Encouraging wildlife in the garden

If you are looking for a cost-effective and low maintenance option to support and encourage all types of wildlife such as frogs, newts, dragonflies and bathing garden birds, it is possible to create a pond using a buried bucket or trough, with stone steps or a wooden ramp for in and out access – it will essentially serve the same purpose as a more lavish pond.

For an option that works for any sized garden, consider a bird box. Blue tits and house sparrows will flock to a bird box attached to the wall of a house. By providing food for birds in your garden, you can help ensure local species continue to thrive. When it comes to bird food, it is best to start by filling one feeder with sunflower hearts and another with peanuts. But bear in mind that diets vary greatly across different species. For example, sparrows and goldfinches enjoy seeds whereas woodpeckers aren’t seed eaters at all – they prefer peanuts, fat, and even mealworms. While many birds will visit a seed feeder, they all have their preferences. Blue tits will seek out fat and suet, while great tits and robins opt for mealworms. Then again song birds such as blackbirds and thrushes prefer fruit.

In the UK, hedgehogs tend to come out of hibernation between March and May. This can be a dangerous time for them, and their most urgent need when emerging from hibernation will be fresh drinking water. To help with this, set up some water in a sturdy dish at ground-level, as well as dry hedgehog food.

Every garden regardless of size can be both bee friendly and beautiful. Bees have a similar taste to humans, in that they favour flowers with bountiful open blooms, and long flowering seasons. Examples of flowers generous in pollen and nectar include geraniums, lavender, open dahlias and globe thistle. Also, herbs such as marjoram, sage and chives and flowering shrubs like buddleia, cotoneaster and apple blossom. A nice idea would be to make a bee ‘nectar filling station’. It’s simply a pot or pots filled with nectar giving flowers and a shallow dish of water (many may be surprised to know that bees need hydration too). Make sure you keep flowers blooming in the pot from March to September by changing them as they fade.

Sean McMenemy, director of Ark Wildlife




The rise of DIY home remodelling projects

When the severity of COVID-19 became evident and it was clear that we were in this for the long-haul, we all expected a variety of possible outcomes. For most of us, a DIY boom wasn’t one of them. But, lo-and-behold, that’s exactly what happened.

The coronavirus pandemic has led to the rise of DIY home remodelling projects not only in the UK, but around the world. Research from several countries show sales are up, retailers and manufacturers are smiling, and folks are rolling up their sleeves and tackling all sorts of projects, from building storage units, to renovating their basements, and more.

Some of the biggest DIY home improvement trends of 2021 have added more momentum to what began last year, and it looks set to continue. Let’s take a closer look at some surprising facts and figures, before exploring some of the most popular DIY home remodelling projects at the moment.

DIY In the UK
Although statistics vary from firm to firm, they all indicate that lockdown and other responses to the pandemic inspired most Brits to improve their living spaces in one way or another. UK-based Arriva’s study titled Home Life In Lockdown: Tech, Tensions and Tidying Up revealed that 85% of respondents engaged in home improvement projects during lockdown, even if some of them were as simple as tidying up or decluttering.

A Ronseal survey produced slightly different results. It found that 56% of those surveyed completed as many as 4 different DIY home remodelling projects during lockdown. While that figure is lower than the Arriva survey’s, it still indicates that more people in the UK undertook DIY projects than those who didn’t. Also revealing was a report by workwear brand Dickies. The brand found online searches related to gardening DIY projects increased by 1241% during lockdown.

According to Statista, online sales of home improvement and gardening retail products almost doubled between 9 and 15 March 2020, compared to the same period in 2019. The sale of plants, seeds, and bulbs rose by 48.2%, while paint sales increased by 47.1%. Building material sales increased by 31.4%, and the sale of tools and equipment rose by 14.7%.

In May 2020, GlobalData reported that 59.8% of British consumers had already used, or planned to use, the extra time on their hands during lockdown to ‘refresh their homes.’ According to the firm, DIY and redecorating items were more popular than new furniture or homeware.

The firm’s own research found that 47.2% of those consumers intended to do DIY in their bedrooms, 22.8% had a DIY project planned for their bathrooms, and 36.7% wanted to do some work in their living room. 13.7% of consumers planned to do some DIY in the dining room, and 31% had DIY plans for their kitchen. At that time, only 7.7% of consumers surveyed planned to work in a home office.

