In Yorkshire
This may be true in Yorkshire and all stations north, but not in southern/western England where hedges and fencing is more common place and walls are not used much at all.
It really depends on what is available locally and oop north where stone is, then you get walls, usually I think, dry stone ones. The northern routes always tend to look a bit barren to me....
But here in the deep south (ya'all) then it's a different matter. Not much stone lying around so fences and hedges come into their own.
Go west and you may well see a balance of walls, fences and hedges.
It just amounts to district - where you are in the UK, and who said 'uk' or even 'yuk', it's GB, Great Britain, always was when I was at school.
Using the AJS station kits will bring your tracks closer together too. Just a thought.
Angela
nowadays headges are used more for resedential places. Walls are used more than hedges in frams as they take up less room as due to the lack of roots in walls more land can be used for crops etc.
phil
This may be true in Yorkshire and all stations north, but not in southern/western England where hedges and fencing is more common place and walls are not used much at all.
It really depends on what is available locally and oop north where stone is, then you get walls, usually I think, dry stone ones. The northern routes always tend to look a bit barren to me....
But here in the deep south (ya'all) then it's a different matter. Not much stone lying around so fences and hedges come into their own.
Go west and you may well see a balance of walls, fences and hedges.
It just amounts to district - where you are in the UK, and who said 'uk' or even 'yuk', it's GB, Great Britain, always was when I was at school.
Using the AJS station kits will bring your tracks closer together too. Just a thought.
Angela