251128 - 28Nov25 session 25-48

Attendees: David Morgan-Jones, Graham Stoddart-Stones, Ian Evans (briefly and silently), Stuart Bacon

Entire meeting devoted to plotting wildlife corridors between ancient woodlands to help dormice and vipers, using Friend of the Earth Woodland Canopy, overhead photography, and two new Parish Layers: one of point geometry to plot gaps where trees/shrubs will be planted, and lines to fulfill the corridors/url


Meeting Summary:

Nov 28, 2025 01:53 PM London ID: 897 5877 7706

Quick recap

The meeting focused on various mapping and planning exercises, including a war game exercise for repatriating casualties and discussions about creating annotation layers in Parish Online. The team worked on mapping strategies for ancient woodland areas and biodiversity corridors, addressing technical challenges with data permissions and layer creation. They also explored mapping military training areas and improving public maps, while discussing the integration of various mapping tools and features for better visualization and documentation.

Next steps

Summary

Military Planning and IT Challenges

David shared his experience from a recent war game exercise focused on repatriating casualties from Eastern Europe, highlighting how valuable historical military planning knowledge has been lost due to downsized defense archives and outdated IT systems. The discussion then shifted to technical questions about annotation layers in Parish Online, where David sought clarification about creating multiple annotation layers and was informed by Stuart that only one layer is available, though Graham suggested using labels as an alternative solution.

Ancient Woodland Movement Corridor Strategy

David presented a strategy for linking ancient woodland areas using hedgerows and tree lines to create movement corridors for dormice. He encountered issues with copyright permissions from Friends of the Earth, preventing the use of their mapping data in Parish Online's public map. David expressed the need for an annotated layer to map potential movement corridors, similar to an existing EPC mapping feature, but was unable to export the necessary data.

Biodiversity Corridors Mapping Project

David and Stuart discussed creating a new layer for biodiversity corridors on an interactive map. They decided to use line geometry for the corridors and set up two fields: name and type. Stuart guided David through the process of adding data, creating classes, and styling the layer. They agreed to use two colors to represent different types of corridors: red for routes with gaps and green for routes with no gaps. David praised the mapping work, particularly the Friends of the Earth layer, and they concluded by drawing an example line on the map.

Dormouse Route Mapping Project

David and Graham worked on creating and styling a map with dotted and solid lines to represent potential dormouse routes, with Stuart providing guidance. They discussed changing the line types to better represent gaps in hedgerows and tree canopy, ultimately deciding to create polygon layers to highlight areas needing improvement. David planned to add a new layer to show gaps in the tree canopy that need to be filled, with the goal of identifying specific areas for planting.

Tree Planting Map Layer Design

The team discussed creating a map layer to represent tree planting areas and corridors for small mammals. They agreed to use a simplified point-based system instead of complex polygons, with different tree types and sizes to be added. David and Graham worked through adding features and customizing the style, including changing icons and adjusting sizes. Stuart suggested adding a "Size" column with categories like small, medium, and large. They completed the setup by creating sample gaps and saving the new layer.

Map Enhancement and Label Optimization

David and Graham worked on improving a public map by adding layers and adjusting labels for clarity. They discussed the visual representation of gaps and the displacement of labels to ensure they were centered and readable. Stuart provided guidance on reducing halo sizes and refreshing the map to see the changes. The team successfully enhanced the map's presentation, with David expressing satisfaction with the results.

Parish Net Zero and Biodiversity

David discussed the challenges with copyright issues related to Friends of the Earth and mentioned that Stuart might resolve these in the long term. David also shared progress on the parish's net zero and biodiversity initiatives, focusing on raising awareness about EPCs and encouraging residents to undertake EPC work. He plans to engage with Tristram and Alex next week to discuss potential collaboration and show them a map of the parish. David outlined the parish's biodiversity strategy, which includes supporting Surrey and Hampshire Wildlife Trusts in creating a wildlife corridor and focusing on preserving ancient woodland and hedgerows to enhance biodiversity.

MoD Training Area Mapping Project

David, Graham, and Stuart discussed mapping the Ministry of Defense (MoD) training area, which is unlikely to change due to its proximity to Aldershot barracks. They agreed to create a new layer in their mapping tool to represent the training area, with David taking the lead on adding the feature. Graham and Stuart provided guidance on the process, including selecting the appropriate geometry type and adding a name to the new layer. They also discussed how to filter and display the new layer within the parish boundaries.

Training Area Mapping Tools Discussion

The group worked on mapping a training area, with David receiving guidance from Graham and Stuart on using various mapping tools and features. They discussed adjusting the map's transparency, patterns, and layers to better visualize the area, including the integration of aerial photography and tree canopy data. David noted that the mapped area aligned with the actual training area and tree gaps, and Graham suggested using geolocation on a phone to capture and verify the area's details in real-time.

Parish Online Mapping System Training

David learned how to use Parish Online's mapping system on his phone, including turning on geolocation and adding photographs to tree gap records. Graham and Stuart discussed the possibility of redrawing maps to exclude road areas, with Stuart suggesting they could link corridors together as one unit.


Audiotranscript:

WEBVTT

1 00:06:39.180 --> 00:06:40.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hi, David.

2 00:06:40.380 --> 00:06:41.270 David Morgan-Jones: Hi, Graham.

3 00:06:41.640 --> 00:06:43.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: How are you this wonderful day?

4 00:06:45.330 --> 00:06:47.949 David Morgan-Jones: Recovering, having been on a war game.

5 00:06:48.120 --> 00:06:50.870 David Morgan-Jones: with, I agree.

6 00:06:50.870 --> 00:06:52.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: go over the MOD, right?

7 00:06:52.610 --> 00:06:54.169 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, we were…

8 00:06:55.050 --> 00:07:01.100 David Morgan-Jones: Whilst no one else is on the line, we were wargaming the repatriation of casualties back from

9 00:07:01.330 --> 00:07:03.269 David Morgan-Jones: Eastern, Europe.

10 00:07:03.460 --> 00:07:04.710 David Morgan-Jones: Right.

11 00:07:06.450 --> 00:07:08.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's likely to be necessary, isn't it?

12 00:07:09.610 --> 00:07:14.569 David Morgan-Jones: It's like winding the clock when I first joined the military.

13 00:07:15.110 --> 00:07:17.820 David Morgan-Jones: And the problem is, all the people that had spent

14 00:07:18.330 --> 00:07:28.289 David Morgan-Jones: years refining and, coalescing all the plans and all the systems to, when we were in the BAR days.

15 00:07:28.750 --> 00:07:31.939 David Morgan-Jones: All of that has just vanished.

16 00:07:32.240 --> 00:07:33.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No.

17 00:07:33.150 --> 00:07:38.010 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, we are so bad at learning from history.

18 00:07:39.090 --> 00:07:48.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It vanished because there are no files, no data, there's no standard procedures left. I mean, they must have been recorded somewhere.

19 00:07:48.150 --> 00:07:52.280 David Morgan-Jones: They probably are, but the question is that the defense has been…

20 00:07:52.490 --> 00:07:56.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Downsized and downsized and reorganized and reorganized.

21 00:07:57.110 --> 00:08:04.170 David Morgan-Jones: And then the corporate memory of where the archives are kept begins to…

22 00:08:04.560 --> 00:08:08.349 David Morgan-Jones: Fritter away. Combined with the fact that,

23 00:08:10.580 --> 00:08:14.210 David Morgan-Jones: People don't actually know that the archives actually exist.

24 00:08:14.940 --> 00:08:20.899 David Morgan-Jones: And so… and they still do. I mean, there are… everything is archived.

25 00:08:21.080 --> 00:08:30.459 David Morgan-Jones: It's a question of having the wherewithal to go and A know where it is, and then having the resources to go and find it.

26 00:08:30.610 --> 00:08:32.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I thought they were all in queue.

27 00:08:32.820 --> 00:08:39.289 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you look at Patrick O'Brien, who wrote the books about the Navy in the 18th century.

28 00:08:39.299 --> 00:08:39.819 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

29 00:08:39.820 --> 00:08:46.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: A lot of his stories are based on fact, because he went to Kew, and he started reading the logs of all the ships that have been around.

30 00:08:46.490 --> 00:08:48.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Fascinating.

31 00:08:50.160 --> 00:08:54.900 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, anyway, so that's, me having spent… just sort of, sort of,

32 00:08:55.550 --> 00:08:59.880 David Morgan-Jones: been in a situation where I put 3 days in, which I won't get back.

33 00:08:59.880 --> 00:09:02.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Was it encouraging or discouraging?

34 00:09:06.580 --> 00:09:13.559 David Morgan-Jones: It was encouraging because of the breadth and, skill and experience of the people that turned up.

35 00:09:13.930 --> 00:09:18.210 David Morgan-Jones: So that was good, because they… people are taking it really seriously.

36 00:09:18.450 --> 00:09:22.570 David Morgan-Jones: Right. Including fairly… well, very senior planners in the NHS.

37 00:09:23.220 --> 00:09:28.809 David Morgan-Jones: And Surgeon General turned up on the last day.

38 00:09:28.810 --> 00:09:29.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Whoa.

39 00:09:29.540 --> 00:09:48.949 David Morgan-Jones: So yeah, no, people are taking it seriously, but it's very depressing because there's a lot of right hand doesn't know what the left hand does, you know, we've got systems in place, people are trying to duplicate them because they don't understand… don't really exist, and that much of the lessons learned

40 00:09:49.000 --> 00:09:51.270 David Morgan-Jones: In previous conflicts.

41 00:09:51.900 --> 00:09:54.130 David Morgan-Jones: Have simply not… have been lost.

42 00:09:54.650 --> 00:09:55.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: By me.

43 00:09:57.380 --> 00:10:02.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, that's what we're trying to do with great collaboration, is capture all the data and store it in a knowledge base.

44 00:10:02.590 --> 00:10:04.599 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, absolutely.

45 00:10:04.600 --> 00:10:06.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Which, of course, didn't exist back in those days.

46 00:10:07.630 --> 00:10:18.829 David Morgan-Jones: But they had very good systems. Even in the Second World War, their filing systems on the whole were very efficient, and, very good. It's only since…

47 00:10:18.990 --> 00:10:22.670 David Morgan-Jones: We've moved to IT systems.

48 00:10:22.960 --> 00:10:25.359 David Morgan-Jones: That we have…

49 00:10:25.570 --> 00:10:37.110 David Morgan-Jones: started to lose track. Because once upon a time, some clerk would sit there and type this bloody thing out. Yeah. And because a clerk had to type it out, it had to be short and succinct.

50 00:10:37.120 --> 00:10:38.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes. Now we have…

51 00:10:38.750 --> 00:10:43.780 David Morgan-Jones: A hundred-page documents, much of which is just complete fluff and flannel.

52 00:10:44.100 --> 00:10:49.190 David Morgan-Jones: Which someone stir… saves on a, on a, on a disk somewhere.

53 00:10:49.330 --> 00:10:51.470 David Morgan-Jones: Then the systems get upgraded.

54 00:10:51.580 --> 00:10:54.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And all that stuff gets lost, because it's…

55 00:10:54.960 --> 00:10:55.590 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

56 00:10:55.830 --> 00:10:56.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

57 00:10:57.050 --> 00:11:04.840 David Morgan-Jones: So, yeah, no, I think sometimes you look at our medical records, some of the best medical records I've ever seen were during the Boer War.

58 00:11:05.940 --> 00:11:11.020 David Morgan-Jones: Really crisp, clean handwriting, logs in, logs out.

59 00:11:11.020 --> 00:11:15.829 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you think about it, they'd had hundreds of years to perfect the paper filing system.

60 00:11:15.830 --> 00:11:16.440 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

61 00:11:16.440 --> 00:11:21.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And we haven't yet had hundreds of years to perfect the IT filing systems.

62 00:11:21.550 --> 00:11:26.560 David Morgan-Jones: And not only that, as you mentioned before, the problem is that you've written it in .

63 00:11:26.560 --> 00:11:27.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: One format, which is near.

64 00:11:27.870 --> 00:11:40.689 David Morgan-Jones: Word 1, and we're now on Word 1 of 1000, and, you know, one can't talk to the other, or it was written in a different software system because it was the flavor du jour, and now we can't read the bloody thing.

65 00:11:40.690 --> 00:11:41.390 Stuart Bacon: threatening.

66 00:11:41.700 --> 00:11:42.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All true, yep.

67 00:11:43.030 --> 00:11:45.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hi, Stuart. Nice to see you back.

68 00:11:45.210 --> 00:11:45.960 Stuart Bacon: folks.

69 00:11:47.110 --> 00:11:49.919 David Morgan-Jones: I think we're a very limited number today, aren't we?

70 00:11:49.920 --> 00:12:01.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, well, we have one other who registered to join, but often doesn't make it, so it may be us, and we can now formally ask you, Dave, if you arrive with a specific question.

71 00:12:02.890 --> 00:12:04.020 David Morgan-Jones: Yes, I did.

72 00:12:04.020 --> 00:12:06.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Splendid man.

73 00:12:06.910 --> 00:12:07.940 David Morgan-Jones: Annotation.

74 00:12:08.130 --> 00:12:08.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.

75 00:12:09.350 --> 00:12:13.079 David Morgan-Jones: How many layers of annotation can you create?

76 00:12:13.370 --> 00:12:14.020 Stuart Bacon: One.

77 00:12:15.770 --> 00:12:22.080 David Morgan-Jones: So you can't have… Different annotation layers for different… areas.

78 00:12:22.190 --> 00:12:25.509 David Morgan-Jones: Or is there a different way of skinning this particular cat?

79 00:12:25.960 --> 00:12:30.559 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think there is a different way of skinning the cat, which is with labels.

80 00:12:31.730 --> 00:12:46.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And, if you want specific things to come up at specific times, on specific topics, then labels is the best way to go. We create a new layer for each label you want, and make sure you just tie it in with the layer that it refers to.

81 00:12:47.820 --> 00:12:48.660 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, now…

82 00:12:48.660 --> 00:12:50.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'll put them on both at once.

83 00:12:50.150 --> 00:12:58.310 David Morgan-Jones: If I… So the use case that I've got in my mind… is.

84 00:12:58.460 --> 00:12:59.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Is it something you can show?

85 00:12:59.940 --> 00:13:05.819 David Morgan-Jones: I'll try, if I remember what the hell I was doing, you can help me. Guide me through the process.

86 00:13:05.820 --> 00:13:09.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So there's a green button down at the center bottom of the Zoom screen.

87 00:13:10.060 --> 00:13:12.409 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, let me just get Parish Online up and…

88 00:13:12.470 --> 00:13:14.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Logged in. Yep.

89 00:13:14.940 --> 00:13:19.820 David Morgan-Jones: And then I'll… share my… Page with you.

90 00:13:20.770 --> 00:13:27.990 David Morgan-Jones: Now… Let's, share… What?

91 00:13:29.960 --> 00:13:30.860 Stuart Bacon: Oh, no.

