The Bristol Six + Eight Magazine - October 2020

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THE BRISTOL SIX + EIGHT MAGAZINE OCTOBER 2020 - ISSUE 69 DELIVERED FREE EACH MONTH ACROSS WESTBURY PARK, COTHAM, KINGSDOWN, NORTH CLIFTON AND REDLAND

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You may be concerned that increasingly, solicitors’ practices are becoming ‘law firms’ with a solicitor meeting the client, taking on a matter and then supervising paralegals and legal executives to carry out the work. Corfield Solicitors does not operate in this way; we simply offer three fully qualified solicitors, personally dealing with your matter from start to finish. Deciding to leave his city centre firm, Jonathan Corfield established his own practice in Sneyd Park in 2009 where he and his wife have lived for many years and raised their family. Charles Corfield joined the practice later that year after graduating from Bristol University with a Masters in Law and both were later joined by Stuart Corfield when he also qualified as a solicitor. Our fees are set in order to make a living rather than a fortune. No ‘extra costs’ are added for home visits. No additional ‘out of hours’ charges are made.

Fixed Fee Conveyancing House sale or purchase Flat sale or purchase

£1,000 £1,000

Our fixed fees for conveyancing do not apply to new build or off plan purchases, or properties priced in excess of £900,000.

Wills

Single Will Joint (Mirror) Wills

£195 £295

Probate

Charged at usual hourly rate with no additional percentage of the value of the estate added.

No extra charge for home visits or evening appointments 2


Lasting Powers of Attorney

One type of Both types of LPA LPA Individual £400 £600 Couple £600 £900

Hourly Rate

For work carried out on a timed basis, our hourly rate for all three solicitors is £195. All prices exclusive of VAT.

Residential Conveyancing & Property Issues • • • • •

Purchase & Sale Freehold & Leasehold Remortgage Retirement property purchase Probate property sale

Commercial Property

• Purchase, Sale & Lease • Renewal, variation or surrender of leases • Rent Deposit Deeds & Rent Reviews • Licences to Assign • Local Authority planning agreements • Preparation of auction documentation • Options, conditional sales and pre-emption

Services for the Elderly and Carers

• Home visiting • Nursing home & hospital visiting • Residential, Nursing care provision & funding issues • Retirement property purchase • Wills & Powers of Attorney

Wills Probate and Trusts • • • •

Joint & Single Wills Codicils & updates Provision of Executor services Immediate assistance when a loved one has died • Probate & Administration • Trust administration assistance • Declaration of Trust

Powers of Attorney

• Lasting Powers of Attorney • Registration of Enduring Powers of Attorney • General Powers of Attorney • Appointment of a Court of Protection deputy

Telephone:

0117 968 8890 Office: 2 The Avenue, Sneyd Park, Bristol, BS9 1PA

Email: info@corfieldsolicitors.com

Or visit our website: www.corfieldsolicitors.com

Honest, down to earth fixed fees and hourly rate 3


THE EDITOR’S SMALL PIECE 10

0%

Quality Serv ice

Hi there and welcome to the September issue of the magazine, and after a gloriously sunny few days break in mid-Wales it now feels as if Autumn has properly arrived. Which is fine by me - the good weather that arrived at the same time as “you know what” in March has been terrific, but it feels like it is time to move on into the season of mellow fruitfullness, when hazelnuts can be harvested (a real childhood memory), wierd and wondereful funghi spring up (like the one on the front cover we spotted in a park in Cheshire last year, and which we think may be a “Fly Agaric” (def. not to be consumed), and the temptation to turn the heating on begins to gnaw at you. Oh, and there are chocolate coins and advent calendars in certain local shops.

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In case any reader is interested then a kitten update for you - our two lockdown acquisitions have been with us for 6 months now, so are 8 months old. It has been great fun watching them develop from inquisitive little bundles of fluff into sleek young hunters who now, like teenagers, think they can decide when they go out and when they need to come back in. No spider, falling leaf or biscuit crumb is safe from them now - but they still love their home comforts and like nothing better than curling up with their grandparents (as we are now known) on the sofa. Have a great month and see you in November.

• Stylish • Made to Measure • Unique Range • Lifetime Guarantee

Andy

Do Get In Touch andy@bcmagazines.co.uk 0117 259 1964 / 07845 986650 8 Sandyleaze, WoT, BS9 3PY

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USEFUL INFORMATION Contact Numbers

Local Libraries - please check times in advance if possible as opening hours may vary

Gas Emergencies 0800 111 999 Electricity Emergencies 0800 365 900 Water Emergencies 0845 702 3797 Avon & Somerset Police Non-Emergencies 101 (new no.) Crimestoppers 0800 555 111 Southmead Hospital 0117 950 5050 Bristol Royal Infirmary 0117 923 0000 Bristol Children’s Hospital0117 342 8460 NHS non-emergency 111 Bristol Blood Donation 0117 988 2040 The Samaritans 08457 909090 Alcoholics Anonymous 0845 76975 55 ChildLine 0800 11 11 National Rail Enquiries 08457 484950 Telephone Pref Service 0845 070 0707 Mailing Pref Service 0845 703 4599 West of England Care & Repair - help, advice & info 0300 323 0700

Waste & Recycling Due to the current Covid19 situation the Household Waste and Recycling Centre on Kingsweston Lane, Avonmouth is opening and operating to a non-standard timetable. Please check www.bristolwastecompany. co.uk for up to date information - save yourself a long wait or an abortive trip! Bristol City Council The Council website offers residents information about BCC services including council tax, bins & recycling, schools, leisure, business, streets and parking. Visit www.bristol.gov.uk or contact the General Enquiries switchboard on 0117 922 2000.

Postal Services please check times in advance if possible as opening hours may vary

Trains to / From Temple Meads Due to the current Covid19 situation train travel is severley disrupted and train timetables liable to regular change. Please check www.gwr.com for comprehensive up to date advice or call 03457 000 125 (09:00-17:00, 7 days a week)

Cotham Pharmacy & Post Office 9 - 6 Monday to Friday 9 - 1 Saturday Whiteladies Rd Post Office 9 - 5.30 Monday to Friday, 9 - 13.00 Saturday

The Silver Line The Silver Line is the only free confidential helpline providing information, friendship and advice to older people - open 24 hours a day, 365 days of the year. Call anytime on 0800 470 80 90.

Gloucester Rd Post Office 9 - 5.30 Monday to Saturday Late Post - there is a late post box at the main Post Office sorting depot on the A38 at Filton. Currently the late post is at 7pm. 6


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Friday 2 October Saturday 7 November

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MUSIC NOW & THEN - DUNCAN HASKELL Album of the Month

original production, in particular the way one song seamlessly flows into the next (as intended). It also contains bonus material that you actually want to hear, something of a rarity in a world where more often means less.

The Delta Sweete [Expanded Edition] by Bobbie Gentry

This month we are breaking our own rules and recommending a reissue. It’s not like we’re shouting about a record which everyone loved the first time around; reaching only number 132 on the US album charts in 1968, it faired even worse over here. In fact, ever since Bobbie Gentry left the public eye in the early 1980s, it’s rare to hear her talked about at all.

So whether you’re hearing The Delta Sweete for the first time or revisiting a long forgotten masterpiece, there is much joy to be found. Next Step The Girl From Chickasaw County by Bobbie Gentry If, like us, The Delta Sweete has you thirsting for more, this expansive collection from 2018 is the answer (and some). Featuring her entire recording career for Capitol Records (7 studio albums and 75 previously unreleased tracks) this is definitive stuff and shows Gentry’s strengths as a songwriter, song interpreter, arranger, producer and performer. An artist who was very much the full package, it leaves you wondering why she isn’t remembered as one of the all-time greats… we guess that’s the price some people pay for doing things their own way and walking away from the celebrity lifestyle.

That wasn’t always the case, especially when she burst onto the scene in 1967 with Ode To Billie Joe. Following the success of that song and its parent album, Gentry decided to pay homage to Mississippi, the state where she had spent the first 13 years of her life (far less than many people had assumed), with The Delta Sweete. The first side of the album is only a hint of what’s to follow. Songs like Okolona River Bottom Band and Big Boss Man have a similarly matter-offact style as Ode To Billie Joe, but then things start getting a little more technicoloured, as if someone laced Gentry’s sweet tea and she’s now strung out on the front porch musing on the life that’s drifting by.

Podcast of the Month Disgraceland

Gentry’s soulful delivery keeps things the right side of sickly and whether an unexpected instrument or lyric, something always turns up to take things in an interesting direction. The only misstep, musically and geographically, comes with Louisiana Man – which feels very much out of place.

Blending music history, true crime and a large dollop of creative license, Disgraceland is a podcast about musicians literally getting away with murder (rather than committing audio crimes). Answering questions such as ‘Did Jerry Lewis kill his fifth wife?’ and ‘How did Sid Vicious and Sam Cooke really die,’ the likes of Guns N Roses, Bob Marley, Amy Winehouse and Whitney Houston all get put under the macabre microscope. With 50 episodes to sink your teeth into, this one should keep you occupied for some time.

The trio of Penduli Pendulum, Jessye’ Lisabeth and Refractions are masterful pieces of chamber pop. The voice draws you in close before the arrangements take you through these slightly off-kilter vignettes, loosely themed and sitting together perfectly. It’s easy to hear why some called this record, “The Sgt Pepper of the swamp.” Not only is this reissue a chance to enjoy an album which passed most people by the first time round, the re-mastering work done by Andrew Batt has vastly improved certain aspects of the

Duncan Haskell - October 2020 8


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THIS MONTH IN BRISTORY News

Pethick-Lawrence was born in Bristol and was the second of thirteen children. After moving to London she worked as a “sister of the people” for the West London Mission at Cleveland Hall. She was also a member of the Suffrage Society and became treasurer of the Women’s Social and Political Union as well as founding the publication Votes For Women in 1907 with her husband both were imprisoned in 1912 for conspiracy.

4 October 1795 The poet and founder of the Romantic Movement, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, married Sarah Fricker in St Mary Redcliffe church. Robert Southey, a fellow poet and friend of Coleridge who now has a blue heritage plaque at his former home of 87 Kingsdown Parade, also got married at the church the same year. Coleridge and Fricker had four children together before eventually separating.

29 October 1969 - Roni Size Born Ryan Owen Granville Williams, but best known as his stage name of Roni Size. Williams grew up in St Andrews and learnt music production at the Sefton Park basement project, a local youth club. Most famous for his work with drum and bass group Roni Size & Reprazent whose debut album, New Forms, won the 1997 Mercury Music Prize. He has also released three solo albums and worked with artists such as Beverley Knight and Krust.