Hot DIY Home Remodelling Trends
In addition to DIY jobs, Brits decluttered and cleaned their homes and invested time and energy into their gardens. Influence Central surveyed 630 consumers via its Consumer Insights Panel and found that 61% of those respondents, based in various places, undertook DIY projects. Of those projects:

  • 61% were the organising of closets and drawers
  • 57% were stocking and organising pantries
  • 43% were working on a garden or outdoor space
  • 26% were working on a home office space
  • 22% were setting up a home gym or exercise space

The website’s findings are in keeping with current popular DIY home remodelling trends, some of which you might’ve implemented yourself. According to House & Home, a few of the popular trends at the moment include:

Home Offices—According to the Office for National Statistics, 46.6% of employed people did some work from home in April last year, and 86% of those people did so because of COVID-19. The office also revealed that the number of people who work from home exclusively rose from 21% to 24%. With stats like that, it’s not surprising that the home office is one of the must-haves of 2021.

Storage Units—Folks who cannot or do not want to declutter, whether or not their stuff sparks joy, are turning to built-in and freestanding storage facilities. However, instead of purchasing them from stores, people are putting up shelves, building cupboards, assembling cabinets, and coming up with various creative solutions.

Outdoor Living Spaces—As mentioned, the UK saw a sharp increase in interest in gardens and outdoor living spaces. While some planted vegetable gardens, laid paths, and dug new beds, others installed decking, hot tubs, furnished nooks, she-sheds, and other lifestyle elements. The outdoor DIY projects doubtlessly will continue through the summer as people use their new facilities and find more room for improvement.

Multigenerational Homes—More and more people are adapting their homes to accommodate multiple generations of their families. Some reasons parents, adult children, grandparents, and grandchildren are living together, either in one home or in several separate dwellings on one property, are to save money, to be closer to one another should future lockdowns be implemented, and for the sake of healthcare.

Outdoor Living In 2021
Britain’s renewed love of DIY and gardening is still going strong more than a year after COVID-19 first reached the UK’s shores and lockdowns were introduced. In early April 2021, the Guardian reported that spending at DIY stores and garden centres was expected to reach £1.4bn during Easter, a figure that is £290m higher than the spend during Easter 2020.

Among the reasons given for the whopping spend were the continued closure of pubs and non-essential retailers, as well as the banning of trips and getaways over the long weekend. According to the publication, the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) said that DIY store sales increased by 35%, and gardening centre sales increased by 8.5%, in the last three months of 2020, compared to the same period for 2019, and that the trend is still going strong.

Some of the most popular items among British consumers are firepits, gazebos, and outdoor pizza ovens, as well as patio sets, and the materials needed to create an outdoor room.

A New Appreciation
COVID-19 caused havoc on a scale not seen in decades, but it also gave many people a new sense of appreciation of their homes, and newfound confidence in their own skills.

If you’re toying with starting a DIY home remodelling project, we encourage you to take the plunge. Be warned, though—you’re likely to find another DIY project soon after.




Vann – a Surrey gem

Vann is a family home between Chiddingfold and Godalming, owned by the Caröe family, whose gardens are open during the year. The late Mary Caröe told us its history back in April 2017.

Vann was leased by my late husband’s grandfather WD Caröe, the Arts & Crafts architect from the Godman Estate at Hascombe, in 1907 for the princely sum of £42 per annum. He did not purchase it until 1930. He was also architect to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners from about 1886 so much of his work concerned cathedrals and churches all over England and Wales. He was allowed to make whatever alterations he wanted to the house and was quite ruthless in his adaptation of the existing building in spite of his membership of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings. But the works were done to a very high standard and incorporated some very special arts and crafts features for which he was renowned.

The name Vann is a corruption of ‘Fen’, a wet place, and that indeed is what Vann is. Our research has shown that there was a house on this site in 1198 listed as belonging to Elizabeth atte Fanne. The oldest existing central part of the house, a typical Surrey half-timbered building of wattle and daub with later brick in-filling, was built by the descendants of Sir Bernard Jennings (1415-85), MP for Guildford in 1446-7 and Mayor of Guildford in 1465,1474 and 1476. He may have never lived here but his great grandson Thomas is described ‘as of Fanne’.

