MAR 2023
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We have had a mixture of weather recently, with cold bright sunny days, as well as some breezy wet days. What do you think our Spring and summer will bring us this year? Last summer was pretty good, so I am ever hopeful (as always) that we once again we will be able to bask in the sun and enjoy some alfresco dining. For now, we can marvel at the snowdrops (my all-time favourites), the bluebells, tulips and golden / white delightful daffodils. Gorgeous.
Do you have a spring clean to do? Do you want to change the décor? We did a spot of redecorating ourselves this week. Do you need a carpet cleaned, a tidy of the garden, a new blind for the kitchen, or new windows? Well, our wonderful advertisers here can help you! Take a look through your local magazine and see who you can call to ask for advice and get them to come to you or visit them at their place of work and then let them do the work for you. That is what they are here for.
If you have a summer fate coming up, a barn dance, a community picnic in the garden, a local sing-song or amateur play to perform, please let us know as we can promote these for you for free. Anything which is local and has the purpose of bringing people together we want to support. Let’s get to know our friends and neighbours and create some social time. It makes all that working so much easier and gives us things to look forward to.
Happy March to you all!
Debbie, Stephen & all of us here at Modern Magazines
DISCLAIMER: Whilst every care has been taken to ensure the data in this publication is accurate, the publisher cannot accept any liability to any party to loss or damaged caused by errors or omissions resulting from negligence, accident or any other cause.
A family run company committed to providing good quality and genuine care for your loved ones.
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The John Thornton Young Achievers Foundation is fast approaching its 15th Anniversary and the first event to mark the occasion will be a Vintage Afternoon Tea at the Barrington Centre, Ferndown on Saturday 22nd April.
Guests will enjoy dainty sandwiches, scones with jam & Rodda’s Cornish Clotted Cream, cakes and little sweet treats, together with unlimited tea. Our thanks must go to Rodda’s for sponsoring our event.
A scrumptious afternoon tea is not all that is on offer, guests will also be treated to a nostalgic trip down memory with the fabulous ‘Land Girls.’ This talented duo is sure to get everyone singing along as they provide an uplifting 1940’s experience with songs from The Andrews Sisters to Vera Lynn and lots in-between. This is an event not to be missed! Tickets are just £12.50 per person, or £15.00 with a glass of Prosecco,
and available direct from the Barrington Centre. Buy yours today, or why not treat someone special?
https://barringtoncentre. co.uk/events
All proceeds will be supporting local young people, providing them with the financial help they need to achieve their ambitions and really develop as individuals. Enjoy a fabulous Vintage Afternoon Tea and support a great local charity in the process.
The past 3 years have seen more than their fair share of challenges. The pandemic, Russia invading Ukraine and the subsequent supply issues and increase in inflation (now described as the “cost of living crisis”). The human cost has been tragic on many levels and will never be forgotten. Generally human kindness has shone through but can the same be said from businesses? Going forward, what can businesses learn and what should you expect from them?
I feel very fortunate that the industry I work in has been able to continue and be relatively unaffected by lockdown initially and subsequently the inflationary pressures from suppliers. Having said that, the volatile investment markets have created uncertainty and worry for investors and our clients have needed our advice and guidance more than ever. I have a huge amount of sympathy for businesses who were unable to open, or those in industries which have seen a dramatic drop in demand for their services. But I have also been very frustrated by businesses who seem to have forgotten the importance of their clients be it delaying refund money, poor service or now increasing prices beyond what is reasonablefundamentally taking advantage of their customers.
1. Our Client Charter states: “We will always look after your best financial interests and treat you fairly”. We never forget that and are on your side!
2. Local, accessible office. The pandemic has shown that we can deliver our service remotely when necessary, and it works. However, for the majority of our clients (aged 50 plus) face to face advice is preferable and having a local office is critical in delivering that service. At a time when most financial institutions are closing offices to save money (aka increase profits further), we focus on what our clients want and need.
3. High quality, independent financial advice. Stewart and I are both Chartered Financial Planners and Fellows-the highest qualifications in our industry. We have many years of experience and deliver impartial advice due to our independent adviser status. We often work with our client’s own accountants and solicitors to deliver joined-up
advice, and we are SIFA Pro members (SIFA is affiliated to the Law Society).
