Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi,


I'm doing some research on Dawson's Hill as part of a project for my MSc. Dawson's Hill is the greenspace between Dunstans Road and the Dawson Heights Estate. Can anyone tell me if The Dawson's Hill Trust - http://www.dawsonshill.org.uk/ - is still organising workdays and promoting the hill? I'm wondering if there is a management plan or particular work days volunteers meet? Has there been any biodiversity/flora/fauna/invertebrate surveys carried out on the hill by the trust/local groups/individuals? The website mentions bats and woodpeckers but does anyone know the specific species? Also any personal opinions are welcome, what do people enjoy about the hill and use it for? - Recreation, nature study, peace & quiet or to take in the views? If anyone can offer help with these questions or wants to share experiences I'd be grateful.


Warm wishes,

Andrew Lynch

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/24844-dawsons-hill-trust/
Share on other sites

Thanks KidKruger & ComputedShorty,


Yes I got a lot of good information from the excellent Dulwich Society post, thank you. I'm now looking to see if The Dawson's Hill Trust is still together or if anyone was a member in the past. I presume they've finished now as the website was last updated in 2004. I'm also interested in anyone who has information on the species of bats and other wildlife found on the hill - even if it's just sightings while out walking


I have found that the the area of Secondary Woodland / Roughland beside Donkey Alley is listed as 'TRADITIONAL ORCHARD PRIORITY HABITAT' by DEFRA although quite overgrown now. Anyone spotted any apple tree species?

Can't help you in research but I would say loads of us go there to see the fireworks 5 Nov and at New Year's and there's a great atmosphere. I always take visitors there to see the views and it's soooo much better than Primrose Hill! It's one of my favourite places in London to see London! I look forward to hearing / reading your work and thanks computedshorty for the links!
I'd love to know about bats near to where I live - just opposite Goodrich School on Goodrich Road. Bats are one of my favourite creatures but I never see them around here, even though the back of my house backs on to a football pitch-sized patch of suburban gardens which I'd've thought would be a good feeding and roosting spot for them. Anyone else see bats in and around SE22/21/15?

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

    • Bob spicer  friend of my old man.
    • Cut the people list down to 3. Spend £16  simples
    • Has anyone found a car key fob in College Road SE21 or Dulwich Park?  Lost it at about midday Wednesday 17th December.  
    • An excellent point, ed. I reckon you could possibly get the cheese down to 75g per person depending on how many courses, the cheese media one is using and the accompiaments. A thicker biscuit can really increase the power of your cheese dollar. I'd also recommend putting all the last year's chutneys and pickles from the back of the cupboard in a single Kilner jar, adding a bit of malt vinegar and a grated apple, then attaching a hand written label saying 'Pikey's Pickle: Autumn 2025'.  It's not Megan Markle levels of domestic deceit, but it works every time. Pre-portioning cheese seems arbitrary, but I think acceptable when it's 20 people. It gives people an idea of how much a serving is, and negates the issue of somebody, normally a brother in law or cousin's new boyfriend, not taking their share of the rind. Remember, you're doing them a favour. Somewhere in the room there's an older family member who could see it and never forget. It's disinheritance stuff. It also gives rise to the great postprandial game of 'Cheese!' where guests can swap their share of cheese for another. Tastier than Monopoly and far less cardboardy, cheeses can be traded like currency or commodities. Hard and soft cheeses, dependent on their relative strengths, normally settle at close to parity but I've seen blue cheeses trade at less than half the price.  It's a Stilton lover's paradise, if you can hold your nerve.  Goat cheese lovers can clean up, but need to beware. As volatile as the 1970's Argentinian Peso, it's up and down like a bride's nightie.   I think I'll stick to Neal's Yard, then.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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