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Dear Residents, Where has the summer gone? Well, I believe Spring is just around the corner, so let’s hang on in there and take a deep breath until March! In the meantime, this cooler weather and rain gives us a chance to look at the house and see what is needed to upgrade or change a few things around. Maybe there are people here in your local magazine to help you? We have electricians, plumbers, solar panel experts, builders, roof specialists, carpet cleaners, oven cleaners, window cleaners, carpet fitters, window fitters… and much more! Each of our loyal and trusted trades people and services would love to hear from you. Now is a good chance to get the help you need, so please do mention us when making those all-important calls. I am always very happy to hear this as it makes all our work worthwhile. You get a local person to help with what you need, and the company keeps busy. It is what we are all about. It also keeps our local economy thriving which is good for us all. A win-win all round.
I also hope you enjoy reading the articles and local data inside. If there is anything you would like to see or any suggestions for making your useful magazine, more useful I would love to hear from you! Do give me a call or send an email.
For now, we wish you a good month of February. May you have fun with, or even find, your Valentine!
wishes, Debbie, Stephen
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features: local attractions puzzle pages community hub Issue No. 8 February 2023
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& 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. Winchester Gazette does not officially endorse any advertising material included within the publication. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in any retrieval systems or transmitted in any form, without prior permission of the publisher.
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94-Year-Old Leyland Bus
Joins Friends of King Alfred Buses Collection
Thanks to a benefactor who wishes to remain anonymous, Friends of King Alfred Buses (FoKAB) has taken ownership of a fully restored Leyland Lion single deck bus built in 1929. This vehicle, registered RU 8678, was B268 in the fleet of Hants & Dorset Motor Services (H&D) from 1929 until 1948 and is believed to be the only operational pre-war H&D bus still in existence.
Since 2003 it has been based at the Scottish Vintage Bus Museum (SVBM) where its previous owners, the late Douglas Scoular and his son Ross, had rebuilt the vehicle. It is now to return to its original home in Hampshire.
The bus is being repainted into the green and ivory livery of King Alfred Motor Services, but the long-term plan is to restore it to its original H&D condition, in time for its centenary in 2029.
King Alfred owned two very similar Leyland Lions (registered OT 8608/9), so FoKAB can now demonstrate what these
buses looked, sounded and felt like.
This one survived because it became a motor caravan for almost twenty years, before being found and rescued in 1967, going initially to the West of England Transport Collection at Winkleigh in Devon.
It moved on twice before passing in partially deconstructed form to Jasper Pettie of the SVBM at Lathalmond in Fife, Scotland. From 2003 it was taken on by father and son team Douglas and Ross Scoular, who carried out a comprehensive rebuild of the bus, effectively back to original specification. They took one liberty, however. They decided to present the vehicle in the livery of Edinburgh Corporation Transport which was local and had some very similar vehicles.
Sadly, Douglas died in the early part of 2022 and his son Ross decided to refocus his activities, leading to the difficult decision to find a new home for the Lion.
In Winchester it will join FoKAB’s other two pre-war vehicles, the well-known Dennis 30 cwt 18-seater of 1931 owned for over thirty years and the recently reinvigorated 1935 Albion Victor 20-seater coach, as part of the King Alfred fleet. It is therefore expected to be the star attraction at The Original King Alfred Running Day based on Winchester Broadway on Bank Holiday Monday 1 st May 2023.
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Cleaning up our act
Keen to make your laundry routine as ecofriendly as possible? Well, we’ve got some simple and effective solutions for you.
1. Lessen the load
Sometimes the most obvious option is the best one, and in this case, that would be to simply do less washing.
Naturally, socks and pants can only be worn once before they need a clean, but perhaps you can at least strive to get a couple of days from the same pair of jeans or sweatshirt.
Going fewer days without doing a wash is also a good strategy: three larger loads a week is preferable to five smaller ones.
2. Curb the chemicals
Toxic detergents have a very negative impact on our local eco-systems – particularly marine life. Fortunately, there are numerous ecobrands on the market that are also effective and pleasantly fragrant.
Another good option is soap nuts - these are dried shells of berries from a tree native to the Himalayas. Entirely natural, chemical-free and gentle, these
nuts contain saponins, a soap-like chemical that foams when agitated in warm water. Soap nuts are also anti-bacterial, anti-fungal and an effective alternative to chemical cleaners.
3. Get some balls
Your favourite scented dryer sheet is singleuse, non-biodegradable and packed with toxic chemicals, so invest instead in some wool dryer balls.