The central part has been core-dated to 1540. It was a grand ‘hall house’ of the period and would have had a fire on the central floor and sleeping bays reached by ladders as one sees at the Weald and Downland Museum’s Bay Tree House. However even a wealthy family like the Jennings could not have afforded window glass and the windows carried vertical oak slats of which one set remain. They would have had waxed linen blinds to help keep out the draughts. Bernard was the great grandfather of Sarah Jennings, later Duchess of Marlborough thereby adding a grain of truth to the legend or false family tradition that she was associated with Vann. The house remained in his family until 1590 when it was sold by Thomas, who also owned Braboef Manor in Guildford (now the College of Law) and other local properties.

In 1608, Vann passed to the Vintners Company. I am told that the city livery companies bought properties as an investment at this time. It was held in trust for a Sarah Clarke from Battle in Sussex. She most certainly never lived here but her son Anthony did and bought and sold a nearby cottage from the More family of Loseley. In those deeds, he is described as ‘gentleman of the Manor of Vann’, the first record we have of Vann as a ‘manor’.

It was at this time in 1619 that the great central chimney was inserted and the house was then floored. In 1689 Clarke sold Vann to another Mayor of Guildford, John Childe (who built Guildford House). He was responsible for the addition of the William and Mary wing to the south. This three-storey building (and basement) comprises two handsome pine panelled rooms on ground and first floor still with their original Delft tiles in the fireplaces, and a fine oak staircase. The rooms are tall and well-proportioned with shuttered windows and window seats, wooden mullions and transoms and much of the original glass which is supported unusually by wooden saddle bars. There are two particularly charming bedrooms at the top under the eaves.

Childe’s eldest son, also John (born 1656), sold the house in 1722 and it was entailed in 1734 to Peter Myers. In 1735 another pine panelled room was added to the north of the original timber-framed house comprising a kitchen with a well below. There were several owners or tenants in the C18 including members of the Ford family who are buried in Hambledon churchyard.

In the mid C19, Vann was part of the large Sadler estate and was known as Lower Vann Farm with fields stretching to the south-east over what is now woodland. An architect called Pocock from Chiddingfold owned it in 1840 and added the lean-to at the front and bay windows at the back. Tom Sadler of Pockford sold to Joseph Godman of Park Hatch and Burgate and it was he who leased the house to WD Caroe, who set about major alterations to create a typical Edwardian country retreat, doubling the house in size with new kitchen quarters and offices.

He amalgamated the five C16 rooms and three staircase to create ‘the parlour’ with the original open fireplace and Jacobean crane and spit rack. He installed a C16 plaster ceiling from Vicar Pritchard’s house near Llandeilo, which he was given as a gesture of thanks for his campaign to prevent its demolishment for road widening. There were other additions made to the house including a dressing room with a domed ceiling to accommodate a rail so that he could do somersaults for exercise, and a magnificent mahogany-clad bath with eight taps.

He joined the barn, dated by dendrochronology to 1575 on to the house, with the cart sheds and pig-sty as the link. The house had electricity with a ‘battery room’, a very early example. WD Caröe held the post of Master of the Worshipful Company of Plumbers for many years from 1904. The pipe work was all in lead and each plumber had to label his length with a brass plate with his registration number. Woe betide that man if there was a leak. From the new 1907 wing a very attractive pergola of Bargate stone led out eastwards to the field pond.

There was five acres of garden with a crinkle crackle wall for fruit trees and a Yew Walk planted in 1909 and enclosing a dry stone walled rhyll fed by the stream from the hills above. The original plantings were roses but the depredations of the local deer population led us to remove these in 1970 and replant with foliage plants, less attractive to the wild life. In 1911 the Caröe’s friend and neighbour Gertrude Jekyll designed a water garden, damming the field pond to create a waterfall that descended into the valley with four ponds crossed by bridges and stone flagged paths to a second waterfall with the stream disappearing into the woodland beyond ‘grandmother’s White Garden’, a mass of snow drops in winter, and later fritillaries, martagon lilies and white flowered shrubs supplied by Miss Jekyll. She herself provided 1,500 plants from her nursery at Munstead to clothe the banks. These are listed in her note book number 24 that is now in Godalming Museum. Much of this original planting remains.

