Magazine
INSIDE EVENTS
BOOKS GALORE! AUTUMN FOOD BEAUTY
LITERARY FESTIVAL
PACK MONDAY Issue 224 October 2019
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Crossing counties, look inside for info on the best events and activities in West Dorset and South Somerset
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From the Editor This month we are saying a fond farewell to our Assistant Editor, Lauren Hill, who has worked on The Conduit for several years. When I became Editor of The Conduit two years ago, it was Lauren who provided me with the essential “inside info” about this much loved and long running magazine. Lauren helped the new Conduit team make sense of all the various bits of paper, scribbled notes, files and knowledge that accumulate over the years and can never quite be understood without someone who’s “in the know.” A big thank you to Lauren and we wish her every success in her new career in Bristol.
EDITOR Jane Adkins
In other news, you will see this issue has quite a big emphasis on books – new ones coming out, authors being interviewed and of course the Sherborne Literary Festival. Plus I hope you’re enjoying our partnership with Somerset’s Radio Ninesprings – Ross Owen Williams has written a fascinating article on a local musician. Food and Drink is another “must read” section - take a look at what our most popular pubs and restaurants have lined up for the next few months. If your favourite pub or restaurant is missing, remind them they need to be in November’s Conduit!
Contents WHAT’S ON p4
NOVEMBER DEADLINES News and Articles: FRIDAY, 11 October Advertisements: MONDAY, 14 October
Now Screening at The Swan Theatre Yeovil
Find out what’s going on in your area. A definitive guide to what’s happening near you.
BOOKS p13 Book reviews galore!
Thursday 17th October 7:30pm Tickets £15 Available from: www.swan-theatre.co.uk 07500 37 60 31
ARTS p29
All the news from the Arts scene
Tel: 01935 478100 walterwallyeovil@hotmail.co.uk
We are looking for a part-time Editorial Assistant to join our team at The Conduit.
Prepare your garden for autumn
A guide to holidays by rail
34 Princes Street, Yeovil, BA20 1EQ
VACANCY
GARDENING p18 TRAVEL p23
Domestic and contract flooring specialists
ANTIQUES p40
All the local auctions and Bruton Decorative Antiques Fair
Must be organised, have great attention to detail and fully conversant with M/S Outlook, Excel and Word. Please apply to: info@theconduitmagazine.co.uk
Visit our website for more Events, Services and Classifieds www.theconduitmagazine.co.uk Wyvern Buildings, North Street, Milborne Port DT9 5EP | 01935 424724 | info@theconduitmagazine.co.uk © The publisher is The Conduit Magazine Limited. The layout, format, design and all other aspects of this magazine are an original idea and therefore copyright of the publisher. No part of the contents may be reproduced in whole or in part without prior permission in writing. Whilst every care is taken in compiling the contents of this magazine, the proprietor assumes no responsibility for mistakes and omissions. The views of our contributors is not necessarily the view of the publisher.
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WHAT’S ON
WELCOME TO PACK MONDAY FAIR! It’s back! Pack Monday fair, the great tradition unique to Sherborne is back for 2019 to continue its long running history. In its second year of managing the event, local company Events Crew ltd, has gone further in its bid to ensure the event is a celebration of everything local. One of the biggest coups of Events Crews 2019 planning is in securing a local musician who is concluding a prestigious 30 year career – Ben Waters. Playing his last few gigs before he leaves the music scene, Ben is looking forward to coming home with his band to Sherborne’s Pack Monday Fair on Friday 11 October at Pageant Gardens to perform a farewell concert. In an amazing career he has played, accompanied and recorded with many legendary musicians. The likes of Jools Holland, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood have all been amazing mentors and friends, whilst Jerry Lee Lewis and Chuck Berry are among the legends he has played alongside. Amazing concerts earlier this year featured Ronnie Wood, Imelda May, Sir Rod Stewart and even Johnny Depp! Feel like you might like to ‘shake a tail feather’ to some great rock & roll? Book tickets online early to avoid disappointment for this, not to be missed, evening.
A hard act to follow, but Events Crew think they have the answer to make the evening of Saturday 12 October the ideal follow up to what promises to be a great night before. Saturday will be headlined by an act that in 2018 was so well received, organisers couldn’t ignore local demand and have secured ‘RATRACE’ to return to Pageant Gardens along with supporting acts to bring another night of SKA music to Sherborne. This event was so well received in the inaugural year of bringing entertainment evenings to the build-up for Pack Monday Fair that tickets are sure to be in short supply for anyone leaving it late. As the organisers work tirelessly on Sunday 13 October to turn the marquee on Pageant Gardens from a music venue into an indoor space fit for bringing a wider range of traders to Pack Monday, it’s not to be overlooked that you can enjoy ‘all the fun of the fair’ up on The Terrace as the much loved Anderton & Rowlands fair continues to thrill, excite
and entertain having been in position from Thursday 10 October through to the close of Pack Monday. The day itself, Monday 14 October promises to be another step forward in bringing the best Pack Monday fair possible back to the streets of Sherborne. Organisers have been inundated with traders new and old wishing to claim pitches both inside the marquee on Pageant Gardens as well as out on the historic streets of the town. For more information, please visit the event website www.packmondayfair.com or follow the social media page on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for up to the minute updates on any new announcements.
Thursday 10th to Monday 14th October The Terrace - Opening Times: Thursday & Friday: 6pm to 10pm Saturday: 2pm to 10:30pm Sunday: 2pm to 8pm - Monday: 6pm to 10:30pm
FRIDAY 11TH OCTOBER £15 + BOOKING FEES
SATURDAY12TH OCTOBER - PAGEANT GARDENS
Monday 14th October 2019 Town Centre, 10am to 9pm All enquiries, please call 01963 364399
£15 + BOOKING FEES
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Book Friday & Saturday tickets online: www.packmondayfair.com
WHAT’S ON
COMPETITION
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JTQ are perhaps best-known and best-loved for their unrivalled live performances - their concerts include reworkings of classics such as Green Onions and Time Is Tight, as well as JTQ’s Blow Up and the JTQ Theme plus the inimitable, Starsky and Hutch.
WIN
1 pair of tickets to see JTQ at 7.30pm on Saturday 2nd November at The Exchange, Sturminster Newton.
To enter just answer the following question: What’s the name of the music genre in which the band has set the standard for the past 25 years? Send answers by Wednesday 23 October with your name and contact details and the subject heading: JTQ Competition to info@theconduitmagazine.co.uk or post it to the address on p3. Good Luck!
A CELEBRATION OF NEIL 07/04/2019 15:31 DIAMOND Wayne Denton and band with hits Sweet Caroline, Love On The Rocks and more Friday 25 October 7.30pm. Tickets £15 THE THREE DEGREES Back by popular demand all the way from Philadelphia – not a tribute! Saturday 26 October, 7.30pm Tickets £20 JTQ - THE JAMES TAYLOR QUARTET British jazz funk band led by Hammond organ player James Taylor Saturday 2 November, 7.30pm Tickets £19/£18 LESLEY GARRETT An evening of song & chat with Britain’s most popular soprano. Friday 8 November. 7.30pm Tickets £25
LOS PACAMINOS WITH PAUL YOUNG The Boys are back with a tequila fuelled Tex Mex party night! Saturday 30 November 8pm Tickets £20 BYE BYE BABY A jaw dropping tribute to ‘Jersey Boys’ & music of ‘Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons Friday 13 December, 7.30pm Tickets £20 KIM WILDE ‘WINTER ACOUSTIC TOUR’ A very intimate show with Kim plus her 3 piece acoustic band. Saturday 14 December, 8.00pm Tickets £26 DANCE TO THE MUSIC Starring ex Strictly Come Dancing professional Kristina Rihanoff and hosted by Jake Quickenden Tuesday 4 February 2020, 7.30pm Tickets £28/26, VIP £45 (includes Meet & Greet)
Old Market Hill, Sturminster Newton DT10 1FH Tel: 01258 475137
Web: www.stur-exchange.co.uk Email: info@stur-exchange.co.uk 5
What’s On
WHAT’S ON
Coffee Mornings MARTOCK On Friday 27 September from 10.30am at the Parish Hall go along to Come For Coffee. Enjoy a cafetiere of coffee, pots of tea, home-made cakes and raffle. Occasional market stalls. Profits shared between Parish Hall Fund and charities. On Friday 25 October from 10.30am at the Parish Hall go along to Come For Coffee. Enjoy a cafetiere of coffee, pots of tea, home-made cakes and raffle. Occasional market stalls. Profits shared between Parish Hall Fund and charities. SOUTH PETHERTON On Wednesday 30 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at the David Hall there is a Coffee Morning. Free entry. WINCANTON On Saturday 12 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at the Memorial Hall there is a Coffee Morning. Coffee, produce, raffle and books will be on sale. On Tuesday 15 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at the Community Hospital there is a Coffee Morning. In aid of the Friends of Wincanton Community Hospital.
Early Listing LONG LOAD From Friday 22 to Saturday 30 November from 10.00am to 4.00pm at Long Load Village Hall there is Annual Exhibition ‘Connections’. An exhibition of embroidery and textiles by the members of the Somerset group. Sales table. Refreshments available. Free admission. For more information email dragonflyliz@ btinternet.com QUEEN CAMEL On Saturday 2 November from 10.00am to 6
2.30pm at the Memorial Hall there is a Craft Fair. Variety of stalls, refreshments, homemade cakes, tombola and raffle. All proceeds shared between the Dorset and Somerset Air Ambulance and St Margaret’s Hospice. All welcome. Free entry.
Fairs CHARLTON HORETHORNE On Friday 4 October at the Primary School there is an Open Afternoon and School Autumn Fair. MAPPERTON On Saturday 28 September from 10.30am to 4.00pm at Mapperton Gardens go along to ‘Eat, Live Well – Food, Drink and Wellbeing Fair’. A one day celebration of Dorset’s commitment to good food, good living and good health hosting over forty local stallholders, supplying nourishment for both body and spirit. In addition you can enjoy a yoga class, listen to talks on children’s nutrition, essential oils and tea and relax in a sound bath as well as practice mindfulness. Children can have fun recycling and junk puppeting with Save the World Girl, helping her sort the rubbish and play games for prizes. The event will be hosted by Julie Montagu, author and top London yoga teacher who lives part of the time at Mapperton. Entry £5 from www. mapperton.com/foodfair or £6 on the day, under 16’s free. NORTON SUB HAMDON From Friday 11 to Sunday 13 October from 10.30am to 4.00pm it is Norton Sub Hamdon Festival at the church. Hobbies exhibition, organ, flowers and refreshments. On Saturday 12 October see folk concert featuring ‘The Four Foot Four’, Mitchell and Vincent and Jack and Alison. Tickets £7 from the village shop or £8 on the door. On Sunday 13 October at 9.30am there is a Harvest Communion with
Contact: Lauren Hill
/theconduitmagazine
E: info@theconduitmagazine.co.uk
@conduitmag
preacher David Mangles and at 4.00pm there is Festival Praise with requested hymns. SHERBORNE On Saturday 5 October from 10.00am to 4.00pm at Digby Memorial Hall the Yeovil and District Philatelic Society have a ‘Stamp and Postcard Fair’. Tea, coffee and ploughman’s lunch. For more information phone 01460 74422.
Food
On Saturday 19 October from 10.00am to 4.00pm at Digby Church Hall West Country Craft Fairs hosts Sherborne’s 15th Annual Autumn Craft Fair. Admission free. Enquiries on 01749 677049.
ALWESTON On Saturday 19 October from 9.00am to 11.00am at Alweston Village Hall there is a Big Butty Breakfast. Preserves, mince pies and more. Children’s activity table. Food bank collection at the hall for anyone wishing to contribute. A free child’s butty breakfast with the purchase of an adult breakfast (children under 10). A community event organised by Folke Church. Advance notice: Christmas breakfast on Saturday 7 December.
From Friday 23 to Sunday 25 October at The Merritt Centre at Sherborne Girls School it is Sherborne Literary Festival. Over the weekend see names such as Kirsty Wark, Raynor Winn, Max Hastings, Paul Williams, Jonathan Scott, Libby Page, John Hemming and more. In addition there will be a writing workshop by Tom George on the Friday. Their ever popular Writer-inResidence, Diana Cambridge, will be available on Thursday for those wishing one-onone sessions. Tickets and full programme at www. sherborneliterarysociety.com/ festival
CREWKERNE Every Thursday during September from 12.00 noon at the Henhayes Centre go along to Pie, Mash and Quiz Thursdays plus dessert. General knowledge quiz follows food with a prize up for grabs. Each week will be a different pie to try. Booking essential by 10.30am. Entry £9.50. Quiz only entry £2.
SOMERTON On Saturday 12 October from 7.30pm at the Parish Rooms it is Somerton’s 2nd Oktoberfest. Music, comedy, games, food and drink. With the Sherbervarian Stompers, Nevertheless and beer from Wagonkered Bar. Tickets from Palmer Snell, Somerton. Part of the Somerton Music and Arts Festival.
On Friday 4 October at Henhayes Centre from 12.30pm it is Fish and Chip Friday. Battered Cod with chips, mushy peas and tartar sauce followed by a fruity dessert. Entry £8.75. Vegetarian alternative available. Booking essential. More information phone 01460 74340. On Friday 18 October from 12.30pm at the Henhayes Centre it is the Chef’s Special Lunch. Fruit juice on arrival, roast beef followed by lemon ginger crunch with coffee/ tea and a chocolate to finish. Vegetarian alternative available. Booking essential. Entry £9.50. More information phone 01460 74340.
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WHAT’S ON
On Saturday 26 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at the Henhayes Centre there is a Big Breakfast/Brunch. Egg, sausage, bacon, tomato or beans, toast and tea or coffee. Vegetarian/ vegan options available. Entry £4.50. Extra portions 50p each. More information phone 01460 74340. SHERBORNE On Friday 18 October from 12.00 noon to 2.00pm at Barchester Trinity Manor Care Home, Bradford Road learn how to cook authentic curry with a cooking demonstration with multi award winner, entrepreneur, Dorset based TV Celebrity Chef, Sarah Ali Choudhury. Free entry, but please book on 01935 574961.
Markets CASTLE CARY Every Tuesday at the Market House from 8.30am to 2.00pm there is a weekly market. Fruit, vegetables, bread, fish, cheese, preserves, baked goods, gluten free options, season plants and other giftware available. MARTOCK On Saturday 12 October from 10.00am 1.00pm at the Shopping Precinct it is the Farmers Market. Over 16 stalls selling thoughtful food magnificently fit for purpose. For more information 01935 822202. MONTACUTE On Saturday 28 September from 10.00am to 2.00pm at Montacute House the monthly Levels Best Market returns for the year. All welcome. Free entry. On Saturday 28 September and Saturday 26 October from 10.00am to 2.00pm at Montacute House the monthly Levels Best Market returns for the year. All welcome. Free entry.
Quiz MARSTON MAGNA On 5 October in Marston Magna Village Hall, a fundraising Call My Bluff Wine Tasting Quiz. Tickets £15pp including a light supper. Call or text
07971 606716. In aid of MNDA. MILBORNE PORT On Monday 14 October from 7.30pm at Church House, Bathwell Lane Milborne Port History and Heritage Group are hosting a quiz called ‘Can You Guess What It is?’ organised by Hugh Vincent, an experienced local Dectorist. If you have found any local artefacts, please do bring them along for Hugh to look at and hopefuly identify! Free admission but donations welcome. SHERBORNE On Friday 25 October from 7.00pm at the Digby Memorial Hall it is Sherborne Museum’s Big Fat Autumn Quiz. A fun general knowledge quiz with a smattering of questions about the Dorset you know and love. Teams of up to 6 are encouraged or you can book individually and you will be introduced to a team. Light refreshments will be available, but please bring your own drink and glasses. Tickets £5 per person from Sherborne TIC or from 01935 815341. SOMERTON On Thursday 31 October from 8.00pm at the Sports Club there is a Monthly Quiz. Teams of up to six. £1 per person. All welcome to this friendly monthly brain teaser. SOUTH PETHERTON On Saturday 26 October from 7.30pm at the David Hall in South Petherton there is a Quiz Night. Join for an evening full of fun and facts. Test your knowledge, enjoy a ploughman’s supper and raise money for The David Hall at the same time. Maximum four team members. Tickets £6, includes supper. Advanced booking only by Wednesday 23 October.
