Category Archives: Uncategorized

Wildflower meadow developing

This year there has been a great development in the meadows along Shirehampton Road. Since the Council stopped regularly mowing them their intention has been to let these areas turn to wild flower meadow, but it takes time for native species to establish.

This year there has been a rise in the amount of Yellow Rattle in parts of the park which is a great addition. Yellow Rattle is a semi-parasitic wild flower that saps nutrients from the soil making it harder for grasses to grow. In turn this enables other wild flowers to come up through the greensward where they would otherwise be suffocated by dense grass. Many wild flowers prefer less nutrient rich soils so the Yellow Rattle is a welcome arrival which will enable the meadows to thrive.

Historic painting discoveries

We have been continuing our research into the history of Kings Weston and hunting down material from more and more obscure sources. This included a recent foray to Neath and the Neath Antiquarian Society where we discovered a pair of very interesting watercolour paintings.
The artist and date are unknown, but they are likely to date to the early Nineteenth Century, around 1800-1820. One is particularly interesting as it is the only known view of Kingsweston Inn from this period. Its early form is clear from the painting showing it with its central tower (viewing point?) before victorian modifications reduced it in scale and replaced it with a gable. It isn’t entirely clear in the artists depiction whether the cutting and iron bridge have been constructed, but this occurred in 1821 and the implication seems to be that these pre-date that.
The other painting, clearly the pair to the one of Kingsweston Inn, shows Park Lodge just below it on Shirehampton Road. The lodge there today, now a listed building, replaced this earlier cottage at the gates to the private parkland. We were delighted to be able to add to the catalogue description of this item for the Neath Antiquarian Society as this painting had lost any identification of it’s location, but is similar to another painting held in the Bristol Record Office.

 

Park Lodge, Shirehampton Road, c. 1800-1820. Courtesy of Neath Antiquarian Society

Park Lodge, Shirehampton Road, c. 1800-1820. Courtesy of Neath Antiquarian Society

YOUTH ART NOW!

An exhibition is  running at Kings Weston House between the 3rd and 11th June shows what the youth of nearby Lawrence Weston hope their area can be put back on the map. Come along and see what the future might hold or maybe join them on 9th June when the Lord Mayor will attend and award the prizes. Cafe opening hours are 9:30am-4pm
Youth Art Exhibition

WILD AND FREE! A family activity day

Announcing our next event! Wild and Free!
SUNDAY 6th July will be WILD AND FREE at Kings Weston! Wild and Free is being held in partnership with Bristol Natural History Consortium and the National Trust and will be a day of family focussed events running from 11am to 4pm. The event will be focussed on the Circle, close to the end of Shirehampton Road car park. Come along on a bug hunt with our experts and see what you can uncover, or join in with our Nature Artefacts Roadshow by bringing along your strange and unusual nature finds for identification, or even just something you want to learn more about.
Nature walks will run at 12pm and 2pm and help you discover the natural highlights and habitats of the Kings Weston woodlands. Or take a grab-bag and lead your own expedition, bringing back your discoveries and see how many you can collect from our identification sheets. Wild and Free should be a good woodland romp for the whole family in the company of knowledgeable experts to help uncover the park’s hidden ecology.

NEW EVENT!

Join us on a walking tour of the historic Kings Weston estate.
SATURDAY, MAY 3rd, 2014
Starting at 10:30 from Shirehampton Road public car park

The walk will take in many familiar, and less well known parts of the landscaped parkland offering new insights into the history of the house and estate based on the Kings Weston Action Group’s newest discoveries. Discover the story behind the Scouts’ Chapel, find out about famous visitors, and uncover the ruins of lost monuments. David Martyn of KWAG will guide you through four Centuries of the history of Kings Weston, shedding light on the people that created it and the legacy they left.History Walking Tour

Walk is 1¾ miles, takes approx 2½ hours & finishes at the house cafe.
Places cost £5. All proceeds go towards helping Kings Weston estate
Booking essential as spaces limited. Children under 16 are free and
well behaved dogs on leads are welcome.

To book or for further information contact KWAG
tel: 07811 6666 71
email: kwactiongroup@gmail.comhistory walking tour

New Working Party location for 12th April

Following our three-month attack on the brambles and undergrowth at Penpole Point we are moving our attention to an easier spot this month. We will be running our working party THIS SATURDAY starting at 10am from Shirehampton Road car park and tackling undergrowth and self-seeded saplings along the main avenue leading towards Kings Weston House just here.

