Latest News

Bug House Opens For New Residents

Built from cut-up old pallets and stuffed with all manner of bits and bats, the new Bug House now sits in pride of place at the Sensory Garden. Designed to be a home for a wide range of insects it was constructed by Maurice Houghton our Vice-chair and then pupils from St. George’s C of E Primary School filled it with the materials to make cosy nooks and crannies for the bugs to dwell in.

Bat Walks Return

The First Bat Walk and Talk of the year will be on Saturday 27th May 2023 starting at 8.45

Meet outside the front door of Astley Hall.

A short talk by Harold Green of Merseyside & West Lancs Bat Group will be followed by a guided walk to see and hear the bats. The  walk will finish around 10.15pm. 

There will be a charge of £2.00 for Adults.  U/16 free. Payment on the night. Booking is essential, as numbers will be limited, please ring Maurice on 01257 271507 or contact via email at emandbeejay@talktalk.net

Please bring a torch and wear strong shoes. if you have a bat detector, please bring it.

If it is raining, the event will be cancelled, as the bats will not be flying

Snowdrop Trail in Full Bloom

Thanks partly to recent leaf and bramble clearance work done by Friends’ volunteers, the flowers on the Snowdrop Trail are now on full show. The circular waymarked Trail can easily be walked starting from opposite the front of Astley Hall and either by going down the Dam Wall Steps or along the woodland edged lawn opposite the bowling greens. The Trail continues from the Lost Fountain eastwards along the southern bank of the River Chor to the bottom of the Steps.

Mayor joins in with Firm’s Giving Back Day

Engineering and construction firm J. Murphy & Sons Limited recently provided 80 trees and shrubs plus the personnel to help Friends of Astley Park volunteers plant them in various locations across the town’s premier park. The Murphy team, who are currently doing rail infrastructure projects in the Chorley area, gave their time as part of the company’s ‘Giving Back Days’ scheme, which gives employees paid time off to support their local communities across the country. On this occasion, alongside the shrubs and volunteered time, the Murphy team also donated £500 worth of groceries to the Living Waters food bank and provided the opportunity for Buckshaw and St Laurence’s primary school pupils to do litter picking in the Park.

The tree and shrub planting was overseen by Chorley Council staff and the Friends. The day was topped off by the Mayor, Cllr Julia Berry, providing the finishing touches to the task.

Murphy’s have also made a commitment to carry out major works next Spring to bring the River Chor Reed Bed back to its original function by removing large amounts of silt so as to reinstate the water flow around both sides.