Not only do they reduce static electricity and wrinkles, soften fabrics and encourage them to dry faster, they can also be used over and over again – far kinder to your pocket, too! And to go a step further, sprinkle with essential oils to give your clothes a dreamy scent.
4. Ditch the plastics
It’s no secret that single-use plastic is enemy number one to the environment. Why not seek out a local store that provides refillable stations, or consider a detergent alternative such as soap nuts or even just distilled white vinegar -
don’t worry, the vinegar smell naturally neutralises!
5.
Cool it down
Even though most washing machines offer the option of a 90-degree wash, it really is an unnecessary temperature to wash linens at. If you do have nasty stains, pop half-a-cup of baking soda in with your clothes to banish them.
Even your colour clothes wash can be dropped from 40 to 30 degrees thanks to better formulated detergents (even the eco brands), a small change that lessens both the impact on the planet and on your pocket.
8 To advertise in this magazine, call 01264 316499
Going Green...
So much is being said about the need to protect the planet and use more eco-friendly material, but it is the small steps that each of us can do that will really make the difference.
Take the EcoEgg Laundry Egg... the innovative laundry solution. It replaces laundry detergent and fabric conditioner, reducing both harmful chemicals used and also single-use plastic packaging.
Dermatest has rated it excellent for use on sensitive skin, giving a kinder wash on both your skin and your pocket.
The mineral pellets in the egg, which are refillable (saving even more money!), work together in the water to effectively draw dirt from your clothes and softens them by changing the pH. Therefore leaving your laundry clean and fresh.
EcoEggs are available in Fresh Linen, Spring Blossom and Fragrance Free.
Recently, they have also released the EcoEgg Dryer Egg, which can be used when tumble drying. They reduce the drying time by up to 28%, saving you both time and money.
“I’ve been using mine for over a month now and I absolutely love it. It saves money, there’s no mess from washing powders and liquids. Also easy to use, and is better for the environment. Helps cut down on single use plastic and doesn’t use harmful chemicals.” KD
If you would like to know more about these products and many more, please feel free to visit my website at debbiegoesgreen.uk or email me at hello@debbiegoesgreen.uk as I would love to hear from you. Let’s look after ourselves and our environment!
Let’s go eco friendly!
Debbie Corney
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Puzzle Page Quick Crossword 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Across Clues: 2. Juice (3) 5. Nearly (6) 7. Small white-fleshed fruit (6) 9. Becoming higher value (11) 10. Brought back (6) 11. Firm sweet (6) Down Clues: 1. Garment hung in loose folds (6) 2. Took (6) 3. Easily bent (6) 4. Tight fitting hat (6) 6. Apparent (11) #024 13. Vomiting (6) 16. Peace, harmony (6) 18. Shaking (11) 19. Capsule for egg cell production (6) 20. Pilots (6) 21. Dark liquid (3) 8. Dramatic ending (11) 10. Bitterly regret (3) 12. Tall deciduous tree (3) 14. Reason (6) 15. Establish ascendancy (6) 16. Fast-spinning star (6) 17. Colourless reactive gas (6) Word Ladder Make your way from LAMP to BARN by changing one letter on each step to make a new word! ANSWERS: (LAMP, CAMP, CAME, CARE, BARE, BARN) LAMP BARN The Ultimate Love Quiz 1. To visit the City of Love, which country would you visit? 2. What is the highest grossing romance movie of all time? 3. How many dating apps are there in the UK? 4. What planet was named after the Goddess of Love? 5. What fruit has been referred to as a Love Apple? 6. Where is a shrimps heart? 7. On average, what percentage of marriage proposals are on Valentine’s Day? 8. What hormone is known as the ‘love hormone’? 9. What is the Guinness World Record for the longest marriage ever recorded? 10. Who are Shakespeare’s most famous lovers? 10 To advertise in this magazine, call 01264 316499
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Avatar...again
Never an actress who rushes to take up film scripts, Zoe Saldaña very often opts for the ‘less is more’ approach – thus, a string of colossal projects decorate a CV that is notable for gaps in between.
Certainly in terms of the film that set her on her way to a string of big-budget projects from where she rarely now strays, the influence of James Cameron’s groundbreaking Avatar has been present for well over a decade now.
So it is with no small amount of relief that, finally, a sequel has arrived… and not just one. In what may turn out to be the biggest box office series ever, production of four more Avatar movies is in motion, through to Avatar 5, due for release in 2028, no less.
