Blue Flower

Each December I report on our main activity and news from the year, which used to be included in the last blog of the year, but from now on will be a separate report in the Articles section. This review will also be used for the Annual Parish Meeting in March, as minutes of the meeting are not put on the council website for many months afterwards, so there's no point writing an upto date report specially for the meeting.

Review 2025

2025 marked 10 years since restoration work started at the bone mill which we celebrated at our May and September open days, we also celebrated the 80th anniversary of VE Day in May with a Breckland Council grant. New visitor guide maps were introduced at the September open days which were popular.

Jan’s bone mill workers research was completed in January and was on display at both open days and is also on our website. This includes details of fatal accidents and a picture of one of the workers.

We had a meeting in February to decide what to do at the end of the HLF grant period (December 2025) when we are no longer bound by the grant terms, but we decided we would continue with open days, volunteering and our website.

Jonathan supplied and installed owl boxes along the Nar Valley Way, and Rob gave us owl boxes he made which we installed in trees at The Maltings, opposite the public footpath.

We cleared a number of fallen trees blocking the Nar Valley Way footpath this year, we cut them up and used them for firewood in our railway wagon volunteer room.

Anne Marie made a new garden in front of our visitor centre and planted flowers which all bloomed well including cosmos and sunflowers. In April the volunteers all walked down the river to see the tulip fields.

Our wildflower meadow was not as successful this year due to the very dry spring, its not practical to water the whole meadow, so when we re-seeded in Autumn we limited sowing to a smaller area so we can water it if needed. The covered brick floor which was part of the meadow has now been left as a lawn, as thin soil prevented flowers growing there.

The barn owl box previously used by jackdaws was taken over by stock doves this year, we watched their chicks being raised as well as great tits which nested again in the other nest box with camera. We put the camera cables in more trunking as animal runs had eroded soil and exposed them.

We had to repair our insect hotels, butterfly boxes and a dormouse box this year as they are getting old. The solitary bee box we made in 2024 was used, we saw bee activity around it and saw larvae and pollen through the Perspex windows.

We repainted and refurbished several tables and bench seats, including a picnic bench donated to us. We planned to repaint bench seats in the church yard again, but the church now have their own volunteers.

We had visits from walkers on the footpath, and Kings Lynn u3a local history group attended with 24 members in October.

Our fallen river wall has not been addressed yet for various reasons but we are hoping to carry out these works in the near future.

We made a storage compound in November, this has tidied several areas of the site and made more room in our shed. We also made another log store as our fire wood was overflowing.

Our next open days will be 9 & 10 May 2026. For more information about the mill and to contact us, see our website www.bonemill.org.uk

Graham Bartlett

Secretary

Narborough Bone Mill

Review 2024       March 2025 Report       Volunteer       Mill Workers     Blog (Late December)