Sunday 27th April
Jules Tennick been cheered 10 times.
Goodgymers have noticed what Jules has done and have cheered them 10 times. We doff out caps to you Jules.
Sunday 27th April
Jules Tennick earned their community cape by completing their first community mission.
Jules completed a community mission. Instead of watching TV or lying in bed, Jules was out there making their community a better place to be. For making that choice they have earned the community cape.
Sun 27th Apr at 2:00pm
About a year ago, the kids from Featherstone High School approached Alex, today's task owner, asking about an overgrown space hidden behind the school's football pitches. Was that a garden? Could it become a garden? That's how the idea of the Garden Learnscape started. The students' initiative needed some support from the grown-ups. Gurpal from Southall Transition, who was involved in the project, introduced Alex to GoodGym. Fast forward a few weeks - and here they were!
Steph, Sevan and Kash ran to the school in Southall from their previous task in Pear Tree Park, with a break for lunch on the way. How surprised they were to see Jules, who had joined them at the previous session, turning up at the destination! Jules ran-walked all the way to the Featherstone School to make another spontaneous appearance. Her hands would definitely make the work lighter! Michelle, who walked to the task, completed the GoodGym crew. There were three more volunteers, including Alex and Gurpal and Hishaam from Southall Transition. Teamwork was the greatest strength needed at the first GoodGym session at Featherstone.
Probably the most spectacular achievement of the afternoon was moving the logs from a local park through a secret gate to the garden to create a sitting area. The timber pieces were enormous and we were not sure how to even approach them! The answer was: problem-solving and cooperation. Without those ingredients, the strongest of us wouldn't have dreamt of transporting that garden furniture!
Although everyone was up for the log challenge, there were plenty of other jobs we undertook when not getting physical with the timber: Jules reassumed her pruning trade, which she had proven to be an ace in, Michelle, Alex and Hishaam were weeding and turning the soil in beds, Sevan busied himself with plenty of various odd jobs, including carrying water, and Steph, Kash and Gurpal were working on flattening a giant mound of soil.
The team made fantastic progress on the development of the Garden Learnscape. We are looking forward to the next session in May to spread woodchip on the path and do more weeding. Sign up to join us!
Sun 27th Apr at 2:00pm
Create a site where children can learn about science
Read moreSun 27th Apr at 10:00am
To ask why we do good is to ask why the brambles grow - it is in their nature. Brambles and nettles swallow old paths, woodchip gets washed out by rain and trampled by walkers, and mud comes back to obscure trails. And so GoodGymers and Greenwayers come back to keep the paths alive.
Speaking of great comebacks, Bryon and Christos both found time for some GoodGymming today between the joys of being dads. The award for the most unexpected return goes to Jules, who signed up while the other GoodGymmers were sipping their pre-task coffee at Oscars and still made it to the café herself. Well done Jules - that's the sort of surprise we like the most!
The team walked from Pitshanger to Brent Viaduct to meet Ealing Greenwayers: Richard, Sam and Jim. The objective was similar to those at many previous sessions at the banks of Brent River: make the riverwalk safe and enjoyable to all visitors. Were the activities repetitive then? By no means!
We were up to a lot of diverse jobs:
There was, of course, wheelbarrowing and raking like at any other woodchip-focussed task. If you've done woodchipping in the past, you know the drill. If you haven't - maybe it's time to give it a try? Why not lend us a hand at the nearest opportunity in May?
In 90 minutes our 9-people team has completed revitalising the path - such a rewarding feeling to see it rejuvenated (and improved) at the whole length! We also got some shoutouts from the park visitors!
Next month we are up for another adventure in Pear Tree Park - bramble and nettle bash by the river. Sign up now!
Sun 27th Apr at 10:00am
Enhance access to the park from the south east
Read moreFriday 31st January
Jules Tennick has done their first good deed with GoodGym.
Jules is a now a fully fledged GoodGym runner. They've just run to do good for the first time. They are out there making amazing things happen and getting fit at the same time.
Tue 28th Jan at 6:45pm
Ealing Report written by Sevan
A third task in 5 days at Blondin Park saw Steph, Mohamed and Sevan run from Ealing Broadway, followed by Jules, who joined us for her first task with GoodGym Ealing. Welcome Jules! 👏🎉 We look forward to seeing you at another task soon.
The team were supposed to be mulching the snips that were planted by volunteers over the weekend, including some of our own GoodGym members. While the threatened storm this evening had held off, the group were thwarted from their intended task by darkness. Task owner Linda thought it was too risky for the GoodGymers to hulk wheelbarrows between the fragile snips in the dark, so a substitute task was ready. They would be mulching trees at the entrance of the park to turn them into an attractive feature for park goers.
Blondin Park's ever present wood chip pile was waiting for the team. Wheelbarrows, shovels and a rake were at the ready and the barrows began whizzing between the wood chip pile and trees, with Steph and Mohamed creating a neat ring of mulch around each trunk. The mulching was finished in super quick time, so everyone moved on to wood chipping a nearby bed to round out the task.
After the big impact that they made in the park, as always, Linda offered everyone a warm space and a cup of hot chocolate along with updates on her big plans for the park. What a tasty way to prepare for the run home ☕.
Tue 28th Jan at 6:45pm
Help newly planted trees have a good start to 2025, improve biodiversity and make public green space enjoyable for everyone
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