“The project is huge, but it has to be,” says Saldaña. “You have a film that took $3billion at
the box office, and yet here we are 13 years on. Perhaps it’s only right we’re getting this many sequels done if it’s taken us this long up until now!”
On the eve of Avatar: The Way of Water, one of the most-anticipated sequels in film history, Zoe Saldaña is a woman with a lot of work to do. does just different… different.”
While details over Avatar 2, or The Way of Water to give it its official title, are sketchy, what’s clear is this is no rushed project, nor is Saldaña taking her return lightly.
“I was very nervous because sequels can be dangerous, and we were feeling the pressure. I think the first couple of days, we all had moments of, ‘Can we do this again? What was the secret ingredient?
Do you know, does anyone? Should we just leave it there, not mess with it?’ There were a lot of nerves. It has been a long while.
“Yet [director and writer] James Cameron is in charge and his vision is present and trustworthy. And the film is very different from the first, way different… different planet different.”
While we are now in a new era of film that feels a world away from the CGI-laden original, the appeal of welcoming a new generation of filmgoer to the mystery of Eurasia is one Saldaña is relishing.
“We still retain the curiosity and interest of the millions of people who went out to watch it first time around, but the continuation of this story will bring new eyes to the story, and that’s a thrill for me.”
12 To advertise in this magazine, call 01264 316499
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Puzzle Page Answers Quick Crossword Solution #024 Answers: Across: 2. Sap, 5. Almost, 7. Lychee, 9. Upvaluation, 10. Reborn, 11. Toffee, 13. Emesis, 16. Shalom, 18. Tremblingly, 19. Ovisac, 20. Airmen, 21. Tar. Down: 1. Blouse, 2. Stolen, 3. Pliant, 4. Beanie, 6. Obviousness, 8. Cliffhanger, 10. Rue, 12. Elm, 14. Motive, 15. Subact, 16. Spinar, 17. Oxygen. 1. Paris 2. Titanic 3. 1,400 4. Venus 5. Tomato The Ultimate Love Quiz Answers 6. Head 7. 50% 8. Oxytocin 9. 86 years, 260 days 10. Romeo and Juliet LA LANDSCAPES CALL: LUKE 0790 855 0468 aylingluke15@gmail.com BLINDS AWNINGS SHUTTERS We offer an expert measuring, manufacturing and installation service with a FULL 5 YEAR GUARANTEE Our other services include awning and canopy restoration, including re-covering, and blind servicing and repair. Tel: 01962 736 836 or 07711 007 079 info@winchesterblinds.com www.winchesterblinds.com Call us for a FREE no obligation quote 14 To advertise in this magazine, call 01264 316499
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Greenfingers…
The Alan Titchmarsh Column
He’s a brilliant presenter, accomplished gardener, talented novelist, and allround horticultural inspiration. is month, Alan Titchmarsh discusses how to keep motivation for your garden going.
e back might ache more than it used to and there’s more than a hint of a painful creak in the knees, but most days I still feel the urge to get out there and do my bit… and even when I don’t feel the urge, I always find it important to push on. A er all, my faithful beds and trellises rely on it!
It’s also worth remembering how beneficial the everyday rigours of flowering and weeding, pruning and digging are. It comes with the territory when you get to my sort of age, but I always remind myself that by the very nature of gardening you are outdoors, filling the lungs with oxygen and experiencing what it is to be around plants, trees and flowers. If that isn’t good for the soul, I don’t know what is!
I think what should motivate us to garden, even on those days when we would rather be in the pub, is the fact there is something unique about every outside space, and it changes on each occasion you set foot out into it. ere is always something that’s di erent, and special, and always ready to enchant you… always something you perhaps hadn’t noticed before!
It’s important to remember that although your garden is a wild space, you have, in e ect, tamed a lot of it; so like a pet or a child, it relies on you to keep doing the things you invested in it in the first place. It’s sort of saying, ‘you’ve started now, you can’t just stop!’
Remember too, it was you who had the vision, the idea, the perception of what this space should look like; so press on with those jobs and keep making your garden your own personal space – it’s an expression of who you are, and just like we get up in the
mornings and have a wash, comb our hair, so too do we owe that to our gardens.
So in summing up, of course the work can be hard and tiring and there are days when the body seems to be telling me to stop, but I am happy and healthy and have a loving family so things could be far worse. And what would I do anyway? Okay, yes… head to the pub!
18
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The Property Protection Trust Will package is based around how you hold the ownership of your home. All good estate planning nowadays considers the difference between owning your home as joint tenants or as tenants in common.