This months task will be a lot easier than recent and involve removing self-seeded saplings and undergrowth that are challenging the growth of the ancient avenue trees. Hopefully nowhere near as many brambles!

As usual we ask that volunteers make sure they are wearing suitable clothing and footwear for the event and please do come along with your own tools if you would prefer to use them. We should have a supply of tools and gloves available if you don’t have your own.  Please provide your own lunch, or feel free to come along any time during the event. If you look out for one of KWAG’s event coordinators and report when you arrive we will be wearing out KWAG polo shirts.

Hope to see you there!

 

Incredible history of Bristol’s Kings Weston revealed in new plan


Inspirational new plan launches in important anniversary year.

A full twenty years has passed since the first attempt at a conservation strategy for the historic Kings Weston Estate in the north of Bristol. Now a new plan has been launched by Bristol City Council coinciding with the 350th anniversary of Sir John Vanbrugh, the architect behind some of the park’s most distinctive buildings.

The new Conservation Management Plan (CMP), has been produced by the city council’s Urban Design Group with match-funding from Bristol Buildings Preservation Trust (BBPT), and with major contributions made by members of the Kings Weston Action Group (KWAG).

The parkland around Grade I Listed Kings Weston house is a Registered Historic Landscape, but has lain largely neglected and poorly understood for many years. Most of the 300 acre park came into the full ownership of Bristol City Council only in 1996 with the 80 acres of the Shirehampton Park portion of the estate being owned by the National Trust. In recent years the council, BBPT and latterly the volunteer Kings Weston Action Group have been working closely together to promote, conserve and enhance it.

The new CMP is a colourful and detailed document that sheds new light on the history and importance of Kings Weston as, perhaps, Bristol’s most important historic landscape, though it’s main aim is to detail ambitious new aspirations for its future conservation. The park contains at least five buildings designed by Sir John Vanbrugh, one of the greatest architects of the Eighteenth Century, most famous for Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard. 2014 marks the 350th anniversary of his birth and Bristol can lay claim to one of the most significant collections of his buildings in the country.

Councillor Gus Hoyt, Assistant Mayor with responsibility for Environment and Neighbourhood Partnerships, said: “This document is an important piece of work, the result of a great deal of work by officers, multiple council administrations, the Bristol Buildings Preservation Trust and volunteers.  It is a credit to all sides, and a plan which makes clear the historic and architectural importance to Bristol of this area.

“Bristol City Council, which has supported the creation of the plan, is keen to continue to work with the action group to support their efforts to gain funding in order support future conservation work.” 

David Martyn, Chairman of the Kings Weston Action Group said: “We’re delighted that this new plan is complete. It’s the road-map for the future we’ve been waiting for, and it’s now our aim to work with the City to seek out funding and come up with a plan to realise the aspirations.

“This is a major landmark for Kings Weston, but we hope it’s just the beginning of bigger things. We’re indebted to the City and Bristol Buildings Preservation Trust for having commissioned it, and this anniversary year couldn’t have been a better time to launch it.”

Councillor Anthony Negus is Chair of the Bristol Buildings Preservation Trust and as a former council Executive Member worked to kick-start and secure funding for the project.  He said: “As a former conservation architect I am acutely aware of the importance of this estate, which is undoubtedly one of the finest in the country.  In all my years I have never seen such a high quality and detailed Conservation Management Plan, and I am very thankful to everyone who put their time and efforts in to it, particularly the dedicated staff of the council’s conservation and estates teams.

“I am very proud to have worked on the project from the outset and to see it completed is a real joy.”

KWAG shared all of its own research with the City Council, much of which has now been incorporated in the CMP, and offered continuous advice, community consultation, and feedback since the plan was commissioned by the council in 2011. The CMP will be available free to download from both the Bristol City Council’s and KWAG’s website for everyone to enjoy.

It can be viewed online at www.bristol.gov.uk/kingswestonestate or www.kwag.org.uk. 

Golden rewards

The last couple of weeks has been an explosion of gold at Kings Weston and rich reward for our efforts in clearing below the viewing terrace the last few months of 2013. A bit of an unconventional before-and-after to remind you what the scene was just in December and what it looked like on a sunny Saturday just three months later. The daffodils had been planted in about 1994 by the Kingsweston Preservation Society, but had been engulfed by brambles and lost. They have certainly made up for lost time this year!

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Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Early spring buttercups in front of the newly revealed main front of Kings Weston House

Early spring celandine in front of the newly revealed main front of Kings Weston House

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.

Daffodils abound below the viewing terrace and old Inn overlooking Shirehampton Road.