Hedges, eh? Of course there's a Northamptonshire view of hedges, perhaps a tale of two Charlies.
On the one hand the anti-royalist Sulby Hedges, decisive in the Battle of Naseby. Fairfax, commanding the parliamentary army, had rushed before dawn from Northampton to secure the look-out post - the steeple of Naseby chuch - so that he could view Rupert's royalist army approaching from Leicester. Here's the view today, just north of the church and looking north towards Market Harborough and Leicester.
But in the seventeenth century the small hedges (and the trees) would not have been there. Instead, on the left, running north-south, was one high and thick set of hedges through the Hundred of Sulby. These were the Sulby hedges.
Fairfax placed his cavalry, under Cromwell, on the left. In turn, Cromwell placed some of his men - a troop of horse under John Okey - on the extreme left on the other side of the hedges. When Rupert attacked, the first shots in the battle came from Okey's men through the hedges. Confusion followed and when the rest of Cromwell's cavalry - the Ironsides - counter-attacked, Rupert's morning was over. Shortly afterwards, King Charles was captured and held at nearby Holdenby House.
Earlier this year, however, I learned that another Charles is getting his own back on this landscape. Returning from a New Year's Cyclists Lunch in the Sibbertoft Reading Room (a village just north of Naseby), we spotted some new hedge laying on the boundary of the Cottesbrooke estate.
One of my oldest friends, John, lept from his bike to give us an ex-tempore lecture on hedge laying. This hedge, he told us, was typical of the “South Midlands style” and was clearly going to be “bullock-proof”. (If you enter hedge-laying competitions, it's no use turning up to a Lake District competition - where South Midlands style would stick out like a sore thumb against all the Cumberland style hedges.) We could easily see its advantages over an adjacent hedge which had merely been strummed. How did John know? He was teaching himself hedge-laying to improve the boundaries of his property. Out cycling a week later, I noted his craftsmanship:
This is where his boundary runs along the A5099 at Chapel Brampton on the old Northampton-to-Leicester road (the Welford road for followers of rugby) - along which many of the parliamentary army would have marched in 1645. Four months later and John had also laid a fence along his boundary with neighbouring farm land:
and this detail shows that he too is becoming a "bullock-proof" hedger:
He told me that, even with a day-labourer he has employed, he is very slow and therefore not yet a craftsman. However, hedge laying only needs to be done every fifteen years and, as he is seventy, he doesn't plan on doing it again! How does this relate to Prince Charles?
Well, craftsmen-hedgers are rarer than piano-tuners and thatchers. So John has been teaching himself from videos. And the sponsor / patron of the best hedge-laying videos? Prince Charles.
BTW, I've had a lengthy phone conversation today with mmmmmartin and can confirm that I'll be the white-van-man for those of you riding from Saturday 14th June to Saturday 21st June 2014 following the draft outline in his comment above.