4. Access to world class investment management. Our independence is the key. We act as the informed buyer for our clients, filtering the myriad of investment products & providers through a robust due diligence process. Our clients benefit from us offering best of breed investment solutions from a wide range of highquality financial institutions. This helps reduce charges to our clients as we aren’t obligated to use any specific provider products.
5. Integrity and trust. We never take your trust for granted, nor the responsibility you place in us to manage your money and provide suitable advice. This is a serious business, and we treat it with the attention and importance it deserves. We are “Dementia Friends” and in March 2021 we won “Best Adviser Firm for Vulnerable Client Care” at the National Professional Adviser Awards. We are an FT Adviser Top 100 adviser firm.
6. Excellent, attentive personal service. Our clients are individuals with varying demands. We are able to deliver a very personal service to all of our clients and aim to impress. Our Google reviews provide evidence of our high standards. What can you expect from us? Integrity, trust, reliability and value. Do you feel every business you work with offers you the same?
My colleague Stewart Sims-Handcock and I are available for a free initial, no obligation chat to discuss your personal requirements, and would be delighted to help.
Howard Goodship is an Independent Financial Adviser with Lonsdale Wealth Management, 5 Fridays Court, Ringwood. Tel: 01425 208490 www.lonsdaleservices.co.uk
The value of an investment and the income from it could go down as well as up. The return at the end of the investment period is not guaranteed and you may get back less than you originally invested. The contents of this article are for information purposes only and do not constitute individual advice.
Garage3R are now in their third year of trading on Ferndown Industrial Estate and have built quite the customer base. Their unique approach of being able to maintain and repair both high end supercars including brands such as McLaren, Maserati, Ferrari and Lamborghini as well as being able to cater for your everyday cars with experience in Mazda, Honda, Nissan and Mitsubishi has allowed the company to offer the very best in service excellence and quality of workmanship at a competitive affordable price.
Special tooling for the higher end brands gives owners an opportunity to have technical issues and repairs rectified on their weekend toys without the huge labour price tags affiliated with Main Dealers. Servicing your supercar within its warranty period does not mean taking it to the Main Dealer, and can
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Via a galaxy far, far away, film star John Boyega is back within a few miles of where it all began - Peckham’s hottest property has been subtly talking up an Attack the Block sequel, something which reveals a few things about the 30-year-old social justice champion.
For many cinemagoers, John Boyega’s unveiling to mass popular culture was in the opening shot of the very first teaser trailer for 2015’s Star Wars: The Force Awakens, which attracted a recordbreaking 58 million YouTube views in its first week.
Past that, Boyega has strengthened his allegiance to the Star Wars brand in almost every way possible, as well as finding time to tread the boards, effectively making a
return to where his acting career started, describing his 2017 appearance in Woyzeck as “like riding a bike”.
“You’re on the stage and suddenly the lights are on and there’s an audience either clapping or throwing tomatoes at you,” he begins. “You have to adjust from being on a film set as there’s only one take!”
Boyega now looks to take that reconnection even further with the much talked-about return of Attack the Block, which came before Star Wars, albeit to a much more limited audience. The original 2011 sleeper hit became a cult film and launched both his and director Joe Cornish’s careers.
It’s therefore with some element of sentimentality, perhaps, that the multi-millionaire actor accepts the invitation to do it all again, at a time when his public profile suggests he should be doing something more status-driven.
“There is a romantic element to this, I don’t deny it,” he says. “You always want to reignite how the past feels, and it
gives you some perspective and appreciation of how far you have of come.
“No-one is doing this just for kicks. We are serious and we want to create something that isn’t just part of a sentimental journey. And it will be good. Better than good!”
Boyega’s return to the council estate also belies a growing reputation that he has become a stereotypical mouthpiece for a minority. “The things that matter to me – racism, equality, fairness – have mattered to me all my life,” he explains.
“I have never removed myself from who I am or what I stand for. What I do think is that the media are very good at painting you in one light, and that can be the go-to headline for everything you do.
“I don’t want to be that person,” he admits. “Sure, I want to champion equality, but that is not everything I stand by and stand for, and I think most people who know me, know that.”
Now that we’re moving into Spring, it’s the perfect time to think about making compost for our gardens, hanging baskets and window boxes.
Composting is great for the environment. It improves soil - helping to create healthy plants and reducing the need to water and fertilise. It’s easy to make, can save money and you only need a small outdoor space.
Dorset Council is offering compost bins at prices as low as £6 and there is an extra buy-one-get-onehalf-price deal (plus delivery). This is for a limited number of bins so hurry whilst the offer lasts! See getcomposting.com for details.
