Raising Money for the Paddling pool 2019

Raising Money for the Paddling pool 2019

As always, John Rhodes and his wife are up with the lark and out in all weathers raising money to ensure the Children’s paddling pool will be reopened for Summer 2019.

The Rhodes are committed volunteers to Friends Of Streatham Common, Streatham Common Cooperative which looks after the Rookery and the Pool. They also spend a  huge amount of time fundraising and raising the profile of the Pets as Therapy Charity

The Doggy Splash day at the start of October raised in total £1200. John is hoping to collect at least £2000 in total of the £5K needed to get it opened.  The stall has lots of fun, silly and useful items – Bric-a-brac –  with 100% of sales going to the Pool fundraiser. Currently we are in negotiations with Lambeth Council about having the pump repaired….which all costs money!

Johns stall will be up outside the Rookery Cafe  until midday Weekdays and all day on weekends.  Please show your appreciation to him when passing, either buying something, passing him any spare change or indeed you could inquire about doing your own fundraiser for this much loved play area.

Please contact SCCOOP for details on how to help

If you are a parent – we would love to see your involvement in keeping this vital corner of summer heaven alive and kicking.

Photos of Kite Day 2018

Photos of Kite Day 2018

Thank you all for making KITE DAY 2018 a wonderful success.

The wind was down a little on previous years but it was still a fabulously sunny day to enjoy beautiful Streatham Common, and the community who worked hard to make it an amazing event!

For more images keep track of the KiteDay instagram page

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Also, please take a look at local photographer Roy Reed’s great pictures of the day:

Crocodile Kite

URGENT CALL: KITE DAY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

URGENT CALL: KITE DAY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

We are asking all members of Friends of Streatham Common, to offer just a few hours of your time to make sure our 20th Kite Day celebration is a success.

You dont have to be a member to offer help, we need litter pickers, stewards, and bodies to help set up and take down the event area structures. Nothing is too heavy, we have lots of different duties and actually is great fun to be a part of. Volunteering for your local community means that everyone can enjoy a safe day out and gives those participating and giving up their time a fantastic feeling of being part of the bigger picture in Streatham.

As you may know, circumstances beyond our control meant that our original day in May had to be cancelled because of the state of the ground which needed to recover. However, not all of our trusty band of core volunteers can participate in the new date.

We only need a minimum of 2 hours – but would be great if you can be flexible. Please contact kitedayvolunteers@streathamcommon.org so I can coordinate times that can fit with your schedule.

Kite Day Sunday 2nd September 2018

Kite Day Sunday 2nd September 2018

Now in its 20th year – Kite Day returns on Sunday 2nd September

A great FREE event for all Streathamites, Kite fans and those who want a fun day out from further afield. It has everything…music, food…and kites!

Volunteers will be needed so if you want to join in  – please let us know so we can place you accordingly.

Planning ahead:  How to get to Streatham Common

By Bus – 50, 60, 109, 249, 250, 255.

By Train – Streatham or Streatham Common stations.

By Bike – A23 Streatham High Road – ample space for cycle parking around the common.

By Car – Not recommended. Parking restrictions will be in place and the area is already densely populated. Lets help the environment and travel by public transport instead. Do your bit for greening our City

 

10/04/18: ATTENTION! STREATHAM KITE DAY POSTPONED! Serious ground damage to Common means the ground will not be in good shape for the big day in just one months time & this has meant we needed to move dates.

The ground in the lower Common has suffered much damage this year due to the combined effort of extreme weather conditions & churn caused by heavy vehicles from a prior event in March.

Although the ground may dry out in time, there is too much to risk with around 5000 people expected to visit the Kite Day – any regrowth would be crushed and so the ground would again need repair.

We thank all the volunteers and organisers who have put time in to working towards the 13th May, but we did not want to risk the health of the Common itself. We were unable to place Kite Day before September due to the Commons planned diary of events, and commitments of expert Kite flyers that ensure our Kite Day is now a key event on the National & International Kite festival circuit.

 

Wind in the Willows at the Streatham Rookery

Wind in the Willows at the Streatham Rookery

Wind in the Willows at the Streatham Rookery
Sixteenfeet Productions

Thursday 9th – Monday 13th August

11.30am & 2.30pm on weekdays

(no afternoon performance on the 10th)
2.30pm & 5.30pm at weekends

Age Guide: 5+

Book tickets online: https://sixteenfeet.cloudvenue.co.uk/windinthewillowsstreathamrookerygardens

About the theatre company: Sixteenfeet collaborates with writers, musicians and actors to produce new work and tell classic stories in a contemporary and inventive way. We specialise in site-specific theatre, which we perform in unexpected places. Our summer productions give a fresh perspective to classic stories and bring promenade theatre to some of London’s loveliest parks and green spaces. We also run an educational programme with workshops to support our productions. Our Lambeth Voices Programme works with all sections of the Community increasing participation in and access to creative opportunities.

Read about the Wind in the Willows and author Kenneth Grahame

 

 

FoSC Annual General Meeting: Wednesday June 27th at 7:30pm

FoSC Annual General Meeting: Wednesday June 27th at 7:30pm

Rookery Cafe
Wednesday June 27th at 7:30pm
The Friends AGM

Just a quick reminder about our AGM next Wednesday. We will talk about all that’s happened on the Common over the past year and we’re very pleased to welcome the following guest speakers:

Olivia Pearcey will hold a Q&A session on Lambeth events run on the Common
Lee Heykoop will be speaking on the new design for the Rookery Cascade
Thomas Talbot, from Inkspot, will give us an update on Streatham Common’s microbrewery (samples will be on sale in the cafe along with wine and soft drinks)

If you’d like an opportunity to take an active role in what happens across the Common then we are also looking for people to join the Friends Executive Committee. I hope to see you there.
Mike Robinson

click for larger version

 

Small Mammal Surveying and Workshop: 23rd and 24th June

Small Mammal Surveying and Workshop: 23rd and 24th June

 Discover what small mammals are on Streatham Common.

