Tag: Bradley Stoke

  • A walk through Bradley Stoke

    A walk through Bradley Stoke

    Introduction

    It’s said that ‘you don’t know what you have until it’s gone’. This year a spinal injury forced an overnight transition from being very active to almost housebound for several months. All photography had to be curtailed and mentally that’s been tough. It’s also said that ’with absence the heart grows fonder’. I now, more than ever, recognise that being outdoors photographing our beautiful landscape is a passion of mine. So, it’s been a joy these last few weeks to again be outdoors with a camera and, fingers crossed, on a return to health.

    Maybe it’s an idea that’s been growing subconsciously during those darker days when I really didn’t know if I’d be carrying camera and tripod again but I currently seem to have an elevated liking for the dark, black and white style commonly known as Film noir. It’s a visual style should be familiar to most people, even if not by name. Think moody, dramatically shadowed, 1940/50s black and white movies with a private detective and femme fatale. Looking back now, I see it’s a style I’ve explored before with Cornish Tin mines and, whilst not so much Film noir, contrasty black and white’s of the Neolithic stones at Avebury.

    Route

    The route should be easily identifiable from the photographs by those familiar with the area. It went along Brook Way to the Aldi roundabout, detoured to Tesco Extra before passing through the nature reserve down to the duck ponds and then under the road bridge before rejoining Brook Way at the Sherbourne’s Brake roundabout. It’s about 5km and so isn’t a major undertaking.

    So, with camera in-hand and set to black and white mode I set off around my local area with only a mid-range zoom deciding to leave camera bag and tripod at home. In mind was the idea of a warts and all, slightly grungy feel to any images, something that should work well in a Film noir style.

    Wonky

    I’ve walked the route countless times over the years but on this occasion, for some reason, I was greatly amused by the sheer number of signposts many of which lean slightly one way or another. With their text, arrows or coloured symbols they stand atop short grey rusting poles littering the landscape with no apparent regard to their aesthetic or visual impact. Along Brook Way they seem to outnumber the trees!

    Wonky signage

    I’m glad to write that some signage, specifically that for the ‘Three Brooks local nature reserve’ has clearly been given greater thought with its lettering elegantly carved into large timbers. But, disappointingly, planted alongside these nice signs are ugly, plastic footpath/cycle-path signage and yet more of the ubiquitous grey poles. Yes, I’m having a moan but is all this ugly signage really necessary?

    At the top of the route near the Aldi roundabout are some shops and a telephone box. The box is of a generation prior to deregulation when British Telecom managed the UK telephone system as opposed to the more well known, red coloured, traditional Post Office telephone boxes. Again I found myself having a giggle as it, together with adjacent signage and fencing, was so off-level that it was a struggle to know just what was level!

    Three Brooks Nature Reserve

    Three Brooks local nature reserve

    Walking through the nature reserve the scenery changed from urban clutter to something more natural and pleasing to the eye. Alongside the main track running through the reserve are three wooden benches hewn from the trunks of trees presumably cut when, or soon after, the reserve was created. Wood ages beautifully and these benches are no exception. Although their once fresh, elaborate carvings have softened with age they are still great features adding character to the reserve. It’s also great to see that new carvings are still being created. During 2023 in woodland behind the sports centre an Owl was carved by artist Andy O’Neil. This beautiful creation sits at eye level atop its wooden stump and looks incredibly realistic!

    Sometimes when walking through the reserve small groups from the Three Brooks Nature Conservation Group are encountered. If you see them, stop and say ‘hello’ as they are all volunteers and doing a wonderful job at looking after the reserve for us all. On a different but recent walk I stopped and had a most enjoyable chat with Sara who was incredibly knowledgeable and keen to talk about the flora, fauna and the work of volunteers.

    Wrap-up

    Back in the office the images were uploaded, developed and Film noir styled using Capture One and Silver Effects from DxO. Looking at them now, as a collection, I quite like the Film noir styling; it’s helped add a little drama to what could otherwise be some quite mundane images. I especially like the resulting detail on the Three Brooks signage, fence and dead tree.