23 October 1912 A sports pavilion at Coombe Dingle belonging to Bristol University, which had been completed only two years earlier, was destroyed by a fire lit by Votes For Women activists. A note found nearby read, “‘Business before pleasure. Hobhouse being responsible will pay. Release Mary Richardson.” Richardson, an activist in the women’s suffrage movement, was serving a sentence in HM Prison Holloway. 26 October 1986 Deregulation of buses meant that for the first time since the 1930 Road Traffic Act, bus services in Bristol city were open to free competition. Buses have been active in the city since 1887, with the Bristol Tramways & Carriage Company (under various different name changes) having a monopoly for the century before deregulation.

Deaths 18 October 1891 – Gronow Davis Gronow Davis was born in Clifton on 16 May 1828. His career with the Royal Artillery saw him rise to the rank of Captain when he was just 20. When he was 27, during the Crimean War, he rescued several injured colleagues during the attack on Redan by running into severe enemy fire – a heroic act for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross. Davis died suddenly at his home on Royal Park, Clifton in 1891 and is buried at Arnos Vale Cemetery.

17 October 1998

Fulham manager Kevin Keegan took his spending to £11 million with the £2 million purchase of Barry Hayles from Bristol Rovers. Having signed for Rovers from Stevenage Borough, Hayles was the club’s record scorer in the 1997 / 98 season with 26 goals in 57 matches. A further 10 goals at the start of the following season was enough to convince the wealthy Division Two side to snap him up.

2 October 1943 - Ernest JH Mackay A pupil of both Bristol Grammar School and Bristol University, Mackay went on to become an eminent archaeologist with a particular focus on Mohenjo-daro and other sites belonging to the Bronge Age Indus Valley Civilisation (in northwestern regions of South Asia). He also served as a captain in the Royal Army Medical Corps in Egypt and Palestine during WW1 and was Custodian of Antiquities for the Palestine Government from 1919 – 1922.

Births 21 October 1867 - Emmeline Pethick Lawrence A women’s rights activist and suffragette,

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GOOD READS - BRUCE FELLOWS’ BOOK RECOMMENDATIONS Better to be feared than loved Machiavelli decided, and in his wonderfully enlightening psychological study, Dictators, Frank Dikotter shows how eight of the twentieth century’s worst tyrants came to the same conclusion. Censorship, highly organised mass demonstrations, paranoia, hubris, ruthless violence, sycophancy and fawning foreign admirers are all key ingredients in the cult of the personality as developed by the likes of Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin and Mao Zedong. Such callousness they displayed towards the people who once offered them love and loyalty! The numbers of deaths they caused beggar belief. And they’re still about; you could name them. This book is a warning from history. In Hannelore Cayre’s amusing and gripping crime novel The Godmother, our heroine is Patience, a widow, and thanks to her exotic upbringing a fluent Arabic speaker, so she can earn a living in Paris translating police wire taps on drug dealers. But her mother’s nursing home is expensive and so are her daughters. The police pay translators ‘off the books’, and she has no pension on the horizon, so when a stash of hash falls into her lap, well, she knows what to do with it. Terrific dialogue, great characters, not least her Chinese neighbour and DNA, her dog, make this is a wonderful read. Banned in the USSR, how did Doctor Zhivago reach the world? The answer is, by a very complicated route. But now you can track that route in Lara Prescott’s fascinating and surprising Cold War novel, The Secrets We Kept. ‘We’ are the secretaries bundled together in one room by the CIA and typing reports very quickly. Prescott uses many of those young women as narrators of her informative and fast-paced story. Boris Pasternak is another narrator as is Olga, his muse. There are spies, KGB interrogations, spangled dresses and plots to counter Sputnik anxiety, as well as a moving love story (not Olga and Boris). Late in the Day by Tessa Hadley features four friends, close since their youth and now much older though still close until Lydia rings to say Zach is dead. The survivors are thrown into uproar. We track their lives in the present and learn how they met and came together. Nothing stays the same; Lydia can’t cope as a widow, Alex and Christine try to help, the two sets of children get involved, secrets come out, loyalties are strained, Christine locks her studio and can’t get back to painting. This is a compelling novel of family life and deep friendship, with entirely believable characters lovingly drawn. Elwood is young, earnest and, in his mind, as good as anyone. But he’s black in Florida in the 1960s and when he’s falsely convicted, he’s sent to be educated at the Nickel Academy, a segregated reform school dedicated to making honest, upright citizens of The Nickel Boys, as author Colson Whitehead calls them in his outstanding novel. Elwood clings to Dr King’s teaching, whatever you do, ‘we will still love you’. But the regime is as cruel as can be imagined; boys are beaten, boys disappear. Can Turner help him? This is a brutal but timely story brilliantly well told. Don’t miss it. Bruce Fellows - October 2020

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Wills Witnessed on Video Calls Made Legal from 28 September 2020

Leila Goodarzi

This summer, the Government announced that it would revise its Wills legislation in response to coronavirus (COVID-19) and from 28 September 2020 the necessary legislation to temporarily permit Wills to be witnessed by video conference or other visual link will come into effect. Importantly, the legislation will have retrospective effect, so Wills witnessed by video link and made from 31 January 2020 will be legal.

How Can My Will Be Witnessed Legally by Video Link? This change is not without its challenges as the risk of not witnessing a Will correctly is to make an invalid Will. Be aware of the following: •

You cannot use pre-recorded video for this process. Live video is required of both signing and witnessing.

There can only be one Will document. There will be an inevitable delay in its completion, whilst it is delivered to both your witnesses for them to sign (again by live video link).

Your Will is not valid until everyone has signed, resulting in an incomplete Will during this lag time. This could present difficulties if, for example, you change your mind or lose capacity between signing the Will yourself and your witnesses signing. The Government’s guidance states that the witnesses should ideally sign within 24 hours. The longer the

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process takes, the greater the risk of encountering difficulties.

There is a risk of loss or damage when posting the Will.

The whole process should be recorded if possible. There will be a minimum of two separate video recordings - one for you to sign the Will and the second for your two witnesses to sign, if they are together in the same room when they do so. If they are in separate places, a third recording will be required.

Electronic permitted.

signatures

are

not

Will This Change Be Permanent? This is a temporary amendment to the Wills Act 1837 and will apply to Wills made up until 31 January 2022. Any Will (which has not already been admitted to probate), made in this way since 31 January 2020 will be valid if compliant with the legislation.


Is It Better to Make My Will by Video Link? It is likely to be more difficult to prove the validity of a Will if the witnessing has not been done correctly and the detailed list opposite indicates the many ways in which witnessing could go wrong, potentially also leading to an increase in challenges to Wills made by video link by opportunistic beneficiaries. Our advice is to only use this newly permitted method of signing and witnessing your Will as a last resort and after having received detailed

professional advice on how to comply with the new procedure. Wherever possible it is preferable to witness your Will either in the presence of a qualified practitioner with the appropriate social distancing in place or with them overseeing the process by video link on a separate screen.

For specialist legal advice on making your Will to ensure it is valid please contact Partner Leila Goodarzi on 07909 682 364, in the Private Client team at awardwinning law firm VWV.

Need Legal Advice? • Buying or selling a house • Estate administration • Family, divorce & children

• Lasting powers of attorney • Personal injury • Wills & inheritance tax

Our COVID-compliant offices are open by appointment only. Contact Leila Goodarzi at lgoodarzi@vwv.co.uk or on 0117 925 2020.

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QUIZ TIME - ANSWERS ON PAGE 59 66 The Human Body 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

3.

Where are your trapezius muscles? What is the average UK male shoe size? If you had a tracheotomy performed, on which part of your body was the surgeon operating? How many pints of blood does the average female have and is this more or less than the average male? Who is Louise Joy Brown?

4.

of the pork pie? Robusta, Liberica and Arabica are all types of what? Name these popular savoury snacks (l to r)

Sport 1. 2.

Name the former coach of the UK cycling team that won numerous gold medals at the 2004, 2008 and 2012 Olympics. Name these sportsmen and women, past and present.

5.

Famous People 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

3. 4. 5.

Name the gas that makes sparkling water fizzy.

What links Sophie Ellis-Bextor to Blue Peter? Who did actress Billie Piper marry in 2001 at the age of 18? Name the four Presidents depicted on Mount Rushmore in South Dakota. What are Karol Wojtyła, Joseph Ratzinger and Jorge Bergoglio best known for? Name these actors and actresses (l to r).

Who scored the first try for the Barbarians against New Zealand in 1973, often considered the greatest rugby try of all time? Which sports are these late commentators most associated with - a) Dave Lanning, b) David Mercer, c) Sid Wadell? Which professional boxing weight comes between featherweight and welterweight?

Food and Drink

The Arts

1.

1.

2.

What are these food-related machines used for (left to right)?

2.

Which English county is the spiritual home

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Artist Edvard Munch and composer Edvard Grieg both came from which country? Name this UK museum.

(continuedoverleaf) overleaf) (continued


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QUIZ TIME - ANSWERS ON PAGE 59 66 3. 4. 5.

With which section of the arts would you associate a) Elisabeth Frink, b) Frida Kahlo, and c) Clarice Cliff? What colours are a) vermillion, b) cerulean, and c) crimson? Who was the outgoing Director General of the BBC?

5.

Music 1.

Geography 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Who “owned” these TV pets - a) Willy from Eastenders, b) Bouncer from Neighbours, c) Shep from Blue Peter?

2. 3. 4.

Which country has the longest border with Brazil? Which of these countries has the highest peak - Denmark, Estonia or Moldova? In which counties would you find the following towns - a) Bakewell, b) Eccles, c) Chorley? If you travel from Stockholm to Barcelona as the crow flies which countries other that Sweden and Spain would you pass over? On which islands would you find the following? (left to right)

5.

Name the Pet Shop Boys first UK number 1 single. Name U2’s first UK number 1 single. Name JLS’s first UK number 1 single. Name Depeche Mode’s first UK number 1 single. Name Pink’s first UK number 1 single.

Pot Pourri 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name the Russian spy poisoned in Salisbury in 2018. In British aristocracy name the five levels of peerage. Who were the first winners of Strictly Come Dancing? Which continent are sloths indigenous to? Which Bristolian actor featured prominently in the first Star Wars trilogy (Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi)?

Who Am I?

Pets 1. 2. 3. 4.

What are the most common male and female cat names in the UK according to a 2019 RSPCA survey? And what, according to the same survey, are the most common male and female dog names? What are the three most popular UK pets, and what percentage of households have them? What sort of cat was Bagpuss?

