Flute Concert at 1pm at St John The Baptist in Cathedral Square, Peterborough
This concert is the third in a summer concert series organised by St Johns CIC. Hannah Clark will be joined by Irena Radić. Both of these young musicians have given concerts at St John’s before. In their début appearance here together Hannah Clark (flute) and Irena Radić (piano) will play music by Fauré, Ravel, Reinecke, and more…
The church will be open from about midday and arriving early ensures time for a homemade cake or a coffee. All profits go to The Green Backyard.
The concert will begin promptly at 1pm. Admission is free, but those who are able to afford it are asked to make a donation. The suggested amount is £4.
You can also spend some time with the magnificent textile work, Mapestry, installed in St John’s as part of this year’s magnificent PECT Green Festival. Mapestry will be in the church for a short while, and then it will tour the route of the River Nene which passes through the city. The work consists of twelve delightfully characterful panels, each one describing a month in the year and a place on the Nene. The work has been created by Froglife a major wildlife charity based in Peterborough and a number of community crafters. Nenescape is a Heritage Lottery funded Landscape Partnership Scheme conserving and protecting the Nene Valley’s natural and built history. Get in touch with them if you think you can help. A woman in a red dress is walking her dog in Ferry Meadows:
Yesterday, inspired by comments about walking by Ch Ali Shan, I smashed a personal best (PB). I completed a hyper leaflet drop. I knew it would be tough, so I decided to use a smart phone app called mapmywalk.
I was thinking I could picture my leaflet drop to produce something shareable with the team (we’d just broken all our leafletting records over the weekend) and that this would be fun for me on a tough day and we might end up with something we could all use. I don’t go nuts for personal performances or PBs (well, not usually!) but the mapping bit could turn out to be extremely useful. But I’d already set off, before deciding to give it a go and downloaded the app on the go. (I wouldn’t do that usually.) So I began with an inaccuracy: a bit of real walk not covered by the walk being built by the app.
Doing this properly, you’d have to decide: what is the start of the drop: where you start delivering, or your home?
As I went, I found good things to snap:
Although this pathway needs the no cycle sign and the dreadful barriers removed, I loved the blossom framed by the archway.I passed some stunningly beautiful gardens
And you can’t go anywhere in Peterborough now without finding ghastly things on pavements. The stuff we can’t live with and before it has done a job is no longer worth the cost of disposal to people who value what cash they can get. I now report there and then, using: FixMyStreet, which has much more functionality than MyPeterborough which, despite being a very poor and unresponsive (i.e. the app developers don’t respond to user queries) app, is the only one listed on the council’s website. Here are some of the horrible things walkers come across every day in Peterborough:
You can pause the “walk” on the app and resume, so as keep the walk part look like an actual walk and the stop and do things or chat to people not look like part of the “walk”. If it were possible to do this correctly, the app would give you an accurate average speed for when you were really walking. It sounds easy, but every time I did something like reporting a discarded pct and then the mouldy chair without remembering to pause the app each time, there would be an impact on my “walk’s” average speed and my results would get less and less true.
In fact, yesterday, I think as I pressed resume, just after the mouldy chair by the bus stop and the public toilets which have been closed for over a decade, I lifted my head, ready to go and a massive training lorry swung swung into a small tree in front of my eyes. There are moments when apps are not even in your consciousness.
But once or twice I also forgot to resume until I was several hundred yards from where I’d stopped. This error is funny because the app creates something which looks like a flight path on the “walk”. When I did this and turned a corner, the app would draw a flight path straight through a house. And when I stopped in The Crown for a coffee (yes, they do), the app stayed there long after I’d set off again, sat and maybe dozing in front of the fire, improving my average as I walked on and on without using any time, and waiting for another short flight.
I wonder if a pedometer rather than a route mapper would have worked better for me, or maybe one which does both? Because unless you are delivering to homes with very long driveways, the app doesn’t see the little sideways ducks and dives from the pavement to the letterboxes. That is OK if what you are mapping is an ordinary walk. But a leaflet drop is something else.
People look down on leafletting or assume (sometimes at their peril) that it is easy. In fact it isn’t easy: it is very physical and the best footwear would probably be cross trainers. It isn’t just the walking: it is the sharp turns round gates, bending down to letterboxes, some of them at ground level. Leafletting certainly gives your whole body a workout. This is why councillors ask people to help them deliver and promise them they can shrink their waistlines. This promise is actually true. It is also hard on the knees, because if you walk fast your body needs to change direction fast.Which app best describes this sort of activity?
As for today, I might write a bit and check on my seedlings or if my legs can cope, I might pop down to the Real Nappy Library, who are doing their bit to reduce landfilled nappies in Central Park today till 2pm.
10am to 8pm – Monday 7th March to Saturday 12th March
Admission free to all events
Come and find out how to use less energy, save money, live more sustainably and help to improve your environment.
The show combines an exhibition and evening events looking at energy saving measures and renewable technologies. Specialist local businesses will display a range of energy saving products including the new Nissan Leaf electric car.
Other events during the week include:
Monday 7th March
7-9pm – The Gallery: launch and reception.
Tuesday 8th March
11am – 12.30am – Whitwell Passivhaus, tour and talk. Call 01780 460457 to book a space on the tour. More information available here.
7-9pm – The Gallery: A selection of films on the environment and sustainable living. More information available here.
Friday 11th March
7-9pm – The Gallery: Illustrated talks on Low Energy design…
Saturday 16th January 2016 11am – 3pm at Riverside Pavilion, Candy Street, Peterborough, PE2 9RE
An Open Space discussion on how to create a green and sustainable Peterborough is being hosted by Peterborough Green Party. Tickets are free, but places are limited!
The event offers attendees a chance to share their views openly on a number of topics, which will be chosen by participants at the event. We hope to pursue the theme of a sustainable and green city and our objective is to facilitate and engage in ongoing dialogue with the City Council.