Sale CASTLE CARY On Saturday 12 and Sunday 13 October from 10.00am to 4.00pm at All Saints Church it is FibreFest. A free exhibition and sale celebrating textile art and yarn of all kinds. Among the exhibits will be samples from John Boyd Textiles, art quilts, embroidered and felted pieces, historical work and more. Do come and
see what local textile artists are doing. If you are a textile artist, quilter, dyer, felter, knitter, dressmaker, weaver or spinner and would like to show your work or give a demonstration please email katya.goubsky@ gmail.com There are also flyers and entry forms available from All Saints’ and St. Andrew’s churches, Bailey Hill Bookshop and The Market House, Castle Cary. Refreshments available. For more information phone 07842 806931. Free entry, but donations to All Saints Church Development Fund. MARSTON MAGNA On Saturday 12 October from 10.00am to 1.00pm at Marston Magna Village Hall there is a Table Top Sale. Free admission. Tables £5 from 01935 850647 or 01935 851576. NORTON SUB HAMDON On Saturday 5 October from 11.00am at Norton Sub Hamdon there is an Autumn Sale. All usual stalls with new and nearly new, clothes, shoes, bags, books, DVDs, toys, collectables, bric-a-brac, cakes, raffle and more. All welcome. Admission 50p. All proceeds to Hall Funds. Any enquiries phone 01935 881718. STOKE SUB HAMDON On 5 October from 2 – 4pm at Stoke-sub-Hamdon Working Men’s Club, a Jumble Sale including books, games, clothes, toys etc. Admission 50p
Social ALWESTON On Sunday 13 October from 9.30am at Folke Ilchester Sportsfield Fund
CHARITY
CAR BOOT EVERY SUNDAY UNTIL 13TH OCTOBER
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SHERBORNE’S 15TH ANNUAL AUTUMN
CRAFT FAIR SATURDAY 19 OCTOBER
10.00am-4.00pm
Digby Church Hall, Sherborne ADMISSION FREE
Enquiries 01749 677049 Organised by West Country Craft Fairs. Church bring your pets and join in at the Pet Service. Hamsters, dogs, guinea pigs, cats etc. Refreshments for all afterwards. ILMINSTER On Friday 27 September at 7.30pm at the Warehouse Theatre from 7.30pm go along to ‘Murder in the Wings’ hosted by Bryan Hallett of Murder to Measure. Exercise your talents as detectives to see if you can solve the mystery of ‘Death in the Wings’. Tickets £7.50 from Harrimans Menswear, Silver Street and www. thewarehousetheatre.org.uk MINTERNE MAGNA Throughout October until Saturday 9 November from 10.00am to 6.00pm visit Minterne Gardens and see the autumn scenery. Synonymous with Rhododendrons, Acers and Magnolias, and set around lakes, streams and cascades, Minterne’s 27-acre garden will give you a taste of autumn in the Himalayas. The stunning warm colours of the leaves,
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WHAT’S ON
berries and barks will entrance you as you walk around this tranquil garden. Entry £6. For more information phone 01300 341370 or visit www.minterne. co.uk SHERBORNE Every Tuesday during term time from 10.00am to 11.45am at the Digby Memorial Hall it is Tuesday Toddlers. In 1985 a toddler group was started by The Mothers Union and supported by Sherborne Churches Together. Volunteers from each of the churches would support the running of the toddler group and became a popular place for mothers and babies to meet, play and exchange tips of parenthood. Recently renamed Tuesday Toddlers, it is still ruby volunteers, mostly from the local churches and a few parents and grandparents. To keep this valuable group alive Tuesday Toddlers are seeking helpers and a new leader. If you have a valid DBS certificate, are under 70(for insurance reasons), and can spare a few hours of a Tuesday morning, then please pop in to introduce yourself. Maybe you are a crafting goddess, take join preparing food or enjoy preparing or packing away toys? Maybe you just like to help? On Friday 27 September from 7.30am at Abbey View Nursing Care Home there is a Breakfast Networking Meeting. Enjoy tea, coffee and a continental breakfast, an informal way of networking with other local businesses and other healthcare professionals. Please email Emma to book your place. Entry £2. All proceeds to the Stroke Association. For more information phone 01935 813222. Every first and third Thursday each month from 2.00pm to 4.00pm the Dorset Blind Association host Social and Handicraft clubs. Transport provided. For more information phone Judy on 07748 212009 or 01202 712865. Every Thursday from 9.30am to 11.30am at St Pauls Church Hall or West End Hall (two groups) join in with Art for Parents. Free friendly art class for parents and carers of primary school age children. Fully funded by the National Lottery Community Fund. 8
For more information and to book text 07483 338969. Organised by ArtsLink. Every Tuesday from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at the Wingfield Room, Digby Hall and 2.00pm to 4.00pm at the West End Hall go along to Art For Memory. This group is for people experiencing mild to moderate memory loss. Free entry. Funded by the National Lottery. Organised by ArtsLink Fizz. For more information phone 01935 815899. Every Thursday from 2.30pm to 4.00pm at Tinney’s Lane Youth and Community Centre join in with Parkinson’s Dance. Free friendly class for people who are experiencing the challenges of living with Parkinson’s Disease. Funded by the National Lottery. Organised by ArtsLink Fizz. Free entry. For more information phone 01935 815899. SOMERTON On Monday 14 and Monday 28 October from 10.45am at West Street Church Somerton Sings are meeting. Purely for fun, for all ages and abilities. Sing anything well known, songs from the shows, old English melodies, and songs from the 30’s up to date. Visitors £1, including coffee and biscuits. TEMPLECOMBE On Sunday 29 September and Sunday 27 October from 9.30am to 4.30pm go along to the next Open Day at the Gartell Light Railway. Frequent trains, refreshments, free parking. For more information phone 01963 370752 or visit www. newglr.weebly.com WEST CAMEL On Saturday 5 October from 7.30pm at the Davis Hall Country and Western Dance Club hosts ‘Donna Wylde’. Bring your own alcohol. Soft drinks, rolls, snacks available. Tickets £6. For more details 01460 78895.
Latin and Sequence Dance. All abilities. Different dance host each week, playing a variety of traditional and modern dance tracks. Smart casual dress. Over 18’s only. Non members £8.50 on the door. For more information phone 01935 825939 or westlandballroom@ yahoo.com
for anyone looking to exercise in a relaxed, supportive and friendly environment. Every session contains a gentle warm up and suitable for all ages and abilities. Entry £4 a session. For more information phone 07738 696362 and visit www. englandnetball.co.uk/walkingnetball
On Thursday 31 October from 10.00am to 2.00pm at Yeovil Country Park there is a Halloween Trail. Pick up a leaflet from the frightful friends of Yeovil Country Park stall opposite Ninesprings Café. Follow the pumpkin markers through the woods. Find the missing letters which will be hidden at several marked pumpkin stops along the way to help craft the witches spell. Trail takes one hour to complete. A buggy friendly/little legs short route will be available. Children £2, under 2’s free.
SHERBORNE On Thursday 3 October from 10.00am at the end of Cheap Street, near the Conduit see Margaret Read off on her solo cycle ride to London. Margaret from Frome St Quintin will be then joining the October protects organised by Extinction Rebellion to lobby parliament about catastrophic climate change.
Every Tuesday from 7.00pm to 8.30pm at Westlands Sports Centre Yeovil Table Tennis Club have a social Table Tennis Evening. Play for fun, no need to sign up. Opportunities to join the club and play competitively if desired. Entry £4.
BROADWAY On Tuesday 8 October at Broadway Village Hall from 7.30pm The Ile Valley Flower Club have a demonstration called ‘The Worlds Your Oyster’ with Amy Shakeshaft. Visitors £6.
Whist Drive every Saturday at the Holy Trinity Church Hall at 7.30pm. Enquiries 01935 862325.
Sport CHARD Every Wednesday from 6.00pm to 7.00pm at Holyrood Academy, Zembard Lane there is Walking Netball. This is a slowed down version of the game of netball, designed
Talk
BRUTON On Monday 21 October from 7.30pm at the Community Hall the Bruton Horticultural Society have a talk called ‘Lift the Latch’ by Pauline and David Wright. David and Pauline have created this beautiful garden from scratch. Designed for all year round colour and interest, it has evergreen and deciduous trees, a large wildlife pond with stream and an ornamental Koi pond. They open their garden for charity and it has featured on BBC2’s Open Gardens and in several magazines.
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PROPERTY MAINTENANCE Tel: 01935 411813 Mob: 07811 070 498
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WINCANTON Every Thursday from 2.00pm to 4.30pm at Wincanton Memorial Hall enjoy an afternoon of Sequence Dancing. Entry £3. For more information phone 01747 851260.
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WHAT’S ON
CASTLE CARY On Tuesday 1 October from 7.30pm at Caryford Community Hall the Somerset Wildlife Trust have a talk called ‘Manu National Park – Where the Amazon Meets the Andes’. Entry ÂŁ3, Children free. On Thursday 3 October from 7.30pm at the Methodist School Room the Gardening Association have a talk called ‘Spectacular South African Flora’ by Rosemary Le Grand. Entry ÂŁ1. On Tuesday 15 October from 11.00am at Caryford Hall the Arts Society has a lecture entitled ‘The Founders and the Treasures of the Wallace Collection’ by Stephen Duffy. This lecture covers the story of the founding family of this great collection, including the 4th Marquess of Hertford and a chance to see many of its finest treasures. Entry ÂŁ6. For more information phone 01963 350132. On Saturday 19 October from 6.15pm at Caryford Community Hall there is a lecture called ‘The Sound of Violence: War, Peace and Radio 1922 – 1939’ led by Professor Simon Potter of the University of Bristol. Cash bar only and canapĂŠs. Tickets ÂŁ10 from Bailey Hill Bookshop or ÂŁ11 on the door. CHARLTON Every Tuesday at 7.30pm at the New Remembrance Hall the Blackmore Vale Amateur Radio Society meet. Visitors welcome. For more information visit www. bvars.org.uk COMPTON DUNDON On Wednesday 9 October at 7.30pm at Meadway Hall the WI have a 90th birthday party.. For more information phone 01458 447075. EAST COKER On Thursday 10 October from 7.30pm at East Coker Hall the Gardening Club have a talk called ‘Gardens from Near and Far’ by David Moon. Visitors ÂŁ3. For more information phone 01935 862447. HALSTOCK On Saturday 26 October from 7.00pm at Halstock Village Hall Screen Bites – Second Slice, Dorset’s food and film festival, arrives. There will be a mini farmers’ market with local food producers offering tastings, followed by a fascinating talk
from Liberty Dairies about their new organic milk venture. Then settle down to watch the great comedy movie ‘Madame’. Tickets ÂŁ8 from Halstock Shop or on the door. For more information visit www. screenbites.co.uk
anyone considering a place at Toy Box pre school and village school. There will be a warm welcome with a variety of playing and making activities and a music session for younger children. Just turn up. Any queries phone 01458 241434.
HINTON ST GEORGE On Saturday 19 October from 2.30pm at Hinton St George Village Hall there is a Cancer Research Fundraiser. Jenny Chance will demonstrate with the title ‘Autumn Splender’. Spend a pleasant afternoon relaxing and watching wonderful flowers been put together. Tickets ÂŁ8 includes tea and cake and tickets ÂŁ8 with raffle of arrangements, available from 01460 75025 and 01460 77233.
MARTOCK On Tuesday 8 October from 7.30pm at the Primary School the Gardening Society has a talk called ‘Cartgate Nature Reserve’ and their AGM. Visitors ÂŁ2, includes tea/coffee and biscuits. Annual membership ÂŁ10. For more information phone 01935 823366.
KINGSBURY EPISCOPI On Monday 14 October from 7.00pm at St Martin’s Church there is a talk called ‘Gardening Trends’ with Brimsmore Garden Centre Gold Club. Non members ÂŁ2, ÂŁ10 membership. Refreshments available. LANGPORT On Monday 7 October from 7.30pm at the Sixth Form Auditorium, Huish Episcopi Academy the History Society have a talk on ‘Town Criers’ by Janet Seaton, researcher and chair, followed by the AGM. Non members ÂŁ4. LONG SUTTON From Tuesday 1 October to Tuesday 12 November from 7.30pm at Long Sutton Village Hall a new WEA course starts called ‘Douglas Rice – The Sky in Science and Imagination’. This course will present some historically important objects, events and ideas in astronomy, showing how they have inspired both imaginative and scientific responses. Six sessions will focus on Astrology, Shakespeare’s Universe, Voyages to the Moon, and the inspiration the sky has given to music, art and writing. From Newton to Fats Waller—a whole cosmos to enjoy! Tickets ÂŁ25 from 0300 303 3464, quoting Course Reference C3530645. For more information phone 01458 241711 or doreenharveylongsuttonwea@ outlook.com On Saturday 12 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at Long Sutton C of E Primary School there is an Open Morning for
On Wednesday 9 October from 2.00pm at the Parish Hall the U3A host ‘Cupcakes, Coffee and Quiz’ as they celebrate their second birthday with a free cupcake and fun quiz. For more information phone 07510 178094 or martocku3amembership@gmail. com On Tuesday 22 October from 7.30pm at the Primary School the History Group have a talk called ‘Non-conformist Chapel Buildings’ by Julian Orbach. He will discuss the different sects have made on our towns
and villages. Julian revised the Pevsner for Somerset in 2011 and has many photos. Non members ÂŁ3. MERRIOTT On Tuesday 29 October from 7.00pm at Tithe Barn the Gardening Club Chris Sperring, MBE of the Hawk & Owl Trust will be talking about his work with birds of Prey and will be bringing along one of his special birds. Go along and see a bird of prey up close. Entry ÂŁ3, Children free. Refreshments available. MILBORNE PORT On Monday 7 October from 6.30pm the Gardening Club have their 70th Anniversary Party at Church House, Bathwell Road. Entry ÂŁ12. Tickets for non members ÂŁ7.50, includes wine and nibbles, from 01963 251598 or 01963 220984. NORTH CADBURY On Wednesday 16 October from 7.30pm at North Cadbury Village Hall there is a talk called ‘Shady Ladies and Sun Seekers’ by Mary Benger. Non members ÂŁ2. NORTON SUB HAMDON On Wednesday 16 October 7.30pm at Norton Sub Hamdon Village Hall the Crewkerne
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WHAT’S ON
Trains every 25 mins from 10.30. Free Parking. Refreshments. Breakfasts from 09.30. Under 3s travel Free
LAST OPEN DAY 2019 Sunday October 27th 09.30 -16.30
THE GARTELL LIGHT RAILWAY As the clocks go back, why not take a trip on the narrow gauge Gartell Light Railway at Common Lane, Yenston on the A357 between Wincanton and Henstridge on its last Open Day of 2019 on Sunday 27 October?
The trip takes about 35 minutes and includes reversals at the ends of the line, Park Lane and Tower View with further reversals at Pinesway Junction, from where two trains depart simultaneously in the same direction.
The trains depart at 25-minute intervals from Common Lane, with the first leaving at 10. 30 and the last at 16.20. Unfortunately the trains are not big enough for large dogs but two of the trains can accommodate wheelchairs with assistance from the friendly staff.
Tickets are valid all day allowing visitors to take rides on all three trains with both steam and diesel haulage.
The half-sized trains run, in part, along the track-bed of the old Somerset and Dorset railway, which ran from Bath to Bournemouth until it was closed in 1966.
Astronomical Society have their next talk called ‘Galaxies – Do Mergers Matter’ by Chris Lintott. First visit free, then £1 after, under £16’s free. OVER STRATTON On Monday 21 October from 7.30pm at Over Stratton Village Hall the Gardening Club have a talk called ‘The Good, The Bad and the Ugly’ by Michael Jordan, from the Association of British Fungal Groups. Visitors £3. For more information email somersetdays@hotmail.com QUEEN CAMEL On Thursday 10 October at 7.30pm at the Memorial Hall the District Horticultural Society have a talk on the ‘Dorset Wildlife Trust’ with speaker Richard Thorbury. Entry £2. For more information phone 01935 850673. SEAVINGTON On Thursday 10 October from 7.30pm at the Millennium Hall the Gardening Club have a talk called ‘Autumn Flowering Perennials’ by Rosy Hardy from Hardy’s Cottage Plants. Plants for sale. Flower of 10
Follow the signs from the main road to the large free car park and go to the ticket office in the “Pines Suite” where food and toilets are available. Breakfasts are served from 09.30. Please see the advertisement for details or go online at newglr. weebly.com
the month competition. Visitors £2. Enquiries on 01460 249728. On Thursday 17 October from 7.30pm at the Millennium Hall the RSPB have a talk. SHERBORNE On Friday 27 September from 7.00pm at the Raleigh Hall the Sherborne Literary Society host a ‘Words with Wine and AGM’ with a talk called ‘Horses and Humans’. Tickets £5 from Winstone’s Bookshop. On Wednesday 2 October from 12.00 noon to 2.00pm Barchester Trinity Manor Care Home, Bradford Road host a talk called ‘How To Put Your Garden to Bed For Winter’ by Kyla Foster-Shaw from Castle Gardens. Followed by tea and cake. Free entry, but please book on 01935 574961. On Wednesday 2 October at 3.00pm and 7.00pm at the Digby Hall the Arts Society presents an illustrated talk called ‘What Really Happened
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Signposted from Henstridge traffic lights on A30 and from Templecombe on the A357 tel 01963 370752 SatNav BA8 0NB www.newglr.weebly.com
in the Yellow House in Arles in 1888’ with Julian Halsby. A fascinating lecture which discusses the two artists’ different approach to painting and surveys the results of this confrontation. Visitors £7.
Barchester Trinity Manor Care Home, Bradford Road there is an Antique Valuation day with Gill Norman from Acreman St Antiques. Followed by cream tea. Free entry, but please book on 01935 574961.
On Thursday 3 October from 2.00pm to 4.00pm Sherborne Library are celebrating National Poetry Day with readings from Elaine Beckett and the Sherborne Library Poets. Refreshments provided. For more information phone 01935 812683.
On Wednesday 16 October from 7.30pm at the Digby Memorial Hall Dorset Wildlife Trust has a talk called ‘Dorset Blue Butterflies’. Jeremy Thomas, OBE, Emeritus Professor of Ecolgy, University of Oxford, will be giving a talk on the seven blue butterflies of Dorset and their symbiotic relationship with ants, in particular the Chalkhill, Adonis and Silver-studded Blues. Entry £2.50. A glass of wine or soft drink available beforehand. For more information phone 01935 872742.
