Thursday 16 December 2021

Donkey Lane Community Orchard - Wassail

If you happened to walk up Donkey Lane on a very cold Saturday afternoon in January 2020, you might have heard a group of people singing and 'making merry' in the Orchard. What was that all about? Well, Greening Chinnor were holding their first Wassail just before Covid and lockdown struck. We couldn't hold one this year, but on Saturday January 29th 2022, we will once again be Wassailing the apple trees.

Advertising for the event described it as "a very old tradition practiced in the apple orchards of southern England during the winter to bless the fruit trees to encourage them to produce a good harvest for the year. The tradition is to make a lot of noise to ward off bad luck and mischievous spirits, so they stay away and don't steal the fruit!"

The word Wassail comes from the Old English 'Waes Hael' meaning Be Healthy or Be Whole; and it is a toast of 'Good health' for both the people, their crops and their animals. Because once upon a time it wasn't just apple trees that were Wassailed, other fruit trees, cows and even bees all had their own Wassailing. The ceremony involving cider apple trees seems to have survived longest, so it is counties such as Somerset, Devon and Herefordshire which were most closely associated with Wassailing in the last century and into living memory.

Dating back at least to the Middle Ages, Wassailing is a custom which almost died out but has lately been revived and re-imagined for the 21st century. For example the National Trust has held public events at several of its properties in recent years, and locally the Mid Shires Orchard Group has been holding Wassails in orchards in Buckinghamshire since about 2008. It is now often celebrated in a more family-friendly way during daylight hours. In the Cotswolds the Morris Men take part in dancing round the trees, and here in Chinnor we were lucky enough to have the Village Voices community choir come to sing us Wassail songs as well as the Vicar who blessed the Orchard.

Other aspects of the traditional ceremony included drinking from a communal Wassail bowl, with a sort of punch which could be cider or beer-based, usually warm and spiced and sometimes with added eggs and cream. These Wassails were held at night, with bonfires being lit in the orchards and people carrying flaming torches. Such old customs could vary between different villages, even between different farms, but they all encompassed singing, drinking and praising the trees with encouragement to do even better next year. Each place had its own song too, a form of folk song or carol, and luckily many of them were collected and written down before they were forgotten. The closest to us that I can find is the Adderbury (Oxon) Wassail, collected in 1917. Read more...

Wednesday 17 November 2021

Donkey Lane Community Orchard - The effect of WW1 on the families born in the Orchard Part 2 The Sad Part!

Anyone reading this will know that this is not a story with a happy ending. The three young men in question are featured on the Chinnor War Memorial and were all closely connected with what is now, The Donkey Lane Community Orchard.
 

Major Frank Eggleton, Royal Field Artillery

His battery took part in the 3rd Battle of Ypres better known as Passchendaele. The Battle lasted from July 1917 until November, but the main offensive began on the 12th October to gain the high ground. The weather was very wet indeed and the whole offensive movements were impeded by deep mud, allied troops were mown down by German machine guns because they were unable to advance. This battle was described as a wasteful disaster.

During this time Frank had gone forward to the guns to attend to an officer who had been wounded. On the way back, he stepped aside to let the stretcher pass him and while he was waiting, he was hit by a large piece of exploding shell in his back which entered his spine. A fellow officer with him reported that “he immediately became unconscious and died a few minutes later”. He died on 21st of October 1917 aged just 31. It was reported in the John Hampden Grammar School, High Wycombe obituary that a 2nd Lieutenant in his battalion wrote that he was ‘so loved and respected by all’. He was buried in Canada Farm Cemetery.

Frank is remembered on the High Wycombe Hospital memorial as well as on the Chinnor Memorial. He was reported to be very popular for his kind acts. He had requested that better socks for his men should be found and contacted friends in High Wycombe by letter to arrange for them to be knitted and sent out to the battlefield. We have not yet discovered whether the socks actually arrived there to be used. Read more... 

Wednesday 10 November 2021

Do you like to Volunteer?

We want to run our local Repair Cafés on a more regular basis. Can you help?


How you can help? We need more co-ordinators and reception/café support to join the team to help organise and run the cafés.

