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Friends of Langley Park
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COMMITTEE MEMBERS Meet the members of the Friends of Langley Park Committee. Each month we will be adding another profile so you can find out about all the varied duties and accomplishments of the team. Click on the blue link below to go straight to the committee member. Margaret Ashmore (Member) | Davina Watson (Treasurer) | Jodie Mills (Secretary) | John Watson (Member) | Tansie Nicole (IT Officer) | Maureen Stevens (Membership Secretary) | Chris Ring (Chairman) | Andy Stevens (Conservation and Photography)
I am fortunate to live on the edge of the Park, with my husband Aubrey, our two dogs and the cat. I walk the dogs every day in the park, as I have done for the past 11 years. It is a beautiful place with a wide variety of wildlife and it is a privilege to play a small part in its restoration.
My name is Davina Watson and I am the Treasurer for the FOLP. It is my duty to keep the funds raised by membership, donations and events safe and to ensure that any expenditure is accounted for and to work closely with the Chairman and Secretary on any fundraising. My background has been varied and I have held similar positions for the Friends of Slough Museum when the Museum first opened, and also for the Southern Skirmish Association - a national re-enactment group. It was whilst holding the latter position that I had the unenviable task of registering for VAT before the ceiling was raised to a more realistic level, and for many years I also kept the accounts for a friend’s company where the turnover could be as high as one and a half million, but I don’t think FOLP will reach that level! Most of my working life has been spent in the film industry and I have even been responsible for Langley Park being used as a location by one company I worked for. I came to this area in the mid-50’s when my parents returned from Canada and spent most of my formative years having fun in both Langley Park and Black Park, where my first brush with filming was when my friend’s horse bolted through the trees and straight through a column of ‘American WWII prisoners’ and their ‘German’ guards scattering them to the four winds. It was only later that I discovered the strangulated scream of ‘Cut’ came from the famous director Carl Foreman! Basically I can say that over the past 50 + years I have walked dogs, ridden horses and earned a living in Langley Park and hope that it continues to provide as much fun and entertainment to the generations to come as it has to me. Davina Watson
Me and my dog, ‘big head
Benny’ loved You can get an idea of what I am like from some of the comments in my leaving book from the Langley Park Friends and members and parks team:
I have had lots of environmental jobs - before I came to Langley Park to work I used to work as a forester at the National Trust’s famous Cliveden Estate in Berkshire. I learnt how to chop down huge trees, and set up a successful education programme and volunteer network. After nearly losing a few limbs I decided it was time to hang up my chainsaw! Before I was a forester I went travelling for a year - I went to Mexico (where they paint donkeys to look like zebra’s!), and where I ran a BTCV conservation Holiday on an community organic food growing project (the Mexican leader made us wash the plates with lemons and used to sniff each one to check it was clean!), Guatemala (where I contracted malaria!), Honduras (where I learnt to scuba dive again!), Belize (where we met a French man who had hurt his toe – he called it his ‘foot finger!’), then 3 months in New Zealand where I did a snowboarding season (where I broke a rib) and bought a campervan. Then to Vietnam (where a ‘shared taxi’ meant 4 in the front (2 people in the drivers seat) and 5 in the back!), Cambodia and Laos and a final flight to India (where I starred in a Bollywood movie!) I also used to work for a small environmental charity in Sunderland where I was a conservation training manager but before I could get any paid work in this field I had to become a fulltime conservation volunteer in Lancashire for a year even though I had done a years conservation work in Australia and got a degree in Environmental Science! Anyone thinking of a career in the environment should join the Friends of Langley Park group to get a taster of what conservation and community work is like and how much fun you can have – it also looks great on your CV! Jodie Mills How did I
