
Good news for lee residents who have been waiting more than three weeks for their food bins to be empties. They were finally done yesterday, at least in some roads in the area. Please let us know if you are still waiting.

Good news for lee residents who have been waiting more than three weeks for their food bins to be empties. They were finally done yesterday, at least in some roads in the area. Please let us know if you are still waiting.

Wondering what’s going on with bin collections.? Some parts of Lee haven’t had their food bins emptied for more than a fortnight, with turkey carcasses and other Christmas leftovers rotting inside.
Lewisham Council say the Christmas and New Year holidays should only delay collections by up to three days. But they have also admitted that “severe staff shortages” have caused further delays. Now they have promised that things should get back to normal by January 13th. Fingers crossed! Find out more here.
In the meantime, have a laugh with the Naked Week’s take on the Christmas bin issue!

The Christmas Tree graveyard in Manor House Hardens is already filling up.
Lewisham Council offers this advice on how to dispose of your tree:
After Christmas, you can take your real Christmas tree to a collection point near you. If you have a garden waste bin, you can use it to recycle your real Christmas tree. Just cut it into pieces no bigger than 10cm thick and 50cm long. Find out more about our garden waste collection service. You can donate artificial trees to a charity shop or give them away. If it’s broken, take it to the Landmann Way Reuse and Recycling Centre.
You can find details of other collections points here.

By Charles Batchelor
More than a dozen households have responded to the Society’s proposal to match-fund the planting of trees in Southbrook Road. We have set aside funds to spend on the planting and invited residents to provide a similar amount.
The death of several of the aged cherries has left Southbrook Road particularly denuded of tree cover though the Society plans to roll out the programme to other local streets in future years.

Much of the £395 charge per tree is accounted for by labour costs, digging up the pavement to create a tree pit. Working with Street Trees for Living, the charity managing Lewisham’s street tree programme, we have surveyed potential planting sites.
Some residents have expressed an interest in trees offering either spring blossom or autumn colour. A final decision has yet to be taken on the varieties to be planted but they will comprise a small number of tree types rather than a single variety. This will make the trees less liable to succumb en masse to any of the many viruses that can affect them. Planting will take place in the winter of 2025.