Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Some years ago I had a problem with a neighbour lighting bonfires in their garden during the day- not at the end of the garden but near our adjoining fence near the house.


My daughter is asthmatic and was living with us so we had to keep all the windows closed (it was summer). This was crazy so we knocked on their door and asked if they would not do this and that they could have rubbish collected for free by the council. They seemed sympathetic but didn't put the fire out. So we wrote a very polite note with phone numbers etc for the collection service. Still the fires burned.


I phoned the council-they sent someone round, spoke to the neighbours and gave us leaflet- a green leaflet entitled 'Bonfires'. The rules WERE -one bonfire, once a month at dusk and burning for one hour and only garden waste.Except for 5th November. This did the trick (except for the abuse we got from the neighbour)


When we had that lovely spell of warm weather in March this year we called the environment team again for another long-burning horrible fire down the road. The person on the other end of the phone seemed to suggest that all those sensible rules in the leaflet had been relaxed- unfortunately.


(There is no need to burn stuff get the Council to collect- it could be builders because they would have to pay to dispose of stuff)

I saw the bonfire you are referring to as my garden backs onto the gardens on Barry Road. The fire didn't seem that huge when it started but when I came back from the shops, my house stank of it. It was so strong that I was actually worried that something was on fire in my house as all my windows and doors were closed. There's loads of building stuff in the garden so they might be doing some extensive works on the house. Perhaps they were burning building debris - hope they don't make a habit of it.
Oh gosh.. this fire was in our garden. Its a building of five flats and the garden in being done.. but lots of inherited rubbish was there and it seems the gardeners are burning some of it. Its not dangerous at all and is contained but I'm so sorry its been a pain. I'm afraid the wind may have blown it in inconvenient directions. Its all but finished so please accept our apologies.. we absolutely will not be making a habit of it.

Sayroo Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> ... Or indoors? My partner and I are moving to ED

> shortly. The Victorian terrace (who'd of thought

> it?) we're buying has original fireplaces but the

> flume has been closed off. Have others reinstated

> these despite being in smokefree zone and managed

> ok with smokefree fuel?


xxxxxx


Yes you can burn smokeless fuel fine in the original fireplaces.


I've been doing that for twenty :-$ years in my Victorian terraced house.

We burn Homfire smokeless coal in our open fire through the winter, approved for smoke free areas


You can buy it from any petrol station in the cold months or online from coal merchants


Regular coal and logs are widely available (again petrol stations) although clearly marked "not for use in smoke free areas". I suspect a lot gets burnt after dark.

I have called the council twice about this

There is no real restriction unfortunately.

My neighbour in Crystal Palace Road, likes to burn cardboard and other waste , instead of recycling.

He usually waits for a nice hot day, when you have your windows open to keep cool,

The he stokes up the fire

Actually he hasnt a clue about how to do it, as he usually just gets a big smokey pile going, and fills the street and houses with smoke


AHHHHHHH !!!

Once upon a time, it was just common courtesy not to burn rubbish on warm days/evenings when windows were likely to be open or washing out on the line. Nowadays people seem to care far less about what they do and how it might impact on those living near them. I suspect we'll see less Council intervention in anti-social behaviours due to the budget cuts as there's no one left to enforce them.

randombloke Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Being facetious I'd hesitate to open fire in the

> back garden for fear of starting off a "Police

> Helicopter flies over East Dulwich" thread on the

> EDF.

> Gun crime=gang activity.


NEVER open fire in a back garden. Unless it's against foxes.

Lowlander Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> We burn Homfire smokeless coal in our open fire

> through the winter, approved for smoke free areas

>

> You can buy it from any petrol station in the cold

> months or online from coal merchants

>

> Regular coal and logs are widely available (again

> petrol stations) although clearly marked "not for

> use in smoke free areas". I suspect a lot gets

> burnt after dark.


xxxxxx


The DIY shop in Lordship Lane at the Goose Green end also sells smokeless fuel.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I’m not sure how many other people have experienced this; but both me and one of my friends have the same story. Around Crawthew Grove and Crystal Palace Road: I was followed by a large fox right on my heel. At first I didn’t notice because I had my headphones on, but then I noticed my shadow had an extra lump in it, funnily enough, it was a fox, very very close to my feet. Even if I sped up walking it just tried to get closer - it was quite frightening actually, it was quite clear that it wanted to nip me. I didn’t know what to do so, I started to reprimand the fox and walked slowly away from it, facing it - which it didn’t seem to like and backed off a bit. I then proceeded to speed-walk away.   Quite frankly, the whole situation was quite embarrassing and a little bit frightful as I’d never had a fox even come up to me. I’ve heard of particularly curious foxes that might come up to someone who beckons them, and maybe even bite that person, but I’ve never heard of a fox chasing someone. The amount of confidence that it had was incredible.    When it happened, I was on the way to see some friends, and once I had told one of them, she told me the same thing happened to her.  if anyone else knows anything about this bitey fox then let me know!
    • Another recommendation for Andy. I needed an old kitchen removed as an emergency. Andy came over quickly and did a fantastic job. I have used Andy a few times. He is punctual, helpful and always does an  excellent job. 
    • Dear East Dulwich residents, this is to inform you that the next Goose Green Safer Neighbourhood Team (SNT*) Ward Panel Meeting will be held on the 21st of January 2026.   Timings: 7pm - 8.15pm  Location: East Dulwich Picturehouse     116A Lordship Lane | London SE22 8HD The meeting is open to all local residents, community groups and businesses. It’s a great opportunity to engage with local police and councillors, raise community concerns, and help shape priorities for the area. We hope many of you will be able to attend. *The Goose Green SNT (Safer Neighbourhood Team) is a dedicated police team for East Dulwich area. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...