250620 20Jun25 session 25-25
Following items covered: Frequency of Land Registry updates, use of filterl vs layer duplication, grass mowing and due dates, gazebos and line drawing to align them
Video Timeline (min:sec):
00:00 - 03:40 Land registry - frequency of updates 03:40 - 08:00 Filtering data to change map vs duplicating layer 08:00 - 09:30 Grass mowing and gully clearance - using PO to calculate next due date 09:30 - 13:30 Land Registry - usage 13:30 - 15:30 More grass cutting 15:30 - 18:00 Banter 18: 00 - 66.29(end) plotting gazebos along an alignment curve
Presentation:
No separate presentation this week
Chat:
No separate chat this week
Speech-to-text (for AI Search)
63 00:04:23.580 --> 00:04:26.970 Retired Clerk: Go for it led Scott. Let's see what we can do for you.
64 00:04:26.970 --> 00:04:29.988 Scott Mason: No problem. Right? Just share my screen.
65 00:04:33.620 --> 00:04:34.590 Scott Mason: Right?
66 00:04:35.700 --> 00:04:37.529 Scott Mason: Let me know when you can see that.
67 00:04:38.470 --> 00:04:39.900 chris edwards: Not quite. Yeah. Yeah. There we go.
68 00:04:39.900 --> 00:04:55.739 Scott Mason: There we go. So my 1st question is around the land registry layer that seems to be embedded into parish, and how up to date. That is because I'm getting conflicting information from land registry. When we go through their portal particularly, we've got a dock area in Bridgewater, and you can see
69 00:04:55.870 --> 00:05:06.920 Scott Mason: on lands registry provided plan. There's different ownership records to what parish is showing. So just wondered how reliable and how up to date the parish layer was for land registry, and if you knew that at all, please.
70 00:05:07.520 --> 00:05:14.309 chris edwards: I I suspect we'd have to ask Chris muse at parish online for that information.
71 00:05:14.520 --> 00:05:15.430 Scott Mason: Okay.
72 00:05:16.600 --> 00:05:16.939 Retired Clerk: Which is.
73 00:05:16.940 --> 00:05:22.959 chris edwards: It's not not a very helpful answer, but at least that's the right direction for us to go in, so to speak.
74 00:05:23.670 --> 00:05:26.280 Retired Clerk: And land registry is always going to be the better one.
75 00:05:26.480 --> 00:05:37.480 Scott Mason: And in this instance we've obviously yeah, we've made sure we've gone with that. I just wondered if there was a monthly frequency, or weekly or annually, even, you know, as to when it might get updated. So we just can ensure the accuracy. That's all.
76 00:05:38.430 --> 00:05:39.200 chris edwards: Are are you?
77 00:05:39.200 --> 00:05:40.429 chris edwards: Nobody has to do that.
78 00:05:41.070 --> 00:05:45.579 John Roberts: You looking at property, Scott, that haven't got a a number.
79 00:05:46.080 --> 00:06:01.010 Scott Mason: So with this particular project where there's a Docs renovation project and I'm keen to know which areas are unregistered linked to the docs, and obviously the properties here showing on the right here show is registered and on parish online show is unregistered.
80 00:06:01.648 --> 00:06:04.581 Scott Mason: Which has given me some concerns.
81 00:06:05.443 --> 00:06:11.420 John Roberts: The the view that we're looking at on the right hand side. Where is that from.
82 00:06:12.233 --> 00:06:16.180 Scott Mason: That's an extract from land registry on our portal access that we've got with them.
83 00:06:16.540 --> 00:06:17.130 John Roberts: Right?
84 00:06:17.300 --> 00:06:18.160 John Roberts: Okay.
85 00:06:19.000 --> 00:06:26.080 Scott Mason: I would always treat that as you know, the the final. I just be nice. It's a clumpy process to go through land.
86 00:06:26.080 --> 00:06:26.430 John Roberts: Right now.
87 00:06:26.430 --> 00:06:33.019 Scott Mason: Portal. And it would be nice, obviously, if we could rely on the data that's in Paris to be as accurate as the land registry.
88 00:06:33.020 --> 00:06:39.170 John Roberts: The the answer I had once before from parish online was, was they update it
89 00:06:39.930 --> 00:06:43.520 John Roberts: when they get the updates from land registry.
90 00:06:43.520 --> 00:06:44.630 Scott Mason: Right? Okay.
91 00:06:46.460 --> 00:06:48.900 John Roberts: The land registry updates can be a bit
92 00:06:49.751 --> 00:06:58.689 John Roberts: if you like. They're not. I don't think on a regular basis. We've still got a lot of properties in this village that aren't registered at all.
93 00:06:59.050 --> 00:06:59.750 Scott Mason: Right.
94 00:07:01.500 --> 00:07:07.610 John Roberts: And I think, is it later this year or next year there's going to be a law where everything's got to be registered, anyway.
95 00:07:07.610 --> 00:07:08.280 Scott Mason: Yeah.
96 00:07:09.590 --> 00:07:10.590 John Roberts: But
97 00:07:10.900 --> 00:07:18.620 John Roberts: as as it's updated by land registry to parish online, it will change. But I don't think I don't believe there's a regular.
98 00:07:18.950 --> 00:07:19.600 Scott Mason: Hmm.
99 00:07:20.019 --> 00:07:25.049 John Roberts: Update process. But then, like Chris said, you know, Chris Muse.
100 00:07:25.790 --> 00:07:28.119 John Roberts: we'll give you a definitive answer.
101 00:07:28.450 --> 00:07:31.899 Scott Mason: How would I contact him? Do I raise a ticket? Is that the best way or.
102 00:07:32.230 --> 00:07:32.760 chris edwards: Yes.
103 00:07:32.760 --> 00:07:38.220 John Roberts: If you if you go to the top of your parish online page, where it says, Help.
104 00:07:38.510 --> 00:07:39.150 Scott Mason: Yeah.
105 00:07:39.400 --> 00:07:41.389 John Roberts: And then you've got contact support.
106 00:07:42.000 --> 00:07:43.049 Scott Mason: Okay. I'll do that.
107 00:07:43.050 --> 00:07:49.879 John Roberts: And if you fill that out it's a form to fill out. You will need your parish online login.
108 00:07:50.110 --> 00:07:50.840 Scott Mason: Okay.
109 00:07:53.360 --> 00:07:57.430 John Roberts: And then then you fill out the ticket, and they're pretty quick in answering it.
110 00:07:57.710 --> 00:08:00.309 Scott Mason: Okay, brilliant. I'll do that after the meeting. Thank you.
111 00:08:00.950 --> 00:08:01.725 Scott Mason: Okay.
112 00:08:02.500 --> 00:08:04.250 John Roberts: That's 1 we couldn't answer.
113 00:08:05.280 --> 00:08:18.870 Scott Mason: I've got. I've got 2 more for you. Right? Okay. So the next one we have an event coming up called Playday, and I've plotted a fair amount of detail relating to the event into here. Now, what I'd like to do is
114 00:08:19.480 --> 00:08:28.380 Scott Mason: just supply a plan that only shows these entrance points the entrance. 1, 2, 3, 4. I think it's 5 in total. Is there a way that I can
115 00:08:28.550 --> 00:08:33.550 Scott Mason: remove certain annotations, but only leave some behind? Is that possible?
116 00:08:34.210 --> 00:08:38.490 chris edwards: I would suggest you do a separate layer for the entrance points.
117 00:08:39.262 --> 00:08:42.077 Scott Mason: So that you could actually show that
118 00:08:42.650 --> 00:08:46.450 chris edwards: Solely for the entrance points on that.
119 00:08:46.450 --> 00:08:54.020 chris edwards: Have the other layers standing by next to it, where you can bring in the tents, and the you know, whatever else you have.
120 00:08:54.680 --> 00:08:55.200 Scott Mason: Okay.
121 00:08:55.200 --> 00:09:00.779 John Roberts: Is that a layer that's been annotated, but using the annotate tool? Or is it a layer you've created.
122 00:09:01.010 --> 00:09:18.999 Scott Mason: So it's a layer I've created. And then, under style, I've got all different features all here. Yeah, I just know if there's a toggle where you could turn on and off certain what they call them expressions on here, or certain names of things. To only leave certain things remaining. That was all.
123 00:09:22.620 --> 00:09:23.599 Stuart Council: You're anywhere to do
124 00:09:23.600 --> 00:09:32.310 Stuart Council: that spot is to do it for an entire layer. Unfortunately, you can't do in individual items within a layer.
125 00:09:32.880 --> 00:09:34.509 Scott Mason: Okay, that's fine.
126 00:09:34.510 --> 00:09:37.132 Stuart Council: You should be, you should be able to
127 00:09:37.750 --> 00:09:43.290 Stuart Council: If you create another layer, you can then sort of pull out the items that you transfer?
128 00:09:43.290 --> 00:09:44.860 Stuart Council: Yeah, it's all duplicate.
129 00:09:44.860 --> 00:09:51.471 Stuart Council: Yeah. And then duplicate that. So you're not having to go in and redo everything again as such. But.
130 00:09:52.050 --> 00:09:52.980 John Roberts: Okay.
131 00:09:52.980 --> 00:10:01.579 John Roberts: let's say, if you use the duplicate layer and then go into administration and give it another name, such as entrances, then you can just edit out everything else.
132 00:10:01.940 --> 00:10:12.619 Scott Mason: I mean, is it a feature you think I ought to suggest through a ticket? Because I see you could turn labels on and off. It'd be nice, I suppose, that labels and not icons, but whether that could be the function to turn on and off. Certain
133 00:10:13.060 --> 00:10:14.820 Scott Mason: it's things on here.
134 00:10:14.820 --> 00:10:18.729 John Roberts: A better way to do it would be to ask the question, can I turn off
135 00:10:19.360 --> 00:10:21.219 John Roberts: certain things within a layer.
136 00:10:21.220 --> 00:10:22.129 Scott Mason: Yeah, okay.
137 00:10:22.130 --> 00:10:25.029 John Roberts: So that I can print a map showing just those.
138 00:10:25.160 --> 00:10:25.900 Scott Mason: Okay.
139 00:10:27.840 --> 00:10:29.799 John Roberts: Again. Yeah, it's a ticket.
140 00:10:29.800 --> 00:10:45.931 Scott Mason: It would also make it a lot easier if, when you're creating a layer, you could choose whether to have point and polygons, for instance, because I've obviously set this up as points. But I've got to replicate the fence 30 times rather than actually destroying a line or or a polygon of some sort.
141 00:10:46.220 --> 00:10:54.429 John Roberts: We? We've been there with them on this one now, on several occasions, and the last answer was, It's in the pipeline we're looking at it.
142 00:10:54.430 --> 00:10:57.539 Scott Mason: Oh, I'll put that in my ticket as well, then,
143 00:10:59.590 --> 00:11:03.979 Retired Clerk: Are you? Are you putting up putting out a public map for this? Then Scott, or you.
144 00:11:04.265 --> 00:11:11.410 Scott Mason: It, it'll be yeah, I will. I will generate a URL for stallholders that are coming, but it won't be public as such. But yeah.
145 00:11:12.447 --> 00:11:17.840 Scott Mason: so I might do a stripped down version. Anyway, this is more for event setup purposes.
146 00:11:17.970 --> 00:11:21.959 Scott Mason: But I might do one for stallholders just showing where they're going and entrance points.