92 00:13:31.220 --> 00:13:32.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Looking good.

93 00:13:32.030 --> 00:13:34.080 Stuart Bacon: just zooming in and out, Graham.

94 00:13:34.080 --> 00:13:41.120 David Morgan-Jones: Right Now… What I… let me just,

95 00:13:42.490 --> 00:13:44.820 David Morgan-Jones: Let me take to our parish website.

96 00:13:55.350 --> 00:13:56.619 David Morgan-Jones: Well, I'll share.

97 00:13:58.360 --> 00:13:59.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, we can see that.

98 00:14:01.330 --> 00:14:03.080 David Morgan-Jones: Can you see me flicking through that?

99 00:14:03.080 --> 00:14:03.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yo?

100 00:14:03.840 --> 00:14:04.590 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

101 00:14:04.830 --> 00:14:09.580 David Morgan-Jones: So, we're on, this is our, our biodiversity.

102 00:14:11.120 --> 00:14:23.300 David Morgan-Jones: And… We… instead of having 500 pages of strategy, which I loathe, This is our strategy.

103 00:14:25.180 --> 00:14:25.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right?

104 00:14:26.740 --> 00:14:34.920 David Morgan-Jones: Now, what we have done here, and what I've had to do, is I've had to take

105 00:14:35.080 --> 00:14:40.180 David Morgan-Jones: a screen grab, and…

106 00:14:40.690 --> 00:14:45.309 David Morgan-Jones: So I've got my ancient woodland areas, which have been highlighted on the mapping system.

107 00:14:45.970 --> 00:14:51.380 David Morgan-Jones: I've got a really good, one that Friends of the Earth, Canopy.

108 00:14:51.540 --> 00:14:52.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup.

109 00:14:52.060 --> 00:14:52.950 David Morgan-Jones: mapping.

110 00:14:52.950 --> 00:14:53.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nope.

111 00:14:54.060 --> 00:14:57.169 David Morgan-Jones: Now, what we're trying to do is we're trying to link

112 00:14:57.560 --> 00:15:01.889 David Morgan-Jones: All of these, ancient woodlands together,

113 00:15:02.010 --> 00:15:06.350 David Morgan-Jones: By hedgerow, and more importantly, by tree lines.

114 00:15:06.350 --> 00:15:06.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

115 00:15:07.270 --> 00:15:16.459 David Morgan-Jones: Because that will give us an arboreal route for the movement of dormice, which are prevalent within the ancient woodland areas.

116 00:15:16.620 --> 00:15:17.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

117 00:15:17.990 --> 00:15:27.090 David Morgan-Jones: And so, you probably can see very faintly, I've got a green line here, which shows that the movement between this bit of ancient woodland

118 00:15:27.230 --> 00:15:36.799 David Morgan-Jones: And this bit of ancient woodland on the military training area is fine, because we've actually got trees over-branching the road to create a bridge.

119 00:15:36.890 --> 00:15:54.810 David Morgan-Jones: And so we've got a line there. Now, what we need to try and do is join up this bit of ancient woodland with this block of ancient woodland and this block of ancient woodland. Yep. Now, there's a couple of problems here, and one of which I've written back to… I've already sent a note to,

120 00:15:55.770 --> 00:15:58.439 David Morgan-Jones: Parish Online, Parish Online team.

121 00:15:58.710 --> 00:16:00.190 David Morgan-Jones: is that…

122 00:16:02.390 --> 00:16:10.850 David Morgan-Jones: they don't seem to have the right, copyright or permissions to allow Friends of the Earth mapping

123 00:16:11.710 --> 00:16:14.860 David Morgan-Jones: To, be made public.

124 00:16:15.830 --> 00:16:20.989 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Really? Because we do have Friends of the Earth maps within Parash Online.

125 00:16:20.990 --> 00:16:25.509 David Morgan-Jones: Yes, yes we do. But you know when you try and make it into a public map?

126 00:16:25.760 --> 00:16:26.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.

127 00:16:26.390 --> 00:16:28.470 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah .

128 00:16:28.470 --> 00:16:32.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you can't get at the columns to make them public, because they're third-party?

129 00:16:32.550 --> 00:16:46.259 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, so, you can't… you can't find it, they won't allow you to push it through, which is a real shame, because this is absolutely the layer that just nails it for us.

130 00:16:46.260 --> 00:16:46.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Absolutely.

131 00:16:46.880 --> 00:16:51.959 David Morgan-Jones: And… the reason I ask about different annotation layers

132 00:16:52.110 --> 00:16:57.770 David Morgan-Jones: It's because what would be really nice is to be able to put a… An annotated layer.

133 00:16:58.180 --> 00:17:02.630 David Morgan-Jones: Which gives you the, the, move… potential movement corridors.

134 00:17:03.150 --> 00:17:06.979 David Morgan-Jones: for, the little rodents.

135 00:17:07.230 --> 00:17:12.200 David Morgan-Jones: And it allows you to map what you're going to try and achieve.

136 00:17:12.630 --> 00:17:19.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, but what… I'm not quite sure where the Friends of the Earth licensing department has come in.

137 00:17:19.130 --> 00:17:23.759 David Morgan-Jones: Right. Now, if you… do you remember me showing you this map?

138 00:17:25.160 --> 00:17:26.359 David Morgan-Jones: This one here.

139 00:17:26.369 --> 00:17:27.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Of course.

140 00:17:27.599 --> 00:17:31.509 David Morgan-Jones: Which allows us to go into the, EPC mapping.

141 00:17:31.639 --> 00:17:34.119 David Morgan-Jones: And so you've got an interactive map.

142 00:17:34.169 --> 00:17:36.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Of all our EPC states.

143 00:17:38.109 --> 00:17:45.529 David Morgan-Jones: So you can just link to it directly. What I'm trying to do is do exactly the same, but for the, biodiversity.

144 00:17:46.019 --> 00:17:52.139 David Morgan-Jones: But I can't do that, because…

145 00:17:53.899 --> 00:18:05.389 David Morgan-Jones: I can't get… I can't export the, the, Friends of the Earth map, and there's nothing else in the… in the layers that gives anything comparable to this pit… this… this… this analysis.

146 00:18:05.659 --> 00:18:21.299 David Morgan-Jones: And what I want to be able to do on Parish Online, if I could, would be to A make it an interactive map, so they can look around, look around the rest of the parish, but more importantly, I want to be able to put these red dotted lines showing where we're trying to link

147 00:18:21.419 --> 00:18:23.579 David Morgan-Jones: The ancient forest areas.

148 00:18:23.749 --> 00:18:26.699 David Morgan-Jones: On that interactive map.

149 00:18:26.999 --> 00:18:33.529 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah. But if I've… if I've only got one annotated layer, or one layer I can annotate.

150 00:18:33.629 --> 00:18:36.099 David Morgan-Jones: All the work that we're doing on…

151 00:18:36.359 --> 00:18:47.009 David Morgan-Jones: road traffic, roads, etc, will also be featured on the biodiversity mapping, which I… which would just cause utter and complete confusion.

152 00:18:47.930 --> 00:18:51.680 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, I don't think I would use annotated layers, they're…

153 00:18:51.680 --> 00:18:52.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Definitely.

154 00:18:52.210 --> 00:18:54.830 Stuart Bacon: To achieve what you're trying to, sort of, suggest.

155 00:18:54.830 --> 00:18:58.009 David Morgan-Jones: Okay. I appreciate the challenge and whatever with getting the…

156 00:18:59.070 --> 00:19:00.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The daytime.

157 00:19:00.020 --> 00:19:07.940 Stuart Bacon: the Earth data and whatever into the public map, but I think what you would… in terms of putting your green and red lines in.

158 00:19:07.940 --> 00:19:11.099 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah. The only way to do that, it's just with the parish there.

159 00:19:11.230 --> 00:19:11.980 Stuart Bacon: Which he then…

160 00:19:11.980 --> 00:19:14.300 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, can you show, can you show me how to do that?

161 00:19:14.840 --> 00:19:17.570 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, so if you.

162 00:19:17.570 --> 00:19:19.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Or you stop… yeah, right.

163 00:19:20.550 --> 00:19:22.340 Stuart Bacon: If you click on Parish Lair.

164 00:19:23.390 --> 00:19:24.920 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

165 00:19:26.260 --> 00:19:27.840 Stuart Bacon: And then right-click on that.

166 00:19:31.030 --> 00:19:32.940 David Morgan-Jones: Right, toggle all those.

167 00:19:33.080 --> 00:19:37.529 Stuart Bacon: Go to the top, and let's do it that way. Let's go to Create at the top.

168 00:19:38.870 --> 00:19:39.580 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

169 00:19:40.380 --> 00:19:41.960 Stuart Bacon: New layer.

170 00:19:41.960 --> 00:19:42.610 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

171 00:19:43.880 --> 00:19:49.149 Stuart Bacon: And then, this is your biodiversity corridors, is that what you want to call it?

172 00:19:49.390 --> 00:19:51.260 David Morgan-Jones: I'll call it Dual Mass Corridors.

173 00:19:51.790 --> 00:19:52.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.

174 00:19:54.360 --> 00:19:57.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Too many O's in Dormouse. Yeah.

175 00:19:59.000 --> 00:20:00.550 David Morgan-Jones: Right, there we go.

176 00:20:00.940 --> 00:20:03.130 Stuart Bacon: Geometry type would be line.

177 00:20:03.490 --> 00:20:05.010 David Morgan-Jones: Yes.

178 00:20:05.010 --> 00:20:09.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hmm, interesting. I think for a corridor, wouldn't you want it to be a polygon?

179 00:20:10.570 --> 00:20:14.139 David Morgan-Jones: No, I wanted lines, preferably, actually, to start off with.

180 00:20:14.140 --> 00:20:14.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.

181 00:20:16.110 --> 00:20:21.680 David Morgan-Jones: So this would be dual… Nice.

182 00:20:22.750 --> 00:20:24.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Potential hurdles, yeah.

183 00:20:24.810 --> 00:20:25.740 David Morgan-Jones: Sweet.

184 00:20:26.770 --> 00:20:27.690 David Morgan-Jones: blocks.

185 00:20:29.270 --> 00:20:31.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Of ancient woodland, huh?

186 00:20:31.920 --> 00:20:33.420 David Morgan-Jones: Right, okay.

187 00:20:34.480 --> 00:20:37.560 Stuart Bacon: So you're gonna want…

188 00:20:37.560 --> 00:20:38.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: At least one column for.

189 00:20:38.850 --> 00:20:44.910 Stuart Bacon: Two or three fields there, I would have thought. One for the name, one for… A type, at least.

190 00:20:46.120 --> 00:20:47.979 David Morgan-Jones: So, just, put two in.

191 00:20:48.130 --> 00:20:48.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

192 00:20:48.940 --> 00:20:49.870 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, yeah.

193 00:20:49.870 --> 00:20:52.919 David Morgan-Jones: And what would you call a sort of type, shall we?

194 00:20:52.920 --> 00:20:53.520 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.

195 00:20:54.050 --> 00:20:54.980 David Morgan-Jones: Okay.

196 00:20:57.920 --> 00:20:58.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Is this done?

197 00:20:58.990 --> 00:20:59.510 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, Don.

198 00:20:59.510 --> 00:21:00.580 Stuart Bacon: Finish that.

199 00:21:05.070 --> 00:21:05.780 David Morgan-Jones: Okay.

200 00:21:06.490 --> 00:21:12.160 Stuart Bacon: Now if you open it up in the parish lair bit on the side there, your door mouse, corridors.

201 00:21:12.550 --> 00:21:15.479 Stuart Bacon: Yep, and go to, the COG.

202 00:21:18.100 --> 00:21:19.579 Stuart Bacon: Let's go to Style.

203 00:21:19.910 --> 00:21:20.780 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

204 00:21:22.910 --> 00:21:27.060 Stuart Bacon: Change the style type from single

205 00:21:27.480 --> 00:21:30.740 Stuart Bacon: In the top left there, to class-based.

206 00:21:33.410 --> 00:21:36.450 Stuart Bacon: Change the second one to type.

207 00:21:40.130 --> 00:21:44.900 Stuart Bacon: You want to force labels.

208 00:21:48.480 --> 00:21:49.419 David Morgan-Jones: Say again, Eva?

209 00:21:49.580 --> 00:21:52.779 Stuart Bacon: So, what do you want the label to tell you?

210 00:21:52.780 --> 00:22:00.070 David Morgan-Jones: So there's been two… there's basically two colors. One… one red shows,

211 00:22:00.870 --> 00:22:03.510 David Morgan-Jones: A possible route, but gaps.

212 00:22:04.350 --> 00:22:07.379 David Morgan-Jones: And green means root with no gaps.

213 00:22:08.120 --> 00:22:10.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so they'll… they'll be the two types.

214 00:22:11.530 --> 00:22:17.929 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So your label can be based on, name, I would, but for the moment, and then with moist change it later.

215 00:22:18.380 --> 00:22:18.920 Stuart Bacon: Yep.

216 00:22:19.170 --> 00:22:23.820 David Morgan-Jones: So, can I just get these things? So, class-based, type, and name.

217 00:22:24.790 --> 00:22:27.650 Stuart Bacon: Yep, and then on the right-hand side, under Classes.

218 00:22:29.160 --> 00:22:29.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But you can't do.

219 00:22:29.900 --> 00:22:30.220 David Morgan-Jones: up.

220 00:22:30.220 --> 00:22:31.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Put some data in there.

221 00:22:33.380 --> 00:22:36.220 Stuart Bacon: But you could set the classes up with before…

222 00:22:36.370 --> 00:22:40.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, you can't, because there's no differentiation, it doesn't know the different types.

223 00:22:40.620 --> 00:22:44.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You've got to put at least one record of each type in first.

224 00:22:46.810 --> 00:22:47.980 Stuart Bacon: Okay, so…

225 00:22:49.300 --> 00:22:50.100 David Morgan-Jones: Safe?

226 00:22:50.100 --> 00:22:51.540 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. Save, yeah.

227 00:22:56.570 --> 00:22:59.110 Stuart Bacon: And let's draw an example of each.

228 00:22:59.380 --> 00:23:05.759 David Morgan-Jones: Right, before I do that, let me just zoom in, and let's go, let's just do a search.

229 00:23:05.760 --> 00:23:07.309 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I know in your ancient woodland.

230 00:23:12.860 --> 00:23:15.660 Stuart Bacon: Probably easy searching friends, but yeah, okay.

231 00:23:22.880 --> 00:23:23.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good.

232 00:23:23.750 --> 00:23:25.980 David Morgan-Jones: And then…

233 00:23:29.630 --> 00:23:31.380 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You do the Fringe of the Earth layer.

234 00:23:31.780 --> 00:23:32.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hmm.

235 00:23:35.110 --> 00:23:36.929 David Morgan-Jones: See, that is fantastic.

236 00:23:36.930 --> 00:23:39.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Absolutely brilliant piece of mapping.

