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NDA 85/88

Some NDA 85/88 ‘Old Boys’ met up in the summer.

29th June this year: John Allen, Paddy Barker, Richard Blackhurst and Paul Christian all met up for a farm tour on Richard’s Farm and a close inspection of his onion crop, as well as a quick look at part of the fens. All looking good except his reservoir was almost empty….but the rain came just in time….

John Allen is still farming just outside Plymouth for Maristow Estates, Paul is MD of Sentry and Paddy is not doing much farming at all now due to Cemex kicking him off his tenancy and digging the farm for gravel! Luckily, the yard is not part of the quarry and the rental of farm buildings is good near Slough!

We all survived Covid, battling inflation, happy and in good health, getting greyer, and looking forward to meeting up at the college in May ’23.

Richard Blackhurst’s crop of Onions. How did they fair later on in the hot weather I wonder?

Holme Fen Posts Peterborough

These cast iron posts anomalously lurk in a birch forest. At nine feet below sea level, they mark the lowest land point in England. Once completely buried, these improvised geographical tools became gradually exposed as the peaty earth around them sank 13 feet.

The first Holme Fen Posts were commissioned by a landowner, William Wells, who was concerned about the effects of his scheme to drain a local wetland, Whittlesey Mere, on the already uniform, low-lying landscape of the East of England. Similar projects elsewhere had resulted in sunken land and the need for costly water management solutions like the Denver Sluice.

The posts were purposely driven through the soft, waterlogged peat into an underlying layer of clay to measure the rate the peat contracted due to marsh drainage. The idea was that as the peat sank the posts, firmly rooted in the solid clay below, would gradually become exposed, revealing how rapidly the otherwise homogenous landscape was falling below the level of the all-too-close North Sea. Thirty years after the first post was sunk, the land had already dropped eight feet.

The older of the two posts dates to 1851 and replaced an earlier wooden post. Its ornate nature suggests it may have been sourced from the illfated Crystal Palace in London. The later post dates to 1957, and like its older sibling was originally totally buried up to its top as a simple but effective way of measuring how the drying out of the land affects its height.

Thanks lads. Great pictures.

Richard Blackhurst and Paul Christian beside one of the Holme Posts

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