If you own your home as Joint Tenants; when one of you dies the ownership of the home passes by the Law of Survivorship and not by your Will. Therefore, the surviving partner will automatically own 100% of the property. This sounds right to most people. BUT should the surviving partner need care in the future, the Local Authority can take everything they own (including their home) to pay for the care fees, leaving just £14,250 to be inherited by children and grandchildren.
There is an alternative.
Nowadays many couples choose to own their home as Tenants in Common where each partner will own 50% of the family home. This provides for many benefits. Firstly, it allows you to legally leave your share of the property in your Will to whoever you wish. A properly written Will can ensure that your half of your house will eventually pass to your children even if your widow re-marries.
Unmarried cohabiting couples or relatives living together can also use this means of ownership as a way of minimising their Inheritance Tax exposure.
It can also help with long-term care costs. If one of you is still living in your home the Local Authority can’t include its value in the means test if one of you has to go in to long-term care. This also applies if the husband or wife still living at home dies while the other is in care as their share will go into the trust.
Dorset and Wight are your local experts in Property Protection Trust Wills.
Increasing numbers of homeowners are choosing to hold their properties as tenants in common to reduce inheritance tax and help protect their share from care fees
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Probably the most impor tant documents you will ever own. Simple Wills £140 each All four Lasting Power of Attorneys for a couple £620 (save £60) Lasting Power of Attorneys £170 each We are specialists in providing for the elderly or less mobile. Ever ything is dealt with in the comfor t of your own home. Members of the Society of Will Writers and Estate Planning Practitioners. A complete Property Protection Trust, Wills and all four Lasting Power £1,149 (save £471) Are you concerned about care fees and other risks? The “Ultimate” Family Protection Package includes All Trust Wills and £1,429 (save £601) If you are concerned about care fees and protecting your children’s inheritance from divorce and other risks. All four Lasting Power of Attorneys & two Wills for a couple £870 (save £60) EXPERTISE • EXPERIENCE • EMPATHY www.dorsetandwight.co.uk Dorset - 01202 065953 Hampshire - 01264 252900 Isle of Wight - 01983 623900 All subject to deliberate deprivation guidelines 21 Please mention Modern Magazines when contacting advertisers
The Adventures of Daichi
The Modern Magazines Camper Van
Daichi, The Dashing Dude, our wonderful, spirited Campervan is always ready to cheer us up, to take us on family adventures both near and far and generally take us away from any stresses or strains of everyday life. He doesn’t believe in watching the news or letting woes and worries get him down. He is all about living life, seeing friends and family and making the most of our beautiful British Isles. It is a great attitude to have. Christmas seems a long way away already, but at that time we have two important Birthdays (well I think so…), my own and Stephen’s. You see I was born 3 days before Christmas and Stephen was born on Boxing Day. It is a busy time of year! Daichi’s story this month is how very different we can spend our Birthdays and how we all enjoyed both of them!
Daichi drove us all the way to Hull for my Birthday… where I was born and lived until I was 18 years old. The family are still there and what I wanted was to see them all with my Mum and Dad. It gets to a certain time in your life, when, I don’t know about you, but you wonder if this Christmas could be the last, with certain people. I had this going on in my jumbled head for some time, so Daichi was very accommodating and drove myself and Stephen all the way to Hull. We arrived late on December 21st. What my Dad did not know
was that I had already been in contact with our 22 family members there, and each were coming to his humble abode the following evening. Dad worries a lot, and at 87 now and though still very fit and able to drive all the way down South, Daichi did not want to stress him out. A Mum with dementia is not at all easy and situations can never be predicted, but I managed to get her up and dressed and ready to go to a local garden centre the morning of my Birthday. For anyone with this problem, I had bought mum a gorgeous doll and it worked like a treat. This “baby” was a saving grace on many occasions this Christmas. It is very sad to watch in many ways, but believe me, Mum lit up like a Christmas tree when she saw her, and hardly let go the whole time we were with them. The people in the garden centre were marvellous too, mum had many smiles and hello’s, and I was very touched by all their gracious looks and helpful comments as Mum wandered around holding carefully her pretty baby. Daichi was all smiles too. What a great idea that worked a treat, for everyone’s benefit. During lunch I approached Dad and told him my Birthday plan. A little taken aback, but he knows me well, the next step of the plan was set. Shopping! The boys would do the shopping,
Enjoying a family walk in “the garden”! To advertise in this magazine, call 01264 316499 22
Debbie and mum in the garden centre
while I kept mum entertained at the garden centre. It worked! Daichi took the boys to the supermarket… and I lost Mum several times walking around the Christmas decorations! All good fun.