    The full collection of images from the walk are below.

    Andy

    My previous posts regarding Bradley Stoke and the Three Brooks nature reserve are available to read at:

    1. Autumn in Savages Wood

    2. Three Brooks Nature Reserve

    3. Bradley Stoke snow


    Select an image to view at a larger size:

  • Autumn in Savages Wood

    Autumn in Savages Wood

    As readers of my previous post will know, Savages Wood is a small woodland in the Three Brooks Nature Reserve. It’s my closest woodland and I spent a little time walking its numerous paths amongst trips to more extensive but distant woodland and forests this Autumn.

    First a little lesson. Healthy tree leaves produce a substance called chlorophyll; chlorophyll absorbs all but green light hence leaves typically appear green! But, when the chlorophyll content reduces other colours, especially yellows, become visible. This reduction in chlorophyll occurs when the amount of sunlight reduces and temperatures start to decline. We know this time as Autumn.

    The main factors contributing to the intensity of non-green colours are the tree species, the temperature over time profile, the amount of light and the moisture content of the soil. With so many factors it’s not surprising that the same tree can look very different from year to year! These factors also highlight why, for example, trees in Northern England generally change colour and drop their leaves before trees in Southern England or why the change may appear as several waves over a few weeks.

    Anyway, lesson over. Autumn in Savages Wood appeared to peak during the third-week of October and pretty much to schedule – perhaps early by a week or two at most. Considering the dry and at times very hot weather that shouldn’t have been a surprise but through September and early October I did feel somewhat unclear what Autumn would look like and when it would occur this year.

    The walking of dogs is very popular and based on my experience it’s probably what brings most people into the wood. Making photographs with a large camera and tripod takes time and the process is very different to taking quick snaps. So, it was a pleasure to meet and say ‘hello’ to some lovely dogs and their owners who passed by once, twice or more times whilst I was waiting on the light to change and/or the wind to drop.

    Below are a few photographs of Savages Wood this Autumn. For those that know the woodland well you may spot that whilst developing I’ve removed the graffiti from the tree I call the ‘Tuning fork’. Unfortunelty, this was only possible on the photograph!

    Andy


  • Three Brooks Nature Reserve

    Three Brooks Nature Reserve

    The Three Brooks Nature Reserve is the gem of Bradley Stoke. At 110 acres (roughly 62 football pitches) it provides a biologically diverse, green space for the community. The history of the reserve may be less well-known and I for one originally assumed it was contemporary with the 1980’s commencement of home building. Whilst that’s true, the reserve does enclose areas with much longer histories.

    Is three the magic number? As its name suggests the reserve includes three brooks – Patchway Brook, Bradley Brook and Stoke Brook – but also three woods: Webb’s Wood, Savage’s Wood and Sherborne’s Brake. The name Four Brooks Nature Reserve is, perhaps, more appropriate though as the Southern end of what is today Patchway Brook was once called Hortham Brook. In 2007 a small Community Orchard was also planted; located in the heart of the reserve and just to the East of Bradley Stoke Community School. So, technically, the magic number is four!

    Webb’s Wood is on the North side of Stoke Brook near the lake and is probably the oldest wood within the reserve. Sherbourne’s Brake sits at the South Western edge of the reserve near the junction between Braydon Avenue, Brook Way and Orpheus Avenue and is considered to be roughly 200 years old. Today Savage’s Wood covers the largest area, contains a small pond and the tallest trees.

    The National Library of Scotland has an excellent website that allows maps from different times to be overlaid and their transparency adjusted to enable easy comparison. Comparing a modern map against, for example, the an Ordnance Survey Six inch map from 1888 – 1913 identifies just how much has changed and, very surprisingly, how much has remained the same with many old field boundaries still delineating either housing developments or modern roads. Be warned tho. Comparing current-day features with a previous era is a wonderfully engrossing journey into history!

