News and Events

Aug 2023 – things to do in your garden

Although August is the last true month of summer, the garden and veg plot are still at their best.

Some plants to enjoy in August

  • Callistemon- (the bottle brush plant) is native to Australia, but the shrubs are now popular ornamental shrubs due to their vivid flower spikes. Grow in a warm, sheltered spot.
  • Echinacea – these hardy perennials give borders late flowering colour. 
  • Lychnis coronaria – (rose campion) these magenta flowered plants thrive in the heat and will produce the best leaf colour in dry soils. Deadhead regularly to prolong the display. 
  • Phygelius – (cape fuchsia) ideal for subtropical borders and pot displays. The flowers should last into September, if dead-headed regularly.
  • Phlox – hardy and reliable herbaceous perennials, phlox are a late-summer essential. Cut back to the ground when the foliage begins turning yellow in late autumn. 
  • Veronicastrum – (Culver’s root)  elegant perennials with tall flower spikes, loved by pollinators. They grow best in damp but well-drained soil.
  • Bergamot (monarda) has mounds of foliage topped by dazzling red, pink or purple blooms. The aromatic leaves give off a lovely, spicy fragrance when crushed. too. 
Photo by Adrianna Calvo on Pexels.com

General Garden Maintenance

• Now that this year’s nesting season is over for the birds, cut and prune hedges into shape.
• Summer prune Wisteria to encourage flowers next year, by cutting off the long whippy growth and unwanted laterals at the base.
• Prune shrubs like Weigela, Philadelphus and Choisya which have flowered earlier in the season, to reshape the shrub and encourage growth for next year
• As the summer goes on the Roses become more prone to black spot. Collect the fallen infected leaves and destroy (not in the compost bin) and spray to control the disease.
• After flowering, trim spent flowers from Lavender and clip the plant into neat shape. This will help to keep the plant in a good shape for the next year.
• Dead-head your flowers frequently to ensure your summer display continues to bloom for as long as possible.


Flowerbeds and Pots

• Ericaceous shrubs such as Camellias and Rhododendrons are now forming their flower buds ready for next spring’s display. If August is dry, the plants will have fewer and smaller buds, so water well to avoid this. If you have not fed your ericaceous shrubs yet, catch up by feeding in August and September using a proprietary ericaceous feed.
• Cut late flowering Lavender for drying, choosing newly opened flowers for the best fragrance and hang up in a cool, dark place.

• Give Dahlias a liquid feed and tie the shoots of tall varieties to sturdy stakes as they grow.

• Keeping hoeing and hand-weed borders so weeds don’t have time to set seed.

• Water and feed sweet peas regularly, pick the flowers every few days and remove seed pods.
• Plant autumn bulbs, including Nerines, in pots and borders.

• Feed, water and deadhead summer bedding regularly, in pots, borders and hanging baskets.

• Cut back early summer perennials, such as hardy Geraniums and Delphiniums, after flowering for a second flush.

• Feed and deadhead roses to keep them flowering strongly.

• Pick off flowers on Coleus plants to maintain their colourful leaves.

• Sow biennials, such as Foxgloves, Honesty, Forget-me-nots and Wallflowers, for blooms next year.

Fruit and Vegetables

• Continue to harvest beans, courgettes and salads regularly.
• In hot weather hose down the greenhouse floor in the morning to control temperatures.
• It is possible to get a second crop of broad beans. When the broad bean plant has finished, cut down the stem close to the ground to about 15 cms near a growing point and give it a feed. It should re-grow and produce a second, smaller crop.
• There is still time to sow quick growing salad crops such as Lettuce, Rocket and radish.
• Onions, Garlic and Shallots should be ready to harvest by the end of the month. When it goes brown, bend over the top growth and ease the bulbs out of the earth carefully, resting them on soil to dry out before bringing in for storage.
• Onions must be stored in the light, so in a greenhouse would be ideal. They must be bone dry before being stored. If damp, they will rot.
• Garlic is similar, wait till the top growth turns brown, usually in late August. Store in a dry and light spot in the warmth, rather than a cold area.
• Keep feeding tomato plants and watering regularly. Remove excess leaves to encourage fruit production and pinch out the top growing point to stop the plant growing any taller.
• Maincrop potatoes can be harvested once they have flowered and should be ready to harvest in late August. You can leave them in the ground for a while after the top growth has died back.
• Carrots can get “green shoulders” caused by the carrot pushing up in the soil. In order to prevent this, put some soil or compost around the top of the carrots which are exposed to the light.

New 86 bus timetable from 3rd Sept

The 86 bus service which comes though Alpington and Yelverton will have an amended timetable from 3rd September.

