Video Timeline (min:sec):
00:00 - 01:00 Introductory banter
01:00 - 03:40 Geolocation
03:40 - 06:07 layer copying and changing geometry
06:07 - 54:00 3rd party layers available in PO
54:00 - 58:00 Filtering features in a layer
58:00 - 59:45 Photos as attachments
59:55 - 68:15 Allotments
68:15 - 74:41(end) limited access to layers by users
Meeting Summary:
TBD - zoom website not delivering summaries just now......(20Feb)
Chat:
00:11:31 Stuart Bacon: https://support.geoxphere.com/portal/en/kb/articles/using-geolocation-gps-positioning
00:34:01 Iona Taylor: Sorry, please could you just show where the parish council questionnaire was again?
00:43:01 Stuart Bacon: Replying to "Sorry, please could ..."
Click within your parish and there is a button to the right of Council Statistics which opens the questionnaire.
00:43:16 Judith Mashiter: I think it’s £7 now!
00:56:27 Sheila Churchward: This may be a question for Geoxphere, but you may be interested. We are going to set up a community engagement platform and wonder if we can link our Parish Online to it with basic access?
00:58:26 Katharine Sheehan: Thank you this has been very useful and I will try to come again!
01:21:43 Helen Davey: Must go thank you . very interesting afternoon.
Speech-to-text
WEBVTT
25 00:03:41.210 --> 00:03:46.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Anyway, let me just say good day to Judith and Ann and Chris. Nice to see you back.
26 00:03:46.960 --> 00:03:47.675 chris edwards: Hello!
27 00:03:48.740 --> 00:03:54.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And Philip Rowe and Laura. Nice to see you all got people coming in from everywhere.
28 00:03:55.630 --> 00:03:56.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Amazing.
29 00:03:58.110 --> 00:04:15.190 Iona Taylor: I don't know whether, you know. But the session was promoted on a community clerks, network on Face Group this morning, and there was quite a lot of interest from that. There's quite. I don't know whether there's any other parish clerks out here, but certainly from like a council point of view. There was quite a lot of interest.
30 00:04:15.450 --> 00:04:19.829 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I suspect that is the case then, because there are some names here that I've not seen
31 00:04:20.140 --> 00:04:22.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: either before or for a long, long time
32 00:04:25.010 --> 00:04:27.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so, and in what part of the world are you in.
33 00:04:30.700 --> 00:04:35.630 Anne Ogilvie: West Oxfordshire, I. Clark small small councils there, 4 of them.
34 00:04:36.110 --> 00:04:39.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Or the busy lady. Okay.
35 00:04:39.660 --> 00:04:41.840 Anne Ogilvie: Yeah, kind of a full time equivalent
36 00:04:43.890 --> 00:04:46.580 Anne Ogilvie: but 4 lots of finance and 4 lots of audits.
37 00:04:46.900 --> 00:04:47.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
38 00:04:48.450 --> 00:04:50.689 Judith Mashiter: I can beat that. I do. 5.
39 00:04:53.740 --> 00:04:55.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, Judith, it's nice to have you back.
40 00:04:56.150 --> 00:04:58.310 Judith Mashiter: Thank you. Thank you, Graham.
41 00:04:58.310 --> 00:05:03.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And for a moment I saw Sheila. Oh, there she is, Sheila! You made it.
42 00:05:04.250 --> 00:05:05.629 Sheila Churchward: I did. Sorry.
43 00:05:05.630 --> 00:05:06.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well.
44 00:05:06.030 --> 00:05:08.089 Sheila Churchward: In a rush today.
45 00:05:08.090 --> 00:05:15.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I got all sorts of messages, saying I can't talk. I'm on my way to pick up Paris, anyway.
46 00:05:16.320 --> 00:05:22.840 Sheila Churchward: I've just finished. It is Valentine's day, and as I walked in the door my husband gave me a glass of bubbles.
47 00:05:22.840 --> 00:05:23.850 Malcolm Daniels: Oh, that's good!
48 00:05:23.850 --> 00:05:29.374 Sheila Churchward: How about that? In that case we should turn the meeting over to you. It'll be hilarious.
49 00:05:30.450 --> 00:05:35.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think he's showing a very bad example to the rest of us as he does.
50 00:05:35.490 --> 00:05:37.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: How's his pint? Yes.
51 00:05:39.470 --> 00:05:41.320 Malcolm Daniels: I got a glass of water.
52 00:05:41.480 --> 00:05:46.430 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Yeah, likewise. God damn miserable misery!
53 00:05:46.960 --> 00:05:49.831 Nigel Wylie Carrick: I'll wait for the yard arm to be crossed.
54 00:05:50.150 --> 00:05:52.424 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, well, that's very nautical. Goodness me!
55 00:05:54.800 --> 00:05:58.880 Sheila Churchward: I must admit I could do without being a parish councillor at the moment.
56 00:06:00.571 --> 00:06:04.260 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Did anyone go to the Elminster Flood Forum.
57 00:06:04.790 --> 00:06:07.950 Sheila Churchward: No, no, we don't have floods down here.
58 00:06:07.950 --> 00:06:17.180 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Well, we did have one, and unfortunately I was down with this logo still got the tail in, Charlie. So so sadly. I'm
59 00:06:17.320 --> 00:06:21.520 Nigel Wylie Carrick: I'm a bit fluey, but anyway.
60 00:06:21.520 --> 00:06:25.929 Malcolm Daniels: Anything like mine, Nigel. It's gone on for 3 weeks now.
61 00:06:25.930 --> 00:06:28.519 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Well, that's depressing news.
62 00:06:30.350 --> 00:06:31.810 Malcolm Daniels: I thought I'd cheer you up.
63 00:06:31.810 --> 00:06:39.849 Stuart Bacon: Well, I'm I'm feeling optimistic because I mean, I've got impacted badly.
64 00:06:40.140 --> 00:06:43.012 Nigel Wylie Carrick: On one day, so
65 00:06:44.300 --> 00:06:47.320 Nigel Wylie Carrick: I sort of took it easy for 2 days.
66 00:06:47.910 --> 00:06:51.500 Nigel Wylie Carrick: and it seems to be clearing up now, so.
67 00:06:52.990 --> 00:06:54.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All things being equal.
68 00:06:56.310 --> 00:07:02.819 Graham Stoddart-Stones: let me start the ball rolling by saying good afternoon to everybody, and very nice to see a good turnout.
69 00:07:03.150 --> 00:07:10.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and traditionally, when we do these things, we start off with any existing or pre-existing questions.
70 00:07:11.790 --> 00:07:13.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And after
71 00:07:13.150 --> 00:07:24.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: having said that, of course, the person I'm going to talk to Stuart's just disappeared. Are you recognizing that you sent me an interesting note about floods and floodplain forecasts, and so forth?
72 00:07:29.630 --> 00:07:31.549 Stuart Bacon: Yes. Yes. Sorry.
73 00:07:31.600 --> 00:07:32.297 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That was it.
74 00:07:32.530 --> 00:07:38.380 Stuart Bacon: As a follow up to Andrew's comments last week about the the
75 00:07:38.480 --> 00:07:45.946 Stuart Bacon: the details on on flooding, and where we were. I just decided to check on
76 00:07:47.240 --> 00:07:57.750 Stuart Bacon: took on the location in the villages as to how they were doing, what? What the sort of types of the reports were that it had come up with to see how it was, and I got quite
77 00:07:57.890 --> 00:08:00.379 Stuart Bacon: drastically differing results.
78 00:08:01.127 --> 00:08:11.410 Stuart Bacon: From 2 sites on from gov.uk the one Andrew recommended. Gave me
79 00:08:12.130 --> 00:08:16.880 Stuart Bacon: one end of the spectrum, and there was then another one. I'm planning
80 00:08:17.435 --> 00:08:22.329 Stuart Bacon: that gave me sort of totally the other end. The
81 00:08:22.650 --> 00:08:33.029 Stuart Bacon: yeah. So I guess it was what one said. There was no risk of flooding whatsoever, and the other said you were tier 3 and highly at risk.
82 00:08:33.834 --> 00:08:42.224 Stuart Bacon: So yeah, I I just sort of thought it a little bit sort of
83 00:08:42.750 --> 00:08:45.279 Stuart Bacon: challenging to believe some of the results.
84 00:08:45.760 --> 00:08:48.109 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now of those
85 00:08:48.310 --> 00:08:53.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: reports which ones are in fashion online, not the.gov.uk ones. The long term ones.
86 00:08:57.280 --> 00:09:00.459 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Cause. We just get the environment agency stuff that we did.
87 00:09:00.460 --> 00:09:06.660 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, I can't remember. Sorry I it wasn't directly it it was what was referred to during the conversation.
88 00:09:06.660 --> 00:09:07.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
89 00:09:07.540 --> 00:09:10.180 Stuart Bacon: Neither of them were actually in parish online.
90 00:09:10.180 --> 00:09:14.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I was just clarifying for the people who are, you know, fresh to the meeting.
91 00:09:15.006 --> 00:09:19.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: This follows on from a previous call rather than being a direct question this week.
92 00:09:20.150 --> 00:09:27.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So the next step in the proceedings is to ask if there's anyone who's arrived with a burning question that they'd like to ask
93 00:09:27.950 --> 00:09:29.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to the excitement of everyone else.
94 00:09:30.570 --> 00:09:36.419 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Judith, you're usually a very reliable source, Judith. You're not going to tell me you've come with nothing today.
95 00:09:36.420 --> 00:09:40.159 Judith Mashiter: I've come to to be astounded by layers.
96 00:09:40.430 --> 00:09:40.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But.
97 00:09:40.700 --> 00:09:48.335 Judith Mashiter: And and your your your teasers have have brought me here. I want to know about
98 00:09:49.090 --> 00:10:13.239 Judith Mashiter: fuel poverty in the area, and particularly, I suppose, and this might apply to several aspects the level of aggregation that there is here. Does it go down to small, tiny parish council level, because otherwise it's a bit meaningless. So I'm looking forward to learning about hedgehogs and cyclopaths and things like that.
99 00:10:14.080 --> 00:10:15.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay? Sheila.
100 00:10:16.310 --> 00:10:27.370 Sheila Churchward: I'd like to know if I go on to the Wiki site. Can I do a search on using a mobile phone to fix a point for an allotment
101 00:10:27.500 --> 00:10:37.670 Sheila Churchward: I can't remember. I remember we talked about it. Oh, when I 1st started on this this forum, and
102 00:10:37.800 --> 00:10:49.250 Sheila Churchward: did you actually record that, so I can go back and have a look to see how I do it on Monday. I've got a representative from the from the church
103 00:10:49.370 --> 00:10:52.250 Sheila Churchward: who wants to have their allotments plotted.
104 00:10:52.460 --> 00:11:18.560 Sheila Churchward: and I'm I've drawn the line around the area, but they want to actually plot and make a section out areas as a plot, and then use that plot as a as a number, so they can charge for their allotments. The Parish Council has given me permission to actually support the church in this.
105 00:11:18.930 --> 00:11:32.079 Sheila Churchward: But I can't find my notes of that meeting when we actually had a mobile phone to go and plot road signs. Remember, ages ago.
106 00:11:32.080 --> 00:11:33.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yes. Yeah.
107 00:11:33.449 --> 00:11:38.899 Sheila Churchward: Plotting where a road sign actually was was, and taking a photo of it.
108 00:11:40.120 --> 00:11:44.800 Sheila Churchward: I'd like to do the SIM something the same for the parish church.
109 00:11:45.150 --> 00:11:52.820 Sheila Churchward: as far as their allotments are concerned, and I can't remember where that was, or can I do a search on Wiki.
110 00:11:53.483 --> 00:12:07.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can. But it it might be easier if I just send you the details of that particular activity. I think you're talking about 2 separate actions. One is geolocation, which is the ability to go out with your mobile phone.
111 00:12:07.830 --> 00:12:09.099 Sheila Churchward: Mobile, phone, yeah.
112 00:12:09.100 --> 00:12:10.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Have an asset.
