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Your old Xmas Tree can make a difference !

Just Helping Christmas Tree Collection for Comberton

JustHelping works in partnership with local charities, hospices, community & volunteer groups to co-ordinate  Christmas Tree Collections nationwide

Christmas Tree Collection – Cambridgeshire – Arthur Rank Hospice Charity (A)
This Christmas Tree Recycling Scheme is run by Arthur Rank Hospice Charity in partnership with  JustHelping and with support from numerous local businesses and members of the community. 

Now in its tenth year, the collection has gone from 400 registered trees to 4000! This generates an income of over £60,000 each year which is invested back into providing support for those going through a tough time.

Arthur Rank Hospice Charity supports people in Cambridgeshire living with an advanced serious illness or other life-limiting condition and those who need end-of-life care. Our ‘Outstanding’ services support approximately 3,600 patients and their families annually helping people to make every moment count.

Your donation will make a real difference to our patients and their families. 

Did you know?

  • £20 provides an online gentle movement session for a Living well patient. 
  • £32 will help deliver a counselling session to a patient and their loved one. 
  • £50 provides 2 hours of tailored care to comfort a patient in their own home in the last days of their life.
  • £68 will provide a nurse’s uniform for one full time member of staff
  • £100 will cover the monthly costs of craft materials for creative sessions.

What you need to know about this year’s Collection

Our team of volunteers will be collecting trees from Thursday 9 – Saturday 11 January 2025

In order for us to collect your tree, please register by 11.59pm Sunday 5th January.

We are unable to collect trees above 10ft/3m in height.

Important information

We ask that you put your tree (minus decorations and pots) outside the front of your property, where it can easily be seen by our voluntary collection team, by 8am on Thursday 9 January.

Please note we cannot guarantee what date or time your tree will be collected. We do aim to collect trees in the city centre area first.

Due to Health and Safety policy our lovely volunteers are unable to, under any circumstances, enter your property (e.g. house, garden, gated driveway) or any confined or restricted space to access your tree.

If you would like to volunteer your time to help with 2025’s collection please see further details at arhc.org.uk/tree-recycling or contact the team on 01223 675888 or email @

On behalf of the staff, volunteers, patients and family members at Arthur Rank Hospice Charity, thank you so much for your support.

After costs, over 90% of the funds raised will go to the hospice and the remaining % (up to 10%) will be donated to other local charities.

Great news – the team will be collecting Christmas trees between Thursday, 11 January 2024 – Saturday, 13 January 2024

The Christmas Tree-cycling Collection

the Just Helping flagship event is the Christmas Tree-cycling Event. It engages thousands of volunteers and hundreds of organisations to work together and contribute to their community. The collection engages thousands of people to donate to good causes while providing a valuable community service. 

 

 

The Christmas tree collection event has been growing every year with a vision to offer Christmas Tree-cycling in every postcode within 3 years. 

 

Comberton based Nature-friendly farming charity needs your support

Comberton based Countryside Regeneration Trust (CRT)
launches appeal to create lifeline for wading birds in winter
at our local Cambridgeshire Lark Rise Farm

Wading birds are in decline and need wet areas with soft, muddy ground to feed over winter so CRT  needs £8,000 to create an ideal habitat for wading birds. These include lapwing, black-tailed godwit, curlew, golden plover, redshank, common snipe, jack snipe, sandpiper species. It will also attract other species, such as wigeon, teal, gadwall, and goldeneye. 
CRT’s Helena Darragh, Head of Conservation and Land Management, said:

“We’re asking for your help to create a simple, yet potentially lifesaving feature on our farmland – a series of shallow, muddy channels that will make the difference at the toughest time of the year. 

A species like the beautiful and distinctive curlew uses its long, down-curved bills to push into soft, wet ground to find food. Without areas of damp grassland, wading birds struggle to find food over the colder winter months. The curlew is already one of the UK’s most rapidly declining breeding bird species, with a 48 per cent drop in numbers from 1995-2015 in England.” 

A shallow ‘scrape’ may look like an unassuming patch of water, but to wading birds like the curlew, it is an oasis.  

In these wet areas, they can find an abundance of invertebrates to eat, providing the critical nutrition needed to survive.  

“For centuries, the UK’s wetlands, floodplains, and coastal areas have been home to waders. However, these natural habitats are being lost, and while these birds are adaptable, they can’t keep pace with the rapid loss of safe spaces to feed and rest undisturbed,” added Helena. 

“Curlew and lapwing are among the most iconic of our Red-listed wading birds, but the habitat we’ll create with your donations will also attract other Amber-listed birds such as teal, widgeon, and numerous ducks and geese. 

“We were delighted to see growing numbers of lapwings at Lark Rise this summer, so we very much hope they will use the habitat in the winter as well.” 

Development on tidal fringes and floodplains, drainage of fields and dredging of rivers has meant that fields do not get wet and stay wet like they once did.  

“As a result, we are lacking areas of seasonally inundated water which is what our wading birds and waterfowl need in the winter to feed. Some wading birds are migratory, coming to the UK for our winter, whilst others are residents, such as overwintering lapwings,” said Helena. 

“While we can get a partial grant, we are looking for around £8,000 in donations to make this happen,” added Helena. “There is more survey work to be done first at Lark Rise Farm, and, if further assessment of the land is needed, this might take a little longer and be ready for winter 2026. 

“These areas can be created by creating shallow channels and pools no more than 50cm deep on grassland fields, which typically are soggy in the winter. We then connect these channels to existing watercourses, such as ditches to allow water to flow into them in wet periods, creating muddy puddles which create wet grassland habitat.  

“In dry months, the water recedes or evaporates, and we can continue to manage the field with livestock and hay cuts. These features are easy to maintain, can be grazed over and driven over by farm machinery in summer months due to their shallow gentle gradients.” 

For this Lark Rise Farm Christmas Appeal click here
For more info on Lark Rise Farm click here