Tag Archive for talcontent

Content idea: feature local parks, allotments and gardens

Farnham Allotments

Farnham Allotments

Try to feature some information and news about your local green spaces, be they parks, gardens or allotments.

Last August Clare White wrote a blog post that featured some of Britain’s garden blogs, such as the Patient Gardener’s Weblog from Worcestershire.  Are there any keen local gardeners that might like to contribute to your community site by writing about their hobby? If your neighbourhood has more than a few green-fingered residents you could build a feature around the best gardens in your area.

Oxford Road Community Garden

Oxford Road Community Garden

Are there any allotments near you?  These are thriving little communities in themselves and there are plenty websites out there if you’re looking for inspiration in writing about them.  Welsh Girl’s Allotment is one girl’s quite personal site ‘detailing my quest for an allotment, its cultivation and hopefully bountiful crops’, but there are allotment sites that serve their small communities, such as Farnham Allotments, which publishes news for all allotment holders – events such as a Growing Vegetables Winter Lecture and notices to advertise Free Horse Manure.

Is there a community garden in your area?  Perhaps one or some of the people involved in its development would like to chart its progress online.  Oxford Road Community Garden, a garden created with Section 106 money from local development, has a simple website with photos and posts that keeps everyone updated on latest news and activity and what’s growing on the site.

Talk about what’s going on in your local park.  Highbury Park Friends in Birmingham publish their newsletters and points of interest on their simple WordPress website, including the above charming film of the pond’s ducks.  Kings Cross Environment has a dedicated category for the local Bingfield Park, which features the hard-fought War on Squirrels.

Normand Park Trees, London W14

Normand Park Trees, London W14

Is there a cause or campaign concerning your local green spaces your community website could help with? W14 & SW6 London held a campaign to Save Normand Park Trees from felling – website manager Annette posted a template preservation order request letter along with the relevant council officer’s name and email address, which made supporting the cause as simple as copying and pasting into an email.

Kingsley House Gardens

Kingsley House Gardens

Another talk about local website for Kingsley House, set up by The Kingsley House Tenants Association to try and improve the  Bristol residential blocks, concentrates on the particularly sorry state of their council-maintained landscaped gardens.

Have a think about how you can include the local green patches and the people who help cultivate them into your community website, and if there’s anything you could do to help preserve, protect and develop them by talking about what they bring to the area in your online space.

Content idea: details of local schools, doctors, dentists, etc.

Parwich Primary School

Parwich Primary School

Think about putting details and information about your local schools, doctors, dentists, etc. on your community website.  Parwich.org have a dedicated page for Parwich Primary School which includes term dates, whilst Bishopthorpe.net have a page for Bishopthorpe Medical Practice.

Bishopthorpe Medical Practice

Bishopthorpe Medical Practice

This would be especially useful for newcomers or people thinking of moving to the area, who will want to quickly complete the tasks of finding a school for their children and registering the family with a local doctor and dentist.

Content idea: local timetables and opening times

Crumlin Swimming Pool Opening Times | Drimnagh is Good

Crumlin Swimming Pool Opening Times on Drimnagh is Good

Do you have access to local timetables that you could publish on your website?  Your readers would find it incredibly useful to access local opening times or travel information on their community website.

Drimnagh is Good have published the Crumlin Swimming Pool opening times and entry prices.  Leisure centres and sports class timetables are information local people will often be hunting for and appreciate being able to find in one, easily accessible place.  The Cricklade Bugle have posted the timetable of the Women’s Running Network, whilst The Moretonhampstead Hub have details of Satyananda Yoga Dartmoor classes.

Mayo Movie World | MayoToday.ie

Mayo Movie World on MayoToday.ie

Also think about your local cinemas, theatres, arts centres, etc.  Mayo Today have a dedicated cinema listings pages.

Local Travel on Bishopthorpe.net

Local Travel on Bishopthorpe.net

Travel timetables are also good. Parwich.org have published an array of bus timetables for their readers, whilst Bishopthorpe.net have a dedicated Local Travel page, with information on forthcoming holiday services and service distruptions.

Do you live in an area that survives on just one or a handful of shops?  Think about publishing their opening times.  Everyone likes to know what bus or train to aim for, or that their trip out of the house won’t be a wasted journey, so see if you can include this information on your website and make it super-handy for local people!

Content idea: introduce your Safer Neighbourhood Team to the community

PSNI Newcastle

PSNI Newcastle

Why not introduce your local Bobbies on the beat to your readers with a short post about them, much like Newcastle Rocks have done in this simple post, which includes details of the Newcastle PSNI station, Who’s Who and statistics on How They’re Doing.

Try reaching out to your local Safer Neighbourhood Team and asking if they’d like to send you locally relevant information to publish on your website to reach the community.  William Perrin often receives press releases and appeals from the Caledonian Ward Safer Neighbourhood’s Team, which he publishes largely unedited on the Kings Cross Environments website.

If the local police force recognize your site as a means through which they can talk with the local community, you could find this generates incredibly useful content for your website or, in the case of Tamworth Blog, some incredibly exciting content when the authors found themselves invited to accompany the police on an early morning drug raid as part of Operation Nemeses!!

Content idea: publish local photos on your website

Newcastle Rocks: Saturday morning prep at The Strand

Newcastle Rocks: Saturday morning prep at The Strand

For some simple and effective content, try posting some photos of your local area on your website, these can either be taken by yourself, contributed to you or something you’ve found elsewhere online.

Photos can be a local landscape, landmark or just something that really encapsulates local life, such as the above photo of Saturday morning prep at The Strand on the new Newcastle Rocks website (Northern Ireland).

BiNS Friday Photo: German Market by Karen Strunks

BiNS Friday Photo: German Market by Karen Strunks

Birmingham it’s Not Shit made a nice little feature of local photos with its regular Friday Photo slot from photographer Karen Strunks.  Karen is also creator of the 4am Project – another way to gather some interesting images for your site by taking photos at the magical time of 4am!

Don’t worry too much about the quality or taking brilliantly artistic shots, no-one’s expecting you to become David Bailey, just tell simple stories with a pictures. But if you’re not a keen photographer yourself maybe you could ask for contributions from your readers, as many might be keen to bring their photo collection to a local audience?  Is there a Flickr group in your area, a little like Birmingham Flickrmeets Group, which holds monthly photo walks? If so, try joining and talking to its members to see if they might be interested in working with you on your website and publishing some of their images of the area on there.

Camp Hill Flyover, Birmingham, 1970 by Lady Wulfrun

Camp Hill Flyover, Birmingham, 1970 by Lady Wulfrun

Search Flickr regularly for interesting local photos – if they are not available for you to use under Creative Commons (follow link for explanation), contact the photographer and ask if they’d mind you using it.  As your site is a non-commercial venture for the community, nine times out of ten the answer will be yes, as long as you attribute the photographer.

And don’t forget to look for some older photos of your area to get reader reminiscing on how things used to look!  When I found the above photo of the long-gone Camphill flyover and published it on Digbeth is Good, people commented with their memories of driving over it.  People may have interesting old photos hidden away – you might like to look into scanning and posting those online to bring them to a wider audience?

So get busy with your cameras, ask those around you to help out by doing the same and start looking at what’s already being published online to add some lovely imagery to your site and really give your readers an eyeful!

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