watering the seeds |
This activity ended
and the children returned to school. Well done all of you.
Over the coming
weeks the seeds will be watered every evening by a volunteer unless there is rain.
With the right conditions, not too much
rain, not too much drying heat from the sun, we should see the first shoots
emerge by mid-April.
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