147 00:11:23.495 --> 00:11:26.179 Scott Mason: Yeah, just trying to utilize it more. Really.
148 00:11:27.100 --> 00:11:30.379 John Roberts: The other. The other thing with regards to your fence.
149 00:11:30.380 --> 00:11:33.789 John Roberts: Yeah, if you had a created a layer
150 00:11:34.060 --> 00:11:39.560 John Roberts: using a line and then just show the fence. You can bring both layers up.
151 00:11:40.580 --> 00:11:41.180 Scott Mason: Okay.
152 00:11:41.180 --> 00:11:43.689 John Roberts: You can create a public map that way as well.
153 00:11:43.910 --> 00:11:45.649 Scott Mason: So you'd have 2 playday layers, one.
154 00:11:45.650 --> 00:11:46.240 John Roberts: Layers on.
155 00:11:46.400 --> 00:12:05.567 Scott Mason: Yeah, okay? And you'd have them both on at the same time. Yeah, I see what you're saying. Okay, that could be a way around it. I've also put a suggestion in about some new symbols as well, because there's a lot of things that aren't necessarily relevant to what they need to be so. I did put a ticket in for that, and they said that was in the pipeline, so.
156 00:12:05.830 --> 00:12:08.560 John Roberts: It's very, in fact, very much an answer.
157 00:12:09.300 --> 00:12:13.209 John Roberts: I might be wrong to say that sometimes I get the impression that.
158 00:12:13.390 --> 00:12:17.356 chris edwards: If in the pipeline means we hadn't thought of that. We'll look at it.
159 00:12:17.780 --> 00:12:34.620 Scott Mason: Well, I've suggested it, anyway. Right? Okay. So my last query, we are responsible for the grass cutting around Bridgewater. And I was wondering if, in fact, I might show you what we've done with the gullies 1st of all. So we've got all of our gullies plotted.
160 00:12:34.750 --> 00:12:47.541 Scott Mason: and when we get a report of one that's blocked. We change the status on here to visit required, and the OP. Once the opt is finished he'll fill out the details, and he'll change it to
161 00:12:48.370 --> 00:12:56.719 Scott Mason: cleaned and left satisfactory, hopefully or not attempted, requires further work that edits the color status of the asset, which is, works really well for us.
162 00:12:56.930 --> 00:13:13.550 Scott Mason: so similarly linked to that. If we move on to grass, what we'd like to do is be able to look at this map and see where the team have completed a cut, and then they move in a clockwise direction. Essentially. So once they've clicked on this area here.
163 00:13:13.870 --> 00:13:17.349 Scott Mason: I'd like them to be able to go in and change the status from.
164 00:13:17.920 --> 00:13:24.530 Scott Mason: you know, either to in progress or complete. So we can see when we get inquiries how far they've got? Basically. But is there a way of that
165 00:13:24.950 --> 00:13:31.950 Scott Mason: process resetting after a specified amount of time, so that it becomes due again? Or is that a manual process only.
166 00:13:32.510 --> 00:13:35.719 John Roberts: As far as I know, that would be a manual process.
167 00:13:35.980 --> 00:13:36.960 Scott Mason: Got it. Okay.
168 00:13:36.960 --> 00:13:45.110 John Roberts: Because in in the list, for where you've created that you'll have inspection date the next inspection date, whatever.
169 00:13:46.580 --> 00:13:48.070 Scott Mason: What? In here?
170 00:13:48.260 --> 00:13:48.950 John Roberts: Yeah.
171 00:13:49.490 --> 00:13:54.390 Scott Mason: Okay, yeah. I didn't know if there's any way of timing it. So that
172 00:13:54.760 --> 00:14:03.229 Scott Mason: you know, I have to say 2 or 3 weeks of defined period, it would revert back to cut due, and then, so that it would constantly be alive, almost like a live map of where they've
173 00:14:03.780 --> 00:14:05.930 Scott Mason: cut around Bridgewater. Essentially.
174 00:14:07.020 --> 00:14:09.801 Scott Mason: So I just thought I'd bring it to you all for your thoughts really.
175 00:14:10.000 --> 00:14:14.239 chris edwards: Yeah. Well, yeah, thank you very much for those interesting points.
176 00:14:15.150 --> 00:14:23.890 chris edwards: Scott, can I just ask a question? We've we've used land registry, cadastral parcels
177 00:14:24.010 --> 00:14:27.950 chris edwards: a number of times, and I think our council of
178 00:14:28.250 --> 00:14:34.089 chris edwards: found out about the ownership of 2 or 3 plots of land. Yeah, I mean
179 00:14:34.210 --> 00:14:38.290 chris edwards: to put it in perspective with you, being in a very large town.
180 00:14:38.810 --> 00:14:46.789 chris edwards: Are you using the? Are you finding out the ownership of plots on a vast scale?
181 00:14:48.365 --> 00:14:50.854 Scott Mason: So we look at boundaries of
182 00:14:51.500 --> 00:15:04.529 Scott Mason: private versus public areas on a daily basis, due to the reports that we get in. And obviously I'll go to is parish. And that's why I'm questioning the accuracy of it in terms of actually delving deeper into ownership records. Maybe a couple of months.
183 00:15:04.930 --> 00:15:10.440 Scott Mason: Which we've got access through the land registry portal to do so, and we have to pay. I think it's 7 pounds a search for.
184 00:15:10.440 --> 00:15:11.220 chris edwards: That's right. Yes.
185 00:15:11.710 --> 00:15:15.140 Scott Mason: So yeah, yeah, it's quite regular. Yeah.
186 00:15:15.240 --> 00:15:17.180 chris edwards: Okay, that's interesting. Thank you.
187 00:15:17.180 --> 00:15:18.050 Scott Mason: That's okay.
188 00:15:18.260 --> 00:15:26.770 chris edwards: Yeah, Hello, Andrew, and welcome to our meeting. Sorry you've missed a bit of it so far.
189 00:15:26.770 --> 00:15:27.510 Angie Bamford: Alright!
190 00:15:29.620 --> 00:15:32.500 Scott Mason: Pop. Show right any other questions, please.
191 00:15:34.797 --> 00:15:38.370 Retired Clerk: Scott, just going back to your grass cutting.
192 00:15:38.370 --> 00:15:38.970 Scott Mason: Yeah.
193 00:15:38.970 --> 00:15:44.669 Retired Clerk: Yeah, you've created that as your only rather than using one of the established ones for that, have you.
194 00:15:44.970 --> 00:15:46.269 Scott Mason: I have, yeah.
195 00:15:46.570 --> 00:15:49.846 Retired Clerk: That's only because that that would have given you
196 00:15:50.610 --> 00:16:00.529 Retired Clerk: areas and inspection dates bloody black. You know you could. You could use one of those that might have trip given you some more information to, to harvest.
197 00:16:00.790 --> 00:16:03.910 Scott Mason: Oh, okay, I hadn't thought of that, I must admit.
198 00:16:04.620 --> 00:16:10.820 John Roberts: Yeah, the with the asset and maintenance layer, the grass cutting.
199 00:16:11.190 --> 00:16:14.499 John Roberts: It gives you area id type.
200 00:16:15.190 --> 00:16:18.659 John Roberts: group id notes that that's all it's got in there.
201 00:16:18.980 --> 00:16:24.639 Scott Mason: Okay, yeah. I'm just looking at that. Now. Okay, yeah.
202 00:16:34.300 --> 00:16:39.300 Scott Mason: Yeah, I must admit I've only ever created layers within our own Paris layers of not inputted to existing ones.
203 00:16:40.570 --> 00:16:53.939 Retired Clerk: Tell me that the existing, the the sort of format layers would give you other information to consider, particularly when you're when you're thinking about dates and sort of inspection dates that's already there. In certain of these.
204 00:16:54.260 --> 00:16:54.880 Scott Mason: Okay.
205 00:16:54.880 --> 00:16:57.629 John Roberts: Look at the one called ground surfaces.
206 00:16:59.410 --> 00:17:02.640 Scott Mason: It's not grass cutting. It's right down the bottom.
207 00:17:02.640 --> 00:17:04.130 Scott Mason: Oh, yeah, I've got it. Yeah.
208 00:17:04.877 --> 00:17:11.559 John Roberts: If you create, if you go add feature, you get the list that comes up.
209 00:17:11.560 --> 00:17:12.259 Scott Mason: Oh, yeah.
210 00:17:12.869 --> 00:17:18.359 John Roberts: And that's quite a long list of what you can fill in for your different ground surfaces.
211 00:17:18.519 --> 00:17:20.999 John Roberts: There's no reason why you couldn't use that one for grass, cutting.
212 00:17:21.170 --> 00:17:24.190 Scott Mason: Yeah, asset value replacement value. Okay.
213 00:17:25.530 --> 00:17:32.739 chris edwards: John, would it be an idea for you to share your screen and show that we could all have a look at what you're looking at?
214 00:17:33.220 --> 00:17:34.990 John Roberts: Yeah, okay, I hadn't thought of that.
215 00:17:44.260 --> 00:17:44.990 John Roberts: Okay.
216 00:17:45.810 --> 00:17:47.230 chris edwards: Not quite. Oh, there we go!
217 00:17:47.230 --> 00:17:47.880 Retired Clerk: Yes.
218 00:17:48.330 --> 00:17:48.950 John Roberts: Right?
219 00:17:49.390 --> 00:17:52.939 John Roberts: Yeah, what I was looking. If you go into the grass cutting one.
220 00:17:55.590 --> 00:17:58.729 John Roberts: there actually is not a lot of information you can store in it at all.
221 00:17:58.730 --> 00:17:59.460 Scott Mason: No.
222 00:18:00.410 --> 00:18:05.180 John Roberts: I have to admit, like Scott, we've created our own grass cutting layer, but
223 00:18:07.110 --> 00:18:09.519 John Roberts: down the bottom is ground surfaces.
224 00:18:10.000 --> 00:18:10.610 Scott Mason: Yeah.
225 00:18:13.120 --> 00:18:18.560 John Roberts: Now, yeah, the different categories, what? It is.
226 00:18:19.560 --> 00:18:22.000 John Roberts: So obviously it would be other.
227 00:18:22.937 --> 00:18:28.110 John Roberts: Then you've got where it is. Date, date purchase. Will that be the date you took it over?
228 00:18:29.080 --> 00:18:35.690 John Roberts: These would not apply as such. But then you've got your inspection, dates and condition state.
229 00:18:36.370 --> 00:18:38.310 John Roberts: You could use that for grass cutting.
230 00:18:38.730 --> 00:18:39.430 Scott Mason: Yeah.
231 00:18:39.430 --> 00:18:43.900 Retired Clerk: Or suggest another ticket to incorporate some of that into the grass, cutting one.
232 00:18:44.250 --> 00:18:44.780 John Roberts: Yes.
233 00:18:44.780 --> 00:18:48.416 Scott Mason: We're we're giving you a bad name. Here, Scott.
234 00:18:49.120 --> 00:18:53.510 John Roberts: The thing thing to remember. Scott is with the asset and maintenance layer.
235 00:18:53.510 --> 00:18:53.960 Scott Mason: Yeah.
236 00:18:53.960 --> 00:18:58.109 John Roberts: That's the one that the insurance company will look at to look at your assets.
237 00:18:58.110 --> 00:18:58.870 Scott Mason: Okay.
238 00:19:01.290 --> 00:19:02.860 John Roberts: Which I wasn't aware of.