237 00:23:39.950 --> 00:23:46.530 David Morgan-Jones: So, what we're now looking at is, if we, let me close that down…

238 00:23:46.630 --> 00:23:51.319 David Morgan-Jones: And we want to go back to… this is the layer that's still active, isn't it?

239 00:23:51.940 --> 00:23:52.520 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.

240 00:23:52.710 --> 00:23:56.580 David Morgan-Jones: So what we want to now do is we want to draw a line

241 00:23:57.020 --> 00:24:00.329 David Morgan-Jones: Joining these two bits of woodland together.

242 00:24:00.830 --> 00:24:03.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Over here, then you want to add a feature.

243 00:24:10.150 --> 00:24:11.600 Stuart Bacon: Draw the line first.

244 00:24:11.600 --> 00:24:12.780 David Morgan-Jones: Draw the line first.

245 00:24:13.420 --> 00:24:14.410 David Morgan-Jones: Right.

246 00:24:15.510 --> 00:24:19.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just, just mark on the map across where you're starting.

247 00:24:19.460 --> 00:24:20.160 David Morgan-Jones: Alright.

248 00:24:20.710 --> 00:24:23.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep, so just start there, and then… there you go.

249 00:24:34.150 --> 00:24:35.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perfect.

250 00:24:35.230 --> 00:24:36.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Double click.

251 00:24:38.870 --> 00:24:39.350 David Morgan-Jones: Right?

252 00:24:39.350 --> 00:24:43.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And what type is that? Is that dotted joined or solid joined?

253 00:24:43.500 --> 00:24:45.539 David Morgan-Jones: That would be dotted if we…

254 00:24:45.690 --> 00:24:47.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so… call it dotted.

255 00:24:50.300 --> 00:24:54.230 Stuart Bacon: It won't let you put anything in now, because your types are already confirmed.

256 00:24:54.870 --> 00:24:56.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no, it's okay.

257 00:24:56.640 --> 00:24:58.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You, you, we can just add to it.

258 00:24:59.680 --> 00:25:04.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: well… When we get around to editing, you can just add it.

259 00:25:04.400 --> 00:25:06.210 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, so I've got dotted.

260 00:25:06.210 --> 00:25:08.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Is it really called dotted? Is that the name of it?

261 00:25:08.700 --> 00:25:13.160 David Morgan-Jones: No, no, so… Possible…

262 00:25:14.640 --> 00:25:21.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But is it Route 1, or as opposed to Route 3, or it's joining Ancient Level A with Ancient Level B, whatever it's… whatever.

263 00:25:22.000 --> 00:25:26.380 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, yeah, alright, so we're gonna label…

264 00:25:26.640 --> 00:25:31.889 David Morgan-Jones: So we… we label each artefact as an entity in its own right, do we?

265 00:25:31.890 --> 00:25:33.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, each part, we're talking about each path.

266 00:25:33.910 --> 00:25:35.420 David Morgan-Jones: So, Route 1…

267 00:25:35.420 --> 00:25:36.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep, that's fine.

268 00:25:37.080 --> 00:25:38.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And save it.

269 00:25:39.920 --> 00:25:43.700 David Morgan-Jones: Saved on the bottom there, yep.

270 00:25:44.400 --> 00:25:48.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then if you close the column, the editor with the X at the top.

271 00:25:48.090 --> 00:25:48.800 David Morgan-Jones: Yah.

272 00:25:49.110 --> 00:25:52.099 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And click on your red line, anywhere on the red line.

273 00:25:53.720 --> 00:25:54.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

274 00:25:54.750 --> 00:25:56.109 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, go into it.

275 00:25:56.730 --> 00:26:00.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on the pencil to edit it.

276 00:26:01.990 --> 00:26:04.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now, put something under type.

277 00:26:04.930 --> 00:26:07.699 David Morgan-Jones: It's dotted, isn't it, or whatever you want to call it. Yeah, dotted.

278 00:26:08.880 --> 00:26:10.829 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good. Okay, now save that.

279 00:26:13.240 --> 00:26:19.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And just… go ahead now and create another one. So, if you go back to your parish lair.

280 00:26:19.890 --> 00:26:21.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Third feature.

281 00:26:25.660 --> 00:26:30.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And just do another one, and this one you want to be the other name, which is solid, or as opposed to dotted, or something?

282 00:26:30.700 --> 00:26:33.350 David Morgan-Jones: I'll, I'll do the solid one over here.

283 00:26:34.920 --> 00:26:36.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just so we can get the styling sorted out.

284 00:26:36.910 --> 00:26:39.930 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, so, click here.

285 00:26:44.750 --> 00:26:47.449 Stuart Bacon: And I don't think dotted or… I don't know.

286 00:26:47.560 --> 00:26:50.879 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, well, we can always tweak it later, once I know what I'm doing.

287 00:26:51.530 --> 00:26:53.080 David Morgan-Jones: name…

288 00:26:54.200 --> 00:26:58.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hang on a minute, I think you… is that there, that link? Did you do a double click?

289 00:26:58.500 --> 00:26:59.140 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah, it's that?

290 00:26:59.140 --> 00:27:00.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, I just didn't see it.

291 00:27:00.820 --> 00:27:03.439 David Morgan-Jones: So, Route 2…

292 00:27:03.440 --> 00:27:03.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

293 00:27:04.760 --> 00:27:06.129 David Morgan-Jones: Save is a save.

294 00:27:06.720 --> 00:27:07.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.

295 00:27:09.710 --> 00:27:10.949 David Morgan-Jones: And then…

296 00:27:11.800 --> 00:27:13.610 Stuart Bacon: On the red line again.

297 00:27:13.820 --> 00:27:15.599 David Morgan-Jones: Right, okay.

298 00:27:18.000 --> 00:27:19.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go, log on.

299 00:27:20.010 --> 00:27:20.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on it.

300 00:27:23.650 --> 00:27:24.290 Stuart Bacon: And so…

301 00:27:24.400 --> 00:27:27.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Edited, pencil, yeah.

302 00:27:28.140 --> 00:27:30.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And that's solid, or you want to call it?

303 00:27:34.190 --> 00:27:35.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Save it.

304 00:27:37.630 --> 00:27:39.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Close down the editor column.

305 00:27:41.080 --> 00:27:45.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on Your Parish Lair for Dormouse, and go into Style.

306 00:27:52.630 --> 00:27:54.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's interesting.

307 00:27:56.100 --> 00:28:02.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yes, because… That's very interesting, I've never seen it do that before.

308 00:28:03.610 --> 00:28:04.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No shampoo.

309 00:28:04.400 --> 00:28:05.160 Stuart Bacon: I'll be fine.

310 00:28:05.160 --> 00:28:12.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you should have two records, or three records now, under the classes column. You should have solid, you should have dotted, and you should have null.

311 00:28:13.150 --> 00:28:14.520 Stuart Bacon: No.

312 00:28:16.110 --> 00:28:21.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because the type… the class space is based on type, and you've got data in type now.

313 00:28:21.340 --> 00:28:24.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's very interesting. Alright, try editing it.

314 00:28:36.170 --> 00:28:38.749 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And add another one, which is solid.

315 00:28:39.180 --> 00:28:40.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Make it brown.

316 00:28:41.260 --> 00:28:42.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Or whatever.

317 00:28:52.300 --> 00:28:59.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then, as you say, you can play around with the lines and the, arrows.

318 00:29:01.460 --> 00:29:03.070 Stuart Bacon: You want to increase your gap.

319 00:29:14.920 --> 00:29:16.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nope, it's looking good.

320 00:29:17.750 --> 00:29:22.159 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you don't want a gap on that one, do you? No, no, you don't, actually. That's very true.

321 00:29:22.310 --> 00:29:25.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There we go. I'll just make that slightly thicker.

322 00:29:26.090 --> 00:29:28.529 David Morgan-Jones: I'll make it… both of those a little bit more…

323 00:29:28.530 --> 00:29:33.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm surprised you chose green, because there's all sorts of green all over that map.

324 00:29:33.140 --> 00:29:34.600 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, you're right.

325 00:29:34.990 --> 00:29:36.120 David Morgan-Jones: Let's.

326 00:29:36.120 --> 00:29:37.890 Stuart Bacon: With a purple or something.

327 00:29:38.120 --> 00:29:38.920 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, let's do that.

328 00:29:39.150 --> 00:29:39.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

329 00:29:40.720 --> 00:29:43.609 David Morgan-Jones: That'd be in your face. The Friends of the Earth people like that.

330 00:29:44.000 --> 00:29:49.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Matches their hair color, most of them. So, save that.

331 00:29:49.560 --> 00:29:50.839 David Morgan-Jones: Alright, say…

332 00:29:55.880 --> 00:29:59.429 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And it should show… that is purple, good, that one worked.

333 00:29:59.430 --> 00:30:00.590 David Morgan-Jones: And so is that one.

334 00:30:00.590 --> 00:30:04.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That one's red. Perfect. Okay, and it's dotted. Well done.

335 00:30:05.520 --> 00:30:14.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So then, the only thing you want to do now is to… the label should say Route 1… oh, it does say Route 1 and Route 2, perfect. Okay, you're in good shape.

336 00:30:15.350 --> 00:30:16.699 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What more could you want?

337 00:30:17.280 --> 00:30:25.670 David Morgan-Jones: So, if I want to add another line, let's just do, so, Dormouse… add feature.

338 00:30:25.960 --> 00:30:26.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup.

339 00:30:26.880 --> 00:30:28.119 David Morgan-Jones: And then…

340 00:30:28.120 --> 00:30:32.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Go to that top left, don't you? Go up a bit on the left-hand side.

341 00:30:32.600 --> 00:30:35.559 David Morgan-Jones: No, it's down this way now.

342 00:30:35.560 --> 00:30:36.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, alright.

343 00:30:41.080 --> 00:30:43.440 David Morgan-Jones: I'm trying to give them multiple escape routes.

344 00:30:43.840 --> 00:30:47.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Poor little doormats.

345 00:30:53.330 --> 00:30:55.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Very good, double-click, don't forget.

346 00:30:55.010 --> 00:30:55.650 David Morgan-Jones: Yup.

347 00:30:56.680 --> 00:30:58.140 David Morgan-Jones: So, Route 3…

348 00:31:00.290 --> 00:31:03.449 David Morgan-Jones: Type is dotted.

349 00:31:07.030 --> 00:31:08.579 Stuart Bacon: There we go. That one should come in…

350 00:31:08.820 --> 00:31:09.250 David Morgan-Jones: It has.

351 00:31:09.250 --> 00:31:09.790 Stuart Bacon: Chef.

352 00:31:10.260 --> 00:31:11.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Very good, good stuff.

353 00:31:11.120 --> 00:31:12.849 David Morgan-Jones: Right, now, I shall…

354 00:31:13.200 --> 00:31:20.190 David Morgan-Jones: I'll be able to do it now, probably the next half an hour, and I'll probably have no idea how I did it in the future.

355 00:31:20.190 --> 00:31:21.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can view the video, so you'll be.

356 00:31:21.710 --> 00:31:23.389 David Morgan-Jones: Oh yeah, absolutely.

357 00:31:24.860 --> 00:31:31.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And it'll also be listed in the text, and it'll be listed in the audio transcript, so you can't go wrong.

358 00:31:32.980 --> 00:31:40.059 David Morgan-Jones: So there we go, brilliant. Actually, well, there's one bit we need to, join. Let me just go back in, so…

359 00:31:40.530 --> 00:31:44.990 David Morgan-Jones: I'm just gonna add another feature whilst we're doing it, so I might as well just finish it off.

360 00:31:46.340 --> 00:31:50.499 David Morgan-Jones: And reinforce. So, what we want is…

361 00:32:08.280 --> 00:32:15.699 Graham Stoddart-Stones: To the untutored eye, David, you're following paths that are already there. You've already got trees and hedgerows and things there.

362 00:32:15.700 --> 00:32:18.389 David Morgan-Jones: You have, but there are gaps.

363 00:32:18.390 --> 00:32:19.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, I don't.

364 00:32:19.010 --> 00:32:24.009 David Morgan-Jones: If you go into the, so this is Route 4.

365 00:32:25.480 --> 00:32:30.600 David Morgan-Jones: And it's dotted… And save…

366 00:32:31.880 --> 00:32:34.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, if we zoom right in.

367 00:32:34.300 --> 00:32:35.409 David Morgan-Jones: Can you see there's gaps?

368 00:32:35.410 --> 00:32:37.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yes, okay, that's good, yeah, absolutely.

369 00:32:37.540 --> 00:32:41.199 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, and so what we've got to do is try and persuade the landowners…

370 00:32:41.200 --> 00:32:43.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Fill the gaps, yeah, that's wonderful, wonderful.

371 00:32:44.630 --> 00:32:48.089 Stuart Bacon: The one thing… sorry, just looking at what you got, David.

372 00:32:48.090 --> 00:32:48.880 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah.

373 00:32:49.170 --> 00:32:53.880 Stuart Bacon: Were your types at the moment solid and dotted?

374 00:32:54.360 --> 00:32:55.140 David Morgan-Jones: Yes.

375 00:32:55.430 --> 00:33:00.580 Stuart Bacon: For the uneducated reader and observer of your map.

376 00:33:00.840 --> 00:33:01.280 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

377 00:33:01.280 --> 00:33:03.269 Stuart Bacon: Is that the best description?

378 00:33:03.660 --> 00:33:06.789 Stuart Bacon: That you will want, or is it a…

379 00:33:06.790 --> 00:33:13.120 David Morgan-Jones: No, I think you're absolutely right. Let's go… let's go back into the…

380 00:33:13.520 --> 00:33:17.809 David Morgan-Jones: How do I actually go back into the bit where I edit the…

381 00:33:17.810 --> 00:33:23.760 Stuart Bacon: So, scroll back down, on the parish layer to… yep, I'm going to style again.

382 00:33:23.760 --> 00:33:25.520 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, yeah, style, isn't it?

383 00:33:25.660 --> 00:33:31.299 David Morgan-Jones: So, if I, can I, how do I edit that?

384 00:33:32.570 --> 00:33:33.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, you need to go…

385 00:33:33.620 --> 00:33:42.789 Stuart Bacon: What we end up doing is adding a replacement, and we change the ones for the ones that you've got, because you can't edit the style once it already exists.

386 00:33:43.890 --> 00:33:49.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can change the records that you've already created. It does the same thing.

387 00:33:50.450 --> 00:33:53.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Stuart is saying it's quite right. Just add a new one.

388 00:33:54.820 --> 00:33:56.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And give it a name.

389 00:33:56.270 --> 00:33:58.290 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, so, potential.

390 00:33:58.880 --> 00:33:59.989 David Morgan-Jones: Potential route?

391 00:34:00.270 --> 00:34:00.820 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.

392 00:34:07.100 --> 00:34:10.630 David Morgan-Jones: Make that… Rez?

393 00:34:10.630 --> 00:34:14.319 Graham Stoddart-Stones: name as the one you're going to replace. Is that going to replace a solid or a dotted?