What’s involved? Co-ordinator: help plan the cafes, liaise with our volunteer fixers and support team, help promote event via posters and social media, facilitate the ‘flow’ at the café. Reception/Café support: help set up/clear away, welcome, explain process, book items in, offer refreshments.

All roles are flexible and can be done as and when you have time to offer. Training/support is offered for the roles.

If you’d like to find out more either email greeningchinnor@gmail.com or come along to our Repair Café on Saturday 13th November for an informal chat and look about.



Wednesday 20 October 2021

The Effect of WW1 on the families who lived at the orchard

Anyone who has attended the Chinnor Remembrance Day ceremony will be familiar with the Roll of Honour. The horrific thought of the repeated surnames that are called is disturbing, as is the massive loss of young men especially those from the same family. If like me you can almost recite the WW1 Roll of Honour, you will be aware that there were 4 young men from the Marriott family, 4 from the Witney family but the ones that stood out from the Orchard Cottages Census were 2 of the 4 young men called Howlett, Alfred and Aubrey. In addition, Frank Eggleton, the son of the owner of the land on which the cottages stood. 

The effect of the first world war was felt strongly amongst those who had lived in the immediate area. The Howlett family, Alfred and Mary, lost both of their sons, Alfred and Aubrey. In addition, Frank, the younger son of Henry and Annie Eggleton the landowners at Hill Farm also died. 3 young men from this very small area of Chinnor.

We will begin with Frank Eggleton as he is the eldest of the three and the first one to volunteer. At the time of the 1911 census the orchard land was part of Hill Farm which at that time was owned by Henry Eggleton and his wife Annie (nee Keene) and their two sons William and Frank. William, the elder son was involved in the family business of farming, but the younger son Frank was described as a Mercantile Clerk for Wheeler’s Brewery in High Wycombe. 

Frank was born 5th January 1886 and at 28 years old in 1914 was already quite mature with an already established a career in the brewing trade. He gained further qualifications from evening classes at The John Hampden Grammar School achieving the membership of ‘The Chartered Institute of Secretaries’ and became Company Secretary for Wheelers Brewery in High Wycombe in 1914. The company reported after his death that he had the potential for a very successful career in the company. They had lost quite a few of their key employees as a result of the war.  Read more ...


Saturday 9 October 2021

Greening Chinnor General Meeting

The next Greening Chinnor general meeting will be held on Tuesday 19th October 2021 via Zoom. If you would like to attend please email me at greeningchinnor@gmail.com and I will send you the link. The meeting will start at 7:30 pm.

Topics to Discuss

Ongoing Activities

Repair Cafe

Monday 27 September 2021

Apple Pressing at the Orchard

Sunday 24th October 2 pm - 4 pm

Do you have a bumper crop of apples this year? What do you do with yours? Why not save all your good apples, not the ones with bruises and maggots, and bring them to Donkey Lane Community Orchard on the 24th October along with some clean screw-top glass bottles and we will help you make some lovely apple juice from your apples together with our own orchard apples. 

As well as apple pressing, we will have refreshments including freshly pressed apple juice and be holding guided tours of the orchard. 

Come and find out about the lives of those who lived at the orchard; the story of the fruit trees and the amazing varieties of plant life we’ve discovered and how you can get involved.

This is a free event and donations towards the orchard would be most welcome.

For more information contact Linda at greeningchinnor@gmail.com or 07973 788339. 


Sunday 5 September 2021

Donkey Lane Community Orchard - The Apples

 As stated in the previous article on the Chinnor Plum, we knew there were at least 20 apple trees in the orchard, according to the 2013 on-site survey by Derek Tolman of Bernwode Fruit Trees. However, there was no ‘actual’ identification of the varieties of apples on the sketch map but it did tell us some identifying features of the trees such as, double based, single late season, flat - small trunk, split and engulfed!


As clearing of the area began, we were delighted to start finding the fruit trees and by using Derek’s map and numbering system were able to identify them. Not only did we find all 20 trees, we found one more!

After carefully clearing the area around the fruit trees and trying to divest them of the enormous amount of thick growth of ivy, they were numbered and labelled in accordance with the map for consistency.