ever find time to go to work? I expect you’ve heard that before. I’m John Watson, and this is a picture of me with Molly and Brandy. I’m the tall one. We moved to George Green in October 1998 and, very quickly, the dogs showed me all the footpaths and fields within a two mile radius. There’s an old truism that goes “the more you put in, the more you get out” and, sure enough, all that walking made me realise how little I knew about the wild flowers that I saw. So I put that right. But then came bushes, deciduous tress, and then conifers, and the more I learned the less I knew. Just about when I retired, I saw a notice asking for volunteers for Langley Park, and I thought that this would a be good opportunity to put back some of what I had gained, without taking more. I volunteered, and far from not getting more, the park threw things at me I never even dreamed of. There is a bigger variety of trees than anywhere between here and Kew Gardens. There are more, and rarer, bugs in dead trees than anywhere between here and The New Forest. There are roe deer and voles, hobbies and cross bills, fungi and bats, butterflies and spiders. Every time I turned a corner the park stuck something else in my face as if saying “So what’s this then Mr Know-it-all”, and often I didn’t. So I put that right. Then they started a group “The Friends of Langley Park”. I’m not a friend; I’m an ardent fan and admirer, so I joined the committee. I don’t have a particular role, I just help all the others who are much more skilled and able than I. But at meetings I get to pontificate about every subject, and have no responsibility for any. Makes me feel like a real politician !! I also thought it was a opportunity to put back some of what I had gained without taking more. Until the floodgates opened. I gave up history in the third form in 1953, and never had cause to regret doing that during fifty years in commerce. That was until 2005, when I suddenly found out about lots more “Friends”. King John of Magna Charta fame, Henry VIII, Elizabeth I, Queen Charlotte wife of George III, Dukes, Earls, Lords and Ladies, the Kedderminster family, the Bateson Harvey family, Capability Brown, and Stiff Leadbetter. All had walked the same paths in the park as I. Mind you, none of them had been on the committee. And if you don’t want any of this, then the park just stands there, welcoming all who come through it’s gates whatever the time; 6 o-clock sunrises over the lake in spring, or January squalls down the vista shot blasting your face with rain and dead leaves. And if this is still too much, then solitude is in Temple Gardens, Kings Wood, or by the lake. My dad always told me not to believe everything I read. I’m telling you “Don’t believe everything you read”. Come to Langley Park and find out for yourself. I did. You could wonder how you ever found time to go to work. John Watson
It has been a lot of fun and at times challenging to work out ways of getting things done on the site, but also very rewarding, and I am pleased to say I am now quite proud of it! My background has been Admin/PA based, mixed in with being a Complementary Therapist and Trainer, and I now also design web sites for people. My passions are being in nature (so I love the conservation work we do, especially as we have a great group of people doing it), working with animals (I currently foster 4 adorable kittens and a beautiful 5 year old female for the Cats Protection League), dog walking for the Harefield Dogs Trust, spending time with my 5 nieces and nephews - its great to be a child again!, to name but a few. Going back to the website, we have tried to include as much of interest to people as possible, namely the guided walks, orienteering trail, maps of Langley and Black Parks, and conservation work. We also have a monthly Park User, Photo Competition and Forum to make this site more interactive. And the latest addition has been using PayPal so that anyone can pay by debit or credit card for membership or our other goodies online, as simply as possible. Anyway, I hope you all enjoy the website and Langley Park, and if you have any ideas for improvements or suggestions for either please let me know. Tansie Nicole
My name is Andy Stevens and I am the Conservation and Photography Officer for the Friends of Langley Park. My role allows me to get involved with the volunteering side of the group which is a very important part of our objectives and it is rewarding to know that we are helping the Country Parks Team to maintain and improve such a special place. Have a look at our Conservation page to see the kind of volunteering work we do. My day time job is that of Park Manager at the Orchards Residential Park, which is situated very close to Langley Park and which also had a mention in the historical survey carried out by John Phibbs for the HLF bid, as the site of an Elizabethan Pleasance Garden, this is exciting news and is yet another piece of the historical jigsaw. The photography side of my job involves documenting as many of our varied activities as possible in order to monitor our progress, keep the website up to date and have a good laugh at some of the strange things FOLP members do at events and social functions (some will never be seen!!) and of course to implement