Showing posts with label Church Hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church Hill. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 September 2023

A Comet Through The Smog...

Just before sunrise this morning, I made my way up to Church Hill to see if I could spot Comet Nishimura. However, the recent heatwave and associated atmospheric conditions had combined to form an absolutely horrendous cloud of air pollution that hung over the Medway valley in the form of a brown haze that you could actually taste.

The smog pretty much put paid to any chance of seeing or photographing the comet, although the sight of the crescent moon and crescent Venus rising over the Medway bridge made the early morning start worthwhile.

A red haze of pollution hangs over the Medway Valley...

Although difficult to see, I think the tiny comet and its tail is just about visible above the trees and to the left of Venus in the picture above, but it really is pretty much wiped out by the haze. 

World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines state that with regards to airborne micro-particulates (called PM 2.5s), 24-hour average exposures should not exceed 15 µg/m3 more than 3 - 4 days per year.

Data from the nearest working national atmospheric pollution monitoring station at Stoke (the one on Chatham Hill being mysteriously out of action this past week) show that PM 2.5s have been consistently well above the above WHO safe limits for the past week. For much of today, PM 2.5s were over four times that level!

Data from Stoke AMS, 4th to 11th September...

Polluted sunrise as seen from Church Hill. The M2 viaducts can hardly be seen...

Air pollution does at least make for some "atmospheric" sunrises... 

St. Michaels through the polluted Bakers Field sunrise air on Church Hill...


Sunday, 16 July 2023

Church Hill...


This year, the grasses and nettles have been allowed to grow on Church Hill, instead of being cut back in June. I'd like to thank whoever it is who usually looks after this area for leaving it alone and giving the insect population a chance to get re-established up there this year.


That won't please the "got to keep it tidy" merchants, some of whom were particularly nasty and unpleasant on Cuxton's anti-social media a while back when complaining about the long grass and daisies in the churchyard. But then they seem like the sort of people who will have a moan about anything. "Why doesn't SOMEBODY DO SOMETHING" is their refrain. Of course, that "somebody" is never them - by "somebody", of course, they mean "somebody else".

And I just wonder how much simpler the concept of "No-Mow May" has to be before some folk get to understand it.


I happen to rather like the long grass on Church Hill at the moment, which has now turned a pleasant golden colour and is so restful to watch as it sways in the breeze. Leaving grass and nettles to grow during the late spring and summer is also a boon to summer insects, particularly butterflies.


This year, for once, has been a particularly good one so far for Small Tortoiseshells, which have otherwise been struggling to hang on in what once was a stronghold for them. There were quite a few larval colonies on the Church Hill nettles this May, and it seems as if many of them have made it through to the adult stage judging by the numbers I have seen this year.

Church Hill panorama
The same is true for other nettle-using butterflies, such as Peacocks and Red Admirals. Talking to people who live close to Church Hill, many have observed that "it's a good year for butterflies", and I think the situation on Church Hill has helped greatly in that respect.


The long grass has also encouraged the Meadow Browns and Marbled Whites back, the latter having been driven away in the previous couple of years where the grass was cut short in early June.


Hopefully, a continuation of this "no mow summer" policy will also see the return of the Common and Chalkhill Blues, the Ringlets and the Wall butterflies, all of which used to grace Church Hill in the summer in good numbers, but could not survive the spring or early summer cut-back of grass that has happened in the past few years.


A hay cut in September would be just the job (with the insects that overwinter in the larval or pupal stages usually having gone to ground by then) otherwise the brambles and hawthorns will start taking over. But if whoever it is who usually does these things can't do it, well, you won't see me complaining. Time, equipment and fuel to run it all is not cheap.


Oh, and talking about people who do stuff (rather than those who just moan about others not doing it) many thanks to whoever it was (Cuxton Countryside Group, I suspect) who replaced the broken gatepost and the gate at bottom of Church Hill.

Nice job. That should see out those of us who care about such things.

Tuesday, 16 May 2023

Church Hill...

 The buttercups were out...


Panorama form Upper Church Hill....

The above shot took several goes as the area is fenced off and I am too old and creaky to climb over the fence. I was determined to catch the view on camera however, so I had to have the camera on a pole and poke it through the fence. It somehow seems just wrong that a private landowner can fence off such a spectacular view point, one that provides such good views of the valley and the village... 




Baker's Field (Lower Church Hill - mercifully still accessible...)

Sunday, 11 December 2022

Church Hill...

