Categories
Green Palmers Green Palmers Green Planning and open spaces

Are butterflies thriving in Palmers Green? – join the survey and let 15 minutes flutter by

Small tortoiseshell taken by James Hearton (creative commons license)
Small tortoiseshell taken by James Hearton (reproduced under a creative commons license)

Is it my imagination, or are there a few more butterflies this year – but less variety? This afternoon I had my first sighting of a peacock butterfly on a Buddleia in Old Park Road. They are the ones with the circles on the wings. Intrigued, it seemed like the perfect afternoon to take part in the Big Butterfly Count.

If you want to have a go, it’s very simple: choose a sunny day, like today, sit yourself outside for 15 minutes, and count the largest number of butterflies you see simultaneously of each type. You can be anywhere – in the park, in your garden, on holiday in the UK.

If you are out for a walk the rules are slightly different – just count what you see rather than the largest number of a each type present at the same time (its to avoid double counting if you are in one place –  but that shouldnt be a problem if you are on the move). You can even submit more than once if you like, and there is a downloadable app so that you can even do it on your phone.

Counting butterflies is a useful way of assessing the health of our environment, say organisers Butterfly Conservation. Butterflies react very quickly to changes in the environment, which means that they are a good indicator of biodiversity, and an early warning of other potential losses – a way of taking the pulse of nature. The count also provides valuable information on population trends and where action needs to be taken.

If you don’t know a butterfly from a bootstrap, there is a handy downloadable chart here. Log your results at  https://www.bigbutterflycount.org/species. And why not share them with your neighbours via this site by leaving a reply at the bottom of this article?

Here were my results:

Small white: 3

Gatekeeper: 2

Categories
Community Uncategorized Winchmore Hill

Winchmore Hill’s arty party

Summer_Exhibition_winchmore_hill_green_N21_Final_webThe Winchmore Hill Festival is back next Saturday with a Summer Exhibition on the Green and at the Kings Head.

The exhibition will include work by some of the area’s most interesting artists, photographers, sculptors, ceramicists and jewellers, some of it for sale.

There is also a chance to wet your whistle at the N21.net Get Together Bar.

The event runs from 10 to 6. Bag yourself a beautiful bargain …

Categories
Art and Culture Community History Music Southgate Winchmore Hill

Did you rock around the clock?

Shake,_Rattle_and_Roll_(album)_coverSixty years ago next year, in December 1954, rock and roll hit the UK charts for the first time. By Bill Haley and the Comets, Shake, Rattle and Roll was a cover of Big Joe Turner’s song, entering the Christmas charts to nestle alongside postwar jazz ballads by the likes of Frank Sinatra and the ragtime of Winifred Attwell’s Lets Have a Party (that year’s Christmas no 1).

Its successor Rock Around The Clock became one of the biggest selling single of the 1950s  – and the film Blackboard Jungle in which it was featured became notorious despite cuts from the censors. In Elephant and Castle ‘teddy boys’ danced in the aisles and ripped up seats, a spectacle that would soon be repeated in cinemas all over the country, to the alarm of politicians and the media. Music, and what it meant to be a teenager in the UK, would never be the same again. Or, at least that’s what we are told.

We are looking for people in the area who remember the arrival of rock and roll for a new oral history project launching this summer, culminating in an exhibition, publication or website for the 60th anniversary next year.

Titled Rock and Roll Enfield, the project will be focusing in particular on what it was like to live in Palmers Green, Southgate, Winchmore Hill and Enfield in those days.

And now we need  your help!

Do you remember the first days of rock and roll? How did it impact on you and your family? What did you wear and where did you go out to meet your friends? If you have memories to share, or would be interested in being interviewed, or have photographs or memorabilia from that era that you would be glad to share, we’d love to hear from you. Please email us at  rocknrollmemories@btopenworld.com

The project is being run by Joe Studman of Jaywalks and Sue Beard of Palmers Green Jewel in the North, with the kind support of Southgate District Civic Trust.

Categories
History Uncategorized

How Enfield got its name

There is a fascinating post by Matt Brown on the Londonist website today about how the London Boroughs got their names, including Enfield…You might also be interested in the Londonist’s amusing redrawing of the boroughs in an article written by  Jonn Elledge last year – click on the map to go straight there…

London-new-boroughs

Categories
Art and Culture Community History Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Uncategorized

New film celebrates Broomfield Park

A new film has been launched this week to promote Broomfield Park.  Created,  directed and produced by Christine Lalla, who grew up in Palmers Green, the intention is to support the efforts of local groups to restore the house, water garden and stable yard, by showing Broomfield’s unique history and heritage.

The film features historic clips and local people speaking about their memories and connections with the house and park including Kate Godfrey, Ralph Hutchings, and Janet Iorns, grandaughter of Broomfield’s first head gardener, William Ellis.

Music is by Graham Hine

[youtube]http://youtu.be/nTy9ZUcQ5iA[/youtube]

For more information about work to conserve and restore the house and park, visit http://www.friendsofbroomfieldpark.org/  and http://www.broomfieldhouse.org/

Categories
Art and Culture Community Music Palmers Green Planning and open spaces

Pop up to Broomfield Park this week

Visit the pop up tomorrow
Visit the pop up tomorrow

Palmers Greenery will have a pop up cafe tomorrow from 11-4 as part of Broomfield Park’s packed programme for Love Parks Week.

Love Parks week aims to raise awareness of the importance of parks and green spaces, showcasing the benefits they bring and highlighting the need for continual investment and engagement. It’s an urgent issue, as the organisers Keep Britain Tidy point out on its website “Sadly, as the nation comes to realise the benefits green spaces bring to our lives and communities, funding is being dramatically reduced.”

Also part of Broomfield’s Love Parks celebrations, the conservatory will also be open every day from 2.30-4.30, offering a children’s quiz and tree trail; Broomfield Community Orchard will be conducting an audit of wildflowers on Wednesday afternoon and there are also opportunities to try a new sport, including bowling and croquet.  This years annual bandstand concerts also kick off this Sunday with an open mike session from 1pm, followed by an afternoon of acoustic blues from 2-5. There will then be music each Sunday throughout August.

See the Friends of Broomfield Park website for full details of all events.