Any subsequent new fruit trees not identified on the map but in close proximity to an identified tree were given a suffix to identify it; for example by tree number 8 there was a small apple tree sapling which was numbered 8b.

At this stage, although identifying the location of the trees, we had no idea what varieties of apples were in the Orchard. The next question was ‘how were we going to identify them?’

What we knew – the area was thought to be occupied by cottages from c1700 with the last one demolished c1920; the cottagers most likely planted the fruit trees and no apple trees had been planted in the Orchard since it had been abandoned. We were hopeful that some of the apples would be a rarity.

How did we find help to identify them? In September 2019, members of the team, with an assortment of Orchard apples and leaves, visited an apple identification day run by Mid-Shires Orchard Group who had the Chair of the Fruit Section of the RHS attending. Some of the fruit taken had been picked too early so was difficult to identify. This is what we found out. Read more...

Saturday 14 August 2021

Donkey Lane Community Orchard - The Chinnor Plum

 Have you heard of the mythical Chinnor plum? Does it really exist? Read on to find out.

2013 Sketch Map of the fruit trees at orchard

In 2013 a formal survey of Donkey Lane Community Orchard by Derek Tolman of Bernwode Fruit Trees, identified 20 apple trees and a single plum tree. These were marked on a sketch map of the site and scion wood was collected to propagate new trees. This was done in an attempt to protect the genetic lineage of the traditional varieties growing on site. 

Experts later confirmed that the plum was unique and named it the Chinnor plum. 


Move on to early 2019 when we started work clearing the orchard. It was apparent that the overall site was much more overgrown than it was in 2013 and it was difficult to confirm whether all of the trees on the sketch map still existed.

As our clearing of the decades of rubbish, brambles and ivy progressed we discovered not one but two plum trees. They were in a pretty sorry state and the trunks needed support. Once the trees were exposed to the light, we were delighted to see extensive white blossom and much to our surprise similar blossom on a tree a short distance away. Following the line of the trees already found and knowing that plums tend to spread by sending out suckers we were able to find another two juvenile examples. So, in one season our stock of the Chinnor plum had multiplied from one to five. Read more...


Monday 12 July 2021

Donkey Lane Community Orchard - Who lived there 180 years ago?

The first full population census, taken in 1841, tells us who lived in the three cottages on the land now known as Donkey Lane Community Orchard. It shows us 31 names from the six families living there, which is hard to imagine when you look at the site now. All six were renting from the owner, Joseph Allnut.

The census taker worked from the High Street towards Chinnor Hill and our knowledge of who lived in which cottage is based on a presumption that he continued uphill to follow the dwellings in order. The lane was then called Holland Lane. (Donkey Lane is a later and never an official name.)










In the top cottage, nearest Chinnor Hill, lived the Bishops and the Ways. The Bishop family were Jacob (45) and his wife Ann with daughters Sushannah/Susan (19) and Martha (16). Jacob was an agricultural labourer, probably on one of the local farms. He was born in Oakley in 1796: Oakley then was a separate settlement from Chinnor, connected by a road between heath and fields. He married Ann Keen from Bledlow when he was 25.  Read more... 









Thursday 8 July 2021

Activities at the Orchard w/c 12th July

Wow, looks like it's going to be a busy week at the Orchard...

Tuesday 13th July 2021 | Orchard Survey Group |11:00 am at the orchard - to review survey quadrats and other areas of the orchard.

Wednesday 14th July 2021 | The Orchard Story Group meeting | 3:00 pm - to discuss the social history and other 'stories' of the orchard via Zoom. 

Thursday 15th July 2021 | Donkey Lane Community Orchard Meeting - to discuss ongoing activity at the orchard 7:30 pm via Zoom. 

Saturday 17th July  | Working Party |  Donkey Lane Community Orchard 13:00 - 16:00. All welcome, Please wear suitable clothing and footwear.

If you'd like attend any of these events please email Linda at greeningchinnor@gmail.com and the details will be sent to you.


Tuesday 15 June 2021

Donkey Lane Community Orchard Meetings

For those of you who are interested in the Donkey Lane Community Orchard, we have two meetings this week which you are welcome to attend. Both meetings are via Zoom, details below.