239 00:19:03.110 --> 00:19:03.710 Scott Mason: No.
240 00:19:03.710 --> 00:19:06.740 John Roberts: Until we had a finger post incident. But
241 00:19:09.030 --> 00:19:14.340 John Roberts: I'm not having to go through and add things that I had our own layers for
242 00:19:14.500 --> 00:19:18.440 John Roberts: into the asset and maintenance, just so that the record they are ours.
243 00:19:19.030 --> 00:19:21.280 Scott Mason: Okay, that's interesting. Yeah. I hadn't considered that.
244 00:19:21.280 --> 00:19:24.150 John Roberts: Sure I'm not sure a grass area can be clues as an asset.
245 00:19:26.280 --> 00:19:33.149 chris edwards: John, can I raise the point? If you use assets and maintenance.
246 00:19:33.830 --> 00:19:36.870 chris edwards: and we're talking about a ground area.
247 00:19:37.010 --> 00:19:41.730 chris edwards: can you? Can you then produce a table view of all the
248 00:19:42.330 --> 00:19:45.780 chris edwards: areas one by one or not.
249 00:19:46.450 --> 00:19:53.409 chris edwards: You you can do in a parish lab, but I'm querying whether you can do it in an asset.
250 00:19:54.000 --> 00:19:57.900 John Roberts: Yes, certainly. Ground surfaces gives you a table view.
251 00:19:58.250 --> 00:19:59.030 chris edwards: Okay.
252 00:20:00.850 --> 00:20:02.429 John Roberts: I think most of them do
253 00:20:02.720 --> 00:20:06.550 John Roberts: blade right? Yeah, some don't. But the majority do.
254 00:20:06.820 --> 00:20:10.600 John Roberts: Okay, pop up grass cutting.
255 00:20:11.470 --> 00:20:13.300 John Roberts: So does grass cutting. Yeah.
256 00:20:13.870 --> 00:20:20.970 chris edwards: Okay, thank you very much, Helen. Can I just say Hello! Nice to see you.
257 00:20:20.970 --> 00:20:23.360 helen Davey: Hello, Hello, Chris! Hello! Everybody.
258 00:20:23.360 --> 00:20:24.460 John Roberts: Hiya! Hello, Helen.
259 00:20:24.630 --> 00:20:27.939 helen Davey: Stuart, you're not falling on the floor, have you? Because I see you?
260 00:20:30.080 --> 00:20:30.800 helen Davey: Hello, Angie!
261 00:20:30.800 --> 00:20:31.797 Angie Bamford: Haven't seen him.
262 00:20:33.050 --> 00:20:34.080 helen Davey: Oh dear!
263 00:20:34.500 --> 00:20:35.600 chris edwards: Do you have a question?
264 00:20:35.600 --> 00:20:36.300 chris edwards: Shouldn't have a.
265 00:20:36.350 --> 00:20:39.559 helen Davey: I haven't really got any questions. I've just
266 00:20:39.700 --> 00:20:43.670 helen Davey: come to join you to learn what I can learn, what I didn't know. I didn't know.
267 00:20:44.507 --> 00:20:46.450 chris edwards: That's fine. Yeah.
268 00:20:46.780 --> 00:20:47.220 helen Davey: Thank you.
269 00:20:47.220 --> 00:20:50.519 chris edwards: If Stuart's still there, Stuart, can you hear us.
270 00:20:51.590 --> 00:20:54.449 helen Davey: No, I think he's collapsed. So 8.
271 00:20:55.060 --> 00:20:55.750 chris edwards: Yeah.
272 00:20:56.170 --> 00:20:56.930 helen Davey: T.
273 00:21:00.820 --> 00:21:06.039 chris edwards: I'm afraid I've got no questions today, so I can't be of much help.
274 00:21:08.740 --> 00:21:12.549 chris edwards: John, you must. You must have a query somewhere tucked away.
275 00:21:12.820 --> 00:21:19.570 John Roberts: I haven't preoccupied with things like finger posting that this this last few weeks. So
276 00:21:19.940 --> 00:21:23.729 John Roberts: I have to admit parish online hasn't come into my
277 00:21:24.150 --> 00:21:25.949 John Roberts: workload a lot for the last 2.
278 00:21:25.950 --> 00:21:26.620 chris edwards: Very much.
279 00:21:26.770 --> 00:21:27.960 chris edwards: Yeah, yeah.
280 00:21:32.060 --> 00:21:38.920 John Roberts: But our finger post is now up and repaired and back in place, so that project's finished.
281 00:21:39.170 --> 00:21:42.570 chris edwards: Is that the great big iron one that you showed a picture of.
282 00:21:43.410 --> 00:21:45.469 John Roberts: Yeah, the one that was knocked down on Christmas Eve.
283 00:21:45.470 --> 00:21:47.050 chris edwards: Oh yes, yes.
284 00:21:48.150 --> 00:21:53.309 John Roberts: It's now been repaired, refurbished, repainted, and it's back in place.
285 00:21:53.440 --> 00:21:54.150 chris edwards: Right.
286 00:21:54.450 --> 00:21:55.780 John Roberts: Taken, 6 months.
287 00:21:59.160 --> 00:22:05.630 chris edwards: We've lost you, Stuart. We've we'd lost you earlier. Have you got any questions to ask?
288 00:22:05.630 --> 00:22:07.150 Stuart Council: No questions, no.
289 00:22:08.830 --> 00:22:13.019 helen Davey: I will please ask a question, because I've just thought of something.
290 00:22:13.020 --> 00:22:13.810 chris edwards: Okay.
291 00:22:15.120 --> 00:22:20.040 helen Davey: I have drawn a line which will be
292 00:22:20.880 --> 00:22:27.480 helen Davey: where my gazebos will stand for the fate, and
293 00:22:27.640 --> 00:22:31.609 helen Davey: I would like to get rid of the lion, and I
294 00:22:32.030 --> 00:22:34.680 helen Davey: I've done all sorts of things I've finished up with the
295 00:22:35.150 --> 00:22:40.200 helen Davey: I think I finished up with a load of arrows or something. Should I share and show you.
296 00:22:40.510 --> 00:22:42.170 John Roberts: Yes, please.
297 00:22:42.170 --> 00:22:42.730 John Roberts: Tyler.
298 00:22:43.220 --> 00:22:45.869 helen Davey: You. You never know what I might be talking about.
299 00:22:49.370 --> 00:22:51.790 helen Davey: I never know what I'm talking about most of the time.
300 00:22:53.760 --> 00:22:55.370 helen Davey: Oops wrong way.
301 00:22:56.280 --> 00:22:57.359 chris edwards: There we go!
302 00:22:57.360 --> 00:23:05.650 helen Davey: You see, I had a line, and now I've got whatever it is, and it's.
303 00:23:05.660 --> 00:23:06.957 Angie Bamford: My wife, track.
304 00:23:07.750 --> 00:23:11.419 helen Davey: So what I want to do is get rid of that line because I want to
305 00:23:12.570 --> 00:23:17.010 helen Davey: put it somewhere different and put a different and put a measurement on it.
306 00:23:18.670 --> 00:23:20.149 John Roberts: Yeah, if you click on the line.
307 00:23:20.650 --> 00:23:21.990 helen Davey: Click on the line.
308 00:23:22.250 --> 00:23:23.100 helen Davey: Yeah.
309 00:23:23.900 --> 00:23:26.569 John Roberts: And then click on where it's got line drawing.
310 00:23:26.570 --> 00:23:27.370 helen Davey: Yes.
311 00:23:28.280 --> 00:23:30.810 John Roberts: Then click on the bot, the dustbin.
312 00:23:30.950 --> 00:23:33.230 helen Davey: Oh, oh, simple!
313 00:23:33.770 --> 00:23:38.910 helen Davey: Oh, thank you! I cannot be so stupid doing that.
314 00:23:39.180 --> 00:23:39.760 helen Davey: I'll say.
315 00:23:39.760 --> 00:23:43.350 chris edwards: So what are you hoping to show on your map now that the line has gone.
316 00:23:45.390 --> 00:23:46.170 helen Davey: We got.
317 00:23:46.170 --> 00:23:46.720 chris edwards: Please.
318 00:23:47.710 --> 00:23:53.940 helen Davey: The yeah. But the gazebos will. I just want to put them on, because now you've shown me how to
319 00:23:55.150 --> 00:23:58.500 helen Davey: that, all comes up with lots of little squares.
320 00:23:58.740 --> 00:23:59.400 chris edwards: Yeah.
321 00:23:59.400 --> 00:24:00.529 helen Davey: You know I mean, don't you?
322 00:24:00.530 --> 00:24:01.420 chris edwards: Yeah, yeah.
323 00:24:02.040 --> 00:24:11.679 helen Davey: So I'll I'll be able to just now. I don't need that line. I can just put the gazebos, and I might be able to put spaces and gaps for people to walk through.
324 00:24:11.680 --> 00:24:12.340 chris edwards: True.
325 00:24:12.550 --> 00:24:15.959 helen Davey: So. That's brilliant. Thank you very much.
326 00:24:16.390 --> 00:24:26.790 chris edwards: You can use the templates that the that parish online had provided for small gazebos, medium large, or whatever you like.
327 00:24:27.665 --> 00:24:33.520 helen Davey: Right well. The only measurement I've found is football fields and things like that. I I haven't found.
328 00:24:34.100 --> 00:24:40.790 chris edwards: It does go down to, let's say, for example, 3 meters by 3 meters the size of a gazebo.
329 00:24:40.790 --> 00:24:43.249 helen Davey: How do I make 3 meters into 4.
330 00:24:43.710 --> 00:24:47.749 chris edwards: Well, no, you, there's there's possibly a template for that.
331 00:24:48.590 --> 00:24:49.260 helen Davey: Right!
332 00:24:49.660 --> 00:24:52.309 chris edwards: I'm scratching my head to think of
333 00:24:52.410 --> 00:24:55.849 chris edwards: where you go to get the template.
334 00:24:56.830 --> 00:24:58.409 chris edwards: I'll have to think about that.
335 00:24:58.640 --> 00:25:01.260 chris edwards: I've used it previously.
336 00:25:01.420 --> 00:25:07.850 John Roberts: If you go into style, whatever you what you you gotta click on something you're gonna do.
337 00:25:09.430 --> 00:25:12.150 John Roberts: So your layer at the moment is a line.
338 00:25:12.150 --> 00:25:12.900 helen Davey: Yes.
339 00:25:13.470 --> 00:25:18.199 John Roberts: And if you want to put things like gazebos on you, you're gonna have to use a layer that's got
340 00:25:19.150 --> 00:25:19.839 John Roberts: a polygon.
341 00:25:20.480 --> 00:25:21.190 helen Davey: Address.
342 00:25:21.190 --> 00:25:21.740 John Roberts: Think.
343 00:25:22.560 --> 00:25:23.150 chris edwards: Star.
344 00:25:23.150 --> 00:25:24.140 John Roberts: If you go to style.
345 00:25:24.140 --> 00:25:24.760 helen Davey: Help
346 00:25:28.110 --> 00:25:29.160 helen Davey: and.
347 00:25:29.650 --> 00:25:34.460 John Roberts: Now all that gives you. If you look at the right hand side, it only gives you the option
348 00:25:35.198 --> 00:25:39.099 John Roberts: what you do for a line. There's no option there to use an icon.
349 00:25:39.730 --> 00:25:40.430 helen Davey: Aha!
