Showing posts with label Stonyfield Wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stonyfield Wood. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 August 2022

Around the Silverhand Estate...

It seems that we will just have to get used to a large chunk of the parishes of Halling, Cuxton and Luddesdown being unilaterally renamed by a bunch of tax-exile billionaire-funded Johnny-Come-Lately arrivistes (a.k.a. Vineyard Farms/MDCV Ltd). As I have said elsewhere, the "Silverhand" moniker appears to have absolutely nothing to do with our area (or its history) and instead seems to have been dreamt up by some computer game-obsessed marketing wonk. 

Anyway, I'd thought I'd take a little walk over to the Silverhand estate again, just to see if there was anything much in the way of grapes growing on the fledgling vines. The hot dry summer is apparently giving rise to a bumper grape harvest, even if it is killing everything else...

Wingate Wood...

Stonyfield Wood - fence prepping...

"Coppicing" in Stonyfield Wood...

The woods around Stonyfield still reverberate to the noise of chainsaws, work which has been going on since at least April this year. These woodlands form part of the Silverhand estate and are therefore at the tender mercies of Vineyard Farms. It is SSSI woodland, but that status doesn't prevent trees from being felled. 

As far as I can tell from the Forestry Commission database, these activities are apparently covered by a Woodland Grant Scheme, which applies to much of the woodlands under the ownership of Vineyard Farms (though the licence - transferrable - was granted to the original cement company landowners, CeMex in 2013). The licence permits coppicing and thinning (which is long overdue in many areas, to be honest) and is valid until August 2023...

Hornbeam, Bushy Wood...

Fortunately, Vineyard Farms have yet to get around to cutting down any trees in Bushy Wood. By no stretch of the imagination would the felling of the old historic Cuxton parish boundary marker tree (above) count as "coppicing or thinning", so barring an act of illegal spitefulness, it should be safe...

Dates on the parish boundary marker tree, going back to 1966...

It will be interesting to see if Vineyard Farms will grant permission to allow access to their land for this coming October's iteration of the ancient tradition of "beating the bounds" (the organisers will ask, I'm sure). I can't see VF refusing, somehow. It would be rather bad publicity if they did... 

Ray and Eiley Bassett memorial bench, Wrenches Shaw...

The memorial bench overlooking Luddesdown valley from Wrenches Shaw looks as if it could do with a bit of TLC but it is still sound. Ray Bassett started the Luddesdown Rights of Way Walking Group and was a great champion of walking access. I wonder what he would have made of the "Silverhand estate"...?

Vineyard views from the memorial bench...

Across the valley toward Cobham...

View towards Round Wood across Bowling Alley

Watching the watcher...

Walking down the NS214 footpath towards Buckland Road, I stopped to photograph the few wild flowers that were on show, and took a few scenic shots. I was idly wondering when a Vineyard Farm "warden" would turn up to keep an eye on me when suddenly, as if by magic, one appeared, thundering along inside the field edge with Buckland Road in a white pick-up truck, newly-emblazoned with the Silverhand Estate logo. I stood still for a few minutes, watching him watching me. He soon got bored with that and drove off in a cloud of dust. Doubtless he had some other harmless walkers to keep an eye on...

Chicory...

Prickly Sowthistle...

A few scrubby wildflowers had managed to survive both the drought and the vineyard's scorched-earth land management, giving a touch of colour to the otherwise dull monoculture of vines...

Vineyard view towards Meadow View House...

The vines nearest Vineyard Farms' headquarters at Court Lodge are the oldest, most sheltered and best established of the vines to date. It was here that I took a look at what was likely to be the best of this year's crop.... 

Some of this year's grapes...
 
Despite the drought, only one or two of  the vines had succumbed and most looked to be flourishing in the summer heat, a testament to their deep roots. Even in this area, the vines didn't seem to be exactly overburdened with fruit, but the grapes that were there seemed to be in good-sized bunches and looked pretty healthy. In other areas of the estate further up the hill, there were very few grapes and the vines nowhere near as well-developed. 