On Tuesday 8 October from 1.15pm to 4.30pm at Digby Memorial Church Hall go along to ‘Quakers: Who are we and what do we do?’ Drop in for tea and a chat. For more information phone 07825 152251. On Tuesday 8 October from 8.00pm at the Digby Hall the Sherborne Historical Society have a talk called ‘The Diet Worms 1521’. Professor Elaine Fulton asks what the significance of the occasion was when Martin Luther defied Holy Roman Emperor Charles V? Non members £5. For more information phone 01935 812233. On Thursday 10 October from 7.30pm at the Raleigh Hall the Sherborne Gardeners’ Association have a talk called ‘Cottage Flowers’ with florist, Angie Blackwell. Annual subscription £12. Visitors £2. On Sunday 13 October from 11.30am to 3.30pm the Sherborne Steam and Waterwheel Centre have Open Day. Wheel and steam engines running. Audio Visual displays. Many items of local and historic interest. Tea Room. Picnic Area. Entry by donation. For more information visit www.SSWC. co.uk On Tuesday 15 October from 11.00am to 2.00pm at
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On Tuesday 22 October from 8.00pm at the Digby Hall the Sherborne Historical Society have a talk called ‘Cottages Ornés: the Charms of the Simple Life.’ Roger White explores the ornamental cottage, an English 18th century invention, which is the only architectural genre to cover the entire social spectrum. Non members £5. On Thursday 24 October from 7.30pm at the Catholic Church Hall Sherborne Floral Group have a talk called ‘Miss Potter and Friends’ with Elizabeth Witcomb. Refreshments and raffle. For more information phone 01935 813316. SOMERTON On Tuesday 1 October from 7.15pm at the Parish Rooms the WI have a meeting. New members welcome. On Tuesday 8 October from 7.30pm at the Parish Rooms the Somerset Wildlife Trust have a talk called ‘British Deer – Their History and Impact’ from Dr Jochen Langbein, who runs Langbein Wildlife. Langbein Wildlife is a specialist
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WHAT’S ON
ecological consultancy working predominantly with deer, covering all aspects of their behaviour, population dynamics and management of their impacts. They have worked in collaboration with BBC’s Autumnwatch. Non members £3. On Thursday 24 October from 7.00pm at the Parish Rooms the History Society have a talk called ‘At the Knife Edge of Royalty’ by Graham Deane. Non members £2. On Friday 25 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at the Edgar Hall the Somerton U3A are meeting. All welcome. On Friday 25 October from 10.00am at Edgar Community Hall the U3A have a talk called ‘Not For King and Country’ with Kathleen McNally. Kathleen formerly worked for the Government Secret Service and will talk about King Edward VIII and his mistress Wallis Simpson. It has romance, intrigue and espionage. After eighty years the truth is emerging, piece by piece about the events that shook an empire. Visitors £2.
On Monday 28 October from 7.30pm at the Parish Rooms the Green Gardeners have a talk called ‘Art in the Garden’ with Christopher Bond. Refreshments available. Visitors £3. For more information phone 01458 272333. SOUTH PETHERTON On Monday 7 October at 7.15pm at Frogmary Green Conference Centre the Arts Society Neroche South Somerset opens the new season of lectures with ‘Punch and Judy Show – a Subversive Symbol from Commedia Del’Arte to the Present Day’ by Bertie Pearce. Mr Punch – the most famous puppet character of all time. His comic irreverence gave ‘Punch’ magazine its title. His anarchic vitality has inspired opera, ballet and punk rock and his enduring popularity has seen his likeness on goods ranging from Victorian silverware to computer video games. Appearing in England in 1662, Punch is descended from the Italian Clown Pulcinella of the 15th century Commedia Del’Arte tradition. Even today this Lord of Misrule uses his slapstick to dispense with oppressive
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RARE PIECES OF ALPACA KNITWEAR –
never found on the High Street
ARTISAN
Artisan Route is a young business only four years old, but packing a wealth of experience gathered over many years by Clive Webber, bestowing a maturity to underpin this new brand.
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Artisan Route specialises in rare pieces of Alpaca knitwear, exotic hand woven silk scarves, and ‘Perfect Fit’ Pima cotton tops. They are an example of real excellence, with an attention to fit and finish which just ‘shout’ quality.
Maya – Stunning geometric intarsia jacket. Knitted in 100% Peruvian Superfine Alpaca.
Clive is no newcomer to Alpaca and Pima cotton products, having built up a solid reputation working extensively in Peru and Bolivia for 26 years and with products sold throughout much of the UK and Scandinavia. He has had connections with Sherborne for more than 20 years and is so pleased to be making this fifth event at Digby Hall in Sherborne after once more building up such a good response last April. On Saturday 12 October Artisan Route will be holding a one day Open Day Event at the Digby Hall, Hound Street, Sherborne from 10.30am - 4pm and showing its Autumn collection all of which will be available for sale on the day.
Open Day Event Digby Hall, Hound St, Sherborne Saturday 12th October 2019 (10:30am - 4pm)
They will be delighted to welcome visitors along with their friends and families to this Open Day. You can check out their collection in advance at www.artisanroute.co.uk
Follow postcode DT9 3AA Check out our Autumn collection of Alpaca Knitwear, Pima Cotton Tops and Handwoven Silk Scarves in advance at
style Lauren in colour Spectrum Blue
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w w w. a r t i s a n r o u t e . c o . u k or phone for a brochure. T : 01896 823 765 ( Monday - Friday 10.00 - 18.00)
/TheConduitMag
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WHAT’S ON
authority, be it politicians, political correctness or the devil, while proclaiming his notorious refrain ‘That’s the way to do it!’ Visitors £10. On Wednesday 23 October at 7.30pm at the Methodist Church Hall the Local History Group have a talk called ‘The Non Conformist Chapels of Somerset – A Look at their Architecture’ by Julian Orbach. Visitors £3. For more information email s_petherton_ history@hotmail.co.uk STOURTON CAUNDLE On Wednesday 9 October from 7.30pm at Stourton Caundle Village Hall the Garden Club have a talk called ‘Perennials That Light Up Late Summer Borders’ by Helen Yemm. Non members £7.50 from 01963 23375 or 01963 363816. TEMPLECOMBE On Monday 14 October from 7.15pm at Templecombe Village Hall the WI have a ‘Willow Crafting’ demo and participation meeting by Stephan Jennings. WINCANTON On Friday 4 October from 7.00pm at the Memorial Hall the Gardeners AGM and talk on ‘Gardens of the Rich and Famous’ by David Moon. Entry £1. Annual membership £5. Refreshments available. YEOVIL On Friday 4 October from 7.30pm at the Holy Trinity Church the Archaeological and History Society have a talk called ‘The Roman History of Ilchester’ with speaker John Smith. The Roman occupation of Ilchester and the surrounding area with items to show and talk about, up to AD 427 – end of coinage – in the reign of Roman ‘Western Emperor’. Non members £2. On Monday 14 October from 1.30pm at The Yeovil Court Hotel the Yeovil Probus Club have a talk called ‘Railway Disaster at Yeovil Pen Mill’. New members welcome. For more information contact the Hon. Secretary on 01935 414765.
Walk CREWKERNE Every Tuesday at the Sports Centre from 6.00pm to 7.00pm join in at 12
the weekly Walking Netball sessions. For all ages and abilities. All sessions contain a gentle warm up. No need to book. First session free then £3.50 per session. LONGBURTON On Sunday 27 October from 10.15am meeting at the Rose and Crown, Longburton join Dorset Ramblers for a morning walk of 4.5 miles on fairly level terrain. MARTOCK On Friday 18 October from 9.30am at the Precinct there is a Free Health Walk. Friendly 45-60 minutes, led by trained volunteers at pace suitable to group. For more information phone 01935 824252. OSMINGTON On Sunday 13 October from 10.15am meeting at Church Lane, Osmington join Dorset Ramblers for a walk from Osmington Mills to Bowleaze Cove. 4.5 miles in the morning followed by 1.5 miles in the afternoon. SHERBORNE Every Friday from 2.00pm starting from Waitrose Sherborne store entrance there is a Health Walk. Free, friendly walk of approximately 60 minutes around the town. Optional refreshments at the end. No need to book, just turn up! For more information phone 07825 691508. On Thursday 3 and Thursday 17 October from 11.30am at the Library there is a Health Walk for an hour. Wear sensible shoes and clothing. Organised by Macmillan, The Ramblers Association and SSDC. For more information phone 01458 274631. Every Thursday at 11.00am starting by the Museum there is a 40 minute Health Walk. Generally flat with a mixture of pavement and fields in dry weather. For more details call Bryan Pearson on 01749 938191.
Workshops BARRINGTON On Sunday 13 October from 1.30pm at Barrington Village Hall go along to ‘Dances with Shakespeare: Historical Dance Class’. Taught by friendly specialist. No
experience or partner needed. Wear light loose clothes and flexible footwear. Entry £6, just turn up, check before first time. For more information phone 01935 472771 or email thedancingmaster@outlook. com On Saturday 26 October from 12.00 noon to 4.00pm at Barrington Court there is a Willow Workshop. Join their volunteer Carol for a special autumn willow-weaving workshop. Fun for all the family! BRIDPORT On Sunday 6 October from 1.30pm at the Royal British Legion Hall, Victoria Grove go along to ‘From Wolf Hall to Poldark: Historical Dance Class’. Taught by friendly specialist. No experience or partner needed. Wear light loose clothes and flexible footwear. Entry £6, just turn up, check before first time. For more information phone 01935 472771 or email thedancingmaster@outlook. com CASTLE CARY On Thursday 24 October from 7.30pm at the Market House go along to ‘From Wolf Hall to Poldark: Historical Dance Class’. Taught by friendly specialist. No experience or partner needed. Wear light loose clothes and flexible footwear. Entry £6, just turn up, check before first time. For more information phone 01935 472771 or email thedancingmaster@outlook. com
Michael Jordan, author of the Encyclopedia of Fungi of Britain and Europe as he searches for and identifies his findings. Adults £6, Children free. On Monday 28 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at Ham Hill there is Lantern Decorating. Drop in session at the ranger’s office. Decorate your own lantern for Halloween or bring your lantern to the Lantern Parade on Friday 1 November. All craft materials supplied. Free entry, donations appreciated. LANGPORT Every Friday at Ridgway Hall from 2.15pm go along to ‘Health and Wellbeing Circuits’. Led by exercise specialist Marion Cooper. Ideal as a continuation of an NHS, COPD Respiratory or Cardiac Rehabilitation Programme. Suitable if you have been diagnosed with diabetes, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis or part of your health recovery. The session offers support, guidance and motivation in a safe, comfortable and friend environment. For more information phone 07814 826951 or marioncooper@ hotmail.co.uk LONG SUTTON Every Monday during term time at Long Sutton C of E Primary School from 9.30am to 11.00am there is a workshop called Music Baddies. A group for 0 to 4 year olds which includes a sing, play and snack. Entry £2 per family. Friendly and informal. All welcome.
COMBE ST NICHOLAS On Saturday 19 October from 10.00am to 1.00pm at Combe St Nicholas Village Hall go along to ‘How to Arrange Flowers Underwater’ workshop. Want to learn how to create a beautiful foam-free floral design for your home using just a few fresh flowers? This workshop reveals the techniques needed to elegantly arrange your blooms underwater. A current trend that is simply sensational. Workshops taught by award winning Somerset tutor Jackie Nicholls from Ashville Design. Entry £22. For more information phone 01460 67795 or visit www. ashvilledesign.co.uk
MARTOCK Every Monday at Martock Parish Hall from 2.30pm go along to ‘Mature Movers’ session. Age UK Somerset session. Led by exercise specialist Marion Cooper. Ideal as a continuation of an NHS, COPD Respiratory or Cardiac Rehabilitation Programme. Suitable if you have been diagnosed with diabetes, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis or part of your health recovery. The session offers support, guidance and motivation in a safe, comfortable and friend environment. For more information phone 07814 826951 or marioncooper@ hotmail.co.uk
HAM HILL On Saturday 12 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at Ham Hill Country park there is Fungi Foray. Join renowned mycologist
SHERBORNE On Wednesday 9 October from 1.00pm to 3.00pm go along to Barchester Trinity Manor Care Home, Bradford Road where
WHAT’S ON
there is a taster session of Indian head massages and hand messages with Louise Byford from Ninesprings. Both are incredibly relaxing, relieving stress, tension and leaving you feeling rested and restored followed by high afternoon tea. Free entry, but please book on 01935 574961. On Sunday 20 October from 1.30pm to 4.30pm at Digby Memorial Hall Sherborne Folk Band have their workshops. Workshops are led by Hannah Cumming, an inspiring and experienced workshop leader, who will teach tunes and harmonies by ear. The workshops are suitable for all levels and all acoustic instruments. Notation and audio supplied. Everyone welcome! Tickets £10, £25 for 3 workshops, from www.sherbornefolkband. org, info@sherbornefolkband. org or 07527 508277 or £12 on the door. On Monday 21 October from 9.30am to 3.30pm at Digby Hall the West Country Embroiderers have a workshop called ‘Inspired by Van Gogh’ with tutor Janet Edmonds. New members welcome. For more information phone 01963 34696. On Tuesday 22 October from 11.00 to 1.00pm at Trinity Manor Care Home, Bradford Road there is a make up demonstration with Margaret Balfour Beauty Centre who will also talk about how to look after your skin in Winter. Followed by afternoon tea. Free entry, but please book on 01935 574961. On Thursday 24 October from 2.00pm to 4.00pm at Barchester Trinity Manor Care Home, Bradford Road there is a Dementia Friends Session. Free entry, but please book on 01935 574961. SOUTH PETHERTON On Saturday 28 September at 3.00pm at the David Hall go along to ‘Quimantu’s Family Music Workshop’ with Songo. An engaging and fun-filled session introducing young children to our favourite character Songo, who loves to sing and share music. During the session they will be singing songs from Quimantu’s unique collection of songs for
early years, inspired by World Rhythms, and introducing instruments for the hands-on experience of making different sounds, moving and dancing and opening children’s ears to the world of music. Children need to be accompanied by an adult throughout the session. Tickets Adults £5, Under 10s £3. YEOVIL Every Tuesday at the Baptist Church go along to the award winning Monkey Music Classes for Babies and Young Children for ages 3 months to 4 years. Monkey Music aims to introduce music to very young children in a fun way they can easily understand and enjoy, with specialist teachers who gently encourage social and musical skills within fun, stimulating and friendly environment. Unique to Monkey Music is their newest curriculum which has been specially written for babies from 3months in response to huge demand from parents, who are increasingly aware of the importance of introducing their children to music from as young an age as possible. Each class is themed around the everyday life of a very young child. To find out more, or to book your free first class, phone Alison on01935 850541 or email sherborne. dorchester@monkeymusic. co.ukOr why not visit the interactive website at www. monkeymusic.co.uk to sample some of the delights of Monkey Music for yourself? Every Thursday at Birchfield Community Centre from 2.00pm go along to ‘Health and Wellbeing Circuits’. Led by exercise specialist Marion Cooper. Ideal as a continuation of an NHS, COPD Respiratory or Cardiac Rehabilitation Programme. Suitable if you have been diagnosed with diabetes, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis or part of your health recovery. The session offers support, guidance and motivation in a safe, comfortable and friend environment. For more information phone 07814 826951 or marioncooper@hotmail.co.uk
BOOKS
DEBUT NOVEL
FOR SHERBORNE LIT FEST
WRITER IN RESIDENCE West Country award-winning journalist Diana Cambridge has her debut novel – Don’t Think a Single Thought (Louise Walters Books, £7 99) launched in Sherborne with an event at Winstone’s on 3 October. Diana, who lives in Bath, has been Sherborne Literary festival’s Writer In Residence for several years. “I have met so many promising writers here – I’ve always enjoyed Sherborne so much. I am delighted that Winstone’s would host an event for my novel.” she says. “It will be a relaxed sociable evening, with free wine and nibbles.” Long-listed for the Guardian’s Not The Booker Prize, the novel, billed as a ”literary psychological thriller” was reviewed by Rebecca Mascull, author of The Visitors as “Extraordinary, fresh, unique, disturbing. Wow…just wow!” Diana left school at 16 and joined The Clevedon Mercury as an apprentice reporter. She worked on regional newspapers, had a column on office life in the Guardian and wrote about Royalty for the Sunday Mirror. Awards include the Society of Authors Margaret Rhondda Award for women journalists: and a Freeman award as Women’s Writer for Wales. Diana is now Chairman of the Bath branch of the Society of Authors. “The novel is based on the life and death of Manhattan writer Sue Kaufman, who wrote Diary of a Mad Housewife, also adapted for film. It’s forty years since she took her own life, but her writing is still so fresh, witty and relevant… my novel is a work of imagination, but Kaufman fans will recognise the territory.” Diana adds: “If you’ve met me at any of my writing workshops, please come and say hello! I’m still in touch with many past students, so there will be a lovely mix of friends old and new.” You can follow Diana on Twitter – Twitter@ DianaCambridge
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BOOKS
Becoming a writer Diana Cambridge, writer in residence at Sherborne Literary Festival talks to The Conduit about how she became a writer. “I like shape very much. A novel has to have shape and life doesn’t have any.”
Jean Rhys (1890 – 1979)
I always wanted to be a writer – sending prize-winning letters to Jackie magazine (prize: ten-shilling (50p) postal orders) and learning shorthand and typing at home.
The novel is probably the most satisfying work I’ve ever done – once I saw the finished book, handled it, stared at the stunning cover , I was both amazed “ Is this really mine?” and full of joy.
I typed on my Dad’s army-issue typewriter with a steel casing, which he said could be used as a shield in battle. For a long time I believed him.
But it’s all too easy to fall in love with your work, re-reading it constantly (I did).