It is following this consultation. However, they have mentioned that should anyone wish to comment further at this stage, they can email yard@ourhire.co.uk 01493 752223.

In a nutshell for our village and Bergh Apton the highlights are:

The early morning bus through the village is proposed to be retimed and rerouted to serve Poringland and Arminghall.  Arrive Alpington 07:53 arriving in Norwich at 08:15. This will enable students to use the service to attend Fram Earl HS

(currently service is arrive Alpington 07:27 arrive Norwich 07:45 – via A146)

There is also an additional service leaving Norwich at 15:00 via Arminghall and Poringland which will ensure students are able to get home again.  

Yelverton Pond Project seeks expressions of interest from local contractors

Yelverton Pond Project – New Seating Area and Accessible Path

Alpington with Yelverton Parish Council would like to invite interest from local contractors who wish to be considered for this important parish project.

The completed works will create a new seating area and ramped access at the side of the pond which is located on Framingham Earl Road, Yelverton. A full design and specification pack is available and will be issued to contractors with suitable experience, health and safety practices, appropriate insurances and satisfactory references.

An image of the plan is downloadable below.

In the first instance please contact the Parish Clerk with your credentials and we’ll be in touch soon.

clerk.alpington@gmail.com

Bin collections unchanged for Alpington and Yelverton on w/c 28th Aug

A message from South Norfolk Council about the bin collections on the bank holiday week, commencing Monday 28th Aug:

“There will be no delayed collections of any materials w/c 28 August 2023, due to the bank holiday we WILL be collecting Garden Waste bins for those scheduled Monday 28 August and all other collections days will remain the same.”

To keep up to date with bin collections please download the South Norfolk Bin Collections app: http://ow.ly/u83j50Nw2cX

Alternatively, you can find bin collections dates at: http://ow.ly/riFs50Nw2cY

Hyperfast Full Fibre Broadband for Alpington and Yelverton – Initial Information

You might have seen from a recent flyer through your door from County Broadband, plans are in motion to bring much faster more reliable broadband to the village, and this post gives all the initial details.

The bottom line is that if the village project is to go ahead, they need 25% of households to preorder, which involves no money or bank details, it is just sending an email with your name address and email address.

It’s well worth a proper read, as there are some benefits to pre-ordering (which is just a simple email, it does not involve any payment or card details). In my opinion a key point to note is that if you’re in a contract (as most of us probably are), as long as you preorder, you can see out your contract while you’re on the new fibre connection, and then start paying for the new system straight after. So in other words you won’t pay for 2 contracts at any point, it’s one then the other.

This project is supported by the Parish Council, who have been involved from the start.

The details below are from County Broadband themselves:


Introduction

Dear Village Residents

You may be currently aware that we are looking to upgrade your current network to help bring hyperfast full Fibre to the property broadband (FTTP) to Alpington & Yelverton.

My name is Daniel and I am the project lead for your village. Therefore, if you have any questions moving forward after reading the information below, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Our major shareholders are Aviva, last year we had a our second phase investment , totalling £100m, with recognition from the Government on this historic milestone as we roll out our full Fibre network. Here is the link where you can see the details:

https://countybroadband.co.uk/100m-investment-aviva-investors-2022/

Gigabit Broadband Voucher Scheme (GBVS) – (free installation)

We can offer you an entirely free installation of the brand-new network. The Government pledged that by 2030 they want every UK business and residential property to be able to access gigabit capable broadband. Its apart of a scheme called the gigabit voucher scheme meaning they cover the cost of the installation so it’s free for the rural villages who unfortunately get left out of larger ISP upgrades. Here is the link to the official Government website.

https://www.gov.uk/business-finance-support/gigabit-broadband-voucher-scheme-gbvs-uk

If you are unsure of the difference between copper and Full Fibre to the Property, please see the details below.

What is the villages’ current infrastructure?

From our research, the current provision is very poor and there are no plans from other providers to rectify this with a full fibre connection.

Your current provision in the area is called an FTTC connection (fibre to the cabinet). This means that there is a fibre cable from the exchange building into the green cabinet in your area, but to your home, zigzagging under the road or on poles overhead is a copper cable that currently delivers your broadband and landline service. Copper is causing a lot of problems currently such as:

·       Unreliable – at certain times speeds are very low or signal is dropping out since the majority of the village is all sharing the same network.

·       Copper is degrading – it was built 50+ years ago to carry phone signals not broadband.

·       Working at its maximum capacity – currently the best speed anyone in the area can get is only 80mbps along a copper connection but that is a very small minority and usually directly next to the green cabinet.

·       No choice of going faster – whichever provider you go with such as BT, EE, TalkTalk etc will all use the same copper cable as no one else is building a full fibre network.

