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Intrepid explorers we were not, and the Ipswich hinterland is hardly
uncharted territory, but even so, the groups of members who assembled to
walk the proposed Fonnereau Way on 22 June and Churchman's Way on 2 July,
under the guidance of Roger and Stella Wolfe, were probably
discovering places they had never reached before!
The purpose of these two proposed routes is to provide easily accessible
"green corridors" out of Ipswich into the surrounding countryside, short
walks of not more than three miles which can be started from or terminated
at public transport connections. They are intended to form part of the
much wider "Greenways Project" which through the agency of a consortium of
the Suffolk
County Council, district, parish and town councils, the Ipswich Borough
Council and a range of wildlife and environmental groups, is putting into
place a wide variety of envirornmental preservation and improvement features
in and just beyond the Ipswich borough boundary. Forty-three
such features are listed in the recent annual report of the Project,
including for example improvement to heathland at Belstead Heath, managing a
wild flower bank at West End Road and
maintaining Grundisburgh's Millennium Meadow. Most of the work is being done
by dedicated volunteer groups.
The Fonnereau Way is intended to provide a route from Christchurch Park to
Westerfield, using public transport at the beginning or end of the trail. We
enjoyed an eight minute train ride,
Ipswich to Westerfield. It was said that probably Westerfield had not seen
so many passengers alighting at one time for many a day! Along the walk back
into Ipswich, features of the route were pointed out by James Baker, the
Greenways Project Officer, Peter Scotcher, an Ipswich Parks Ranger, and Paul
Jackson, a tree surgeon. The route [photo below] has a varied content - a
village footpath in Westerfield, an ancient hedge and ditch boundary, a
railway crossing, hay
meadows, and last but not least all the interesting features in Christchurch
Park itself.
The second outing took us along the proposed Churchman's Way, named for Sir
Arthur Churchman (later Lord Woodbridge) who presented Chantry Park and
Mansion to Ipswich
Borough in 1927. The route takes in a large portion of the Park. This time
the group walked out from Ipswich, starting first through Gippeswyk Park.
This park was given to Ipswich by that other notable benefactor of our town,
Felix Cobbold, giving rise to the off-the-cuff suggestion that an
alternative name for this green corridor should be Cobbled (sorry -
Cobbold!) Way.
We progressed to Chantry Park after navigating a rather busy London Road,
gaining access by what was until very recently an "unofficial" entry into
the park up a steep roadside bank. This has, under the Greenways Project,
now become an official one with the construction of a very
sturdy set of wooden steps. It was there and then ceremonially opened by the
cutting of a tape by our President, the Mayor of Ipswich, Councillor Penny
Breakwell, who had undertaken to walk with the group. Both she and her
husband who accompanied her are keen walkers. As on the previous walk, we
had been joined by James Baker and Peter Scotcher, and as we passed through
the park we were kept informed about the management of all the different
environmental areas and concerns within it - the hay meadows, the wilderness
areas, the woodland, the ponds, as well as the more formal gardens and sport
and recreational areas.
After strolling down Church Lane into Sproughton - to the church naturally -
the Mayor then proceeded to perform an unexpected but popular little
ceremony, when she presented a medal and scroll to Roger Wolfe, confirming
him as one of Ipswich's "Unsung Heroes", a recognition on behalf of Ipswich
Borough Council of the dedicated work he has undertaken in planning and
walking out these proposed routes as part of the Greenways Project.
From Sproughton, after suitable refreshment, the energetic ones walked back
to Ipswich along the Gipping Path and two defaulters, who are named below,
decided to test out the public transport. Definitely worthwhile!
RUTH and BILL SERJEANT
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Cover, issue 153
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