I was born in a Bedminster council house, left Weston-SuperMare grammar school at 16 and joined The Clevedon Mercury as an apprentice reporter. I was too young to sign the three-year contract, so my dad came in to sign for me, then he and the editor drank sherry while I had lemonade. One of my regular jobs was typing out the tide times for the week; essential for local fishermen. My major error was getting the tide time times wrong one week and enraging a fishing group who called in to complain. The editor’s apology was a couple of bottles of Johnny Walker. Later I had a column in The Guardian Office Hours section – and wrote about Royalty for the Sunday Mirror. Many markets have dried up or closed in the last ten years. I started thinking about fiction. For decades I’ve loved the work of Sue Kaufman (Diary of a mad Housewife – also adapted for film) and wanted to write a fictional novel based on her life and death. My debut novel, Don’t Think a Single Thought, is a kind of literary psychological thriller, with lots of twists and turns. I was fortunate in being runner-up in the Retreat West (www. retreatwest.co.uk) First Chapter award in 2017. My lovely publisher, Louise Walters of Louise Walters Books, scouts that competition, and she asked to see the rest of it. Then offered a contract. The production schedule took about ten months, with about 16 rounds of proofing. It’s important, I think, to work with your publisher and not try to defend the bits she thinks are better deleted. And to remember she’s putting a lot of time and money behind you. Do as much publicity as you can – don’t turn anything down! 14
Begin your next novel. Also go on funding courses- the Arts Council runs some high quality weekend-end courses, which take you through all the funding routes available. There are more than you think. I’d also recommend “work-in-progress” Arvon courses – I went on one with tutor Jill Dawson – one of the best investments I’ve made. You can get grants for them if earnings are low. Join The Society of Authors – masses of support, free legal advice and a ten per cent discount in Waterstone’s. Other tips: Enter everything that is relevant. For example, Retreat West’s First Chapter competition is excellent: also look up www.writersreign for a frequently-updated list of all the current competitions, with full contact details. There are prizes for first novels, for writers over 40, for working-class writers and for many other categories. Diversity is emphasised. Writing (www.writers-online.co.uk) magazine, where I am “Agony Aunt” contains news of many competitions every issue. I’ll be launching my novel at Winstone’s fine shop in Sherborne on October 3 – free wine and nibbles, a relaxed atmosphere. Sherborne is one of my favourite places and I’ve loved being Writer In Residence at the Sherborne Literary Festival. I’ve seen many talented writers and urged them to continue their work. Sometimes exemplary writers don’t sustain their project and this is my major tip: you must complete. Even 500 words a day helps. Even 200. Write first, edit later. Get something down! Don’t wait until you’re “in the mood” because you never will be. Start writing, and after a little while you’ll find you are in the flow. Then the writing overtakes you – you’ll see.
www.dianacambridge.co.uk
BOOKS
GUEST AUTHORS
FRIDAY 25th OCTOBER
THURSDAY 24th OCTOBER
WEDNESDAY 23rd OCTOBER
AT THIS YEAR’S FESTIVAL
Kirsty Wark 11am
Raynor Winn 2pm
Max Hastings 7pm
Paul Williams 11am
Jonathan Scott 2pm
Ziauddin Yousafzai 7pm
Rory Maclean 11am
Libby Page 2pm
John Hemming 7pm
ONLINE www.sherborneliterarysociety.com or Eventbrite/Sherborne Literary Society IN PERSON Sherborne Tourist Information Centre
Diana Cambridge
Writer in Residence WEDNESDAY 24th OCTOBER 10am - 6pm
Tom George
Mindfulness Workshop THURSDAY 25th OCTOBER 10am - 4pm
BY TELEPHONE to the above on 01935 815341 IN PERSON DURING THE FESTIVAL Merritt Centre, DT9 3QN
HOW TO BOOK
WORKSHOPS
ALL EVENTS ARE HELD AT THE MERRITT CENTRE AT SHERBORNE GIRLS, SHERBORNE DT9 3QN
BOOKS
PHOTOGRAPHY AND NATURE HEAL A BROKEN MIND
Author Paul Williams will speak about his experiences at Sherborne Literary Festival, book tickets to hear his unique account Wildlife Photography: saving my life one frame at a time (RRP: £29.99), explores the links between wellbeing and wildlife photography. This unique book by photographer Paul Williams charts Paul’s own journey, which has seen his passion for photography and nature help to heal the mental wounds that left him hopeless and suicidal. Demonstrating how wildlife photography has the power to improve physical and mental wellbeing, the book is designed to appeal to a wide range of individuals, from beginners with very little photographic experience through to those further along on their photographic journey, as well as those interested in Paul’s odyssey from rock bottom to rediscovery of a life worth living. TV presenter, conservationist and nature photographer Chris Packham commented after reading the book, “Photography has the power to change people’s minds; here, it’s a means of mending a mind, illustrating a brutally honest visual journey through Paul’s account of his breakdown and recovery. Uplifting and beautiful in its simplicity, this is a heartening tale of how a closer bond with nature can heal the human mind.” Throughout the book we learn how wildlife photography pulled Paul back from the brink after his very challenging careers took their toll on his mental state. A career soldier, he went on to become a highly qualified physical training instructor before shattering both ankles in a climbing accident. After leaving the military Paul gained a First Class honours in Clinical Mental Health nursing, and worked as a senior mental health specialist in Assertive Outreach. At the age of 40 Paul decided on a complete career change and joined the police. In 2010 he developed PTSD after defending four people against a mentally ill, samurai sword-wielding woman, and
became very unwell very quickly, attempting suicide three times before experiencing a significant breakthrough with a new psychotherapy treatment. Already an amateur photographer with some 20 years’ experience, Paul picked up his camera to give him an incentive to get out, as he had become far too reclusive. He discovered great satisfaction from sitting in still, quiet spaces waiting for wildlife to appear (or not, as was often the case). What makes the book so unique is how Paul is able to combine practical help on photography alongside an insightful commentary on his mental wellbeing. For example: “All three of these images were shot in my garden on a bright, sunny day that gave me plenty of light to help keep the shutter speed high – essential if you want to keep fast-moving subjects sharp, and you don’t have, or want to use, flash. Knowing I had only to go into my garden to take these images meant a lot of the stress I associated with going out amongst people was significantly reduced. Looking back, I now know that finding the motivation to take these images when I was so unwell were important first steps on the road to my recovery.” With general tips and points about equipment, fieldcraft and techniques, this fabulously-illustrated book of over 200 original colour images seamlessly aligns photography with creative suggestions around mindfulness, wellbeing and holism to create a blueprint for all, and especially anyone experiencing poor mental or physical health, who would like to express themselves creatively in the natural world.
Editor of The Conduit, Jane Adkins will be interviewing Libby Page about her best-selling first novel at Sherborne Literary Festival. Book tickets now!
THE LIDO By LIBBY PAGE THE LIDO is about the heart of a community, loneliness, friendship and hope. Published in paperback by Orion Fiction on 4 April 2019 at £7.99, eBook at £4.99 and audio at £19.99 Brockwell Lido is under threat of closure from property developers. Rosemary, 86, has recently lost her husband of 65 years, with whom she used to swim in the lido every day. She has begun a campaign to save the place that holds so many memories for her. Kate, 26, has just moved to London. Like many other young people, her initial excitement has given way to loneliness. She shares a house with people she never sees and spends every evening in her room with a ready meal and a bottle of wine. She suffers crippling panic attacks and has lost all her confidence. Kate is the reporter for a local newspaper and is sent to cover Rosemary’s campaign.
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Rosemary recognises Kate’s loneliness and suggests that she take up swimming every day which Kate does, reluctantly and then with growing enthusiasm. She realises that in the water, everyone is the same and that the lido offers a kind of freedom from her isolated life. Together, she and Rosemary join forces on the campaign to save it from closure. Unexpectedly, people from the local community begin to step forward to offer their help and they realise that even in a city like London, they are not alone. THE LIDO is Libby Page’s first novel. It was bought in six-figure pre-emptive deals within 24 hours of submission in the UK and the US, and has been sold in over twenty other territories around the world. Libby graduated from The London College of Fashion with a BA in Fashion Journalism before going on to work at The Guardian
and in marketing. She is now a full-time writer, as well as a passionate outdoor swimmer. She and her sister run a blog and Instagram account @ theswimmingsisters, documenting their swims and the benefits of outdoor exercise for mental health. Libby has also been a leading campaigner for fairer internships and has spoken on radio, TV and in parliament in support of fair pay for interns. Libby began writing at an early age and when she was sixteen wrote an illustrated book, Love Pink, to raise money for Breast Cancer Care. Libby lives in London, where she enjoys finding new swimming spots and pockets of community within the city.
BOOKS
BOOK REVIEW By Wayne, Winstones
8, Cheap Street, Sherborne, Dorset. DTP 3PX 01935 816 128 winstonebooks1@gmail.com www.winstonebooks.co.uk
Dare we mention the C word!
Christmas is looming and to lessen the anxiety we thought we would highlight some fantastic fiction titles out this autumn which could be perfect gift solutions. Robert Harris author of Fatherland has written a brilliant new novel which though set in the past has definite echoes of today’s political climate; Robert is a master storyteller at the height of his powers. A new Tracy Chevalier is always a publishing event and set in Winchester her latest novel doesn’t disappoint. Winstone’s have an edition which is an exclusive to independent booksellers with additional content.
As Fairfax is drawn more deeply into the isolated community, everything he believes – about himself, his faith and the history of his world – is tested to destruction. ’A thoroughly absorbing, page-turning narrative in which the author pulls us ever deeper into the imaginative world he has created.’ NICK RENNISON, SUNDAY TIMES
Margaret Atwood’s sequel to the Handmaid’sTale is the publishing event of the year which reviewers are falling over themselves to praise. Testaments is also shortlisted for the Man Book Prize. For the lucky few we have a number of free tote bags given away with each purchase.
Margaret Atwood The Testaments £20 hbck
Tracy Chevalier A Single Thread £14.99
Robert Harris Second Sleep £20 hbck
All civilisations think they are invulnerable. History warns us none is. 1468. A young priest, Christopher Fairfax, arrives in a remote Exmoor village to conduct the funeral of his predecessor. The land around is strewn with ancient artefacts – coins, fragments of glass, human bones – which the old parson used to collect. Did his obsession with the past lead to his death?
a few secrets of her own that could just change everything... Warm, vivid and beautifully orchestrated, A Single Thread reveals one of our finest modern writers at the peak of her powers.
This is the new book from the Dorchester based author of Girl With A Pearl Earring and it’s every bit as good as that book. It is 1932, and the losses of the First World War are still keenly felt. Violet Speedwell, mourning for both her fiancé and her brother and regarded by society as a `surplus woman’ unlikely to marry, resolves to escape her suffocating mother and strike out alone. A new life awaits her in Winchester. Yes, it is one of draughty boarding-houses and sidelong glances at her naked ring finger from younger colleagues; but it is also a life gleaming with independence and opportunity. Violet falls in with the broderers, a disparate group of women charged with embroidering kneelers for the Cathedral, and is soon entwined in their lives and their secrets. As the almost unthinkable threat of a second Great War appears on the horizon Violet collects
And so I step up, into the darkness within; or else the light. When the van door slammed on Offred’s future at the end of The Handmaid’s Tale, readers had no way of telling what lay ahead. With The Testaments, the wait is over. Margaret Atwood’s sequel picks up the story 15 years after Offred stepped into the unknown, with the explosive testaments of three female narrators from Gilead. ‘Dear Readers: Everything you’ve ever asked me about Gilead and its inner workings is the inspiration for this book. Well, almost everything! The other inspiration is the world we’ve been living in.’ Margaret Atwood. Alex Clark Guardian, “Atwood’s task in returning to the world of her best-known work was a big one, but the result is a success that more than justifies her Booker prize short listing,”
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GARDENING
Gardening IT’S NEARLY TIME FOR THAT AUTUMN TIDY UP! By Mike Burks, Managing Director of The Gardens Group Pests and plant diseases can over winter in the debris underneath the plant and while a too-tidy garden isn’t so kind to wildlife, there are some significant benefits for some plants if a tidy up is undertaken when all of the leaves have fallen. This includes reducing the prevalence of Scab in apples. Scab is a fungal disease that affects the foliage with black spots on the leaves in the summer followed by brown or black spots on the fruit. A couple of diseases look very similar and Apple Scab can be confused with Bitter Pit, the difference being that Bitter Pit goes right through the flesh of the apple whereas Scab is just on the surface. Biter Pit can be solved with a drench of Calcium nitrate, a type of fertilizer, in the summer but Scab can be reduced by raking up all of the leaves, fallen fruit
and any pruning’s and putting them on the compost heap. The spores of Scab overwinter on such debris and by removing it the young leaves in the spring will have a much better chance of getting a good start. The same is true of Blackspot on roses. Again the fungal spores live on the leaves below the plant over the winter and so by removing the debris the life cycle is broken. Unfortunately, unless everyone within a 200mile radius is doing the same thing you will probably still get Blackspot but the incidence should be reduced in the early stages of growth. If you’d prefer not to use fungicides have a go at spraying your roses with milk. The theory is that fat in milk can coat the spores stopping their spread plus perhaps the calcium helping to keep Blackspot under control. It’s an old remedy but coming back into favour.
rdening
Be sure not to waste the debris that you collect, put it into the compost heap and cover with a lid or perhaps a hessian sack. Keep the heap active with the addition of an accelerant such as Garotta or your own home made version from nettles or comfrey and the leaves will break down so that there is nothing for the fungal spores to hibernate on. The compost created can then be used as a mulch or dug into the soil as an improver.
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UP THE GARDEN PATH by Julie Haylock, Sandhurst Garden Design
Autumn is the perfect time of year to start planning your dream garden and the key to a successful project is in planning, so make yourself a cuppa and consider these points before you start. Our winters tend to be milder and drier of late, making this is a good time to do any construction work in your garden, as a rule most of us don’t tend to use our gardens as much at this time of year, leaving us to enjoy our new garden during the warmer weather. Existing plants will have died back making this the ideal time to relocate any plants or shrubs that need to be moved and cause less disruption to wildlife. Take time to consider what you want from your outdoor space – do you want a place for entertaining, or for children to play, does the space need to include a ‘practical’ area to grow vegetables or store the recycling bins? Get inspired – treat yourself to a garden magazine or go online and look at Pinterest and Instagram to get the latest ideas and trends, and then create a mood board of all your favourite things. Consider what look you want for your garden when choosing your hard landscaping materials and see how they link to any existing surfaces and to your house.
Sandhurst Garden Design Julie Haylock Garden Designer 20 Sandhurst Road, Yeovil, Somerset BA20 2LG
Tel: 07899 710168 Email: haylock2lg@btinternet.com www.sandhurstgardendesign.co.uk Contact Julie for garden and border design, planting plans, plant selection advice and garden styling
BBC Gardeners’ World Live Gold Medal Award Taunton Flower Show Gold Medal Award and The Western Daily Press Cup for Best Show Garden
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N R I C
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GARDENING
Wills
Check out any underground services like water, gas and electric and how they might affect where you locate your new design. What type of soil does your garden have? Remember right plant, right place! Check the plant label for ideal growing conditions before you buy.
of Sherborne
PlumbinG & Heating ltD
Spend some time assessing how different weather conditions effect your garden – study which areas get the sun for the most part of the day, this is important when considering your seating areas, and remember to think about some shade to have somewhere to retreat when it gets too warm.
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Consider asking for the help of a professional garden designer like myself to guide you through your project – I may offer ideas you had not thought about, and I can assist you with your plant choice. Talk to your neighbours – make sure they don’t have any plans for their own garden which might affect your design. Take advice with regard to any regulations. If you intend to remove any trees check they are not the subject of any preservation order, and if you plan to build any structures check you don’t require building regulation approval from your local council.
Email: wills.plumbing@hotmail.co.uk Telephone Malcolm: 07885 420609
Then all you need to do on those cold, wet winter evenings is to sit infront of the fire and choose all those gorgeous plants and accessories for your lovely new garden next Spring! Until next time, Julie
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CARE
WORKING THE NIGHT SHIFT A commitment to becoming a Samaritans volunteer is also a commitment to doing regular night shifts. And while not everyone likes to be a night owl, many Samaritans positively embrace the concept.
can seem. It is a really good feeling to be in a position to offer someone a non-judgmental ear at any time of the day or night.’
Sarah says the night shift absolutely suits her body clock. ‘Between 12 and 3 is when I’m at my most alert, and I genuinely think it’s the time when I can provide callers with the best of me. And you do need to be on your toes, as many of the most challenging calls come in at these hours. My body has never wanted to confirm to normal waking hours which is partly why I opted for a volunteering role that does involve night time work.’
Norman said that one of the great things about the night shift is how much callers appreciate you. ‘Many are genuinely surprised to be able to get through and will express their thanks, however desperate they are feeling, which is really touching.
Jen says: ‘Many years ago when I was undergoing treatment for cancer, I had the most amazing support from family and friends by day. But of course, they weren’t quite so available at night when I would often lie awake feeling alone, frightened and overwhelmed by the thoughts and worries going around in my head. Yes, I could have phoned a friend or woken someone, but I never did. Neither did I think to call Samaritans. ‘When I recovered and became a Samaritans listening volunteer, I was truly able to appreciate the value of being there during the night for callers. Having experienced some very lonely and long nights myself, I’m so happy to now be in a position to fulfil that need.’
‘From a practical point of view, when you take into account the travelling to and from the centre, the night time shift is actually quicker than daytime as there is never any traffic! I’m one of those lucky people who falls asleep whenever and wherever my head touches the pillow. So I quite often get my head down in one of the bedrooms at the Centre which are made to available to volunteers for this purpose.’ Could you volunteer with Samaritans? The Yeovil Branch holds monthly Information evenings which take place on the first Wednesday of every month at 7pm at 25 The Park, Yeovil, BA20 1DG. There’s no need to pre-book, just turn up and you’ll be warmly welcomed with a cup of tea and answers to any questions you may have. Alternatively, you can call our information line on 01935 414015, email: recruitment@yeovilsamaritans.org.uk or visit our website at https://www.samaritans.org/branches/samaritansyeovil-sherborne-and-district
Chris said: ‘Anyone who has ever lain awake worrying while everyone else is sleeping will know how much worse things
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At a launch event, sponsored by Porter GARDENING CARE September at Dillington House, Ilminste Time to Change Employer Pledge.
BLUEBIRD CARE IS IN THE FINALS!This is designed to help businesses tack
Bluebird Care is in the Finals of the Somerset Outstandingthe work force. This is costing UK busin Care Awards - Domiciliary Provider of the year Executive. The campaign, which is being fu The Awards recognise those domiciliary providers who go above and beyond their organisational aims, and highlight those in Somerset’s broadcast media partner, w charge of the organisation who listen to and empower their care includes: Care visits at home staff to offer an outstanding service to those who need it. We care passionately
Asking what Bluebird Cares greatest achievement is Ross Perkins (Director) comments,
• • • • •
“Over the last five years, there have been many great achievements; being rated as Outstanding by the CQC was a highlight; seeing staff grow in confidence and experience and thus achieve promotion has been particularly satisfying; and as the company grew in size, being able to give back through our Community Grant programme has made us all very proud of who we are and what we do.