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Senior Snippets Protecting yourself from flu

Welcome to the latest edition of Senior Snippets: the monthly advisory column with the older members of our community in mind, brought to you by John Moore, Director of Home Instead Senior Care in North Bristol. If you’re 65 and over, it’s vital that you have your seasonal flu vaccination. Flu is not simply a bad cold – and it can increase your risk of more serious illness. Why should I have the flu jab? As we age, our immune system becomes weaker and less able to fight off viruses. Even fit and healthy older people are more vulnerable to catching the flu, and at a greater risk of having serious complications from the flu. Catching flu can also make some existing conditions worse. The NHS provides a free flu jab if: ● you’re aged 65 and over ● you have certain health conditions such as a heart problem, a chronic ● breathing problem, diabetes, chronic kidney/liver disease, Parkinson’s disease or motor neurone disease. ● you’ve had a stroke or mini-stroke ● you have a weakened immune system ● you care for an older person who may be put at risk if you fall ill When should I have the flu jab? Most surgeries and pharmacists start to offer the jab in late September or early October. It takes up to 14 days for the vaccine to take effect, so it’s best to have it as early as possible. I had a seasonal flu jab last year. Do I need one this year? Flu is a highly infectious disease caused by viruses that are always changing. You need a flu jab every year because a new vaccine is produced to target those viruses most likely to be in circulation during the coming winter. Where do I go for my flu jab? You can have your flu jab at your local GP surgery or a local pharmacy. If you would like to speak to someone at Home Instead, please do get in touch. Telephone 0117 989 8210 or email john.moore@homeinstead.co.uk

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GARDENING TIPS FROM HILARY BARBER 1. In October, don’t be too hasty to tidy up the garden as seed heads and grasses create a lovely autumn/winter habitat for the wildlife in your garden. Do also create some piles of twigs and leaves in the back of borders for overwintering frogs or toads and, if you are lucky, a hedgehog! 2. Start to rake up leaves. You can put small quantities in a compost bin and mix them in well, but it is better to compost leaves on their own, to make leaf mould, a great soil improver and mulch 3. You can make a simple leaf mould bin with four posts and chicken wire. Alternatively, use biodegradable loose weave jute sacks (hessian), pack the leaves in tight and store them in a corner of the garden 4. Continue to plant spring bulbs such as daffodils, crocus, alliums, snowdrops and try to finish planting by the end of the month, with the exception of tulips. Tulips are best planted later, in November, to reduce the chance of tulip blight which breeds in warmer soils 5. If they have finished flowering, prune shrub roses by one third to prevent wind rock and breaking of the branches during the winter. Also prune climbing and rambling roses this month and tie in the stems before autumn winds cause any damage 6. Plant hardy trees, shrubs and climbers (especially clematis and wisteria) while the soil is still warm and moist. Give them a good mulch (see 11) If the weather is still clement, with no frosts forecast, you can also continue to plant perennials 7. Complete scarifying, aerating and top dressing to your lawn and apply autumn lawn feed before the end of the month. October is also a good time to lay turf. This may also be the last month for mowing 8. Finish planting of autumn onion sets, shallots and plant garlic. Sow overwintering broad beans such as ‘Aquadulce’, overwintering 24

9.

10.

11.

12. 13.

peas such as ‘Kelvedon Wonder’, and sow some perpetual spinach to overwinter. Divide your herbaceous perennials and rhubarb crowns and have a plant swap with friends! Some perennials can be cut back, but I prefer to leave flowerheads and seeds for the birds and then tidy in spring (unless frosted and then it is best to tidy up blackened stems and leaves). Towards the end of the month start mulching them with well rotted manure, compost, leaf mould or mushroom compost. Give evergreen hedges a final trim before winter. For some lovely spring colour, plant out spring bedding such as wallflowers, Bellis perennis, Primulas and winter pansies.

Happy Gardening! www.facebook.com/HilaryBarberGardens www.instagram.com/hilarybarbergardens

Garden development, Therapeutic gardening and tutoring


Fundamental Changes to Use Classes On 30th June 2020, the government announced plans to “radically reform” the planning system, allowing more types of commercial premises to repurpose. On 1st September 2020 The Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) (Amendment) (England) Regulations 2020 (‘2020 Regulations’) came into force. Significantly, the Regulations: 1 - revokes Parts A and D of the Schedule to the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1987 in relation to England (subject to transitional and savings provisions) (regulation 2). Part A contained use classes A1 to A5 which includes uses commonly found on the high street including shops, cafes and takeaways. Part D contained use classes D1 which are Nonresidential institutions and D2 which is Assembly and leisure. 2 - inserts three new use classes: • Class E which is commercial, business and service; • Class F.1 which is learning and nonresidential institutions; • Class F.2 which is local community. 3 - confirms more uses as sui generis (which are uses in a class of their own). Any building or land which is used for one of the following classes on 31st August 2020 will be treated on or after 1st September 2020 as falling within new Class E: • •

Class A1 (Shops). Class A2 (Financial

and

professional

Your local award winning law firm Wills Probate

• •

services). Class A3 (Restaurants and cafes). Class B1 (Business).

Class F.1 (Learning and non-residential institutions) and Class F.2 (Local community) will replace Class D1 (Non-residential institutions) and Class D2 (Assembly and leisure). New sui generis uses The following uses are confirmed as being sui generis (in a class of their own): • A public house, wine bar or drinking establishment (currently Class A4). • A drinking establishment with expanded food provision (currently mixed use of Class A4 with Class A3). • A hot food takeaway for the sale of hot food where consumption of that food is mostly undertaken off the premises (currently Class A5). • A venue for live music performance. • A cinema (currently Class D2). • A concert hall (currently Class D2). • A bingo hall (currently Class D2). • A dance hall (currently Class D2). Generally, sui generis uses cannot be changed to any other use (including any other sui generis use) without express planning permission. The new Class E is important, covering uses as wide reaching as nurseries, offices, financial services retail, food, gyms, healthcare, and light industry. If there is a change of use within the same use class, it will not be considered a development and will not require planning permission. These changes are expected to increase flexibility and help high streets and town centres to adapt to the ever-changing needs of the consumers and businesses. Developers will no longer need to apply for planning permission for a change of use that fall within the now wider categories under these use classes. Janine Harris is the Head of the Commercial Property at AMD Solicitors. For further advice and assistance on Commercial Property matters, please do not hesitate to contact Janine Harris at janineharris@amdsolicitors.com or by telephone on (0117) 973 5647.

Family Property Commercial

Call us: 0117 962 1205 or visit: www.amdsolicitors.com

25


IT ISSUES - RUSSELL ISAAC Lots to like in Apple’s new iOS14 system update

into various categories.

For the very first time since it’s launch The iPhone (and iPad)is getting a proper face-lift.

Widgets Until now, the iPhone’s widgets have been relegated to the Today View on the left of the main screen. Now, you can pull these widgets out and into your home screen (just like on Android) and get alternate sizes for them. This allows you to customize how your phone looks and quickly access certain functions – very handy. One particular widget from Apple is Smart Stack, which bundles together a variety of widgets into one oblong-shaped box. You can swipe through this to see the others, or Smart Stack will automatically change the widget based on time of day and your usual activity.

The latest version of Apple’s mobile operating system, iOS 14, is now available for download, and you’ll notice several visual tweaks when you first install it. Notably, your home screen looks very different, with an app library, widgets everywhere, and a new look for Siri. First things first – make sure you upgrade to iOS14 - Open the Settings app, tap General, and then Software Update. Your device will search for an update and will then start downloading it. It will take a few minutes and will automatically restart, (so make sure you initiate this when you aren’t doing anything important).

Video If you’re watching a movie on your iPhone but need to switch to a messaging app to respond to someone, Apple’s new Picture-in-Picture mode means you don’t need to hit the pause button. Instead, you’ll see a floating screen over your home screen (or any other app).

Here are the major changes; App Library For years, the iPhone home screen has been a grid of app icons that go on for pages and pages. In iOS 14, you can now hide pages of apps you don’t use often, and a scroll to the right will let you access your new App Library with apps grouped

All in all a great upgrade and worth having a play about with! For a full read-up and how-to guides, visit https://9to5mac.com/guides/ios-14/

26


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HISTORY NOTES No. 152 - JULIAN LEA-JONES How below ground became Bristol’s above ground

that a lorry turning across Redland Hill, knocked the wall down into the quarry. Fortunately by the grace of God, no one was killed, but years later repairs to the stone face are still ongoing, comprising steel rods, plates and cement grout, a technique used successfully on the rock face at the bottom of Bridge Valley Road.

Although nowadays there is much less evidence of the holes from which material was excavated to build Bristol, some are still visible. One is now a hazard for gatherers of the perfect elderflower with which to make cordial or wine. This is because their favoured part of the Downs, alongside Upper Belgrave Road between Pembroke Road and The Avenue, still has many deep holes and depressions that are a surviving feature of the Dumps or Gruffy Grounds. The best elderflowers always seem to grow out of the middle of the steep-sided holes, traps for the unwary flower gatherer.

Crossing to the other side of Blackboy Hill a road sign directs you down Quarry Steps where houses built in the quarry floor have vertiginous back walls. Further along Worrall Road, again backing against the former quarry rockface, was the site of Lester’s Club, later Bristol’s own Moulin Rouge. Although these quarries and mineral workings, including of course those on the sides of the Avon Gorge, are still very visible, northwest Bristol has many others, no longer used, worked out and infilled to provide level ground for parks and leisure facilities. In some places on the Downs, where the infilling has settled over the years, a slight raised line shows the former quarry edge.

Lead came from these and other workings in Clifton, such as Litfield Place, literarily ‘the place of the Lead Fields’. It is possible that some houses still have lead water pipes and rainwater gullies from these workings, especially as there was a lead blowing mill, needed to reduce the ore to the metal, in Jacobs Wells Road. The Romans are known to have used British slaves to operate their Mendip mines, and isotope analysis has confirmed that water cisterns at Pompeii are made from our lead. Andrew Mathieson, Bristol Museums Education Service geologist, said it was thought that they also worked lead here, as the Anglo-Saxon Charter of 883 contains a reference to the mineral being dug on the Downs.

Nowadays often the only clues to their former use, providing limestone and other building materials for Bristol’s nineteenth and early twentieth suburbs, are street names, such as Quarry Road, Claypit Road, off Westbury Road, or Rockside Drive in Henleaze. The latter led down to the former huge Southmead Quarry, closed in 1912. It was bisected at Eastfield Road, colloquially known as ‘Clarke’s Corner’, (now the site of Amelia Court retirement homes). The southern, Henleaze side of this was filled in with WWII bombsite rubble to form the everpopular Old Quarry Park. As an aside, other Bristol bombsite rubble also provided much needed ballast for the “liberty boats” returning to New York after the war where it was used as foundation infill for the East River Drive. Details of this bit of Bristol’s history can be read on the plaque on the Centre opposite the Hippodrome. A poignant thought - there may be children now using the park who are playing on the remains of their great grandparents’ homes.

