From the Editor
Happy Spring readers!
So, it was noted by a friend, that last month I was a touch on the miserable side in my message. I did explain that this was for 2 completely valid reasons; 1. January lasts forever. 2. I wasn’t happy about my big birthday.
I mean, let’s be honest, that’s not the only reason for a bit of misery is it! I’m sure we could all write a list and the general unsettled nature that exists at the moment is making us all a little grumpy. So many businesses (irrespective of large or small) are struggling at the minute and for many, the juggling act of trying to eat and stay warm is worse than I have known in my lifetime. ‘Worry’ is a permanent state of mind for so many and inevitably this leads to people perhaps not behaving as kindly towards others as they should.
The thing is, even the phrase ‘be kind’ has turned into a verbal attack, thrown on social media by keyboard warriors. But, it’s even more important now than ever! A good example of this was visiting the Ice Hockey last month – a good time was had by all but it was crazy busy. My friend went to get a coffee at half time and to be fair, had a bit of a shambolic experience with the coffee stand – they did seem to be out of most key items such as milk, sugar, stirrers, syrups – if you wanted a plain black coffee though, you were sorted!!. Anyway, the woman in front of my friend had no hesitation in stating her views on the matter, at the top of her voice, balling out the 18yr retail assistant over the lack of milk and how she was bang out of order and it was “illegal” for her to sell her a drink without milk, etc etc (insert hyperbole aplenty!). I’m not sure how the unhappy lady was eventually ‘satisfied’ (not sure that is the correct term!) in the end but it resulted in the assistant crying her eyes out and probably reconsidering her job choices.
So, question to my lovely readers, yes the company had run out of milk but does that ever justify losing your temper publicly at someone who is probably working for minimum wage in between studying at College/Uni?
I’m not saying that this didn’t happen 15yrs+ ago and there are always people that open their mouths before their brain is engaged. I worked in retail most of my young life and I still recall an elderly gentleman going absolutely bananas at me one Christmas in a well-known supermarket because Mr Kipling had changed the packaging on his Festive Pies and him demanding what I was going to do about it!? I think I answered that I work for minimum wage on a weekend & that whilst I understood his frustration, I wasn’t sure that I could get Mr Kipling to listen to me on this matter! Maybe I’m just getting old, maybe I’m super resilient and I see people’s unkindness as their problem rather than mine and dismiss it, but maybe all the pressures we are facing currently, certainly financially, means we are losing our sense of decorum & human decency? It’s hard to say, until we stop getting squeezed from above I guess and in fairness, should the boss of British Gas or Shell be standing in front of me, assuming I could get close enough to the ivory tower, maybe I’d lose my decorum as well!!
Anyway, Spring has Sprung (ish!) & I’m back to being 21 again, so I’m going to have a little think over the coming month and see if I can write something more positive for my friend, next time.
Wear your Red Nose with Pride!
Can you believe the first Red Nose Day, aka Comic Relief, took place in 1988?
Crikey, that made me feel old when I looked it up! Of course it makes sense because Live Aid in 1984 kickstarted the whole idea of mass fundraising events in the UK, and others were bound to follow.
That first Red Nose Day raised £15 million as apparently more than 30 million people tuned in to watch the likes of Black Adder and the Young Ones.
Since inception, £1,068,416,012 has been raised for charities (this sum also includes amounts from Sport’s Relief events). The single most successful fundraising year was 2011, when £108,436,277 was collected.
That is a staggering amount of money raised by the British public, but I can’t help but wonder if this year will be (in comparison) disappointing as the cost of living crisis continues to bite. Last year’s total of £42,790,147 was the lowest since 1999 - I think this year’s total will be lower still.
So where does all this money go?
Well, according to the Comic Relief website, the money raised has helped to support 11.7 million people worldwide. In their 2021/2022 accounts, 54% of the grants made during that financial year were to UK based charities and individuals, although in previous years, it does seem to have been slightly tipped in favour of overseas operations.
So what can YOU do to help with this year’s fundraising on Friday 17 March?