Wednesday 16th June 3:00 pm The Orchard Story Group - to discuss social history and other 'stories' of the orchard. 

Thursday 17th June 7:30 pm Donkey Lane Community Orchard meeting - to discuss ongoing activity at the orchard.  

Email greeningchinnor@gmail.com for the link if you are interested in attending.

Sunday 16 May 2021

Chinnor Parish Footpath

You may have noticed that things are really starting to move on our local footpath network. Besides all of the damaged stiles that have already been replaced by nice new easy to use gates, there are a couple of major projects in the pipeline. All of the decrepit stiles around Emmington are waiting the installation of a whole new set of gates. 

Unfortunately, we had planned to have these installed last year but owing to the series of lock downs and shielding, the volunteers from the Chiltern Society have not yet been able to do their amazing job. The good news is that they are now on the list for this year. 

We have also recently received a  generous grant from Trust for Oxfordshire’s Environment (TOE) to make major improvements to the network around Henton and running up to the County Boundary at Forty Green.

We are delighted to see many of our fellow villagers out enjoying some of the awesome local walks and really hope that things continue once all of the restrictions have been eased. 

Rest assured that all of your feedback to the Oxfordshire County Council website reporting issues are looked into and they are all on an action list for necessary remedial work. 

A reminder that a series of 4 local circular walks can be found here.

Alan

Parish Path Warden 


Thursday 13 May 2021

Donkey Lane Community Orchard - How it began


Those of you in the village who walk up Keens Lane and into Donkey Lane towards the Ridgeway pass the Donkey Lane Community Orchard on the right just past the railway crossing.

Historically this was not an orchard. On the site there were six families living in three cottages built probably during the late 18th century and finally pulled down about 100 years ago. All of the heritage fruit trees found within the orchard were most likely planted by the cottagers.

About 25 years ago, efforts were made by the Chinnor Countryside group to clear the site but since then it had become completely overgrown and a focus for antisocial behaviour.

Greening Chinnor were approached by the Chiltern Conservation Board back in November 2017 to discuss involvement in ‘Rough around the Edges’; one of the interweaving projects part of the ‘Chalk, Cherries & Chairs’ Lottery-funded project. In discussion, the ‘orchard site’ came up which, at that time, was an impenetrable mess.

After much thinking, surveying and writing, rewriting and even more rewriting of proposals and costings, we were ready to reach out to the community at the end of 2018 and publish the ‘Five-Year Orchard Plan’. Local organisations could not have been more supportive: Chinnor Parish Council, Mid Shires Orchard Group (MSOG), Wild Oxfordshire, BBOWT, Chiltern Rangers, SODC and most of all our amazing team of volunteers. Special thanks must go to Mr Derek Nixey the landowner who has given the village a free fifteen-year tenancy. Read more ...






Saturday 24 April 2021

Spring Blossom watch with the National Trust


The National Trust are asking you to share the beauty of blossom on social media for their  #BlossomWatch day on 24 April 2021. Upload pictures of your local blossom, tag the location of where it is and use #BlossomWatch to spread the joy of spring with others. Why not check out their website and download the blossom pack.

National Trust Spring Blossom Watch

Thursday 22 April 2021

Minutes from Donkey Lane Community Orchard Meeting

The minutes from the meeting held on the 17th April 2021 are now available to view via the 'Governance & Minutes' tab or by following this link.

Sunday 18 April 2021

Back at the Orchard

 Great news, we're back at the Orchard. 

Working parties at the Orchard restarted on Saturday 17 April albeit with restricted numbers and with Covid-19 safety measures in place.

We will be running regular working parties as follows:

The first Tuesday of the month: 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
The third Saturday of the month: 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm

If you would like to attend one of the working parties, please email Linda at greeningchinnor@gmail.com to book a place.

Blossom

 

Photo courtesy of Keith Webley

Photo courtesy of Keith Webley

It's the middle of March and already some garden trees in Chinnor are in blossom, either pink or white ornamental cherries with their delicate blooms which are even more noticeable because the trees are not yet in leaf. And already the Magnolias are showing their large buds ready to burst into spectacular flower to transform some lucky peoples' front gardens.I was surprised to discover that Magnolias are such an old family that they have been around for at least 20 million years. And that was before there were many flying insects such as bees to pollinate them, so they relied on the heavier beetles which had already evolved.