113 00:12:10.340 --> 00:12:22.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the other is, if you're going to start plotting allotments, then the fastest and simplest way of doing it is to turn on the overhead photography and just trace around the allotments because they're already there
114 00:12:22.910 --> 00:12:23.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: rather than.
115 00:12:23.610 --> 00:12:30.399 Sheila Churchward: Well, this is this is this is a bare, almost a bare area. It's very badly overgrown.
116 00:12:30.650 --> 00:12:38.309 Sheila Churchward: And the new our new vicar. She's lovely. Her name's Vanessa. She wants to bring it into order.
117 00:12:38.420 --> 00:12:43.870 Sheila Churchward: and so the allotments aren't even visible.
118 00:12:44.540 --> 00:12:46.732 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right at the moment.
119 00:12:47.420 --> 00:12:55.909 Sheila Churchward: So I want to help them, agreed. I can use parish online to help them.
120 00:12:55.910 --> 00:12:56.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
121 00:12:56.970 --> 00:13:01.989 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So give me a second, Sheila, just to check with Chris, who's also got his hand up
122 00:13:02.120 --> 00:13:05.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: in case it's limited or linked to the same question.
123 00:13:06.092 --> 00:13:14.549 chris edwards: No, completely different. And I'm sure this question's been asked before. I think it's probably as best for me to share.
124 00:13:15.475 --> 00:13:21.910 chris edwards: My query is I've got a a parish lair
125 00:13:22.040 --> 00:13:30.349 chris edwards: this 20 mile an hour signs in my parish, and I've set it up about 2 months ago with a polygon.
126 00:13:30.730 --> 00:13:35.569 chris edwards: But now I feel that it would be better served by using a point.
127 00:13:36.231 --> 00:13:40.209 chris edwards: Is there a quick fix for me to just change that over.
128 00:13:40.330 --> 00:13:44.800 chris edwards: because I don't seem to be able to edit that.
129 00:13:45.090 --> 00:13:46.159 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, what you want to be able to.
130 00:13:46.160 --> 00:13:47.430 chris edwards: Strong polygon.
131 00:13:48.635 --> 00:13:53.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If, Chris, what you want to do is to use the duplicate layer facility.
132 00:13:54.060 --> 00:13:54.860 chris edwards: Okay.
133 00:13:55.130 --> 00:13:57.568 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Which, if you go back to your list of
134 00:13:59.360 --> 00:13:59.770 Stuart Bacon: Oh, God!
135 00:14:00.620 --> 00:14:03.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There's go to the previous page.
136 00:14:03.520 --> 00:14:06.000 chris edwards: Yeah, let me just get rid of all the
137 00:14:06.560 --> 00:14:10.980 chris edwards: sorry I've got the pictures of everybody blocking my view.
138 00:14:10.980 --> 00:14:11.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, right.
139 00:14:13.330 --> 00:14:16.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you go down to your 20 miles an hour in Ashford.
140 00:14:17.060 --> 00:14:18.130 chris edwards: Where is it?
141 00:14:18.130 --> 00:14:19.109 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think it was a bit higher.
142 00:14:19.110 --> 00:14:20.310 Sheila Churchward: Lost it again.
143 00:14:20.310 --> 00:14:20.900 chris edwards: There it is!
144 00:14:21.240 --> 00:14:25.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right. So now now just highlight it. Now go up to the top of the page
145 00:14:25.710 --> 00:14:28.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and click on the duplicate layer, icon.
146 00:14:29.010 --> 00:14:31.879 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and it asks you, do you want to change the geometry type? And you say.
147 00:14:33.230 --> 00:14:33.730 Sheila Churchward: Oh!
148 00:14:33.730 --> 00:14:34.050 chris edwards: Oh!
149 00:14:34.050 --> 00:14:36.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then go into Polygon, change it, to point.
150 00:14:36.880 --> 00:14:37.630 chris edwards: Point.
151 00:14:37.630 --> 00:14:38.649 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then Whoa! Whoa! Whoa!
152 00:14:38.650 --> 00:14:39.310 chris edwards: Whoa! Whoa!
153 00:14:39.310 --> 00:14:40.863 chris edwards: I'm sorry.
154 00:14:42.346 --> 00:14:43.760 chris edwards: Oh, dude.
155 00:14:43.760 --> 00:14:51.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I wasn't sure. Well, I wasn't sure. The system lets you duplicate the data as well. I think it may have turned the data off when you change geometry. Type.
156 00:14:52.655 --> 00:14:53.430 chris edwards: Damn!
157 00:14:53.430 --> 00:14:58.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you click that. Oh, it does. Yeah. Can you click in the include data box? You can't no.
158 00:14:58.880 --> 00:14:59.490 chris edwards: No.
159 00:14:59.490 --> 00:15:09.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so no, no harm done then. So cancel that one, Chris, because it'll already be there. Your copy. If you go down now to your whoops 20 miles an hour. One. You'll see the copy above.
160 00:15:09.910 --> 00:15:10.910 chris edwards: Oh yes!
161 00:15:10.910 --> 00:15:11.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yeah.
162 00:15:11.790 --> 00:15:14.209 chris edwards: It's a point. The only point.
163 00:15:14.210 --> 00:15:17.549 Graham Stoddart-Stones: With that is is, you've now got to reenter the.
164 00:15:17.550 --> 00:15:18.300 Sheila Churchward: All the data.
165 00:15:19.390 --> 00:15:21.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, I I don't mind doing that. That's fine
166 00:15:21.680 --> 00:15:25.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that many of those so that answered your question
167 00:15:25.510 --> 00:15:27.419 Graham Stoddart-Stones: lovely. Thank you ever so much. That's great.
168 00:15:27.420 --> 00:15:29.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Back to Sheila.
169 00:15:30.475 --> 00:15:37.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think because we've got so many people interested in layers. May I come back to you on that one separately?
170 00:15:37.970 --> 00:15:39.850 Sheila Churchward: Oh, no, yes, no problem. Thank you.
171 00:15:40.040 --> 00:15:52.229 Stuart Bacon: I've just put a a video in the chat or a link to the video and help tech section in the chat for Chris's support on doing
172 00:15:52.400 --> 00:15:53.720 Stuart Bacon: geolocation.
173 00:15:53.720 --> 00:15:58.639 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, thank you for Sheila. You want a geolocation. Yeah.
174 00:15:59.410 --> 00:16:11.509 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so let's go on to the layers. If nobody else has any questions. I guess. Unfortunately, I've been feeling a bit like Stuart last week, and trying desperately to get everyone else to ask questions before I have to.
175 00:16:11.510 --> 00:16:14.480 Helen Davey: I'll I'll join in if the when everyone's finished.
176 00:16:14.480 --> 00:16:15.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, excellent.
177 00:16:16.934 --> 00:16:20.325 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So let me go over to parish online
178 00:16:30.520 --> 00:16:33.159 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and let's go to an area I'm happier with.
179 00:16:40.140 --> 00:16:40.850 Helen Davey: Hmm.
180 00:16:41.990 --> 00:16:47.569 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I'm going to assume for most people, as I said, the starting of a
181 00:16:47.780 --> 00:17:04.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: sort of familiar with the system, but not all of the bits. So there's a color coding interviewed over here on the collections. So these are called collections of layers, and then in each side each one, you've got a whole bunch of individual layers. So the light beige are layers. The darker beige are collections.
182 00:17:05.510 --> 00:17:19.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and these are known as the base maps. The green ones, so you usually need to have at least one green facility alive for any of the others to work properly and by default you've always got the standard
183 00:17:19.250 --> 00:17:22.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: coordinate survey map in place, and then
184 00:17:22.369 --> 00:17:31.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the layers starting with everything except your own and the assets and maintenance which are logged. The planning layers are
185 00:17:31.740 --> 00:17:42.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: really for those people who are planning to an application on behalf of the Council because they like to have them in a specific shape. So that's really what that's for
186 00:17:42.850 --> 00:17:47.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: neighborhood planning ditto. I think it's all and self-evident.
187 00:17:47.734 --> 00:17:52.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't think there's anything there of particular. These are all sort of to help you get going.
188 00:17:53.350 --> 00:18:00.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Isochrones. Are people familiar with this that you are basically taking into account?
189 00:18:02.232 --> 00:18:05.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You're already in there. No, there's nothing there at all interesting.
190 00:18:06.480 --> 00:18:28.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, an isochrone is a way of traveling that takes account of your geography. So if you're on roads going by car, then 15 min on a main road will take you further than 15 min on a minor road, and ditto for walking or cycling. If you're going up a hill it'll take you less distance in the same time, just to allow for geography.
191 00:18:28.780 --> 00:18:33.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I mean the same problem that you were having with pictures. Just get rid of them.
192 00:18:35.570 --> 00:18:41.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, Epcs, everyone's familiar with. Epc, do anyone want me to talk about Epcs.
193 00:18:41.340 --> 00:18:42.170 Sheila Churchward: No.
194 00:18:42.170 --> 00:18:43.489 Helen Davey: I don't know about you.
195 00:18:43.900 --> 00:18:46.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, okay, we'll come back to you, Hazel. In a minute.
196 00:18:49.200 --> 00:19:15.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Again. The best public rights of way. Your local footpaths will come to you from your local council, County Council, or Unitary council, if you've got one. That's cooperative and exports data. But they've all got the your local public rights of way in their computers, and they are obliged to share it with you. But a lot of them haven't got the realization that you guys have got
197 00:19:15.560 --> 00:19:33.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: a global geographic information system in parish online that can cope with their data. So if you can educate them that all they need to do is export it to you, and geosphere will help them with that. Then you can get all of your footpaths in great detail.
198 00:19:34.890 --> 00:19:52.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: This is where we start getting interesting. So the biodiversity corridors is something that's fairly recently been started. And what they're saying is, these are collaborative layers. So whatever you enter in your local parish will, in fact, show up on these maps.
199 00:19:52.780 --> 00:19:56.459 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that's why I was saying where you can find out where there are hedgehogs.
200 00:19:56.590 --> 00:20:00.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: These all depend upon people actually filling in
201 00:20:01.290 --> 00:20:03.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: system. So if there's nothing much to see.
202 00:20:03.990 --> 00:20:06.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and there hasn't been a great deal in the past.
203 00:20:06.840 --> 00:20:10.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, we've got a hundred 67 records now.
204 00:20:10.500 --> 00:20:17.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so you can find out where people have put stuff. And now that we found out where this stuff you can go and have a look at it and see
205 00:20:18.206 --> 00:20:22.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but they're there. So now that I know they're there, let's go and look for some. Let's turn off the
206 00:20:23.810 --> 00:20:30.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and we'll I just gonna turn off the boundary lines because they get very confusing when you start going into
207 00:20:30.830 --> 00:20:32.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: greater scales.
208 00:20:32.780 --> 00:20:38.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So let's zoom in. I think there was certainly a bunch. There we go. There's a bunch of round the oval.
209 00:20:38.600 --> 00:20:41.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so if we can come into here
210 00:20:41.810 --> 00:20:44.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: something you can click on there, and here's a whole bunch of stuff.
211 00:20:46.140 --> 00:20:53.239 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you're a keen on hedgehogs, then you have the facilities to plot
212 00:20:53.400 --> 00:21:00.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: all of the sightings that you have in your area, and they'll come up on a national map like this, which I think is pretty convenient.
213 00:21:01.180 --> 00:21:09.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you can do the same with hedgerows. Not that you're going to be growing those particularly fast or quickly, but they're there
214 00:21:10.510 --> 00:21:20.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: moving on because we've got quite a lot to carry. The addresses is fabulously useful. So if people not familiar with this, you can get the address of every single building in the country.
215 00:21:21.390 --> 00:21:34.809 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You zoom in to turn it on, and now you can see, each.is a building. There's a color code in the legend, so you can turn the legends on with view legend, and it tells you which color is doing. What?
216 00:21:35.030 --> 00:21:39.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you want to see what this particular blue.is doing, click on it.
217 00:21:39.760 --> 00:21:41.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and he comes up and tells you.