The easiest (and quickest) way would be to purchase one of the “new” red noses; they are on sale, priced at £2.50, from the Comic Relief website (although when I wrote this article they were out of stock!) and on Amazon. This year’s noses are a little different to past years as they are partially made of paper - opening up from a flat crescent (easy to post) shape into a honeycomb-paper sphere.
If you want to get more involved and have more fun, why not organise a “bake-off” at your place of work? Or have a dress up /dress down/ fancy dress/ dress in red day at your school, work, or college.
Maybe you could organise challenges, be they physical ones like running/ jumping/ skipping/ swimming, or more cerebral such as quiz nights. There are lots of different ways to fundraise, but for Comic Relief, the funnier, the better!
Of course, you could simply head to the website at any time or call /text on the day of the TV show and pledge however much you can afford.
Whatever you do, have fun and remember any donation is better than none - and if you would rather give directly to a local charity, I am sure they would be VERY grateful.
THE LITTLE RED HEN HOUSE NORTHUMBERLAND
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Cannon Mill, Furnace Hill in Chesterfield formed part of the Griffin Foundry of John and Ebenezer Smith and Co., 1775-1833. It was the casting shop and a plaque on the wall dates it to 1816, though this is possibly not accurate.
It was last restored in 1951. The building is a 2-storeyed red-brick square with a coped gable end with ornamental cresting and a pantiled roof. There are 3 sham Gothic arches. The date plaque has a portrait of a cannon and cannon-balls but isn’t the year of the buildings construction. Originally a cannon foundry, the building was water-powered with a Head Goyt carrying water from the Hipper into a tank above a large cast-iron overshot water wheel, returning to the Hipper via a tail race close by. Cannon Mill was probably erected between 1788 and 1791 as an additional casting house for an existing furnace and foundry complex (the Griffin Foundry) leased in 1775 by Ebenezer Smith & Co. from James Shemwell. The firm manufactured engine cylinders and cannon until 1833, and a plaque with a cannon and the date 1816 probably commemorates the Battle of Waterloo. The mill was eventually bought by Robinson & Sons in 1886 and redeveloped for cotton manufacture. What survives today is a brick shed with pointed arched openings on two sides and remnants of a water wheel. The firm is likely to have been manufacturing cannons and cannon balls for the American Independence battles of 1778-83, and would have supplied munitions for the wars against France, Spain and Holland and later still for the Napoleonic Wars
from 1793-1815. Over a similar period there was a strong demand for Newcomen steam engines for pumping out lead mines and later for collieries and textile mills. They were designed by Francis Thompson and some of them were manufactured at this site. The decline of Griffin Foundry has been blamed on a number of reasons: the supplies of ironstone began to fail locally; the foundry was too far away from the Chesterfield Canal with its cheaper transport costs; and the third generation of Smiths were less able businessmen than their predecessors. There was also a major slump in the iron foundry business following the Napoleonic Wars and very low prices prevailed for some years, which would have certainly weakened the Griffin Foundry. It closed in 1833, and the various components sold on for several uses. What of its future? A Cannon Mill Trust CIO was formed in 2020 with a view of restoring the building to enable it’s use to be become a new local asset.
TRENTHAM MONKEY FOREST
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING TO DO WITH THE KIDS?
SOMETHING OUTDOORSY WITH A BIT OF ADVENTURE?
At Staffordshires Monkey Forest there are 140 free-roaming monkeys that live in total freedom, and you can walk amongst them !
The woodland is the monkey’s tranquil home in Trentham. The primates can go wherever they like as they aren’t restricted by any bars or cages, allowing visitors to observe the species in a way that can’t be done anywhere else in the UK. The fascinating natural behaviours of the primate happen right before your very eyes, making it one of the most unique but affordable days out in the UK.
COMPETITION
To win a family ticket (2 adults & 2 Children) answer this question
How many Monkeys roam free at Trentham Monkey Forest?
To enter simply email the answer to the question to community@voicemagazines. co.uk with the title ‘ Monkey Forest’ including your name, telephone number and address. Closing date 14th April 23 • T&C’s apply • valid until 6th Nov 23.
Professional Services
Book Review
It’s always a delight when you discover a writer by chance, read one book, think how good it is and then find that there’s a whole catalogue of their books to race through.