Of course all our native British broadleaved trees are flowering plants, and some have small greenish flowers that can easily be overlooked amongst the leaves. But there is one family which generally produces showy flowers and that is the Rose family. Perhaps the tree which is most associated with spring and the old festivals which marked the turning of the year, is the hawthorn with its abundant May blossom. Of the plants cultivated by man, as well as garden roses, this large family includes both apples and pears, as well as plums, cherries and almonds.

In England there used to be many customs associated with hawthorn blossom, and the cover of the book 'Chinnor in Camera' first published in 1988, shows a photograph of children holding their garlands on May Day around a century ago. Inside is the 'garlanding song' they sang as they went around the village. More recently towards the end of the last century, a May Fayre was revived at nearby Kingston Blount. A May King and Queen were chosen and school children displayed the different dances around the be-ribboned Maypole. Read more ... 


Monday 12 April 2021

Minutes of AGM and Annual Report

The minutes of our AGM held on the 31st March 2021 along with the Annual Report have now been published and can be found on the 'Governance & Minutes' tab  or by following the following links:


At the AGM the revised Greening Chinnor Constitution was adopted. The Constitution can also be found on the 'Governance & Minutes' tab or by following this link

Thursday 8 April 2021

Dates for your Diary

Thursday 15th April 7:30 pm: Donkey Lane Orchard meeting via Zoom. Email greeningchinnor@gmail.com for link to meeting

Saturday 17th April 10:00 am - 1:00 pm: Working party at the Orchard - booked places only

Sunday 2nd May 10:00 am - 12:30 pm: Spring Community Litter Pick. Details to follow



Tuesday 30 March 2021

Annual General Meeting

We would like to welcome you all to our (online) annual general meeting on Wednesday evening at 7:30pm. This meeting will be conducted via Zoom and if you would like to attend please email greeningchinnor@gmail.com for the link.

The agenda for the meeting is below and contains links to our last AGM minutes and also to a copy of the new Constitution, which will be adopted at the meeting as well as a link to a document which notes all the changes to the Constitution.

We plan to keep the meeting short and then to enjoy a short film and discussion. Details on the agenda.

31 March 2021 | 7:30 pm | via Zoom link
All welcome to attend
Please email greeningchinnor@gmail.com for meeting link

AGENDA

1. Welcome & Introduction from the Chair

2. AGM Formal Business

    2.1. Approve Minutes of the last AGM link here

    2.2. Presentation of Annual Report

    2.3. Presentation of Financial Report


3. Motions

    3.1. To adopt updated Constitution link here (link to change document here)

4. Election of officers

    4.1. Chair
    4.2. Treasurer
    4.3. Secretary

5. AOB
 
The formal part of the evening will be followed by a short film featuring speaker Louie Schwartzberg on ‘The hidden beauty of pollination’.
 
Pollination: it's vital to life on Earth, but largely unseen by the human eye. Filmmaker Louie Schwartzberg shows us the intricate world of pollen and pollinators with gorgeous high-speed images from his film "Wings of Life," inspired by the vanishing of one of nature's primary pollinators, the honeybee.

Followed by discussion

Friday 19 March 2021

Greening Chinnor Annual General Meeting

Like many organisations, our AGM for 2019-20 was postponed by the pandemic and Zoom was just coming into our consciousness.

This year it will go ahead, albeit virtually, on Wednesday 31st March 2021 and you are invited to join us. After the brief business side of the meeting, we will be showing a short uplifting film. Details will be sent out next week along with the agenda and meeting link. 

In accordance with our Constitution, officers are elected at the annual general meeting for one year, with no limit on the number of times they can be re-elected. We have three officer posts as well as general members of the committee available and all are welcome to make a nomination or to volunteer for any of the posts below:

  • CHAIRPERSON 
  • SECRETARY
  • TREASURER

Nomination to be emailed to our Honorary Secretary or posted to Greening Chinnor, c/o 7 Hunters Point, Chinnor, Oxon, OX394TG. Nominations close on Wednesday 24th March 2021. Votes will be counted and officers elected at the AGM.