Home care with Bluebird Care can be “We will be working in partnership with anything from a 30 being a charity, minuteall cathe re viprofits sit to 24from thes provide help po ours lthose ivlaunches e in csuffering acampaign re, Mindto inhSomerset tofrom fight menta suManager pporting yat ouMind to Fundraising in Somers Mind in Somerset, the charity dedicated to improving menta remain as independent tackle mental health issues in the workplace, including the ed as possible, living the “We want tostmake Somerset the most lifesponsored yle yobyu Porter chooDodson, se. Gooch & Ho At a launch event,
“However, our greatest achievement has been to never lose sight of our purpose. Although the company has grown significantly in size over the last five years, through the implementation of small teams, led by a single supervisor we have remained focused and local. We all know that the best Care is delivered by small teams of well led people who know what they are doing and know their customers. We have achieved that and will continue to achieve that – that will always be our greatest achievement.” Bluebird Care offers a realistic alternative to residential care by allowing people to stay in their own homes with care and support. Their work can involve one or more short visits a day in order to help with the everyday tasks of life. However, their homecare service doesn’t stop there because longer duration visits are also available, including overnight help and live in care.
Mind in Somerset launches campaign to fight mental health crisis in the workplace.
At a launch event, sponsored by Porter Dodson, Gooch & Housego and Jones Building Group, on 26 September at Dillington House, Ilminster, Mind in Somerset will outline their campaign, including the Time to Change Employer Pledge. This is designed to help businesses tackle the growing crisis of anxiety, stress and depression among the work force. This is costing UK businesses at least £35bn a year, according to the Health & Safety Executive. The campaign, which is being fully supported by BBC Radio Somerset as Mind in Somerset’s broadcast media
campaign will involve TheMind Time to Chw September at Dillington House, Ilminster, in Somerset
Call and talTime k to oto neChange of our fEmployer riendly Pledge. professionals today:
For further information about Bluebird Care’s homecare and support services across the South Somerset area, please contact the team on 01935 584184 or visit www.bluebirdcare.co.uk/southsomerset
Mind in Somerset, the charity dedicated to improving mental health, is launching a new campaign to tackle mental health issues in the workplace, including the education sector.
Managing For manymental peoplehealth the at wor questiHealth ons aboFirst ut caAid re Mental don’t arisresilience e until Emotional suddenly, there Stress is a nand eed.Anxiety Toolbox Train Free Lunch & Learn sessions
partner, will involve training both in the public and private sectors and includes: • Managing mental health at work for CEOs and managers • Mental Health First Aid • Emotional resilience • Stress and Anxiety Toolbox Training • Free Lunch & Learn sessions “We will be working in partnership with national Mind and other local Minds and organisations and, being a charity, all the profits from these courses will be ploughed straight back into the services we provide to help those suffering from poor mental health in Somerset,” says David Fields, Community Fundraising Manager at Mind in Somerset.
improving mental welfare in the workpl
This is designed to help businesses tackle the growing crisis o the work force. This is costing UK businesses at least £35bn a 01a93Time 5 584to 184 “Mind in Somerset is Change Executive. s o u t h s o m e r s e t @ b l u e b i r d c a r e . c o . u k The campaign, which is being fully stigma supportedattac by illness and remove the old b l u e b i r d c a r e . c o . u Somerset’s broadcast media partner, will involvektraining bo anxiety and depression.” /south-somerset includes: We are independently regulated •
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“We will be working in partnership with national Mind and o being a charity, all the profits from these courses will be plou provide helptothose suffering fromthe poor mental health in So “We to want make Somerset most Fundraising Mind in mentallyManager healthy at county toSomerset. work in in the UK. Part of the campaign will involve The “We wanttotoChange make Somerset the Pledge most mentally Time Employers’ where healthy co campaign will involve The Time to Change Employers’ Ple businesses can commit to improving improving the workplace mentalmental welfarewelfare in theinworkplace andand become Men
become Mental Health Champions. “Mind in Somerset is a Time to Change Hub and we want to “Mind Somerset is astigma Timeattached to Change illness andin remove the old to it. That mean Hub and we want to encourage anxiety Help and us depression.” fundraise through the use of Mu businesses to rethink mental illness and remove the old stigma attached to it. That https://www.mindinsomerset.org.uk/training/ T. (01935) 47 means talking openly about issues like stress, anxiety and depression.” www.mindinsomerset.org.uk/training/ T. (01935) 474 875.
Help us fundraise through the use of Music: www.mindinsome Help us fundraise through the use of Music: www.mindinsomerset.org.uk 21
Fashion
FASHION
ALL TREATS AND NO TRICKS!
MELBURY GALLERY
SHERBORNE Half Moon Street DORCHESTER 10-11 Tudor Arcade, South Street www.melburygallery.co.uk
By Thelma Drabik, Melbury Gallery
The bewitching month is upon us and here at Melbury Gallery we are positively spellbound by the glorious new autumn collections that are beginning to fill the rails of our shops! It is truly a magical sight to see! The brand new season from OSKA has landed and boy are you in for a treat! Sumptuous boiled wool to wrap up in, classic knits to keep you warm, heavy jersey for a sleek silhouette and luxurious cord. OSKA’s quality are second to none and these fabrics come in the beautifully designed pieces we have come to expect from them. Their trousers are a cult favourite and have become a staple in our shop as well as their highly sought after jackets and coats! The OSKA aesthetic is elegant, casual and timeless using materials that are both distinctive and sustainable with craftsmanship at its core. THOUGHT are another fabulous company who are sustainably minded and put so much care into every collection. Their force of nature fabrics include breathable bamboo, helpful hemp, certified organic cotton and tree friendly tencel which are all responsibly sourced. These materials are made into glorious prints and this season their flare for design really shines! Beautiful skirts, flattering dresses and easy to wear tunics all feature in their latest collection and boast an array of artistic and inspiring prints. SAHARA always deliver such creatively minded collections for the artistically inclined and this year is no different! Their garments feature bold splashes of colour and jacquard details in the fluid shapes they have become synonymous with.
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So come visit Melbury Gallery to see all our new autumn clothing which we’re sure will have you enchanted! And if you’re free this weekend we’d love to see you at our SPECTACULAR WAREHOUSE SALE!
TRAVEL
DISCOVER THE WORLD BY RAIL by Heather Muir, Miles Morgan Travel
Here at Miles Morgan Travel in Yeovil we are seeing an increase in requests from customers wanting a different experience and holidays by rail are proving more popular than ever. Boasting stunning views, delicious food and a rich culture and history, it’s easy to see why around 670 million people travel to Europe each year! And with a reliable and efficient rail network, Europe is a breeze to explore. Travelling by rail from London St Pancras on the Eurostar is simple and comfortable, with local connections, and with picture-postcard views to be enjoyed from the moment you depart to the moment you reach your destination, there’s no better way to discover Europe. Holidays are a time for making new discoveries and relaxing, as a main agent for Rail Discoveries’ we know that their itineraries perfectly balance excursions to must-see landmarks, tours with local guides, authentic food and drinks tastings, and free time to sightsee in a way that suits you. New for 2020, they have introduced a whole host of experiences to get you better acquainted with ancient history and deep-rooted traditions. As a sister company to Great Rail Journeys, Rail Discoveries has more than four decades’ experience providing outstanding rail holidays. Their escorted tours benefit from the presence of a
professional Tour Manager, who will ensure that all holidays run smoothly. Allow Rail Discoveries to take the stress out of organising a holiday; their tours include rail travel, a range of superb accommodation, and several meals. With more flexible options than ever before, why not join a Fly:Rail holiday and enjoy the best of both worlds, flying there and back but making explorations by rail. Travelling solo? You’ll be pleased to hear they now offer fewer solo supplements across a range of departures, all boasting fantastic inclusive value. Book now and secure your 2020 adventure for the best price possible.
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No surcharges - 100% financially secure Fully escorted by a UK Tour Manager from start to finish Exciting excursions included in the price of your holiday Prices start from only £799pp
Contact our Travel Specialists today Phone lines open until 10pm
01935 428488
2 Borough Arcade,Yeovil, Somerset BA20 1RX
We also offer many worldwide tours from the famous Rocky Mountaineer and Glacier Express to the Palace on Wheels in India and the great trains of America and Australia. Therefore, if you think a rail holiday may be for you then pop in and see us at 2 Borough Arcade, High Street, Yeovil or call us on 01935 428488 and our Travel Specialists would love to tell you more. We look forward to seeing you soon!
BESPOKE FLORAL
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www.petalperfections.co.uk 23
LEGAL
Prepare for the worst but hope for the best By Catherine Murton, Head of Private Client, Pardoes Solicitors LOOKING AFTER YOU, YOUR FAMILY & YOUR BUSINESS Have you ever considered what it would be like to be blind or to have vision so poor that all of the day-to-day activities that we all perform without any thought become near impossible tasks? Reviewing bank statements to check for discrepancies, looking through paperwork for investments or filling out all of the necessary forms for the sale of a house become stressful and onerous. I, like so many others, have found that my eyesight has become steadily worse over the last few years. My arms were no longer long enough to enable me to clearly see text on my phone and reading a menu in reduced lighting left me randomly selecting as I had no clue what choices were on offer! However, my optician has been able to assist to improve things considerably. Many people are not so fortunate and the loss of sight can leave them feeling very vulnerable. Of course, there is some excellent help available to promote as much independence as possible. As a private client solicitor, I can contribute by ensuring that there is at least one person legally appointed to assist with all financial and property matters, like writing cheques and completing forms. This does not mean that decision making is taken away from the individual, quite the opposite. It will allow the donor to choose who they wish to act for them and will simply give the attorney the legal right to perform tasks when requested to do so by the donor. The donor can also determine how the attorneys can act. They may decide that the attorneys must all act together in all things or that they can act independently of one another (known as jointly and severally). The power of attorney documents also allow the donor to provide guidance for their attorneys in case there comes a time that they do not have mental competence to direct them personally. For example, they may state that they would prefer that any house purchased on their behalf is to have a south facing garden, or they can give specific legally binding instructions, for example, that they only want environmentally sound investments to be made. If you need any advice on the preparation of lasting power of attorney please call me on 01935 382689 or at catherine. murton@pardoes.co.uk. Free initial consultations and home visits are available. 24
Come and see us at one of our
FREE LEGAL CLINICS Walk in on the day for a free chat with one of our solicitors and we’ll help you find the best way forward. SOMERTON The Parish Rooms, 9am-12pm Tuesdays - 3 & 17 September 2019 SOUTH PETHERTON The David Hall, 9am-12pm Wednesdays - 11 & 25 September 2019 Bridgwater • Bridport • Taunton • Yeovil 01935 382680 @PardoesLLP pardoes.co.uk
LEGAL
Emily wins place on Law Society’s Children’s Panel Battens Solicitors Family Law team member Emily Davies, has been awarded a place on the Law Society’s prestigious Children’s Panel.
The accreditation is a nationally recognised hallmark of quality that Guardians and other professionals can seek out when specialist representation is needed for children in difficult private disputes or care proceedings. Gaining the accreditation takes dedication and hard work. Emily, who has been practicing family law for almost three years, trained intensively before undergoing a demanding assessment and interview process at Chancery Lane’s renowned Law Society. “I am really pleased to have achieved the accreditation. It is a reflection of all of my hard work and means that I can now represent children through their Guardian in Court proceedings. I can also represent competent children in Court proceedings. This area of law can leave parents and children feeling confused, upset and anxious and I endeavour to advise and assist in an empathetic but professional manner whilst providing realistic and appropriate advice”. Emily becomes the seventh member of the Battens Family Law team to gain the accreditation making Battens one of the leading family law firms in the South West.
Why Cohabitee’s should make a Will According to the Office of National Statistics the number of cohabiting families has grown by 25.8% in the last decade. In 2018 they made up nearly a fifth of the 19.1 million families in the UK. Solicitors act for many clients who are cohabitees and there is still misconception that the phrase “common law” husband or wife has legal relevance and provides your partner with automatic rights. As a solicitor that acts in the preparation of Wills and Administration of Estates I can quite unequivocally state, no it does not. If you cohabit with someone and you want them to benefit on your death
the only way you can do this with any certainty is to make a Will. Even if you hold assets together in your joint names it is still important to make a Will as you can never assume the law will apply to your situation in the way you think it does. A common example is that a client and their partner have lived together for a number of years in a property that my client owns in their sole name as they bought it before they met their partner. Everything has been fine all these years who wants to spoil it by talking about what happens if my client should die? But what does happen when they die? They might want their partner to have the house, they might want them to be able to live there as long as they want
but ultimately they want their children to have it, they might want to allow their partner to live there for a while but not indefinitely; all of these may be reasonable but none of those outcomes are guaranteed without a Will. If they died without a Will the house will pass to their family under the intestacy rules; it could mean that the children inherit it or their parents or siblings inherit and they may be happy to arrange for the partner to stay but maybe they won’t. The only way to have any certainty is to grasp the nettle and make a Will! For more information please contact Naomi Dyer on 01935 811307 or naomi. dyer@battens.co.uk
ADVERTORIAL
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COMPUTING
HISTORY
LIMITED STORAGE NETBOOKS & CHROMEBOOKS By Jimmy Flynn, Milborne Port Computers Well that’s the summer over with! Strawberries & cream, Wimbledon, country shows and holidays are a distant memory. But if you’re going away over the autumn or winter, you’ll want to be able to check the weather, get your emails and generally carry on with your electronic life. So, what do you get if you’re not up to a tablet with no keyboard … a netbook! This is a small laptop usually with a 10 – 11” screen, no CD, no spinning hard disk and most have no fan either. A lot of them also have a touchscreen that makes them more like a tablet but with an attached or detachable keyboard. The biggest issue however is that people expect them to be a replacement for their existing PC or larger laptop … but this is not the case! Your existing system has the ability to store acres of stuff; pictures, music and videos but your netbook can’t as it has limited storage. To overcome this you have to change the way you work. Firstly, use an email system
that stores everything on the web: Google’s Gmail, Microsoft’s Outlook.com and many others provide a very workable email system that integrates into your netbook and uses no storage at all. When you get home you’ll find that everything you’ve done whilst away is neatly synchronised with your home system. Secondly, use the free online storage provided by your email account: Google give you 15gb of storage and Microsoft Onedrive gives you 5gb of free space. Use this to upload your photos and videos you’ve taken whilst away every time you have some free wifi provided by your hotel, restaurant or airport lounge. Listening to music requires a little more inventiveness and requires that you sign-up for one of the on-line services: Spotify, Deezer, Napster, Amazon and Apple Music to name but a few. With one of these you can download a playlist or album when you’ve got wifi, play it when you want, delete it when finished and download some more … Simples!
Of course, when you’ve got wifi you can stream whatever you like. Finally, if you really want to be able to do all this when you’re on the move and have no wifi then you’ll need to have a mobile phone that can generate its own wifi hotspot, and a mobile phone data plan that supports this. Then when you want to browse the internet or listen to some music when you’re in the middle off a field you just turn on your mobile hotspot and away you go. As always, if in doubt you know where to come if you need help. Coming Up Next Month … Garbage in: Garbage out!
BEER AND TOBACCO By Barry Brock
The clay smoking pipe bowl in the photograph was discovered recently in a Sherborne garden. The writing says: ‘Woolmington, Brewers, Sherborne’. But why was a Sherborne brewer’s name imprinted on the bowl of a clay tobacco pipe? Clay pipes are as old as the use of tobacco in this country - probably copied from the American Indians in the latter part of the sixteenth century. They developed into a wide variety of shapes and designs, but by the nineteenth century most workmen preferred a plain bowl with a short stem. These cost little to make and could be given away with a pint of beer in the local pub - this is probably where the Woolmington pipe came from. As manufacturers (and brewers) in the latter part of the nineteenth century developed new ways of advertising their wares, putting your name on a pipe bowl must have seemed a good way to fix this in the smoker’s mind. The Woolmington Brewery was located at the top of Sherborne’s Cheap Street. Founded by John Withye, the brewery was one of three brewing in Sherborne at the time of Queen Victoria’s coronation, when the brewers provided: ‘A pint to every member of the family above ten years of age, and half a pint to those under to drink Queen Victoria’s health.’ There was a different attitude towards under-age drinking in those days! 26
William Bingham purchased the business after Withye’s death in 1847 and was followed by Isaac Woolmington in the early 1850’s. The business grew rapidly under Isaac’s leadership, with the acquisition of a number of public houses and the building of a hotel (now apartments) on the island opposite the South Street entrance to Sainsbury’s supermarket. Built to take advantage of the arrival of the railway in Sherborne, it was to have been called the Railway Hotel, but was named the Woolmington Hotel when it opened in 1866. Isaac’s initials can still be seen on a badge above the first floor windows at the north end of the building. Isaac died in 1873, aged only 43 years, and was succeeded by his wife, Mary Woolmington. In 1889, Mary transferred the business to her two sons, who traded as the Woolmington Brothers. The brothers were faced with a serious setback in 1891, when their South Street malthouse (at the back of the Woolmington Hotel) burned down, but this was soon rebuilt. The Woolmington name was in the newspapers again in the following year, when
John Woolmington became so incensed over an attempt to entice away one of his employees, that he confronted the man responsible and felled him with a blow to the ear. The magistrates were horrified that a respectable man should do such a thing, and fined him £3 plus costs. John Woolmington died in 1913, aged only 49 years, and in 1922 his brother, Arthur, sold the brewery and tied houses to Eldridge, Pope & Co of Dorchester. Brewing ceased and the brewery premises were subsequently used as a distribution centre. My thanks to Jo and Steve Green for the photograph of the Woolmington pipe bowl, found in their back garden.