Mick Herron has been described as Britain’s finest living spy thriller writer. But his spies are far from the glossy Bond heroes we’ve come to associate with the genre. The chaps in the Slough House series are the misfits of MI5, exiled from the mainstream for various offences, put out to grass where they will do least harm, tying up other people’s loose ends.
Slough House is the run-down old building where these disgraced spies, known as “slow horses” get sent to see out the rest of their derailed careers.
Needless to say, none of them wants to be there and in this first book in the series - Slow Horses –they get accidentally drawn in when a boy is kidnapped and held hostage then scheduled to be beheaded live on the net. And who are the baddies in this scenario?
Mick Herron’s writing is stylish and funny. The plot is complex. You need to stay awake with this writer. The whole scene is sharp, sardonic and seedy and somehow absolutely gripping.
And if you get hooked, as your reviewer has, there’s a whole series to go through.
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Slimming World Recipe Lemon
Chicken
This recipe is packed full of fresh and tasty veg and chicken. With the flavour hit of Lemon to tantalise your tastebuds!
Method
1. Make your sauce by mixing the sweetener, lemon juice, stock and soy sauce in a jug. Toss the chicken in the cornflour.
2. Spray a wide non-stick frying pan with low-calorie cooking spray and put it over a medium-high heat. Fry the chicken for a few minutes or until it’s starting to crisp up at the edges. Add the carrots and chopped chilli and stir-fry for 1 minute.
For more information visit www.slimmingworld.co.uk
3. Pour your sauce into the pan and bring to a simmer, then add the sugar snap peas and let it all bubble for 5 minutes or until the chicken is cooked through and the vegetables are tender. Scatter over the shredded spring onions and red chilli to serve. If you’re not on an Extra Easy SP day, this is also great with plain boiled rice.
Serves: 4 Ready in: 20 mins
Ingredients:
1 level tsp sweetener granules
Juice of 1 lemon
300ml hot chicken stock
2 tbsp light soy sauce
4 skinless and boneless chicken breasts, cut into bite-size chunks
1 level tbsp cornflour
Low-calorie cooking spray
3 medium carrots, halved lengthways and thinly sliced diagonally
1 red chilli, deseeded and finely chopped, plus shredded chilli to serve
200g sugar snap peas
2 spring onions, shredded, to serve
Syns per serving: 1/2 Syn
50 YEARS OF RASCALS SWIMMING CLUB, RIPLEY
RASCALS this year is celebrating Fifty Years of teaching children to swim in Ripley and surrounding areas. The object of the Club was, and still is, to teach as many people as possible to find pleasure in, and to be safe in, water. Our swimmers range from age 4 in our Learn to Swim programme to our more senior competitive swimmers in the main pool. We also have our Lifesaving section who compete at pool competitions regionally, nationally and internationally as well as beach competitions.
Over the fifty years the club has been teaching our younger members and coaching our senior athletes we have had representation at National, International, Commonwealth, Olympic and World Championships from both the swimming section and the lifesaving section with numerous records and medal successes.
Our Learn to Swim Programme is the leading national teaching syllabus for delivering safe, inclusive and effective swimming lessons for all ages. The number of swimmers in our classes is kept deliberately small to ensure that each child gains the necessary skills at each stage before progressing to the next stage. This is all the way to Stage 8 when they can then move into
our Competitive Squads and compete in Galas, Opens and our Club Championships each year. The Club also competes in two local swimming leagues where we compete against other clubs and these are a really good introduction for newer swimmers to build their confidence. There are also competitions in the County and further afield.
It all starts with those first steps in the small pool at Ripley and Alfreton Leisure Centre.
RASCALS has always had a reputation for being a “family Club”. The amount of parental involvement in managing, poolside work and administration is renowned in swimming circles.
There is a proven progression from Learn to Swim to International representation. If you are interested in our Learn to Swim Programme we do have spaces available at the moment as well as our Main Pool and Lifesaving sections too. We hope that we will soon be able to add your name to that list.
Please contact us on learn-to-swim@ripleyrascals.org.uk for more information.