But what of other holes? One of the largest quarries also along Upper Belgrave Road did not get finally filled until the 1880s. But the most noticeable one today and probably the most remembered is the quarry at the top of Redland Hill which, in the 1950s, was the site of The Glen - where my generation of teenagers flocked on Saturday afternoons. Tiffany’s is no longer a must-visit music venue, because since the 1980’s The Glen has been home to the well-known BUPA Hospital, (currently the Spire Hospital), that sprang like a giant brick mushroom from the quarry floor. Instead of Rocking and Rolling to groups such as Pete Budd and the Rebels, or the Moonrakers who came first in the Skiffle competition, nowadays once sprightly teenagers still visit the same site, but now to be repaired! Ironically, it was the view of repair work on the quarry wall from my hospital ward window which provided the inspiration for this article. It seems

27 28

On a more cheerful note, one of the most popular facilities in the park is the zip wire. Part of the northern end of Southmead Quarry was infilled for houses and tennis courts, but by 1936 the remainder was allowed to fill with spring water as the quarry was no longer viable enough to (continued overleaf)


Free Valuation Day Jewellery, Watches, Silver & Gold Monday 26th October 10am - 4pm

£30,000

at the Salerooms

£6,600

£3,450

£9,300

£4,600

£23,500

Our experienced Valuers, Gemmologist John Kelly and watch specialist Marc Burridge will be at the Salerooms IN A COVID SECURE ENVIRONMENT on the above date appraising jewellery, watches, silver & gold, and providing free verbal sale estimates, without obligation, for possible consignment to the Specialist Sale on Thursday 3rd December. There is ample free parking. No appointment is necessary. For more information please contact Toby Pinn at the Salerooms

We look forward to seeing you in our COVID SECURE environment Every lot in every sale illustrated and sold with live internet bidding Fine Art Auctioneers & Valuers The Auction Centre, Kenn Road, Clevedon, Bristol, BS21 6TT Tel: 0117 325 6789

Further October Valuation Days 29 at www.clevedon-salerooms.co.uk


HISTORY NOTES No. 152 - JULIAN LEA-JONES maintain the pumping necessary to keep it dry. This soon became Southmead Lake, eventually becoming Henleaze Swimming Club, whose history has been thoroughly documented in Derek & Joyce Klemperer’s excellent book, ‘The Quarries and Limekilns of Westbury-on-Trym’.

The cream coloured Bath or Doulting stone seen on many of our public and Victorian buildings dates from the Jurassic age and because it is softer and easily shaped to smooth and regular blocks is often used as facing stone. Another source of stone for local buildings, such as Cabot Tower, Queen Elizabeth’s Hospital and Bristol Grammar School features the red Brandon Hill Grit, a quartzitic sandstone. However, these rocks are extremely hard and can only be faced and trimmed with great difficulty. For example, as recently as the 1980s, the flats on the site of the former Princes Theatre in Park Row required explosives to quarry out the footings. Other buildings using this stone are often faced with Bath stone.

Five limekilns by Southmead Quarry, two of which were under Clarke’s Corner, another in Chock (Chalk) Lane, provided limestone and mortar for most of northwest Bristol’s homes. The limestone quarried on the Downs, both at The Glen and Eastfield and Southmead Quarries was carboniferous limestone - typically dense, hard, and grey which weathers to white, as seen on the exposed rocks in the Avon Gorge. This was used as a building stone, commonly in boundary walls. Liz Loeffler showed me these interesting fossil corals in a wall in Henleaze Road.

We now marvel and are grateful to the foresight of the City Council and the Society of Merchant Venturers and the Lords of Henbury to jointly ensure filled in quarries that form the upland plateau of Clifton and Durdham Downs are saved for public use, but if you stood on Stoke Road in the 1860s you would not have seen a plateau but a series of vast holes that formed the Stoke and Westbury White Lime quarries. For example, where the clump of trees known as the seven sisters, (now five), stand was the Chain Quarry. To get an idea of that nineteenth century landscape, visit the City Art Gallery, or read Anthony Beeson’s book, ‘North Bristol Through Time’ which include the artist William Arnee Frank’s evocative painting, seen here, showing the true size of that one quarry.

It also provided lime for mortar because when they built our new suburbs amongst many other things, they needed lots of lime mortar, the latter being a classic example of entrepreneurship and reuse. Local coal pit owners had lots of coal slack/ dust to get rid of, and someone had the brilliant idea of selling it to builders who could use it to bulk up lime mortar (remember the small black mountain alongside the A4174 by what is now Abbey Wood, which was slack from the Harry Stoke pit, conveniently near Lime Kiln Close?). This formed Bristol’s infamous Black Mortar, the curse of any DIYer drilling walls to put up shelves or hang a picture.

The vast hole took all the material from the dredging the Cumberland Basin lock system and straightening the course of the River Avon by removing the ‘point’ at the former Hot Wells

28 30


HISTORY NOTES No. 152 - JULIAN LEA-JONES House. A special steam engine and trackway was constructed to pull the spoil up through Walcome Slade Gully to the Downs.

into a fissure which put Bristol on the world’s Palaeontological stage. The fissure contained the fossilised remains of a late Triassic aged dinosaur, approximately 2 metres long: Thecodontosaurus antiquus, generally referred to as the “Bristol Dinosaur”

Material for filling former quarries, such as the Pembroke Road Quarry, came from the excavations of the River Frome Culvert in central Bristol. Sometimes ground was moved not to fill holes, but to give a better view, When the new Crescent shaped Council House was built at the head of College Green, the green was lowered by a few feet. I was told that it was this spoil used to form the tennis courts, below the Sea Walls. One of the quarrymen’s most unexpected discoveries was while getting stone from the Durdham Downs quarry, near the present water tower, when they broke into a cavern containing very unusual items which gave rise to yet another urban myth. I was told by ‘one who knows’ that “Of course, “THEY’ hushed it all up, and the workmen were told to seal it up before anyone investigated the contents and delayed work.” Absolute tosh. The reality was the workmen had broken into a cavern, which the City Museum’s geologists believed dated from the last warm phase of the Ice Ages between 128,000 and 116,000 years ago. The cavern was found to contain bones, later identified, as remains of at least twelve hyenas, a bear, two rhinoceroses, several hippopotami, fragments of numerous examples of wild bulls, about five deer, and five or six elephants, (a veritable Ice Age Zoo)! The bones were nearly all fractured into small pieces, with a greater proportion of teeth and horns to other parts of the bodies. Taking this fact into consideration, together with the marks of gnawing on the bones, and the certainty that the cave could not have accommodated more than a small fraction of the animals represented by the remains, scientific observers concluded that the den had been the retreat of hyenas, which had carried there portions of their prey. Surely a splendid example of truth being stranger than fiction! Andrew Mathieson said that the Museum even made a model of the cavern.

Stone was also needed for all the new roads, many of which still have kerbstones of greengrey pennant sandstone from Frome Valley quarries. Lampooned as the ‘Colossus of Roads’ was Bristol’s Surveyor of Roads, John Louden McAdam, a plaque on his house in Berkeley Square marking his nineteenth century achievements. His innovative idea was to use locally quarried stone to make a stable roadbed of small graded and compacted rocks, which could pass through a 1 inch, 25mm sieve. Prior to his innovation road construction was a haphazard affair, prone to landowners vested interests. A prominent feature of pictures of his new stone-faced roads shows clouds of white limestone dust – the result of abrasion by iron shod carters’ horses and iron cartwheels. This problem was initially solved by water carts, (with iron rimmed wheels?) wetting the roads to momentarily settle the dust, it was later that the idea of sealing the road surface with a mixture of gravel and bitumen, the now ubiquitous Tarmac® that solved the problem. I am not sure whether John Louden McAdam was responsible for this innovation, but it is on record that the lower levels of the Black Rock Quarry on the bank of the Avon Gorge had bitumen inclusions, some of which were even liquid. A victim of the quarry’s closure was the cottage on the bank of the Avon which had a unique claim to fame. Amongst Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s many proposals was a water supply for Clifton; his plans in the City Archives, show he chose the stone doorstep of the quarry’s cottage as the reference datum for all his elevation measurements. Lastly, Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson were visiting Bristol to see the splendours of the Avon Gorge, and as they were climbing up the Gulley, Watson picked up a rock and asked Holmes, “We have seen many different rocks from the quarries here today, but what sort is this?” “it’s sedimentary, my dear Watson”. Eur-Ing. Julian Lea-Jones - C. Eng., FRAeS © Julian Lea-Jones, 2020 (NB. The Editor accepts no responsibility for the quality of the

In 1834 Durdham quarrymen again broke through

above “joke”)

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Advertising Feature Bristol-based electricians Lek-Trix Limited has been named Which? Trusted Trader of the Month for September 2020.

‘I am always trying to constantly improve and strive for good customer service so people can say traders are alright too! That’s our main motivation.’ Lek-Trix is a team of three: Dan, his partner Frankie, and Lee who joined recently and is training. Dan said: ‘Being a small team enables us to keep it a bit more personal. If I come out and quote the job, most of the time it’s me that’s doing it.’

September 2020

Lek-Trix became a Which? Trusted Trader in 2016 because it was ideal for its customers and there were few Trusted Traders in the area who were electricians. ‘Most customers recognise that Which? Trusted Traders has genuine reviews and when people realise that Which? vets the reviews it gives them confidence.’

No job is too big or small for Lek-Trix, which does a wide range of electrical work, including lighting, power and fitting smart home systems. This is the company’s second win, with Lek-Trix Limited also named Trusted Trader of the Month in August 2019. It also achieved a Certificate of Distinction in June 2020, awarded to a select few traders who achieve the highest standards.

As well as being committed to looking after its customers, Lek-Trix throws itself into charity and community work. The judges commended its efforts to support an electrician intraining. Lek-Trix donated tools to an individual who wanted to change careers and train as an electrician but was finding it tricky to get work experience without the necessary equipment. Since then, he has joined the team while he studies.

Lek-Trix is recommended by 100% of customers on its Which? Trusted Trader profile page at the time of writing. Customers often praise its reliability, high standard of work, tidiness and promptness. So perhaps it’s no surprise that LekTrix says that the majority of work comes from repeat customers or from word-of-mouth recommendations.

Every customer is involved in LekTrix’s charity work with Beam which supports homeless people looking to retrain and get back into work. When an invoice is paid, customers get a £10 prepaid donation card and they choose who to support with it via the Beam website.