218 00:21:41.770 --> 00:21:54.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the most useful thing for anybody involved at all with emergency services is the universal property reference number is what the fire brigades and the police and the ambulances use to specify which building you're in.
219 00:21:55.100 --> 00:22:04.829 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you want to get your uprn, make clear on things like the village hall and the local churches, or whatever that will really help
220 00:22:05.110 --> 00:22:11.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the emergency services to get to you. And there's a unique number for every single building in the country. Extraordinary.
221 00:22:12.170 --> 00:22:18.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Again using the table view. You can export of all this into a spreadsheet and do then all sorts of things would be very helpful.
222 00:22:19.800 --> 00:22:24.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The other thing about the address plus points or the addresses collection
223 00:22:24.350 --> 00:22:31.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: is, you get all your postal codes so fabulous? I find that myself asking all the time, Where are you, because
224 00:22:31.804 --> 00:22:36.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the only way I can tell them is when I look it up. But it's it's very helpful.
225 00:22:36.390 --> 00:22:42.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, moving on to the overlays. These are just different things that you can get on top of the usual map.
226 00:22:42.840 --> 00:22:47.699 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you want to know what the highway network's paths are, I have not the slightest idea.
227 00:22:48.380 --> 00:22:50.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You want to know who else he is.
228 00:22:51.756 --> 00:22:53.239 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Table view on that. Okay.
229 00:22:53.870 --> 00:23:11.439 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the the water networks and the water courses have been invaluable, haven't they? So we've turned those on. If you scroll in a bit, you can start seeing all of the rivers, both above ground and underground, and where they go, and where all the access points are, or whatever they happen to be.
230 00:23:11.750 --> 00:23:12.300 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Oh!
231 00:23:12.300 --> 00:23:23.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So these are. Anyway, it's good stuff. I find that as you start trolling through this in your own parish, you suddenly discover it's a much more complicated place than you realize. It used to be.
232 00:23:24.705 --> 00:23:27.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But there is all this stuff available.
233 00:23:28.180 --> 00:23:33.809 chris edwards: Graham, you mentioned the word access point. Could you define the word access.
234 00:23:35.276 --> 00:23:37.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In the in terms of the waterways.
235 00:23:37.490 --> 00:23:37.990 chris edwards: Yes.
236 00:23:38.404 --> 00:23:47.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You. Well, I think it may have been a what's the word? A wonderfully misspoken word on my part, I think if you.
237 00:23:48.140 --> 00:24:02.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if you have one of those layers put out by your local council, as we do in Somerset, who've exported all the gullies, then the gullies are the access points to the drains and the sewage pipes and all the other pipes.
238 00:24:03.420 --> 00:24:11.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm assuming that a node on a watercourse is going to be something of the same as either a valve or an access
239 00:24:11.955 --> 00:24:14.649 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but which is which I I'm not familiar with. I'm sorry.
240 00:24:15.990 --> 00:24:16.349 chris edwards: You for that.
241 00:24:16.350 --> 00:24:17.180 Sheila Churchward: Rings.
242 00:24:17.820 --> 00:24:18.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Come again!
243 00:24:18.750 --> 00:24:33.010 Sheila Churchward: We have lots of springs in Exminster, and that they are causing problems underneath the new developments, because that well, they were new developments 20 years ago, but now the springs are starting to
244 00:24:33.180 --> 00:24:34.860 Sheila Churchward: find another way up.
245 00:24:35.160 --> 00:24:39.738 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, we've had a wonderfully long conversation with Chris about that where
246 00:24:40.390 --> 00:24:45.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: new housing developments around him are having all sorts of trouble with water, and
247 00:24:45.960 --> 00:24:56.779 Graham Stoddart-Stones: we were finding out that there was really no reason for people not to have known that because you went back to a tithe map of 150 years ago, and it was very clearly showing that there was water there.
248 00:24:57.250 --> 00:24:57.580 chris edwards: Nice.
249 00:24:57.610 --> 00:24:59.509 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They really ought to know better.
250 00:25:01.190 --> 00:25:23.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Down to the property density map. But people oh, no, it wasn't this that people are asking, but this is actually quite fascinating. When people say we have to build 300,000 new homes a year in your place, you can take a look at this map and say, Well, why don't you just increase the density of buildings where there are already buildings? So you get a color code here. If I divide the country up.
251 00:25:24.000 --> 00:25:31.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You get told the number of buildings per inside that particular square, and I think that's a 1 kilometer square.
252 00:25:31.860 --> 00:25:42.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So not much in the country, but you go down into a town, you'll find it's closer to 50 or 60. Go to London. It's more like several 100 because of skyscrapers and things, but
253 00:25:42.610 --> 00:26:05.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think there's quite a movement amongst people when they're told that they have to have, you know, 300 new homes built next to them that you might say, Well, why don't you just double up the layers of the existing places and not increase our number of houses at all? So it's an argument to have. But I'm just saying the information is there? It is another way of discovering what's going on in your parish.
254 00:26:07.750 --> 00:26:26.879 Graham Stoddart-Stones: allotments, I think, in cemeteries speak for themselves just so that you're aware they come with 2 types, the plots and boundaries. The boundaries are a collaborative layer, so everybody everywhere can see the outline of your allotments. But to answer Sheila's question. Sorry it wasn't Sheila. It was the.
255 00:26:26.880 --> 00:26:27.820 Sheila Churchward: It was. Yes.
256 00:26:27.820 --> 00:26:30.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It was. The individual pots that you put in
257 00:26:31.000 --> 00:26:44.489 Graham Stoddart-Stones: are private. They're not seen by anybody else, and the information about Mr. And Mrs. Jones are always late in paying their 10 bob a year, or whatever it is that doesn't get shown to the world. But the boundaries around the outside do.
258 00:26:44.960 --> 00:26:51.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the reason for that is that there are questions associated with each of these. So if I add a new feature
259 00:26:52.360 --> 00:26:56.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to my boundaries, all these questions are available to be answered.
260 00:26:57.310 --> 00:27:19.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and because they're a collaborative layer, the information goes out to the country so people can see that you do have parking near your allotments, or you do have loos, which is so general and useful information to people. But how much is paid for? The land is an individual plot thing. And the same is true of cemeteries that
261 00:27:19.390 --> 00:27:26.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the cemeteries, the outline, is a publicly available information to everybody throughout the country with parish online.
262 00:27:26.350 --> 00:27:34.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But the individual information about individual graves or plots is entirely for your benefit. Only.
263 00:27:34.770 --> 00:27:40.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So again, for people who are not aware of this parish online is.
264 00:27:40.780 --> 00:27:47.939 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you cannot see from your parish what any other parish has put in, except in the in the collaborative layers.
265 00:27:48.240 --> 00:27:55.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I quite often get people saying, Well, can you not just come in and do this for me, and I'll say, Well, no, because I'm not in your parish, but
266 00:27:57.310 --> 00:28:22.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you're aware of that. I perhaps missed. I think one of the most interesting things which I should have done right back at the start, because I think it's great is the live, feed on traffic all right again. This is nationwide. But you can turn this on and see what is happening on any road, anywhere in the country. Green. Everything is flowing nicely red, it ain't, and I think there are different degrees, is there's an orange here. So again, if we have a legend on.
267 00:28:22.610 --> 00:28:25.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: we probably get an indication of
268 00:28:25.873 --> 00:28:27.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: sorry. I mean the allotment, plus. That's interesting.
269 00:28:29.020 --> 00:28:33.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Turn that off. Sorry. Let's come down here to allotments.
270 00:28:33.790 --> 00:28:37.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Turn that off, turn that one back on
271 00:28:38.770 --> 00:28:40.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: view. Legend, see what it says.
272 00:28:42.370 --> 00:29:11.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It doesn't have one for the traffic. Okay? Self evident. Basically, we've had a few discussions as to where this information is coming from. And we've come to the conclusion it's coming from mobile phones and the Internet. So the number of mobile phones on any road at one time or cars nowadays. Of course, all talk to the Internet. So that's where they're getting their data from. So it is really live. And again, if you're heading for somewhere, and you want to know whether there's a traffic jam
273 00:29:11.980 --> 00:29:14.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: parish online can tell you.
274 00:29:16.620 --> 00:29:22.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Going back down to where we were cemeteries are obvious traffic analysis. I think it's just Somerset, so I won't bother with that
275 00:29:23.200 --> 00:29:32.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: now is probably self-evident. They're just the county boundaries for each Nelk, or each Local Council Association.
276 00:29:32.720 --> 00:29:45.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The national maps are fascinating, but before we go into them, let me just show you one thing that you may not be familiar with, and I probably ought to turn the parish boundaries back on for this one.
277 00:29:46.220 --> 00:29:47.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So let me just do that.
278 00:29:48.690 --> 00:29:54.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If I come back to my home boundary, and I click anywhere inside my parish.
279 00:29:55.160 --> 00:30:06.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The record changes to my parish record, and what I want you to show people is that 1st of all, you have direct access to the Cse's carbon calculator. Here.
280 00:30:06.530 --> 00:30:06.950 Sheila Churchward: So, if you.
281 00:30:06.950 --> 00:30:17.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Not familiar with this. It's a lot of fun. It's full of information. There's an extremely good using impact help system here that tells you how to use it.
282 00:30:17.910 --> 00:30:25.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And there's another really good report here. The report is hugely packed with information. Very useful stuff.
283 00:30:25.850 --> 00:30:34.399 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I commend this to you. I won't go through it now, because we've got too many layers to go through. But I do recommend using the impact calculator.
284 00:30:34.930 --> 00:30:36.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The other thing.
285 00:30:36.140 --> 00:30:38.549 Sheila Churchward: Say that we use that in Exminster.
286 00:30:38.690 --> 00:30:46.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, yeah, the other thing is the Council statistics here. This is a sort of a questionnaire.
287 00:30:46.920 --> 00:31:11.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but you can answer it at any time, and you can go back and fill in the blanks later. And it's all the interesting questions about councils. Are you? Do you have a certificate of competence. Do you have a clerk who's got silica? Have you declared a climate emergency? All that sort of stuff? 19 questions in there, fill them in in your own time, and having shown you where this is, I'm now going to go back and show you
288 00:31:12.010 --> 00:31:13.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: where you get the answers.
289 00:31:13.920 --> 00:31:21.589 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if we come back here, and we come down here and we turn off those ready boundaries. Thank you.
290 00:31:22.050 --> 00:31:28.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And we go back to the national maps. Okay, now, national maps, parish statistics.
291 00:31:28.830 --> 00:31:32.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: These are where all the answers to all those questions get put.
292 00:31:32.640 --> 00:31:37.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you are interested in knowing how many people have.
293 00:31:38.370 --> 00:31:43.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: what types of councils there are, you know, you can get if I show you the legend again.
294 00:31:44.950 --> 00:31:51.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So parish councils, town councils, communities, and all the rest of them so nice small places with parish meetings.
295 00:31:51.870 --> 00:31:56.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: bigger paces again. It's more fun to look at this on a national scale.
296 00:31:57.980 --> 00:32:01.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you can see where all the types are around you.
297 00:32:03.350 --> 00:32:08.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Come down and do the same thing with any of these other ones.
298 00:32:09.190 --> 00:32:13.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The precepts that you're paying again color coded.
299 00:32:17.440 --> 00:32:31.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So what are your band D precepts around the country, so you can see whether you are charging a hell of a lot more than your local, the parishes around you, or whether the scope to increase your precept without everyone objecting too much.
300 00:32:31.460 --> 00:32:36.607 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I'm not sure that's the way you're supposed to be using this, but it's very helpful.
301 00:32:37.832 --> 00:32:46.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What else are the I'll turn these off and just show you how many people have declared climate emergencies. So
302 00:32:46.240 --> 00:33:10.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you have to bear in mind that these data are only being gathered by parish online, and they're only being affected by the people who filled in their questionnaires so a long way to go in terms of recording, actually, who has declared a climate emergency. But if you want to know who around you has, you can find out from here, or you could fill in the blanks on your own
303 00:33:10.230 --> 00:33:15.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: questionnaire, so that you, your parish, arrives on this national map.