Webpage: www.ripleyrascals.org.uk
If you are just learning how to swim or a competitive swimmer looking for a new challenge, please contact us. contact@ripleyrascals.org.uk |
Vintage Rambles with rafaand Flake
This month we have picked a walk that is aimed at the whole family. The walk is a little shorter than usual but still has beautiful countryside, amazing views and to put the cherry on the top, there is an Ancient Monument, The Nine Ladies Stone Circle! The Moor contains hundreds of archaeological features and monuments dating back to the Bronze age with the Nine Ladies being the highlight. I hope you enjoy it as much as we did!
2.5 MILE CIRCULAR WALK AROUND STANTON MOOR
A short but sweet walk for the whole family which should take around 1.5 hours to complete. The walk is on paths and trails so please wear appropriate footwear, especially if it has been wet! The Moor is a Scheduled Ancient Monument and there is a flock of sheep on the moor so please keep dogs on leads around livestock. And, as always, follow the countryside code.
1. Park on the side of the road on Lees Road a few hundred meters out from Stanton in Peak near at the entrance to Stanton Moor. There is space for half a dozen cars, but it can become busy, so plan to arrive early, or late to give yourself the best chance of getting a spot.
2. Begin the walk at the signs to Stanton Moor. Take the public footpath to ‘nine ladies stone circle’, passing through a small wooden gate.
3. Walk ahead to pass through another small wooden gate and continue, with a wooded area on your right. Continue to pass through another gate and carry on along the main path into the wooded area.
4. Carry on along this well-trodden path to reach the information board at the Nine Ladies Stone Circle and take some time to explore.
5. From the notice board turn left on the path, which takes you in the opposite direction to the stone circle.
6. Shortly, the path splits. Take the left path to the tower ahead. Carry on past the tower.
7. At a joining of paths, go left then after some distance, at a split in the path, bear right.
8. Carry on to reach the large ‘Cork Stone’ with climbing handholds on it.
9. Just before the ‘Cork Stone’, take the path to the right. Shortly, at a split in the path, bear left.
10. Keep to the main path for a long way. Take care as there are some drop offs to the left. The path winds its way back to the Nine Ladies Stone Circle.
11. Re-join the path by the noticeboard and head left to retrace your steps back to the start.
This walk is for illustrative purposes only. Voice Magazines Ltd takes no responsibility for anyone who chooses to follow this route and encourages all walkers to obey all byelaws and signs and to respect the area they are walking in, ensuring they pick up all dog mess and obey the countryside code at all times.
Call us on 01773 602 466
had ceased trading by 1977. The stone took its name from one of the earliest manufacturers “Reade’s Donkey Brand”. “Doing the step” on your knees was
Guess the words and Fill in the crossword ! Pitcherwits®
Pitcherwits® are crossword puzzles where some of the clues are in pictures. Sound easy? It’s not called “Pit-your-wits” for nothing! The mixture of cryptic and picture clues, combined with Professor Rebus’ unique sense of humour, will keep you entertained for hours.
Across
6 Inform, in a less than intelligent way (4)
7 Be sick of the bailiffs! (3)
8 Rant about high water (4)
14 Magma causing a bit of an upheaval, right? (4)
15 Melody, the stuff of life, basically (3)
16 Writer made out of club iron (4)
Down
3 Re-license the very first antiquity (5)
4 From back end to a bit of church he comes: such a card! (5)
12 Hero’s mythical steed (5)
13 Remove objections to the launching? (5)
Down
1 Dallas won’t accommodate the chemist’s rule (7,3)
2 Net coin values get unpleasant (3,4)
5 Cancels him out, with not much hope (4,6)
17 Spin doctor’s gear, for curing feet maladies? (10)
10 Say it straight, but stagger away? (4,3)
This puzzles has been devised by the brilliant Professor Rebus. For more of his puzzles visit www.pitcherwits.co.uk
ALFRETON & DISTRICT HERITAGE TRUST
RICHARD PEAT 1863 - 1903 VIOLIN MAKER OF SOME REPUTE
Looking through the newspaper archives recently I came across a reference to a Richard Peat of Alfreton, who according to local and London opinion was the maker of the finest violins in England. He was certainly unknown to me but with assistance from friends at Tibshelf
Local History and Civic Society we have managed to learn a little more about him.
