Yes it is - I'm fertilizing the willow.
Did the Fire Brigade get you down?
Anyways here are some more pic's
18th March 1952: British cricketers Stuart Surridge (right) and Alan Moss at work collecting willow trees which will be made into cricket bats in Surridge's factory. (Photo by Dennis Oulds/Central Press/Getty Images)
March 1952: Cricketer Alan E Moss, Middlesex and England (1953 - 1960), splitting willow wood with fellow batsman Stuart Surridge who owns a cricket bat factory. (Photo by Central Press/Getty Images)
24th January 1935: Making cricket bats at cricketer Stuart Surridge's factory. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
March 1938: British cricketer Patsy Hendren, examining the rough cast willow at a cricket bat factory in Saint John's Wood, London. (Photo by Davis/Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
Harvesters in Essex make their way back from marshland with specially selected willow logs which will be made into cricket bats, 20th January 1936. (Photo by L.C. Buckley/Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
This one I've called smoking the willowMarch 1922: England cricketing legend Jack Hobbs (1882 - 1963) carefully selects the willow from which his bat is to be made. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)