• Agenda for Parish Council Meeting 8 September 2011 published

    South Lopham Parish Council

    Members of the Council are hereby summoned to attend a meeting to be held at 7.30 pm on Thursday September 8th 2011 at Pansthorne B&B, South Lopham.

    Members of the press and public are welcome to attend.

    Agenda in PDF format (opens in new window).

  • The Lophams’ News September 2011 Edition

    The September 2011 edition of the Lophams’ News has been published and uploaded to the website. Click here to view it (Adobe PDF format opens in new window).

  • Lophams’ News August 2011 Edition

    https://south-lophampc.norfolkparishes.gov.uk/files/2011/03/News2.pdf

  • The Lophams’ News July 2011 Edition

    The Lophams’ News July 2011

  • Minutes of AGM 2011

    AGM May 12th 2011

  • Rolfe’s Track

    The dedcation of Rolfe’s Track as a Public Right of Way

  • The Lophams’ Ramblers

    Lophams’ ramblers We continue to meet on the first Friday of the month usually at 0930 for a walk of about 5 miles in the local area.  As we occasionally have to change the walk and therefore the meeting place, the programme for future walks will not be advertised in advance. New walkers are always welcome.

  • U3A

    The University of the Third Age

    AGM:
    The chairman David Emerton reported on another successful year for the Diss Branch with overall membership now standing at around 230. Interest group members continue to expand and the Diss U3A website is also attracting an increasing amount of interest. Group leaders and committee members were thanked for their continued support and hard work throughout the year with special thanks and presentations given to Bronwen Moran and Judith Buckfield who were standing down from the committee following the expiration of their terms of office. The chairman then welcomed on to the committee Bernie Morris and Don Rogers who were elected to serve as Business Secretary and Membership Secretary respectively.

    Following the AGM the guest speaker was Dr David Dougan who gave a most enlightening and enjoyable talk on the life of Samuel Pepys. Although he was both a naval administrator and an MP, Pepys is best known for his diaries kept between 1660 and 1669. Originally written in code and intended for personal use only, these diaries have become some of the most important works in English history, describing as they do his eyewitness accounts of events such as the Restoration and coronation of Charles II, the great plague and the destruction of the city during the great fire of London. Pepys also recorded with frank honesty events in his own daily and domestic life which when translated by David Dougan into modern day language gave life to that which was for some of us just a name in history.

    The next meeting of Diss U3A will be on 7th April at the United Reformed Church commencing at 10.30am.

    For further information on Diss U3A please telephone 01379 642674.

  • Massive Award for The Little Ouse Headwaters Project

    Precious fenland habitat across the Norfolk/Suffolk border is to be restored thanks to a massive Heritage Lottery Fund grant of £370,400, to the Little Ouse Headwaters Project (LOHP)

    This has firstly enabled the purchase of Webbs Fen, a very important wildlife site in the Little Ouse valley. Named Webbs Fen, after its former owner, Mr John Webb, it will be restored to fen habitat and opened for public access over the next year.

    Webbs Fen lies between the two isolated fragments of Thelnetham Fen SSSI which are managed by the Suffolk Wildlife Trust and adjoins the LOHP’s Bleyswycks Bank site. It is another vital link in the chain of sites that the LOHP has been working to establish since its formation in 2002. This 5.6ha site brings the total of land now under LOHP management to 65 ha.

    The HLF funding will also enable the LOHP to restore two sites in Garboldisham (Scarfe Meadows, owned by the LOHP, and Broomscot Common, which is leased from the Garboldisham Parish Charities). Scarfe Meadows was purchased by the project in 2010, with funding from a range of sources, including donations from the group’s members.

    Commenting on the award, Nigel Clark, chair of the LOHP’s board of trustees said..“The award of this grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund is fantastic news for the project. The purchase and restoration of Webbs Fen will link the existing parcels of land in conservation management making a substantial contribution to the improvement of the valley for the enjoyment of local people and wildlife. The grant will also enable the project to develop and involve many more local people securing the future of the landscape for future generations. However, even with this generous grant we still need to continue to raise funds for the maintenance and development of our existing sites.”

    Robyn Llewellyn, Head of Heritage Lottery Fund, East of England, said:

    “The purchase of this small but significant piece of land will have a big impact on the Little Ouse. Not only will this grant help to safeguard an important Fen habitat for the future, but thanks to Lottery players, many more people will be able to get involved, learn about and appreciate the natural heritage that is all around us.”

    This new grant also enables the LOHP to undertake an exciting new project “Conservation & Learning in the Upper Little Ouse Valley”, over the next three years. LOHP will be expanding its range of activities, working with other organisations and individuals to increase community involvement in protecting, understanding and celebrating the local landscape heritage. Much of the HLF grant is specifically designated for this work. It will include the production of learning resources for schools, and a project with Garboldisham Primary school run by the Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts .The Sainsbury Centre will also lead a project for aspiring creative writers and artists inspired by the valley’s heritage. The valley’s history is a major theme of the grant. Work on the landscape history will be supported by Suffolk County Council and the University of East Anglia. The University will also work with the Norfolk Sound Archive to help project volunteers record oral histories from local people before their vast store of knowledge about the past use of the valley and its fens is lost. All of the information generated from these activities will be stored in a new archive for the valley, accessible through the LOHP’s website.

    All this is in addition to the continuation and expansion of current activities, such as volunteer work parties, guided walks and talks, that the group has been running for the past nine years. The first of a series of Heritage Walks, ‘The Little Ouse headwaters: a walk through 400,000 years of environmental history’ will be led by local expert Tim Holt-Wilson on 12th June (see the LOHP’s website for details).

     

  • Alternative Transport – Where can I get to?

    Provides information on alternative methods of transport on demand.

    You will be surprised just how much is on offer and how flexible it can be, so why not try and see where you can get to.

    Tel: 0344 800 8020

     

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