FINANCE
IT’S NOT AS SCARY AS YOU MIGHT HAVE HEARD
By Mark Salter, Financial Planner If there’s something that can put quite a bit of fear in each of us and I’m not talking about witches and zombies at Halloween, it’s the idea and possibility of losing money… and a lot of it. We all work hard for our money each month and all have a certain level of expenses. Some of us will be trying to save for something special, some will be trying to grow the amount of money we have over time and others will be trying to make their money last as long as they can. At the current time inflation in the UK is at 2.8% (RPI) but the interest rates payable on cash savings accounts is significantly lower. Even if you regularly switch your cash savings to the very best savings accounts, you’ll be lucky at the current time to get higher than 1.5% from the very best online savings accounts. Cash accounts are of course one of the most suitable places to be if you’re saving for your family holiday next year or you have a tax bill to pay in January, but is it the best place for your medium and long term savings or if you’re trying to build up a pot for your retirement? Let’s consider you had £50,000 in a savings account and inflation remained at 2.8% per annum for the next 10 years
and you managed to achieve 1.5% per annum over this same period. Yes, at the end of the 10 years you would now have a larger sum of money, seeing your savings increase to just over £58,000, but in 10 years’ time the purchasing power of this money would have fallen by £7,875 as you’d need £65,900 of savings to buy the same amount of goods. Although you may not see this as losing money as you’ve got more than you started with, the purchasing power of your savings have been falling year on year due to inflation. Not a good idea if you’re trying to build up savings so you can help your children or for your retirement. But what about the horror stories of investing in the world stock markets or the bond markets? What happens when one day you wake up and you’ve lost half of your pot? With this scary possibility why would anyone even consider investing? How could you sleep at night with these frightening thoughts going through your head? Yes, unfortunately the world stock markets and the bond markets do have crashes and down years and can be blood curdling at times. However, those investors who have a well-diversified
investment portfolio and a strategy that they can live with have historically, over most 5-10 year periods, achieved greater returns than leaving their money in a cash savings account. It seems those who are most frightened by the markets and investing for the future are usually those most unfamiliar with the topic or taking too much risk with their hard-earned money. Which absolutely makes sense as most of us are fearful of things we don’t know about, aren’t familiar with or can’t control. At FFP an important part of what we do as Financial Planners is to educate our clients on investing and build personal investment strategies centred around them and their plans for the future. Speaking to a Financial Planner should help ease your fears and put a spell on those scary and frightening thoughts so you can concentrate on enjoying life with the knowledge that your finances are being well looked after. 27
LIFESTYLE
INSPIRATIONS FOR THE CURIOUS SHOPPER By Dawn Woodward, The Emporium, Yeovil
We can’t believe it’s been a little over four years since we first opened our front door and launched Waterloo Music! We turned a neglected, empty old shop into a beautiful hub for musicians, filled with a stunning range of instruments, teaching studios and all sorts of essential bits and bobs that keep customers coming back.
If variety is the ‘spice of life’, we certainly have it in bucket loads at The Emporium! Neither could we have imagined that we’d meet so many amazing people and had some really great
times. It’s certainly an enjoyable adventureTickets that we wouldn’t have missed theorworld. (£5) are available from ourfor cafe Our ground floor been has been transformed at www.bearcatcollective.co.uk or £6 Sorecently here wewith are,some at themajor ripe developments: old age of four yearsonline old, now with a ‘sister’ shop in Taunton called Bath Place Music, stocking on the door. new, crisp, window displays to showcase fabulous brands, an established team of talented staff and having just completed a refresh of our Yeovil based store. Here you’ll theour diversity of what sellfolk in store, from departments are all now on our ground floor along with our repairs centre. On the find amazing guitarwe and instrument As usual, we’ll be serving and rooms. drinks There’s so much to see, call in and 65+ independent businesses. first floor you’ll find our specialist drum department, music books and ourdinner teaching from the bar during the evening. take a look at our new store lay-out, have a chat with our friendly staff, all musicians themselves, they can help all your playing This should be well worth putting in your Step inside our and you’ll repairs and related queries asfront well door as accessories, teaching. diary now, hope to see you there! be met with Saville Row Hounds’ newly Waterloo Music can be found dog at 16clothing/ Hendford, Yeovil, BA20 1TE. Tel 01935 507330 or visit: www.waterloomusic.co.uk FB/ extended shop, showcasing waterloomusic On a different note, we’re looking forward couture for all occasions, including to welcoming celebrity Chef, Matt weddings! All bespoke and lovingly hand Pritchard, Dirty Vegan, into our cafe for a made, call in for more information. There’s vegan cooking demonstration alongside even a dog-sized Maserati model car, I kid our own vegan Head Chef, James you not! Woodward on 31 October at 4pm. This is a free of charge bolt-on for anyone having Our new ladies fashion shop ‘Wild Violet’ booked for Matt’s talk at The Octagon has developed into a fabulous, new, Theatre, earlier on the same afternoon. independent boutique for Yeovil. With lots It should be highly entertaining and of exciting clothing, accessories, jewellery informative! and lifestyle stock, this shop has become instantly popular. Come and have a look, We hope to see you at The Emporium there’s bound to be something that takes soon, if you’re interested in joining us as your fancy, watch out for details of our a trader, please get in touch as we have a upcoming shopping evenings and styling few opportunities for dedicated business events. owners! If you’d like to reserve a table for And then there’s more, so much more... the breakfast, lunch or afternoon tea, or to enquire for a private event, please call us eclectic mix of antiques, gifts, crafts and on 01935 411378 or drop us an email to collectables throughout the store makes info@theemporiumyeovil.co.uk. each visit like a voyage of discovery. Our wonderful cafe continues to delight us with the gorgeous food and drink served daily and the friendly atmosphere within. The fully licensed cafe is open 9-5, Mon-Sat and serves a fantastic breakfast, delicious lunches, cakes and afternoon tea. Then, a few evenings each month, it transforms into a fabulous evening venue for live events and dinner. These incredible events that we’re fortunate to host just keep on coming... here are a few more dates for your diary... 17 October: Magdalena Atkinson and The Mystical Birds will play a headline gig, supported by the fabulous Fiddleback. 28
Thank you to all our wonderful supporters x
A
VISUAL ART
From now to Saturday 26 October from 10.00am to 5.00pm East Lambrook Manor Gardens host a new exhibition called ‘Simple Pleasures’ by Alex Roden. An exhibition of high quality watercolour prints in the Studio Gallery. Free entry.
On now to Friday 4 October from 9.30am to 5.00pm at Jerram Gallery there is a exhibition of new work by Louise Balaam, Jill Barthorpe, Emma Haggas and Elsa Taylor. From now to Sunday 6 October from 10.00am to 5.00pm ACE Arts next exhibition is ‘Fingerprint’. They work together regularly at the Dove Etching Studio in Butleigh, inspiring and supporting each other. In addition to printmaking, they will be showing other aspects of their working practice in ceramics, sculpture, drawing and painting. From now to Sunday 6 October from 10.00am to 5.00pm at ACE Arts there is an exhibition ‘Your Art Here’. Their annual exhibition and chance to purchase postcard sized original artworks which have been made by artists, professional and amateur, who have kindly donated them to help fund their community outreach work. From Saturday 5 to Tuesday 29 October at next exhibition at David Simon Contemporary, 37 High Street in Castle Cary is ‘Parastoo Ganjei: Stillness & Movement’. A solo exhibition of paintings capturing the moment of change; of roses at fullest bloom, to the changing skies as weather builds and falls away across gestural landscapes. Whether painting still life’s or landscapes, Parastoo Ganjei’s technique combines a confidence and energy in her mark-making
with an absolutely thorough understanding of her chosen subject. Roses are a favourite theme, and Ganjei is so well rehearsed in translating onto canvas that often this artist will paint them intrinsically from memory, understanding the references to colour, structural formation and weight of the flower head. This way of working allows Ganjei to become fully immersed in her painting technique. This exhibition of new paintings provides a balance of still life’s in formal arrangements, roses in abundance loosely captured with vigour as well as gestural landscapes relating to Wiltshire. Opening times Monday to Saturday 10.00am to 6.00pm, Wednesdays 2.00pm to 6.00pm. For more information phone 01963 359102 or visit www. davidsimoncontemporary.com On Saturday 5 and Sunday 6 October at Templecombe Village Hall from 10.00am to 5.00pm there is an Art Exhibition. Refreshments available. Free admission. Proceeds in aid of The Alzheimers Society. From Monday 7 to Saturday 26 October from 9.30am to 4.30 at Ilminster Arts Centre see exhibition ‘My Locality’. This will display textile work by the South Somerset branch of the national Embroiderers’ Guild. Taking inspiration from the world just around us; nature, architecture, industry and more. No longer just the domain of fabric and thread, textile art now embraces (amongst other things) the world of mixed media, dyeing with rust and plants, print and videos. The Guild welcomes everyone with an interest in any area of embroidery and members are encouraged to participate at any level, whether young people learning to stitch, a professional artist extending
the boundaries of textile art, or someone who simply appreciates fabric and thread. The Embroiderers’ Guild exists to build awareness of stitch and textile art and educates, inspires, and promotes the achievement of excellence. This is a continuing journey. You may enter at any point. Free entry. On Monday 7 October from 2.00pm to 3.30pm in the Wingfield Room at Digby Hall go along to ‘Experimenting with Abstraction’ talk and demonstration with Diana Pilcher. Diana will take you through some of the basics of abstracting an image, talk through technique and provide demonstrations. Tickets £5 to include tea, biscuits and Q&A. Book at ArtsLink office 01935
By Rachel Mowbray
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815899 or visit www. sherborneartlink.org.uk From Saturday 12 October to Saturday 9 November from 10.00am to 5.00pm at ACE Arts in Somerton see their next exhibition ‘Rewild’ with Donna Lawley Hopton, winner of the British Wildlife Open 2018. Painter of British wildlife, based in Lympstone, Devon who is concerned with declining biodiversity and the loss of wild spaces. Proud to be working in partnership with Somerset Wildlife Trust. From Friday 18 October to Friday 8 November from 9.30am to 5.00pm Jerram Gallery in Sherborne have an ‘Exhibition of New Work by Ana Bianchi, Emma Dunbar and Fiona Millais’. On Saturday 26 and Sunday 27 October from 10.00am to
Now Screening at The Swan Theatre Yeovil
Thursday 17th October 7:30pm Tickets £15 Available from: www.swan-theatre.co.uk 07500 37 60 31
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www.sherborneartslink.org.uk
Creative Art
Courses, Evening classes & Films Talk on 7 October
Experimenting with Abstraction Workshop on 9 November
Stained Glass Decorations
Free weekly wellbeing groups:
Parkinson’s Dance, Art for Memory, Art for Parents 01935 815899
Charity no.1007680 Company no.24714382 Funded by Dorset Council and National Lottery Community Fund
4.00pm at the Memorial Hall the Queen Camel Quilters host a two day exhibition of patchwork and quilting. A wide range of quilts, wall hangings, cushions, bags and boxes will be on display together with a bag faffle, sales table and competition. In addition, raffle tickets will be on sale for the group’s hand embroidered redwork patchwork quilt which has been made specifically to raise money for St Margaret’s Hospice. Refreshments available. Entry £2. From Monday 28 October to Saturday 23 November from 9.30am to 4.30pm at the Ilminster Arts Centre see popular exhibition by the Neroche Artists. Their work is diverse; each artist excelling in their own particular field. All are based in and around Somerset which offers inspiration for much of their work, but also travels abroad and people going about their everyday business, these all add to an interesting and varied exhibition. Neroche Artists include members who have all the ability to cover these subjects, and more, in the most sensitive and skilful of ways. Mediums include etchings, oils, watercolours, pastels and beautifully executed sculptures, and because there is a broad range of subjects, mediums and techniques, we know that there will be work that appeals to everyone in some way. Free entry. On Saturday 9 November from 10.00am to 4.00pm at the Digby Hall go along to a ‘Stained Glass Decorations’ full day workshop with Kate Doig. Kate will take you 30
through the exciting process of making your own stained glass decorations using the copper foil technique. For beginners and those with some experience. Entry £68. Max eight students. Book at ArtsLink office on 01935 815899 or visit www. sherborneartlink.org.uk
MUSIC
On Saturday 28 September from 7.30pm at St Peter’s Church in Stourton Caundle see ‘Connaught Brass’ – a brass quintet from the Royal Academy of Music. A wonderful opportunity to hear an award winning ensemble of Britains most talented young instrumentalists. Tickets £18, includes refreshments, from 01963 364384 or tim@ familyvilliers.co.uk Proceeds to St Peter’s Church. On Saturday 28 September from 7.30pm at St Peter and St Paul Church join Strode Singers for an evening of ‘Songs from Stage and Screen’. Many all time favourites performed by local choir. Tickets £10 available from N&D News, 07532 450250 or on the door.
Hart in Yetminster see ‘The Land Girls’. A nostalgic trip down memory lane. Singalong fun ranging from The Andrews Sisters to Vera Lynn with lots in between! With great harmonies and authentic costumes, The Land Girls provide an original and uplifting 1940’s, 1950s and 60s experience. On Monday 30 September from 6.30pm at Sherborne School see ‘Sølvguttene: The Boy Choir’ who will be performing an evening of choral music. The ‘boys of silver’, led by Oslo-born singer and conductor Frikk HeideSteen, will be performing a varied programme of repertoire, from traditional Norwegian folk music to classical works by Handel and Mozart in addition to the music of Andrew Lloyd Webber. Since their founding in 1940, Sølvguttene has been a cultural ambassador for Norway with 150 performances a year, with kings, queens and presidents being amongst the audience members. The choir also has a history of journeying to London for Christmas for the lighting of the big Norwegian Christmas Tree in Trafalgar Square, an annual gift from the people of Norway to the UK. Free entry.
On Saturday 28 September at 8.00pm at the David Hall see ‘Quimantu’. The AngloChilean band Quimantu creates a unique cultural blend through their exceptional use of the numerous traditional folk styles of Latin America, skilfully incorporated with contemporary influences from Western Classical music to Celtic, African and Indian styles, to name just a few. Their concert will include a selection of new songs featuring the rising star Laura VenegasRojas, whose warm and velvety vocals are complemented by virtuosic violins, the brilliance of guitars, charango and cuatro and the vibrant rhythms of Latin percussion. Experience a wonderful concert with this multi-talented group of musicians who have quite deservedly gained a reputation as one of the UK’s best and most creative Latin groups. Tickets £16.
On Tuesday 1 October from 7.30pm at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil enjoy a musical evening with ‘Armonico Consort’. They capture the enchanted journey through the extraordinary history of the Papacy, trekking through tales of greatness and intellect, whilst stumbling upon Papal times the church would prefer long forgotten. Illustrated with music by the greatest Italian church composers and their massive works with groups of choirs and soloists placed all over the building - Armonico Consort, with the help of the English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble will guide you through the musical heritage inspired by this great institution. They will be playing works by Allegi, Gabrielli, Monteverdi and Palestrina. Tickets £15.
On Sunday 29 September from 4.00pm at the White
On Thursday 3 October from 7.30pm at the Octagon
Theatre in Yeovil see Joe Brown. He has gone from strength to strength as his contemporary achievements continue to gather momentum. Joe has a new more eclectic band for this tour, including fiddle virtuoso Tom Leary, bass player Andy Crowdy and Joe’s 27 year stalwart band member, drummer, percussionist and singer Phil Capaldi. Joe combines timeless classics, rockabilly, gospel, country, bluegrass, and rock, all interwoven with his effervescent delivery and humorous reminiscences. Tickets £31. On Friday 4 October from 7.00pm at Charlton Horethorne Village Hall see The Yeovilton Military Wives Choir. On Friday 4 October from 7.00pm at the Henhayes Centre see Mike Denham and Tom ‘Spats’ Langham at their probation special concert. Tickets concert only £12 or with supper £20. Supper is steak and ale pie followed by apple cake and cream. On Friday 4 October from 7.30pm at the Ilminster Arts Centre Concerts in the West presents ‘Boyd and Lane’. The cellist Nathaniel Boyd is an artist of many talents - not only is he an internationally recognised chamber musician and soloist who has appeared at the world’s leading concert halls, he is also a committed painter and sculptor. Described as an ‘exceptionally gifted’ recitalist by Musical Opinion in 2013, Nathaniel has won numerous prizes for his work with the Navarra String Quartet. Nathaniel currently is the cellist in the
ARTS
Atalanta Piano Quartet and plays a Grancino Cello of 1695. Not surprisingly, Simon Lane has gained recognition for his compelling and sensitive performances, and has collaborated with many of the world’s most exciting musicians including Danielle de Niese, Iestyn Davies, Allan Clayton, Guy Johnston and Jack Liebeck. He has performed with violinist Lana Trotovšek, and made appearances with Guy Johnston, Tamsin Waley-Cohen and the Atalanta Piano Quartet. The evening programme includes Mendelssohn Sonata in D major, Op 58; Beethoven Sonata No 4 in C major, Op 102 No 1; Chopin Sonata in G minor, Op 65; Piazzolla Le Grand Tango. Tickets £15. On Friday 4 and Saturday 5 October from 7.30pm at the Ilminster Arts Centre see ‘The Best Of That’ll Be The Day’. Prepare for a nostalgia extravaganza as the UK’s No.1 Rock & Roll variety production returns. This very special edition of the show presents the most popularly requested songs, impressions and comic sketches from over 33 years of That’ll Be the Day! Featuring smash hits from the 50s, 60s, 70s & 80s this is a throwback evening of brilliant entertainment that guarantees to have you on your feet and dancing in the aisles before the night is over. Tickets £26. On Friday 4 October at 8.00pm at the David Hall in South Petherton see Christine Collister and Michael Fix. Christine draws her inspiration from the Celtic mysteries of the Isle of Man, in the middle of the Irish Sea. He has both
the dry deserts of Australia and a German heritage in his blood. Between them, Christine Collister and Michael Fix create a rare musical synergy that transcends cultures and musical traditions and enraptures audiences wherever they perform. With Christine’s sultry, sensuous voice and unsurpassed brilliance in range, combined with Michael’s exquisite guitar playing, the listener is transported to places in the soul where only music can take you. Tickets £16. On Saturday 5 October from 10.00am to 4.00pm at Long Sutton Village Hall Mid Wessex Singers presents ‘Come and Sing for Birds’. Mozart Spatzenmesse, Handel Nightingale Chorus, Gibbons The Silver Swan, Vaughan Williams The Turtle Dove. Bring lunch. Non members £16. For more information phone 07929 803097 or info@ midwessexsingers.co.uk On Saturday 5 October from 7.00pm at St Nicholas Church in Henstridge see the Avon and Somerset Constabulary Male Voice Choir. Tickets £8 from 01963 361041. On Saturday 5 October from 7.30pm at the Dance House in Crewkerne Concerts in the West presents ‘Boyd and Lane’. The cellist Nathaniel Boyd is an artist of many talents - not only is he an internationally recognised chamber musician and soloist who has appeared at the world’s leading concert halls, he is also a committed painter and sculptor. Described as an ‘exceptionally gifted’ recitalist by Musical Opinion in 2013, Nathaniel has won numerous prizes for his work with the Navarra String Quartet. Nathaniel currently is the cellist in the Atalanta Piano Quartet and plays a Grancino Cello of 1695. Not surprisingly, Simon Lane has gained recognition for his compelling and sensitive performances, and has collaborated with many of the world’s most exciting musicians including Danielle de Niese, Iestyn Davies, Allan Clayton, Guy Johnston and Jack Liebeck.
