A Week on the Estate: Georgina’s Grafters, Working Outdoors & Frosty Rolling
We hope you find you safe and well after a week of fog, frost and bone fide winter weather. In the coming week, we’re set to swap a freezing north-easterly weather system for a milder and damper south-westerly with highs of 12C and lows of 3C. Wednesday 21st December marks the winter solstice with only 7h28m of daylight at our latitude.
Undaunted by the gloom and chill, we’re hard at work on the land. It turns out that a good cold snap is ideal for rolling volunteer beans as frost inhibits their growth. Finding a positive use for midwinter weather in preference to using agricultural chemicals is one facet of our organic approach.
You may know Jo as hostess of our delightful afternoon teas, but she’s versatile and doesn’t mind the cold! Hedge-planting season is here and Jo is one of the hard-working team-members getting stuck in. We’re progressively replacing fencing with hedgerows that will act as wildlife corridors, both hosting and spreading biodiversity. Estate records go back a fair way and tell us that our field numbers dropped from 170 in 1888 to 96 in 2018, a pattern consistent with post-war farming practices. We’ve been working hard to reverse this trend and do better for nature. We’ve planted more than 6km since 2019 and we’re still going.
On Lime Tree Walk, Thomas spotted a green sandpiper (Tringa ochropus). Classed as a passage migrant, this bird is only encountered as a winter visitor. When their sub-arctic breeding grounds freeze, green sandpipers move on to Southern Europe, the tropics and, occasionally, the UK. Favoured British attractions for these rare tourists are marshes, rivers, flooded gravel pits and sewage works. If you spot one in our neck of the woods, do let us know.
For this week’s staff profile, we caught up with Georgina Routh, veteran of the South Ormsby Estate graduate scheme and brand-new Graduate Placement Officer and Saturday Club Manager. She gave us the low-down on making soap, planting vines, working with teenagers, scheduling graduates and getting things done outdoors.
“My dad was in the army and I mostly grew up in Bristol and Devon,” said Georgina. “His final posting was in Lincolnshire and we moved to the edge of the Wolds in 2016. I studied English Literature at the University of Sussex near Brighton. I’ve always been a bit of a book nerd and decent with the written word. I thought I’d go into editing and publishing but I decided half-way through my degree that I really wanted to work outdoors.