and supervise the Fixed Point Photography of Langley Park which is a requirement of the HLF project. Fixed Point Photography is a method of recording photographic data of designated areas including the Lake, the Car Park, the Temple Gardens and the Arboretum, etc from fixed points around the given areas at regular intervals for as long as is required. This is normally done over many years. The information is stored in hard copy and data files that can be cross referenced throughout the project and beyond allowing the Country Parks Team and the HLF to see exactly where the monies are being spent. This is a project any keen photographer within the group can do as expensive equipment is not required, although a tripod is quite important. Every visit to the park is different and I gain a feeling of great pride and pleasure to know that the FOLP members ably assisted by the hard working Country Parks Team are helping to promote and maintain a place of such diversity and interest that is Langley Park. I look forward to seeing you during my many wanderings. Andy
I have lived and worked in the Slough and South Bucks area all my life and have been regularly using Langley Park to exercise myself and my dogs for over twenty years. I remember visiting both Langley and Black Parks with my parents more than forty years ago. I taught in three local schools in the 70’s and 80’s, Langley Grammar, Westgate Secondary and Lynch Hill Combined before changing to a career in Thames Valley Police. As I approach the final year of my policing life and with my family growing up, I decided to join the Friends to help maintain the park and to support the HLF bid. In the absence of any other volunteers and not really knowing what I was letting myself in for, I offered in March 2006 to Chair the newly formed group to see where the journey took us. You will see from the rest of this website that the journey has been a long, varied and an extremely fulfilling one filled with new experiences, meeting new friends and learning new skills. I never dreamt how difficult and frustrating it would be to lead a group of conservation volunteers in support of a common goal. Health and Safety, Risk Assessments, Constitutions, Sponsorship bids, Committee Meetings … It would be easier to do a jig saw in the dark with boxing gloves on! Having said that I am very pleased with the progress we have made which is a credit to the hard work of all of our committee members, the support of the Country Parks team, our sponsors and our 100+ membership spread across several counties. Our successes have far outweighed our failures and with the positive result of the HLF bid our work and our journey is only just beginning. If you think you might like to join our committee, even if only on a trial or temporary basis, get in touch and I will be happy to have an informal chat with you. Enjoy the park, Chris
I have known Langley Park for many years and have a deep love of wildlife and the countryside, passed on to me through my father. From childhood he has always taken me out and about and shown me many beautiful places, from the mountains and forests of Wales to many areas around Buckinghamshire and Berkshire. The Chilterns are probably at their most beautiful in Autumn, although I really love the fresh greens of Springtime. The early childhood interest has never left me and I always try to instil something of nature into people around me, either at work or where I live. I never walk far in the countryside without having to stop to hunt for whatever I heard scurrying through the undergrowth and invariably it is a mouse or a vole or even sometimes a lizard. If you wait long enough and patiently enough it will appear. Wildlife is never far away. When the chance came to get involved in doing some conservation work in Langley Park I jumped at the chance and from that grew the Friends of Langley Park. I have gained many wonderful friends through the Friends of Langley Park in particular the other committee members and volunteers and I very much enjoy meeting with people through the events we put on. Invariably it is people with the same interests. We truly have become a “Friends group”. In my normal daily working life I am a Secretary for a large construction company in Slough, which at times can be pretty monotonous and a walk through the woods or the Rhododendron Gardens at the end of a long and busy day, listening the wonderful bird songs, can be a good release. I also enjoy gardening and try to incorporate plants and flowers that attract the butterflies and insects which can be beneficial to every gardener and when I get some spare time, however small it may be, I do like to sit down and do some card making. You never know, one day I may get the chance to sell some at some of our events. Maureen Stevens
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. . . . Site last updated: May 6, 2008 . |