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An iconic tree from our landscape has all but disappeared from the riverside. Bridget Flanagan from the Great Ouse Valley Trust describes efforts to reinstate it. The full article is available for downloading below.

Hunts Post 31 March 2021


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Back in January Graham Campbell, our Chair, announced in this paper that the Trust had received funding from the County Council to provide the Ouse Valley Way with some ‘tender loving care’. He described what had to be done and said, ’We have a lot of work to do’. He was right! The full article is available for downloading below.

OVW BOARDS PAGE 26

 

OVW Boards Page 27


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We are delighted to be able to give our readers an exclusive preview of a new, specially created Ouse Valley Way information panel for St Ives.

The long-distance footpath starts in Northamptonshire and follows the river downstream through Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk, and to the sea at Kings Lynn. At 150 miles it is one of the longest river valley walks in the country. Our Cambridgeshire section was first waymarked and information panels provided in 2004. The full article is available for downloading below.

St Ives NOW Apr May 2021


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www.greatousevalleytrust.org.uk

Media Release 26 April 2021

OUSE VALLEY WAY GETS 13 NEW INFORMATION BOARDS

The Great Ouse Valley Trust proudly announces the completion of its first major project

OVW Information Board

 

• Ouse Valley Way is one of the longest river valley walks in the country
• Section through Cambridgeshire from Eaton Socon to Earith now fully informed!
• 13 boards re-designed, re-written and now with local historic features
• A lock-down project completed in record time
• Perfect timing for all to enjoy our beautiful valley for health and well-being

Chairman of GOVT, Graham Campbell, says ‘I am proud of our team’s amazing work over six weeks to upgrade all the existing signs and create two new ones. I must also acknowledge the support of Cambridgeshire County Council with funding from Highways England A14 Legacy Fund.’ The path and its riches and benefits are now even more accessible to all!’

Editors: please see overleaf for your GOVT contacts for interview and photographs, plus notes on the Trust and its vision. We have also prepared an article with illustrations from which you are welcome to extract.

Contact for interview Graham Campbell 01480 394933 • 07952 754763

Contact for provision of hi-res images Ian Jackson 01480 385999 • 07836 248360


What is the Great Ouse Valley Trust?

The Great Ouse Valley Trust (GOVT) is a charity formed in October 2018 with the charitable objective:
To promote for public benefit the conservation, restoration, and enjoyment of the landscape, wildlife and heritage of the Great Ouse Valley and environs in the county of Cambridgeshire.

Members include local councils, the local Wildlife Trust, individuals and environmental groups.

The Trust’s Vision recognises the Great Ouse Valley is a fantastic place to live and visit, with off the beaten track areas to explore by foot, cycle or horse. The area is nationally recognised and valued for its wildlife, leisure, natural and heritage attractions which contribute to the county’s natural green spaces. This is achieved by GOVT being the catalyst which brings national organisations, local communities and individual people together for the common good.

GOVT’s mission covers:

· Enhancement of landscape – increased biodiversity
· Promotion - sense of place, tourism and local economy, health benefits
· Protection – active conservation and campaigning
· Access for all – residents and visitors, disabled
· Partnerships and alliances: groups working together
· Increased engagement – education, volunteering

 

www.greatousevalleytrust.org.uk

 

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Have you heard the cuckoo yet? Yes, they’re back and singing along the river valley. Their sound is so distinctive and unusual that we name the bird after its call. Bridget Flanagan, from the Great Ouse Valley Trust, celebrates the return of the iconic, not-so silly bird.

CUCKOO ARTICLE 2


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At last the unseasonable cold and damp April and May weather has come to an end and summer has arrived on cue at the beginning of June. The visitor honeypots of the Ouse Valley have once again become a huge attraction. The use of our landscape for all kinds of leisure activities is very encouraging but does of course produce its own challenges with car parking becoming a real issue over the holiday weekend in many places.

Energy and zeal
There is a great burst of enthusiasm and call to action from many of our Partner Members keen to get involved in actual projects on the ground. There is a great desire to restore meadows to their former glory, to reinstate lost hedges, plant riverside trees, improve water quality and much more - and there is no lack of support from our volunteers. The real issue is the identification of landscape and biodiversity projects that are achievable. These can only be accomplished with the cooperation of landowners and farmers. Many of them are waiting on the new post Brexit Government scheme to promote environmental benefit in farming, and are reluctant to promote new initiatives until they have some clarity on the details.

Black Poplar progress
A local farmer, however, Alf Peacock, has been a great supporter of GOVT. The Trust has begun to plant native Black Poplars on his hay meadow opposite Brampton Mill and volunteers have successfully carried out the first planting using ‘cactus’ cattle protectors. For this project we have been grateful for a £2,000 grant from Astra Zeneca. We continue to work with local landowners, and with FWAG (Farmers Wildlife Advisory Group), to find more sites for riverside tree-planting to support the Woodland Trust initiative to ‘Cool the Rivers’.

[Left] Partner Members volunteer representatives assembling the ‘cactus’ tree protectors on a special steel former. It can be painful work!    [Right] Planting the new native Black Poplars on West Meadow opposite Brampton Mill

 

FALLEN GIANT
This very ancient tree was the last remaining Black Poplar on Clarke’s Island on Portholme Meadow. It collapsed in last year’s high winds. The Trust is working had to re-establish native black poplars which are so important to the character of the Great Ouse Valley Landscape.

