Three of us as advertised today and we managed three courses to bring the wall up to coverband height on the new stretch. Bright and very breezy day, one kite, three sets of walkers and loads of mud on the approach.
Chris G.
No. waller:3
Three of us as advertised today and we managed three courses to bring the wall up to coverband height on the new stretch. Bright and very breezy day, one kite, three sets of walkers and loads of mud on the approach.
Chris G.
No. waller:3
Duncan and Graham resumed work on the stile on a windy and sometimes
very windy day but apart from the odd light squall, a dry one. Underfoot was
however very damp and messy. A perfectly formed rainbow appeared a number of
times on the opposite side of the valley
The previous week's work was
reviewed at length and apart from some minor changes remained
unchanged. Stone or the lack of it was the major challenge, and the
current stile solution reflects what was available. A further course was
laid on the field wall before the wind blasting and damp conditions caused us
to depart.
Graham D.
No. Wallers: 2
The weather forecast for Wednesday as storm Dudley approached, particularly
for the afternoon, was horrendous so we had only planned for a morning.
Originally it was Graham and Roderick, but amazingly Roderick tested positive
for Covid so Duncan was able to step in.
Clive had kindly moved some
large stones for the cheek end the previous day,so we were able to get a good
morning's work in and complete the cheek end plus a couple of courses on the
adjoing wall. In the end, the weather was not too bad , the wind strong but
not cold and initially the on-off drizzle was not a real problem. Having
built and secured the cheek end, the proper rain arrived, the ground became
greasy, we came muddy and wet and by lunchtime it was time to retire.
Graham D.
No Waller: 2Dazzling sunshine but a very chilly breeze.
Barry, Roderick and Graham this week, with Barry working on the stile and surrounds and Roderick and Graham sorting out the path wall. From a small bit of patching this has developed into a five or six metre stretch of rewalling. Definitely another week's work to do.
We went to have a look at Clive's pile of stones to set aside some chunky pieces for the stile cheek end. Hopefully they can be delivered to site for next week.
Graham D.
No. Waller: 3
The expected foursome met up at a generally fine and sunny Markenfield as
planned.
We managed three courses on the stretch beyond the stile - one before coffee,
another before lunch (which wasn’t called until 13:00 hrs CMT (Catriona Mean
Time), and a third, somehow much trickier one, in the afternoon. We even
managed to add three throughs-(lite) as well, of course, as a ton and a half
of fill. The day remained dry (mostly) and sunny but the wildlife (aside
from a few walkers) was conspicuous by it’s absence.
After three weeks at barmy Markenfield, it was back to the February norm of dull sky, drizzle and stiff breeze at Fogfield and the remake of the stile on Low Lane.
Barry, Roderick and Graham, this week, with some very necessary specialised help from farm owner Clive and his telescopic earth mover.
By coffee break, the site was cleared and an opportune visit from Clive resulted in him collecting a very large stone , with the help of his earth mover and "deftly" dropping it at the bottom of the stile . Two bars and three people later it was in place.
After further walling, the other large stone provided previously by Clive , a 47 inch (120cm) long lintel or post was expertly maneuvered into place to crown a successful day's effort.
The sight of the day was a stoat in ermine (white stoat) which ran along the top of the opposite field wall.
Graham D
No. Wallers: 3