304 00:33:15.920 --> 00:33:19.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that's what the statistics are for the national maps.
305 00:33:19.430 --> 00:33:27.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: property statistics who's got charges and all that sort of thing, all the same sort of information very useful. If you are
306 00:33:28.080 --> 00:33:36.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: keen to know where you can get your car charged ditto again for the summaries
307 00:33:37.420 --> 00:33:46.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: here, which is just how many people parishes are using.gov.uk domains again. This is a question coming out of that questionnaire for parish councils.
308 00:33:48.980 --> 00:33:56.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: now we're down just to give an example to people of what you can get from your district or county council.
309 00:33:56.500 --> 00:34:00.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All right. So the answers are.
310 00:34:00.330 --> 00:34:07.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: every council has got layers of information that can be mapped just like these ones that we're mapping in parish online.
311 00:34:07.890 --> 00:34:19.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the number of layers that are exported vary from Warwickshire, which exports 0 to nobody up through South Somerset, which does about 95
312 00:34:19.330 --> 00:34:29.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: up through Bristol and northeast Somerset, which export 400 layers of data constantly to their parishioners.
313 00:34:29.750 --> 00:34:45.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you're down close to the 0 mark. You should be hounding your parish. Sorry your district councils and your county councils to say Oi, we have a Gis. We need to have the information that you've got for us.
314 00:34:45.400 --> 00:34:59.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now, the question you often get is, what is it that you really want? And then you say, Well, actually, I don't know what you've got, so how can I tell you what I want? I'll tell you the answer. The answer we gave to South Somerset was all of it.
315 00:34:59.170 --> 00:35:04.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So they did, and we got buried in useful information, which was fabulous, actually.
316 00:35:04.460 --> 00:35:14.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And let me show you what you can get. So if you're in South Somerset. As I said, there are 90 layers of data here. But look at the sorts of things that you're getting
317 00:35:14.530 --> 00:35:29.509 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to October, and the all the usual ones that you want. Like planning applications are here. Tree preservation orders are here all sorts of stuff. I mean, really, really useful, helpful things.
318 00:35:29.680 --> 00:35:57.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We then turn around. And I give kudos here to Malcolm, who's online today and really was the driving force behind this Somerset Council didn't do anything until we confronted them about it, and now they've got all excited, and they're beginning to send us more and more stuff. So we started off originally with nothing. Then we got. I'm sorry that's not true. We did get the rights of way, the footpaths and so forth. Then we got.
319 00:35:57.310 --> 00:36:08.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We started getting the community network. Sorry the educational catchment areas, which is very useful for parents who are trying to work out how to move or where to move, to make sure their children get the right education.
320 00:36:09.021 --> 00:36:16.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And recently we've got gullies. And which is actually, let me just show you that for fun, because it's extraordinary.
321 00:36:16.610 --> 00:36:24.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We need to zoom in a bit to Somerset, and a bit more.
322 00:36:25.270 --> 00:36:49.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then if we turn on the gullies, you'd be amazed at how many there are just. The whole countryside is full of basically every manhole cover in your pavements, every drain off your highways, everything is all here, and you can sort of. Take a look at one, get a record of it. And the stuff that's really interesting is, when was it last inspected?
323 00:36:49.200 --> 00:36:52.399 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because some of this stuff is really very old.
324 00:36:52.710 --> 00:37:09.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: This is a better one. It was inspected in 2021. So only 4 years ago. But we've seen stuff going back t020-15-2017, and bear in mind that your County Council is mandated by law to inspect the gullies every 4 years. You can see they aren't keeping up.
325 00:37:10.250 --> 00:37:20.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: which is half of the trouble. You know we're all short of money. We're all short of the necessary manpower. We're all short of resources, but this is an indication of it in real life.
326 00:37:22.060 --> 00:37:23.995 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that was gullies
327 00:37:24.660 --> 00:37:49.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: all sorts of other things. And they've also started now, bringing in the district councils that have been merged into the unitary of Somerset. So as we're going through the transition process from district Councils and County Council to a unitary, so Somerset is, as the unitary is beginning to re-export to us the information that the old district
328 00:37:49.230 --> 00:38:03.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: sometimes wasn't quite as good as doing as they could have been. So that's your local council data. There is in the knowledge base an entry called Council Data. If you go into the the knowledge base for those of you who are not familiar with it up here
329 00:38:03.820 --> 00:38:10.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: on the top. Right click, you get help and support takes you into the knowledge base. If you type on council data.
330 00:38:12.980 --> 00:38:26.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then you get a wonderful step-by-step guide of the way to make sure you get information from your local authority. So whether you're a County Council or a district person follow these steps through.
331 00:38:27.180 --> 00:38:28.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and that will help
332 00:38:28.770 --> 00:38:39.149 Graham Stoddart-Stones: geosphere. The company behind parish online make sure that you get the data you want exported into or imported into your version of of parish online.
333 00:38:39.310 --> 00:38:47.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But they like you to go through these steps first, st because it really makes life a lot easier for them. The other big thing to remember is that geosphere.
334 00:38:48.400 --> 00:39:03.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We'll do the import for your county or District council free of charge when you get told. I'm sorry we don't have the time or the resources to do that. Your answer is stuff and nonsense. It's geosphere that do the work you don't.
335 00:39:03.320 --> 00:39:04.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And these people
336 00:39:05.010 --> 00:39:15.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just so that you're aware of it. The exercise for geosphere is very, very short. It takes literally no more than a few seconds to import the data once they know where to go for it.
337 00:39:16.160 --> 00:39:30.819 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So it's very fast. That's why it's free, because they're doing this all day every day. They're very, very quick at it. It's easy to do, and your Council will say we don't have the people. It's going to take weeks to get that done, and you can say, Well, that's not what Graham says.
338 00:39:32.870 --> 00:39:36.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: By all means get me into trouble all right for moving.
339 00:39:36.460 --> 00:39:40.839 Malcolm Daniels: But the problem often is that the County Council don't know where it is.
340 00:39:41.760 --> 00:39:43.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That is very true, very true.
341 00:39:44.300 --> 00:39:56.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So so many silos they don't actually know what they've got. And when they ask you, What is it that you want is because they don't know what they've got, and they need you to tell them what you want, so they can go off and find it.
342 00:39:56.360 --> 00:40:00.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's very strange, all right. That was the shared maps stuff.
343 00:40:00.490 --> 00:40:08.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let's just turn off some of these things so that we don't keep people misdirected. That's right.
344 00:40:09.840 --> 00:40:15.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right? So on. Defense of the earth. 2 wonderful options here the tree canopy map
345 00:40:17.070 --> 00:40:24.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: which ask you to zoom in a bit just before it starts working. So let's zoom into the area where I know they are
346 00:40:24.480 --> 00:40:25.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: working.
347 00:40:27.770 --> 00:40:57.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So what they've got here is actually nearly every tree that they're familiar with in the country. So you can zoom in again a bit more, get a bit more detail. But basically they're tying together areas that can be linked to each other, to make nature pathways for animals, for increasing the commercial value of land, for making the woodlands available in a much better place to get the coverage to the country. They've got these
348 00:40:57.830 --> 00:41:19.749 Graham Stoddart-Stones: canopies set up and suggest how you can draw them together. All those of you who've got tree planting ideas, and you're all keen to go out and plant trees is well worth liaising with friends of the earth through these maps to make sure that you're all working together, and that's the country gets more better canopy as well.
349 00:41:19.870 --> 00:41:24.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The other one is their wooden opportunity, which is where they're saying
350 00:41:25.250 --> 00:41:37.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the value of this land is less valuable to agriculture than it is to making it wooded. So start planting trees in these areas that they've got here. So put the 2 together.
351 00:41:38.370 --> 00:41:40.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and they make a lot of sense.
352 00:41:40.700 --> 00:41:49.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But basically they're taking into account what the value is of the agricultural land. And if it can't be used for a more cash. Intensive crop.
353 00:41:50.050 --> 00:41:51.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then use it for woodland.
354 00:41:52.830 --> 00:41:55.029 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that's the friends of the earth.
355 00:41:55.300 --> 00:42:03.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Somerset Hgr. Is going to be linked to Somerset boundaries, I think, speak for themselves. Land registry. Just a quick point here.
356 00:42:04.340 --> 00:42:04.820 Sheila Churchward: Hmm.
357 00:42:04.820 --> 00:42:05.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Like.
358 00:42:05.310 --> 00:42:05.860 Sheila Churchward: Cool.
359 00:42:06.260 --> 00:42:18.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All the area that you know about is limited. The beauty of this number is, if you click on the number in any cadastral parcel. It gives you a record, and the record says.
360 00:42:18.810 --> 00:42:28.469 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Here is your Id that you make and make a note of, and they give you a very handy button to click to it, and then they say, now go off to the inspire database
361 00:42:28.640 --> 00:42:35.099 Graham Stoddart-Stones: which is held by the land registry, and they want you to put that number that you just put into there.
362 00:42:36.030 --> 00:42:42.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you convince them they're not a robot, and maybe they can do a quick search, and they will tell you that. Yes.
363 00:42:42.900 --> 00:42:45.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: there are documents available.
364 00:42:45.990 --> 00:42:55.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can read all of the documents as much as you like, provided you pay us 3 pounds for them for each time you ask for a document there's a 3 pound charge.
365 00:42:55.920 --> 00:43:14.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So the land registry is immune to arguments that they're a public organization, and therefore we've already paid the money for the documents because we pay them. They don't believe that. So it's an easy way of finding out if there are documents that describe the property that you're talking about, because sometimes there are
366 00:43:14.950 --> 00:43:23.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: discrepancies. Sometimes there are arguments over property, and this is a great way of finding out who owns what
367 00:43:23.910 --> 00:43:27.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and whom to talk to. If things are going wrong.
368 00:43:27.630 --> 00:43:44.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The evidence we've got from people who talk to the land registry is that they're very ready to come out and do a resurvey. If you think there's something wrong with the parcel. If this doesn't cover the land, you think it does, or it's taking land it shouldn't be. They're apparently very receptive to changing it.
369 00:43:45.040 --> 00:43:49.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So sorry. I don't know why I did that. Let's move on.
370 00:43:51.960 --> 00:43:54.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't know why I did that right.
371 00:43:54.990 --> 00:44:06.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: all right. So that was your cadestral parcels. Historic England. A lovely way of saying, this is where you find out where the grade 2 listed houses are around you. So again, just turn on the layer.
372 00:44:07.200 --> 00:44:11.919 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you're in the right part of the world, which we probably need to go back home to find out.
373 00:44:12.060 --> 00:44:19.279 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can see every dot represents a listed house of some sort click on the detail, and you can find out
374 00:44:19.970 --> 00:44:33.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so. And the other really handy thing is is that they give you a link that takes you to the appropriate page on historic England sites. If you want to find out more about any one of these buildings. The link is here
375 00:44:33.540 --> 00:44:39.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: again really useful, particularly if you're in history, in-minded history, minded, or whatever.
376 00:44:42.850 --> 00:44:57.319 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and that off. And you, you know there's a whole bunch of stuff you can do here and again, finding out what things you never knew about your parish. You may not have realized that there was a major battle fought there in the Civil War, or something, but this is a great way of finding out
377 00:44:57.520 --> 00:45:18.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: met office. This is really useful in when we get our storm warnings. Okay? You probably didn't realize that parish online can tell you when there's a storm coming at the moment. I don't think there are any in the United Kingdom that I'm aware of, but very good for your area. If you want to know if the wind's going to be blowing. If you're going to be putting up a wind turbine or something, when shouldn't you be doing it?
378 00:45:18.290 --> 00:45:20.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You get a weather warning there.
379 00:45:20.760 --> 00:45:23.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Greenbelt land, I think, is self-explanatory.
380 00:45:24.880 --> 00:45:30.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you probably don't need me to go through that defrait. This is really helpful.
381 00:45:31.020 --> 00:45:35.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, if you need to know if you are in a really noisy area
382 00:45:35.350 --> 00:45:44.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: or you're being troubled by noise, then you can come in here and find out what the situation is. Of course there's no point in my looking in Somerset. There's no noise in Somerset.