Free compost bins are also offered to schools. We offer up to two compost bins and two caddies, plus a visit from a team member. Visit dorsetcouncil/ recycle for more details.
Good things you can compost include teabags, plant prunings, cut flowers, vegetable peelings and fruit waste (add citrus peelings sparingly). You can also add cardboard eggboxes and scrunched up paper. These provide fibre and carbon and also allow
important air pockets to form in the mixture. Twigs, grass clippings and leaves can also be added, but they will take a long time to break down if large quantities are added at one time.
The compost is ready when it’s brown and crumbly. Dig into the soil in early spring or late autumn to improve the soil structure and act as a slow release fertiliser.
Free wildlife survey training courses in Dorset, Wiltshire and Hampshire thanks to funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund
Cranborne Chase is an area of great ecological importance, exhibiting exceptionally rich and diverse habitats of local, regional and international importance. Through a diverse programme of free training courses, online talks and site surveys, hundreds of volunteer surveyors and wildlife experts are coming together to learn more about the area’s vast biodiversity thanks to funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund as part of the Chase & Chalke Landscape Partnership Scheme.
The area is famous for nationally important ancient woodlands, internationally important chalk grassland, crystal clear chalk streams, important assemblages of arable plants and birds and significant populations of species such as
dormouse, early gentian, orchids, butterflies and bats. This richness of the biodiversity is reflected in the number and size of the designations across the area and the Nurturing Nature project aims to train hundreds of volunteers to take action for nature and is dedicated to improving our understanding of just how precious and important this area is.
Thanks to funding from The National Lottery Heritage Fund, Wiltshire and Swindon Biological Records Centre, a not-for-profit organisation hosted by Wiltshire Wildlife Trust, will manage this new project with the Chase & Chalke Landscape Partnership Scheme team at Cranborne Chase Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
“WSBRC is Wiltshire & Swindon’s repository for biological and geological data and records. We’re very excited to be working with the Chase & Chalke Landscape Partnership project which will leave a lasting legacy and encourage new interest in recording”.
Jon Isherwood, WSBRC ManagerWorking with local land managers and local communities a diverse range of free training courses, talks and walks have been developed by the team that will train, mentor
and support a new wave of wildlife surveyors to undertake an in-depth survey of these special habitats and species to help improve our understanding and take practical action to improve habitats through conservation work.
The project aims to train over 100 new local wildlife surveyors who will collect thousands of new records from across the area. It aims to improve habitat conditions for 25 key species and survey 100 sites in partnership with local farmers and landowners, as well as creating a series of practical conservation days for adults and local youth groups to get everyone involved in the project.
Over the next few months the team will be delivering dozens of community events to reach out to local communities across Dorset, Wiltshire and Hampshire and tell people more about the training programme.
“We’re creating an exciting programme of training for our volunteers, covering a wide range of wildlife survey types, so there is something for everyone. These are designed to provide people with a basic understanding of the amazing species found on their doorstep. And
this will subsequently provide us with valuable information to inform future conservation projects in the area.”
- Anna Cooper, Citizen Science Project Officer at the Wiltshire & Swindon Biological Records Centre“We’re looking for more people to join our Nurturing Nature Community and we’d love to hear from anyone who has an interest nature and wildlife, and would like to know more. The free training and volunteering opportunities will inspire a new wave of wildlife surveyors and increase awareness of this landscape and the nationally distinctive special species that rely upon it, supporting local communities to learn more and share their knowledge with others.” Jonathan Monteith, Chase & Chalke Landscape Partnership Scheme Manager.
The training will be online as well as in-person across the Chase & Chalke Landscape Partnership area, with full details available from the project team and through the Chase & Chalke Volunteer and Training
Hub www.bttr.im/cnmw2. If you or someone you know would like more information on how to get involved, please email the team
chaseandchalke@cranbornechase. org.uk
He’s a brilliant presenter, accomplished gardener, talented novelist, and allround horticultural inspiration. This month, Alan Titchmarsh discusses garden design and spontaneity.
They say that a builder’s home is always unfinished, and much the same is true of any gardener in regards to his or her outside space.
We have been in our current home for almost 20 years, and I am still evolving, adding, altering – every day. And that’s what makes each passing year so special – the fact you never go back to a blank canvas, but each spring there are new opportunities, ideas and spaces that emerge here and there, that can be formed into whatever takes your fancy at that particular time.
