Stay updated with breaking news from ஹோலின்ஸ் பண்ணை. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
A demolition job, new homes, and an extension project â five interesting plans A demolition job, new homes, and an extension project are just some of the many applications submitted to Bucks Council in the last week. Here is a selection of just some of the latest plans that the council’s planning officers will now decide. Listed building application for internal damp remediation and single-storey rear extension - 21/07078/LBC Tracey Wainwright, of Battram Associates, has submitted to Bucks Council an application for St Peter’s Cottage, Ellesborough Road, Butler’s Cross. Plans detail ‘internal damp redress and a ground-floor extension for a shower room’. ....
LAND managers have spent the past three years planting, or bringing into ‘appropriate management’, hedgerows and woodlands either side of Freeholders’ Wood at Aysgarth Falls, where dormice were reintroduced in 2008. Farmers have even planted brambles – a plant they might usually regard as a thorny nuisance – in order to provide the mammals with late season fruit. Although now formally completed, the impact of the three-year ‘Wensleydale Dormouse Project’ will be monitored. Simple tubes, containing inked pads, have been hung in hedges to track how far the dormice spread out from their Aysgarth stronghold. “Local people have really taken to hazel dormice,” said project officer Phill Hibbs. “School children at Bainbridge studied them during lockdown, so they’ll know that the dormice are about to wake up from their winter torpor, while local landowners – particularly Stuart Raw at Hollins Farm and Tom Orde-Powlett of the Bolton Estate – ha ....
Hazel dormouse in hand. Picture: Clare Pengelly WOODS and hedgerows across a 9.5 kilometre stretch of mid-Wensleydale have been connected to create an ideal home for the endangered Hazel Dormouse. Land managers have spent the past three years planting, or bringing into ‘appropriate management’, hedgerows and woodlands either side of Freeholders’ Wood at Aysgarth Falls, where dormice were reintroduced in 2008. Farmers have even planted brambles – plants they might usually regard as a thorny nuisance – in order to provide the mammals with late season fruit. Although now formally completed, the impact of the three-year ‘Wensleydale Dormouse Project’ will be monitored. Simple tubes, containing inked pads, have been hung in hedges to track how far the dormice spread out from their Aysgarth stronghold. ....