394 00:34:14.580 --> 00:34:16.860 David Morgan-Jones: It's, it's a dotted.

395 00:34:16.860 --> 00:34:17.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.

396 00:34:19.889 --> 00:34:25.149 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So make it the same as the dotted up above, and then go ahead and delete the one up above.

397 00:34:25.159 --> 00:34:28.069 David Morgan-Jones: So there, and I… there's the dotted.

398 00:34:28.460 --> 00:34:29.589 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and delete it.

399 00:34:29.870 --> 00:34:31.619 David Morgan-Jones: How do you select…

400 00:34:31.620 --> 00:34:32.699 Stuart Bacon: late first.

401 00:34:33.020 --> 00:34:33.840 David Morgan-Jones: Right.

402 00:34:37.960 --> 00:34:38.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup.

403 00:34:39.929 --> 00:34:40.809 David Morgan-Jones: Alright.

404 00:34:40.810 --> 00:34:44.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, that was… yes, that's the style, okay, that's fine.

405 00:34:45.159 --> 00:34:51.149 David Morgan-Jones: And add… And then we put, root exists.

406 00:34:55.729 --> 00:34:56.599 David Morgan-Jones: odd.

407 00:34:58.149 --> 00:34:59.789 David Morgan-Jones: I'll come back to purple again.

408 00:35:01.019 --> 00:35:02.019 David Morgan-Jones: Save.

409 00:35:02.489 --> 00:35:13.529 David Morgan-Jones: Might not… 3… Turn solid… Click on that, and delete.

410 00:35:14.590 --> 00:35:15.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Very good.

411 00:35:15.040 --> 00:35:15.650 Stuart Bacon: Yep.

412 00:35:15.970 --> 00:35:22.210 Stuart Bacon: What you also want to do is the null value, Change the color.

413 00:35:22.210 --> 00:35:23.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, agreed.

414 00:35:27.320 --> 00:35:30.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now you need to go back and change your existing records to…

415 00:35:30.720 --> 00:35:31.529 Stuart Bacon: I've saved the…

416 00:35:31.530 --> 00:35:32.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: equal…

417 00:35:32.650 --> 00:35:33.350 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.

418 00:35:33.350 --> 00:35:34.550 David Morgan-Jones: Yes. Save that.

419 00:35:35.190 --> 00:35:35.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

420 00:35:36.870 --> 00:35:43.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So now go back into, the… yeah, go into your layer, and click on Table View.

421 00:35:46.950 --> 00:35:51.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now go to each of those ones and change the type, yep.

422 00:35:52.760 --> 00:36:00.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, sorry, you need to be in full screen, so if you go halfway up, yeah, click on that one. There you go. And now you can just change the droplet to something else.

423 00:36:15.010 --> 00:36:15.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Brilliant.

424 00:36:17.550 --> 00:36:18.260 David Morgan-Jones: There we go!

425 00:36:18.590 --> 00:36:19.160 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

426 00:36:19.380 --> 00:36:22.460 Stuart Bacon: And that should have your… Yeah.

427 00:36:22.770 --> 00:36:24.900 David Morgan-Jones: Now, let's just see…

428 00:36:24.970 --> 00:36:25.940 Stuart Bacon: If we…

429 00:36:26.100 --> 00:36:28.649 David Morgan-Jones: If we can turn that into a public map…

430 00:36:30.200 --> 00:36:30.750 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.

431 00:36:30.750 --> 00:36:31.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Cool.

432 00:36:32.040 --> 00:36:34.749 David Morgan-Jones: Right, so we go.

433 00:36:34.750 --> 00:36:35.779 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I've been, yep.

434 00:36:36.370 --> 00:36:39.439 David Morgan-Jones: Administration… Public map.

435 00:36:40.200 --> 00:36:43.870 David Morgan-Jones: Improving the habitat.

436 00:36:43.870 --> 00:36:44.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Excuse me.

437 00:36:44.940 --> 00:36:46.799 David Morgan-Jones: I want to edit that.

438 00:36:47.860 --> 00:36:50.979 David Morgan-Jones: So, we want… that's fine.

439 00:36:51.300 --> 00:36:51.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

440 00:36:53.170 --> 00:37:00.980 David Morgan-Jones: And then we want… This is slightly logical, the way in which this is all organized, but .

441 00:37:00.980 --> 00:37:04.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Not really. These are the ones that you've created, so you want door mice.

442 00:37:05.130 --> 00:37:07.279 David Morgan-Jones: Alright, so Dormice corridors…

443 00:37:07.280 --> 00:37:09.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep. Now move on.

444 00:37:09.310 --> 00:37:09.980 David Morgan-Jones: Then…

445 00:37:09.980 --> 00:37:12.029 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Probably one Prince of the Earth on the next one.

446 00:37:12.250 --> 00:37:14.309 David Morgan-Jones: And Ancient Woodland as well.

447 00:37:14.730 --> 00:37:15.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.

448 00:37:16.070 --> 00:37:18.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think they'll both be on the next one, yeah.

449 00:37:18.240 --> 00:37:19.899 David Morgan-Jones: So there's ancient woodland there.

450 00:37:20.230 --> 00:37:20.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right?

451 00:37:21.120 --> 00:37:22.859 David Morgan-Jones: And then Friends of the Earth.

452 00:37:23.620 --> 00:37:26.960 David Morgan-Jones: So what was it called? It's called Tree Canopy, isn't it?

453 00:37:31.410 --> 00:37:33.850 Stuart Bacon: Three canopy map by Friends of the Earth, yeah.

454 00:37:35.870 --> 00:37:37.189 David Morgan-Jones: R. S…

455 00:37:53.680 --> 00:37:55.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, let you play with it.

456 00:37:56.690 --> 00:37:57.920 David Morgan-Jones: Night.

457 00:37:58.530 --> 00:38:02.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You… you say… well, you said you've written for them already about this.

458 00:38:02.300 --> 00:38:03.570 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, I have, so…

459 00:38:03.570 --> 00:38:05.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, let me see what should you get.

460 00:38:06.420 --> 00:38:08.250 David Morgan-Jones: So that's what you get…

461 00:38:09.200 --> 00:38:13.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you want to choose your starting point. This is… you're choosing your starting point here.

462 00:38:14.030 --> 00:38:18.579 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What's the first view that everybody sees when they turn on the public map?

463 00:38:18.580 --> 00:38:18.900 David Morgan-Jones: Right.

464 00:38:18.900 --> 00:38:20.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Something that they're gonna recognize.

465 00:38:21.480 --> 00:38:22.830 David Morgan-Jones: So, something like that.

466 00:38:23.040 --> 00:38:23.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Fair enough.

467 00:38:26.050 --> 00:38:30.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then, which layers do you want to show up when they first see it?

468 00:38:30.940 --> 00:38:32.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All of them?

469 00:38:33.620 --> 00:38:36.589 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, I think so. I'll put that one there as well, see what happens there.

470 00:38:36.590 --> 00:38:39.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, it's got Tree Canopy Mappers showing, look at that, well done, you.

471 00:38:42.610 --> 00:38:46.210 David Morgan-Jones: Right, let's, see… let's see what the reality is.

472 00:38:47.570 --> 00:38:50.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, the question, yes.

473 00:38:54.630 --> 00:38:56.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you want things like.

474 00:38:56.010 --> 00:39:00.040 David Morgan-Jones: There you go. So that's what… so that's what it produces. Can you see that?

475 00:39:00.040 --> 00:39:01.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, it's pretty good, isn't it?

476 00:39:01.990 --> 00:39:16.600 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, except it doesn't have the free, I mean, whilst you've got your roots on, which is great, and whilst you've got the ancient woodland blocks, great, what we don't see, which is really important, is the… if I go back to…

477 00:39:16.780 --> 00:39:19.320 David Morgan-Jones: Let me just close out of that.

478 00:39:19.590 --> 00:39:22.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I know what you mean, you don't see the gaps in the hedgerows.

479 00:39:22.130 --> 00:39:25.159 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, and you don't see the hedgerows either.

480 00:39:25.160 --> 00:39:31.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But, well, that's just… now we come back to the point that I made when we started. I thought you might want to make this a…

481 00:39:32.130 --> 00:39:43.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: polygon layer rather than a dotted line layer, because you need to be able to identify the gaps and say to somebody, please go and plant a tree in gap 42.

482 00:39:44.150 --> 00:39:46.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you need to identify the gaps, I think.

483 00:39:46.950 --> 00:39:51.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I mean, when you're sending people out to do a job to fill in the hole, where are they gonna go?

484 00:39:51.620 --> 00:40:03.679 David Morgan-Jones: That's a really good idea. Okay, I need to just look at it, I won't do it now, now that I've got the idea of it, because what I need to do is, put on the Friends of the Earth,

485 00:40:03.930 --> 00:40:09.679 David Morgan-Jones: a layer here, and then every… wherever there's a gap, I put a polygon.

486 00:40:10.240 --> 00:40:11.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, so…

487 00:40:11.040 --> 00:40:14.150 David Morgan-Jones: So what will happen is, when you look at this.

488 00:40:14.380 --> 00:40:18.039 David Morgan-Jones: You'll just see a series of polygons where there are gaps.

489 00:40:18.040 --> 00:40:18.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Correct.

490 00:40:19.020 --> 00:40:19.600 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

491 00:40:19.810 --> 00:40:33.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, the question of delaying whether you do it now is entirely up to you, but I'm… there's nobody else asking questions, I don't know how tied up Stuart is, but I'm certainly here to help you do that now if you wanted to.

492 00:40:33.930 --> 00:40:42.190 David Morgan-Jones: Okay… let's, go into here, let's go to… Ancient.

493 00:40:48.880 --> 00:40:54.360 David Morgan-Jones: And then, tree… Canopy?

494 00:40:55.740 --> 00:40:56.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Beautiful.

495 00:40:56.660 --> 00:41:01.250 David Morgan-Jones: close that down, and now we want to go to…

496 00:41:01.530 --> 00:41:02.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: New passionate.

497 00:41:02.350 --> 00:41:03.120 David Morgan-Jones: Claire.

498 00:41:03.120 --> 00:41:03.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Almost.

499 00:41:04.140 --> 00:41:05.970 David Morgan-Jones: mousy things there.

500 00:41:06.280 --> 00:41:08.640 David Morgan-Jones: And, right, okay.

501 00:41:08.890 --> 00:41:11.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You're gonna have to create a new layer, alright?

502 00:41:11.780 --> 00:41:21.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because you can only have one geometry type per layer. This Dormouse line has got a line layer, so you now need to get a new one with a polygon on it.

503 00:41:21.070 --> 00:41:24.619 David Morgan-Jones: So what would be the one… what's an ad feature? So what does that.

504 00:41:24.620 --> 00:41:30.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The same thing as what you do when you click on the little cogwheel, and it comes up, add feature. It's just adding new data, a new…

505 00:41:30.480 --> 00:41:31.470 David Morgan-Jones: Alright, okay.

506 00:41:31.470 --> 00:41:35.050 Stuart Bacon: where you wanted to add the lines in and whatever, that would be, yeah.

507 00:41:35.050 --> 00:41:39.340 David Morgan-Jones: So this one is called, potential…

508 00:41:39.340 --> 00:41:39.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.

509 00:41:40.550 --> 00:41:42.910 David Morgan-Jones: Dormouse, Dorm.

510 00:41:43.170 --> 00:41:45.469 David Morgan-Jones: mice, roots.

511 00:41:45.610 --> 00:41:46.530 David Morgan-Jones: Tree gaps.

512 00:41:46.530 --> 00:41:48.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Filled, yeah, exactly.

513 00:41:49.040 --> 00:41:49.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perfect.

514 00:41:49.960 --> 00:41:54.250 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, geometry is polygon.

515 00:41:54.250 --> 00:41:54.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

516 00:41:55.840 --> 00:41:58.360 David Morgan-Jones: And I won't bother with that.

517 00:41:58.610 --> 00:42:07.359 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just as a point of discussion while Stuart's here, you could arguably make it, a point, and just have it a very large point.

518 00:42:07.690 --> 00:42:08.810 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, yeah.

519 00:42:08.810 --> 00:42:10.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: a complicated drawing.

520 00:42:10.080 --> 00:42:14.669 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, that would be a very good idea, and actually, you only need a point on the map, don't you?

521 00:42:14.670 --> 00:42:15.639 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, exactly.

522 00:42:15.640 --> 00:42:17.760 David Morgan-Jones: gaps…

523 00:42:17.870 --> 00:42:18.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you can adjust.

524 00:42:18.640 --> 00:42:19.200 David Morgan-Jones: the point.

525 00:42:19.200 --> 00:42:21.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Tries to match the gap.

526 00:42:21.180 --> 00:42:27.770 David Morgan-Jones: tree line… Hedge… Right.

527 00:42:29.090 --> 00:42:30.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: dorm lives, yeah.

528 00:42:30.290 --> 00:42:32.850 David Morgan-Jones: But need to be filled.

529 00:42:33.480 --> 00:42:34.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We'll do almost corridors.

530 00:42:35.220 --> 00:42:36.500 David Morgan-Jones: Create.

531 00:42:39.170 --> 00:42:41.520 David Morgan-Jones: Mice. Superhighways.

532 00:42:42.220 --> 00:42:43.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perfect.

533 00:42:44.020 --> 00:42:48.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I suppose that protects them from owls and things that are out to get them, does it?

534 00:42:48.470 --> 00:42:51.690 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, it does, that's how they move. The only problem is, they move…

535 00:42:52.280 --> 00:43:00.329 David Morgan-Jones: It'll take them about 15 years for the mice, the mouse, to gradually move, migrate from one area to the next.

536 00:43:00.330 --> 00:43:02.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, but it's time someone took a long view.

537 00:43:02.980 --> 00:43:11.429 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Okay, so we need to add some layers, so name and text, type.

538 00:43:11.430 --> 00:43:17.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, yes, I would. It's certainly just the sort of tree you want to put in there, so to.

539 00:43:17.090 --> 00:43:20.980 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, oh, that's true. Yeah, that's good. We could, we could,

540 00:43:21.250 --> 00:43:29.240 David Morgan-Jones: We'll put some… we'll put some, tree 1, tree 2, 3, to start off with, then I can get a bit more sophisticated once I know I've spoken to the specialist.

541 00:43:29.240 --> 00:43:32.029 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Out of fun, you could do those as ad plus.

542 00:43:32.160 --> 00:43:34.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you go up to Add Plus on the type.

543 00:43:35.260 --> 00:43:35.880 David Morgan-Jones: Yup.

544 00:43:36.310 --> 00:43:38.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And put in Tree Type 1.

545 00:43:38.850 --> 00:43:39.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's true.

546 00:43:39.410 --> 00:43:39.920 David Morgan-Jones: street.

547 00:43:40.680 --> 00:43:42.539 David Morgan-Jones: type 1…

548 00:43:42.540 --> 00:43:43.840 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Add it on the top.

