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Garden Birds

As the weather starts to warm up, the wildlife in the Morshead Mansions communal garden becomes a lot more active. It’s a timely reminder of how lucky we are to have such a wealth of resident garden birds. More commonly associated with life in the countryside, London is full of a wide array of diverse bird life, many of which can be found right outside our windows…

Wood Pigeons

The Wood Pigeon is one of the Garden birds that can be found in Morshead Mansions

Probably one of the most common birds found in London are pigeons, which you will see pretty much everywhere you go. London Pigeons are usually Feral Pigeons, and the Morshead Mansions gardens have their fair share of these. They usually nest in chimneys, guttering or under the iron balconies. The Morshead trees though are also home to the Wood Pigeon, which is actually the most common pigeon in the UK. More likely to be found in the rural areas, it has become more urbanised in the last 30 years and is now a feature of the communal gardens.

Parakeets

Parakeets can often be seen in the Morshead Mansions communal gardens

Also becoming a more common sight in London are bright green Parakeets. Not native to the UK, just how they came to exist here isn’t exactly known. There are several theories however, one of which is that they originally escaped from Ealing Studios in 1951 while being used for the filming of African Queen. Another is that they escaped from aviaries during the great storm of 1987. Yet another is that a pair of Parakeets escaped from a pet shop in Sunbury on Thames in 1970. However it happened, there’s no doubt that they seem to be here to stay and the last official count in 2012 recorded 32,000 Parakeets in London. They can often be seen, and heard, flying between the trees in the communal gardens.

Jays

Jays are often seen in the Morshead Mansions communal gardens

Another Morshead resident is the Jay. A colourful member of the Crow family, it is predominantly brown and features brilliant blue patches on its wings. Usually quite a shy bird, it’s most likely to be heard before it is seen, due to its very loud screaming call. They are present all year round but are most likely to be seen more often in the Autumn, when they are out searching for acorns, nuts and fruit, which they tend to store to see them through the winter. Apparently, the acorns that jays collect often get forgotten, growing into oak saplings and eventually trees.

Crows

Carrion Crows are often seen in the Morshead Mansions communal gardens

Including the Jay, there are actually 8 species of Crow in the UK. The most common, and the one most seen in the Morshead gardens, is the Carrion Crow. An intelligent and adaptable bird, it has thrived on the changes that humans have made to the landscape. It will eat pretty much anything, including food scraps, dead animals, fruit, worms, small mammals and other birds. It’s thought that as many as two million live in the UK, although they are usually solitary birds that are wary of any contact. This is another loud bird that is usually heard before it is seen.

Magpies

Magpies are one of the Garden birds that can be found in Morshead Mansions

Also included in the Crow family is the Magpie, and this is one of the garden birds that is being seen more and more in Morshead in recent years. They are widely thought to be intelligent birds and have shown the ability to make tools, imitate human speech, grieve, play games and work in teams. Magpies are easily identified by their black and white plumage, long tail and green/blue/purple wing and tail feathers. They are known to be scavengers, thought to be attracted to bright objects, but can also be predators and pest controllers. Magpies generally mate for life but will occasionally form new partnerships if they lose a mate. Non-breeding birds or those without mates will tend to gather in flocks.

Robins

The Robin is one of the Garden birds that can be found in Morshead Mansions

Often called the UK’s favourite bird is the Robin, easily identified by its red breast. It can be seen all year round and is especially associated with the Christmas season. Males and females look identical, although young Robins don’t have a red breast but one that is spotted and golden brown. Robins sing nearly all year round but despite their cute appearance, they are aggressively territorial and are quick to drive away intruders. The Robin is one of the garden birds that is traditionally known as a gardener’s friend, due to its main diet of worms, bugs and insects. In winter it will supplement its diet with berries and seeds.

Blue Tits

Blue Tits are one of the Garden birds that can be found in Morshead Mansions

Last but not least and a welcome resident of our garden is the Blue Tit. Usually found in woodland, parks and gardens, they tend to nest in holes in trees but are just as happy to use nesting boxes. They are active feeders with a liking of insects and spiders but will happily visit bird tables and bird feeders, being particularly fond of nuts and seeds. It’s worth noting that if you hang feeders on your balcony to attract Blue Tits, it’s probably better to fill them with seeds rather than nuts, as the local squirrel population are also very keen on nuts and will happily scale walls all the way up to the top floor to find them!

So that’s a run-down of some of the garden birds that can be regularly spotted in the Morshead Mansions communal gardens. Keep an eye out this Spring and Summer and see how many you can identify!

To find out more about the Morshead Mansions communal gardens, click here.

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Rear Drainage Works

I’m writing in order to explain the rear drainage works and related excavations which many of you will have seen being undertaken by our contractors on the rear of the building.

These works are in part a response to the pressures arising out of the advancing trend for works of alteration affecting a significant number of flats in which the position of kitchens are being moved to what was originally the front/main bedroom, which is then opened up to provide an open plan kitchen, dining living rooms.  Further changes include the development of a number of the roof voids so as to create ‘Duplex’ apartments (12 so far out of a possible 26).  In a couple of cases, bathrooms have been introduced to the rearmost room in the flat, originally also a bedroom.