350 00:25:40.550 --> 00:25:41.410 helen Davey: Right so.
351 00:25:41.710 --> 00:25:46.240 John Roberts: Basically, your layer should be a polygon and not a line.
352 00:25:46.740 --> 00:25:53.810 helen Davey: Oh, yes, yes, I need to change that 1. 0, yes, and set.
353 00:25:53.810 --> 00:25:55.269 John Roberts: Do you want me to run through it?
354 00:25:57.630 --> 00:26:00.089 helen Davey: Yes, I'm going to regret saying this because.
355 00:26:01.970 --> 00:26:02.500 chris edwards: Oh!
356 00:26:04.510 --> 00:26:05.380 helen Davey: Thank you.
357 00:26:07.000 --> 00:26:09.020 helen Davey: What do go back to.
358 00:26:09.020 --> 00:26:11.410 John Roberts: Do you want right? Do you want me to share my screen.
359 00:26:13.110 --> 00:26:14.460 helen Davey: Yeah. Yes.
360 00:26:14.830 --> 00:26:16.286 chris edwards: So you'll have to
361 00:26:16.780 --> 00:26:17.700 helen Davey: Get rid of mine.
362 00:26:17.700 --> 00:26:20.380 chris edwards: Get rid of yours. Yes, they're out. Well, then.
363 00:26:25.600 --> 00:26:27.249 John Roberts: No, I'm assuming you're looking at it.
364 00:26:28.150 --> 00:26:28.790 chris edwards: Yes.
365 00:26:28.790 --> 00:26:33.049 John Roberts: If I if I go to, where are we if I can find it?
366 00:26:46.390 --> 00:26:50.090 John Roberts: Now, if I go into style, the layer is a polygon layer
367 00:26:54.770 --> 00:26:57.899 John Roberts: you've got you, you! If you look at that lot it's different.
368 00:27:00.730 --> 00:27:01.430 helen Davey: Hello!
369 00:27:02.130 --> 00:27:02.790 John Roberts: Yeah.
370 00:27:04.600 --> 00:27:11.280 John Roberts: So if I add, trouble is, there's no I've got no nothing in the
371 00:27:17.960 --> 00:27:24.190 John Roberts: because I've got nothing within the background of this Stuart out.
372 00:27:26.530 --> 00:27:29.060 John Roberts: I need to fill out the columns. Helen.
373 00:27:29.580 --> 00:27:30.760 Stuart Council: What's up? Sorry.
374 00:27:30.760 --> 00:27:34.940 John Roberts: That I need to fill out the columns, so that here I get
375 00:27:35.210 --> 00:27:37.169 John Roberts: the different things I'm looking for.
376 00:27:37.980 --> 00:27:41.719 John Roberts: and then where you've got pattern. You will also get icon.
377 00:27:45.190 --> 00:27:45.850 helen Davey: I.
378 00:27:47.860 --> 00:27:49.793 Stuart Council: So you need to change
379 00:27:52.430 --> 00:27:55.449 Stuart Council: You've got it as class based, haven't you? On the left hand side.
380 00:27:55.450 --> 00:27:56.310 John Roberts: Class based.
381 00:28:05.450 --> 00:28:07.309 Stuart Council: What are we trying to change? Sorry.
382 00:28:07.310 --> 00:28:10.840 John Roberts: Well, how do to use the icons?
383 00:28:11.790 --> 00:28:15.910 John Roberts: And I jumped in, forgetting that my my
384 00:28:16.500 --> 00:28:19.170 John Roberts: layers that I've got are just basic layers.
385 00:28:19.560 --> 00:28:27.899 helen Davey: I've just got rid of a line, and I want to make little square gazebos by just clicking and clicking it. And I was thinking that
386 00:28:29.250 --> 00:28:32.770 helen Davey: I've got rid of the line, thanks to Tom.
387 00:28:32.770 --> 00:28:35.850 John Roberts: That's all you get with. That's the only options you get with a line.
388 00:28:36.470 --> 00:28:37.180 helen Davey: Yes.
389 00:28:38.830 --> 00:28:43.130 helen Davey: So what I'm trying to do now is make polygons.
390 00:28:45.490 --> 00:28:46.379 Stuart Council: Yeah, which is.
391 00:28:46.380 --> 00:28:47.120 helen Davey: Style.
392 00:28:52.370 --> 00:28:53.679 John Roberts: What you should get there.
393 00:28:53.680 --> 00:28:56.000 Stuart Council: And should be able to choose from the type, isn't it?
394 00:28:56.840 --> 00:28:57.430 John Roberts: Yeah.
395 00:28:59.570 --> 00:29:00.620 Stuart Council: Go ahead!
396 00:29:01.290 --> 00:29:04.550 John Roberts: That's under type, because I've got no columns.
397 00:29:06.060 --> 00:29:07.730 John Roberts: It won't give me an icon.
398 00:29:09.340 --> 00:29:10.749 Stuart Council: So add a class.
399 00:29:13.910 --> 00:29:19.710 Scott Mason: Can you not only add icons to point type players, not lines.
400 00:29:20.980 --> 00:29:21.960 John Roberts: Yeah, possibly.
401 00:29:22.890 --> 00:29:23.500 Stuart Council: Yeah.
402 00:29:27.380 --> 00:29:28.809 John Roberts: Well, that's easy enough to do.
403 00:29:33.700 --> 00:29:40.319 Stuart Council: Yeah. So where? So sorry. Who's operating? This is this you, John?
404 00:29:40.320 --> 00:29:44.700 John Roberts: No, that was me trying to show Helen what to do, and getting in a complete muddle, doing it.
405 00:29:45.200 --> 00:29:47.729 Stuart Council: Yeah, okay, let's let's nip across.
406 00:29:48.070 --> 00:29:50.500 Stuart Council: If you stop sharing, let's put Helen on.
407 00:29:50.930 --> 00:29:51.660 John Roberts: That's better.
408 00:29:51.950 --> 00:29:52.910 Stuart Council: And sharing.
409 00:29:56.330 --> 00:29:57.070 John Roberts: There you go!
410 00:29:58.140 --> 00:30:00.300 chris edwards: Close? Yours. Helen. Yeah.
411 00:30:01.520 --> 00:30:02.440 helen Davey: Let me.
412 00:30:02.950 --> 00:30:03.750 helen Davey: Yes.
413 00:30:05.400 --> 00:30:06.150 helen Davey: Right?
414 00:30:06.150 --> 00:30:06.730 helen Davey: Okay.
415 00:30:07.220 --> 00:30:08.800 Stuart Council: So now.
416 00:30:12.450 --> 00:30:16.410 Stuart Council: which is this? The layer for the the line.
417 00:30:17.380 --> 00:30:18.120 helen Davey: Yes.
418 00:30:19.230 --> 00:30:22.050 Stuart Council: Okay, so it's not the line layer that we need to
419 00:30:22.930 --> 00:30:28.649 Stuart Council: change, is it? We don't need to change any of this. I don't think, from what what I recall the other week
420 00:30:29.050 --> 00:30:30.869 Stuart Council: you'd got everything there.
421 00:30:31.310 --> 00:30:34.989 Stuart Council: It was just we. So we we need to come out of.
422 00:30:35.430 --> 00:30:37.040 helen Davey: I've got rid of the line.
423 00:30:37.410 --> 00:30:38.812 Stuart Council: Yeah. Come out.
424 00:30:39.730 --> 00:30:41.849 helen Davey: And I want to put gazebos.
425 00:30:41.850 --> 00:30:48.309 Stuart Council: Cancel the yeah cancel. Cancel out of where we are in the Admin section. And let's go back to your maps
426 00:30:49.530 --> 00:30:52.059 Stuart Council: in the bottom, right hand corner that it says cancel.
427 00:30:52.220 --> 00:30:55.200 helen Davey: Yes, I had to move you all.
428 00:30:55.440 --> 00:31:07.009 Stuart Council: Yeah, no worries. Now, on the left hand side you should have your
429 00:31:07.550 --> 00:31:10.890 Stuart Council: stalls there, or whatever it was we you called it.
430 00:31:10.890 --> 00:31:21.530 helen Davey: I removed that because I that was the line where the stores were going, and I wanted to get rid of the line so I could just put in the stalls where I wanted them.
431 00:31:23.770 --> 00:31:27.080 Stuart Council: Okay. But have you got a have you got a layer for the stools?
432 00:31:28.620 --> 00:31:31.980 helen Davey: That's the line. What was the line drawing.
433 00:31:33.810 --> 00:31:39.229 Stuart Council: No, no, no! Have you got a have you got a polygon layer for the stools.
434 00:31:39.230 --> 00:31:44.539 helen Davey: No, that's what that's what we were trying to achieve at the moment.
435 00:31:45.840 --> 00:31:46.680 Stuart Council: Because what?
436 00:31:47.180 --> 00:31:54.909 Stuart Council: So you've deleted because we you had a a layer. There you were that had all your stalls in it, didn't you? The other week.
437 00:31:55.170 --> 00:31:55.890 helen Davey: Yes,
438 00:32:00.090 --> 00:32:05.990 helen Davey: It's going to the 20. 0, yes, oh, that's brilliant, because they're there now, and the rep the line's gone.
439 00:32:06.810 --> 00:32:07.340 Stuart Council: Okay.
440 00:32:07.770 --> 00:32:10.690 helen Davey: Thank you very much.
441 00:32:11.650 --> 00:32:12.350 helen Davey: Thank you.
442 00:32:12.350 --> 00:32:12.950 Stuart Council: And.
443 00:32:13.250 --> 00:32:15.480 chris edwards: So do you click on the.
444 00:32:15.480 --> 00:32:22.079 Stuart Council: If you click in have you got more stalls to add? Is that what to what's on this.
445 00:32:22.320 --> 00:32:26.910 helen Davey: I want to move those ones and add some more and leave a gap through.
446 00:32:27.250 --> 00:32:30.200 helen Davey: So we'll have a gap through from this area
447 00:32:30.360 --> 00:32:34.390 helen Davey: through the sports and funfair down to the Aquarium. Rspca
448 00:32:35.011 --> 00:32:40.549 helen Davey: display is going on. So where I had originally going in.
449 00:32:40.710 --> 00:32:45.002 helen Davey: I'm going to come down, leave a gap, and then start again.
450 00:32:45.600 --> 00:32:49.920 Stuart Council: Okay, so we need to make sure that the line line layer is visible.
451 00:32:50.390 --> 00:32:51.430 Stuart Council: Again.
452 00:32:52.560 --> 00:32:53.490 helen Davey: Yeah.
453 00:32:53.680 --> 00:32:58.870 Stuart Council: You can turn that on, and then when you, when you're done, you can turn that line off.
454 00:32:59.639 --> 00:33:02.339 helen Davey: But I'm not going to follow that line exactly.
455 00:33:03.950 --> 00:33:06.089 John Roberts: That that line was deleted.
456 00:33:06.800 --> 00:33:11.469 Stuart Council: I wanted to get rid of that line, because I don't want to follow that.
457 00:33:13.710 --> 00:33:22.920 Stuart Council: Well, no, no, but the the aim of the the aim of having a line, and it's not necessarily you can change the the position of the line. That's there.
458 00:33:23.420 --> 00:33:23.979 helen Davey: I don't, but they.
459 00:33:23.980 --> 00:33:28.860 Stuart Council: The aim of having the line is so that you line up all of your stalls.
460 00:33:28.860 --> 00:33:29.640 helen Davey: Yes.