549 00:43:44.670 --> 00:43:46.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And put tree type 2.

550 00:43:47.740 --> 00:43:51.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just, again, this is just fine, but you're going to be changing it to open B.

551 00:43:51.770 --> 00:43:52.530 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

552 00:43:52.530 --> 00:43:56.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Ash and stuff like that, depending on the terrain.

553 00:43:56.310 --> 00:43:57.130 David Morgan-Jones: 3.

554 00:43:57.490 --> 00:43:59.429 David Morgan-Jones: There you go. I think that'll be enough for the moment.

555 00:43:59.430 --> 00:44:00.080 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

556 00:44:00.080 --> 00:44:09.960 Stuart Bacon: Finish? I'll put another one in, as well, not as, not on the, the item there, but on the, the column title, as size.

557 00:44:15.570 --> 00:44:17.110 David Morgan-Jones: And that's a number.

558 00:44:17.890 --> 00:44:18.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Can be.

559 00:44:18.330 --> 00:44:20.999 Stuart Bacon: I was thinking small, medium, large, actually.

560 00:44:21.000 --> 00:44:21.770 David Morgan-Jones: Alright, okay.

561 00:44:21.770 --> 00:44:23.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Lovely?

562 00:44:23.230 --> 00:44:24.490 David Morgan-Jones: I like, simple, and I'll.

563 00:44:24.490 --> 00:44:28.419 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I can put that in here, can't I? Absolutely, yes, they'll do just that.

564 00:44:31.630 --> 00:44:32.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Be smart.

565 00:44:41.390 --> 00:44:42.410 David Morgan-Jones: Yep, finish.

566 00:44:42.490 --> 00:44:43.310 Stuart Bacon: Yep.

567 00:44:47.110 --> 00:44:47.890 David Morgan-Jones: Done?

568 00:44:48.490 --> 00:44:52.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now go into your layers, And turn it on.

569 00:44:53.640 --> 00:44:55.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now add features, yeah.

570 00:44:56.510 --> 00:44:58.340 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, and who…

571 00:44:58.340 --> 00:45:01.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Style is quite a good idea, actually, once you're there.

572 00:45:01.720 --> 00:45:05.720 Stuart Bacon: Hang on, I think you've just gone into the Dormouse corridors, not the new one.

573 00:45:05.720 --> 00:45:06.290 David Morgan-Jones: Right, hang on.

574 00:45:06.890 --> 00:45:10.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, go into the bottom one and click on style.

575 00:45:12.800 --> 00:45:13.520 David Morgan-Jones: Style?

576 00:45:13.520 --> 00:45:14.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep. Yep.

577 00:45:15.330 --> 00:45:21.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then, instead of shapes, That means you… So, yes.

578 00:45:21.200 --> 00:45:23.510 Stuart Bacon: Talk the left side out first.

579 00:45:24.740 --> 00:45:26.730 David Morgan-Jones: Right, okay, this side, here.

580 00:45:26.730 --> 00:45:30.450 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, so change that from single to class-based.

581 00:45:32.390 --> 00:45:32.910 David Morgan-Jones: Yup.

582 00:45:33.930 --> 00:45:39.090 Stuart Bacon: And then you're changing your class type from name to type.

583 00:45:39.250 --> 00:45:39.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

584 00:45:41.110 --> 00:45:42.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And they label the column.

585 00:45:43.200 --> 00:45:44.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Which will be name, I expect.

586 00:45:47.410 --> 00:45:50.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And move across to the middle of the third row.

587 00:45:53.000 --> 00:45:59.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And for each tree type, I would suggest you want to change it from a shape to an icon in the third little column.

588 00:46:01.470 --> 00:46:08.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And, if you click… yes, exactly. Now click on the three… the dots, the three dots in the next column.

589 00:46:08.740 --> 00:46:10.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Type in tree.

590 00:46:11.870 --> 00:46:13.480 David Morgan-Jones: I like it.

591 00:46:13.640 --> 00:46:14.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

592 00:46:15.350 --> 00:46:16.230 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

593 00:46:17.020 --> 00:46:19.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, there's a different type of tree for tree 2.

594 00:46:24.090 --> 00:46:26.260 Stuart Bacon: Erroneous E… G, sorry.

595 00:46:26.260 --> 00:46:29.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's the same type, isn't it?

596 00:46:30.430 --> 00:46:32.100 Stuart Bacon: No, that's different, yeah.

597 00:46:32.100 --> 00:46:33.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, is it? Okay.

598 00:46:34.990 --> 00:46:36.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And another one for that one.

599 00:46:39.170 --> 00:46:40.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Fair enough.

600 00:46:43.920 --> 00:46:46.630 Stuart Bacon: And then… Save that.

601 00:46:47.220 --> 00:46:48.700 Stuart Bacon: Actually, no, sorry.

602 00:46:48.950 --> 00:46:53.740 Stuart Bacon: Change your… change your size to about… 20.

603 00:46:53.890 --> 00:46:54.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, agreed.

604 00:47:08.270 --> 00:47:08.800 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

605 00:47:09.230 --> 00:47:09.840 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup.

606 00:47:09.840 --> 00:47:13.619 Stuart Bacon: Is that big enough? Looking at the example on the right, is that big enough?

607 00:47:13.850 --> 00:47:15.569 Stuart Bacon: Do you want to go to dirty?

608 00:47:15.690 --> 00:47:19.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I usually start with these at 30, I must say.

609 00:47:29.110 --> 00:47:29.640 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

610 00:47:29.880 --> 00:47:30.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup.

611 00:47:30.270 --> 00:47:31.729 Stuart Bacon: Yep, so save that.

612 00:47:32.350 --> 00:47:33.829 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now create some.

613 00:47:35.920 --> 00:47:37.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Go and fill in your gaps.

614 00:47:38.350 --> 00:47:42.890 David Morgan-Jones: So, hemp… add feature.

615 00:47:43.130 --> 00:47:43.690 Stuart Bacon: Yep.

616 00:47:44.980 --> 00:47:51.220 David Morgan-Jones: So… People call this Gap, GAP 1.

617 00:47:51.360 --> 00:47:52.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

618 00:47:54.430 --> 00:48:00.280 David Morgan-Jones: Type is tree type 1, Size is…

619 00:48:00.280 --> 00:48:01.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Massive.

620 00:48:01.350 --> 00:48:04.170 Stuart Bacon: Look at the… look at where you're thinking of placing those.

621 00:48:04.170 --> 00:48:04.570 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

622 00:48:04.590 --> 00:48:08.869 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, it's whether it's a large amount of trees, a small amount of trees, or whatever.

623 00:48:09.120 --> 00:48:10.259 David Morgan-Jones: Put a medium there.

624 00:48:10.720 --> 00:48:11.370 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.

625 00:48:11.370 --> 00:48:11.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

626 00:48:12.060 --> 00:48:13.929 David Morgan-Jones: And then… I put it there.

627 00:48:13.930 --> 00:48:15.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep, that's good. Save it.

628 00:48:20.210 --> 00:48:22.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right. Okay, move on to the next one.

629 00:48:23.110 --> 00:48:24.330 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, so…

630 00:48:24.330 --> 00:48:24.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Absolutely.

631 00:48:26.430 --> 00:48:29.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And that one needs to be large, isn't it?

632 00:48:29.060 --> 00:48:31.000 David Morgan-Jones: Gap.

633 00:48:31.340 --> 00:48:34.350 David Morgan-Jones: 2… time.

634 00:48:34.350 --> 00:48:35.559 Stuart Bacon: 3 Type 2.

635 00:48:36.850 --> 00:48:37.770 David Morgan-Jones: Large.

636 00:48:37.920 --> 00:48:38.790 Stuart Bacon: Yep.

637 00:48:38.970 --> 00:48:40.040 David Morgan-Jones: So…

638 00:48:40.040 --> 00:48:41.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perfect.

639 00:48:41.760 --> 00:48:45.369 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perfect. You see, it's a different color, it's everything, it's lovely.

640 00:48:46.610 --> 00:48:50.989 David Morgan-Jones: The rest of that one looked really good. There's just one there.

641 00:48:50.990 --> 00:48:51.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Absolutely.

642 00:48:51.780 --> 00:48:53.530 David Morgan-Jones: So we want… gap.

643 00:48:54.770 --> 00:49:00.220 David Morgan-Jones: 3… type… tree type T, Large.

644 00:49:00.650 --> 00:49:03.190 David Morgan-Jones: Wipe it down there.

645 00:49:03.190 --> 00:49:03.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

646 00:49:06.150 --> 00:49:09.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you have a really big area like that, you can always create two points.

647 00:49:10.230 --> 00:49:13.959 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah, no, absolutely. In fact, what I might do is…

648 00:49:14.200 --> 00:49:17.009 David Morgan-Jones: I'll close that down now.

649 00:49:17.460 --> 00:49:22.479 David Morgan-Jones: And I'll go into here. I'm gonna go into the, the style.

650 00:49:23.310 --> 00:49:25.680 David Morgan-Jones: And I'm going to make those…

651 00:49:25.840 --> 00:49:27.710 David Morgan-Jones: I'm gonna make them up to 40.

652 00:49:27.870 --> 00:49:28.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's fine.

653 00:49:33.340 --> 00:49:39.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The thing to remember about these, David, is that when you show them on the public map.

654 00:49:39.390 --> 00:49:39.990 David Morgan-Jones: Yup.

655 00:49:39.990 --> 00:49:41.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They will be quite large.

656 00:49:42.260 --> 00:49:43.860 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, right, okay, so…

657 00:49:43.860 --> 00:49:47.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you now go into your public map…

658 00:49:47.720 --> 00:49:54.939 David Morgan-Jones: Let's go back in… let's close that one down. If I go to public map, and then we need to add another layer, don't we?

659 00:49:54.940 --> 00:49:56.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Correct, yes.

660 00:49:57.120 --> 00:50:00.430 David Morgan-Jones: Public map, improving the parish habitats.

661 00:50:01.490 --> 00:50:02.550 Stuart Bacon: Pencil on the top.

662 00:50:02.550 --> 00:50:03.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on the pencil, yeah.

663 00:50:03.480 --> 00:50:07.349 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, on the top, we've done that, yeah, happy with that.

664 00:50:07.350 --> 00:50:08.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now we won.

665 00:50:08.840 --> 00:50:15.150 David Morgan-Jones: Dorma… Dormice, ABC… Where did I put it?

666 00:50:15.820 --> 00:50:18.519 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You, like, call it GAPS or something, I can't remember what you call it now.

667 00:50:18.520 --> 00:50:21.070 David Morgan-Jones: It was Dorma… I think they're based off of Dorma.

668 00:50:22.240 --> 00:50:23.389 David Morgan-Jones: Dual loss.

669 00:50:25.080 --> 00:50:26.639 Stuart Bacon: Not there under Domos.

670 00:50:26.990 --> 00:50:29.880 Stuart Bacon: Is that what you called it? I can't remember.

671 00:50:30.180 --> 00:50:32.280 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Go back, you can always go back and find out.

672 00:50:32.280 --> 00:50:34.430 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, no, that's a good idea, Nick, so…

673 00:50:36.410 --> 00:50:36.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bye.

674 00:50:36.970 --> 00:50:38.700 Stuart Bacon: Porch layers, open it up.

675 00:50:38.700 --> 00:50:39.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The bottom one.

676 00:50:39.920 --> 00:50:43.499 Stuart Bacon: Potential Dormouse route, is what you called it, yeah.

677 00:50:44.230 --> 00:50:47.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, when I go back into your public map?

678 00:50:47.210 --> 00:50:49.040 Stuart Bacon: So… Code, yep.

679 00:50:54.130 --> 00:50:54.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Pencil.

680 00:50:55.820 --> 00:50:56.520 David Morgan-Jones: Depends.

681 00:50:56.760 --> 00:50:57.730 David Morgan-Jones: Pink.

682 00:50:59.010 --> 00:50:59.770 David Morgan-Jones: Potential.

683 00:51:03.570 --> 00:51:06.160 Stuart Bacon: Up 2, from where your mouse is. Work, Dan?

684 00:51:08.000 --> 00:51:08.930 Stuart Bacon: Three more.

685 00:51:09.100 --> 00:51:10.249 Stuart Bacon: 4, 5 more.

686 00:51:10.250 --> 00:51:10.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.

687 00:51:10.900 --> 00:51:11.810 Stuart Bacon: Down 5.

688 00:51:12.330 --> 00:51:14.029 David Morgan-Jones: Oh yeah, got it, sorry. Yeah.

689 00:51:14.030 --> 00:51:14.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.

690 00:51:14.920 --> 00:51:15.880 David Morgan-Jones: Next.

691 00:51:16.120 --> 00:51:16.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Next.

692 00:51:16.890 --> 00:51:17.820 David Morgan-Jones: Next.

693 00:51:18.060 --> 00:51:19.180 Stuart Bacon: Next.

694 00:51:19.500 --> 00:51:20.410 David Morgan-Jones: Next.

695 00:51:20.740 --> 00:51:21.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Next.

696 00:51:21.070 --> 00:51:21.550 Stuart Bacon: God.

697 00:51:22.510 --> 00:51:25.219 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just click on the, yeah, click on that.

698 00:51:25.690 --> 00:51:27.509 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The little icon on the right.

699 00:51:27.820 --> 00:51:31.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That'll copy it for you. And now, exactly.

700 00:51:31.540 --> 00:51:33.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You've done this before, haven't you?

701 00:51:36.500 --> 00:51:38.200 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, yeah, brilliant.

702 00:51:38.860 --> 00:51:40.289 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's really good.

703 00:51:41.070 --> 00:51:41.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because the…

704 00:51:41.690 --> 00:51:48.590 David Morgan-Jones: Except there's quite a lot of space where the gap is. The, these, these labels, the tree?

705 00:51:48.590 --> 00:51:51.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, they're there, but they're… they're not… they're a bit removed, aren't they?

706 00:51:51.680 --> 00:51:52.530 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah…

707 00:51:52.960 --> 00:51:53.510 Stuart Bacon: We can'

708 00:51:53.790 --> 00:52:05.520 Stuart Bacon: We can amend that. If you go back… leave that… leave that tab open, and go back to the… the Parish Online tab, that one just where your mouse is now, yep. Yep. Go back to your main maps.

709 00:52:11.350 --> 00:52:16.999 Stuart Bacon: And open the parish layers, and you want to start… click on that one and then style it.

710 00:52:23.420 --> 00:52:25.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What's the labels to go to…

711 00:52:27.170 --> 00:52:27.840 Stuart Bacon: Excuse me.

712 00:52:27.840 --> 00:52:29.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Like…

713 00:52:29.530 --> 00:52:30.380 Stuart Bacon: in England.

714 00:52:34.090 --> 00:52:36.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I would suggest you might want them to be center-bottom.

715 00:52:39.520 --> 00:52:40.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, try that.