·       Distance – from the green cabinet hugely affects speed. The further the data signal has to face, the higher the resistance of the degrading copper.

What are County Broadband building and why is it better?

We are building a brand-new infrastructure with new fibre cables delivering a full fibre network, with no copper in whatsoever. The benefits of having a full fibre connection rather than copper are:

  • Over 10x faster speeds.
  • Much more reliable as not so much of a ‘fight’ for the network.
  • Fibre is designed to carry broadband and cannot degrade as it is a laser passing through a glass tube, so distance is irrelevant from the green cabinet too.
  • Choose how fast you want to go (slower speed is cheaper than faster speed)
  • Future proof your home – Once it is installed, you have the potential to go as fast as you would like to.
  • Add value to your home – broadband is now of vital importance when purchasing a house since the global pandemic (people working from home etc).
  • Technology within our homes is getting more advanced and faster, thus requiring faster speeds from our broadband.
  • Save money – our basic package could be cheaper than your current package for a faster, more reliable, and future proof solution.

About Our ‘Pre-order’

This is completely free to place, we do not take bank details or do any credit checks, only details needed is simply the address of the property, name, and email address to place a ‘Pre Order’.

Why Pre-Order the service instead of waiting until the network has been built?

  • Free standard installation (Those who join after the network has been built have to pay install costs which start at £225+)
  • Free high spec router (worth £150)
  • 24 months completely free on our service whilst you see out your existing contract
  • Ensure your property is secured within our build

How to Pre-order

To preorder, please send an email to daniel.watson@countybroadband.co.uk, saying ‘I would like to preorder fibre broadband for the rollout in the Alpington area’. And include the following details:

Our Fibre Plans

Full Fibre – 100mbps – £34.99 per month for 24 months or £39.99 for 12 months

Full Fibre – 200mbps – £36.99 per month for 24 months or £40.99 for 12 months

Full Fibre – 300mbps – £38.99 per month for 24 months or £42.99 for 12 months – (Most desirable package)

Full Fibre – 600mbps – £44.99 per month for 24 months or £59.99 for 12 months

Full Fibre – 900mbps – £49.99 per month for 24 months or £74.99 for 12 months

Phone Plans

Everyone who pre-orders a full fibre plan will receive a free VOIP phone line with unlimited inbound calls and outbound calls at 10p per minute. For those customers who are still actively using their landlines and feel they will need a call plan to keep costs fixed can choose from the following;

Phone basic – unlimited landline calls for £6 per month
Phone standard – unlimited landline and mobile calls for £13 per month
Phone international – unlimited landline, mobile and international calls for £17 per month

*Please note all these prices listed above are time limited and are at a fixed price throughout the entirety of the contract*

Here is the link to our website: https://countybroadband.co.uk

Further Information and Contact Details

If you would like to contact me further regarding any questions concerns or queries, please get in touch as I’m here to help.

Please contact me on either of the following

Email: Daniel.watson@countybroadband.co.uk

Phone: 07538 399903

Alpington & Yelverton Coronation Celebrations

On Sunday May 7th, Alpington and Yelverton celebrated King Charles III’s Coronation with a ‘Street Party’ held at the Wheel of Fortune pub and garden.

We were fortunate that the weather turned out lovely that afternoon meaning that people could enjoy a picnic in the pub garden or a hot snack from Broadland Bars and a cake from Jasmine Cakery.  The children had fun running around the garden and using the play equipment whilst the adults could enjoy a drink or two in the sunshine.

We were entertained to lively sing-a-long tunes by ukulele group Jelly & the Biscuits and gave three cheers to His Majesty.

There was a great turnout for the event and our raffle raised £172 for the Norwich Foodbank.

Thank you to the small team of villagers who organised the event, put up bunting, and decorated tables and the marquee and then helped clear it all up, and thanks to Barry and Naomi at the Wheel of Fortune for hosting the event and Jelly & the Biscuits for entertaining us.

Norfolk Day Photo Competition – £500 prize – deadline 14th July

From Norfolk Community Foundation:

We’re inviting charities and voluntary groups in Norfolk to send in their photos capturing community projects in their area, showcasing community action and spirit.

The winning entry will receive a £500 cash prize, with a second prize of £300 and a third prize of £200 available.

Following shortlisting and then decision by an expert panel, the winning images will be announced to celebrate Norfolk Day on Thursday 27th July 2023. Three winners will receive a cash prize of up to £500 to support the work of their community group and we aim to feature as many entries as possible throughout our work during the next year.

Deadline for submission is Friday 14th July 2023.

Further details on the website below:

Norfolk Day photo competition 2023