“I love a good fire,” was the
response of many a volunteer to news of this week’s session. Just as well really, because – for the third
week in a row – our job was to clear up after other people, who had been engaged
in winter countryside tasks.
A slightly diffident site warden had
to break the news that today we would be seeing to another burst of spring fire:
burning up a big pile of brash which we have accumulated from our hedge laying courses and competitions over the winter. Our Sunday group started the task at the weekend, but after burning brash all day there is still a good quantity left to get rid of …
He was not
kidding about the quantity of brash left over:
Nor could
there be any doubt that it was the most beautiful spring day:
Green-Gymmers
need little encouragement to get stuck into a session of sawing, lopping, and
breaking up cut wood. Nor do they lack
confidence about the amount they can get through in a session:
The fire of
course started small, with site warden and our usual fire-master instructing an
assistant …
then grew ...
and grew:Note assistant fire-attendant is wearing safety spectacles |
From time to
time, the fire had to be allowed to rest, before being re-loaded with ever
larger branches:
There were
also tutorials in how to set a saw …
Some extra in-service training for our Tools Officer |
and on the
art of hedge-laying, as it can be seen from a stretch freshly laid this last
season:
This
particular length would not have been a winning length in the hedge-laying competition,
for points will have been deducted for an ‘Elvis’:
However, the
work has been done well enough (particular plaudits if, as is quite likely, this
was a section taken on by novices) and, if one were to return in a year’s time, the
winner of the original hedge-laying competition would not necessarily win a regrowth
competition. Looking further along the branch
with the unfortunate pompadour trim, we could see how well the new shoots were
developing:
There was a
regrowth too in turn-out for Green Gym this week. Several volunteers had returned from trips
away, or had recovered from the winter virus – welcome back!
Talk of
interesting species seen while abroad (Kernow, aka Cornwall) led to
reminiscences of childhood lessons in What To Do if Bitten by a Snake. Which in turn led to thoughts of how people
can be unduly afraid of animals which they do not often get to see. Which reminded someone else of how they used to
see (and chase) mice in the house where he grew up as a child. One mouse had hidden behind a picture frame,
but was apparently unaware that its tail was still hanging out. What happened next? Ah, that he could not remember. But, as a fellow-volunteer observed, “Thereby
hangs a tale.” <Groan>
By the
official end of the Green-Gym session, this was the progress which had been
made:
Before |
After |
A good
number of volunteers (myself not included this time) stayed on to see the job through to
the end. Proof positive that Green-Gymmers
really do love a good fire? Or perhaps they
just did not fancy carrying the heavy tools back to the car-park. By hand.
Uphill. The thought that if they
stayed on for a while, tools could be loaded in the back of the Earth-Trust
landie must have been an extremely attractive one.
There is no
guarantee that next week’s session will not also be a bonfire. However, today’s burn-up will definitely have
been the last fire until next year with the Earth Trust,
so we are guaranteed
something different next time we are with them.
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