716 00:52:41.830 --> 00:52:43.750 David Morgan-Jones: Actually, it's gapped it again.

717 00:52:43.960 --> 00:52:46.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you can't swap that, that's the only thing you can do about that.

718 00:52:49.500 --> 00:52:51.349 Stuart Bacon: You reduce the halo size.

719 00:52:52.130 --> 00:52:55.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't see it'll have any printout, will it?

720 00:52:55.780 --> 00:52:59.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No. Because he's got no halo.

721 00:53:04.500 --> 00:53:07.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You might try forcing the labels, but…

722 00:53:08.760 --> 00:53:11.420 David Morgan-Jones: And the center… middle… there.

723 00:53:11.810 --> 00:53:12.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.

724 00:53:17.780 --> 00:53:19.879 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then taking…

725 00:53:19.880 --> 00:53:25.869 Stuart Bacon: If you now go back to your public map on the right-hand tab, and just refresh that page…

726 00:53:25.870 --> 00:53:26.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

727 00:53:26.810 --> 00:53:27.999 David Morgan-Jones: There you go.

728 00:53:28.000 --> 00:53:29.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Say, look at that, isn't that brilliant?

729 00:53:31.050 --> 00:53:34.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You've got the one confusing bit where the root one is overwritten.

730 00:53:34.130 --> 00:53:37.560 David Morgan-Jones: Over the gap, but if you expand out…

731 00:53:37.560 --> 00:53:38.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep, exactly.

732 00:53:39.090 --> 00:53:40.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It'll all be clear, yep.

733 00:53:40.670 --> 00:53:41.040 David Morgan-Jones: There you go.

734 00:53:41.040 --> 00:53:43.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Lovely. I think that's doing a really good job.

735 00:53:47.120 --> 00:53:48.269 David Morgan-Jones: Cool, okay.

736 00:53:50.840 --> 00:53:51.920 David Morgan-Jones: Got that.

737 00:53:51.920 --> 00:53:56.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you can either do more, or you can discuss anything different you want to do.

738 00:53:56.970 --> 00:54:01.210 David Morgan-Jones: That's quite nice there, like that, there's the gaps without the thing there. Brilliant.

739 00:54:01.210 --> 00:54:02.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They're very clear, aren't they?

740 00:54:02.610 --> 00:54:03.890 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, very clear.

741 00:54:04.120 --> 00:54:15.229 David Morgan-Jones: No, that's me done, really. It's just a, there's nothing we can do about the, Friends of the Earth bit. That's just a copyright issue.

742 00:54:16.440 --> 00:54:17.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, you may well put…

743 00:54:17.310 --> 00:54:17.910 David Morgan-Jones: issues.

744 00:54:18.450 --> 00:54:23.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, it might be something that they can resolve at Paratra Online for you in the longer term, but…

745 00:54:23.490 --> 00:54:24.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: For sure.

746 00:54:24.000 --> 00:54:25.729 Stuart Bacon: Short term, at least you've got a solution.

747 00:54:26.260 --> 00:54:32.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, except I can't see that Friends of the Earth objects to you producing it, because you were helping their case.

748 00:54:33.750 --> 00:54:34.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: True.

749 00:54:34.260 --> 00:54:51.039 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, I mean, I don't understand why, but, they did say they were going to look into it. I might just chase them. I'll find the email, and, ask them if they wouldn't mind, just… just coming back to me, whether, you know, whether the permissions are likely to be forthcoming.

750 00:54:51.040 --> 00:54:51.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Exactly.

751 00:54:52.920 --> 00:54:53.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good.

752 00:54:55.870 --> 00:55:07.569 David Morgan-Jones: So I've… so in… so in terms of being able to… to continue to evolve what I'm trying to achieve on the net zero and the biodiversity, so,

753 00:55:08.270 --> 00:55:10.310 David Morgan-Jones: the biodiversity

754 00:55:10.630 --> 00:55:25.590 David Morgan-Jones: we are, we're slowly inching our… by millimeter by millimeter. So the first stage is actually trying to get people aware of, you know, what their EPC state is.

755 00:55:25.700 --> 00:55:36.460 David Morgan-Jones: And we've got to do some work in terms of how we actually engage people, and more importantly, persuade people to, undertake EPC work on their houses. As you can see.

756 00:55:36.660 --> 00:55:40.239 David Morgan-Jones: All the dots… with no square.

757 00:55:42.600 --> 00:55:44.600 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, no, there's no EPC.

758 00:55:45.000 --> 00:55:45.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

759 00:55:45.570 --> 00:55:51.130 Stuart Bacon: Which are probably houses that haven't been sold since EPCs came in, and thus…

760 00:55:51.130 --> 00:55:51.860 David Morgan-Jones: Correct.

761 00:55:51.860 --> 00:55:53.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You haven't been very close to me.

762 00:55:53.440 --> 00:55:55.420 David Morgan-Jones: Correct. Absolutely.

763 00:55:55.810 --> 00:56:02.290 David Morgan-Jones: So, we need to, sort of, because actually it's about 50% of the parish.

764 00:56:03.600 --> 00:56:11.300 David Morgan-Jones: And then, what we then need to do is to… I'm delighted to see that my house is green.

765 00:56:11.510 --> 00:56:12.060 David Morgan-Jones: Awesome.

766 00:56:12.560 --> 00:56:21.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You may… are you talking as the council to a potential supplier who could do this at a reduced rate, because you're doing all his sales and marketing for him?

767 00:56:21.910 --> 00:56:25.150 David Morgan-Jones: Well, we are… I'm doing that with Tristram and Alex.

768 00:56:25.480 --> 00:56:26.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.

769 00:56:26.070 --> 00:56:30.520 David Morgan-Jones: So, that's a conversation we'll have next week, Tuesday.

770 00:56:30.520 --> 00:56:30.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.

771 00:56:30.860 --> 00:56:33.150 David Morgan-Jones: Because I can now show them this map.

772 00:56:34.090 --> 00:56:40.399 David Morgan-Jones: And then now I've got the work done. If I could just get that, tree… tree,

773 00:56:40.580 --> 00:56:42.990 David Morgan-Jones: Canopy thing sorted out.

774 00:56:43.120 --> 00:56:48.619 David Morgan-Jones: then I think… When we move to the biodiversity, so our.

775 00:56:49.500 --> 00:56:52.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Our strategy is very simple. One is to discover what the hell we've got.

776 00:56:53.530 --> 00:57:11.550 David Morgan-Jones: support Surrey Wildlife… Surrey and Hampshire Wildlife Trust, and what they're trying to do is create a massive corridor, via county boundaries, because in this area over here, you can't quite see it, it's off to the, there, this is, where there's large patches of heather.

777 00:57:12.530 --> 00:57:14.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And gorse.

778 00:57:14.370 --> 00:57:17.259 David Morgan-Jones: And it's where the vipers,

779 00:57:17.580 --> 00:57:28.040 David Morgan-Jones: exist in fairly numerous numbers around that area, and they're trying to make sure that the viper population can move around between Hampshire and Surrey.

780 00:57:28.510 --> 00:57:35.640 David Morgan-Jones: Between each of the, sort of the… Heather Gorseri is…

781 00:57:36.090 --> 00:57:38.660 David Morgan-Jones: So there's a big strategic,

782 00:57:38.790 --> 00:57:44.779 David Morgan-Jones: bit, and then there's our little bit, and so all we're going to be focusing on is,

783 00:57:45.120 --> 00:57:48.240 David Morgan-Jones: Ancient woodland and its preservation.

784 00:57:48.970 --> 00:57:57.710 David Morgan-Jones: and hedgerows. Because if we can get the hedgerows and the ancient woodland all joined up and linked, then the biodiversity bonuses are huge.

785 00:57:58.200 --> 00:58:02.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes. Does they do… do the Vipers need a separate cod, or a different name?

786 00:58:02.290 --> 00:58:19.520 David Morgan-Jones: No, no, no, no, they just need to be able to move, but they're ground-based movements, so of course, we've got roads running through here, covered there, and that, that causes a problem. So if you… most of the, most of the, the vipers live in this area here.

787 00:58:19.520 --> 00:58:25.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think you're very unkind. I think you're very carefully giving roots for the doormice, and then you're going to give them all the vipers to eat them.

788 00:58:26.290 --> 00:58:32.700 David Morgan-Jones: Except the vipers on the gown, and the dorm mites, when they're in… are boreal. They live in the tree canopies.

789 00:58:32.920 --> 00:58:38.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, and are they not going to move through those trees you've just carefully planted for them?

790 00:58:38.340 --> 00:58:50.110 David Morgan-Jones: Not… not… well, the vipers might be lurking on the bottom, and so if they fall out of the tree, there's… there's lunch on the go.

791 00:58:50.110 --> 00:58:56.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that you may get a knocking on your door of the Dormouse trade union, saying, what the hell do you think you're doing?

792 00:58:58.110 --> 00:59:06.420 David Morgan-Jones: And interestingly, if you look at our, if I add the…

793 00:59:07.410 --> 00:59:13.010 David Morgan-Jones: I mean, we're quite unique in the sense that, as a parish.

794 00:59:19.230 --> 00:59:26.170 David Morgan-Jones: If you look at the proportion of the Paris, with ancient woodland, we're actually, you know, it's a fairly…

795 00:59:26.570 --> 00:59:32.640 David Morgan-Jones: small but significant amount of the parish is actually ancient woodland. And then if you then add the,

796 00:59:34.640 --> 00:59:35.400 David Morgan-Jones: Oops.

797 00:59:43.170 --> 00:59:47.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Don't you have a conservation area to stop people developing your land?

798 00:59:47.440 --> 00:59:50.359 David Morgan-Jones: In fact, what is…

799 00:59:51.300 --> 00:59:52.450 Stuart Bacon: Friends of yours?

800 00:59:52.790 --> 00:59:55.270 David Morgan-Jones: Yup, there we go. So…

801 00:59:55.310 --> 00:59:59.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What we have is this part of the parish here.

802 00:59:59.950 --> 01:00:01.920 David Morgan-Jones: Is all military training area.

803 01:00:02.080 --> 01:00:02.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

804 01:00:02.930 --> 01:00:03.980 David Morgan-Jones: So…

805 01:00:04.590 --> 01:00:20.840 David Morgan-Jones: that's not going to change. And unless the MODs sell that off for development or something else, that's unlikely to be changed, because… and to be honest with you, I don't think it will, because it's the only training area close for the barracks, all the shop barracks, just up here.

806 01:00:21.130 --> 01:00:23.199 David Morgan-Jones: So that's unlikely to change.

807 01:00:23.280 --> 01:00:24.890 Stuart Bacon: How's all about maps?

808 01:00:25.740 --> 01:00:26.700 David Morgan-Jones: What's that?

809 01:00:27.270 --> 01:00:28.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: boundary, if they…

810 01:00:28.800 --> 01:00:29.820 Stuart Bacon: Training I'm in.

811 01:00:30.310 --> 01:00:33.810 David Morgan-Jones: I wonder if that's…

812 01:00:36.390 --> 01:00:38.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Can you type in military, for instance?

813 01:00:38.350 --> 01:00:39.520 David Morgan-Jones: military?

814 01:00:39.520 --> 01:00:41.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Orami, or something.

815 01:00:42.610 --> 01:00:44.549 David Morgan-Jones: M… M-O-D?

816 01:00:45.110 --> 01:00:45.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Seuss to be.

817 01:00:54.800 --> 01:00:58.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think you need to make some defense, maybe, because I think you got older.

818 01:00:58.270 --> 01:00:58.850 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

819 01:00:58.850 --> 01:01:00.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Roots and stuff in there.

820 01:01:04.010 --> 01:01:05.959 David Morgan-Jones: We've got ancient Roman Britain.

821 01:01:06.560 --> 01:01:07.549 David Morgan-Jones: No, no teeth.

822 01:01:07.860 --> 01:01:11.379 David Morgan-Jones: Defensive works, yes.

823 01:01:12.340 --> 01:01:14.699 David Morgan-Jones: Know is the answer to that. Knows the answer to that.

824 01:01:15.300 --> 01:01:18.960 Stuart Bacon: Yes, it might be worth you creating a parish lair.

825 01:01:18.960 --> 01:01:20.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Exactly, just to designate that.

826 01:01:20.760 --> 01:01:23.119 Stuart Bacon: Sort of map the boundaries.

827 01:01:23.120 --> 01:01:23.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Very good idea.

828 01:01:23.940 --> 01:01:25.160 Stuart Bacon: ID space.

829 01:01:25.430 --> 01:01:26.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

830 01:01:26.650 --> 01:01:30.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just go up and create it now, David, whilst you're with us.

831 01:01:30.360 --> 01:01:37.779 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah, okay, so, we want to create new layer… I'm gonna call it.

832 01:01:37.780 --> 01:01:39.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: defense, or mod training ground, or whatever.

833 01:01:39.890 --> 01:01:40.800 David Morgan-Jones: a training.

834 01:01:41.760 --> 01:01:42.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Maria.

835 01:01:42.110 --> 01:01:44.620 David Morgan-Jones: cleaning area, yeah.

836 01:01:47.330 --> 01:01:48.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, he's good.

837 01:01:48.000 --> 01:01:49.369 David Morgan-Jones: War memorials, no.

838 01:01:49.370 --> 01:01:51.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no, no, Nick.

839 01:01:51.150 --> 01:01:51.800 David Morgan-Jones: Next.

840 01:01:52.170 --> 01:01:54.389 David Morgan-Jones: Geometry type, polygon?

841 01:01:54.590 --> 01:01:55.120 Stuart Bacon: Yep.

842 01:02:00.290 --> 01:02:02.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The area that perished yet.

843 01:02:02.000 --> 01:02:03.520 David Morgan-Jones: Military training area.

844 01:02:06.100 --> 01:02:07.400 David Morgan-Jones: defense zone.

845 01:02:11.570 --> 01:02:12.300 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

846 01:02:13.740 --> 01:02:15.399 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You need at least one type.

847 01:02:15.530 --> 01:02:16.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Name.

848 01:02:16.540 --> 01:02:17.430 David Morgan-Jones: name.

849 01:02:17.730 --> 01:02:24.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And will you need another for, types? Is there a bit that does vehicles and another bit that does infantry?

850 01:02:25.110 --> 01:02:27.260 David Morgan-Jones: No, no, it's all just one training area, it's just one.

851 01:02:27.260 --> 01:02:28.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I'll just leave it at that, then.

852 01:02:31.410 --> 01:02:32.130 David Morgan-Jones: Okay?

853 01:02:32.410 --> 01:02:33.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Harris left.

854 01:02:37.390 --> 01:02:38.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Add feature?

855 01:02:38.370 --> 01:02:39.140 Stuart Bacon: style.

856 01:02:42.810 --> 01:02:45.810 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, yeah. So, are we gonna go class-based again?

857 01:02:45.850 --> 01:02:46.710 Stuart Bacon: Yep.

858 01:02:47.760 --> 01:02:48.380 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Thank you.