461 00:33:29.640 --> 00:33:33.180 Stuart Council: And it gives you gives you something to to follow for your stalls.
462 00:33:33.320 --> 00:33:34.380 helen Davey: Right.
463 00:33:35.110 --> 00:33:39.770 helen Davey: So I need to check.
464 00:33:41.390 --> 00:33:42.880 helen Davey: Do I need to add.
465 00:33:46.620 --> 00:33:49.689 helen Davey: do I need to add a line? Because one.
466 00:33:49.690 --> 00:33:52.820 Stuart Council: So draw, draw a new click on, add feature.
467 00:33:53.660 --> 00:33:54.400 helen Davey: Yes.
468 00:33:55.430 --> 00:34:02.100 Stuart Council: And now draw in the line where you want to line up your stalls.
469 00:34:02.100 --> 00:34:02.790 helen Davey: Right.
470 00:34:07.370 --> 00:34:13.000 Stuart Council: So click once and then click multiple times to make your points.
471 00:34:14.743 --> 00:34:15.730 helen Davey: To you.
472 00:34:20.080 --> 00:34:21.409 helen Davey: Okay?
473 00:34:22.520 --> 00:34:23.270 helen Davey: Oh.
474 00:34:31.380 --> 00:34:32.789 helen Davey: I don't know.
475 00:34:38.230 --> 00:34:39.590 Stuart Council: Yeah, right?
476 00:34:40.230 --> 00:34:42.489 Stuart Council: Yeah. Use your left click.
477 00:34:43.159 --> 00:34:47.079 helen Davey: Here's my left click. Yes, that's I'm doing
478 00:34:47.409 --> 00:34:49.689 helen Davey: using my left click. We'll start here.
479 00:34:50.380 --> 00:34:50.795 Stuart Council: Yep.
480 00:34:55.560 --> 00:35:02.740 helen Davey: But I need to add the line again, because there's nothing's happening.
481 00:35:05.000 --> 00:35:05.550 helen Davey: Okay.
482 00:35:05.550 --> 00:35:10.019 Stuart Council: Am I refreshing your browser that circle? Yeah.
483 00:35:10.710 --> 00:35:11.779 helen Davey: More than that.
484 00:35:14.340 --> 00:35:18.059 Stuart Council: Right. So go go back into the layers, into the parish layers.
485 00:35:18.300 --> 00:35:24.920 helen Davey: Guys, and then 2025 line drawing.
486 00:35:25.330 --> 00:35:29.150 Stuart Council: Yeah, and on on the line drawing add a feature.
487 00:35:34.420 --> 00:35:37.790 Stuart Council: Now start now click and start drawing your line in.
488 00:35:37.790 --> 00:35:39.200 helen Davey: Oh, look at that!
489 00:35:43.190 --> 00:35:46.060 helen Davey: Then I want to stop here.
490 00:35:46.600 --> 00:35:48.400 Stuart Council: Yeah, so double click, that.
491 00:35:48.400 --> 00:35:49.989 helen Davey: And then I can start again.
492 00:35:49.990 --> 00:35:55.920 Stuart Council: Then you need to save save that as line one put a name in.
493 00:36:00.151 --> 00:36:01.980 helen Davey: If he typed it on my telephone.
494 00:36:02.380 --> 00:36:03.230 helen Davey: Oh, damn.
495 00:36:03.430 --> 00:36:04.010 Stuart Council: Oh!
496 00:36:07.280 --> 00:36:08.150 helen Davey: Right.
497 00:36:08.690 --> 00:36:12.850 Stuart Council: And now save
498 00:36:13.020 --> 00:36:23.150 Stuart Council: oh, no, we you've clicked off. Okay? Sorry. Yeah. Fine. Now, yeah, for this draw. Keep drawing where you want this. The next bit of the line to go.
499 00:36:31.280 --> 00:36:32.050 helen Davey: Oops!
500 00:36:34.510 --> 00:36:35.630 Stuart Council: And double click.
501 00:36:36.400 --> 00:36:39.430 helen Davey: Shall tell a journal so.
502 00:36:39.430 --> 00:36:42.110 Stuart Council: Now, if you save that on the bottom left.
503 00:36:42.110 --> 00:36:47.079 helen Davey: I'll leave that as line one don't like, and so I've got
504 00:36:48.010 --> 00:36:52.389 helen Davey: no name, and 9 1 but and then
505 00:36:55.300 --> 00:36:58.090 helen Davey: I put from here
506 00:37:02.190 --> 00:37:09.640 helen Davey: to there, so that'll just spread them around the green rather than all being in.
507 00:37:10.980 --> 00:37:13.689 helen Davey: Because, yeah, they're dividing.
508 00:37:14.880 --> 00:37:16.910 chris edwards: To save that 3rd line.
509 00:37:17.480 --> 00:37:18.810 helen Davey: Oh, sorry!
510 00:37:19.390 --> 00:37:22.120 helen Davey: I'll put 2.
511 00:37:22.120 --> 00:37:26.349 Stuart Council: Yep, so, and if that's you done with your lines now.
512 00:37:26.350 --> 00:37:27.100 helen Davey: Yes.
513 00:37:27.680 --> 00:37:31.650 Stuart Council: Click on the X at the side of where it says, Feature, editor.
514 00:37:32.980 --> 00:37:36.189 Stuart Council: alright, and that's given us
515 00:37:37.390 --> 00:37:43.470 Stuart Council: the the bases of the line you want to follow, you can go back in and edit it in.
516 00:37:44.029 --> 00:37:44.590 helen Davey: Yes.
517 00:37:44.590 --> 00:37:46.890 Stuart Council: In the future. If you want to change that line.
518 00:37:47.210 --> 00:37:48.880 helen Davey: Brilliant but.
519 00:37:48.880 --> 00:37:55.940 Stuart Council: It that gives you a bit of a, a basic element to follow, to put your your stalls on.
520 00:37:56.150 --> 00:37:56.990 helen Davey: Yes.
521 00:37:57.140 --> 00:38:04.460 Stuart Council: So now, if we if we take
522 00:38:04.730 --> 00:38:12.009 Stuart Council: these, what 8 stalls you've got on the left hand side next to the 1st line you drew.
523 00:38:12.450 --> 00:38:13.090 helen Davey: Yeah.
524 00:38:15.118 --> 00:38:21.469 Stuart Council: Let's go with the 5th one down. That seems to be at the end of the the top of that 1st line.
525 00:38:21.470 --> 00:38:22.120 helen Davey: Yes.
526 00:38:23.180 --> 00:38:25.540 Stuart Council: And just click on that initially.
527 00:38:28.140 --> 00:38:31.110 Stuart Council: and then click on 2025,
528 00:38:39.420 --> 00:38:41.110 Stuart Council: picnic area. Yep.
529 00:38:41.480 --> 00:38:43.629 helen Davey: Click on the pencil.
530 00:38:51.290 --> 00:38:51.900 helen Davey: And.
531 00:38:53.220 --> 00:38:54.250 Stuart Council: Actually no.
532 00:38:54.390 --> 00:38:56.410 helen Davey: That's a good note. Okay.
533 00:38:56.720 --> 00:39:00.560 Stuart Council: Because I if we move these, they're gonna lose their
534 00:39:02.290 --> 00:39:08.569 Stuart Council: set scale, aren't they? You can't because you can't move it. You're only moving a point. You're not moving a shape.
535 00:39:08.800 --> 00:39:13.760 helen Davey: That's what we were coming to, because they're all 3 by 3, and I want them to be 4 by 4.
536 00:39:14.350 --> 00:39:15.940 Stuart Council: Okay, yeah, so.
537 00:39:15.940 --> 00:39:16.670 helen Davey: Hang in.
538 00:39:18.300 --> 00:39:23.090 Stuart Council: What we need to do then is click on the X. Sorry on that one.
539 00:39:24.320 --> 00:39:25.220 helen Davey: Out there.
540 00:39:25.470 --> 00:39:26.070 Stuart Council: Yep.
541 00:39:26.280 --> 00:39:27.300 helen Davey: Not done there.
542 00:39:27.810 --> 00:39:28.600 helen Davey: Okay.
543 00:39:29.420 --> 00:39:37.120 Stuart Council: Yeah, and click on the the recycle bin at the top. Yeah, delete that.
544 00:39:38.330 --> 00:39:41.899 Stuart Council: Okay, and do the same for all of the other 7.
545 00:39:42.670 --> 00:39:46.080 helen Davey: But you don't want to watch me do that, do you? Because I can do that.
546 00:39:46.080 --> 00:39:49.599 Stuart Council: Yeah, yeah, no, no, it's fine. It's fine, because it's only gonna take a few seconds.
547 00:39:49.600 --> 00:39:50.290 helen Davey: Right.
548 00:39:51.410 --> 00:39:52.880 Stuart Council: So 2025
549 00:40:12.170 --> 00:40:13.530 Stuart Council: oh, hang on.
550 00:40:13.530 --> 00:40:14.930 helen Davey: I will plug down.
551 00:40:15.680 --> 00:40:20.709 Stuart Council: You're on the parish. There now, you didn't choose 2025. So click back on your.
552 00:40:23.900 --> 00:40:27.689 helen Davey: Parachials, 2025.
553 00:40:27.690 --> 00:40:29.780 Stuart Council: Yeah, leave that 2025 on.
554 00:40:29.780 --> 00:40:30.490 helen Davey: Yeah.
555 00:40:33.250 --> 00:40:34.890 Stuart Council: Why aren't they showing them.
556 00:40:35.250 --> 00:40:36.390 helen Davey: That come back?
557 00:40:39.740 --> 00:40:40.830 helen Davey: Oh, dear.
558 00:40:41.470 --> 00:40:48.750 Stuart Council: Click, the X. Yep. So now click on the stop. You don't leave. Leave the the bit on the left alone. It's the
559 00:40:48.960 --> 00:40:54.070 Stuart Council: screen. Yeah, click on the on the shape in the map that you want to get rid of.
560 00:40:55.110 --> 00:40:55.820 helen Davey: Alright!
561 00:40:58.720 --> 00:41:00.469 helen Davey: That's not a line drawing.
562 00:41:00.710 --> 00:41:08.289 Stuart Council: So click on the X, let's go back to the zoom in your map a bit.
563 00:41:14.480 --> 00:41:22.259 Stuart Council: Yeah, and click on one of those squares. Yeah, and click on the delete.
564 00:41:22.420 --> 00:41:23.050 Stuart Council: Yep.
565 00:41:25.430 --> 00:41:29.200 helen Davey: Just as well. I didn't do it by myself. I wouldn't have got on very well, would I?
566 00:41:36.310 --> 00:41:41.579 helen Davey: I'll I'll just get rid of them and start again, because at the sizes.
567 00:41:59.020 --> 00:42:00.430 helen Davey: Well, there we are.
568 00:42:01.060 --> 00:42:01.710 helen Davey: Thank you.
569 00:42:01.710 --> 00:42:02.340 Stuart Council: Right.
570 00:42:02.760 --> 00:42:04.080 Stuart Council: Got that sorted out
571 00:42:04.480 --> 00:42:11.700 Stuart Council: so that's got rid of. That's got rid of the all of them. And now you wanna put put more in replacing those.
572 00:42:12.310 --> 00:42:12.940 helen Davey: Yes.
573 00:42:13.250 --> 00:42:16.039 Stuart Council: And you want in those to be what size.