 

Clearing the way - and the Pennywort
We are confident there will be plenty of opportunities for volunteer groups to engage in new planting and habitat restoration in the future. In the meantime, there is much work to do on clearing footpaths, especially on the Ouse Valley Way. Huntingdon Rotary is clearing the path between Bromholme Lane and River Lane, but there are many other sections that need attention. In fact, a great many of our public footpaths need work and our Partner Members are rising to the challenge. Please let us know about all the individual projects that you may be undertaking so we can publicise them and offer help as needed. Here we must mention the initiative of Partner Member Southoe and Midloe PC who have taken advantage of our offer to provide special waymarkers for the the OVW through their parish and which they have already installed. Well done Southoe! Brampton PC too have been quick off the mark with improvements to their section.

The battle by the Environment Agency and many volunteer groups to stop the spread of Floating Pennywort has been very successful in the upper sections of the river, but now needs to continue downstream. There is an opportunity for our Partners Members and Supporter volunteers to engage in the recording of any new Pennywort sitings. Please see this link to Rivercare - Pennywort Alert (rivercare.org.uk) for more information and details.

Important new Trust developments
This a pivotal moment for the Trust as we embark on new ventures. We have had much success over the last two years, for example: overturning the decision to build a new, elevated river crossing; Black Poplar planting projects; and working with the County Council to upgrade the Ouse Valley Way and the information boards. Now we are looking to move to another level, working with our Partners and Natural Cambridgeshire to create a Great Ouse Valley Landscape Partnership, giving the opportunity to apply for larger sums and to employ a coordinator. This will be discussed more fully in June.

Following the presentation by Barry Bendall of the Rivers Trust at our AGM in April we are now in discussion to move towards GOVT becoming the Rivers Trust representative for our Great Ouse. It has previously been unrepresented! This will mean that we would work to improve the water quality and biodiversity of the river with the support of the Rivers Trust as the national body.

Publicity
We offer special thanks to St Neots Town Councillor Stephen Ferguson for his donation of £2,000. He raised this from his walk as Town Mayor of the entire Ouse Valley Way from Buckinghamshire to Kings Lynn in appalling weather last year. We trust your blisters have healed Stephen!

The latest edition of the Inland Waterways Association The Great River Ouse and its Tributaries has just been published. Its author, Chris Howes is a Supporter of the Trust and the book includes a brief summary of the work and aims of GOVT. The book is the standard document for all those who use the rivers for leisure in all sorts of craft. It is published by Imray at £14.95 and is available from all good bookshops and marinas, or from Imray online.

AONB on-going
The Trust’s working party on the application for AONB (Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty) status has produced a further document to upgrade the original 2016 application to Natural England. We are awaiting the much-delayed formal response from Natural England to the Glover Report recommendations.

We have a vacancy
Graham Wilson has been a GOVT Trustee since our inception and has been a vital link with the County Council and a great campaigner against the third river crossing. Following his recent re-election as a County Councillor, and his appointment as Chair of Audit and Accounts for the new Combined Authority administration, he feels he will no longer have sufficient capacity to continue as a Trustee. The Trust wishes him well in his new role. If you feel you have a special skill and enthusiasm to become a Trustee please contact me for a chat.

Finally
There is a great deal for the Trust to achieve this year but with foreign travel all but eliminated this summer I am reminded just how fortunate we are to have such a wonderful landscape to enjoy on our doorstep.

 

Graham Campbell, June 2021

New Swan Families!
It’s that time of year and so here are two tales of cygnets. A Mute Swan has once again nested near the Holt Island Nature Reserve sign. This is her story as told by Nigel Sprowell, the photographer

SIN JUNE JULY 2021


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The Great Ouse Valley Trust is delighted to report that its work to replace all of the information boards along the Ouse Valley Way long-distance footpath through Cambridgeshire is now completed. The new design and fresh content is shown here.

the villager june 2021


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Bridget Flanagan describes the importance of the Ouse Valley causeways and reveals a secret in one of them

hunts post causeway cuting


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Bridget Flanagan of the Great Ouse Valley Trust explains how our lakes were formed and why they are so important.

HUNTS POST 30 JUNE 21 LAKES

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THE HUNTS POST CHANGED OUR HEADING AND USED AN OLD SUBLINE!
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Volunteer Charity Trustees


Who we are:

The Great Ouse Valley Trust (GOVT) was founded in 2018 to fulfil the urgent need to protect, promote and enhance our special landscape of the Great Ouse Valley in Cambridgeshire. Our aim is simply to put the Great Ouse Valley ‘on the map’!

What we're looking for:
We are looking for two Trustees to join our Board. As we are still relatively new our Trustees help shape the future of GOVT. Therefore we're looking for people with a clear commitment to our purpose. We would love to hear from motivated individuals with a special interest in the Great Ouse River and Valley and its relationship with the surrounding countryside and adjacent communities.

You will be required to attend the Board's monthly meetings and be a ‘hands-on’ trustee in between these meetings. We also require a minimum three years term of office.

Please note that the roles are voluntary and unremunerated.

Trustees

We are looking for people from all social and cultural backgrounds, who can draw on a variety of experience, knowledge and skills, whether these have been formed through life or work situations.

We're particularly looking for Trustees with expertise in the following areas:

• Charity and environmental law

• River management

• Conservation management

• Experience of working with volunteers

What we can offer you:

Being a Trustee for GOVT is a great way for you to be able to use your skills and experience to oversee the charity and make decisions that have a direct impact on our valued Great Ouse Valley landscape its rich biodiversity, and the quality of life for all who live, work or visit the area.

You will also have the opportunity to gain new skills and develop existing ones, whilst enhancing the lives of people in Cambridgeshire.


HOW TO APPLY

Please send a copy of your CV and a covering letter (one A4 page) by email to our Chair which sets out how you fit the criteria outlined above and why you are applying for the role.

Deadline for applications: August 8th, 2021
We aim to meet with prospective applicants (virtually or physically) during the second half of August.

If you would like further information about these roles, please contact Graham Campbell

www.greatousevalleytrust.org.uk

 
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