The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Hootie

9 Goodgymers helped their local community in Ealing
Penny
Sevan
Kash
StephDucat
Augustin Lagarde
A.B.
Jo Santa Maria
1 / 19
Ealing

Saturday 9th May

Credits
Sevan
Sevan

SESSION ORGANISER

PHOTOGRAPHER

REPORT WRITER

Kash
Kash

PHOTOGRAPHER

StephDucat
StephDucat

PHOTOGRAPHER

Ealing runner

PHOTOGRAPHER

SOCIAL MEDIA

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Report written by Sevan

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GoodGym's first visit to Blackberry Corner since October showed a huge transformation. Through spring, things had sprung. Mostly weeds around the fruit trees. HANGOT's Orchard Love day for May looked to clear space around the trees so that they could feed off all of the precious sunlight and water that hit the orchard.

HANGOTers scythed the paths first, with everyone staying out of the way of the swishing blades. Once they'd passed, GoodGymers got rolling with their shears, quickly chopping 2 metre wide circles around the tree trunks. Nettles, grass, cleavers and hemlock were wiped out with each snip. The animal lovers in the group found lots of ladybirds, spiders and snails, which they moved to safety before removing the weeds that they'd been sitting on. Rakers followed the choppers, moving the cuttings into large piles to dry out.

After the trees were given some breathing room, the team moved onto cutting back a large overgrown area at the far side of the orchard and also digging out burdock and hemlock, which needed regular and sustained removal to eventually kill them.

The tasks were completed quickly thanks to a lot of volunteers and a desire to get off to today's Hanwell Hootie music festival. A couple of the ladybirds had the same idea. Rather than searching for a new home in the orchard, they decided to hitchhike on a bag to go on a journey of musical discovery via a coffee stop.


This task supported
Hanwell and Norwood Green Orchard Trail
HANGOT plant publicly accessible community orchards to encourage foraging and biodiversity

Hanwell and Norwood Green Orchard Trail is a local community project to plant and care for a trail of publicly accessible community orchards in the Grand Union Canal corridor in Hanwell and surroundings. Publicly accessible community orchards benefit humans, flora and fauna alike, and fruit is free to pick and enjoy. We planted over 150 fruit trees, hazels and rowans since January 2015 in over 12 locations between the Brentford and Southall borders, building nature and wildlife habitat improvements as well as a strong community of local volunteers with a shared sense of responsibility. We also planted hundreds of fruiting hedge plants. We work in close cooperation with Ealing Council park rangers, the Canal & River Trust, local schools and other community groups.

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Ealing

🤘 Hanwell Hootie 🎸 Tear down @ the Viaduct Meadow
🗓Today 10:00am

Help with tear down of a non-profit festival ran entirely by volunteers!

Breda
StephDucat
Sevan
Harvey Gallagher
Kash
6 GoodGymers are going