574 00:42:16.040 --> 00:42:17.269 helen Davey: 4.4.
575 00:42:17.920 --> 00:42:22.400 Stuart Council: 4 by 4. Okay, so on your 2025 layer. Now.
576 00:42:24.720 --> 00:42:28.510 Stuart Council: no, no, turn it back on. Yeah. You want to add a new feature
577 00:42:33.930 --> 00:42:40.886 Stuart Council: and in whoops I've swapped seeing you.
578 00:42:41.708 --> 00:42:52.170 Stuart Council: No, leave. Leave that bit alone in the 4 icons above that, that where where it says picnic area you want the one on the right hand side that's got the 4 dots on it.
579 00:42:54.070 --> 00:43:05.249 Stuart Council: So where it says, picnic area are in red in the the bit on the left. You've got 4 icons above it, and it's the one on the right with the 4 dots. The square.
580 00:43:06.240 --> 00:43:08.699 chris edwards: To the left, move to the left.
581 00:43:10.530 --> 00:43:11.270 Stuart Council: Turn, left.
582 00:43:12.380 --> 00:43:14.980 chris edwards: No, go! Go away from the map on the left.
583 00:43:16.200 --> 00:43:17.779 Stuart Council: In the column on the left.
584 00:43:18.440 --> 00:43:19.880 helen Davey: Column on the left.
585 00:43:22.300 --> 00:43:28.889 Stuart Council: You've got 4 icons. No, no, no, not not there, not there. Above that. Above that you've got 4 icons.
586 00:43:29.880 --> 00:43:34.540 Angie Bamford: There's a little horseshoe, and it looks like a little upside down horseshoe. Next to that.
587 00:43:34.540 --> 00:43:37.520 chris edwards: Yes, on the right, to the right of the Horseshoe.
588 00:43:37.520 --> 00:43:38.790 Stuart Council: But the left arrow.
589 00:43:38.920 --> 00:43:44.339 Stuart Council: a grayed out rubber, the left, the small horseshoe, and a square. You want the square.
590 00:43:44.800 --> 00:43:45.460 helen Davey: Play.
591 00:43:45.460 --> 00:43:46.340 Angie Bamford: Pass along.
592 00:43:47.280 --> 00:43:51.599 Stuart Council: Yeah. Now choose the top one that says, Fa, football.
593 00:43:51.600 --> 00:43:52.260 helen Davey: Yes.
594 00:43:53.120 --> 00:43:58.160 Stuart Council: And scroll down, and we want a marquee.
595 00:44:03.330 --> 00:44:10.339 Stuart Council: choose marquee 3 by 3, and change the sizes to 4 by 4.
596 00:44:17.190 --> 00:44:18.230 helen Davey: Right.
597 00:44:21.100 --> 00:44:25.740 Stuart Council: So now now you've set your your marquee size.
598 00:44:25.740 --> 00:44:26.300 helen Davey: Yeah.
599 00:44:27.230 --> 00:44:32.300 Stuart Council: You want to click on that red line that you've just that we've just drawn.
600 00:44:35.950 --> 00:44:38.659 Stuart Council: Yeah, to place your marquee.
601 00:44:39.880 --> 00:44:45.790 helen Davey: Perfect, and I can keep going down midline.
602 00:44:54.470 --> 00:44:56.150 helen Davey: That's good, isn't it?
603 00:44:57.960 --> 00:45:00.260 John Roberts: Save before you go too far. Helen.
604 00:45:00.650 --> 00:45:01.720 helen Davey: Oh, so cute!
605 00:45:01.880 --> 00:45:03.410 John Roberts: You'll have to start again. But.
606 00:45:03.800 --> 00:45:12.339 Stuart Council: Yeah, you got each one, each one you put in. You've got to save in between Helen. So you need to draw one. Put one on that red line and save it.
607 00:45:13.205 --> 00:45:16.950 helen Davey: Yes, oops bit close.
608 00:45:22.530 --> 00:45:25.680 Stuart Council: And this is where it probably helps to.
609 00:45:27.230 --> 00:45:27.820 helen Davey: Oh!
610 00:45:28.455 --> 00:45:31.280 Stuart Council: It's all right. Don't worry. It's you're only putting one on there.
611 00:45:32.740 --> 00:45:33.670 helen Davey: Have, I.
612 00:45:34.000 --> 00:45:35.340 John Roberts: Yeah, go. To say.
613 00:45:39.460 --> 00:45:45.550 helen Davey: Oops. I got me right and left. Clicks mixed up right.
614 00:45:45.550 --> 00:45:46.190 Stuart Council: Yes.
615 00:45:46.190 --> 00:45:49.890 helen Davey: Save Hello!
616 00:45:50.500 --> 00:45:51.070 Stuart Council: Yeah.
617 00:45:51.560 --> 00:46:05.680 Stuart Council: you've done. You've taken a step further there than I was doing. Sorry I'm working on a phone. So I'm zoomed in looking at where we were on the lower line, and not seeing that you were working on this upper one.
618 00:46:07.190 --> 00:46:11.620 Stuart Council: But as you put a new one in, you can't edit it once you've put it in.
619 00:46:11.620 --> 00:46:12.800 helen Davey: All right.
620 00:46:13.130 --> 00:46:24.260 Stuart Council: Yeah. So where your at the moment now trying to change, turn that square around, you can do that.
621 00:46:24.260 --> 00:46:24.660 helen Davey: Yes.
622 00:46:24.660 --> 00:46:28.280 Stuart Council: Only for the very 1st time you put it down once you've.
623 00:46:28.280 --> 00:46:29.170 helen Davey: See.
624 00:46:29.170 --> 00:46:30.900 Stuart Council: Once you put it in
625 00:46:31.210 --> 00:46:43.090 Stuart Council: you, you shape sizes, and whatever are all set, and it just becomes 4 conjoined lines, and you end up losing your shape if you edit it, and whatever.
626 00:46:44.570 --> 00:46:51.610 Stuart Council: So you need to, if you want it to be a square and orientate it a certain way
627 00:46:52.570 --> 00:47:01.079 Stuart Council: you have to do that at the very beginning, when you 1st clicking on that line, to line it up and square it up. So that that's the way it sits.
628 00:47:01.390 --> 00:47:10.700 helen Davey: So if I did that, then I've got to turn it before I so.
629 00:47:10.700 --> 00:47:11.250 Stuart Council: Yeah.
630 00:47:13.130 --> 00:47:17.810 chris edwards: If you zoom right in on that last square
631 00:47:18.680 --> 00:47:21.819 chris edwards: bit more. But yeah, now, now get right.
632 00:47:22.020 --> 00:47:25.389 chris edwards: You should be able to put another square in below that
633 00:47:29.960 --> 00:47:35.020 chris edwards: right now. Twiggle that round and.
634 00:47:36.132 --> 00:47:41.440 Stuart Council: That one you're doing. Try and line that one up so it's parallel to the one above.
635 00:47:43.430 --> 00:47:45.410 Stuart Council: so keep twisting it round a bit.
636 00:47:45.730 --> 00:47:46.940 chris edwards: All circle.
637 00:47:51.950 --> 00:47:54.629 chris edwards: Yeah, that's more or less. It.
638 00:47:55.020 --> 00:47:55.580 Stuart Council: Yep.
639 00:47:56.760 --> 00:48:03.088 helen Davey: Don't want too big a gap, because if that's 4 majors I don't want about 3 in between.
640 00:48:03.670 --> 00:48:08.018 Stuart Council: No, but what you what you've got there is about half a meter in between the
641 00:48:09.263 --> 00:48:10.250 Stuart Council: The stoves.
642 00:48:10.250 --> 00:48:12.679 helen Davey: Yeah, right half of April.
643 00:48:12.830 --> 00:48:17.500 helen Davey: That made a a bigger about 2 feet, isn't it?
644 00:48:17.650 --> 00:48:18.520 helen Davey: So that'll be.
645 00:48:18.520 --> 00:48:22.760 Stuart Council: A meter. A meter is 3 and a quarter feet. Is it.
646 00:48:23.540 --> 00:48:24.200 helen Davey: Is it.
647 00:48:24.890 --> 00:48:27.130 John Roberts: 39 point and a quarter inches.
648 00:48:27.460 --> 00:48:29.559 helen Davey: So that would be about right, wouldn't it?
649 00:48:30.510 --> 00:48:32.459 helen Davey: Just enough room to get between?
650 00:48:34.230 --> 00:48:41.920 helen Davey: I can't know. So right well, thank you so much. That's wonderful.
651 00:48:42.130 --> 00:48:48.500 Stuart Council: But then, when you're done placing all of your marquines.
652 00:48:49.140 --> 00:48:52.990 Stuart Council: if you you can go back it go back on the left hand side there.
653 00:48:53.572 --> 00:48:58.879 Stuart Council: and turn off the the line there, and you won't see it.
654 00:48:59.670 --> 00:49:05.979 helen Davey: Right. So that will be all right, because I've just done that
655 00:49:06.230 --> 00:49:10.459 helen Davey: and put it back. So I'm sure if not, I'll see you next week.
656 00:49:10.830 --> 00:49:15.630 Stuart Council: Yeah. But and the other thing is, you can still go back to.
657 00:49:15.940 --> 00:49:21.370 Stuart Council: When was it 3 weeks ago in the wiki and watch the the video
658 00:49:22.214 --> 00:49:28.429 Stuart Council: or watch. Today's video when Graham pops it up just to remind yourself how to
659 00:49:29.060 --> 00:49:30.660 Stuart Council: how to do it.
660 00:49:30.660 --> 00:49:36.979 helen Davey: Well, I've been looking on every every week. I look on Wiki, and I can't put another one there by mistake
661 00:49:37.320 --> 00:49:38.160 helen Davey: up.
662 00:49:38.440 --> 00:49:44.990 helen Davey: I can't find anything except back to last April. I think so, probably in the wrong place. But
663 00:49:45.630 --> 00:49:47.409 helen Davey: zone already. Is it.
664 00:49:49.040 --> 00:49:51.056 Stuart Council: Yeah, I believe it's there.
665 00:49:52.810 --> 00:49:53.190 helen Davey: I will!
666 00:49:53.190 --> 00:49:56.750 Stuart Council: Sorry. That might be one for John to check, because, as I say, I'm on my phone, and
667 00:49:57.540 --> 00:49:59.240 Stuart Council: it's a bit more challenging.
668 00:50:00.640 --> 00:50:05.249 Angie Bamford: And did you want? Did you say you wanted to change those 2 icons to marquee icons
669 00:50:05.620 --> 00:50:06.929 Angie Bamford: rather than squares?
670 00:50:07.780 --> 00:50:09.529 Angie Bamford: Was that was that the original.
671 00:50:13.310 --> 00:50:14.230 helen Davey: It's about.
672 00:50:14.600 --> 00:50:21.290 Angie Bamford: Did you say you wanted to change those squares to the icons of a marquee first? st Is that your 1st question.
673 00:50:21.290 --> 00:50:21.620 helen Davey: No.
674 00:50:21.620 --> 00:50:23.449 Angie Bamford: On in style, weren't we to say.
675 00:50:24.970 --> 00:50:31.219 helen Davey: I just want to put them there for the size so that we can see when we know how many we've got. We'll know
676 00:50:31.980 --> 00:50:36.280 helen Davey: her to space and where we can put them. And if we've got enough room,
677 00:50:39.360 --> 00:50:45.080 helen Davey: And I was gonna had originally wanted to measure that line.