859 01:02:48.620 --> 01:02:49.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Me?

860 01:02:52.520 --> 01:02:53.090 David Morgan-Jones: Okay.

861 01:02:56.230 --> 01:02:57.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: on there as well, yeah.

862 01:02:58.950 --> 01:02:59.280 David Morgan-Jones: Okay?

863 01:02:59.280 --> 01:03:00.810 Stuart Bacon: Every column will be name.

864 01:03:01.990 --> 01:03:04.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I would suggest you put it in the label column.

865 01:03:04.720 --> 01:03:05.660 David Morgan-Jones: What in here?

866 01:03:05.660 --> 01:03:09.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no, to the left. Yep, just turn that on and select name.

867 01:03:10.330 --> 01:03:12.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, click one down, that one, select name.

868 01:03:13.880 --> 01:03:14.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good.

869 01:03:15.690 --> 01:03:16.590 David Morgan-Jones: add here.

870 01:03:16.950 --> 01:03:18.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, what you gonna add?

871 01:03:18.570 --> 01:03:19.349 David Morgan-Jones: I don't they?

872 01:03:19.350 --> 01:03:20.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, you don't have anything.

873 01:03:20.330 --> 01:03:21.439 Stuart Bacon: Let him know.

874 01:03:21.440 --> 01:03:21.919 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What's the color.

875 01:03:21.920 --> 01:03:24.660 Stuart Bacon: MOD area or something.

876 01:03:24.960 --> 01:03:25.640 David Morgan-Jones: Where?

877 01:03:26.970 --> 01:03:28.190 Stuart Bacon: Click, click add.

878 01:03:28.780 --> 01:03:31.060 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, I had a class, so it's an MOD area.

879 01:03:36.550 --> 01:03:37.570 David Morgan-Jones: Okay.

880 01:03:37.570 --> 01:03:38.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: color.

881 01:03:39.450 --> 01:03:41.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What color would you like it to be?

882 01:03:41.950 --> 01:03:42.620 Stuart Bacon: Oh, no.

883 01:03:42.620 --> 01:03:45.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bearing in mind that there's no… Yeah.

884 01:03:49.690 --> 01:03:50.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Little bit.

885 01:03:50.800 --> 01:03:51.519 David Morgan-Jones: I'll do it.

886 01:03:53.010 --> 01:03:53.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good.

887 01:03:58.440 --> 01:04:00.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Save it and give it a try, see what happens.

888 01:04:06.800 --> 01:04:11.900 David Morgan-Jones: Right, what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna take off

889 01:04:12.030 --> 01:04:15.789 David Morgan-Jones: How do you actually just filter it to the layers that have been selected?

890 01:04:17.370 --> 01:04:23.140 David Morgan-Jones: you just have to go down, and so that's what I'll do, that's fine.

891 01:04:23.140 --> 01:04:25.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, there is a way to turn off everything.

892 01:04:25.260 --> 01:04:26.080 David Morgan-Jones: Right.

893 01:04:26.870 --> 01:04:30.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Which I'm just trying to remember where that is.

894 01:04:33.980 --> 01:04:37.390 David Morgan-Jones: Because I need the administrative boundaries, so that's fine.

895 01:04:38.430 --> 01:04:42.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So now just go ahead and go into parish layers and add your new feature.

896 01:04:48.410 --> 01:04:53.440 David Morgan-Jones: So… Stupid.

897 01:04:53.440 --> 01:04:54.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Dirty.

898 01:04:54.840 --> 01:04:56.510 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah,

899 01:05:02.880 --> 01:05:04.400 David Morgan-Jones: Right. Now…

900 01:05:07.910 --> 01:05:09.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You won't be able to go outside your own parish.

901 01:05:10.320 --> 01:05:14.260 Stuart Bacon: You should be able to… you should be able to draw it on, but it won't show in the public map.

902 01:05:14.260 --> 01:05:15.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, whoa…

903 01:05:15.620 --> 01:05:19.329 David Morgan-Jones: Alright, I'll just do it within my own parish area, then.

904 01:05:33.940 --> 01:05:34.610 David Morgan-Jones: Damn.

905 01:05:37.420 --> 01:05:39.620 David Morgan-Jones: Is there a way in which you can,

906 01:05:39.780 --> 01:05:42.699 David Morgan-Jones: Move the screen about whilst you're doing this.

907 01:05:44.140 --> 01:05:47.339 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, hold down the m- hold down the mouse and just move the screen.

908 01:05:47.340 --> 01:05:48.510 David Morgan-Jones: Gotcha.

909 01:05:52.150 --> 01:05:54.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you've got a wheel on your mouse, you could.

910 01:05:54.010 --> 01:05:54.400 David Morgan-Jones: Dude?

911 01:05:54.400 --> 01:05:56.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, zoom in, there you go, yes.

912 01:05:56.520 --> 01:06:02.989 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just finish it neatly now, I mean, so untidily now, David, and you can always clean it up afterwards.

913 01:06:03.430 --> 01:06:05.729 David Morgan-Jones: So I can't go down here, for example.

914 01:06:05.730 --> 01:06:06.459 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You know, you can…

915 01:06:06.460 --> 01:06:10.090 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, keep going down there, it should be fine, I don't think it'll be…

916 01:06:12.530 --> 01:06:15.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: As she says, it just won't show on your public map, that bid.

917 01:06:20.880 --> 01:06:22.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, it's quite extensive, isn't it?

918 01:06:30.140 --> 01:06:35.419 David Morgan-Jones: It's not all… it's not all… it's not all training area. There are various…

919 01:06:35.580 --> 01:06:42.610 David Morgan-Jones: various military units locked in here, and it extends all the way up there as well, but I won't bother with that.

920 01:06:43.100 --> 01:06:45.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, at some point, you need to double-click, yeah, there you go.

921 01:06:45.850 --> 01:06:46.810 David Morgan-Jones: There you go.

922 01:06:47.270 --> 01:06:49.510 Stuart Bacon: And then, now you need to give it a name.

923 01:06:51.030 --> 01:06:53.190 David Morgan-Jones: There you go.

924 01:06:53.190 --> 01:06:53.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

925 01:06:53.870 --> 01:06:54.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And save it.

926 01:06:54.540 --> 01:06:55.560 Stuart Bacon: And click Save.

927 01:06:58.730 --> 01:07:06.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Woo. Yeah, now we need to amend it. So if you close down the editing column, click on the brown area.

928 01:07:07.240 --> 01:07:08.639 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, click on that.

929 01:07:08.640 --> 01:07:13.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, go into the mod training area, so you can get the record up, edit with a pencil.

930 01:07:14.050 --> 01:07:18.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now you can zoom in and straighten out the errors. Yeah.

931 01:07:21.860 --> 01:07:24.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You showed it, there's a lot, yeah.

932 01:07:24.990 --> 01:07:28.330 David Morgan-Jones: Actually, it's not… it's good enough, actually, as it is.

933 01:07:28.330 --> 01:07:29.469 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay. Yeah.

934 01:07:29.470 --> 01:07:30.290 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, it's good to know.

935 01:07:30.640 --> 01:07:31.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: See it, boot.

936 01:07:32.230 --> 01:07:32.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So…

937 01:07:32.810 --> 01:07:34.060 Stuart Bacon: How's that when you do them?

938 01:07:34.060 --> 01:07:35.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, save it.

939 01:07:37.360 --> 01:07:40.520 David Morgan-Jones: Is there any way we can make it hatched, or slightly more?

940 01:07:40.520 --> 01:07:45.519 Stuart Bacon: Okay, so if you close the X at the top at the moment, and then go back into style…

941 01:07:49.800 --> 01:07:50.410 David Morgan-Jones: Yup.

942 01:07:52.340 --> 01:07:56.559 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And it's under the… under that, yeah, it's under that area there.

943 01:07:56.940 --> 01:08:00.629 David Morgan-Jones: Opacity, right, okay, so we can reduce that.

944 01:08:02.870 --> 01:08:03.830 David Morgan-Jones: About that.

945 01:08:03.830 --> 01:08:06.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's where you put in the style, yeah, exactly.

946 01:08:07.370 --> 01:08:08.829 Stuart Bacon: If you change the type.

947 01:08:11.920 --> 01:08:12.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.

948 01:08:14.180 --> 01:08:15.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, if you'll keep an eye on the…

949 01:08:15.740 --> 01:08:17.299 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, that's it, that's it, that's what I want.

950 01:08:17.300 --> 01:08:18.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You want? Okay.

951 01:08:19.420 --> 01:08:22.410 David Morgan-Jones: Might just make that… oops, just make that just slightly…

952 01:08:23.720 --> 01:08:26.040 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, let's save that, see what it looks like.

953 01:08:30.510 --> 01:08:31.980 David Morgan-Jones: Brilliant, there you go.

954 01:08:33.579 --> 01:08:35.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Alright, what a useful afternoon this has been.

955 01:08:39.800 --> 01:08:41.319 David Morgan-Jones: It has, because…

956 01:08:41.810 --> 01:08:47.950 David Morgan-Jones: You know, I've now mapped part of the trading area. There's a whole bunch of trading area that goes up here as well.

957 01:08:49.000 --> 01:08:56.870 David Morgan-Jones: And, in terms of our area, that's… that's pretty good, but I think…

958 01:08:57.350 --> 01:09:03.630 David Morgan-Jones: I mean, what's interesting is if you then add… Friends of the Earth.

959 01:09:12.090 --> 01:09:13.590 David Morgan-Jones: Why am I not showing up?

960 01:09:26.770 --> 01:09:29.610 David Morgan-Jones: Hmm, that's interesting. Is there a particular reason why…

961 01:09:30.760 --> 01:09:32.280 Stuart Bacon: Hit on that again, though.

962 01:09:35.700 --> 01:09:38.320 David Morgan-Jones: Right, if I just put in friends…

963 01:09:39.830 --> 01:09:41.330 David Morgan-Jones: And if I click on that.

964 01:09:41.630 --> 01:09:48.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep. There it is, it's all set. This is what you… you won't see it until you zoom in. That little magnifying glass means zoom in to look at it.

965 01:09:49.210 --> 01:09:50.479 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, I see.

966 01:09:51.109 --> 01:09:56.700 David Morgan-Jones: I got you. Because you can see the amount of tree canopy that we've got in the parish.

967 01:09:56.900 --> 01:09:58.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, it's pretty good, isn't it?

968 01:10:00.310 --> 01:10:02.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Even better if you turn on the overhead photography.

969 01:10:03.490 --> 01:10:06.959 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, yeah, yeah. Actually, that's another way of looking at it.

970 01:10:07.380 --> 01:10:08.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Blues.

971 01:10:08.360 --> 01:10:10.529 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah, so if I turn that off.

972 01:10:10.800 --> 01:10:12.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, I don't leave it on.

973 01:10:12.200 --> 01:10:13.130 David Morgan-Jones: Leave it on.

974 01:10:13.130 --> 01:10:13.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

975 01:10:13.790 --> 01:10:15.020 David Morgan-Jones: And then if we go…

976 01:10:15.020 --> 01:10:17.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on the X to close down the search, there you go.

977 01:10:18.040 --> 01:10:21.179 David Morgan-Jones: And… aerial photography, latest.

978 01:10:21.540 --> 01:10:22.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.

979 01:10:22.750 --> 01:10:23.280 Stuart Bacon: Yep.

980 01:10:25.160 --> 01:10:31.919 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then you can turn down the transparency of the map layers, just so you see more of the photography.

981 01:10:32.310 --> 01:10:33.810 David Morgan-Jones: So, how do I do that?

982 01:10:33.810 --> 01:10:36.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you go up to the Ordnance Survey one.

983 01:10:37.350 --> 01:10:39.950 Stuart Bacon: Click on, yeah, go into it. Next one, Dan.

984 01:10:40.640 --> 01:10:41.220 David Morgan-Jones: this one.

985 01:10:41.220 --> 01:10:43.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: One with the circle on it, yes. Click on the tick.

986 01:10:45.110 --> 01:10:48.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And turn down the transparency to about 10%.

987 01:10:48.290 --> 01:10:49.750 David Morgan-Jones: Alright, okay, there.

988 01:10:51.670 --> 01:10:57.770 Stuart Bacon: Either that, or if you check… if you… I… I go with Premium Stack White instead.

989 01:10:58.110 --> 01:11:00.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, that's met me even simpler, yes.

990 01:11:00.410 --> 01:11:03.610 David Morgan-Jones: Which one? Premium Stack White? Yeah. This one?

991 01:11:04.180 --> 01:11:05.710 Stuart Bacon: And then turn the standard one off.

992 01:11:07.240 --> 01:11:08.279 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.

993 01:11:08.280 --> 01:11:09.090 David Morgan-Jones: There you go.

994 01:11:10.320 --> 01:11:14.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then you can do the same if you wanted to for…

995 01:11:15.140 --> 01:11:21.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the other parish layers that you've got on, if you don't want them to be too, too bright, or maybe they are…

996 01:11:21.840 --> 01:11:25.070 David Morgan-Jones: In fact, what we could do is, if I just come down to…

997 01:11:25.250 --> 01:11:28.810 David Morgan-Jones: That, just get rid of the military training error, just click that off.

998 01:11:28.990 --> 01:11:33.770 David Morgan-Jones: Right. And I might just get rid of the tree gaps, let's just hide that.

999 01:11:34.280 --> 01:11:37.150 David Morgan-Jones: And I'll just get rid of Friends of the Earth.

1000 01:11:41.330 --> 01:11:44.760 David Morgan-Jones: Because there, you can then start to see the trees… for real.

1001 01:11:46.360 --> 01:11:47.230 Stuart Bacon: Ring.

1002 01:11:47.230 --> 01:11:50.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you turn your gaps back on, you should be able to see where they fit in with the…

1003 01:11:50.990 --> 01:11:52.459 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, yeah, absolutely.

1004 01:11:54.280 --> 01:11:55.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you've got your parish layers.

1005 01:11:57.050 --> 01:12:00.549 David Morgan-Jones: And then if we go… Turn on your gaps.

1006 01:12:02.460 --> 01:12:03.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.

1007 01:12:03.230 --> 01:12:04.050 David Morgan-Jones: There you go.

1008 01:12:12.260 --> 01:12:14.690 David Morgan-Jones: My mind is that's not particularly good.

1009 01:12:15.690 --> 01:12:18.759 David Morgan-Jones: Aerial photographer, let's just go… let's just turn it on.

1010 01:12:20.070 --> 01:12:22.850 David Morgan-Jones: Standard. No, that's not right, is it?

1011 01:12:23.020 --> 01:12:25.579 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I had no map at all, just used Yale Photography.

1012 01:12:26.180 --> 01:12:27.200 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, like that.

1013 01:12:27.200 --> 01:12:27.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.

1014 01:12:28.920 --> 01:12:32.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So now you can clearly see where you're going to put your gaps.

1015 01:12:32.610 --> 01:12:33.410 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah.