The house was only used for weekends until we inherited it in 1969 – no one had spent the winter here. Over the years, we have managed to restore much of the original planting and in addition have made changes, with island beds where there was a run-down market garden, double borders, and later in 2008, a ‘Centenary Garden’ to reduce the area for vegetables. We have planted up other areas to give added interest the year-round. There is a herb garden enclosed by a yew hedge where I have had some topiary fun – two cats and a mouse. At the front is the original ‘Old Garden’, a cottage garden with its original brick paths approached from the road through a yew arch. Sentinel yew trees and hardy fuchsias give structure here.

The house and garden now provide a wonderful family home for a third and fourth generation of Caröes and the gardens are open during the year. Please visit www.vanngarden.co.uk.




Our Love Affair for Lawns

We’ve always had a love affair for lawns, in fact some would say that the British are obsessed with their lawn. Large or small, neat or natural, most people want some green space in their back garden. But how best to use your lawn? And how can you keep it in tip top condition?

“There’s a lawn style for everyone. You just need to think about who is going to be using your lawn, and what it is going to be used for,” says Sarah Squire, Chairman at Squire’s Garden Centres.

“Young children and pets usually want to run around on the grass, while adults might prefer more sedate activities! At the moment, your lawn may be the place you entertain your family and friends within the rule of six. If you can, it’s great to leave an area of your lawn long to attract wildlife into your garden,” added Sarah.

Lawns are great for so many things

  • For the kids – To feel the grass between their toes, run around on, make a daisy chain, eat ice cream (no mess to clear up!), or look for a four-leaf clover.
  • For entertaining – Enjoy drinks and nibbles, a picnic, or place a table and chairs on the grass and have dinner al fresco.
  • For lounging – Put out a comfortable chair, sun lounger or a rug, and relax.
  • For fun garden games – Play swing ball, giant Jenga, Boulle or croquet. Or if your lawn is big enough, throw a frisbee or mark out a badminton court or football goal.
  • For water fun – Have a water pistol battle, run through the sprinkler, or splash in the paddling pool.
  • For camping out – Not going on holiday this year? Then put up a tent in your garden and camp out under the stars.
  • For wellbeing – Become more grounded by spending a few minutes walking barefoot on the grass. It is said to harmonise our electromagnetic energy, allowing it to vibrate at the same frequency as the earth’s surface. This helps our energy flow more freely making us feel good.
  • For pets – Cats and dogs love playing and relaxing on the lawn. Make sure that you chose pet-safe products such as Mo Bacter Moss Remover which also feeds your lawn for up to 100 days.
  • For wildlife – Be truly green and let your lawn go wild. Don’t mow it and embrace the daisies and dandelions, or create your very own wildflower meadow and let nature thrive.

Five simple steps to a lovely lawn: 

  1. Feed – Apply fertiliser now to help your lawn grow stronger and greener. Go organic with a natural lawn fertiliser such as Westland SafeLawn which is also child and pet friendly. Feed your lawn just before it rains, or sprinkle with a hose to help nutrients reach the roots.
  2. Make the first cut – Set the mower blades at their highest setting, then gradually lower the blades for a closer trim. Cut your lawn about once a week in spring and up to twice a week in summer, mowing until October. Wildflower lawns can be mown after flowering, then left for four to six weeks between cuts.
  3. Manage the moss – Use a scarifying rake or lawn aerator to manually remove moss, or apply a time-saving moss remover product. This will boost your lawns health, and improve how it looks and feels.
  4. Fill the gaps – Bald patches are easy to repair. Create a smooth surface then scatter grass seed or a patch repair product such as Miracle-Gro Patch Magic, and water in gently. Protect seed from hungry birds with netting or fleece, pegged down firmly.
  5. Neaten the edges – Create a crisp new edge with a half-moon tool. Then relax and enjoy your lawn.