678 00:50:46.170 --> 00:50:52.839 helen Davey: So I knew how long the line was, but once I got these on, then I'll know how long it is. Why.
679 00:50:53.700 --> 00:50:56.869 Stuart Council: Yeah. Well, you. You can still check the
680 00:50:57.000 --> 00:51:04.309 Stuart Council: the line distance, the line, distance, or details are recorded in the line layer.
681 00:51:05.210 --> 00:51:08.149 helen Davey: I don't ha! Ha!
682 00:51:08.150 --> 00:51:10.489 Stuart Council: So if we, if you save
683 00:51:10.710 --> 00:51:16.710 Stuart Council: finish putting in the the marquee that you've got you working on at the moment, and save that.
684 00:51:16.860 --> 00:51:24.620 helen Davey: And then we can close out these 2 white boxes, so get rid of the
685 00:51:26.820 --> 00:51:27.639 helen Davey: and get rid of this.
686 00:51:27.640 --> 00:51:38.850 Stuart Council: This one now on your line layer. Might have to scroll down.
687 00:51:41.890 --> 00:51:42.580 helen Davey: Dinner.
688 00:51:43.690 --> 00:51:44.329 Angie Bamford: So for me.
689 00:51:44.330 --> 00:51:49.799 Stuart Council: Scroll down there it. The length is 69.8 5 meters.
690 00:51:50.970 --> 00:51:52.939 helen Davey: Oh, yeah, I don't want to get rid of it, do I?
691 00:51:55.130 --> 00:51:56.999 Stuart Council: Yeah, right? Tells you.
692 00:51:58.220 --> 00:52:00.050 helen Davey: If I click on that line.
693 00:52:01.340 --> 00:52:02.870 Stuart Council: Click on that line. Yep.
694 00:52:02.870 --> 00:52:04.120 helen Davey: All right.
695 00:52:05.180 --> 00:52:05.660 Stuart Council: I'm not.
696 00:52:05.790 --> 00:52:07.359 helen Davey: 69.
697 00:52:08.310 --> 00:52:09.929 Stuart Council: Point 8 5 metres.
698 00:52:10.280 --> 00:52:10.970 helen Davey: Right.
699 00:52:10.970 --> 00:52:12.969 Stuart Council: Basically 70 meters.
700 00:52:13.420 --> 00:52:14.969 helen Davey: 70 metres.
701 00:52:15.380 --> 00:52:22.630 helen Davey: I'll write that down this 70 right.
702 00:52:23.260 --> 00:52:37.039 Retired Clerk: And you're right, and you're right, Helen. The wiki is woefully out of date. They only go back to the end of April. So Graham Graham needs a kick. Send him a ticket, respond to his email, and tell him he's got to do his own work.
703 00:52:42.380 --> 00:52:45.100 helen Davey: Yeah, that's not good.
704 00:52:48.570 --> 00:52:50.090 helen Davey: Oh, there we are!
705 00:52:50.990 --> 00:52:52.480 helen Davey: You are clever.
706 00:52:55.950 --> 00:53:01.319 helen Davey: and that 1 0, that one
707 00:53:01.820 --> 00:53:04.579 helen Davey: doesn't want to tell me, because I've covered it up.
708 00:53:09.960 --> 00:53:14.519 helen Davey: If you zoom in enough you'll be able to find a bit of spare line, and
709 00:53:14.980 --> 00:53:17.630 helen Davey: that one is 20 pounds.
710 00:53:21.010 --> 00:53:24.070 helen Davey: Thank you, is absolutely brilliant.
711 00:53:27.110 --> 00:53:30.270 Stuart Council: I mean the other thing to do. When you get round to
712 00:53:31.460 --> 00:53:37.800 Stuart Council: doing this, it might actually benefit you, not doing it as a map layer
713 00:53:38.090 --> 00:53:44.910 Stuart Council: and changing your your view to the aerial photography layer.
714 00:53:46.580 --> 00:53:49.750 helen Davey: I'm saying right, but I'm not really.
715 00:53:49.750 --> 00:53:57.309 Stuart Council: So on the where, it says in the white box on the left hand side, where it says, line drawing, you've got the X on that.
716 00:53:57.310 --> 00:53:57.680 helen Davey: Yes.
717 00:53:57.680 --> 00:53:59.290 Stuart Council: If I click on the X.
718 00:53:59.700 --> 00:54:00.710 helen Davey: But.
719 00:54:01.470 --> 00:54:04.730 Stuart Council: Now in the green layers.
720 00:54:05.848 --> 00:54:09.560 Stuart Council: Where you've got ordnance survey. Psga.
721 00:54:10.170 --> 00:54:12.530 Stuart Council: Yep, click on that one.
722 00:54:12.910 --> 00:54:19.330 Stuart Council: And instead of having standard turn on the white layer and turn off standard.
723 00:54:21.790 --> 00:54:25.810 Stuart Council: Now minimize the ordnance survey Psga layer.
724 00:54:29.030 --> 00:54:29.720 chris edwards: No.
725 00:54:30.030 --> 00:54:30.400 helen Davey: No.
726 00:54:30.400 --> 00:54:31.010 Stuart Council: Yep.
727 00:54:31.010 --> 00:54:31.430 John Roberts: Notes.
728 00:54:31.430 --> 00:54:35.200 Stuart Council: So. No, it says ordnance survey. Psga, click on that again.
729 00:54:37.520 --> 00:54:38.759 helen Davey: Go left a bit.
730 00:54:40.770 --> 00:54:41.959 John Roberts: Go to the group, go!
731 00:54:42.180 --> 00:54:42.960 helen Davey: Go well.
732 00:54:45.270 --> 00:54:47.620 Stuart Council: Go left the left.
733 00:54:48.400 --> 00:54:49.880 helen Davey: Move it. Oh.
734 00:54:50.655 --> 00:54:52.980 Stuart Council: Post X, that.
735 00:54:55.050 --> 00:55:01.950 Stuart Council: Yeah. Where it says, ordnance survey. Psga, the 3rd one down.
736 00:55:02.660 --> 00:55:06.940 Stuart Council: Okay. Going? Oh, oh, yeah, no. That one click on that now.
737 00:55:06.940 --> 00:55:13.159 Stuart Council: 2 down, it says aerial photography, apg and click on the latest.
738 00:55:15.520 --> 00:55:16.860 helen Davey: Oh yes!
739 00:55:17.180 --> 00:55:24.390 Stuart Council: Yeah. And now click on that aerial photography apg, again to minimize
740 00:55:24.860 --> 00:55:33.570 Stuart Council: that out your way. And now, as you're working on it, you can see more realistically what obstructions
741 00:55:33.740 --> 00:55:41.689 Stuart Council: or anything are actually in line with where you're working, and whether that is the best place for.
742 00:55:41.970 --> 00:55:43.190 helen Davey: Your line.
743 00:55:43.770 --> 00:55:46.770 Stuart Council: And where you put in your gazebos.
744 00:55:47.010 --> 00:55:48.730 John Roberts: Right. Thank you.
745 00:55:48.730 --> 00:55:49.090 Stuart Council: You can't.
746 00:55:49.090 --> 00:55:49.580 John Roberts: If you.
747 00:55:49.580 --> 00:55:59.300 Stuart Council: Looking at those trees on the left there. You can't necessarily see them from the map layer, but you don't want to be within the trees with your gazebos.
748 00:55:59.870 --> 00:56:06.420 helen Davey: So I'll I'll have to move or delete those. Move them forward, move the line and move. Yeah, would.
749 00:56:06.550 --> 00:56:08.109 chris edwards: Yeah. Don't delete them.
750 00:56:08.580 --> 00:56:09.689 chris edwards: Just move them.
751 00:56:10.500 --> 00:56:13.730 Stuart Council: No, no! The easiest way is to delete them and do them again. Chris.
752 00:56:13.730 --> 00:56:14.850 chris edwards: Really oh, right?
753 00:56:14.850 --> 00:56:23.519 Stuart Council: Yeah, because when you when you try and edit them, you're editing the points on the corners and not the shape, and not dragging an entire shape.
754 00:56:23.520 --> 00:56:24.809 chris edwards: Oh! I beg your pardon.
755 00:56:26.200 --> 00:56:26.910 helen Davey: Added.
756 00:56:27.250 --> 00:56:33.009 John Roberts: In regards to Helen's original question where she was on about Icon.
757 00:56:33.700 --> 00:56:39.270 John Roberts: I think I'm right in saying you can only generate the icons if you're in a point layer.
758 00:56:39.820 --> 00:56:40.620 Stuart Council: Correct.
759 00:56:41.640 --> 00:56:43.279 helen Davey: Yeah, I I don't know.
760 00:56:43.280 --> 00:56:45.800 John Roberts: It won't work in Polygon online.
761 00:56:46.690 --> 00:56:49.200 helen Davey: I don't remember asking about.
762 00:56:49.800 --> 00:56:51.839 helen Davey: I think it was that young man who's just.
763 00:56:51.840 --> 00:56:53.540 John Roberts: A few minutes ago, Helen.
764 00:56:54.109 --> 00:56:57.070 helen Davey: Told you. I don't know what I'm talking about.
765 00:56:58.680 --> 00:57:00.950 John Roberts: I got. You've covered a lot since then.
766 00:57:03.790 --> 00:57:06.920 helen Davey: So I would need to. I'll need to delete these.
767 00:57:08.600 --> 00:57:14.039 Stuart Council: Yeah. So to do that again. Do we want to run through that now and make sure we've got that right.
768 00:57:14.270 --> 00:57:15.900 helen Davey: Yeah, please, thank you.
769 00:57:16.070 --> 00:57:17.599 Stuart Council: Expand that layer.
770 00:57:18.500 --> 00:57:20.290 Stuart Council: The parish lairs.
771 00:57:21.400 --> 00:57:23.970 helen Davey: Yeah, right.
772 00:57:25.530 --> 00:57:35.190 Stuart Council: Click on one of those squares for you, gazebos and.
773 00:57:35.720 --> 00:57:39.600 helen Davey: And clicked. Do I need to do something like parish layers?
774 00:57:40.660 --> 00:57:47.040 Stuart Council: No, it should come back up, and it's not click on that.
775 00:57:47.610 --> 00:57:48.280 helen Davey: Okay.
776 00:57:48.280 --> 00:57:49.079 Stuart Council: Click on that.
777 00:57:53.810 --> 00:57:58.269 Stuart Council: Yeah, you shouldn't need to keep zooming in, Helen. You should just be able to click on it.
778 00:57:58.270 --> 00:58:00.009 helen Davey: That was an accident as I was, I was.
779 00:58:00.010 --> 00:58:01.529 Stuart Council: That's all right. That's no worries.
780 00:58:01.853 --> 00:58:05.090 helen Davey: See, when I click, I somehow managed to move it.
781 00:58:06.830 --> 00:58:07.990 helen Davey: I think.
782 00:58:09.760 --> 00:58:14.219 Stuart Council: Okay might be that we have to refresh your browser. Then.
783 00:58:14.970 --> 00:58:19.010 Stuart Council: in which case we'll have to go back and do the
784 00:58:19.280 --> 00:58:23.659 Stuart Council: turning the map layer on, and whatever on the left as well.
785 00:58:24.210 --> 00:58:27.899 Stuart Council: So ordnance survey Psga, open up.
786 00:58:32.650 --> 00:58:34.130 Stuart Council: turn off standard.