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He has performed with violinist Lana Trotovšek, and made appearances with Guy Johnston, Tamsin Waley-Cohen and the Atalanta Piano Quartet. The evening programme includes Mendelssohn Sonata in D major, Op 58; Beethoven Sonata No 4 in C major, Op 102 No 1; Chopin Sonata in G minor, Op 65; Piazzolla Le Grand Tango. Tickets £15. On Friday 5 October from 7.30pm at the Exchange in Sturminster Newton see ‘Showaddywaddy’. They have long been established as Europe’s most successful ever exponents of retroinspired rock. As if the band’s amazing success through 4 decades were not enough, here well into the 21st Century the demand for these legendary performers is every bit as strong, which is surely a testament to their outstanding reputation as live artists. Tickets £21.50. On Sunday 6 October from 7.30pm at Sandford Orcas Village Hall see The Orange Circus Band. Performing on banjo, guitar, fiddle, mandolin, double bass and drums, The Orange Circus Band are a sweet ‘n’ raucous bluegrass and country collective based in the UK with roots in Virginia, USA. Whilst having a hand in roots, rock and gospel music, and updating traditional songs taken from The Blue Ridge Mountains in Virginia, The Orange Circus Band produces original music that has a wholly unique, fresh sound. Expect wild playing, beautiful harmonies and boundless
energy guaranteed to raise the roof and warm the hearts! Tickets £9. On Friday 11 October from 7.30pm at the Exchange in Sturminster Newton see ‘Islands in the Stream’. Enjoy the songs of the Queen and King of country music - Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers. Leave your 9 to 5 worries at the door and get ready for a night in the company of Country Music Royalty. This thigh-slapping stage show brings together the beloved glamour and personality of Dolly, along with Kenny’s charisma and energy with hit after hit. This is a tribute show and is not affiliated with any original artists/estates/management companies or similar shows. Tickets £19. On Friday 11 October from 8.00pm at Ilminster Arts Centre see Mike Denham with violinist Emma Fisk. Having been taught violin at school, Emma was inspired, at the age of 16, to become a professional after hearing and meeting Nigel Kennedy and Stephane Grappelli. However, she then spent ten years playing in her brother’s rock band and four years at university before settling into Grappelli style fiddle playing with the band ‘Djangologie’ where she has been for 15 years. She is now recognised as one of the very best UK jazz fiddle players. Tickets £14. On Saturday 12 October from 7.30pm at the Exchange in Sturminster Newton see ‘The Music of
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the Moody Blues’. This is an opportunity for fans to experience this timeless music live, in a tribute to the greatest classic rock band of a generation – recently inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Gordy Marshall played drums with The Moody Blues for twentyfive years. Together with Mick Wilson (lead singer of 10cc for twenty years) they present a super-group of world class musicians, singers and songwriters and meticulously recreate the magnificence of a Moody Blues Concert. Tickets £20. On Saturday 12 October from 8.00pm at the David Hall in South Petherton see Moscow Drug Club Transcendent Troubadours of Gypsy Cabaret & Swing. Moscow Drug Club are a curious musical place where elements of Berlin Cabaret, Hot Club de France, French Musette and Storytelling meet. Combining their original material with songs by the likes of Jaques Brel, Tom Waits, Leonard Cohen and Eartha Kitt, Moscow Drug Club deliver an intoxicating and intimate musical experience. Tickets £15. On Saturday 12 October from 8.30pm at Somerton Sports Club it is Tim Bassett’s ‘A Tribute to Elvis’ plus his Allsorts charity event. Favourite songs from over the years with Elvis and other artists such as Neil Diamond, Buddy Holly, Cliff Richard, Tom Jones, Johnny Cash and more. There will also be a prize raffle. Tickets £7 from Somerton Sports Club on 01458 273808. On Sunday 13 October from 3.00pm at Wincanton Memorial Hall there is an Autumn Gold Charity Concert featuring the Wincanton Choir and guests Midsomer Norton and Radstock Silver Band. Tickets £7.50 available from St Margaret’s Hospice Shop, High Street. Raising money for St Margaret’s Hospice. From Friday 17 to Sunday 20 October from 7.30pm at the Exchange in Sturminster Newton SNADS present ‘Those Were the Days’. This is a nostalgic look back 32
at the 50s and 60s, where SNADS will endeavour to recapture the mood of those decades through words and music, featuring some of the more popular songs around at the time, and sketches based on some of the well-known radio and TV programmes that filled the airwaves. Tickets £10. On Saturday 18 October from 7.30pm at the Ilminster Arts Centre enjoy a performance by Craig Milverton and his Legacy Band. Craig is joined by his talented children Eleisha May and Ben Milverton alongside great musicians Ashley John Long and Coach York. Craig is firmly established as one of Britain’s finest Jazz Pianists with 12 British Jazz Awards to his name. They will be playing, and singing, straight mainstream jazz tunes and songs, easy to listen to and probably familiar to everyone. Tickets £14. On Saturday 19 October at 8.00pm at the David Hall in South Petherton see Chris While and Julie Matthews. With 24 years of unrivalled musical partnership and gathering numerous nominations, awards and critical acclaim along the way, major British artists and singer/ songwriters Chris While and Julie Matthews are celebrating 25 years as a duo in 2019 with a brand-new album and an extensive autumn tour of the UK. Tickets £16. On Sunday 20 October from 3.00pm at the David Hall see Sarah St John. At a fairly late age, Sarah decided to follow a childhood dream and entered the world of musical theatre. She was fortunate enough to perform as leading lady in such classics as My Fair Lady, Fiddler on The Roof, Anything Goes and Hello Dolly. After a short break as a lead singer for a Rock/Pop covers band, the world of musical theatre and Jazz called again and Sarah decided to strike out on her own as a soloist, supported by the Big Band sound of Smooth Jazz, Slow Swing and songs from The Great American Song Book, along with a few of her most favoured Blues and Easy Listening numbers. Tickets £8.
On Monday 21 October from 7.30pm at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil see ‘The Marmen Quartet’. Winners of the 2018 Royal Overseas League Competition, Music in the Round ‘Bridge’ Scheme, Musicians Company Concerts Concordia Award, Hattori Foundation Award and Royal Philharmonic Society Award. Current String Quartet Fellows at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, London. They will be playing works by Haydn, Debussy and Beethoven. Tickets £13.50. On Wednesday 23 October from 7.30pm at North Cadbury Village Hall Take Art presents ‘Mountain Music’ by Little Bulb in collaboration with Farnham Maltings. When pioneers from the British Isles came to settle in the Appalachian Mountains they brought with them, in their invisible baggage, songs from the ‘old country’ which took on a new life amidst the new land. Join awardwinning Little Bulb as they weave a tapestry both historical and fantastical in an unforgettable evening of story and song. Told with sumptuous threepart harmony and a foot stomping five-piece string band, they invite you on a journey of magical migration of what we now call ‘Country Music. Tickets Adults £10, under 18’s £5 available from North Cadbury Stores or 01963 440705 or www. takeart.org On Thursday 24 October from 7.30pm at Martock Church see ‘Spike’s Five and Dime Jazz Band’. This six piece traditional jazz band from South Wales specialises in playing well known tunes that were recorded in New York by small bands in the 1925-35 period prior to the Big Band era. They are all stalwarts of the South Wales Jazz Preservation Society and the band plays many concerts there and in Wessex. Tickets £9 from Martock News, Martock Gallery or 01935 829576 or £10 on the door. On Friday 25 October from 7.30pm at the Octagon
Theatre in Yeovil enjoy the ‘Magic of Motown’. Get ready for all the hits, glittering costumes, dazzling dance routines and outstanding musicianship in this breathtaking live concert spectacular. You will be going Loco Down In Acapulco as we take you back down memory lane with all the Motown classics from artists such as Marvin Gaye, Diana Ross, Stevie Wonder, The Temptations, The Supremes, The Four Tops, Martha Reeves, The Jackson 5, Smokey Robinson and more. Tickets £27. On Friday 25 October from 7.30pm at the Exchange in Sturminster Newton enjoy A Celebration of Neil Diamond. Wayne Denton fronts this live concert, faithfully recreating the songs, atmosphere and evoking memories of the era in his own inimitable style. Interspersed with humour and audience participation, faithfully recreating and delivering all the hits of Neil Diamond. With spectacular production, world class powerhouse of live musicians, awesome sound and featuring the latest in live video screen technology. Tickets £15. On Friday 25 October from 8.00pm at the David Hall in South Petherton see ‘The Tweed Project’. The Tweed Project is a collaboration between some of Scotland and England’s most in-demand explorers of their respective country’s Folk traditions. The project has been reborn with a new line-up for 2019 with the aim of finding common ground between the Scottish and English Folk traditions - two cultures which live extremely separate lives, despite sharing so many similarities. The band will be interpreting songs from each country’s traditional collections, as well as some contemporary compositions. The Tweed Project are Greg Russell on vocals/guitar/ bouzouki, Josie Duncan on vocals, Ciaran Algar on fiddle, Pablo Lafuente on guitar, Evan Carson on percussion and Ali Levack on whistles/pipes. Tickets £18.
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On Friday 25 October from 8.00pm at the Ilminster Arts Centre see ‘The Teacups’. Comprising the singing talents of Alex Cumming, Kate Locksley, Rosie Calvert and Will Finn, this acapella foursome have been creating a storm across the UK festival circuit in the last couple of years with critically acclaimed performances at Shepley Spring Festival, Beverley Folk Festival, Warwick Folk Festival and more. They will be singing a wide variety of British folk songs. Their musicality is intense and their material is sung with intelligence, heart and soul. Tickets £14. On Saturday 26 October from 2.30pm and 7.30pm at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil see Olympic champion Louis Smith, Rachel Stevens (S Club 7), Melody Thornton (Pussycat Dolls) and Lee Ryan (Blue) for a groovy evening of singing and dancing. The 1970s were when icons were born. With the groundwork for a new sense of personal freedom laid in the swinging 60s, people experimented with their sound, look and entire persona in more extreme ways. From somewhere in space landed David Bowie and Marc Bolan, two other-worldly angels at the forefront of glam rock. In New York and Miami disco was born. Music went more soulful with the sounds from Philadelphia. The Eurovision Song contest made its greatest contribution to pop music with the birth of Abba. Probably the greatest decade for music ever. The 70s didn’t do things by halves! Tickets £33. On Saturday 26 Octagon in 7.30pm at the Exchange in Sturminster Newton see ‘The Three Degrees’. More than three decades on, the threesome have retained their beauty, their sparkling choreography and their precise vocal qualities. Today, the line-up consists of Valerie Holiday, Helen Scott and Freddie Pool. Tickets £20.
PERFORMANCE On Sunday 29 September from 7.00pm at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil enjoy an
evening showcasing the talents of the members of Castaway Theatre Group. Featuring musical numbers, monologues and more. Tickets £11. On Wednesday 2 October from 7.30pm at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil see ‘Crimes on the Coast’. A secluded island hotel just off the English coast becomes a crime scene, as a scandal-inducing femme-fatale is felled. All the guests on the island are suspects, but are they alone and is all quite what it seems? Multi-award-winning theatre company New Old Friends presents this comedy thriller directed by James Farrell. The show enjoyed a sell-out national tour in 2018 (under previous title Crimes Under the Sun) and hits the road again in 2019 featuring four actors playing multiple outrageous characters, and a plot that romps along in the company’s trademark inventive style. Inspired by Agatha Christie, Noel Coward and PG Wodehouse, you are invited on a hilarious but murderous trip to a classic English Riviera retreat. Tickets £14. From Thursday 3 to Saturday 5 October from 7.30pm at the Parish Hall the Martock Players and Pantomime Society presents ‘The Ghost Train’ by Arnold Ridley. Tickets £7 from Martock Gallery or www. martock-players.eventbrite. co.uk From Monday 7 to Saturday 12 October from 7.30pm at Sherborne Studio Theatre the Amateur Players of Sherborne presents ‘The Day After the Fair’. A play adapted by Frank Harvey from a short story by Thomas Hardy in which he explores the relationship between a Victorian maidservant, her mistress and a young London barrister. Tickets £10, Students £8, available from www. aps-shrborne.co.uk or 07585 278722. From Wednesday 9 to Saturday 19 October at various times at the Octagon Theatre see ‘Chitty Chitty Bang Bang’ presented by YAOS. Based on the muchloved 1968 film version of Ian Fleming’s children’s
book and featuring an unforgettable score by the Sherman Brothers this promises to delight its audiences. Filled with amazing stage spectacles and unforgettable songs, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, is a high-flying, fantasmagorical, fun-filled, not to be missed adventure from start to finish. Tickets £18. On Thursday 17 October from 7.00pm at the Swan Theatre in Yeovil the NT Live presents ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’. A feuding fairy King and Queen of the forest cross paths with four runaway lovers and a troupe of actors trying to rehearse a play. As their dispute grows, the magical royal couple meddle with mortal lives leading to love triangles, mistaken identities and transformations… with hilarious, but dark consequences. Shakespeare’s most famous romantic comedy will be captured live from the Bridge Theatre in London. Gwendoline Christie (Game of Thrones), Oliver Chris (Green Wing, NT Live: Young Marx), David Moorst (NT Live: Allelujah!) and Hammed Animashaun (The Barber Shop Chronicles) lead the cast as Titania, Oberon, Puck and Bottom. Tickets £15. On Sunday 20 October from 8.00pm at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil see Dave Gorman with support from Nick Doody. The man behind Dave TV’s hit show Modern Life Is Goodish as well as Are You Dave Gorman and Googlewhack Adventure, is back on the road with a brand new live show called ‘With Great PowerPoint Comes Great Responsibility Point’. As the title suggests, he is bringing his laptop and projector screen with him so expect the ‘King of Powerpoint comedy’ to have more detailed analysis of those parts of life you have never stopped to think about before. Tickets £28.50. On Tuesday 22 and Wednesday 23 October from 7.30pm at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil see ‘Jane
Eyre’. A gothic masterpiece of tempestuous passions and dark secrets, Jane Eyre tells the thrilling story of an orphan girl and her journey from a childhood of loneliness and cruelty to a life at Thornfield Hall and an unlikely relationship with the mysterious Mr Rochester. Falling in love, she gradually uncovers a hidden past to the gloomy, forbidding Thornfield Hall, a terrible secret that forces her to make a heartwrenching choice. Do not miss Blackeyed Theatre’s brand new stage adaptation of one of the greatest works of English fiction. Captivating, brooding and intensely powerful, Jane Eyre is a moving and unforgettable portrayal of one woman’s quest for equality and freedom, and lives as one of the great triumphs of storytelling. Tickets £11. From Wednesday 23 to Saturday 26 October at 7.30pm at the Warehouse Theatre in Ilminster see ‘Under Milk Wood’. Commissioned by the BBC and described by Dylan Thomas as ‘a play for voices’, Under Milk Wood takes the form of an emotive and hilarious account of a spring day in the fictional Welsh seaside village of Llareggub. We learn of the inhabitants’ dreams and desires, their loves and regrets. The play introduces us to characters such as Captain Cat who dreams of his drowned former seafellows and Nogood Boyo who dreams of nothing at all. It is a unique and touching depiction of a village that has ‘fallen head over bells in love’. Tickets £10, Children/Students £5, available from Harrimans Menswear, Silver Street and www.thewarehousetheatre. co.uk On Thursday 24 October from 7.30pm at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil James Wilton Dance, one of Europe’s most in demand dance companies, presents ‘The Storm’, a whirlwind of lightning fast, athleticism, where acrobatics, break-dancing, martial arts and contact work fuse to form dance that will blow audiences away. Seven dancers, a soundtrack of thundering electro-rock 33
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specially composed by Amarok and thousands of pieces of paper combine to create a work that will astound you with its athleticism and touch you emotionally in a way that words simply can’t. In this storm can you find peace? Can you find the calm eye of the storm? Will it all blow over? Tickets £14.
CHILDREN
On Saturday 5 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at Yeovil Country Park there is a Fungi Foray. Join renowned mycologist Michael Jordan, author of the Encyclopedia of Fungi of Britain and Europe as he searches for and identifies his findings. Adults £6, Children free. On Saturday 12 October from 2.00pm to 3.00pm Sherborne Library are having a Story Den! You can help to create a den in our children’s area, listen to a story and do crafts for children aged 3+. For more information phone 01935 812683. On Saturday 26 and Sunday 27 October from 10.30am to 5.00pm at Barrington Court there is an Apple Weekend. This fun and lively weekend is for everyone, with much of the activity centered around our orchards and pressing barn. On Tuesday 29 October from 11.00am to 1.30pm at the David Hall in South Petherton La Baracca presents ‘Upside Down’. An enchanting nonverbal, early years theatre show for 2-5 year olds from the Italian company, La Baracca. Two characters live on different levels. Each of them lives life with their own certainties and fears, both scared but curious to meet the other. The only common element between them is a small red cat that lives on both floors. It takes the escape of their four-legged friend for both to finally meet, sending them off on a chase that will become a journey full of discoveries and wonders. The show runs between 35 – 40 minutes. Tickets £5 for one child, £8 for two. Children must be accompanied by an adult, for whom entry is free. On Wednesday 30 October from 10.00am to 12.00 noon at Yeovil Country Park it is 34
Woodland Explorers. Make your own leaf art. Fun family session. Hot drinks and snacks provided. Wear suitable clothing for getting muddy. Booking essential. Adults £2.50, Children £5.
at all, where, as he puts it, ‘my listeners have better stories than I do’. There is a bucket collection at the end of the show on behalf of The Motor Neurone Disease Association. Tickets £17.50.
