Meeting Thursday 15th April
We are holding our regular public meeting on zoom on Thursday 15th April. See our agenda for the items we are going to discuss. If you’d like to attend please get in touch on email for the zoom call details.
We are holding our regular public meeting on zoom on Thursday 15th April. See our agenda for the items we are going to discuss. If you’d like to attend please get in touch on email for the zoom call details.
We are funding raising for a children’s trim trail obstacle course for our play park. From a mix of funding applications and kind donations we are now over half way there! If you can donate anything, even £5 would help us towards our target.https://www.gofundme.com/f/ke32md-friends-of-scholes-park?qid=e15d89e811a4aabbf4a1548e839387a5&fbclid=IwAR1r_d4xrMQ-JeyKr3lSpezTtnwlx5_DYawek_mSnjj3vvuRDhZ01eQjv84
From 4th April to 17th April Friends of Scholes Park are holding an Easter Trail. Follow the map to find the numbers from one to ten and the clues to complete the cross word puzzle. You may find some lovely areas of the park you haven’t been to before. It is still muddy so we recommend wellies and keep your distance from others at the clues.
Please find attached for your information past minutes and agendas from our meetings
The next Friends of Scholes Park Meeting will be held on Monday 30th November 8.30pm on zoom. Please join us for an update on progress, discussion about future projects and an opportunity to have your say about improvements to the Park. The agenda and zoom meeting details to follow. It is our AGM and we will be accepting nominations for members of the committee including Chair, Secretary, Treasurer, Communications Officer, Events Officer and general committee members. Please get in touch know if you would like to put yourself forward.
We are really pleased to announce the new seesaw is in at Scholes Park. A massive thank you to the Manchester Airport community fund who funded this and congratulations to Biddy Handy who applied for the funding. With the repaired gate and new roundabout installed by the council it’s looking great.
A big thank you to the Good Gym volunteers for planting some of our bulbs in Scholes Park today. Thanks so much to the Gatley Flower Rangers, Blooming Local and others for donating the bulbs. We are doing some school group bulb planting sessions after half term.
During lock down and throughout the pandemic, many of us have realised just how important it is to have parks and green spaces in Urban areas. They provide a haven of peace and tranquillity and a break from our busy lives. They allow our children a place to play and enjoy a sense of freedom and adventure. They enable us a space for us to connect with nature which can be both life affirming and reassuring when times are difficult. A number of local residents have mentioned to me that until this year they had never fully realised how much Scholes Park offers all of this and more to them.
In 2004 a survey of the park’s natural habitat arrived at some interesting findings and a variety of trees and flowers can be found within the wooded areas of the park including mature English Oak trees dating from the 18th century, lesser Hawthorn, Blackthorn Holly and seasonal woodland flowers such as bluebells and crocuses. The small seasonal ponds are populated with frogspawn, rushes and Irises and various woodland birds in the Spring. Whilst the remnants of the garden of Gatley Hill House contain rare Black Poplar trees, Pines, Cypresses, Cedars and a Monkey Puzzle Tree. The Friends group have recently learned that an orchard once stood in the park and is shown on historical maps of the area. Whilst local residents have informed us that the park is a great haven for bats!
The Friends group would love to ensure that the park remains a sanctuary in our busy village. We hope to obtain funds to create a family wildlife trail in the forest area which will enable families to enjoy, explore and learn about nature in fun, playful and active ways. Bird and bat boxes and bug hotels will encourage local wildlife to flourish in the area and could allow us to organise community nature activities. It would be great to recreate the orchard as a community resource for individuals, schools and voluntary groups to gain access to locally grown organic food. We would love to develop the paths and allow more flowers and plants to flourish and bring more colour and interest to the park.
If you are interested in helping us to make these things happen for you and the community. Get in touch!
Thanks to everyone who attended our zoom meeting on Monday. Please find attached the minutes for info