Seeing all my cousins and family members was what I had wanted. We don’t get together too often and when we do it is always good. I was particularly interested in the younger members… now in their twenties and thirties (I am showing my age now…). One cousin is buying her first house. Another cousin had gotten married and gone to Disney for three weeks. An aunt is planning a new life for herself. I loved it. Lots of life, living and forward thinking. It was a great way to spend my Birthday.
Mum and Dad came back with us for Christmas and spent a week with my sister over at their farmhouse in Margaret Marsh, near Shaftesbury. We spent a quiet Christmas Day with them in the countryside. Gorgeous. Log fire, wind whistling around the walls and windows and Christmas dinner…mmm…. From Hull to Margaret Marsh, and then to Weymouth for Stephen’s Birthday on 26th. Variety is the spice of life I have heard it said!
As you know we do love living in Weymouth with our sea views. The last two years, Boxing Day has been glorious! Really, sunny and blue skies. It has become Stephen’s day for a brisk swim in the sea with Hayden, our son, to
Stephen after a bracing dip on Boxing Day
celebrate his big day. They do have wetsuits, but nevertheless this is a brave move I would say! I, well, I take the photographs… Afterall someone has to do it! This year they stayed in the water a good 15 minutes all the while playing ball and diving in and out of the water. It is fun to watch, though people passing by gave us a few sympathetic looks… I think Stephen likes the challenge of it all. There I am bringing the family members together for my day, and Stephen absolutely backs me up with all of that, but on his day a bracing challenge and a full ‘alive feeling’ is what he wants. After a Birthday lunch, including ice-cream of course at our wonderful “Wafflicious” ice-cream parlour, “Avatar 2” was next on the menu! All within walking distance of where we live, the cinema, just around the corner was the perfect way to end a great day. The film is brilliant. Defense of the family is at the core of this adventure. Quite apt really. A three-hour movie, well worth it with gorgeous graphics and we were well entertained the whole time. An exhilarating end to a fabulous day!
So, how did you spend your Birthday? Daichi would love to know. Why not email him at debbie@modernmagazines.co.uk. Maybe we could add some of your Birthday photos in the magazine and Daichi will send you his Best Wishes? Birthdays are a great excuse to do what YOU want to do! Where will Daichi take us next, I wonder?
By Debbie Corney
All set to watch Avatar 2... Please mention Modern Magazines when contacting advertisers 23
A Design for Life… e Kevin McCloud Column
Designer, 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 the concept of space.
During lockdown, our understanding and appreciation of space was something that was challenged in ways we w had probably never expected.
Not only was even outside space challenged and conditioned to be accessed and used in very specific ways, but when at home, our rooms suddenly became multifunctional when they were never designed for such a purpose – our kitchen tables were work desks; our little creative nooks and crannies were filled with children and other imposters!
One of the positive take-outs many of us took from lockdown
was versatility, yet in my own life I’m keen to get back a certain amount of separation, because I find it absolutely essential for organising my mind and staying creative.
It’s for that reason that I actually have different work areas, spaces and locations for different types of jobs. By that, I mean I will do all my creative television thinking in a little bale- and stone-walled hut I have, called The Straw Bale.
It has a roof, some furniture in there, and serves as a studio away from prying eyes and everyday interruptions you would usually encounter in the house.
I felt I needed this little space because with a show such as Grand Designs I am pretty much on-location the whole time. That means there is no set base by which I can connect myself to a project and get in that headspace… unless I make one.
I have an office within the main part of the house, but that is used for much more menial matters, such as answering emails and firing off angry letters to all and sundry!
The concept of space is one that isn’t always objective – it can be
subjective as well. For instance, just because you have a big area with which to express yourself, it doesn’t mean it will actually feel big, or spacious. Similarly, very small rooms can be made to feel much larger than they are with clever techniques and smart aesthetics. I talk around this idea a lot when I mention high ceilings, uplighting and an abundance of floor space, utilising tables and chairs with legs, that guide the eye and light through the space.
In essence, it’s all about how we marry together space and comfort. If done well, you have the first building blocks for somewhere, home or office, that truly inspires you and brings happiness.
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STAR GAZING
WRITTEN BY KATE EARL kateearlastro@gmail.com
Welcome to the February Stargazing Page. Highlights this month include a close meeting of the brightest and dimmest planets in the Solar System, and the constellation Orion high in the sky.