Perhaps it is still early days in terms of good yields. Wine grapes are much smaller, thicker-skinned and sweeter than "eating" grapes and these looked pretty typical compared to others I have seen in commercial UK vineyards elsewhere. Whether there will be enough of them to yield much in the way of home-grown wine from this year's crop alone from the Silverhand estate or not, I don't know. It still seems a far cry from all the fanfare back in early 2019...

Small Copper...

Fly-tipped chalk and concrete, Cutter Ridge Road...

Huge piles of spoil are accumulating on the edge of the field between Luddesdown Road and Buckland Road, at the western end of the footpath that links the two. It has been reported, so I'm told...

"Downs Watch" - by the chalk spoil pile...

Sunflowers, Warren Road...

In Red Wood Field opposite what used to be the old gamekeeper's cottage (Warren House, formerly the Abbeymount Kennels) a bumper crop of Sunflowers has suddenly bloomed. Presumably these were sown by Vineyard Farms. They certainly make for a spectacular view.

Somewhat battered Common Blue...

Bush Farm earthworks...

The ground to the rear of Bush Farm is being carved out, presumably by Vineyard Farms, with the spoil simply being dumped in ugly piles on adjacent fields. Perhaps they are practising for when Barrow Hill gets hollowed out...

Dumped spoil, Peckway...

Bank of dumped spoil, southern edge of Peckway...

Restored boast post...

It would be quite wrong to think that Vineyard Farms care little for the appearance of their property, however. The boast post at the junction of the Both Downs Way with Bush Road had been vandalised, with the original poster ripped off. This has now been restored.

I hope it will be left alone, as it tells you much about our new baronial land-owners...


Friday, 27 May 2022

Woodman, Spare That Tree...?

Summer is here and once again the woods are humming with the sound of chainsaws, as Vineyard Farms/MDCV/Silverhand Estate or whatever they call themselves these days look to continue their programme of “coppicing” in Stonyfield Wood.



Woodland management contractor Tilhill undertook the last load of clearance work in the area a couple of years back, but I am not sure who is doing the work this time around: I have been through there a couple of times and have yet to see any signage to mark out the working area, nor to warn any passing member of the public of the ongoing work.

Stonyfield Wood is part of the Halling to Trottiscliffe Escarpment SSSI and in theory, any “woodland management” activity constitutes an ORNEC (“Operation Requiring Natural England Consent”).

Like any government-funded organisation these days, however, Natural England have been cut to the bone and then way beyond, meaning they are pretty much impotent when it comes to policing the SSSIs under their watch.

The Forestry Commission were able to tell me that a logging licence covering coppicing activity in the area was in place, but NE’s response as to whether they could find any record of granting their supposedly necessary consent was “not at the moment”. I’m not sure it matters in practice. The FC seems OK with it and it’s difficult to know just what value NE’s “consent” would add anyway: the Stonyfield Wood area in question is not “ancient” woodland and had been worked for many years until quite recently.

On balance I personally (for the little that’s worth) think it’s a good thing that these old coppices are being tidied up a bit. A large part of the woodland now under Vineyard Farm’s ownership is old coppice, much of it formerly grown for chestnut hop poles and “stake and wire” fencing. Once common, such things went out of fashion in the 1970s and the coppices, once regularly “farmed”, have been pretty much neglected since then. 

This can be seen in the “non-coppice” trees, the oak, ash and beech, which get left standing when their companion chestnuts get cut down. Allowing the coppices to become overgrown has forced some of the other trees to grow into rather twisted, top-heavy-looking things that appear rather vulnerable to future storms.

The 40 year gap had also allowed some interesting wildlife to become established, all of which gets driven away when the chain-saws move back in. We lost the White Admirals from this area when the first load of coppicing took place in 2020, and the bats in Red Wood also got scared off by coppicing, although numbers of the latter seem to returning to the evening skies over Upper Bush once more. The idea is that coppicing is done over small areas of woodland on a regular basis, allowing the wildlife to transfer to adjacent undisturbed areas, but (through no-one’s fault) this practice has locally gone out of the window.

Fortunately, a small stand of Butterfly and White Helleborine orchids I found last year just down the slope on Bavins bank have remained undisturbed, although it look like the spring storms have brought a bush down on top of them.  Fortunately, they have still flowered.

Butterfly orchids...

Butterfly Orchid

White Helleborine...