What does this have to do with the rear drainage works, I hear you ask? The answer is that all of these changes result in a requirement for effluent disposal which in turn requires a connection to a conveniently located soil pipe. The trouble with this is that there are no conveniently located soil pipes – we only have inconveniently located soil pipes.

In recent years, this has resulted in a proliferation of unsightly horizontally mounted waste pipes stretching across the rear elevations and imposing an unattractive visual burden on the building.  It so happens that the underground drainage is plagued with problems associated with their age and outdated design – the drainage network is now 120 years old and it is feeling the strain. We are plagued by blockages caused by the inconsiderate disposal of wet-wipes which are flushed down the loos and by food waste being poured down the kitchen sink.

Rear Drainage Works

Addressing both problems, unsightly pipework and blockages, requires works designed to increase capacity by the addition of new vertical soil pipes fixed in the corners of the light wells and preventing or reducing blockages by removing the surviving gulley traps (each of which have ‘U’-bends) which used to be the standard means of discharging waste water from kitchens and bathrooms and rainwater.

In the old days, gulleys were the most economic means of connecting cast iron waste pipes to the underground drainage which was made of clay. Each vertical waste pipe would discharge over an open gulley, surrounded by concrete barrier and ‘protected’ by a metal grill intended to catch solid waste (like food) in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent blockages.

Rear Drainage Works

This design was fundamentally flawed – it didn’t work. The metal grills would get blocked within hours by food, if it was a kitchen waste, or by hair and soap (and other ghastly muck) in the bathroom wastes. In a building the size of Morshead Mansions, each block having at least 6 gulleys, you needed porters/caretakers whose job it was to clear these blockages.

If neglected, which eventually became routine, the blocked gulleys would overflow and the waste water and the detritus floating in it would spread out over the ground around the buildings.

Here’s what these blocked gulleys looked like in 1978:

Rear Drainage Works

By December 1992, when we bought the freehold, the situation had not improved. If anything, it was worse – we had no porters, so nobody was even trying to keep on top of the mess that was spewing out from every block. The rear of the building was not a nice place to be.

We did improve the situation in the course of the major works programme which the company undertook in 1993 and 1994 but it was never really finished properly.

We finished up with a half-way house in which we sealed the gulleys to their respective drain pipes but did not eliminate the ‘U’-bends. While this did dispense with the mess depicted in the historic pictures, it did not entirely eradicate the blockages which would still plague the building from time to time. Moreover, with bathrooms being introduced into novel locations within the flats, we have to accommodate a requirement to dispose safely of ‘blackwater’.

Rear Drainage Works

Block 2 (flats 9 to 16) helpfully illustrates what we had to begin with in our present programme. The pictures above afford a good view of the mess which has accreted down the years as uncoordinated efforts produced a chaotic and unsightly jumble of waste pipes which are anything but attractive to the eye.

The last picture shows you the difference in appearance that can be achieved if you have the chance to construct a coordinated system of externally mounted waste pipework which is integrated with the new drainage scheme. There are practically no horizontal pipes crossing the elevation, there are no gulleys or ‘U’-bends to block, all fittings are black in colour and fixed correctly (and in accordance with building regulations), and the building looks good.  A building that looks good enhances amenity and increases value.

Rear Drainage Works

If you have the opportunity, between downpours, why not take a walk along the rear of the building and see for yourself.  Let us know what you think of the benefits of the rear drainage works.

David Wismayer

To read more about the Morshead Mansions communal gardens, click here.

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Considerate use of the garden

Morshead Mansions is very fortunate to have a spacious garden area to the rear which it shares with the neighbouring Wymering Mansions. The garden is well maintained and the planting and shrubbery which has been well orchestrated over several years is now mature and welcoming. Access to the garden requires a key, please contact the building management if you require one. As the area is shared, as well as being surrounded by multiple flats, we ask that you exercise considerate use of the garden at all times.

The garden area is for the use of all residents, and friends when invited, and all are welcome. Please be aware that because of the height of both buildings, sound can tend to echo and be amplified, meaning that the surrounding flats can easily be disturbed by excessive noise, especially in the summer months when most residents will have their windows open.

Morshead Mansions

We would ask that residents taking children into the gardens wait until after 9am during the week and 10am at weekends, to give other residents a chance for undisturbed rest. At other times, please be considerate and try to ensure that your children don’t make excessive noise. You’re welcome to take children’s toys into the garden but please bring them back in with you when leaving. Please supervise your children at all times and please ensure that they don’t play in and disturb the planted areas.

If you are using the garden into the evenings, especially in the summer months, please try to keep noise to a minimum and aim to vacate the garden by 10.30pm so that other residents can sleep peacefully if they retire early, as sound tends to travel even more at night.

Morshead Mansions

Barbecues are permitted in the garden, however, please be aware that not everybody is keen on the smell and it does tend to travel up and into other resident’s flats, so please try to keep them to a minimum. Once you are done, please also clear up and leave the area as you found it. Please do not put disposable barbecues on the grass areas.

The garden tables and chairs are for everyone’s use and have proven very popular since they arrived, so please enjoy them but if you move them around, please return them to their original positions before you leave. With considerate use of the garden, everyone can enjoy it to its full potential and we ask that you bear this in mind.

Unfortunately, dogs aren’t permitted in the garden.