383 00:45:45.320 --> 00:45:55.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but there will be places where oh, they're asking you to scroll in for those of you not familiar with it. This little sign here with a magnifying glass, says you're looking at too big
384 00:45:55.470 --> 00:45:57.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: an area. Shrink it down a bit.
385 00:45:58.560 --> 00:46:02.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and again I still don't see any noise around us. Oh, there we go!
386 00:46:03.320 --> 00:46:09.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So on the road there the M. 5 you would expect to be a noisy road, and it is
387 00:46:14.260 --> 00:46:15.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: transport
388 00:46:16.730 --> 00:46:31.919 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the accidents around you so really, really helpful. If you're trying to make the case that a road should have traffic lights put on it, or something like that. You can look up the number of accidents that have occurred there, and the severity that they have. So if we turn this on
389 00:46:32.130 --> 00:46:34.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you look at the legend.
390 00:46:36.000 --> 00:46:39.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: okay, you get well. Maybe I didn't.
391 00:46:40.920 --> 00:46:49.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I thought there was a color code. Maybe you have to go into each individual spot. But there is a code that tells you the degree of accident that you had. Which is
392 00:46:50.100 --> 00:46:54.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: again can be useful, depending on what you're trying to do
393 00:46:59.790 --> 00:47:01.519 Graham Stoddart-Stones: zooming down right along.
394 00:47:01.870 --> 00:47:04.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let's turn that one off. Let's go. That one down.
395 00:47:04.740 --> 00:47:18.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hs 2 is not well, it's going to be of interest to some people, of course, around here. But basically anything you wanted to know about Hs 2 is probably not going to be in here because limited in what they put out. But
396 00:47:18.190 --> 00:47:28.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it's there. And again, Radon again. For people who are building houses. They want to make sure that there isn't any Radon there, or they're not getting a really bad version of it.
397 00:47:29.800 --> 00:47:41.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And medical stuff is obviously of vast interest to people. If you want to know which region you're in, or which is your nearest clinical commissioning group. This is where you find out.
398 00:47:42.140 --> 00:48:00.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: National grid is the major power lines across the country. Very interesting, actually. But you can find out which of the big transporters, your big sort of multi tens, or hundreds of thousands of volts, kilovolts around here, the big carriers and the above ground, and the
399 00:48:00.670 --> 00:48:04.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: oh, I don't think they do the underground stuff, do they? Don't think they did that.
400 00:48:05.860 --> 00:48:08.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, just the limits of the voltage they carry.
401 00:48:11.165 --> 00:48:14.354 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But useful stuff again, if you start
402 00:48:15.280 --> 00:48:21.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if you're thinking, building your own turbines and so forth. It may be helpful to know where the substations are.
403 00:48:23.380 --> 00:48:30.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: where the gas pipes are when you start digging all those sorts of things, but the substations are really the ones that you need to know about
404 00:48:33.740 --> 00:48:39.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the overlays. Again, I think they're self evident, but again very convenient. So
405 00:48:39.950 --> 00:48:43.772 Graham Stoddart-Stones: where are the built up areas. What the clad, what the
406 00:48:44.680 --> 00:48:49.459 Graham Stoddart-Stones: ordnance survey classifies as a built-up area and everything else, I guess, is country.
407 00:48:54.110 --> 00:48:55.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, here you go.
408 00:48:57.210 --> 00:49:05.279 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I can't remember whether we wanted to do much about this. Well, yes, we know where the local nature partnerships are. They're always good to have.
409 00:49:05.970 --> 00:49:10.829 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And so we've got our rams our sites up here, places up there
410 00:49:11.110 --> 00:49:13.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: again in our part of the world.
411 00:49:13.980 --> 00:49:16.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you can get boundaries for yours.
412 00:49:29.070 --> 00:49:30.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Access.
413 00:49:32.270 --> 00:49:34.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm not familiar with this.
414 00:49:35.220 --> 00:49:41.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Anyone know anything about the access? The national trails may be helpful. No, we don't seem to have anything around us.
415 00:49:43.290 --> 00:49:51.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I honestly don't know what this stuff tells us. But this is obviously conclusive, restricted land.
416 00:49:53.140 --> 00:49:56.749 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if we go in, okay, so here's the contacts.
417 00:49:57.850 --> 00:50:06.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: doesn't tell me what it's restricted for. So I'm not quite sure of the purpose of this. I'm sorry, but the information is there.
418 00:50:07.010 --> 00:50:09.630 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Isn't it right of Rome, or something of that nature?
419 00:50:10.030 --> 00:50:10.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do you?
420 00:50:11.430 --> 00:50:12.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hmm?
421 00:50:12.640 --> 00:50:13.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's okay.
422 00:50:13.130 --> 00:50:15.620 Judith Mashiter: Common land, I think.
423 00:50:16.110 --> 00:50:16.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
424 00:50:17.510 --> 00:50:30.939 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Last week we were looking at this. This is fascinating. It's a fairly new one to come into the country. But Somerset having a sea coast. We were interested to see what that did. So we turned on the coastal Somerset details.
425 00:50:31.070 --> 00:50:54.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and it started telling us that this is coastline which we knew. But then we started looking at the rivers, and so forth. And again you are startled about how much water there is out there, running down fixed water courses. So never mind the the floods stuff coming down the main street, just the everyday rivers that exist around you, I found quite fascinating.
426 00:50:56.390 --> 00:51:00.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then the transitional stuff again, where
427 00:51:00.190 --> 00:51:06.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: this is always moving, always changing. It's very muddy around here. So I guess they're saying, be wary
428 00:51:10.800 --> 00:51:24.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: designations. I think most of this is self-explanatory. Again, it's just very handy to know that it's there. But if you want to know where all the Ramsar sites are, or all the national parks. This is where you get your information.
429 00:51:25.770 --> 00:51:31.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm still tending to run this run through this hastily, though conscious of time.
430 00:51:34.470 --> 00:51:35.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Where were we
431 00:51:37.550 --> 00:51:44.239 Graham Stoddart-Stones: up here, aren't we? Hs 2 public health Nhs national grid overlays. All right. So into natural England. Now.
432 00:51:45.510 --> 00:51:49.670 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Do and designations. What was the designation? Okay?
433 00:51:51.020 --> 00:52:03.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Again really useful stuff. If you were trying to develop anything or save anything you want to make sure you haven't got your sites of scientific interest conflicting with you.
434 00:52:05.060 --> 00:52:07.539 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So we've got plenty around here. So
435 00:52:07.840 --> 00:52:19.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: this is, you can see that this is all green all the way around here so ideally the the absolutely sensible place to build a brand new nuclear power station is right here.
436 00:52:20.460 --> 00:52:25.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just where you'd expect to book one right next door to all these special scientific areas of interest.
437 00:52:28.650 --> 00:52:31.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sorry I'm not allowed to do cynicism. I beg your pardon.
438 00:52:34.050 --> 00:52:41.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think all the natural England stuff is self-explanatory, really helpful. If you need to know where the great crested newts are, and so forth.
439 00:52:42.110 --> 00:52:43.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you can find out about them.
440 00:52:47.520 --> 00:52:53.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let's go into flooding for those of you who, ever troubled by flooding the
441 00:52:54.480 --> 00:53:05.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: risks that you get here are what you expect to happen in a year. So in any one year you might expect there to be a 3% or a zone, 3 chance or whatever.
442 00:53:05.540 --> 00:53:11.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If, again, I'm sticking with Somerset, just where I happen to know the area a bit zone 3
443 00:53:12.060 --> 00:53:15.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: is very prone to flooding, so you can expect
444 00:53:16.080 --> 00:53:22.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: all of this to be underwater at some stage of the winter every year, year in, year out. It's just never ending
445 00:53:24.610 --> 00:53:27.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But for those of you who are in less
446 00:53:27.390 --> 00:53:35.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: flood bound areas, you can find what the chances are of you getting flooding in your area from here.
447 00:53:35.760 --> 00:53:55.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There are variations on these themes. Some of it tells you what happens. If there's a delay. You know how long before the flood occurs. Do you need to start worrying about it? The information is all in here very useful. The reservoir flood extents on wet days and dry days. Useful, good stuff!
448 00:53:57.270 --> 00:54:00.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let me come up. Who to the
449 00:54:01.540 --> 00:54:05.479 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so I think we again all self-explanatory. This stuff
450 00:54:05.730 --> 00:54:12.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: sports England handy to know where all the sports facilities, the public sports facilities are around you.
451 00:54:12.560 --> 00:54:13.140 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Okay.
452 00:54:13.140 --> 00:54:14.964 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So so if you
453 00:54:15.590 --> 00:54:20.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: turn that on and they want you to zoom in a bit. But if I went into Taunton as an example.
454 00:54:21.130 --> 00:54:24.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We've got sports facilities all over the place.
455 00:54:24.823 --> 00:54:29.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And some of it, you know, you think, who knew? And again, what types
456 00:54:30.070 --> 00:54:41.239 Graham Stoddart-Stones: use the legend? So if you want to know where your nearest golf club is, or particularly, you've got children, your ice rinks, whatever the information is there in parish online, just waiting for you to go and pick it up.
457 00:54:43.530 --> 00:54:59.559 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then I think we get down to the interesting bit the one that Judith was asking about. There isn't any real way that you realize that sustrans is all of your cycle paths. But it is so. Let me turn off these sorry sports facilities.
458 00:55:00.780 --> 00:55:07.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you want to know where the national cycle bath network takes you near you, there it is, and if we just zoom out a bit
459 00:55:08.090 --> 00:55:09.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you can see the whole country.
460 00:55:10.500 --> 00:55:15.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's got cycle paths all around it so
461 00:55:15.970 --> 00:55:24.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: removed routes. If you're sorry to see things go, they've gone and then, reclassified is
462 00:55:25.050 --> 00:55:30.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: not quite sure what reclassified is. But again, if you're a cycle person, I assume this is of interest to you.
463 00:55:32.510 --> 00:55:40.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Transport for London. I don't think we have anyone from London online, do we? But again, cycle routes through London are actually fascinating.
464 00:55:42.170 --> 00:55:43.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Wow.
465 00:55:44.480 --> 00:55:50.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you're a commuter and you need to find the best way to go. There's the information for you.
466 00:55:51.550 --> 00:55:55.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't know I've ever used the coal mining out front. Has anyone ever used this?
467 00:55:58.170 --> 00:56:04.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think the last coal mine in the country has stopped working, hasn't it so? And the fact the last coal power steam?
468 00:56:05.600 --> 00:56:14.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, coal-fired steam power has just stopped working as well. So probably this is all ancient history now, but it's still interesting. If you want to know where there's a coal mine.
469 00:56:15.530 --> 00:56:33.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The geology is one of these areas. I think you can get stuck in here for hours. I'll just mention it to you. They're all here. So if you need to know what sort of land you've got around you, or where is the nearest sort of superficial deposit you can find out
470 00:56:33.470 --> 00:56:39.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: by coming in here. So I think it's something where you've got to know what it is that you're looking for.
471 00:56:39.370 --> 00:56:47.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you're looking for dikes, I don't know that there are any around London, but if I come back home to Somerset there must be endless numbers of dikes.
472 00:56:48.880 --> 00:56:50.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: although you wouldn't think so.
473 00:56:52.220 --> 00:56:55.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, who knows? Interesting!
474 00:56:57.470 --> 00:57:00.039 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Quickly moving on, he said hastily.
475 00:57:02.441 --> 00:57:04.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All of the Bgs stuff.
476 00:57:05.390 --> 00:57:09.467 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good access. The grid squares are handy.
477 00:57:10.180 --> 00:57:15.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can turn on any of the grid squares and get the country divided up into grids.
478 00:57:18.390 --> 00:57:23.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Having said that, let's come down a bit to smaller ones, so
479 00:57:24.270 --> 00:57:38.149 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you can start if you're going to say, let's plant some trees, and we want to fill a local area. Then you've got a grid square that you can use to use it, and if that's too small for you, then you can use larger ones.