Richard was born in Somercotes in 1863 the second son of William Peat and his wife Hannah nee Gascoyne. William was a miner working at Birchwood Colliery before moving to Tibshelf in 1870. Hannah was musically gifted and from an early age Richard learned to play both piano and violin. He also was able to repair and make violins. There was a respect and appreciation of music in general, this at a time when people had to make their own entertainment.
Like many young men of the time Richard found work in the local pits but as a young coal miner he suffered a horrific accident resulting in the loss of one leg. Unable to continue working in the mines Richard turned to his hobby of
violin making to earn a living. As the business grew, he rented premises at Newton Green, selling sheet music, books, and all manner of musical instruments.
In 1893 Richard married Arabella Williams from Stonebroom, living first at Newton Green and then at the family home at 15 St Thomas Row, Tibshelf. By then Richard had moved to larger, purpose built, business premises on the High Street at Tibshelf. He started importing musical instruments and other accessories, advertising widely throughout the U.K. and Ireland. Such was his success that in late 1897 he purchased a shop at 3 High Street, Alfreton, where he and his family lived until his death.
Richard was not a well man suffering long periods of ill health through consumption and he died at his Tibshelf workshop on the 7th December, 1903 aged 41, being later buried in Tibshelf Churchyard. The Violins manufactured by Richard Peat were of exceptional quality and certainly command a reasonable price when appearing for auction at such places as Bonhams and Christies. Not a bad legacy for a local lad who, in the face of adversity, got stuck in and made something of his life!
SUDOKU #32
Fill in all the numbers!
This is a sudoku
1 square grid
81 cells
9 3x3 blocks
1 simple rule: Use all the numbers 1-9, with no duplicates allowed, in any row, column, or block.
This puzzles has been devised by the brilliant Professor Rebus. For more of his puzzles visit www.pitcherwits.co.uk
Every Day Should be Mother's Day!
Mother’s Day - or as it’s more formally known, Mothering Sunday, is on March 19th this year.
In the UK, Ireland, and a few other countries in the world, Mother’s Day is connected to the religious observance of Easter. Easter is a “moveable feast” celebrated on the first Sunday after the vernal equinox full moon. Mothering Sunday is set as the fourth Sunday in the festival of Lent, three weeks before Easter Sunday.
Easter falls on a different date each year (depending on the moon cycles) so Mothering Sunday changes yearly.
The origins of Mothering Sunday in the UK date back to the Middle Ages when children working away from their homes, in service, for example, were allowed to go to their home – or “mother” –church.
As the children travelled home, they would pick spring flowers for their own mother or to decorate their mother church, and the day morphed into a celebration of family reunions. The strictly observed rules of Lent were also slackened, allowing people to enjoy the luxury of simnel cake.
Nowadays, a simnel cake is a fruit cake with a layer of marzipan baked in the middle and decorated with another layer of marzipan and eleven marzipan balls representing the disciples (minus Judas). In the Middle Ages, it was more likely to have been an enriched yeast-leavened bread; what made it special is that it would have been baked with the finest white flour. The word simnel comes from the Latin word for flour - simila.
Mothering Sunday continues to be celebrated In the UK on the fourth Sunday of Lent, but in 1907 the Americans got in on the act and decided that a “Mother’s Day” be marked on the second Sunday of May each year. Thus the day we had always known as Mothering Sunday gradually merged in British people’s thinking to Mother’s Day - although we did at least stick to the our time honoured calculation to fix the date.
I don’t think it matters which day we honour our mothers - just that we do. As someone who lost her own mum three years ago, I wish I could turn up at her door with a bunch of flowers, a box of her favourite chocolates, and a big smile. And as the mother of two daughters, I cherish the fact that they make the effort to mark the day for me.
Do I need or want flowers or chocolates?
No, of course not.
What I and every mother I know want is to spend quality time with our children - no matter what age they are. In fact, if you ask any mum, I bet they will say their favourite Mother’s Days were the ones when their very young children attempted breakfast in bed for her - complete with a homemade card and a wilted dandelion in an eggcup!