Founder Dan Haynes told us: ‘We are always proud of our work and do everything to the highest standard. We’re proud of the response we get from customers. As long as the customer is happy then we have won. If we’re not happy with something we are not ashamed to say that it’s not right and we will change it.’

Congratulations to Dan & Frankie, who are keen to say a big thank you to all their customers in BS9 for their support and positive feedback.

www.lek-trix.co.uk - 0117 902 0171 34


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CHILDREN’S PUZZLES - answers on page 59 Who Am I? Can you spot the famous people disguised below?

What Am I? Pick the correct name to match the photo.

Nachos

Bowler

Crimson

Chop Suey

Fedora

Turquoise

Edam

Paella

Trilby

Emerald

Parmesan

Falafel

Panama

Indigo

Feta

Where Am I? In which countries would you find the following landmarks?

36

Cheddar


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37


Falkland Islands penguins revisit the SS Great Britain, 50 years on

With five species and around a million breeding birds, the Falklands has one of the largest breeding populations of penguins in the world. The islands are also home to the largest breeding population of black-browed albatross – 70% if the global population.

Five species of penguin will arrive at Brunel’s SS Great Britain in Bristol this October half term.

The SS Great Britain spent more time in the Falklands than any place else (84 years in total, including time as a floating cargo store) and, to mark the 50th anniversary of her departure, the visitor attraction in Bristol has added a new exhibit and family trail.

The lifelike models are part of a family trail bringing the ship’s incredible homecoming story to life, marking the 50th anniversary of her journey from the Falkland Islands.

Each visitor (from 17 October onwards) will be given their own ‘Stanley’s Penguin Trail’ – a colourful guide that sets them off on a hunt for penguin eggs, highlighting exhibits and stories connected with the homecoming journey from the Falkland Islands in 1970. They will meet each of the five penguin species along the way as well as a dramatic new exhibit in the museum – a black-browed albatross with a two-metre wingspan. The albatross, which died of natural causes, has been preserved and travelled from the Falkland Islands; a gift from the Falkland Islands Museum and Falkland Islands Association.

The SS Great Britain was brought ‘home’ to Bristol from Sparrow Cove in the Falkland Islands where she had spent 33 years. That salvage was the most ambitious and pioneering ever undertaken, and the 8,000mile journey was the longest ever under tow.

The penguin trail – along with an outdoor photography exhibition – are part of a collaboration with support from the Falkland Islands Government and Falkland Islands Association.

Built by Brunel in 1843, the SS Great Britain was one of the most innovative ships in the world. She carried over 30,000 passengers. New exhibits at the award-winning visitor attraction include the family of penguins and an albatross, bringing the final chapter of the ship’s history to life. Along with two existing museums, historic dockyard, dry dock and the SS Great Britain herself, visitors enjoy a safe, full day out.

A day out at Brunel’s SS Great Britain has been unanimously praised as safe and enjoyable by TripAdvisor reviewers, with trails, oneway routes and warm welcome from staff all frequently mentioned. Tickets and timeslots can be booked online at ssgreatbritain.org, and tickets are valid for unlimited revisits for a year.

The SS Great Britain – the world’s first great ocean liner – lay abandoned in the Falkland Islands for 33 years with a colony of penguins and the occasional albatross for company. Sparrow Cove is home to 1,600 Gentoo penguins and is where Brunel’s great ship set off from on her final ‘homecoming’ voyage 50 years ago when she was rescued.

You can win a family pass to the SS Great Britain - have a go at this month’s Prize Wordsearch opposite.

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PRIZE WORDSEARCH This month the wordsearch has a very Bristolian feel to it as it is all about Mr Brunel and his engineering feats - oh, and penguins of course. To coincide with the new adventure trail launched this month at the SS Great Britain, celebrating the 50th anniversary of her homecoming, we are offering a family season ticket (for 2 adults plus 3 children) as the prize. Check out page 54 for more details of what is going on at SSGB.

(07845 986650), or phone (0117 259 1964). Best of luck - here are the words you are looking for. GWR ENGINEER CHINSTRAP RENKIOI HOSPITAL TAMAR BRIDGE BOX TUNNEL WESTERN EASTERN RAILWAYS MAGELLANIC ADELE MACARONI HUMBOLDT ROCKHOPPER EMPEROR GENTOO BRUNEL SS GREAT BRITAIN SUSPENSION KINGDOM ISAMBARD

Listed below are twenty one words associated with either IKB or penguins Twenty of the words have also been hidden in the wordsearch puzzle - and can be listed running forwards, backwards, up, down or on a diagonal. Just let me know the word that is missing from the grid, and if you are correct and first out of the hat after the closing date of 31st October you will win the family ___________________________ season ticket to one of Bristol’s most popular and exciting attractions. Entries please, no later than 31st October, by post (8 Sandyleaze, WoT, BS9 3PY), email (andy@bcmagazines.co.uk), text

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The winner of the August Moldova board game was Rebecca Saunders who spotted that Belarus was the missing country. The children’s puzzle was won by Jessica Escosio for spotting that Estonia was missing from the puzzle. Jessica wins herself a Hobbycraft gift voucher. Thanks as ever to everyone who took the trouble to enter.

Da

Brunel

N I O K L I T S N L U G L O M G P Q F Y G E S L

N F C B T N S K I G H V A X W Z J X Y U M Z M X

Z B F I J H K A R U O G A K E M P E R O R S B A

M Y K R G S Y U M A Z H E N H O M F N M K N X J

I Q M E P Z B B Y B P J D U V T A E N W S D J P

G Z T A C Z O B U J A I B U U L C H I E E R A A

renkioihospital

K U P V V L B C V J D R L B A K A L N S Z O N R

S S A A D V E W Y W K X D T C B R T I M X C S T

T E V T K S P O T X K G I Q I D O O A J J K G S

N J R S Y A W L I A R P E D N V N A T F E H N N

E C O G G A F E M R S C D L A J I I I L N O A I

D B L K A R Q U S O T T P I L T W D R E B P K H

S Z W M W E D O H T H C L E L H A J B N L P W C

39 tamarbridge

E P J E B H R I V R E T G H E G U U T N N E Y J

Z G Y B K Q O E B X E R L X G N W J A U V R A E

K T D D X I W L E R A E N O A R H R E T G W Y Y

M D X I K Y N H D N N K V Y M E S Y R X P A A T

H W Y N R N M H B U I G G L T T T Y G O E C L T

boxtunnel

D Z E I N B S W R Q C G L P M S X Q S B W Q J K

R R Q Z Y Y R B W W O B N E Z A V C S E E T Y L

M G E N T O O A C S V E S E T E K I N G D O M N

Q I C V J Z Q C M A P G N O I S N E P S U S Q T

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N N M U K X V L A A U I K P R H L O B U I U F H

S M N L B S Y K E Y T X Z B N P T Z M Q U J C N

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* Virtual Pilates classes * ➢ Pre-recorded video sessions available via Vimeo, offering flexibility over when and where you take the class ➢ Live 1-to-1 and 2-to-1 sessions conducted via Skype, allowing for tailored instruction and real-time feedback

Socially-distanced group classes also now running at Redland Parish Church Halls: Tuesday, 18:15

Free 30-minute taster video available now

Wednesday, 18:30

Friday, 09:15

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Qualified sports massage therapist based in the BS9 area. Massages available include full body relaxation and injury rehabilitation. Prices: £25 - half an hour massage £40 - hour massage Please get in touch for enquiries: Phone- 07717 743 598 Email- heather.sportsmassage@gmail.com

Facebook- Heather’s Sports Massage

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RIVER AVON TIDE TIMES Here are your River Avon tide times for the weekends in October, with the highest high tides (over 14m) highlighted in red.

Date

High

Low

High

Sat 3rd October

0800

1453

2016

Sun 4th October

0830

1522

2045

Sat 10th October

1146

1802

0027 (Sun)

0639

1305

Sun 11th October

Low

1929

Sat 17th October

0717

1410

1936

Sun 18th October

0800

1454

2019

0556

1240

1843

Sat 24th October Sun 25th October

0140

0714

1424

2052

Sat 31st October

0654

1340

1912

0200 (Sun)

Sun 1st November

0728

1419

1945

© Crown Copyright and/or database rights. Reproduced by permission of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office and the UK Hydrographic Office (www.GOV.uk/UKHO).

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HOWARD I N D E P E N D E N T E S TAT E A G E N T S

HOWARD I N D E P E N D E N T E S TAT E A G E N T S

With more than 30 years of industry experience, the Howard agency is the personal vision of Howard Davis. This professional and truly local With morebusiness than 30isyears experience, property bornof ofindustry family values - trust, the Howard agency is the personal vision of honesty and loyalty. The Howard team really cares CLIFTON BS8 £550,000 CLIFTON BS8 local £1,500,000 Howard Davis. This and truly about the people it professional does business with and this property business is born of family values trust, A grand hall floor level garden garden (front and An individually designed five bedroom stone built beautiful area that we all live and work in. The back) flat offers garage, gardens, cellar rooms detached house, with additional three bedroom honesty and loyalty. team really cares and a spacious interior complete with The many Howard annex, a secluded location tucked away at the end well-liked and respected experts at Howard have original features. No onward chain. of a private Clifton mews, double garage, parking, about theofpeople it does business with and this decades combined sales and lettings courtyard and mature gardens, superb Clifton location. beautiful area that all live and work in. The understanding and we exceptional knowledge of well-liked and respected experts at Howard have Bristol, Somerset and the surrounding suburbs. decades of combined sales and lettings understanding exceptional of If you We what weand do and would knowledge to help you! Bristol, Somersettoand surrounding have a property sellthe or let, one of oursuburbs. professional experts would be delighted to offer you a free We what wecall do and would help .you! If you 0117 923to8238 valuation. Just us on have a property to sell or let, one of our professional experts would be delighted to offer you a free 8238BS8 . £525,000 valuation. call us on 0117 923 FAILAND REDLAND BS6 Just £390,000 An exceptional top floor two bedroom apartment forming part of this desirable Victorian mansion, roof terrace and communal gardens, and off street parking.

Two double bedroom, detached garden. A most attractive and well presented detached bungalow with gravel driveway leading to the garage and car port. Beautifully maintained gardens. Two double bedrooms with en-suites and a spacious loft space.