International Space Station
The ISS can be spotted early in the evening until the 4th. Viewing then switches to our morning skies from the 18th. 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.
Events
A conjunction is when objects in the night sky appear close to one another as viewed from Earth, even though they are actually thousands of miles apart in space. One such event happens at the end of the month when the two bright planets Venus and Jupiter appear extremely close to one another in the early evening western sky (see figure). The closest they reach is actually on March 1st, but they will be approaching each other rapidly the week beforehand, noticeably changing position and moving nearer to one another nightly. This conjunction can be easily seen with the naked eye, but a pair of good, steady binoculars may allow you to spot some of the moons of Jupiter.
Mercury
During the first week of February the innermost planet is visible low in the southeast just before sunrise, but is very difficult to spot.
Venus
Venus will be blazing brightly in the southwest every evening and will be impossible to miss! Apart from the conjunction with Jupiter mentioned above, the Solar System’s brightest planet is also very close in the sky to the Solar System’s dimmest planet, Neptune, on the 15th. You’ll need binoculars or a telescope to see Neptune, which will appear as a star-like object just to the lower right of Venus, at a 5 o’clock position (see figure).
Mars
The red planet can be seen until the early hours of the morning, and although fading every day, is still a bright object located relatively close to the orangered giant star, Aldebaran. It can be interesting to compare the colours of these two ‘reddish’ night sky objects. To
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Jupiter & Saturn
As the Sun sets, Jupiter is visible towards the southwest. It will have disappeared below the horizon by 10pm. Saturn is too close to the Sun to be visible this month.
Moon
February’s full moon occurs on the 5th.
Star of the month
Rigel, the seventh brightest star in the sky, marks the left foot of Orion the Hunter, and indeed the name Rigel stems from the Arabic for ‘left foot’ (see figure). It is blue-white in colour due to its temperature, a searing 12,000 °C (our Sun is comparatively cool, with a surface temperature of nearly 6000 °C). Similar to the star Capella featured in January’s issue, the Rigel star system actually consists of four stars. The largest star in the group (and the one we see) is 20 times more massive than the Sun, and will end its life as a supernova: a huge stellar explosion that leaves behind a neutron star or a black hole. Fortunately, that isn’t due to happen for several million years, and as Rigel is over 850 light years away, the Earth won’t be affected when Rigel’s demise does come about.
Orion The Hunter
View south during February 8.30pm
Betelgeuse
Rigel
Saiph
Bellatrix
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Orion Nebula
Lisa Faulkner’s Choux Hearts with Berries
Having met her now husband, John Torode, on the 2010 series of Celebrity MasterChef –on which he was a judge and she a contestant – Lisa Faulkner knows full well that food is the language of love. So, what better way to woo your beloved on Valentine’s Day than with these stunning choux hearts?
Ingredients
(makes 8 hearts)
For the choux pastry
• 90g butter
• 360ml water
• pinch salt
• pinch sugar
• 110g plain flour, sifted
• 3 whole eggs, beaten well
To serve:
• 500ml double cream
• 400g mixed fresh berries
Method
1. Preheat the oven to 200°C, gas mark 6. Put the butter and water in a medium saucepan, add the salt and sugar, and bring to the boil. Ensure the butter is melted. Remove from the heat, add the sifted flour all at once and beat vigorously with a wooden spoon until the mixture comes away from the sides of the pan. Return to the heat and cook for 2 minutes until the paste is pale. Cool a little.
2. Add the beaten eggs, a little at a time, incorporating fully with a wooden spoon after each addition. The mixture will go glossy then back to dull. Add the eggs until the mixture is shiny again and it just drops off the wooden spoon. Cool the mixture for about 10 minutes. Put in a piping bag and pipe heart shapes on to a baking sheet dampened with a little water.
3. Bake in the preheated oven for 15-20 minutes then reduce the temperature to 160°C, gas mark 3, and bake for a further 15-20 minutes until golden.
4. Pour the cream into a chilled bowl and whisk, either by hand or with a hand mixer, until stiff peaks form. This may take a few minutes.
5. When cooked, turn the hearts over and pop back into the oven for 2 minutes to dry out a little. Split each heart in
Top Tips
Be careful not to overwhip your cream. As soon as you have firm peaks (you should be able to hold the bowl over your head without it spilling out!) you should stop.
If berries aren’t your thing use whatever fruit you prefer… mango and passion fruit, for example.
half horizontally and then spoon or pipe the whipped cream on the base. Top with the other half and fill the centre with the fruit. Serve immediately.
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