    Apple bench
    Apple bench

    As a UK landscape/nature photographer who has lived in Bradley Stoke for 20+ years the reserve provides me with a local space that is easily accessible were I can relax, exercise and just be outdoors. Certainly, during the last couple of years and the various pandemic restrictions its been a great resource which I know is appreciated by many more in the community than it was prior to 2020. Sometime in the summer of 2020 I recall speaking to someone who confessed, that although she knew the lake and reserve existed, she had never before visited. Perhaps that’s a benefit of the pandemic, we were all forced to explore our local communities a little more.

    The Tump
    The Tump

    One of my favourite parts of the reserve is the Tump. It’s a man-made hill created from the spoil of the second Severn crossing, now known as The Prince of Wales bridge. From the surrounding area it’s an unassuming little hillock, something you hardly notice but climb to the top and you get some great and quite different views across Bradley Stoke and Gloucestershire over to the Southern edge of the Cotswolds. A little height makes a big difference!

    Walking on the Tump is always interesting. In places, due to weather and human activity its surface is gradually eroding and, as it does, objects are starting to surface. I’ve certainly noticed a small vehicle tyre emerging from the ground a little more as each year passes and there are also items I don’t quite yet recognise! There is something that looks like the top – perhaps a rocker cover – of an engine as well as more identifiable objects such as stone piping and bricks. Please don’t get the impression it looks like a rubbish tip tho; it has been left alone and its top is now a grassland home to wildlife comprising a few trees and lots of wild flowers – Red Campion, Wood Anemone and Ragwort to name a few.

    White flower
    White flower

    In addition to the main path on its Western side, there is a small path from its North-East corner. This path winds its way North through the woods between the M4 motorway and Patchway Brook passing the junction with Hortham Brook before finally emerging at the stone bridge crossing Patchway Brook. It’s a less trodden and probably lesser known path but a great path nonetheless as it provides a wonderful alternative to the well-trodden, motorway that is the main stoney path to its West.

    Webb’s Wood is another of my favourite spots; perhaps because the bluebells were in full-swing when I first visited, perhaps because its so easily missed when passing along the well-worn track to/from the lake. On casual glance it appears to be no more than a few trees by the side of Stoke Brook but force yourself off the track and into the wood and you’ll discover a really pretty little wood with some of the best bluebells in the reserve. Continue through the wood to it’s East-side and you find a hidden, almost secret little clearing.

    Looking after our reserve is the Three Brooks Nature Conservation Group and their working-parties are sometimes seen managing the reserve. If you would like to assist I’m sure they would be grateful. See links below.

    I’ve illustrated this article with photographs captured during the last few years in the reserve. The image grid below contains the images used above plus others which didn’t fit within the text. Click on images to see the full-size version. To see my photographic work from around the UK please visit Andy Gawthrope Photography.

    Andy


    All images are Copyright Andy Gawthrope Photography.

  • Bradley Stoke snow

    Bradley Stoke snow

    It’s not often it snows at home and thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic we currently are not allow to travel outside our local area here in England. In more normal times I would have travelled to other, more interesting, locations such as Dartmoor. But, this opportunity couldn’t be ignored so, my local woodland area was what it had to be.

    There is a lot to be said for local photography especially in Winter. The sun doesn’t rise until 0800hrs and its quick and easy to roll out of bed, breakfast and arrive on-location in plenty of time. I arrived at my first location, before sunrise and, importantly, before anyone else came to see and play in the fresh snow. 🙂

    Beneth some trees was a small patch of ice containing shapes which immedietly made me think: virus. Sad that it was the first thought that crossed my mind, but I guess, given the pandemic is shouldn’t have been a surprise. I could imagine them silently multiplying until they had consumed the ice like tiny preditors. The largest one seemed poised to devour a little patch of grass and snow near the base of the photograph.

    Three hours later and the snow was well trodden, sledged and melting fast. But I had managed to get out and make some nice photographs. My favourites are below. Click on them to enlarge.

    Andy


    All images are Copyright Andy Gawthrope Photography.