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HOWARD I N D E P E N D E N T E S TAT E A G E N T S

HOWARD I N D E P E N D E N T E S TAT E A G E N T S

With more than 30 years of industry experience, the Howard agency is the personal vision of Howard Davis. This professional and truly local With morebusiness than 30isyears experience, property bornof ofindustry family values - trust, the Howard agency is the personal vision of honesty and loyalty. The Howard team really cares REDLAND BS6 £390,000 REDLAND OIEO £950,000 Howard Davis. This and truly local aboutBS6 the people it professional does business with and this property business is born of family values trust, light flat Two double bedrooms. Wonderfully A substantial and well-presented Victorian gable beautiful area that we all live and work in. The fronted family house. Offering six bedrooms, and provides amazing views across the city honesty loyalty. The Howard team cares allocated and towards Bath, areally sunny have balcony, spacious kitchen/breakfast room, living room, well-likedand and respected experts at Howard secure underground parking two family bathrooms, en-suite, cloakroom, about the it does business with and thisspace and the decades ofpeople combined sales and convenient lettings location to the City, the Downs and second reception room and home office. Whiteladies Road. Gardens front and rear and no onward beautiful area that we all live and work in. The understanding andchain. exceptional knowledge of well-liked and respected experts at Howard have Bristol, Somerset and the surrounding suburbs. decades of combined sales and lettings understanding exceptional of If you We what weand do and would knowledge to help you! Bristol, Somersettoand surrounding have a property sellthe or let, one of oursuburbs. professional experts would be delighted to offer you a free We what wecall do and would help .you! If you 0117 923to8238 valuation. Just us on have a property to sell or let, one of our professional experts would be delighted to offer you a free 8238BS8 . £149,000 valuation. call us on 0117 923CLIFTON REDLAND BS6 Just £355,000 Two double bedroom first floor flat, with private roof terrace in a sought after Redland location, a stone’s throw from Whiteladies Road with no onward chain.

An upper floor retirement apartment enjoys suburb views over Clifton. One bedroom apartment. Well placed for Whiteladies Road, the Downs and Clifton Village. Residents parking and attractive communal gardens.

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203 Whiteladies Road Clifton, Bristol BS8 2XT

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43


CHARLOTTE’S CAKES

Chocolate & Banana Cake with a Peanut Butter Topping For the Cake • 170 grams butter • 225 grams caster sugar • 2 large ripe bananas • 1/2 tsp vanilla essence • 285 grams self raising flour • 1/2tsp salt • 1/2 bicarbonate of soda • 3 large eggs • 100 grams dark chocolate chips For the icing; • 300 grams Icing sugar • 100 grams smooth peanut butter • I00 grams butter • Milk • 30 grams dark chocolate Method 1. Preheat the oven to 160 gas or 150 fan. 2. Line one cake tin with greaseproof paper. 3. Mash the bananas with a fork and add the vanilla essence. 4. Whisk the eggs in a separate bowl and set aside. 5. Place the butter and sugar in a pan on the hob at a low heat. The butter should melt and the sugar dissolve. Once this happens leave the pan to one side to cool for 5 minutes. Then stir into the pan the salt, flour, bicarbonate of soda and beat throughly. Add the bananas to the mix. 6. Then start to add the egg a little at a time, beating continuously until fully combined. 7. Fold in the chocolate chips, pour the batter into tin and place into the oven for around 50 minutes. Place a knife into the centre of the cake, if it comes out clean the cake is done. If it is not clean continue to cook for a further 10 minutes. 8. Allow the cake to cool before adding the icing. Place the butter, icing sugar and peanut butter in a bowl. Using an electric whisk combine all the ingredients together until smooth. The icing should fall of the spoon when lifted but still be able to maintain its shape. If the icing is too stiff add a little milk. Likewise, it is too runny add a little more icing sugar. 9. Melt chocolate in a microwave. Allow to cool for 5 minutes. Spread the icing over the top of the cake, drizzle the top of the icing with the chocolate. Dragging a knife through the chocolate and icing will create an effective swirl pattern. Enjoy!! Top tips If you’re not a fan of peanut butter, any other icing such as chocolate or salted caramel would also work really well. You can use other types of chocolate chips, 44 such as white or milk, or a combination of both!


Inheritance Tax (IHT) Receipts At Record Highs The latest HMRC statistics for tax receipts show IHT receipts for June 2020 as £508 million, 42% higher than the £357 million of June 2019. It is estimated that around 66% of people don’t plan appropriately for IHT liability, meaning there is a total of around £15 billion in unprotected assets in the UK. Whilst shaping your Will as tax efficiently

nally d to end. , do ncial

cant 00k ider or sion ome

of £20,000 should be fully utilised. For as possible is perhaps the first port Enterprise (EIS) up of call. YouInvestment may also Schemes wish to consider to £1m can be invested before 6th Aprilis whether making some lifetime gifts 2020 and qualify for 30% income tax a sensible option as certain gifts made relief, capital gains taxwill deferral and if from held during your lifetime be exempt in qualifying companies for over 2 years IHT: become inheritance tax free. VCTs can be Annual exemption: this30% means giving invested in qualifying for income tax gifts of up to a total of £3,000 each tax relief and dividend and capital gains tax free. year. Investment bonds can deliver valuable tax deferment before transferring or assigning Small gifts exemption: you can make to a non-tax-paying adult on encashment gifts of up to £250 to as many people thereby delivering tax free returns. as you like. Pensions; Use any unused annual Normal expenditure gifts £40k exemption: allowances carried Make includes regular gifts forward. out of surplus income contributions that do notto reduce your pension reduce your standard of living. taxable income (see above for important thresholds). Review your pension’s death Other lifetime gifts, particularly if made benefits to ensure your pension benefits outright, will in most instances from the changes made since 5thattract April no IHT when they are made and IHT 2015.

will be avoided altogether if the donor

Trusts can also provide a way of controlling gifts and can be as rigid or as flexible as you prefer and offer a range of tax and non-tax benefits. The payment of regular contributions to a life insurance policy held in trust for those who will inherit your estate on death would normally qualify as being exempt and the sum can be used to pay any tax due. Did you know that your Cash and Stocks & Shares ISAs can be switched to IHTfree ISAs? An Estate Planning Review can pinpoint areas such as those above and might enable you to reduce the Inheritance Tax due on your estate. How to book Call 0117 363 6212 or email richard@ haroldstephens.co.uk or contact us through the website www. haroldstephens.co.uk for your complimentary Estate Planning review. Harold Stephens provides friendly financial advice in the local community on a face-to-face basis in a welcoming location at 50, High Street, Westbury on Trym. The firm specialises in advising retired clients on savings, investments, Inheritance Tax and long-term care planning.

nual with er a fore

gift

survives for the following seven years.

45


Your gift will ensure patients of the future receive the very best treatment and care. Bill Long decided to leave a gift in his Will as a thank you to the NHS for saving his life.

Have your Will written for free and support your local NHS We are living through unprecedented times which will shape the way we live and work for a long time to come. The Coronavirus pandemic will also shape the medical landscape and how our NHS can continue to care for our communities. Sarah Harrison, director of Southmead Hospital Charity, said: “Every day I am amazed by my NHS colleagues who save lives and care for patients and their families. “This has been a challenging time for us all and we need to do all we can to ensure future generations won’t face the uncertainties we have.” Leaving the gift of a donation in your Will is a special way to leave your legacy for the future. Your gift could play a vital role in helping your NHS in Bristol plan for the future; transforming lives for generations to come by providing state-of-the-art medical equipment or funding pioneering research.

46

He said: “Eight years ago I was treated for prostate cancer here at Southmead Hospital and the surgeons saved my life. “Without them I wouldn’t be here today so I want to give something back to our precious NHS. “The process of leaving a gift in my Will was simple. I owe my life to the NHS and I’m proud that my legacy could save other lives in the future.” Write your Will for free. Southmead Hospital Charity has partnered with local solicitors to offer you the opportunity to have your Will written for free. Write or update your Will, at no cost to you, during September and in return we ask you to kindly consider leaving a gift to your local NHS through Southmead Hospital Charity. To discuss leaving a gift in your Will, request an information pack, or to register your interest in a free Will visit southmeadhospitalcharity.org. uk or contact Cate on 07514 941393.


Will written for free Have your WillNHS written for free rt your local and support your local NHS

p to transform lives.

Gifts Wills help r Will is a in special way to totransform support lives. utureLeaving generations. a donation in your Will is a special way to

support your wonderful NHS for future generations.

If you are interested in having your Will written for free and supporting your localWill written for free and supporting your local hospitals in North Bristol n touch with our Philanthropy Manager, Cate Everitt, please get in touch with our Philanthropy Manager, to help.

Cate Everitt, on 07514 941 393 who will be happy to help.

spitalcharity.org.uk southmeadhospitalcharity.org.uk Registered charity No: 1055900 47


FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOR BS9 We are a team of independent financial advisers focussed on delivering excellence. Our experience and insight enables us to match our services to your specific needs, throughout your entire financial journey with us. We have 2 specialist advisors that represent us in BS9 so if you are looking for tax efficient independent financial advice please do get in contact:

Ben Olson B.Sc(Hons) Dip. PFS Independent Financial Adviser Call 01275 373348 E-mail b.olson@grosvenorconsultancy.co.uk

Phil James Dip. PFS Independent Financial Adviser Call 01275 373348 / 07847 490270 E-mail p.james@grosvenorconsultancy.co.uk

"providing structure and direction to your finances"

Become a Client: The Grosvenor Consultancy experience is defined by outstanding service and a comprehensive commitment to the provision of exceptional advice. If you are considering becoming a client, we would like to make sure that our services will be suitable and beneficial for you. Please call us on 01275 373348 or visit www.grosvenorconsultancy.co.uk

Grosvenor Consultancy Limited, 76 Macrae Road, Eden Office Park, Ham Green, Bristol, BS20 0DD T: 01275 373348 | E: ifa@grosvenorconsultancy.co.uk www.grosvenorconsultancy.co.uk Registered No: 3509936. Authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority

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THINKING OF MOVING? If you’re looking to sell or rent, this is your personal invitation to receive a free, honest and informal valuation of your property with our local experienced sales teams. All of our staff have a wealth of knowledge of the local area and would be delighted to

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it ive t h e mo st pos “Be st y e t wit h e we ’ve ha d nc rie e p ex s elli ng te d mit com ry Ve g en t. a n es t a te a a nd m, a te l a ion a nd pro fe ss ts in ou r int e res t h e y a ct ed t h eir t rus t uld wo t hro u gho ut (I sa l es )” re u t fu on ju dg e m en t Mr P Ban cro ft

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Maggs + Allen | 60 Northumbria Drive | Henleaze | Bristol | BS9 4HW t: 0117 949 9000 | e: agency@maggsandallen.co.uk | www.maggsandallen.co.uk 51


Bristol North West Climate Action Group - October update

Bristol buses will be fully compliant with Euro VI emission standards in time for the implementation of Bristol’s Clean Air Zone. This will be achieved through retrofitting cleaner technology to diesel buses and the introduction of more biomethane powered buses.