While variety and versatility are definitely important in a garden, I do find it’s necessary to follow some familiar boundaries. One
of those, for me, is to ensure the inspiration for the style of my garden comes from the feel of my house, and I think this is true for any
outside space. The two must complement each other or you may find you end up with an awkward juxtaposition between the building and nature.
So my property is a classic, square Georgian farmhousethus I felt I had to do something that complemented that in the garden. I like straight lines anyway, which cross each other, and have softened this by planting throughout, creating a sort of billowing chaos in beds and borders. You essentially have one giving structure to the other.
Remember, gardening is very different to
architecture, because what you are dealing with isn’t just shape and form, it’s time as well –it’s a rapid adjustment and change between how something looks on day one and how it will look on day 100.
And while I know you’ll hear gardeners talking all the time about planning out an area, the types of plants you’ll have, and the tone and feel of a space; very often the reality is you are inspired by something off the cuff, and it is that instinctive appeal that’s exciting.
Whatever you’re going to do in your garden space, I would suggest it is gradual and over time. It really pays to observe and watch how nature embraces things – see what grows and what outgrows, and only when you are absolutely sure you want to adjust a certain area, only then proceed.
It’s about a steady progression rather than the wholesale demolition… such is life!
I think you know how much we love the sea and outdoor living. Well Daichi was very generous last month and booked us a trip on the MSC (Mediterranean Shipping Company) cruise line, the Grandiosa! We have never been on a ship so big. Oh my, there are enough rooms for up to 6000 passengers as well as several thousand crew. It is magnificent with shops, a chocolate cafe, where they make their own chocolate, restaurants, spa, two theatres, bars and an ice-cream parlour, which of course we had to try… after all it is competition to our own ice-cream and waffle parlour in Weymouth, Wafflicious! I think I am getting a little over excited there… But really it is a splendid vessel. The crew are incredible. From all over the world and each has their own story.
We flew to Rome and got a taxi to Civitavecchia an hour away, where the port is. Staying overnight is a good idea as it takes away the stress of travelling, we find. Especially as this time we were in the plane for three and a half hours before we took off! Better to be safe than sorry though, I would say.
We had a leisurely morning, including coffee and a pain au chocolat at a local bijoux cafe. Just had to be done - we really were now on holiday. Once we were through customs and all the checks were complete, we very excitedly found our cabin and dropped our hand luggage off. The big cases were taken on board
by a crew member. We were on the thirteenth floor! Balcony and all. At 5pm off we set. You can hardly tell you are moving, but at night, being so high up there was an unusual side to side motion which I actually found quite soothing after I got used to it.
Palermo in Sicily! Our first stop. Having never been here before it was a delight to see. Stephen and I decided to take our own tours. The ship does provide great excursions, but we wanted to be independent. Google not only tells you where you can go but also how long it takes to walk there, so we (well actually Stephen) were able to work out exactly what we could do and how much time we had. We walked all the way around the centre of Palermo. The twelfth century cathedral is splendid. The horses and carts are delightful. The Massimo Theatre is glorious. I could really feel the splendour, opulence and dramatic setting of this magnificent Italian town. We so enjoyed our walk, gazing in awe, and of course the coffee sitting in one of the narrow streets complete with small, elaborate balconies and music you could almost hear from times gone by.
Malta was our next stop. After an evening of dining and on-board entertainment, we slowly and majestically arrived at our next destination. My dad was in Malta as part of his two-year conscription many years ago. There is a concept… compulsory enlistment, in his case, into the Royal Navy at the age of eighteen. He remembers it well. Today the
area has many museums and artifacts in memory of the second world war. There are even hidden underground passages you can now visit, that were once used by important military leaders and politicians. Lots to do. We chose again to take our own path and in fact we walked over 20000 steps that day! A glorious walk around Valletta with fantastic views across the bays. The new square surrounded by street food vendors and a really attractive fountain were in contrast to the military background and gave you hope for the future.
A day’s sailing was next on the agenda! We chose to have a spa day and watch a movie while we glided our way through the deep waters of the Mediterranean. So relaxing.