Learn about the techniques used for surveying them.

click here for a larger image

During each day, apparatus such as live animal, hair and activity traps will be set up and examined for evidence of wild mammals.

Surveys begins at 10.00am each day with a one hour workshop, which will be repeated at 2.00pm. You can come along at other times, up until about 7.00pm, to see what is going on.

For the workshops, meet at the Rookery Car Park. Iain Boulton will be there to welcome you.

To volunteer to help with setting up and inspecting traps etc. during each day please contact Iain on 07944 823548

New Oak Trees on the Common

New Oak Trees on the Common

Friends of Streatham Common Volunteer Tom Frankfort has been busy on the community’s behalf, working with the Council’s plan to plant a new line of 16 Oak trees along the North side of the Common, roughly between the bus stop and Hopton Road.

6 of these trees are funded by FoSC. There is the possibility we are to fund more, in collaboration with the Council, in future years.

We are constantly looking at the health and long-term sustainability of the Common and as our resident trees age, we need to think about replacements long in advance to ensure our common stays vibrant and environmentally relevant into the future.

Ecological importance: Within its native range Quercus robur – The English Oak is valued for its importance to insects and other wildlife. Numerous insects live on the leaves, buds, and in the acorns. Q. robur supports the highest biodiversity of insect herbivores of any British plant. The acorns form a valuable food resource for several small mammals and some birds, notably Eurasian jays Garrulus glandarius. Jays were overwhelmingly the primary propagators of oaks before humans began planting them commercially, because of their habit of taking acorns from the umbra of its parent tree and burying them undamaged elsewhere.

In England, the English oak has assumed the status of a national emblem. This has its origins in the oak tree at Boscobel House, where the future King Charles II hid from his Parliamentarian pursuers in 1650 during the English Civil War; the tree has since been known as the Royal Oak. This event was celebrated nationally on 29 May as Oak Apple Day, which is continued to this day in some communities.

‘The Royal Oak’ is the third most popular pub name in Britain (541 in 2007) and has been the name of eight major Royal Navy warships. The naval associations are strengthened by the fact that oak was the main construction material for sailing warships. The Royal Navy was often described as ‘The Wooden Walls of Old England’ (a paraphrase of the Delphic Oracle) and the Navy’s official quick march is “Heart of Oak”. In folklore, the Major Oak is where Robin Hood is purportedly to have taken shelter. Furthermore, the oak is the most common woodland tree in England. An oak tree has been depicted on the reverse of the pound coin (the 1987 and 1992 issues) and a sprig of oak leaves and acorns is the emblem of the National Trust. [source Wikipedia]

To ensure the FoSC are able to keep the common sustainable for now and future generations – join us! A years subscription runs to the same total as a cup of coffee and a cake these days. You will be investing in your community and to the environment, protecting and supporting our local wildlife.

Join here!

The Great North Wood Walk [Streatham Common to Crystal Palace]

The Great North Wood Walk [Streatham Common to Crystal Palace]

A joint walk by London Wildlife Trust and South London Botanical Institute (SLBI) on 15th April saw 97 people exploring fragments of the Great North Wood from Streatham Common to Crystal Palace. The six-mile route took in six different sites over four hours, led by Sam Bentley-Toon and Edwin Malins from the Trust’s Great North Wood Project and Roy Vickery from the SLBI.

Photo: Vicky Bruce / Friends of Biggin Wood – Click for larger image

Once a large complex of coppice and wood pasture, fragments of the Great North Wood still remain across south London and it also lives on in place names such as Norwood, Honor Oak and Penge (meaning ‘edge of the wood’).

Starting from the Rookery Cafe, the walk passed through Streatham Common Woodland, part of the Local Nature Reserve managed by the Streatham Common Co-Operative (SCCoop). The group discussed the issue of compaction and erosion in the woodland, and the management solutions that SCCoop are implementing in conjunction with the Great North Wood project.

The route then crossed into the Borough of Croydon, winding through Norwood Grove and along Covington Way to Biggin Wood. This is an ancient fragment of the Great North Wood where London Wildlife Trust has been working with Friends of Biggin Wood to remove invasive plant species such as cherry laurel and also improve the path network. Roy Vickery talked to the group about the delicate patches of wood anemone and the importance of oak trees in these woods.

Further east, the group stopped for lunch at Spa Wood, once the site of the Beulah Spa. This is another site where the Trust’s Great North Wood project has been working with a friends group – the Friends of Spa Wood – to remove invasive plant species that are damaging the health of the woods. Pausing to marvel at the largest oak tree in this part of London, the walk then continued into Grangewood Park and across South Norwood Hill to Beaulieu Heights. London Wildlife Trust’s Emma Pooley then gave a talk on her work surveying London’s hedgehogs with the Urban Urchins project, before the walk continued onwards, concluding at Crystal Palace Station.

Photo: Emma Pooley / London Wildlife Trust – click for larger image

For more information on the above:
http://www.wildlondon.org.uk/great-north-wood

http://www.slbi.org.uk/

https://www.sccoop.org.uk/

https://friendsofbigginwood.org/

http://www.wildlondon.org.uk/hedgehog

Streatham Common. Photo: Caroline Pankhurst/SLBI – Click for larger image