Introduction There was hope that things might return to some sort of ‘normal’, with schools and colleges back. But with Covid on the rise again and warnings from Sir David Attenborough about the extinction of thousands of species, there is plenty we still need to do to look after ourselves and our planet.

Bristol City Council is embarking on a programme of road improvements that will benefit routes such as Service 2 over the coming months. This should act as a great example of what can be done to improve bus services in our city and help reduce congestion and air pollution.

On the move with First Bus The onset of lockdown on 23 March and government advice to avoid public resulted in passenger numbers on our buses falling to less than 10% of normal levels. First Bus changed its timetables more than a dozen times to keep pace with the rapidly changing shape of the lockdown. New cleaning regimes were introduced, plus safety procedures and social distancing measures to keep staff and customers safe.

Equal access to green space For many, walking provided a muchneeded sense of freedom following the COVID-19 outbreak, helping us to stay healthy and boost our wellbeing during difficult times. But we did not experience lockdown equally. Evidence shows that poor access to green space is bad for our health and widens the gap in health outcomes between the richest and poorest in society. The Ramblers are calling on government to guarantee that no one lives more than five minutes’ walk from green space, under the Environment Bill. Write to your MP to ask for fairer access to green space: https://www.ramblers.org.uk/ walkinnature?s=09

Currently buses are running at just under half normal capacity, due to the reduction in the number of seats available on each bus. First Bus is using technology to help plan your journey, with changes to its app so that customers can see how many seats are available on each bus.

Stark warning about species extinction Just in case you missed it, here is the link to Sir David Attenborough’s documentary Extinction: The Facts. For once Britain’s favourite naturalist is not here to celebrate the incredible diversity of life on Earth but to issue us all with a stark warning: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/scienceenvironment-54118769

The reopening of shops and leisure facilities in July, and the return of schools in September saw First’s passenger numbers steadily climb to around 50% of normal levels. With changes in people’s attitude to risk and the growth in home working, passenger levels are likely to remain at these levels for the foreseeable future.

Keep in touch To join our mailing list and to share your ideas, reflections and creative ways that can help tackle the climate emergency locally. Email: BNWclimateaction@ outlook.com 52


s 0 apply e i t er 5,00 ent fee p Pro £18einstatem m dr froity fee an

un mm Co

Anyone for cricket? Enjoy retirement living in your own apartment in the leafy suburbs of Westbury-on-Trym in Bristol. Established around a cricket pitch and offering a haven of calm and an inviting community spirit, Westbury Fields is a most attractive place to call home. We’re sure you’ll be bowled over! To find out more about living at Westbury Fields please call our sales team on 0117 919 4254. www.stmonicatrust.org.uk/villages/westbury-fields

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53


WHAT’S ON & COMMUNITY NEWS Listings continue to be a little different at the moment. Given the current restrictions on gatherings, and the continuing requirement for social distancing, the ongoing operation of many of the clubs, societies, choirs, social groups, fitness sessions and companionship groups remains difficult. So rather than reiterate activities in each listing that may not now be possible it seemed sensible to just list the local groups who have asked to feature, together with their contact names and details.

field and are being delivered by internet until we are able to resume evening meetings at Redmaids’ High School, Bristol BS9 3AW. The lecture on 13 October is on “Peggy Guggenheim and her impact on twentieth century art” and the lecture on 10 November is on “Prehistoric Potters”. For more information visit our website www.theartssociety-bristol. org.uk Babbers Radio Show info@ujimaradio.com.

If, going forward, the organisers of any group that wants a fuller updated listing, detailing how they will be running things in a coronavirus-compliant manner, wishes to get in touch then I will be more than happy to include them from next month. So, here are the regularly listed clubs and groups together with ther latest contact details I have. If these are incorrect please accept my apologies, and do please update me by emailing andy@ bcmagazines.co.uk.

Beaufort Junior Badminton Club Penny at pennyshears@googlemail.com 07941 013 514 Biodanza Classes Sheila on 07731 697 938. Bridge Tuition 07837300073 tc.stygall@gmail.com

All Together Now Bristol Choir info@alltogethernowchoir.com www.alltogethernowchoir.com

Bristol & Clifton Dickens Society 0117 927 9875 www.dickens-society.org.uk

Bristol French Circle/Cercle français de Bristol For the time being we are meeting on Zoom. Our first two talks will be: 15 October – ‘Le Familistère de Guise, la cité ouvrière idéale’ by Brigitte Thibaut; and 29 October – ‘Quelques traits et expressions français expliqués par Jean de la Fontaine’ by Thierry Viennois. Do visit our website at www.cfbristol.org.uk and get in touch with Charlotte if you would like more information – you will be most welcome! A bientôt – nous attendons avec impatience faire votre connaissance! Charlotte charlottejanetaylor10@gmail.com / 07976 922636

Bristol Alexander School www.bristolalexanderschool.co.uk Caroline at cchalk19@gmail.com Bristol Astronomical Society www.bristolastrosoc.org.uk Bristol Bridge Club with the new English Bridge School is pleased to offer a new On Line Course for beginners, starting Saturday 3rd October, 2020 (10a to 12 noon). Lessons will include live tutorial and practice on line. The first session will be free. Course cost is £100 plus a subscription of £5 per month for the online material (first month free). Concessions for students and those in receipt of benefits. www.bristolbridgeclub.co.uk for more details.

Alpine Garden Society 0117 967 3160.

Bristol Brunel Lions Club Bill O’Neill at lion.bill@virginmedia.com

The Arts Society Bristol has recommenced activities and we welcome new members. Lectures on a wide range of arts related subjects are given by specialists in their own

54


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WHAT’S ON & COMMUNITY NEWS Bristol Philatelic Society 0117 956 7853

Bristol Cabot Choir admin@bristolcabotchoir.org www.bristolcabotchoir.org

Bristol Scrabble Club Sue on 0117 924 7871

Bristol Chamber Choir www.bristolchamberchoir.org.uk Rae Ford on 0117 939 1685 rodcoomber@aol.co.uk

Bristol Shambhala Meditation Group bristol.shambhala.info Bristol Shiplovers Society www.bristolshiplovers.co.uk

Bristol Choral Society launch ‘The Big Picture’ CD on Friday 23 October 2020, 19.30-21.00, online on Zoom.Celebrate with us the release of our first recording of works for choir, piano and percussion with classical label Delphian. Our musical director Hilary Campbell will be joined by Judith Weir, Master of the Queen’s music and composer of the ‘The Big Picture’. You’ll be able to hear extracts from the album, which includes music by Weir, McDowall and Chilcott, and interviews with composers and performers. It is all crisp, exciting and evocative music, and represents a new departure for the choir, moving into the recording world. We’ll be hosting the evening online using the web video conferencing platform Zoom. Once you have bought your ticket you will be given access to the Event Page where you will find details of how to join the event. The event ticket price of £16.76 includes a copy of the CD, which was recorded in January 2020 at St George’s, Bristol. Further copies of the CD will be available to buy shortly from our website, bristolchoral.co.uk. To get a ticket (including the CD posted to you) please visit www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/bristol-choralsocietys-the-big-picture-cd-launch-event-cdincluded-tickets-117884484667.

Carers Support Centre 0117 965 2200 www.carerssupportcentre.org.uk City Voices Bristol www.cityvoicesbristol.org Civil Service Retirement Fellowship Tony McKenna on 0117 950 2059 Clifton Rotary Club www.cliftonrotary.org secretary@cliftonrotary.org The Clifton Singers contact@cliftonsingers.co.uk www.cliftonsingers.co.uk Filtones Choir www.thefiltones.weebly.com Friends of Welsh National Opera will sadly not be able to resume our monthly meetings at Redmaids School until early next year, because of the pandemic and the challenge schools are having keeping students and staff safe. We look forward to welcoming you in 2021. Look out for further news here or contact Melanie David at melaniejdavid@btinternet.com or on 01934 842014 for more information.

Bristol Community Gamelan keithripley27@gmail.com phone 9444241 Bristol Grandparents Support Group 07773 258 270 / www.bgsg.co.uk

Friends of the Downs & Avon Gorge www.friendsofthedowns.org

Bristol Morris Men www.bristolmorrismen.co.uk Grant on 0117 944 2165

Friends of Old Sneed Park Nature Reserve www.spnaturereserve.com Next working party will be held on October 17, 10am to 12 noon. All volunteers must reserve a

56


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Unrivalled large distribution and readership for both our magazines Great value for money Thousands of people read our magazines and keep them for the month Over 15 years our magazines have become trusted and well-loved - “like a little friend arriving through the letterbox each month”. Hand delivered by local people Interesting articles, features and local community news Produced locally to bring local business and local people together

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9


WHAT’S ON & COMMUNITY NEWS Help Support Our Nurses campaign. For full details please visit www.ngs.org.uk

place please email. fospnr@gmail.com. Please bring your own tools and refreshments’ All welcome.

The National Trust Bristol Centre Janet Stanton on 0117 456 3497 www.ntbristolcentre.btck.co.uk

Frisbee Club North Bristol Ultimate on Facebook jake.f.waller@gmail.com.

North West Bristol Camera Club Neville at nevwgoodman@mac.com

Happy Days Memory Café Tony on 0117 968 1002

NotaBene Vocal Ensemble Lisa Smith on 07966 459872 notabenebristol@yahoo.com

Henleaze Singing for the Brain Sophia Simlat on 0117 961 0693 bristol@alzheimers.org.uk

Parkinson’s UK www.parkinsonsbristol.com

Hydrotherapy Exercise Sessions Chris & Ali Cowley on 07971 086 628 www.healthyhydrotherapy.co.uk

Pat-a-Cake Toddlers Group Alison on 0117 962 9715

Instep Club for Widows and Widowers Donna on 01275 832 676 Wilma on 0117 962 8895

People of Note Community Choir www.peopleofnote.co.uk peopleofnote@btinternet.com

Karate Classes Trevor on 07921 917 758

Pilates classes Leanne on 07817 189 474 www.mindbodypilates.org

Keep Fit classes Eileen Scott on 07969 929 733 www.keepfit.org.uk

Redland Green Bowls Club redlandgreenbowls.webs.com

Keep Fit for Living Gill Porter on 01275 877 131.

REMAP custom aids for the disabled 0117 329 5183 www.bristol.remap.org.uk.

Knit & Crochet Café 07561 523 919 brisknitcro@gmail.com

Retired & Senior Volunteer Programme Mina on 07860 669 953 www.RSVP-west.org.uk.