Although I think it is good that the coppices are now being cleared, quite what the reason is for felling these trees right now for seems unclear. I thought that perhaps the wood might be used to provide the stakes required for the stringing-up of the ever-burgeoning vine plantings, but I am told that the timber for that purpose is imported from Scandinavia.

Instead, it certainly looks as if at least some of the timber is being prepped up for “post and rail” fencing, so in some ways it seems that the coppicing tradition is being constructively revived.

One would like to think that the new land owners are going to continue to manage their woodlands sympathetically, rather than just go for a one-off cash-in on the timber value.

Monday, 3 May 2021

Bluebells in Wingate Wood...

The cold, wet April weather has slowed spring down, making the show of bluebells about three weeks later than usual...







The western end of Wingate Wood..


The ruins of "Stoneyfield House", an old gamekeepers cottage...


Monday, 15 April 2019

Stonyfield Wood

I am sorry to relate that Stonyfield Woods (at the top of the slope to the north of Court Farm in Halling) has undergone a brutal bout of coppicing. Stonyfield is (sorry, was) largely chestnut coppice, but there were some mature single specimen trees in their absolute prime that have been taken down as well as the coppice stuff.  A few mature but rather twisty oaks and beech (the non-coppicing trees) have mercifully been left behind as might be expected.


Yes, coppicing was long overdue, but I always thought that single specimen trees got left. You can see the size of some of the trees taken out by the size of the logs in the picture below. A ring count showed some of them to be over 90 years old.  Why the sudden demand for timber after all this time?

I was puzzled by this as Cemex (or at least, their tenants) have been pretty good at looking after the extensive swathe of SSSI woodland (the Halling and Trottiscliffe Escarpment) that runs to the north of Pilgrim’s Road across the top of the hill and down either side of Bush Valley to Warren Road.  They kept the footpaths and farm tracks clear and the brambles under control and pretty much left the trees alone.

But it seems it doesn’t belong to Cemex any more.  After some tortuous dealings with the Land Registry, it seems that Cemex have sold their land holdings off, mostly to the same people who have just bought Court and Brookers Farm: Vineyard Farms a.k.a. MDCV Ltd). It seems that, not content with ploughing up that wonderful valley for their vineyard, the Vineyard folk are now attacking the woods as well. 

Why now, I wonder? Any tree felling works in an SSSI require a licence from the forestry commission (though I guess Cemex simply transferred that to the new owners as they are good for 10 years). But Natural England also have to grant permission for tree felling as well. The work is being done by Tilhill, who check out as a pretty responsible company (no Environment Agency prosecutions, anyway), so one assumes all is in order.  (Update: it was. I checked with the Forestry Commission and there is a felling licence in place, although Natural England said they could find no record for permission for SSSI woodland tree work "at the moment." But NE are pretty hopeless, to be honest, and I actually trust Tilhill, after talking to their guys doing the work in the woods.)

It doesn’t really matter. The trees will quickly grow back. But Stonyfield was home to a thriving colony of White Admiral butterflies. Their larvae feed on honeysuckle on which they hibernate over the winter, and have doubtless been destroyed along with the trees.




They are pretty fussy about the condition of the honeysuckle they lay their eggs on. They like straggly stuff in the shade on a stand about 10 feet high but with the bottom couple of meters free from nearby brambles etc, as that's where they lay their eggs. The larvae aren't hard to find at this stage as they sit on the tips of the centre stem of the tip of honeysuckle leaf and nibble either side away. In September they fold a honeysuckle leaf over themselves and settle down to hibernate until around late March. A couple of years ago I found four of these "hibernacula" on a big stand of honeysuckle on a tree that had blown over in a storm. I was able to raise the caterpillars through to adulthood in the spring, releasing them back at Stonyfield, which was very rewarding.  

In July on a sunny day you could often see as many as a dozen of these beautiful insects (and that's a lot, for this species) flying through the dappled sunlight on the main path, with their powerful wing-beats followed by a characteristic glide. 

But no more. White Admirals are not a protected species (though they should be - they are scarce) and the coppicing of woodland in SSSI areas is not illegal assuming the right licensing and permissions are in place, so Vineyard Farms have broken no laws.

But they are not endearing themselves to anyone at the moment, or at least, not to me.