 A foggy, frosty day for a Sunday stroll...

Mays Wood...

Mays Wood...

Church Hill path...

Kicky, Bitey and their offspring..

The beacon...

Frozen cobweb on the WW2 memorial plaque...

St. Michaels...

St. Michaels...

St, Michaels churchyard...

Whornes Place...


Tuesday, 6 December 2022

Church Hill to Lower Bush...

 A short walk in the winter sunshine...

Baker's Field, looking towards the Medway Bridge...

Church Hill, looking south...

Church Hill, looking north towards Cuxton...

Mays Wood...

Mays Wood...

Dean Farm...

Barrow Hill, looking west...

The picture above was taken from the top of the fly-tipped flint pile that Vineyard Farms have seen fit to dump up there. It marks the spot where their £30m concrete cow-pat is almost inevitably going to be built. Although neglected and weed-strewn (like most of Vineyard Farms' land not lost to vines) the view is still spectacular, so enjoy it before it is taken away from us for ever...

Barrow Hill - dumped plastic vine protectors...

It seems to be a feature of privately owned land across Cuxton that the more zealously its ownership is policed, the less cherished it seems to be by its owners, who often just treat their property as a rubbish tip. It seems that some of the 60-odd tonnes of plastic net sheathing used to protect the fledgling vines has now served its purpose and has thus been collected and dumped in an ugly pile at the bottom of Barrow Hill, just like the soil and spoil that litter the "Silverhand Estate" as a result of other Vineyard Farms activities. One assumes that the plastic waste will eventually be taken away for disposal before too much of it blows away.  

Or perhaps they are just going to burn it all...

Brickhouse Cottages, Lower Bush...

Unsightly though the Vineyard Farms policy of letting the hundreds of acres of land not covered in vines "lie fallow" under their "care", it is (unintentionally, I suspect) a bonanza for wildlife. The weed-strewn vistas at Lower Bush were home to linnets (which I haven't seen for a while), goldfinches and a few shy Blackcaps when I walked by them this morning.

Sunday, 24 April 2022

Boundary stones and buttercups...

Southern Bush Valley parish boundary stones...

Today I decided to try and trace the line of concrete parish boundary markers that the 1907 OS map revision suggests run from North Wood westwards down to the bottom of Bush Valley...

Marker stone locations superimposed on an aerial map of southern Bush valley.  The circled ones are those I found...

The map suggested that there was a stone right by the path that runs through North Wood (on the right of the above map) but I could not find it.  In his book, Cuxton - A Kentish Village, author Derek Church describes being able to track westwards down the hill, following the line of markers.  I tried this but hit an impenetrable barrier of scrub and brambles, so I scrambled back up the hill, returning to the path through North Wood.  This comes out by the overhead power cables, and it is possible to follow the clearing under the pylons down to the bottom of Bush Valley.  

Boundary post example...

Heading east up the slope between the field fence and the old pheasant pen, a row of five boundary markers can be found, although the fifth one behind the old pheasant look-out is pretty well hidden in the scrub beneath an old yew tree.  

Boundary post...

I did take a picture of each of them but they are all similar in appearance so I haven't posted them all here. Superficially these stones seem similar in design to the Hilton and Anderson quarry markers, two of which can be found further up the valley above White Pit.  They are smaller, however, and lack the full stop between the H and the A, which the White Pit stones have. Some people believe that the "HA" on these stones also stands for Hilton and Anderson, but personally I think it just stands for HAlling... 

I tried to find the sixth one but once again the brambles made the quest difficult.  I have no doubt it is hiding in there somewhere.  

Panorama of Bush Valley from the eastern path...

I took the path that tracks along the eastern edge of Bush Valley back to Upper Bush. The above panorama shows the rather blasted look of the valley at the moment, courtesy of Vineyard Farms...

Borrow Hill...


After stopping in the White Hart for refreshment, I made my way up Church Hill into Mays Wood via St. Michaels...

St. Michaels graveyard...

St. Michaels...

Buttercups at St. Michaels...

Daisies and buttercups...

The buttercups were also on show at Church Hill...

Looking down the hill...

View south over the Medway valley...

Cuxton from Church Hill...

The Medway bridge from the top of Church Hill...

Although not as showy as their counterparts further up in Wingate Wood, the bluebells in Mays Wood have nevertheless put on a good show this year...

Bluebells, Mays Wood...

Purple anenomes, Mays Wood...