“Soup-a lunch”, Wednesday 30th September 2015

Soup-a-lunch on Wednesday 30th September 2015 at 12 noon in Slingsby Methodist Schoolroom at the Chapel

All are welcomed (especially senior citizens) to lunch in the Schoolroom. There will be soup, sandwiches, a pudding, and no doubt a good chat.

There is no charge but donations are welcome.

No need to book, but if you have any questions please contact Rachel or Stephen Prest on 01653 628277 or Trudy Carr on 628302.

Slingsby Methodist Church kindly arranges this.

Yorkshire Arboretum Autumn Events 2015

 

Yorkshire Arboretum

Yorkshire Arboretum

The Yorkshire Arboretum (at Castle Howard) newsletter of events for Autumn 2015 is here.

If booking an event, we recommend you check whether the usual admission charge to the Arboretum for non-members is payable, as well as the event charge

 

The Farming Column: Harvesting and a Hedgerow

Stephen Prest continues his farming column with a look at the harvest harvest, Malton show, and a hedgerow.

In spite of huge changes in the last few decades, farming remains central to our community here. If you farm near Slingsby and have a tale to tell, email us at  [email protected]

By the time you read this harvest will be underway once again.  It has been a good summer so far for farm crops with sufficient rain and plenty of sunshine so we should be in for a bumper harvest provided the weather is kind at harvest time.

Malton Show went very well this year over at Scampston Park with very good entries in the sheep and cattle classes and a tremendous show of vintage machinery and tractors including Slingsby’s very own Mick Dixon on his David Brown tractor.

On the conservation side we have recently sown 3 acres of wild bird seed mixes which will provide much needed food for the birds in winter.  With help from Richard Hindby we have also put up 2 more barn owl nesting boxes down the fields.  A pair of barn owls are nesting again in one of the older nest boxes which is most encouraging.

About 15 years ago we planted 400 yards of new hedgerow up Slingsby Heights, it is a mixture of hawthorn, blackthorn, hazel, field maple, dogwood and holly.

Old slides & photos 171

Picture 1. shows Bernard Ward, Stephen Prest, Arty Sleightholme and Lawrence Johnson hard at work, (well some of them anyway,) planting the hedge in approx. year 2003.

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Picture 2.  Shows the same men, in June this year, approx. 12 years later with the hedge now over 6ft tall and looking really well.  The men are not looking too bad either are they?

Has anyone seen any more orchids around the village?  In addition to the Early Purple Orchid shown in the last Triangle I have just seen some Common Spotted Orchids and some Pyramidal Orchids.

Slingshot – coming to a field near you?

466px-Slingshot_(weapon)

The Slingsby Village website’s Slingshot feature gives folk a shared platform to express their concerns on the topics of the day. Contributions can be published here anonymously under the Slingshot byline.

Coming soon to a field near you … if you don’t act NOW

Until a couple of years ago the word “fracking” didn’t mean much to me.  I had vaguely heard of protests in America about fracking and the environmental damage it caused, but didn’t realise how close to home it could come.  I am much wiser now!

A company called Third Energy has submitted an application to open a fracking site at Kirby Misperton (700 metres from the village and close to Flamingo Land).  The threat to this peaceful community, the lives and livelihoods of farmers and other residents, as well as to the lucrative tourist trade, is very real.  And it is only the start: Third Energy have said they are planning 19 well sites across Ryedale, with between 10 and 50 wells per site.  So there could soon be up to 950 fracking wells in Ryedale.  Hardly bears thinking about, does it?

I am no scientist but I have learnt that fracking is a fairly new technique for extracting shale gas from underground rock.  A well is drilled deep into the rock and a mixture of water, sand and toxic chemicals is then pumped into the well at high pressure in order to create cracks in the shale, allowing the gas to escape.  The gas is drawn back up the well to the surface and large quantities of contaminated waste water also return to the surface.  It is a major industrial process with round the clock working: constant lighting, noise and HGV movements.  Air, water and noise pollution, as well as health problems, have been reported in America.  Since the wells are drilled horizontally once the vertical shaft is drilled, the location of actual fracking can be a good distance from the well head.  Vibrations can therefore be felt over a wide area, and there have been earthquakes in Lancashire near the only fracking site in the UK.

A report by the Government’s DEFRA department (initially kept secret and only published after a Freedom of Information request) recognised that the contamination of soil, surface and groundwater is a major concern in fracking.  It warns that the leakage of waste fluids could affect human health through polluted water or the consumption of contaminated agricultural products, as happened in the USA.  Even if contaminated surface water does not directly affect drinking water supplies, fracking can affect human health indirectly through contaminated wildlife, livestock, or agricultural products.  The report also estimates that house prices in a fracking area are likely to fall by up to 7% and that properties within 1.5 miles of a site could face additional insurance costs.

Despite the advice of its own experts, the Government seems hell-bent on developing this industry whatever the environmental and health consequences.  It has recently offered licences to fracking companies that cover large areas of North Yorkshire, including the North York Moors National Park (reneging on an earlier commitment to exclude national parks) and most of Ryedale.  To make matters worse, the Government has said it will make decisions on fracking applications if local councils do not do so within 16 weeks – it’s not difficult to guess which way those decisions will go!

What can we do about it?  The immediate priority is to object to the Kirby Misperton application.  This can be done through the North Yorkshire County Council website (www.northyorks.gov.uk) or by email to [email protected] or by writing to Planning Services, County Hall, Racecourse Lane, Northallerton DL7 8AH.  The reference number of the application is NY/2015/0233/ENV.  The deadline for comments is 14 October 2015.

In addition, you could write to our MP (Kevin Hollinrake, House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA), our County Councillor (Cllr Clare Wood, North Yorkshire County Council, County Hall, Racecourse Lane, Northallerton, DL7 8AH) and our District Councillor (Cllr Robert Wainwright, Ryedale District Council, Ryedale House, Malton YO17 7HH).

Please help stop this threat to our beautiful area.

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If you have something that you’d like to share with others, perhaps something you’ve been dying to get off your chest – especially if it concerns Slingsby and its residents – then you can have it published here under the Slingshot byline.

Send your contribution to us either by e-mail at [email protected] or put in an envelope and leave it with Tony at the Village Shop. Please remember to include your name, address and telephone number, in case we need to contact you, though these details will NOT be published (your contribution will be anonymous). Finally, please be aware that the Slingsby Website editors will have the freedom to decide whether or not to publish your contribution.

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Car Boot Sale – Sunday 13th September 2015

slingsby-car-boot

Car Boot Sale at Slingsby Sportsfield on Sunday 13th September 2015 from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. (as always, weather and ground conditions permitting).

This is an addition to the year’s programme of car boot sales, and is held in aid of Yorkshire Air Ambulance.

N.B. For general car boot queries, please ring the Sports Club on 01653 627124 (Friday 8.30 pm – 10.30 pm, Saturday 8.30 pm – 11.30 pm and Sunday 8.30 pm – 10.30 pm).

For information about car boot sales please go to our sportsfield page