The Avening Community Orchard is a ‘pocket orchard’ in a beautiful corner of our village play park. It’s rich in wildlife, a place where you can take time out to relax, re-boot, reflect….and maybe pick an apple or two. There are many ways you can join in: help us to manage the trees; share your photos, poems and paintings; take part in workshops; pick the apples, plums, pears and blackberries and send us your favourite recipes; or just linger a moment longer with a four-legged friend. It’s an orchard for everyone!
The orchard is home to 21 newly planted fruit trees alongside several fruit trees planted many years ago . It is an area rich in birds, insects, mammals, plant life and reptiles.
We’ve planted apple and plum trees which are heritage and/or Gloucestershire varieties. Many of these varieties are fast disappearing.
The apple varieties are:
The orchard is in an area of unimproved grassland surrounded by scrub and woodland trees. It is rich in biodiversity and the orchard aims to retain and enhance this biodiversity while making the area more accessible to people, reconnecting people to nature with all the benefits this connection brings to both people and wildlife.
The mounds of Yellow meadow ants are dotted across the orchard. The ants spend nearly all their life underground and are rarely seen. Yellow meadow ants feed on the honeydew from aphids that feed on plant roots. The aphids are bred by the ants in the intricate nests. The mounds usually have one flatter face which is oriented towards the south-east; this maximising the warming effects of the early morning sunshine.
Wildflowers are abundant and include Pyramidal orchids, Knapweed, Teasle, Willowherbs, Yarrow, Mulleins and much more. The long grasses and wildflowers support a wide variety of invertebrates. The orchard is home to the Dingy Skipper, a Section 41 butterfly of principal importance under the NERC Act in England. This was recorded by one of our villagers on their dog walk!
The rough grass and sunny aspect make the orchard perfect for reptiles including Grass snake, Common lizard and Slow worm.
Tawny owls make the trees surrounding the orchard their home and are very vocal throughout the year. Bats forage for invertebrates over the grassland and trees and include Common and Soprano pipistrelles, Brown long-eared, and even the Lesser horseshoe bat which has several roosts, in and around, the village.
The management of the orchard is carried out carefully and, following all relevant wildlife legislation, to create a range of microhabitats to support all our wonderful wildlife.