1016 01:12:35.980 --> 01:12:39.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's interesting that maybe the gaps don't exist at the moment, according to the…

1017 01:12:40.500 --> 01:12:43.489 David Morgan-Jones: They do, yeah, yeah. Actually, you're right.

1018 01:12:44.630 --> 01:12:50.249 David Morgan-Jones: And there's good canopy. What we really need to do is go and have a look at it, eyeball it.

1019 01:12:50.250 --> 01:12:51.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Exactly.

1020 01:12:51.770 --> 01:12:52.220 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.

1021 01:12:52.220 --> 01:13:04.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now, this is a wonderful opportunity to use the geolocation feature in Paris Online. Take your phone with you, David, take a photograph of it, and the photograph will arrive in your gap layer.

1022 01:13:06.100 --> 01:13:08.070 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, and how do I do that?

1023 01:13:08.850 --> 01:13:10.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Have you got your phone with you?

1024 01:13:10.670 --> 01:13:11.410 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah.

1025 01:13:11.610 --> 01:13:19.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so go down to the, three dots on the bottom down by the right-hand side of your left column.

1026 01:13:21.910 --> 01:13:24.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: On the screen.

1027 01:13:24.030 --> 01:13:27.329 Stuart Bacon: Councillor Morgan, at the bottom, there's 3 dots to the left of it.

1028 01:13:27.700 --> 01:13:28.799 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah, got it.

1029 01:13:30.420 --> 01:13:33.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, geoclation's turned on, good, so leave it on.

1030 01:13:33.790 --> 01:13:35.769 David Morgan-Jones: Yup. Now, go to your phone.

1031 01:13:36.460 --> 01:13:38.099 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, there's remove overlays!

1032 01:13:38.100 --> 01:13:39.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, that's…

1033 01:13:39.330 --> 01:13:42.800 David Morgan-Jones: But you don't want to at the moment. No, no, no. Yeah, I'm on my phone.

1034 01:13:43.400 --> 01:13:45.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, go into a browser.

1035 01:13:47.550 --> 01:13:49.290 David Morgan-Jones: Right, I'm in a browser.

1036 01:13:49.660 --> 01:13:54.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you go to… is it XMAP block cloud login? Something like that.

1037 01:13:54.310 --> 01:13:54.880 David Morgan-Jones: parishion.

1038 01:13:54.880 --> 01:13:56.989 Stuart Bacon: It's online.xmop.cloud, yeah.

1039 01:13:59.440 --> 01:14:03.290 David Morgan-Jones: Right, hang on one second, let me just,

1040 01:14:11.070 --> 01:14:12.030 David Morgan-Jones: Pass.

1041 01:14:21.490 --> 01:14:22.900 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, gosh.

1042 01:14:26.300 --> 01:14:27.140 David Morgan-Jones: Oops.

1043 01:14:41.000 --> 01:14:44.119 David Morgan-Jones: No, it's not… oh yeah, here we go. It's my cloud.

1044 01:14:46.550 --> 01:14:47.550 David Morgan-Jones: Launch.

1045 01:14:54.760 --> 01:14:56.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now, if you had an iPhone?

1046 01:14:56.660 --> 01:14:58.829 David Morgan-Jones: I have, I'm… in fact, I'm now in.

1047 01:14:59.020 --> 01:15:00.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, good.

1048 01:15:00.940 --> 01:15:04.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, there should be a black line on the bottom of the screen.

1049 01:15:04.800 --> 01:15:05.490 David Morgan-Jones: There is.

1050 01:15:05.490 --> 01:15:12.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And on the right-hand side, there is an icon which is for geolocation. You need to tap that and just make sure geolocation is turned on.

1051 01:15:13.090 --> 01:15:13.650 David Morgan-Jones: home.

1052 01:15:13.860 --> 01:15:16.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, then,

1053 01:15:16.330 --> 01:15:28.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you go to the, what I call the, licorice or salt on the left-hand side, black and white box, tap on that, and you are able to turn the layers on. So you want to turn on your Gilmos gap layer.

1054 01:15:29.830 --> 01:15:33.400 David Morgan-Jones: Thomas, parashia, parish layer.

1055 01:15:34.070 --> 01:15:35.739 David Morgan-Jones: Dormouse tree gaps…

1056 01:15:37.180 --> 01:15:44.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now, none of them is going to show very clearly where you are at the moment, because the system is tied to you sitting in your house.

1057 01:15:44.950 --> 01:15:48.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But if you imagine that you're walking out to the gap.

1058 01:15:48.580 --> 01:15:56.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then the map will follow you, and when you get to the gap, you can take a photograph and tie the photograph into the Gap record.

1059 01:15:56.600 --> 01:16:01.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And the photograph will show up next time you come back to Parish Online on your desktop.

1060 01:16:02.640 --> 01:16:04.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, okay. Sweet system, it's very clever.

1061 01:16:05.420 --> 01:16:17.570 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, so, at the moment, I've got potential dormice, dormice root, should be roots and tree gaps, is… I'm just getting a circle of death going round and round and round, waiting for something to happen.

1062 01:16:18.980 --> 01:16:19.809 David Morgan-Jones: On my phone.

1063 01:16:19.810 --> 01:16:24.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, that your… is your phone, carrier strength pretty good?

1064 01:16:24.700 --> 01:16:27.089 David Morgan-Jones: It's on the Wi-Fi, so it should be…

1065 01:16:27.270 --> 01:16:29.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It should be as good as… but yeah, well…

1066 01:16:29.390 --> 01:16:30.010 David Morgan-Jones: Yep.

1067 01:16:30.480 --> 01:16:31.829 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't…

1068 01:16:31.830 --> 01:16:36.280 Stuart Bacon: Maybe you've got the Friday afternoon gremlin kicking in at Parish Online.

1069 01:16:36.650 --> 01:16:47.940 David Morgan-Jones: And so, once I've actually got that up and running, so I've now got the map, and the tree gaps, so all I do is simply just take a photograph.

1070 01:16:48.640 --> 01:16:49.780 Stuart Bacon: If you're going to…

1071 01:16:49.780 --> 01:16:51.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: To actually be there, yes, you need.

1072 01:16:51.310 --> 01:16:54.350 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, let's pretend I'm there.

1073 01:16:54.630 --> 01:16:56.380 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right? You take a photograph.

1074 01:16:56.660 --> 01:16:57.260 David Morgan-Jones: Yup.

1075 01:16:57.440 --> 01:17:02.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then you, can click on the layer.

1076 01:17:03.040 --> 01:17:09.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So it gives you the option to add a photograph, and you take the photograph from the one you… you just select the one you've just taken.

1077 01:17:09.330 --> 01:17:10.080 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, I see.

1078 01:17:10.080 --> 01:17:12.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It'll give you a list of all the photographs you've taken recently.

1079 01:17:12.650 --> 01:17:15.339 David Morgan-Jones: Right, okay, and then you just go click, I'll have that one, please.

1080 01:17:15.340 --> 01:17:16.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, exactly.

1081 01:17:17.840 --> 01:17:26.500 Stuart Bacon: And then it should retain the, the geolocation details and whatever from the photograph in Paris Online, and be able to tie it in.

1082 01:17:26.730 --> 01:17:28.110 Stuart Bacon: Then when it uploads.

1083 01:17:28.610 --> 01:17:29.430 David Morgan-Jones: Cool.

1084 01:17:30.630 --> 01:17:37.570 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, no, it's, it's taking its own sweet time, so I might just come back to that in a bit, because we've reached the winch…

1085 01:17:37.570 --> 01:17:39.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: now, because you're nowhere near the gap.

1086 01:17:39.210 --> 01:17:42.970 David Morgan-Jones: No, no, absolutely. And we've reached the witching now.

1087 01:17:43.280 --> 01:17:48.039 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. So, just for fun, David, you might want to,

1088 01:17:48.140 --> 01:18:07.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: in some layer or other, add your house, and add, I should think you could do it in assets and maintenance there. Put your house in, and then have a building contents layer where you store your waste paper basket or your computer, and then take a photograph of it, and add it to the… and see it added to the record.

1089 01:18:07.790 --> 01:18:17.550 David Morgan-Jones: Okay, alright, I'll do that. I won't do it now, but I'll have a play, as I must go and supervise my little worker bee who's busy beeering doing stuff for me.

1090 01:18:17.790 --> 01:18:18.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.

1091 01:18:19.060 --> 01:18:26.480 Stuart Bacon: The other thing I was thinking about, just briefly, your, if you…

1092 01:18:26.920 --> 01:18:35.020 Stuart Bacon: When we were looking at the map a minute ago, when we looked at the tree canopy, you can obviously see the gaps where the, where the road are.

1093 01:18:35.020 --> 01:18:35.370 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

1094 01:18:35.370 --> 01:18:41.920 Stuart Bacon: whatever. And I looked… I noticed when we drew the… the MOD map.

1095 01:18:42.060 --> 01:18:48.060 Stuart Bacon: That there are roads running through that area that look to be open to the public.

1096 01:18:48.550 --> 01:18:51.390 David Morgan-Jones: It is, the whole thing's… the whole thing's open to the public.

1097 01:18:51.980 --> 01:18:58.680 Stuart Bacon: Okay, yeah, no, but I was just thinking, do you want to redraw the maps so that they're…

1098 01:18:58.980 --> 01:19:02.759 Stuart Bacon: Excluding the road areas, if that makes sense.

1099 01:19:03.500 --> 01:19:13.500 Stuart Bacon: So it keeps the same boundaries, but then, yeah, there's a… there is the feature there where they can all be linked together as one unit without being…

1100 01:19:16.240 --> 01:19:20.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So do you have to put drain panels under the roads to keep your corridors going?

1101 01:19:21.050 --> 01:19:21.840 David Morgan-Jones: Say again?

1102 01:19:21.840 --> 01:19:23.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You're gonna have to put drain pipes under the roads.

1103 01:19:23.810 --> 01:19:42.309 David Morgan-Jones: Well, I think it depends on… yeah, I mean, I think once we get more info in terms of the, the Viper movement, we may well have to try and put some form of road. It's not this way, it's this direction down here, so it's across the two… it's the 287 where we need to, create the movement.

1104 01:19:42.310 --> 01:19:45.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So these tree lines are joined up.

1105 01:19:47.420 --> 01:19:52.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So some people create rope bridges and things for the animals to run across.

1106 01:19:52.150 --> 01:19:52.600 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah.

1107 01:19:52.600 --> 01:19:55.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Traffic and others, dig… dig tunnels underneath.

1108 01:19:57.460 --> 01:19:59.110 David Morgan-Jones: Well, I mean, that's a serious pad.

1109 01:19:59.330 --> 01:20:05.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes. I thought you were going to show us your house, but clearly not.

1110 01:20:05.010 --> 01:20:05.960 David Morgan-Jones: I shave my hat.

1111 01:20:05.960 --> 01:20:11.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no, it was just, I thought you were going to say, this is where I live, show the castle, or whatever.

1112 01:20:11.660 --> 01:20:12.899 David Morgan-Jones: But here's where we live.

1113 01:20:12.900 --> 01:20:13.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.

1114 01:20:14.280 --> 01:20:15.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Beautiful.

1115 01:20:16.010 --> 01:20:22.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you can get an idea of how old the photograph is by telling you you still own a blue and a white car.

1116 01:20:23.140 --> 01:20:25.779 David Morgan-Jones: No, that's the, swim instructor's car.

1117 01:20:26.470 --> 01:20:27.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: light.

1118 01:20:29.200 --> 01:20:29.830 Stuart Bacon: Nice.

1119 01:20:30.330 --> 01:20:32.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Is that because you've got a covered swimming pool?

1120 01:20:32.550 --> 01:20:33.910 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, here. This bit here.

1121 01:20:33.910 --> 01:20:34.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Whoa.

1122 01:20:34.890 --> 01:20:36.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's seriously exciting.

1123 01:20:37.290 --> 01:20:41.659 David Morgan-Jones: There. You see the 9 kilowatts of panels on top of it?

1124 01:20:41.660 --> 01:20:47.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Absolutely. Well, you have to wait for the old, mapping to download, it'll come a bit crystal clearer.

1125 01:20:47.770 --> 01:20:56.719 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, so, yeah, no, that's the… the hall where I and a young, a young lad who's actually working out the front for me, and myself, we built it.

1126 01:20:56.930 --> 01:20:58.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Did you really? What fun.

1127 01:20:58.580 --> 01:21:13.379 David Morgan-Jones: Oh, it was great. No, I loved… I loved every minute. There was a period I didn't enjoy it. We were sitting on the scaffolding, and we used a technique known as ICF, which is where you basically have polystyrene blocks.

1128 01:21:13.640 --> 01:21:19.829 David Morgan-Jones: And you build the whole of the structure with polystyrene blocks, and then you infill with concrete.

1129 01:21:19.980 --> 01:21:20.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Wow.

1130 01:21:20.910 --> 01:21:27.559 David Morgan-Jones: And so the whole thing is… is really heavily insulated. Right. And we were…

1131 01:21:28.500 --> 01:21:32.139 David Morgan-Jones: We were mixing ton after ton of cement.

1132 01:21:32.140 --> 01:21:34.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. And…

1133 01:21:35.160 --> 01:21:39.239 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then the question comes, how do you get the cement from the mixer up to the top of the wall?

1134 01:21:39.240 --> 01:21:41.830 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, we had to push it up with a wheelbarrow.

1135 01:21:41.830 --> 01:21:43.419 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh my. Yes.

1136 01:21:43.420 --> 01:21:48.880 David Morgan-Jones: And so we pushed it, and it was… we had a week where it just continuously snowed.

1137 01:21:49.760 --> 01:21:52.300 Stuart Bacon: And so we were… so we were…

1138 01:21:52.300 --> 01:21:53.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: for concrete.

1139 01:21:53.570 --> 01:22:06.370 David Morgan-Jones: So we were sitting there, you know, you know, pouring this bloody concrete down these gaps with the aerator, trying to get it all evenly distributed. In this sleet and cold, it was bloody miserable.

1140 01:22:08.600 --> 01:22:13.289 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But your days on the BAOR must have acclimatized you for that.

1141 01:22:13.720 --> 01:22:20.990 David Morgan-Jones: I had one or two days. One exercise is like that, where you think, oh my word, this is just ghastly.

1142 01:22:22.400 --> 01:22:23.559 David Morgan-Jones: Well, good.

1143 01:22:23.780 --> 01:22:25.859 Stuart Bacon: I'm gonna have to scarper, gentlemen.

1144 01:22:25.860 --> 01:22:30.740 David Morgan-Jones: And so must I. Thank you very much for your time, that's been really, really useful.

1145 01:22:30.740 --> 01:22:36.219 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it was good, and we'll do it again. All right, fabulous. Thanks very much, everybody.

1146 01:22:36.220 --> 01:22:36.780 David Morgan-Jones: Yeah, yep.

1147 01:22:36.780 --> 01:22:37.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bye-bye.

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