Marie Curie fundraising Helen Isbell on 0117 924 7275 Helen.Isbell@mariecurie.org.uk

Rotary Club of Bristol www.bristolrotary.org Martina at mpeattie@btopenworld.com

Menopause Matters Tricia Worthington on 07962 892 060 tricia_worthington@msn.com

Scottish Country Dancing Alison on 0117 968 4036 Caroline on 0117 924 9226 www.rscdsbristol.info Mitchell 0117 968 5350.

National Garden Scheme are delighted that many of our gardens in England and Wales are now open. All visitors must pre-purchase tickets on our website for a timed slot at their garden of choice. All funds raised will go to the

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QUIZ ANSWERS General Knowledge from page 16 The Human Body 1. shoulder and upper back; 2. size 10; 3. the neck / windpipe; 4. ten pints, the same as a man; 5. the world’s first baby created by IVF - the test tube baby. Sport 1. Sir Dave Brailsford; 2. Lawrence Dallaglio; 3. Gareth Edwards; 4a) speedway, b) tennis, c) darts; 5. lightweight. Food and Drink 1. slicing runner beans, making fizzy drinks, churning butter; 2. Leicestershire (Melton Mowbray); 3. coffee beans; 4. Wotsits, Scampi Fries, Skips; 5. carbon dioxide. Famous People 1. Janet Ellis, Sophie’s mum, was a Blue Peter presenter; 2. Chris Evans; 3. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln; 4. they are the three most recent Pope’s; 5. Olivia Coleman, Danny Devito, Glenda Jackson. The Arts 1. Norway; 2. Natural History Museum in London; 3. a) sculpture, b) painting, c) ceramics; 4 a) red, b) blue, c) red again; 5. Tony Hall. Geography 1. Bolivia; 2. Denmark (561 feet), Estonia (1,043 feet), Moldova (1,411 feet) Ben Nevis is 4,413 feet; 3.a) Derbyshire, b) Greater Manchester, c) Lancashire ; 4. Germany and France; 5. Madagascar, Easter Island, Madeira. Pets 1. Felix and Molly; 2. Alfie and Bella; 3. dogs (23%), cats (16%), rabbits (1%); 4. an old, saggy cloth cat, baggy, and a bit loose at the seams; 5.a) Ethel Skinner, b) Mrs, and then Joe, Mangel; c) John Noakes. Pop Music 1. “West End Girls”; 2. “Desire”; 3. “Beat Again”; 4. Depeche Mode have not had a number 1; 5. “Just Like a Pill”. Pot Pourri 1. Sergei Skripal; 2. Duke, Marquess, Earl, Viscount, Baron; 3. Natasha Kaplinsky and Brendan Cole; 4. South and Central America; 5. Dave Prowse who played the physical role of Darth Vader. Who Am I? Idris Elba, Kate Humble, Bill Clinton, Maisie Williams Children’s Puzzles from page 36 Who Am I? (l to r) Danial Radcliffe, Kate Middleton (Duchess of Cambridge), Claudia Winkelman, Lionel Messi What Am I? (l to r) Paella, Bowler, Emerald, Edam Where Am I? Italy (Leaning Tower of Pisa), China (the Great Wall), England (Cabot Tower, Bristol), USA (the Grand Canyon). Disclaimer The Bristol Six + Eight is published by Bristol Community Magazines Ltd (Co. No. 08448649, registered at 8 Sandyleaze, Westbury on Trym, Bristol, BS9 3PY). The views expressed by contributors or advertisers in The Bristol Six + Eight are not necessarily those held by Bristol Community Magazines Ltd. The inclusion of any business or organisation in this magazine does not imply a recommendation of it, its aims or its methods. Bristol Community Magazines Ltd cannot be held responsible for information disclosed by advertisers, all of which are accepted in good faith. Reasonable efforts are made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained in this magazine but no liability can be accepted for any loss or inconvenience caused as a result of inclusion, error or omission. All content is the copyright of Bristol Community Magazines Ltd and may not be reproduced without the prior written consent of Bristol Community Magazines.

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WHAT’S ON & COMMUNITY NEWS Shared Reading Christine Betts 07967 332 821

Westbury Aikido Club www.westburyaikidoclub reenee@westburyaikido.club

Shouri Shotoryu Karate Club Shouri Shotoryu karate on Facebook 0117 969 5697

Westbury Folk / Country Dancing Christine on 0117 962 2223 Westbury Harriers Running Club www.westburyharriers.co.uk

Simply Social Activity and Social Club www.simplysocial.org.uk 07971 427 766

Westbury Park Orchestra www.westburyparkorchestra.com contact@westburyparkorchestra.com

Soroptimist International Bristol sibristol@hotmail.co.uk www.sigbi.org/Bristol

Westbury Park Women’s Institute westburyparkwi@gmail.com www.westburyparkwi.org.uk Facebook – Westbury Park WI.

Stoke Lodge Ramblers has resumed walking in small groups. If you’ve let your fitness slip during lockdown or you are looking for opportunities to walk in the company of other local people, please check our website for dates when walks are offered - stokelodgeramblers. wordpress.com/home/walks-programme. Walks vary between 3 and 10 miles and are led by club members. The website is updated whenever a walk is offered, and each one will have a different start point and a maximum number of participants, so you MUST book in advance. Phone the Club Secretary on 0117 950 0934 or email lornarenshaw@yahoo. co.uk for more details. Upcoming walks Thursday 8th October, Stoke Park, including the Sculpture Trail (3-4 miles); Thursday 15th October, Sea Mills circular (6 miles).

Westbury Scottish Country Dance Club (Bristol) Cheryl on 0117 401 2416 www.westburyscottish.org.uk

Please Get In Touch andy@bcmagazines.co.uk www.bcmagazines.co.uk 0117 259 1964 07845 986650 8 Sandyleaze, WoT, BS9 3PY.

Tai Chi www.taichiworksbristol.co.uk 0117 9424167

Deadline for all adverts and notices for inclusion in the November 2020 magazine 16th October.

Tai Chi for over 55’s Selina on 0117 946 6434 University of the Third Age scrabble group 0117 924 1318 nigel.d.sara@btinternet.com. Walking Touch Rugby Kris Tavender ktavender@bristolbearsrugby.com

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PAUL LINDO CERAMIC TILING

Tiling Specialists

REUPHOLSTERY

Based here in BS9, with a local reputation for quality tiling done to the highest level

Don’t throw away your old memories! At Sofa Magic we specialise in helping you breathe new life into your old furniture.

Bathrooms, Kitchens, Underfloor Heating

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Mosaic - porcelain - natural stone quarry - ceramic All tiling works undertaken - big and small, new and repairs, in the home and business premises

Come in and view our wide library of fabrics that will make grandma’s old chair a statement piece in your home.

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07973 431 740 www.paullindotiling.co.uk 61


INDEX OF ADVERTISERS Appliance Repairs AASP Domestics

Garden Design 13

Hilary Barber

Architect Services Max Grieve

11

Arts & Crafts Jemima Lumley

Greenblade

27

Katherine Vincent

40

Heating & Gas

13

Auctions & Sales Clevedon Salerooms Ltd

24

Garden Maintenance

John Presland

49

Home Care Services

29

Bathrooms & Wetrooms

Home Instead

21

Bathroom Perfection Bristol

49

Premier Homecare

32

Paul Whittaker Bathrooms & Wetrooms

40

St Monica Trust

53

Blinds & Shutters Just Shutters

Jewellery & Gifts 4

Kemps Jewellers

Building Services Janson Osman

63

Carpets & Floorings Bristol Carpet & Flooring Group

22

Massage Fraser Sports Massage

19

Heather Drewe

40

Maths Tuition

9

Cleaning Services

Granite Rose Education

7

Home Gleamers

37

Painting & Decorating

Oven Gleamers

23

Peter Wyatt

27

Sarah's Decorating Services

49 13

Computer Services FAB ‐ IT Rescue

20

Stephen Carter

IT HomeHelp

26

Pilates

Counselling Jonathan's Voice

Tom Ashfold Pilates

Cycle Services Boing Bicycles

13

Drum Tuition Scott Hammond

27

37

50 42

Bristol Steiner School

11

Redmaids High School

7

Solicitors AMD Solicitors

51

55 14

64

Veale Wasbrough Vizards

Grosvenor Consultancy

48

Harold Stephens

45

Stairlifts Thornbury Lift Services Ltd

Funeral Services 23 5 61

55

Tiling Paul Lindo

Furniture Sofa Magic

2

Devereux & Co

Cardens

Sofa Magic

25

Corfield Solicitors

Financial Advice

Brunel Funeral Directors

11

Schools

Estate Agents Maggs & Allen

27

McCall Plastering Tony Taps

Estate & Letting Agents Howard Estate Agents

JSH Plastering

Plumbing

Electrical Services Daley Electrical Services Ltd

40

Plastering

53

61

Tree Services Sutcliffe Tree Care

49

TV Aerials

Garage Doors

H and P Aerials

11

If you are kind enough to use the services of any of these businesses please tell them you saw their advert in The Bristol Six + Eight. If they continue to advertise the magazine will continue to drop through your letterbox each month. Many thanks! 62


JANSON & SONS Family run business Many years of experience Extensive knowledge of building regulations Fully insured

-Landscaping & Tree surgery -Turfing & Artificial grass -Paving & Patios -Tarmac & Concreting -Jet-washing & Garden maintenance -Extensions & Roofing -General Building & Maintenance -Fencing & Decking

0117 909 8207 07388 211 528

Call today for free quote 63


1993 - 2018

Brilliant Sorters of Financial Stuff Hilary Carden, Managing Director of Cardens

“ Most people spend more time planning a holiday than they do the rest of their life. And that’s not right. ” 1993 - 2018

1993 - 2018

1993 - 2018

If you believe that money is not just for saving, it’s for spending on nice things, family and experiences. If you believe that life planning comes before financial planning. If you appreciate the value of refreshingly straightforward advice. If you want someone alongside you who’s there for the long term. If you’re looking for someone who is genuinely interested in you, your life and your family. If you want someone who’ll help you make the right choices. If a “financial counsellor” might be useful. And someone who promises you no hard sell. Ever.

1993 - 2018

P P P P P P P P

Then we should talk - call Hilary on 0117 290 0259 or visit our website: Cardens.co.uk 1 Westbury Mews, Westbury Hill, Bristol, BS9 3QA

1993 - 2018

1993 - 2018

Authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority Company Registered in England no. 04347771 Cardens draft rev 1.indd 1

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19/09/2018 18:01:40


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