Monthly Archives: February 2021

Wednesday, 24th February 2021: improvements to the Meanwood Valley Trail at the Slabbering Baby.

At the end of February, Leeds City Council started work to improve the path in the area of the Slabbering Baby. There has been a longstanding problem because a large amount of the spring water from the moor no longer flows into the Slabbering Baby but emerges about 10 metres away – onto the path leading up to Buckstone Road. The result is that the path and the Meanwood Valley Trail have frequently been covered in very deep mud.

Over the years, FOAW and Steve Joul and his volunteer team have tried to improve the area by scraping off mud, adding hardcore and doing our best to create a channel across the Meanwood Valley Trail so that water can flow away into the undergrowth on the lower side of the trail. However, it has been difficult because the path surface below the mud is very hard – and the mud returns very quickly!

At the instigation of Cllr Buckley, the Parks and Countryside Department investigated the cause of the problem and have laid new drainage pipes to take the surface water away. The area is already looking a lot better.

The area of brown earth shows where new pipes have been laid to take away the surface water.

Thursday, 11th February 2021: Feeling stressed? Take a walk on the wildside….or in the garden or Adel Woods!

Adel Pond

A few days ago, after several hours of Zoom calls, I felt jaded and couldn’t face more time at the computer and so I decided to go and find something to do in the garden.

To my amazement,  after about a minute of being outside, I found my feelings of being weighed down lifted completely and I felt refreshed and energised – and I enjoyed pottering about in the garden for the next hour or so.

I am not the first to discover that just being outside in the natural world can improve our wellbeing.  In fact, numerous studies have found that spending time out in green space brings many health benefits.

You may even have heard of “Forest Bathing”, a practice which began in Japan in the 1980s, and which is becoming popular in the UK.  In this practice – in which you remain fully clothed by the way! – you spend time enjoying the woods with all your senses.  The aim is twofold – to offer an antidote to stress and to inspire people to connect with and protect our forests.  

Japanese researchers have found that forest bathing can:

  • reduce blood pressure
  • reduce stress
  • improve concentration and memory
  • boost the immune system
  • increase anti-cancer protein production
  • Lower blood-sugar levels
  • lift depression

In 2020 a review of current literature concluded that forest therapy plays an important role in preventive medicine and stress management for all ages.

As my own recent experience shows, even a short time out in nature can have a powerful effect on our wellbeing and a number of factors seem to make time spent in the garden, the park or the woods so beneficial:

  • natural light not only helps set your body clock and improve sleep, but is also believed to increase the production of serotonin which helps the digestive system, sleep and mood;
  • when we engage in gentle physical exercise endorphins are released into the bloodstream, improving wellbeing;
  • many plant species produce compounds and oils called phytoncides to fight infection from viruses and bacteria, and studies show that inhalation of phytoncides has beneficial effects on our immune, endocrine, circulatory and nervous systems;
  • soil, compost and leaf mold contain mycobacterium vaccae, and proteins from the cell walls of this bacterium trigger the further release of serotonin in our brains (so weeding is good for you!);
  • getting out in nature can prompt us to experience awe – a state of wonder coupled with a sense of being small in the presence of something bigger than ourselves, which has been shown to have many psychological and physiological benefits;
  • if there is a pond or stream in the vicinity it is even better: the sound of water has been shown to reduce production of the stress hormone cortisol, and MRI scans have shown that when people are shown videos of water their brain activity moves from flight or fight to relaxation.

So if you are stressed “take a walk on the wild side”  and enjoy some  mindful time out in your local garden, your local park or even Adel Woods.  Even better make it part of your daily routine to enjoy some ecotherapy!

Even better, when we are once more out of lockdown, come and join Friends of Adel Woods in looking after our local greenspace.