480 00:57:38.460 --> 00:57:42.484 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you're using the coordinate finder in
481 00:57:43.920 --> 00:57:55.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: parish online, which is under the view coordinates. If you want to get the code. If you've been given the coordinates somewhere, and you want to find out where it is. One of the answers it comes back to you is the grid square number.
482 00:57:59.340 --> 00:58:04.479 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Roman Britain. Don't get me started. You can really have a marvellous time in there.
483 00:58:04.977 --> 00:58:08.372 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Again, where all the temples are, where all the
484 00:58:10.353 --> 00:58:12.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, all of the stuff.
485 00:58:13.260 --> 00:58:18.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So again, Somerset's got a Major Roman road going through it this the Fosse way.
486 00:58:20.530 --> 00:58:25.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: lots of others as well, and I'm sure you've all got things in your local areas to find out about
487 00:58:26.630 --> 00:58:33.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Roman water features and defences again. All fascinating stuff. You never knew about your particular parish.
488 00:58:34.490 --> 00:58:42.159 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then, NASA, fire detection. This is a satellite that looks out for unexpected heat sources.
489 00:58:42.629 --> 00:58:50.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Particularly of area, in sorry of interest in in Ukraine at the moment, because you can see where all the battles are taking place. But in the Uk.
490 00:58:50.890 --> 00:58:58.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you want to know. Has there been a fire in the last 7 days. 24 h, 48 h. Sorry, maybe that's 7 h, is it?
491 00:58:58.660 --> 00:59:02.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, 7 days, 24 h.
492 00:59:02.590 --> 00:59:11.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: 48 h and 72 h. When I last looked at the 7 days they told me that there were all sorts of fires in North Wales, South Wales. And only that's still true.
493 00:59:13.470 --> 00:59:18.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Think, where was that? Yeah, you start getting red dots. There's a red dot.
494 00:59:18.480 --> 00:59:26.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So it's an unexpected heat source of some sort here now. There were 4 there yesterday, so whatever it is, is dying down.
495 00:59:27.120 --> 00:59:37.699 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But it was a lot worse. And again, I think these are only of interest to you in your particular country or part of the country, and I think that's a lot. And, Judith, you got your hand up.
496 00:59:39.640 --> 00:59:40.749 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you're muted.
497 00:59:40.750 --> 00:59:48.450 Judith Mashiter: 1 1 comment and a question, because I was so keen about fuel poverty. I've just
498 00:59:48.650 --> 00:59:57.589 Judith Mashiter: on my parish online live. I did the search fuel, poverty, and usefully it comes up that it's under the ons analysis.
499 00:59:58.193 --> 01:00:05.300 Judith Mashiter: Layer I've got into that, but it then doesn't show me my other layers.
500 01:00:05.900 --> 01:00:08.399 Judith Mashiter: How do I get back to?
501 01:00:08.870 --> 01:00:13.670 Judith Mashiter: Having all layers showing? Or do I just clear the search function? Would that maybe.
502 01:00:14.009 --> 01:00:24.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you can do it, but I think probably you've somehow got your your Slider turned down close to 0. Have you got a blank page, Judith?
503 01:00:24.200 --> 01:00:31.940 Judith Mashiter: No, I've I've got the fuel poverty map to switch to another layer. But now the other layers aren't showing in my left
504 01:00:32.120 --> 01:00:33.290 Judith Mashiter: menu bar.
505 01:00:33.660 --> 01:00:38.529 Judith Mashiter: Maybe because I've still got I'll try getting rid of fuel poverty. Yeah, sorry I've done it.
506 01:00:38.550 --> 01:00:39.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's.
507 01:00:39.240 --> 01:00:44.319 Judith Mashiter: As long as there's something in the search field. It only shows you what it comes up with.
508 01:00:44.320 --> 01:00:51.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I think I managed to improve this earlier, didn't I? I'm sorry I missed through this one. So fuel poverty you can turn on.
509 01:00:51.390 --> 01:00:53.049 Judith Mashiter: I've got it. Yeah, yeah, thank you.
510 01:00:53.540 --> 01:00:57.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: This needs to be shown up as areas, I think.
511 01:00:57.280 --> 01:00:58.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What am I looking for?
512 01:00:58.980 --> 01:01:02.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, here we go is taking its time to fill in.
513 01:01:02.710 --> 01:01:08.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But again, you have a color code that tells you what sort of area of deprivation you've got.
514 01:01:08.880 --> 01:01:17.090 Judith Mashiter: But Graham on that one? What's that scale supposed to mean? How do you know? What does 0 to 5 0 to 5? What.
515 01:01:17.390 --> 01:01:23.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You know that wonderful politician's reply. I'm so glad you asked that question, Judith, because I haven't got the slightest idea.
516 01:01:24.359 --> 01:01:25.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But we'll ask.
517 01:01:27.580 --> 01:01:30.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, I'll ask geosphere for you and get you back. The answer.
518 01:01:30.730 --> 01:01:31.460 Judith Mashiter: Alright. Thank you.
519 01:01:31.460 --> 01:01:33.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't know off the top of my head.
520 01:01:33.590 --> 01:01:39.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that's my run through, and I hope it's of interest, and I'm open to questions.
521 01:01:40.980 --> 01:01:44.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We stunned everybody into silence. Let me stop sharing.
522 01:01:45.780 --> 01:01:54.290 Judith Mashiter: I think I my thing is, I just want an extra 5 days to to search through all this and and see what there is.
523 01:01:54.290 --> 01:01:59.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I I do know what I forgot to mention. I'm so sorry. Let me go back to sharing the screen, because this is important.
524 01:01:59.800 --> 01:02:03.082 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And Judith. Actually, you mentioned it
525 01:02:05.480 --> 01:02:13.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: up here. I should have mentioned that you can search your layers for things. So if you go into the magnifying glass and say, I'm really interested in floods.
526 01:02:14.680 --> 01:02:20.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, it will automatically find you just those collections that have anything to do with floods.
527 01:02:20.640 --> 01:02:28.539 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then you can then go into each layer and say, Oh, this flood accommodation! All right. I've got no idea what flood accommodation is, so let's
528 01:02:28.700 --> 01:02:30.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: find out. I probably need to turn off
529 01:02:32.200 --> 01:02:36.429 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the poverty stuff which was down at the Uns level, wasn't it?
530 01:02:37.110 --> 01:02:38.080 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There we go!
531 01:02:40.310 --> 01:02:42.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So for now go back up to flows.
532 01:02:42.990 --> 01:02:45.449 Stuart Bacon: Bottom right of the screen. Graham.
533 01:02:47.650 --> 01:02:50.249 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But oh, thank you very much. Yep, this one.
534 01:02:50.830 --> 01:02:51.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
535 01:02:52.570 --> 01:02:54.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yes, okay, that's better.
536 01:02:54.820 --> 01:02:59.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I had all your photographs hiding it. I didn't see it. Thank you very much.
537 01:03:00.840 --> 01:03:10.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Anyway, that was just an example you can type in anything that you're interested in, and if there is something it'll find it for you. It's a way of going through all of the hundreds of layers, and
538 01:03:10.550 --> 01:03:16.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: in a much shorter time, alright! Anything else.
539 01:03:16.030 --> 01:03:28.229 Nigel Wylie Carrick: One question. When you've got a whole series of items on a single layer, say, for instance, a line layer, and you want to see everything less
540 01:03:28.860 --> 01:03:43.279 Nigel Wylie Carrick: one particular category. How do you filter that category out? You can filter it onto that category and show just that category. But I wasn't quite didn't quite get to the position of being able to filter it out.
541 01:03:44.760 --> 01:03:50.180 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Well, if you filtered one in, you filtered all the others out so obviously something else. What did you mean?
542 01:03:50.480 --> 01:03:57.799 Nigel Wylie Carrick: I mean, I've got lots of lines on a particular categories of lines and one line. I don't want to show I want to.
543 01:03:57.800 --> 01:03:59.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The one you want to get rid of.
544 01:03:59.360 --> 01:04:00.080 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Yes.
545 01:04:00.490 --> 01:04:02.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so you can filter that one
546 01:04:03.335 --> 01:04:06.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: in or out. Let me think about that one.
547 01:04:06.970 --> 01:04:07.660 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Yeah.
548 01:04:08.110 --> 01:04:12.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I think you have to filter out the ones you don't want, don't you?
549 01:04:12.990 --> 01:04:22.479 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no, I'm sorry the filtering does filter in. So if you are interested in a specific, let me give an example which might be a simpler way to show you.
550 01:04:22.480 --> 01:04:23.110 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Yeah.
551 01:04:23.800 --> 01:04:29.819 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nigel, if I do a share again and go back into Ash online.
552 01:04:30.570 --> 01:04:34.279 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if I can come back. Got all the pictures in the wrong place. Now
553 01:04:35.870 --> 01:04:38.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it's going to go and turn this layer off
554 01:04:42.156 --> 01:04:43.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that one
555 01:04:48.730 --> 01:04:58.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if I go and turn on. Just for instance, one of our parish layers and say, I want the planning applications for 20 doesn't really matters much which year it is.
556 01:04:59.210 --> 01:05:01.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It will come into where we are.
557 01:05:03.420 --> 01:05:06.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Where are we go home?
558 01:05:08.290 --> 01:05:18.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right? So here's a bunch of planning applications. I only want to see the ones that have infecting houses specifically. So I can go into here. Turn on a filter.
559 01:05:18.950 --> 01:05:21.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oops. Sorry this. I'm just getting rid of the pictures again.
560 01:05:22.780 --> 01:05:24.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Come into here.
561 01:05:26.650 --> 01:05:33.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Turn on a filter and say, I'm only interested in the applications that contain
562 01:05:34.530 --> 01:05:37.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the word HOU. For a house
563 01:05:38.800 --> 01:05:42.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: capitals. Since you know it's in capitalists.
564 01:05:44.190 --> 01:05:47.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, however, many applications we've got here.
565 01:05:47.630 --> 01:05:52.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you will filter them down, none involving houses that year. So there you go.
566 01:05:52.270 --> 01:05:54.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, there's 1 sorry there's 1 there.
567 01:05:55.380 --> 01:06:08.380 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, so you can. So, filtering it down to the one you want is of interest. If you wanted to filter out all the others, you've done that by reverse osmosis, if you will, by selecting the one you want, you get rid of all the others.
568 01:06:08.910 --> 01:06:09.820 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Yes.
569 01:06:09.820 --> 01:06:11.569 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's a that's a housing layer.
570 01:06:12.860 --> 01:06:15.520 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Yeah, with them.
571 01:06:15.750 --> 01:06:16.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In
572 01:06:17.660 --> 01:06:26.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the table view you're able to put in multiple oars so you can have. Show me this or show me that, or show me that, but you can.
573 01:06:26.390 --> 01:06:26.800 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Oh!
574 01:06:26.800 --> 01:06:30.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And and you can't do that in filtering you can only do it in table view.
575 01:06:33.150 --> 01:06:35.379 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But that may be of interest to you.
576 01:06:35.962 --> 01:06:38.077 Nigel Wylie Carrick: It might be actually, because
577 01:06:42.480 --> 01:06:48.100 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Otherwise I have to have more than one linear map, as it were, for to separate the.
578 01:06:48.100 --> 01:06:52.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There. Yes, agreed, which is a shame, but sometimes you can't avoid that.
579 01:06:52.900 --> 01:06:54.340 Nigel Wylie Carrick: No. No.
580 01:06:55.250 --> 01:06:56.479 Nigel Wylie Carrick: No. Okay.
581 01:06:58.840 --> 01:07:03.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do we have any other questions for me? I notice we've run out of official time.
582 01:07:04.160 --> 01:07:13.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sheila, if you want to stay on and have your earlier question answered. I'm happy to do that, and I'm happy to entertain anybody else who wants to know about.
583 01:07:13.430 --> 01:07:15.250 Malcolm Daniels: Thank you for all that.