Barcelona in Spain was our next destination. My parents had their honeymoon 59 years ago in this amazing city. As I was born early and 3 weeks less than nine months later, I do laugh and say, “I was made in Barcelona!” La Sagrada Familia is quite a feat. I thought there were building new on top of old and was dismayed, however that is not the case at all. It is still not complete and is the largest unfinished Catholic church in the world. Started in 1882. The new architecture is looking quite splendid and complements to older stones well. I always remembered that mum and dad went to a bull fight all those years ago, so a walk to Plaza de Toros Monumental de Barcelona was a must for me. It is quite an eerie place really. You can walk in the footsteps of both the matadors and the bulls, as well as enter the ring itself. Cultures change and it is interesting to see old traditions and look back on history, where we were and where we have come from.
The next time we got off the ship was at Genoa! Another unknown town to us and one we really
enjoyed walking around. We did not go in the huge aquarium there, but I hear it is highly recommended. Did you know (a bit controversial) that ‘our’ St George’s flag was apparently ‘stolen’ from here? We saw the flag a few times, flying high, and according to Google… “The symbol was adopted by England toward the end of the religious wars, in the 13th century with our ships flying the flag of Genoa as a deterrent to enemies.” Oops… Again, how interesting our history is.
Well, it was time to take our last cruise back to Rome. On disembarking we had a day to explore. Sitting, overlooking the Colosseum having an Italian lunch was awe inspiring. It ended our eight-day, seven night break on a high.
Sailing is not for everyone and certainly I would generally prefer a smaller ship, but we thoroughly enjoyed our self-generated European excursions, coffees in places we had never been before, nights singing to Abba, Italian Opera and the Addams Family in the all-inclusive entertainment each evening. Waited on hand and foot in the restaurants and having as much food as you want in the buffet. We love cruising. Let’s see if Daichi can top that this coming month!
By Debbie Corney A bull’s eye view inside the MonumentalDesigner, writer and television presenter, Kevin McCloud leapt into our consciousness with his vastly successful Grand Designs show on Channel 4. This month, the affable architectural business owner talks about his favourite room in the house.
I often get asked what I believe is the most important room in any building and my answer is always the same – it’s the toilet!
Now then, I know that’s not the most glamorous of answers, but think about it - you can make a house or a building with any number of rooms; you could create a home with no lightbulbs and perhaps not even a single window; yet without basic sanitation you could never remain there.
Without running water, you have almost no chance of survival without risking poor health, disease and, ultimately, death.
I’m seen the evidence of this, too. I’ve visited places in the world where running water and basic sanitation doesn’t exist; where the absence of those two things creates utter chaos and would eventually bring about the end of civilisation as we know it.
The point of all this is that in this world of ambition and desire, and in our pursuit of homely perfection, we can very quickly and very easily lose sight of the true basic necessities that enable us to evolve and survive as human beings.
It’s for that reason that someone moving into a shoebox studio flat in a grubby backstreet in a dead-end town can actually feel like they have achieved something monumentally big…
and they would be absolutely correct in that notion.
When you have somewhere that offers sanitisation, somewhere to eat, somewhere to sleep – you essentially have created the building blocks preservation of life. That’s tremendously exciting, very special and, rightly, the most rewarding feeling you can have.
In the coming year, we will all dream and plan and design… and do all those other things as far as the perceived improvement of our homes is concerned, and of course that’s the way we are as people – we are almost always forwardthinking and aspirational.
However, sometimes, it really is rewarding to take a step back – to look not at what you don’t have, but what you do have. It’s to say, ‘I am here, and I am covered’.
To have the basic necessities in life is actually 99% of survival and success… everything else on top is just decoration.
Welcome to the March Stargazing Page. Highlights this month include a close meeting of the brightest planets in the Solar System and Orion the Hunter still visible high in the southwest.
The ISS can be spotted early in the morning until the 11th. Viewing then switches to our evening skies from the 16th. To establish exact timings please refer to www.heavens-above.com or a similar webpage for up-to-date information, remembering to set the location to your observing area.
Venus and Jupiter appear extremely close to one another (known as a conjunction) in the early evening western sky. The closest they reach is on March 1st, after which the planets will slowly separate. This conjunction can easily be seen with the naked eye, but a pair of good, steady binoculars may allow you to spot some of the moons of Jupiter.
The start of longer daylight hours commences on March 20th at the Spring Equinox. This marks the first of two dates (the second being the Autumn Equinox) when daylight hours equal the number of night-time hours, wherever you are on Earth (equinox comes from the Latin meaning ‘equal night’). The equinoxes are the best time of year to determine the main compass point directions relative to your own home, as the Sun rises due east, sets due west, and is due south at midday. Try remembering these positions relative to a building or a tree.
