Friends of Marple Memorial Park Task Days

The Friends hold regular task days in the park on the last Saturday of each month in the winter and the middle and last Saturday from March to November. Everyone is welcome to join in for as long or as short they wish during the specified times. Please note that children and young people under 18 must be accompanied by a responsible adult.

If you are interested becoming a volunteer with us please get in touch and we will add you to our Task Day notifications.

We like to keep a record of what we get up and here are details of past task days.

Task Day 12 April 2014

A great deal of work was achieved by a small band of volunteers on our first routine mid-month task day of 2014. Jobs included a full litter-pick of the park, access road and around the community buildings, repairs to the War Memorial display panel frame, repairs to the door on our tool store and removal of graffiti from the backless bench on the driveway into the park.

Numerous park benches were treated with preservative and Midnight the Owl was given a coating of "Green-Away" to remove algae ready for treating with preservative next time. The biggest job of the day was the thinning-out of an abundance of Cowslip and nettles from the woodland wildlife area behind the library and the planting of a variety of more desirable subjects including Borridge, which is loved by the bees. The photo below captures a busy day in a park that is blooming!

Task Day 12 April 2014

Task Day 29 March 2014

Bob Wilson's last "working day" in Memorial Park

The weather was very kind on Park Keeper Bob Wilson's last official working day in the park. Bob has taken redundancy / early retirement as part of the council cuts. Bob has spent the last 9 years of his 40 years of employment with Stockport Council, and latterly Solutions SK, in Marple Memorial Park and he is one of the key reasons that it has been so well looked after.

Bob Wilson's Farewell

It was pleasing that Bob spent his last day working closely with the Friends Group that he has supported so well during virtually our entire existence, and we were delighted to present him with a canvas landscape of the park to remind him of it at home. The really good news though is that Bob plans to return to the park he loves as a volunteer with Friends of the Park.

As far as work in the park, we got a huge amount done including reinstalling the Apple and Pear sculptures and the last of the Acorns removed by vandals. The ornamental beds and war memorial beds were worked on, and also the cinema bed at the front of the park, the sensory garden and shrub beds further into the park, and benches were treated too.

Thank you to Arthur Procter for recording Bob's presentation and the end of an era. As a result of the budget cuts there will no longer be a permanent Park Keeper in Memorial Park and nobody is likely to provide the dedication and care that Bob has given to looking after it over the last 9 years. The need for volunteers to help look after the park it is going to be greater than ever, so if you'd like to help the Friends of the Park rise to the challenges that face us please to come and join in!

Task Day 11 March 2014

"Incredible Edible Marple" Task Day with M.E.S.S.

A special task day was held with Marple Energy Saving Strategy (M.E.S.S.) to kick off their "Incredible Edible Marple" Project by planting 20 Wild Harvest tree saplings provided by the Woodland Trust in the park. These comprised a mix of Hazel, Blackthorn, Crab Apple, Elder and Dog Rose, some of which can be harvested for jams or left to feed the local birds and wildlife.

We also (eventually) reinstalled a picnic bench that had previously been taken out for repair after vandalism - this "small job" turned out to be more difficult than expected due to one of the existing bases being big enough to build a small house on!

Task Day 22 February 2014

A great turnout of volunteers got loads done in the park despite the ground still being too wet to work on the main flowerbeds. Crocuses, Daffodils and Snow Drops are all starting to show and the Park is getting ready to welcome the spring!

Successes included a major revamp of the over-grown shrub bed in from of the Scout Hut with Pyracantha and Holly shrubs. Look out for more planting here soon. There was a good tidy up of the Cinema Bed at the main entrance to the park, to the ones in front and to the side of the Senior Citizens' Hall and we finished off pruning of the Shrub Bed near to Charlies' Bandroom too.

We also started our programme of bench maintenance with the application of Green-Away to many of them and painted the Jubilee Crown, which is in the process of being repaired after vandalism last year. Finally, feed was hoed in around the new War Memorial Beds rose hedge too. A very good effort, well done everyone!

Task Day 25 January 2014

The first task day of 2014 was a fairly quiet start to the year but we were pretty lucky with the weather and got a fair bit done. The park was very wet so we concentrated on areas that we could reach from the paths. The Infants Play Area has a good tidy up, the shrubs and beds around the Council Offices and along the path heading towards the Charles Ingham Bandroom were also given a good prune back. There are lots of bulbs appearing already and we're looking forward to a park in bloom again!

We also had a photo-call with Councillor Iain Roberts, who presented us with a cheque for £200 from the Council's WWI Small Grant Scheme. This grant covers the cost of the red roses that we planted around the War Memorial flowerbeds last year and is the first award of its kind in Stockport for projects that commemorate the 2014-2018 WWI Centenaries. We are very proud to be the first group in the borough top be awarded one of these grants and we are looking forward to the roses that we have planted developing into a Red "Rose Wall" hedge over the next few years that will bloom between June and November.

Task Day 22 January 2014

A special task day was held in the park on Wednesday 22 January when some lads from David Lewis came along with Terry, one of our volunteers who works there. The lads came to help fit bars to several of our ground sculptures that had been pulled out by vandals so that they can be reinstalled in the park and also to fit some brackets to the legs of one of our picnic tables that was vandalised too. They did a great job and left the place much tidier than it was before they came, so thank you lads!

As a registered charity with over 100 years’ experience, David Lewis provides exceptional education, therapy, support and life skill development to individuals with epilepsy, autism and complex learning disabilities. Based in Cheshire, David Lewis’ expertise is sought by and available to people across the UK. Their aim is brighten the lives of everyone who lives, studies and is supported at David Lewis by encouraging independence, instilling confidence and always being there when they’re needed.

To read more visit: www.davidlewis.org.uk