We have been doing living willow structures and sculptures as training days here at Chopwell wood for about 4 years now and it's proved extremely popular with the public as well as quite satisfying to do.
We were doing some last Sunday and we replaced a low, hazel wattle fence around a "nature" pond and constructed a large dome as an "add on" to a large maze type thing which visiting kids play in.
The new dome has a radius of around 9 feet with about 6ft6ins at the centre and would make a fantastic tent with a couple of tarps over the top.
We get most of our willow from Blandford up in Northumberland and it's cut one day and picked up the next. We used quite a lot of the prunings from the original structures this time which saved a few quid. Apparently the stuff we bought in, is all hybrid stock, bred for particular qualities like strength, colour and rapid growth etc.
Earlier this year, I gathered a load of wands from a big crack willow that had been blown down across the river a couple of years back and replanted them around various damp spots in the wood. They came away like rockets and I expect to be able to harvest them this time next year to build a series of domes to be used for hides and fencing to keep horses and mountain bikes from dashing across the roads around the place.
one word of caution; when you plant willow near buildings, you need to have a care for drains as the roots tend to get in there and block them up!:11doh:
this is the dome; a bit "arty farty" for me mind you, but that's the sort of thing the general public are after!
You can see the size of the thing anyway.
Kind regards
R.B.