Monday 22 February 2021

Next Meetings

Whilst most or our activities are curtailed at the moment, our meetings are still going ahead via Zoom. All welcome to attend.


24 February 2021 | Donkey Lane Community Orchard Meeting | 7:30 pm via Zoom. Please email greeningchinnor@gmail.com if you would like the link to attend.

31 March 2021 | Greening Chinnor AGM | 7:30 pm via Zoom. Please email 
 greeningchinnor@gmail.com if you would like the link to attend.

Wednesday 10 February 2021

General Meeting

Our next general meeting will be held on Wednesday 17th February via Zoom. If you would like to attend please email me at greeningchinnor@gmail.com and I will send you the link. The meeting will start at 7:30 pm.

Tuesday 9 February 2021

Chinnor Parish Walk Series

We have put together another three Chinnor Parish Circular Walk leaflets for you to enjoy. These have been kindly supported by Chinnor and Thame Friends of the Earth and paid for by a grant from Chinnor Parish Council.

This now brings the total number of Chinnor Parish Walks to four which include:

No 1: Emmington – existing  
No 2: Henton and Forty Greennew
No 3: Sprigs Alleynew 
No 4: Sydenham and Crowellnew 



Footpaths & Bridleways

 A few lines to bring you up to date with what is happening with our footpaths and bridleways.

The first thing is that it is absolutely brilliant so many of you are using the lockdown to get your permitted exercise enjoying our footpaths. We all know that it is a bit muddy but please keep to the paths to avoid trampling farmers crops. 

Greening Chinnor, working with Oxfordshire County Council (OCC), Chinnor Parish Council (CPC) and the Chiltern Society (CS), have been regularly checking all of our local network of paths and bridleways with a view to getting essential repairs and improvements done. You may have noticed that decrepit stiles have started to be replaced with nice pedestrian and canine friendly gates and that an extensive programme of improving waymark discs is underway. We have recently been given a generous grant from CPC towards these improvements.

Last year, together with OCC and the Chiltern Society, a major proposal for replacing all broken and unusable stiles around Emmington was put together. We are delighted that the Trust for Oxfordshire’s Environment (TOE) approved this proposal and made a significant grant that enabled all of the gates and associated kit to be purchased ready for installation by the South Chilterns Path Maintenance Volunteers who are the group that carry out much of this major work. Unfortunately, due to current restrictions they are unable to get out and get this work done. Moving forward there is another major proposal with TOE for necessary works around Henton.

We’re pleased the list of outstanding issues continues to drop significantly. An example of an issue is a broken stile and a report is an individual member of the public recording the issue on the OCC online database.


A couple of requests: First to dog walkers please carry on cleaning up after your charge and continue to dispose of the bags responsibly and to all cyclists please make sure you do not cycle on footpaths (marked with a yellow waymark). You can use them but please dismount and push your bike until you meet a bridleway. 

Monday 8 February 2021

Greening Chinnor is 10 years old

 - can you believe that! 

When we began in October 2011, we used the Greening Campaign Phase 1- Engaging the Community to launch our group. Since then we  have moved from a campaigning group to being a more ‘hands-on’ group, developing initiatives benefiting the local community. 

We started small with twice-yearly litter picks and tree planting and now have grown and can include projects like the Donkey Lane Community Orchard and Repair Cafes, to name but a few. Like all organisations, over time, we have evolved. During the pandemic we have taken the time to look back and review our documentation on how the group is run.

The first thing to look at was our Constitution; was it still relevant? The general consensus was that it wasn’t and so we have looked to bring it in line with our evolved aims and objectives as they are today and for going forward.

The new constitution is now ready for member consultation and can be found here. Along with the new consultation is a ‘change’ document that lists changes that have been made so you can compare. If you would like to review the constitution please feel free to do so and if you have any constructive comments, please email  by 15 February.

We would appreciate if you give the reason for the comment rather than just saying "I do not like clause 4.2"; or "I do not agree with the wording of clause 6.3", you should provide alternative words.