Treasure your mums this Mother’s Day.
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Gardener’s Calendar
It’s that time again. We can start sowing now!
Though of course only hardy annual seeds such as nasturtiums and Californian poppies and summer bulbs if you’re sowing outside. But the likes of cosmos, sweet pea, cornflower and aquilegia can be grown from seed under cover ready to go out when the worst of the cold is over.
Alpines are coming back to life so remove dead foliage and mulch carefully with grit to avoid foliage making contact with wet soil.
If you haven’t already pruned your roses, do so now. Most will tolerate hard pruning, except for climbers and shrub roses. Cut back quarter of an inch above a bud, with the cut sloping downwards so water does not collect on the bud. To get a cup-like open shape to the bush, cut to an outward facing bud. If there is old wood which is not producing buds, take it off to a point where there is healthy pith when you cut.
Top Tip:
Spring also means lovely little shoots, beloved of slugs. Some damage is inevitable and part of gardening but slug pellets are not good ecologically. Nematodes, bought from your local nursery can be watered into the soil and they will kill slugs. They are not chemical and so not harmful to the soil and other wildlife and pets. If you rake over soil and fallen leaves now it means friendly birds can eat slug eggs. Or try the scooped orange skins method, placing them like a dish in the soil and add small amount of beer - jars would do as well as citrus hulks. Empty every morning and good luck.
Put any bulbs forced for an indoor Xmas display – i.e. narcissi or hyacinth - out into the garden soil where they will flower naturally if a little more slowly next year.
As The Crow Flies
One of our more familiar groups of birds is the corvid or crow family, and which locally includes magpies, jays, carrion crows, rooks, jackdaws and ravens. The latter is a recent recolonist which was driven to extinction in the Peak and surrounding areas by persecution (mostly from gamekeepers) and by pollution from pesticides especially DDT and Dieldrin. All these birds are potentially very long lived and are also particularly intelligent. Their behaviour, from holding and defending territories, to communal nesting (rooks especially and jackdaws to an extent), and winter-time roosts sometimes numbering thousands of birds, makes the crows particularly interesting.
All these above factors have helped embed the various crows deep into our corporate culture, literature, and art. An obvious folk phrase is ‘as the crow flies’, meaning the shortest distance between two points as opposed the route taken by perhaps following an old, winding, medieval lane for example. Although this was known since at least the early 1800s, it may not be specific to crows but to any bird moving a longish distance. Clearly, in its daily wanderings a crow won’t necessarily flight straight, but going to their afternoon roost or pre-roost site they generally do. Furthermore, it is obvious sometimes that they navigate through the landscape guided by topographic features and by human structures line roads. I used to watch long loose lines of carrion crows heading to a massive winter roost at Owler Bar and apparently following the route of the road over the moor.
More mysterious perhaps is the origin of the phrase ‘stone the crows’, which is taken as a mild oath or exclamation of annoyance. It is even suggested that this was noted in the early 1900s, or even the 1930s as an Australian colloquialism of ‘stone the crows’, ‘stiffen the crows’, ‘starve the crows’, or even ‘stone the crows and stiffens the lizards’. Another version was ‘stiffen the crows, spare the crow’, all being Australian in origin. A further suggestion was ‘stow the croze’, perhaps euphemistically meaning ‘stone the cross’, (and hence slightly blasphemous), or from breaking open a wooden barrel for which a ‘croze’ is the groove at the end of the barrel holding in place the end plate. However, maybe the obvious explanation is simply from ‘stoning the crows’ i.e. the practice of throwing stones at crows because they were unwelcome visitors to for example, sheep farms. Crows and ravens will scavenge offal and things like sheep after-birth, and gained reputations, maybe justified sometimes, for attacking new-born lambs. So, stoning crows was a commonplace activity in farming areas and was probably associated with annoyance. Bearing in mind that well into the 1900s, small boys were employed in the English countryside to control house sparrows and to scare away other birds like crows and woodpigeons, and then stoning crows would not be unusual. Even in my own younger years, local parkkeepers in the suburbs and gamekeepers in the countryside ‘shot out’ the nests of crows and magpies, and killed jays with relentless efficiency.
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