584 01:07:16.749 --> 01:07:22.440 Helen Davey: If you've got time, Graham, I would like just to know why my photograph doesn't come up where I
585 01:07:23.605 --> 01:07:24.370 Helen Davey: like.
586 01:07:24.370 --> 01:07:28.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That that should be a quick one. Hazel, share your screen and show us.
587 01:07:28.860 --> 01:07:29.620 Helen Davey: Yeah.
588 01:07:32.310 --> 01:07:35.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I've forgotten all the chat questions that people are asking about.
589 01:07:35.710 --> 01:07:37.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, they're telling me.
590 01:07:37.480 --> 01:07:38.350 Helen Davey: PIN.
591 01:07:38.560 --> 01:07:42.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sorry Iona is Iona still with us? No.
592 01:07:42.990 --> 01:07:43.810 Helen Davey: Okay.
593 01:07:45.090 --> 01:07:46.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep. Go. Use. Picture. Yep.
594 01:07:46.710 --> 01:07:48.830 Helen Davey: So I click on that.
595 01:07:48.970 --> 01:07:49.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
596 01:07:49.830 --> 01:07:51.110 Helen Davey: I go to.
597 01:07:51.890 --> 01:07:53.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The grip bin Grip bin.
598 01:07:53.210 --> 01:07:54.080 Helen Davey: It, PIN.
599 01:07:54.080 --> 01:07:54.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup!
600 01:07:54.470 --> 01:07:56.029 Helen Davey: I go to bin one.
601 01:07:56.030 --> 01:07:56.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
602 01:07:56.440 --> 01:08:02.950 Helen Davey: I go down attachment, says one. I click on that plus.
603 01:08:03.240 --> 01:08:03.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
604 01:08:05.160 --> 01:08:05.524 Helen Davey: And.
605 01:08:05.890 --> 01:08:08.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oops. No, no click on the title. There you are, just.
606 01:08:08.350 --> 01:08:10.590 Helen Davey: It's gone. There.
607 01:08:10.590 --> 01:08:10.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
608 01:08:11.300 --> 01:08:12.150 Helen Davey: It.
609 01:08:12.270 --> 01:08:14.290 Helen Davey: How do I make it stay on the map.
610 01:08:15.880 --> 01:08:18.589 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, I see you want the picture to stay on. The man.
611 01:08:18.590 --> 01:08:19.160 Helen Davey: Yeah.
612 01:08:19.371 --> 01:08:21.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I I don't think there's a way of doing that, Hazel.
613 01:08:21.700 --> 01:08:22.600 Helen Davey: Ever since.
614 01:08:22.600 --> 01:08:23.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No sorry.
615 01:08:23.960 --> 01:08:29.929 Helen Davey: Okay, I thought that we could put the picture on. And so then when people go into the map, they can see.
616 01:08:30.740 --> 01:08:39.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, the the idea is that they just click on the attachment. But I agree it would be nice if it was a way of showing the map or the picture, but they there isn't.
617 01:08:39.560 --> 01:08:42.269 Helen Davey: Well, that's absolutely fine. I've got all my business.
618 01:08:42.859 --> 01:08:46.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Everything sorted down. So you don't have a problem after all.
619 01:08:46.689 --> 01:08:48.429 Helen Davey: No, I don't have a problem.
620 01:08:48.430 --> 01:08:49.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
621 01:08:49.090 --> 01:08:51.489 Helen Davey: I spent hours trying to get that picture on there.
622 01:08:54.740 --> 01:08:58.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm sorry, you know. Beg your pardon if you'd like to stop sharing. Let's give.
623 01:08:58.680 --> 01:09:04.680 Helen Davey: I will! I will stop, share.
624 01:09:04.880 --> 01:09:06.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go! Well done! Thank you.
625 01:09:06.640 --> 01:09:07.569 Helen Davey: Thank you.
626 01:09:08.220 --> 01:09:12.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, Sheila, you were looking about. How do you do your allotments?
627 01:09:13.180 --> 01:09:21.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I'm not quite sure what your question was when it comes to. Are you trying to fit allotments into the boundary area that you've got.
628 01:09:21.529 --> 01:09:22.319 Sheila Churchward: Yes.
629 01:09:22.580 --> 01:09:29.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay. I'm looking to see who the expert is on that. But they they're not here. So bad luck you face with me.
630 01:09:30.210 --> 01:09:32.859 Sheila Churchward: They'll they will have a size.
631 01:09:33.160 --> 01:09:37.200 Sheila Churchward: They're going to have a predetermined size. Yep.
632 01:09:37.701 --> 01:09:40.830 Sheila Churchward: I don't know that yet. Not till Monday.
633 01:09:40.830 --> 01:09:45.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But let me show you the principle that's involved, and then we can go from there. Okay.
634 01:09:45.500 --> 01:09:47.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so let's come back to.
635 01:09:48.590 --> 01:09:49.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's cool.
636 01:09:49.140 --> 01:09:49.850 Sheila Churchward: Oops!
637 01:09:50.149 --> 01:09:51.399 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, thank you.
638 01:09:52.889 --> 01:09:57.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm just trying to see where we are on my map. Let's come out a bit. Make a bit more
639 01:09:57.299 --> 01:09:58.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: sense of it. There we go.
640 01:09:59.579 --> 01:10:05.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you come down to allotments, and do you already have the boundary in place? Does it show up like this?
641 01:10:05.770 --> 01:10:09.180 Sheila Churchward: Well, it will do. I finished it over the weekend.
642 01:10:10.380 --> 01:10:11.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So.
643 01:10:13.100 --> 01:10:17.879 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You have your boundary like this, and then you want to start adding pots to it.
644 01:10:18.080 --> 01:10:18.660 Sheila Churchward: Yes.
645 01:10:18.660 --> 01:10:20.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you can add a feature.
646 01:10:21.420 --> 01:10:26.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And the 1st thing I would say is, zoom in. Let's just zoom in here.
647 01:10:28.680 --> 01:10:53.489 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, I'm going to create allotment plots where there aren't any. This is just an open field at the moment. But let's put some plots in. So the the system says, do you want to add them as a rectangular feature, which the answer is probably yes, right? So you can say yes to a triangle. Then this question you came up with size. Let's just say, for argument's sake, that your plots are going to be 3 meters wide
648 01:10:53.830 --> 01:10:55.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and 10 metres long.
649 01:10:56.720 --> 01:10:59.319 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, and then it says, so stick the
650 01:10:59.950 --> 01:11:05.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: on the map. So you click on the map where it's going to be, and you can just say, There.
651 01:11:06.680 --> 01:11:14.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then, this is now rotatable. You can align it to wherever you want it. So if they're going to run along the line of here.
652 01:11:15.030 --> 01:11:16.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can just do that.
653 01:11:16.880 --> 01:11:30.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What you don't have, unfortunately, is the ability to duplicate this in a nice long set of rows here. But what you can do is just go back to the next one. So if we let's give this an Id just to give it something to say.
654 01:11:30.500 --> 01:11:32.049 Sheila Churchward: So that's number 2.
655 01:11:32.240 --> 01:11:33.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, exactly.
656 01:11:33.580 --> 01:11:36.080 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then we can go back into here.
657 01:11:36.590 --> 01:11:38.640 Sheila Churchward: And just do that. Just repeat it.
658 01:11:38.640 --> 01:11:45.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Exactly. There is also a is this a snap to function? Yes, there's a snap to function. So if you put in
659 01:11:46.470 --> 01:11:50.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: your Preset. We said it was not 3 by 10.
660 01:11:51.130 --> 01:11:52.289 Sheila Churchward: 3, by 10.
661 01:11:52.720 --> 01:12:00.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, and we're going to say we want it. This will be one that's going to run along this line here. So if we stick it there.
662 01:12:00.650 --> 01:12:03.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and we align it like that.
663 01:12:04.880 --> 01:12:06.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then I think you can snap
664 01:12:07.670 --> 01:12:11.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to suggest it closes in on the boundaries. Do you want to snap on this? There.
665 01:12:11.880 --> 01:12:12.680 Sheila Churchward: Layer.
666 01:12:12.680 --> 01:12:13.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
667 01:12:13.800 --> 01:12:21.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I don't know that we don't know that we did that, did we? Or maybe you do that. Okay, that's the area they want you to do it in.
668 01:12:22.510 --> 01:12:24.420 Sheila Churchward: Oh, I see. Yeah.
669 01:12:24.420 --> 01:12:27.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's it, and you save it.
670 01:12:27.830 --> 01:12:29.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.
671 01:12:29.270 --> 01:12:40.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so it will snap it to the edges. If there is an edge. If there is a boundary. There you can snap to the boundary. This is where it becomes useful to turn on those grid lines that we mentioned earlier.
672 01:12:40.590 --> 01:12:47.840 Sheila Churchward: Yeah, I think what they're gonna do is they're gonna put paths. They won't have determined paths between. And and
673 01:12:48.440 --> 01:12:51.429 Sheila Churchward: so that there can be a meter path
674 01:12:51.770 --> 01:12:54.800 Sheila Churchward: and a an allotment either side.
675 01:12:54.800 --> 01:13:01.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. So again, you can put your paths in as a line.
676 01:13:01.240 --> 01:13:03.408 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So let's just say
677 01:13:04.440 --> 01:13:12.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We want to put in a path there, and I think I need a line feature which I've probably got somewhere. So Graham's test line.
678 01:13:12.240 --> 01:13:14.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So let's add a line.
679 01:13:14.740 --> 01:13:15.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All right, we're going to.
680 01:13:15.800 --> 01:13:17.050 Sheila Churchward: Happy to see you too.
681 01:13:17.050 --> 01:13:19.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And this is path one.
682 01:13:21.230 --> 01:13:27.439 Graham Stoddart-Stones: okay. And we can just say, path, one is going to go from here all the way up to there.
683 01:13:27.750 --> 01:13:28.310 Sheila Churchward: Yes.
684 01:13:28.310 --> 01:13:32.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then you'll have allotments on either side, so save it.
685 01:13:33.160 --> 01:13:35.890 Sheila Churchward: So can I connect to that path? Do you think.
686 01:13:35.890 --> 01:13:37.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, you can snap to it. Yes.
687 01:13:37.730 --> 01:13:40.700 Sheila Churchward: Map to the path, because that would be great, wouldn't it?
688 01:13:40.700 --> 01:13:42.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That'd be very handy. Yep.
689 01:13:42.870 --> 01:13:49.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then what I suggest you can do is we can now go into this line
690 01:13:50.530 --> 01:13:54.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if I can find it. Let's go a bit up in scale.
691 01:13:54.320 --> 01:13:55.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I can click on it.
692 01:13:59.970 --> 01:14:04.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: we've got one of those funny Friday afternoon things, haven't we? Because just look at zipping across the bottom.
693 01:14:07.040 --> 01:14:11.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Occasionally this happens so what I tend to do is just to restart.
694 01:14:13.140 --> 01:14:14.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because I don't know what happens to it.
695 01:14:14.430 --> 01:14:18.940 Sheila Churchward: It's just the broadband is is a bit weak, isn't it? After a while.
696 01:14:18.940 --> 01:14:24.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, not at my end, but at their end. Possibly so.
697 01:14:24.610 --> 01:14:29.550 Sheila Churchward: Opening my end. We're on a copper wire.
698 01:14:29.550 --> 01:14:35.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. Well, yes, I I'm on fiber here. But let's go down to our allotments
699 01:14:35.970 --> 01:14:42.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and go into the boundary and the plots. Okay, so here's our line. Can I find it?
700 01:14:42.560 --> 01:14:45.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, okay. So we go into the line.
701 01:14:47.140 --> 01:14:47.570 Sheila Churchward: Yeah.
702 01:14:47.570 --> 01:14:53.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And sorry I I tell a lie. What I should have done is gone into
703 01:14:54.340 --> 01:14:58.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: gone down to the line and changed the style.
704 01:14:59.510 --> 01:15:00.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All right.
705 01:15:00.640 --> 01:15:04.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So this is just a dotted line at the moment, which is not much health to anybody.