Whether you like neat bowling green stripes, or a more natural lawn, Squire’s Garden Centres has lots of products to help. Shop instore or online for local delivery at www.squiresgardencentres.co.uk




Top tips to remain productive while working from home

Richard Crawford Small (www.richardcrawfordsmall.com) is a Surrey-based Amazon #1 Bestselling Author and award-winning business consultant featured in Guardian through to TalkRADIO who helps ethical businesses to develop and uses proven techniques to help them maximise the efficiency of their existing business and then grow using sound ethical principles.

Richard has shared his tips on remaining productive while working from home. Please let me know if you can use these?

  1.       Face your fears now

The prospect of coming out of lockdown as a freelancer, employee or as a small business can be daunting and this can really affect motivation.

The first thing to get you into the right mindset is to try and face your fears because once you deconstruct them and work out what it is that’s actually scaring you you can really start to tackle it so that you’re ready to move forward. As a result productivity will increase.

Sometimes it helps talking to a third party, such as a counsellor or business coach, because their neutral perspective can shed a different light on a problem or area and help you see it differently. Other times it’s just about getting the ball rolling and making a start, whether that’s writing down a list of jobs to do, de-cluttering your workspace, or investing in a more comfortable office chair. Ultimately, any steps taken are a step in the right direction.

  1.       Remember what makes you different

For most of us what makes us stand out from the rest is exactly that – our difference. Rather than fighting against this or trying to dampen it down, I think it’s best to celebrate it. Whether that’s the services you offer, the way you deliver them, the product you make, your ethics, or the way you manufacture or market yourself. Hone in on that USP and shout about it. The lockdown has seen a resurgence in people supporting independent retailers and freelancers, for whom their geographic location doesn’t matter. For that reason it’s never been a better time to remember what makes you different and celebrate that. Putting yourself out there and promote your business to anyone who will listen is a sure-fire way of making you feel in a more productive mindset, allowing your output to increase.

  1.       Reconnect with your client base

Whatever your line of work, your business won’t be successful if you don’t have that human connection. Lockdown has shown just how much people rely on human connections in their lives and it’s no different in business.

In reality with more months of working remotely ahead, forming physical connections with meetings in person is not going to be likely. But that doesn’t mean that you can’t still create that connection in different ways.

Try to form strong, meaningful relationships with your clients whether that’s on email or by connecting on social media platforms such as Instagram. By doing so you’ll not only see what makes them tick and allow them to have more of an insight into you, it will also help to build up the trust so that people return to you for business again and again.

Fortunately thanks to social media we live in an age where these relationships don’t have to be in person, so utilise different social media platforms in order to engage with people of different ages and demographics.’

  1. Focus on your workspace 

. Many of us hastily set up a make-shift office in the corner of a bedroom when lockdown was announced over a year ago, and that’s where we’ve remained. With it looking likely that working from home will be a part of life for the foreseeable future, try and make time to really focus on your workspace so that it’s conducive to productivity. I don’t mean spending lots of money on a fancy desk or chair, but even simple things like positioning your monitor on a piece of wood or book to raise it slightly to prevent you hunching over all day, or turning your desk towards the window so that you can actually see the sky whilst you work. Simple changes can be made that will have an enormous impact on motivation and productivity if you just take a bit of time to think about them.

  1. Review your prices and your product or services offering

Now is the time to ask whether you’re charging the right price for what you offer. In most cases, people aren’t charging enough. Don’t forget that your ability to get your job done quickly, whether that’s writing a business proposal or identify a particular client’s specific needs, is very much down to your experience and expertise. Often motivation increases if you feel that you’re receiving a fair price for your time and services. And it goes without saying that increased motivation results in increased productivity.

  1. Ignore distractions

Once upon a time work for most people meant leaving home and going to another environment, whether that was an office, school or shop. In these places we are physically removed from all the distractions of home life. So in order to increase productivity when working from home try and ignore the distractions that may be there and focus on the job in hand for a certain period of time. Whether that’s ignoring the overflowing laundry basket for four hours until you stop for lunch, or not being tempted to whip the hoover around instead of writing a document. These distractions aren’t going anywhere, so by trying to ignore them whilst you focus on your work you’ll ultimately be more productive.