Moon
March’s full moon occurs on the 7th.
The innermost planet is too close to the Sun to be seen this month.
Venus
Venus continues to dazzle in the southwest every evening and will be impossible to miss! At the start of March it sets around 8.30pm, but by month end it is sinking below the horizon as late as 11pm. It is close to the Moon on the 23rd and 24th (see figure).
Mars
The red planet can be seen above the constellation of Orion until the early hours of the morning, and although getting dimmer every day, is still a bright object.
As the Sun sets, Jupiter is visible low towards the southwest. By the end of the month it will be lost in the Sun’s glare. Saturn is too close to the Sun to be visible this month.
Diagonally across from Rigel, February’s Star of the Month, we find Betelgeuse, the tenth brightest star in the sky. It marks the right shoulder of Orion the Hunter, and its name stems from the Arabic for ‘hand of Orion’ (see figure). It is a red supergiant that is much cooler than our Sun; its surface temperature is 3,500°C. Betelgeuse is an enormous star at the end of its life, and if it were to replace our Sun at the centre of the Solar System, its surface would extend to at least the orbit of Mars. Put another way, if the Sun were the size of a grapefruit, then Betelgeuse would be the size of a large football stadium. Like Rigel, it will end its life in a giant explosion known as a supernova, leaving behind a neutron star or a black hole. On a night with no moon, see if you can notice that Betelgeuse is noticeably more orange than nearby stars.
Famed for the gigantic, raspberrydusted meringues that adorn his shop windows, Yotam Ottolenghi is a patisserie expert, and these deliriously fudgy cookies are no exception.
(makes 24 cookies)
• 110g unsalted butter at room temperature, cubed
• 110g caster sugar
• 1 large egg, lightly beaten
• 125g plain flour
• ½ tsp baking powder
• 20g cocoa powder
• ½ tsp ground cinnamon
• ¼ tsp salt
• 100g 70% cocoa chocolate chips (or 100g dark cooking chocolate in 0.5cm pieces)
• 50g mashed banana (½ small banana)
• 170g pecan halves, finely chopped
• 100g icing sugar
1. In the bowl of an electric mixer with the paddle attachment in place, beat the butter and sugar on a mediumhigh speed until light and fluffy, then add the egg and beat to combine.
Sift the flour, baking powder, cocoa powder, cinnamon and salt into a bowl, then add to
the butter mix, beating on low speed for 15 seconds. Now beat in the chocolate and banana until combined, then transfer to the fridge for two hours to firm up.
2. Once firm, form the dough into 24 3cm balls, about 20g each. Put the pecans in a bowl, then drop in each ball, rolling it around to coat, which will press the nuts in as well, so they stick.
Put the cookies on a baking tray lined with greaseproof paper and refrigerate for at least an hour.
3. Heat the oven to 190°C/375°F/gas mark 5 and line two oven trays with baking paper. Put the icing sugar in a bowl and roll the cookies one by one in the sugar, pressing it in as you go, so it sticks. Arrange the cookies on the trays 2-3cm
apart, then flatten them to about 1cm thick.
4. Bake for 10 minutes, then remove: the cookies will be soft to the touch. Leave to cool for 10 minutes, then move to a rack. Serve warm or cool.
Maintain that fudgy factor by ensuring you don’t overbake these cookies.
You can also freeze them for up to three months once you have rolled them in to balls. Simply add one extra minute on to the baking time when you are ready to use them.
Quick Crossword Solution
#025
Answers:
Across: 5. Antishock, 8. Feta, 9. Eventual, 10. Cadence, 11. Renew, 13. Stint, 15. Treason, 18. Oragious, 19. Sash, 20. Skimboard.
Down: 1. Inhale, 2. Silence, 3. Thief, 4. Scathe, 6. Recapture, 7. Gatehouse, 12. Erosion, 14. Nogaku, 16. Assort.
6) 15 7) 13 8) 45-50 (11 on at a time) 9) 11 10) 6
Rear set colour coded: from £160
Front set colour coded: from £190
Both Front & Rear Sensors: from £280 CRUISE CONTROL FOR MOST VEHICLES £425 FIT TED PRICE.
Metatrak insurance approved vehicle £330
Rear view cameras for Cars £190, Vans from £225 & Motorhomes from £245
Dash cameras starting at £145 or FRONT & REAR cameras for just £245
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