706 01:15:05.220 --> 01:15:15.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What I want to do is to change this completely. So it's going to be much, much wider. So let's just make it about 10 meters wide or 10 wide, whatever that is.
707 01:15:15.250 --> 01:15:19.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And it's not me any dash. So let's go down to 0 on the dashes.
708 01:15:19.950 --> 01:15:23.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and it's gotten down to 0 on the gaps. We want a solid line
709 01:15:24.310 --> 01:15:34.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: alright. And now, if you look over here in the 4th column, which let me get my pictures out of the way, you can see you've got much more of a visible path, if I now save on that.
710 01:15:35.900 --> 01:15:41.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and go back to the line. Now
711 01:15:41.980 --> 01:15:44.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: see, your line is now much more of a pathway.
712 01:15:45.700 --> 01:15:52.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so you just draw it as a line to show where it's going to be. Then you go into styling, and you make it broader to turn it into a path.
713 01:15:53.210 --> 01:16:00.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now let's see if we can add a feature and snap it to it. I'm not at all sure of that bit. To tell you the truth.
714 01:16:00.110 --> 01:16:25.340 Sheila Churchward: What they want to do is there will be a a plan showing the allotments, but what they want for themselves is also an indication of who who is in that plot, you know. That is a regular thing they're going to do. I don't think I'm going to do that. I'm just going to say, well, I'll prepare the plan. The Parish Council will not manage
715 01:16:25.420 --> 01:16:32.050 Sheila Churchward: the changes of data for the Parish Council. They'll have to do that themselves. But if I
716 01:16:32.520 --> 01:16:39.669 Sheila Churchward: I understand, I can actually give a download of this end plan to them
717 01:16:39.900 --> 01:16:45.170 Sheila Churchward: to use as long as they've got a suitable planning
718 01:16:45.660 --> 01:16:49.880 Sheila Churchward: software that they can sit it on and do their own thing with.
719 01:16:50.640 --> 01:16:51.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, another.
720 01:16:51.370 --> 01:16:51.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What?
721 01:16:51.690 --> 01:16:52.080 Sheila Churchward: It would.
722 01:16:52.080 --> 01:16:53.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And it's in parish online, frankly. But.
723 01:16:53.960 --> 01:16:57.037 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Yeah, I've done. I've done mine online, actually. And
724 01:16:57.380 --> 01:16:59.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Could see the the pot name or the pot holders.
725 01:16:59.950 --> 01:17:00.420 Sheila Churchward: No.
726 01:17:00.420 --> 01:17:03.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. So it's all the all this is already done for you.
727 01:17:03.720 --> 01:17:05.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and all they've got to do is fill in the gaps.
728 01:17:06.600 --> 01:17:07.490 Sheila Churchward: That's good
729 01:17:07.490 --> 01:17:28.090 Sheila Churchward: thing is the if can can we give the counts the parish church access to do that without them being, you know, interfering with the rest of the Parish Council stuff, you know. Can they be like a lower user where they look after just that.
730 01:17:28.570 --> 01:17:40.639 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, and you you. What you do is you make them editors. Now editors are able to change information that's already there, but they can't add anything new. Now you
731 01:17:41.220 --> 01:17:49.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: asking is, How is, can you make sure that they don't go anywhere else other than this particular allotment? And the answer, that is, no, not yet.
732 01:17:50.490 --> 01:17:51.090 Sheila Churchward: Oh!
733 01:17:51.670 --> 01:17:55.439 Andrew Clegg: Very important issue, because it's 1 that I've raised.
734 01:17:55.510 --> 01:18:18.249 Andrew Clegg: whereas before, and I think many parish parishes have this groups of people doing something. Groups of volunteers say that you only want to allow access to their own particular layers. Now, you can't do this in parish online, but with Xmap, which is, you know, the parish online's mother and father. It's very easy.
735 01:18:18.250 --> 01:18:36.490 Andrew Clegg: because I'm using Xmap for the environment work that I've done. And I've got several groups. And each group has their own particular layers, and they can't touch any of the other layers. They can see the other layers, but they can't touch them. I'm wondering whether this is something to again take up with parish online at some point.
736 01:18:36.630 --> 01:18:51.170 Sheila Churchward: I think so, because I'm going to ask them if we're going to have a community engagement platform, that is, for the whole parish. So we can engage better with our community. Really, truly. And the environment group is setting that up.
737 01:18:52.520 --> 01:18:59.100 Sheila Churchward: This fits beautifully into that, so that the Church can have access.
738 01:18:59.100 --> 01:18:59.780 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
739 01:18:59.780 --> 01:19:06.439 Sheila Churchward: Onto the community platform to look at their information on allotments.
740 01:19:07.350 --> 01:19:18.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well at the moment. But you can't let them edit it without giving them access to other bits, unfortunately, but you can certainly show them it. Are you familiar with public maps, Sheila?
741 01:19:19.090 --> 01:19:23.299 Sheila Churchward: To a certain extent I'm not, really I no, I'm saying that.
742 01:19:23.350 --> 01:19:30.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's a very easy way of putting information on to say your parish website, and then everybody can come and see it. But they can't.
743 01:19:31.060 --> 01:19:35.499 Sheila Churchward: The parish. The Parish Council hasn't approved that yet.
744 01:19:35.850 --> 01:19:52.609 Sheila Churchward: but fortunately we've got a new assistant clerk, and she's quite able, and she's just done the training on parish online, and she'll be joining this group hopefully quite soon, and I'm hoping that she will be
745 01:19:53.070 --> 01:20:00.270 Sheila Churchward: like an introduction for the Parish council to widen access.
746 01:20:01.130 --> 01:20:05.590 Sheila Churchward: It was enough to be honest for the Parish Council to give permission to buy this.
747 01:20:06.400 --> 01:20:06.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I see
748 01:20:06.970 --> 01:20:19.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that if you can get them to pass a rule that says any member of the Parish Council that's more than 85 years old should not be there, because it sounds like they're all 85 year old, living in the last century.
749 01:20:19.400 --> 01:20:26.030 Sheila Churchward: No, I don't. It's not that. It's just that. There's a great deal of there's an old guard.
750 01:20:26.260 --> 01:20:27.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, exactly. I guess.
751 01:20:27.780 --> 01:20:32.160 Sheila Churchward: They're not old, they're not old, but it's an old guard.
752 01:20:32.160 --> 01:20:33.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The old mail.
753 01:20:33.440 --> 01:20:36.940 Sheila Churchward: No, no, which is.
754 01:20:36.940 --> 01:20:41.212 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, all my theory is going out of the window.
755 01:20:42.140 --> 01:20:43.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, I think you.
756 01:20:43.660 --> 01:20:54.290 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Think there's a standard problem there. I mean our Parish Council. The only one who really uses parish online is myself, but they're very happy to receive the maps that I provide.
757 01:20:54.290 --> 01:20:54.640 Sheila Churchward: Right.
758 01:20:54.640 --> 01:21:04.209 Nigel Wylie Carrick: And they see the value of it, and they will. They will renew the subscription every year.
759 01:21:04.490 --> 01:21:06.709 Nigel Wylie Carrick: So So
760 01:21:08.150 --> 01:21:19.430 Nigel Wylie Carrick: allotment maps for the allotment holders. When we run fates, or whatever down in Cowleys I produce the mapping for that. I've done flood mapping
761 01:21:19.570 --> 01:21:30.469 Nigel Wylie Carrick: for the flood resilience, and it's yeah, they're quite happy to do it, but they're slightly nervous about being the operator, that's all.
762 01:21:30.470 --> 01:21:30.870 Sheila Churchward: That's right.
763 01:21:30.870 --> 01:21:37.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, but it sounds like she just solved that problem, writing yourself getting yourself a new car. Well done.
764 01:21:37.343 --> 01:21:40.480 Sheila Churchward: Thank you very much. That's a great help. Thank you.
765 01:21:40.480 --> 01:21:43.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, well, you're welcome. Let me just turn off this nonsense.
766 01:21:47.460 --> 01:21:52.499 Sheila Churchward: I'm going to dazzle the lady who comes from the parish church on Monday.
767 01:21:52.760 --> 01:21:53.639 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go!
768 01:21:54.040 --> 01:21:55.239 Helen Davey: Thank you. Graeme.
769 01:21:55.910 --> 01:21:58.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hazel, it was lovely to see you again.
770 01:21:58.730 --> 01:21:59.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Speak.
771 01:21:59.470 --> 01:22:06.190 Helen Davey: Yes, I hope so, and thank you. You're welcome, slow day.
772 01:22:06.690 --> 01:22:08.319 Nigel Wylie Carrick: And thank you.
773 01:22:08.320 --> 01:22:09.270 Malcolm Daniels: Very much for that.
774 01:22:09.270 --> 01:22:11.978 Nigel Wylie Carrick: And and for the extra lesson.
775 01:22:12.640 --> 01:22:17.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I'm sorry it was such a rush, but I never know how quickly to go with people.
776 01:22:17.980 --> 01:22:20.150 Sheila Churchward: Thank you very much for today.
777 01:22:20.150 --> 01:22:20.730 Andrew Clegg: See you there too.
778 01:22:21.170 --> 01:22:23.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You bye, bye, then take care.
779 01:22:23.270 --> 01:22:24.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: hey, Malcolm! Nice to see you.
780 01:22:24.720 --> 01:22:25.230 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, but.
781 01:22:25.230 --> 01:22:26.000 Malcolm Daniels: Oh, yeah.
782 01:22:26.000 --> 01:22:26.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Andrew. Bye-bye.
783 01:22:26.960 --> 01:22:27.940 Malcolm Daniels: You go.
784 01:22:28.620 --> 01:22:29.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
785 01:22:31.052 --> 01:22:40.500 Malcolm Daniels: When we started talking about parish online all those years ago, there were 2 different opinions.
786 01:22:40.980 --> 01:22:45.280 Malcolm Daniels: one, I was more keen in what you covered today.
787 01:22:46.020 --> 01:22:49.159 Malcolm Daniels: and you were more keen in putting dates in.
788 01:22:50.480 --> 01:22:51.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, I think so.
789 01:22:51.490 --> 01:22:55.379 Malcolm Daniels: What you've covered today demonstrates quite clearly that
790 01:22:55.530 --> 01:23:00.389 Malcolm Daniels: there are 2 totally different ways of using parish online.
791 01:23:02.040 --> 01:23:02.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Correct.
792 01:23:02.990 --> 01:23:08.339 Malcolm Daniels: And personally, I think this in the long term will be the major use.
793 01:23:09.870 --> 01:23:13.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Of actually using information that's already there.
794 01:23:13.550 --> 01:23:14.230 Malcolm Daniels: Yes.
795 01:23:14.230 --> 01:23:16.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, I'm sure you're right.
796 01:23:17.620 --> 01:23:21.760 Malcolm Daniels: Which is what I tried to say about 6, 7 years ago.
797 01:23:24.000 --> 01:23:24.560 Nigel Wylie Carrick: And then
798 01:23:24.560 --> 01:23:36.889 Nigel Wylie Carrick: the fact that the information is there is making sure that we know that it's there. I think that's the key, but it's very good. I think I'm an absolute fan of it, but
799 01:23:37.240 --> 01:23:38.890 Nigel Wylie Carrick: not everyone else is.
800 01:23:39.140 --> 01:23:40.379 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's weird, isn't it?
801 01:23:40.830 --> 01:23:43.009 Nigel Wylie Carrick: I played it very weird, but there we go.
802 01:23:43.300 --> 01:23:47.760 Malcolm Daniels: Anyway, I better go, I suppose, and thank you. Thank you.
803 01:23:51.000 --> 01:23:54.390 Nigel Wylie Carrick: I'm trying to sign myself off, and I can't find the off button.
804 01:23:54.390 --> 01:23:57.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I need to stop sharing, so I'll just lock you out so.
805 01:23:57.960 --> 01:23:58.300 Nigel Wylie Carrick: There we go!
806 01:23:58.300 --> 01:24:00.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bye, bye, both of you! Take care.
807 01:24:00.460 --> 01:24:01.730 Nigel Wylie Carrick: Thank you very much, Graham.