787 00:58:34.790 --> 00:58:37.990 helen Davey: And I've got put on white first, st haven't I? Then click.
788 00:58:37.990 --> 00:58:38.390 Stuart Council: Yep.
789 00:58:38.390 --> 00:58:41.050 helen Davey: No standard, and then.
790 00:58:41.050 --> 00:58:43.669 Stuart Council: Minimize ordnance, survey Psga.
791 00:58:44.340 --> 00:58:45.790 helen Davey: Important salary.
792 00:58:48.060 --> 00:58:48.940 helen Davey: I.
793 00:58:50.970 --> 00:58:52.079 John Roberts: Close that one.
794 00:58:53.620 --> 00:58:56.370 Stuart Council: Yeah. No, Alan, scroll up, scroll up.
795 00:58:57.580 --> 00:59:00.610 Angie Bamford: Scroll up, click on that one
796 00:59:04.430 --> 00:59:04.790 Angie Bamford: on that.
797 00:59:04.790 --> 00:59:05.749 Stuart Council: Click on that one.
798 00:59:07.570 --> 00:59:12.600 Stuart Council: Now, the Apg, the aerial photography.
799 00:59:13.410 --> 00:59:20.660 Stuart Council: Yeah. Turn that one on and turn on that and then minimize the aerial photography layer.
800 00:59:23.140 --> 00:59:26.539 Angie Bamford: Click on it again. Kind of enable photography. Just click on it.
801 00:59:26.760 --> 00:59:28.449 Angie Bamford: I'll click on the guy.
802 00:59:29.420 --> 00:59:34.999 Stuart Council: Yeah. Now, scroll down to parish layers and it and open that one up.
803 00:59:36.310 --> 00:59:41.159 Stuart Council: Yeah. And you want you turn on your line drawing and 2025 in that.
804 00:59:43.900 --> 00:59:45.769 helen Davey: And I can click on that, can I?
805 00:59:46.430 --> 00:59:48.989 Stuart Council: Yeah. Now, you should be able to click on your square
806 00:59:50.630 --> 00:59:52.699 Stuart Council: and click on 2025.
807 00:59:54.400 --> 00:59:54.760 helen Davey: Hi.
808 00:59:54.760 --> 00:59:56.880 Stuart Council: And delete that.
809 00:59:58.810 --> 00:59:59.360 helen Davey: Thank you.
810 01:00:01.480 --> 01:00:05.230 Stuart Council: And repeat as necessary.
811 01:00:10.200 --> 01:00:11.710 Angie Bamford: Picnic picnic area.
812 01:00:13.120 --> 01:00:16.830 helen Davey: See that, but you can't do them all at once.
813 01:00:29.770 --> 01:00:34.410 John Roberts: The only way to get rid of them all at once is to delete the layer. But you don't want to go there.
814 01:00:35.270 --> 01:00:35.850 Stuart Council: Yeah.
815 01:00:37.350 --> 01:00:42.780 Stuart Council: So now, what we need to do is zoom in a little bit more
816 01:00:45.170 --> 01:00:47.220 Stuart Council: and click on your red line.
817 01:00:49.080 --> 01:00:59.460 Stuart Council: And now click on the pencil in the top left of the white bit, and let's move the
818 01:01:01.540 --> 01:01:04.439 Stuart Council: yeah, move. Move the red line away from the trees.
819 01:01:12.730 --> 01:01:15.869 helen Davey: I just typing it with me at once.
820 01:01:16.180 --> 01:01:17.080 helen Davey: Move?
821 01:01:22.760 --> 01:01:23.830 helen Davey: Oh, dear!
822 01:01:26.170 --> 01:01:27.700 helen Davey: How do I do that? Then?
823 01:01:28.560 --> 01:01:30.699 helen Davey: Can we go back and try again?
824 01:01:30.700 --> 01:01:38.040 Stuart Council: Click, click on the x in the top right hand corner of the white box. Click on the pencil.
825 01:01:40.870 --> 01:01:41.710 Stuart Council: Okay.
826 01:01:42.840 --> 01:01:44.069 helen Davey: Oh, that's better.
827 01:01:53.240 --> 01:01:54.629 helen Davey: That would be good.
828 01:01:57.623 --> 01:01:58.850 helen Davey: That's lovely!
829 01:01:58.850 --> 01:02:03.579 Stuart Council: And if that's if that's them fine, save that.
830 01:02:08.200 --> 01:02:08.770 helen Davey: Damn!
831 01:02:09.150 --> 01:02:14.849 Stuart Council: And now go back to the 2025.
832 01:02:15.360 --> 01:02:17.189 Stuart Council: Sorry click on the x in there
833 01:02:19.770 --> 01:02:23.280 Stuart Council: right now choose your 2025 layer. No, turn it on
834 01:02:24.560 --> 01:02:26.800 Stuart Council: change, 1020, 25 on.
835 01:02:27.130 --> 01:02:30.710 Stuart Council: and on the where the tick is at 2025,
836 01:02:31.150 --> 01:02:36.650 Stuart Council: that becomes a cog, click on the cog an add feature.
837 01:02:41.230 --> 01:02:43.190 Stuart Council: Now you want.
838 01:02:43.710 --> 01:02:49.339 Stuart Council: We're under where it says 2025 at the top. There, you've got those 4 icons and choose the square.
839 01:02:50.000 --> 01:02:53.840 Stuart Council: Now change your size to 4 by 4.
840 01:02:59.720 --> 01:03:04.879 Stuart Council: Yep, and then place your marquee on the line.
841 01:03:05.650 --> 01:03:08.180 Stuart Council: You might want to zoom in a little bit more.
842 01:03:09.180 --> 01:03:11.719 Stuart Council: so that you're a bit more accurate on the.
843 01:03:11.880 --> 01:03:15.509 helen Davey: Bye, I think I'll go halfway because it
844 01:03:15.850 --> 01:03:18.209 helen Davey: people will want to bring their cars
845 01:03:18.330 --> 01:03:22.169 helen Davey: so that will give them room to get random. Yeah.
846 01:03:24.560 --> 01:03:26.870 helen Davey: So that's fine.
847 01:03:26.870 --> 01:03:32.210 Stuart Council: And then, whether you line that up so the marquees sit in line with the edge of the football pitch, or whatever I don't know.
848 01:03:32.210 --> 01:03:37.549 helen Davey: Oh, that's that is a football pitch, but it won't be being used, because it's just what's on there
849 01:03:38.850 --> 01:03:41.800 helen Davey: at some where the children play.
850 01:03:44.690 --> 01:03:48.590 helen Davey: So yes, so.
851 01:03:48.590 --> 01:03:53.010 Stuart Council: Yeah. So when you've when you're happy with the 1st placement
852 01:03:53.600 --> 01:03:58.420 Stuart Council: work, work out whether you want to change the angle of that, or if it's happy at that angle
853 01:03:58.590 --> 01:04:05.479 Stuart Council: when that's the this, the circle in the bottom, right hand corner, and then when you're happy with it, click, save.
854 01:04:06.990 --> 01:04:07.530 helen Davey: Brilliant.
855 01:04:07.530 --> 01:04:08.300 Stuart Council: Okay.
856 01:04:08.500 --> 01:04:08.880 helen Davey: Lovely.
857 01:04:08.880 --> 01:04:11.419 Stuart Council: Then place your second one
858 01:04:16.230 --> 01:04:21.850 Stuart Council: and go through the process again, working out about your angle, and whatever
859 01:04:25.560 --> 01:04:27.970 Stuart Council: make sure you got enough room between them.
860 01:04:30.710 --> 01:04:33.340 helen Davey: So if I put it there.
861 01:04:34.340 --> 01:04:36.509 helen Davey: how much room would that give me.
862 01:04:37.245 --> 01:04:37.510 John Roberts: Mate.
863 01:04:37.510 --> 01:04:39.810 Stuart Council: That to me looks about a metre and a half.
864 01:04:43.170 --> 01:04:44.110 helen Davey: Too much.
865 01:04:46.720 --> 01:04:51.750 Stuart Council: I would say meter and a half is about right to give you room for guy ropes from each.
866 01:04:51.750 --> 01:04:52.760 helen Davey: Oh, I see. Yes.
867 01:04:53.340 --> 01:04:53.920 Stuart Council: Marquee.
868 01:04:54.220 --> 01:04:54.880 helen Davey: Yes.
869 01:04:55.620 --> 01:04:58.110 John Roberts: Are they markings, or are they Gazebos, Helen.
870 01:04:58.110 --> 01:04:59.350 helen Davey: I can see both.
871 01:04:59.620 --> 01:05:00.230 John Roberts: Yeah.
872 01:05:02.060 --> 01:05:05.689 helen Davey: But I went with Barkey, because that's good enough to take.
873 01:05:05.690 --> 01:05:13.439 Stuart Council: Okay, yeah, no, even if they if even gazebos, yeah, you don't. Meter and a half give room for people to walk in between the
874 01:05:14.230 --> 01:05:16.700 Stuart Council: gazebos without tripping over anything, and.
875 01:05:16.700 --> 01:05:17.500 helen Davey: That's right.
876 01:05:17.730 --> 01:05:18.440 helen Davey: Had.
877 01:05:20.470 --> 01:05:21.370 helen Davey: Yeah.
878 01:05:23.830 --> 01:05:33.789 chris edwards: Sorry to interrupt folks. Just gone 3 o'clock. Afraid I've got to attend a meeting later on, so thank you very much for your attendance.
879 01:05:33.790 --> 01:05:34.360 helen Davey: Wonderful.
880 01:05:34.360 --> 01:05:36.699 chris edwards: I'll leave you in the good hands of Stuart.
881 01:05:36.850 --> 01:05:38.679 helen Davey: Thank you very much indeed. Thank.
882 01:05:38.680 --> 01:05:41.290 chris edwards: Pleasure nice to see you all bye.
883 01:05:41.290 --> 01:05:41.890 helen Davey: Bye.
884 01:05:41.890 --> 01:05:42.660 chris edwards: Bye.
885 01:05:43.640 --> 01:05:44.580 helen Davey: Do it.
886 01:05:45.060 --> 01:05:48.780 helen Davey: I won't hold you up any longer. You have been such a help. Thank you.
887 01:05:48.780 --> 01:06:01.029 Stuart Council: No, no problem. I'm gonna say, it's just just a case of rinse copy. Repeat on on this and follow your way around. Make sure you get your your angles right for your gazebo that you're happy with before you save it.
888 01:06:01.030 --> 01:06:01.380 helen Davey: Yes.
889 01:06:01.380 --> 01:06:03.159 Stuart Council: And then move on to your next one.
890 01:06:03.670 --> 01:06:04.500 helen Davey: Thank you.
891 01:06:04.730 --> 01:06:05.350 helen Davey: Wonderful.
892 01:06:05.350 --> 01:06:08.010 Stuart Council: And all the best getting them sorted. We'll see you next week.
893 01:06:08.010 --> 01:06:11.849 Retired Clerk: Yes, I hope I'll see you next week, and then you can put me right again.
894 01:06:13.130 --> 01:06:14.070 John Roberts: Thanks. Stuart.
895 01:06:14.350 --> 01:06:15.250 Stuart Council: Hello!
896 01:06:15.250 --> 01:06:16.050 Stuart Council: Good! And folks.
897 01:06:17.315 --> 01:06:19.140 helen Davey: Bye, but.
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