On Thursday 31 October from 5.00pm to 6.00pm Sherborne Library present ‘Halloween Hullabaloo’! Come dressed up, hear spooky stories and join in with ghoulish activities for children aged 3+. Refreshments provided. For more information phone 01935 812683.
On Thursday 10 October at the Octagon Theatre in Yeovil from 7.30pm there will be six well-known panelists who will each give their view on one of the books shortlisted for the 2019 Booker Prize. Read any of the nominees before the event to see if you can spot a winner! Audience participation is encouraged. Tickets £6.
OTHER
On Saturday 28 September at the David Hall in South Petherton from 10.00am there will be a Bluegrass / Oldtime Mandolin Workshop with Jesper Rübner-Petersen. During this course, Jesper Rübner-Petersen will introduce participants to playing Bluegrass/Oldtime mandolin, with examples of other styles also included. Solo playing as well as accompaniment will be explored during the course, allowing participants to learn new techniques and develop and refine their existing playing skills. Please send an email to willslessons@gmail.com if you would like to register for this course. Entry £90. On Friday 4 October from 7.30pm at the Exchange in Sturminster Newton see Jeremy Vine. In more than thirty years at the BBC, he has presented Newsnight, Panorama, Crimewatch, Eggheads and Points of View — as well as his daily Jeremy Vine Show on BBC Radio 2, the UK’s most listened-to radio news programme. He has been shot at in Croatia and had chewing gum placed on his chair in Zimbabwe (by one of Robert Mugabe’s supporters). But increasingly he finds himself asking ‘What the hell is going on?’ as information and misinformation get mixed together and the sheer volume of news that gets thrown at us all is mind blowing. Get ready to laugh and cry as Jeremy tries to make sense of a world that increasingly makes no sense
On Thursday 10 October from 7.30pm at The Exchange in Sturminster Newton there is a lecture on ‘Stonehenge’. Stonehenge is Britain’s most famous ancient monument, an extraordinary and enigmatic structure attracting over 1.4 million visitors a year. Archaeologist, writer and broadcaster Julian Richards will explain its sophisticated architecture and show how it has been explored, studied and interpreted over the centuries. From Medieval magicians to Druids and the beginnings of archaeology, Julian will show how understanding gradually developed. Only then will the big questions be addressed: who built Stonehenge? How was it
built? And, the most difficult, why was it built? All current theories will be examined, and Stonehenge placed in its prehistoric landscape, itself the subject of extensive recent investigations. Join Julian and learn more about this global icon. Tickets £9. On Tuesday 15 October at Westlands Entertainment Venue in Yeovil from 7.00pm see ‘Behind the Lens’ with much-loved actor David Suchet David has been a stalwart of British stage and television for fifty years. From Shakespeare to Oscar Wilde, Freud to Poirot, Edward Teller to Doctor Who, Questions of Faith to Decline and Fall, right up to 2018’s Press, David has done it all. Throughout his spectacular career, David has never been without a camera, enabling him to vividly document his life in photographs. David will be talking about his remarkable life and career and sharing some of his wonderful photographs. Tickets £9.50. Part o Yeovil Literary Festival www.yeovilliteraryfestival.co.uk On Sunday 27 October from 7.30pm at the David Hall in South Petherton it is the monthly Acoustic Night. All styles and forms of performance welcome – not just music. If you wish to perform email folk@chriswatts. org to secure a slot.
NEW VENUE FOR SHERBORNE FLICKS!
Lovers of cinema will want to know about the new venue for Sherborne Flicks at the refurbished Digby Hall, Hound Street, Sherborne where monthly films will run on the second Wednesday of every month. The improved facility offers additional seating for up to 300, easy parking immediately outside the venue and a welcoming social area with a selection of refreshments including wine, beer, spirits and a selection of non-alcoholic beverages. Organisers from Sherborne Artslink commented, “We are delighted with the new venue for our monthly film nights and really pleased to offer our customers a monthly social evening that brings the community together to view a fascinating range of films proved by our partner Moviola.” Kicking off the new season of Sherborne Flicks on Wednesday, 9 October is Fisherman’s Friends, a delightful feel good film about the West Country. Entry price remains at £6.00 which is excellent value for an evening of entertainment! If you are a film buff interested in cinema, or even someone who would like to help out once a month and meet some like-minded people, Sherborne Artslink needs new volunteers to help them continue offering community cinema. Contact Artslink Coordinator Jennie at: takepart@sherborneartslink.org.uk.
MOVIES ALL IS TRUE (12A)
Shakespeare is acknowledged as the greatest writer of the age. But disaster strikes when his renowned Globe Theatre burns to the ground, and a devastated Shakespeare returns to Stratford, where he must face a troubled past and a neglected family. Starring Judi Dench, Kenneth Branagh and Ian McKellen. SHOWING AT
Somerton on Saturday 19 October, Parish Rooms, 7.30pm, Tickets £6 from Cobbs, Brunel Precinct or on the door.
APOLLO (U)
From director Todd Douglas Miller (Dinosaur 13) comes a cinematic experience fifty years in the making. Crafted from a newly discovered trove of 70mm footage, and more than 11,000 hours of uncatalogued audio recordings, Apollo 11 takes us straight to the heart of NASA’s most celebrated mission—the one that first put men on the moon, and forever made Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin into household names. Immersed in the perspectives of the astronauts, the team in Mission Control, and the millions of spectators on the ground, we vividly experience those momentous days and hours in 1969 when humankind took a giant leap into the future. SHOWING AT
Yeovil on Tuesday 8 at 11.00am, 2.30pm & 7.00pm and Friday 11 October 2.30pm, Westlands Entertainment Venue. Tickets £10.
BLACKKKLANSMAN (15)
This tells the astonishing true story of one of America’s riskiest undercover investigations, in which African-American police detective Ron Stallworth applied for membership to the Ku Klux Klan. Posing as a racist extremist over the telephone, Stallworth infiltrates the KKK’s inner circle but has his colleague Flip Zimmerman pretend to be him for face-to-face meetings. An unflinching examination of race relations in 1970s America, this bitingly satirical true story is still very relevant and won director Spike Lee the Grand Prix at Cannes Film Festival. SHOWING AT
Batcombe on Friday 25 October, Jubilee Hall, 7.45pm. Tickets from 01749 850307.
BILLY CONNOLLY: THE SEX LIFE OF BANDAGES (18)
Hailed as the UK’s most influential comedian of all time, legendary Scot Billy Connolly is coming to cinemas with this brilliant show from his final stand-up tour. Recorded in 2015, during the Australian leg, this whip smart routine is a riotous
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AROUND THE TOWNS AND VILLAGES
journey filled with outrageous tales and blistering observations of everyday absurdities. Screening as a special onenight-only event, Connolly will also muse upon his career, life and legacy in a deeply personal interview filmed exclusively for cinema audiences. Prior to retiring in 2016 following his diagnosis with Parkinson’s Disease, Connolly toured worldwide continuously for 50 years, performing to an audience of over 10 million. The Sex Life of Bandages is a big screen tribute to an iconic funny-man whose sharp wit and anarchic storytelling is still as hilarious as ever. SHOWING AT
Yeovil on Friday 11 October, Westlands Entertainment Venue, 7.00pm. Tickets £14.
CALAMITY JANE (U)
Deadwood, Dakota Territory, is largely the abode of men, where Indian scout Calamity Jane is as hard-riding, boastful, and handy with a gun as any; quite an overpowering personality. But the army lieutenant she favors doesn’t really appreciate her finer qualities. One of Jane’s boasts brings her to Chicago to recruit an actress for the Golden Garter stage. Arrived, the lady in question appears (at first) to be a more feminine rival for the favours of Jane’s male friends...including her friendly enemy Wild Bill Hickock. SHOWING AT
West Coker on Friday 11 October, Commemoration Hall, 7.45pm. Tickets £5.
COLD WAR (15)
A man and a woman meet in the ruins of post-war Poland. With vastly different backgrounds and temperaments, they are fatally mismatched and yet drawn to each other. SHOWING AT
Ilminster on Saturday 12 October, Warehouse Theatre, 7.45pm. Annual membership £25. Guests to make donation.
DOWNTON ABBEY (PG)
The television series Downton Abbey followed the lives of the Crawley family and the servants who worked for them at the turn of the 20th century in an Edwardian English country house. Over its 6 seasons, the series garnered 3 Golden Globe Awards, 15 Primetime Emmy Awards, 69 Emmy nominations in total, making Downton Abbey the most nominated non-US television show in the history of the Emmys - even earning a Special BAFTA award and a Guinness World Record for the highest critically rated TV show along the way.
SHOWING AT
Yeovil on Tuesday 22 and Monday 28 October, Westlands Entertainment Venue, 11.00am, 2.30pm & 7.00pm. Tickets £10.
FISHERMAN’S FRIENDS (12A)
Based on the true story of the Fisherman’s Friends, all-male folk singers from Port Isaac in Cornwall who in 2010 unexpectedly made it into the charts. When music executive Danny arrives in Cornwall for a stag weekend, he finds a close-knit community wary of incomers. As part of a joke he offers to sign up the group, under their leader Jim, but comes to see that they have real potential. He also encounters Jim’s single-mother daughter Alwyn. SHOWING AT
Sherborne on Wednesday 9 October, Digby Church Hall, 7.30pm. Tickets £6. Cerne Abbas on Monday 14 October, Village Hall, 7.30pm. Tickets £5. Ditcheat on Thursday 17 October, Village Hall. Ticket £5 from the Farm Shop or www.ditcheatvillagehall.org. uk or on the door.
IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK (15) African-American teen sweethearts Fonny and Tish are ripped apart when Fonny is wrongly arrested for the rape of a Puerto Rican woman because of the machinations of a racist cop. While seeking justice for Fonny, a pregnant Tish relies on her Harlem community, including her sister, mother Sharon and future mother-in-law. SHOWING AT
Yeovil on Wednesday 9 October, Swan Theatre, 7.30pm. Guests £5, membership £30. 01935 421905.
LATE NIGHT (15)
Legendary talk-show host Katherine Newbury is a pioneer in her field. The only woman ever to have a long-running program on late night, she keeps her writers’ room on a short leash – and all male. But when her ratings plummet and she is accused of being a “woman who hates women,” Katherine puts gender equality on her to-do list and impulsively hires Molly Patel, a chemical plant efficiency expert from suburban Pennsylvania, as the first and only female on her writing staff. With rumours swirling that Katherine is being replaced by a younger, hipper male host, she demands that the writers make her funny and relevant again. A lifelong fan, Molly is determined to prove she’s not just a diversity hire, but the one person who can turn her idol’s career around. Going against everything Katherine has staked 35
MOVIES
her reputation on, she urges her to make the show more contemporary, authentic and personal, a move that could make Molly’s career or send her back to the chemical plant for good. SHOWING AT
Leigh on Monday 14 October, Village Hall, 7.00pm. Tickets £6 from 01935 873269. Castle Cary on Tuesday 22 October, Caryford Hall, 7.30pm, Tickets £5 from the Market House or £6 on the door.
LAST SUMMER (15)
On Saturday 26 October from 7.30pm at the Parish Hall see ‘Last Summer’. During a long hot summer in 1970s Wales, four boys roam free through a neglected rural paradise, until a tragedy strikes that sets them against the adult world and changes their lives forever. The film captures the children’s perspective on life perfectly and uses it to challenge adult assumptions about what’s best for them. SHOWING AT
Martock on Saturday 26 October, Parish Hall, 7.30pm. Tickets £5.50 from Martock News, Moorlands Precinct and Martock Gallery or £6 on the door.
PAIN AND GLORY (15) A film director reflects on the choices he’s made in life as past and present come crashing down around him. Pain and Glory talks about creation and the difficulty of separating it from one’s own life and the passions that give it meaning and hope. This film is in Spanish with English Subtitles. SHOWING AT
Yeovil on Tuesday 1 October, Westlands Entertainment Venue, 2.30pm and 7.00pm. Tickets £10.
NOVEMBER DEADLINES News and Articles: FRIDAY, 11 October
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ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD (18)
Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time... In Hollywood visits 1969 Los Angeles, where everything is changing, as TV star Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his longtime stunt double Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) make their way around an industry they hardly recognize anymore. The ninth film from the writer-director features a large ensemble cast and multiple storylines in a tribute to the final moments of Hollywood’s golden age. SHOWING AT
Yeovil on Monday 7 October, Westlands Entertainment Venue, 2.30pm to 7.00pm. Tickets £10.
RED JOAN (12A)
In a picturesque village in England, Joan Stanley lives in contented retirement. Then suddenly her tranquil existence is shattered as she’s shockingly arrested by MI5. For Joan has been hiding an incredible past; she is one of the most influential spies in living history… SHOWING AT
Yetminster on Tuesday 1 October, Jubilee Hall, 7.30pm, Tickets £6, includes choc ice, from the Spar Shop. Norton Sub Hamdon on Tuesday 8 October, the Lord Nelson, 7.30pm Tickets from 01935 881227. Milborne Port on Friday 25 October, Village Hall, 7.30pm, Tickets from Wayne the Butcher from 1 February, £5.50 on the door. Hinton St George on Saturday 12 October, Village Hall, 7.30pm, Tickets £5 in advance from Personal Services Store and Dorothy’s Tearoom or £5.50 on the door.
ROCKETMAN (15)
The story of Elton John’s breakthrough years, following the fantastical journey of transformation from shy piano prodigy Reginald Dwight into international superstar Elton John. This inspirational story, set to Elton John’s most beloved songs and performed, tells the universally relatable story of how a small-town boy became one of the most iconic figures in pop culture.
SHOWING AT
Kingsbury Episcopi on Thursday 3 October, Community Centre, 7.30pm, Tickets £5 from 01935 823298. South Petherton on Friday 18 October, David Hall, 8.00pm. Tickets £5. Halstock on Saturday 19 October, Village Hall, 7.30pm. Tickets £6. 01935 89248. West Camel on Friday 25 October, Village Hall, 7.30pm, Admission £5 on the door. Sturminster Newton on Thursday 31 October, The Exchange, 7.00pm. Tickets £5.
SHOPLIFTERS (15)
A Japanese couple stuck with part-time jobs and hence inadequate incomes avail themselves of the fruits of shoplifting to make ends meet. They are not alone in this behaviour. The younger and the older of the household are in on the act. The unusual routine is about to change from care-free and matter-of-fact to something more dramatic, however, as the couple open their doors to a beleaguered young girl. The reasons for the family’s habit and their motivations come under the microscope. SHOWING AT
endures devastating horror as a First World War soldier – experiences that fire his imagination to write The Lord of the Rings.
SHOWING AT
Hardington Mandeville on Friday 4 October, Village Hall, Tickets £5 from Springfield Stores on 01935 862363 or £6 on the door. South Petherton on Friday 11 October, David Hall, 8.00pm. Tickets £5
WOMAN AT WAR (12A)
In Reykjavik, choir-mistress Halla appears to lead a quiet and routine existence but her happy disposition hides a secret double-life. Known by the alias ‘Woman of the Mountain’, she is a fierce, committed environmental activist trying to protect the stunning landscape against the local aluminium industry. Just as Halla is planning her boldest operation yet, a letter arrives which changes everything. Part thriller, part black comedy, this film is an intelligent story told with warmth, wit and quirky touches. SHOWING AT
Batcombe on Friday 11 October, Jubilee Hall, 7.45pm. Tickets from 01749 850307.
Crewkerne on Friday 11 October, Wadham School, 7.30pm. Full membership £25. Visitors £6. 01935 822656.
THE GOLDFINCH (15)
Thirteen-year-old, Theo Decker’s life is turned upsidedown when his mother is killed in a terrorist attack at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Confused in the rubble of the tragedy, he steals a priceless piece of art known as The Goldfinch. SHOWING AT
Yeovil on Tuesday 29 October, Westlands Entertainment Venue, 11.00am, 2.30pm & 7.00pm. Tickets £10.
TOLKIEN (12A)
Orphaned at 12 and raised by a guardian priest, language genius John Ronald Reuel Tolkien joins a fellowship of other Oxford student outcasts, marries the love of his life Edith Bratt, and
NEW VENUE!
FISHERMAN’S FRIENDS 12a
7.30 pm Wednesday 9 October Digby Hall, Hound Street, Sherborne DT9 3AA
Tickets £6 in advance from Sherborne Tourist Information Centre 01935 815341 or on the door if available Good company and bar!
www.sherborneartslink.org.uk Charity no 1007680 Company no 2471382 With Dorset Moviola
Music Gigs All Music Gigs are FREE entry unless mentioned.
SEPTEMBER
27 ‘The Furious Pussies’, 50s’-70’s classic gold, The Old Pound Inn, Langport, 8.30pm ‘Rexes Hollow’, Rock/Pop Covers, The Westminster, Yeovil, 9.00pm 28 ‘The Diamonds’, 60’s/70’s Covers, Yeovil Labour Club, 8.00pm ‘Grouvecat’, Acoustic Rock, The Westminster, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘D-State’, Covers 70’s-present, The Arrow, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘Karma Alarm’, Covers, The Royal British Legion, Gillingham, 9.00pm ‘SnakeSnakeSnake Band’, Rockgrass, The Wyndham Arms, Kingsbury Episcopi, 9.00pm ‘Snakebyte’, The Bell Inn, Yeovil, 9.30pm ‘Daytona’, Rock/Pop, Stoke Sub Hamdon Working Mens Club, 9.30pm
OCTOBER 4 5 6 11 12 18 19 23 25 26
‘Bad Edukcation’, Classic Rock, The Westminster, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘NiteLite’, Yeovil Labour Club, 8.30pm ‘Generator’, Rock Covers, The 94 Club, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘Project 17’, Pop/Rock, Gillingham Town Social Club, 9.00pm ‘Cover All Bases’, Covers, The Railway Hotel, Yeovil, 9.00pm James Hollingsworth, Acoustic Blues, Folk, Rock, The Phoenix, Gillingham, 9.00pm ‘D-state’, Cover 70’s-present, The Bell Inn, Yeovil, 9.30pm Sam Trusson - acoustic guitarist and singer, The Phelips Arms, Montacute, 9pm Ross Kirk, Rock Covers, Yeovil Labour Club, 4.00pm ‘Area 51’, Rock Covers, The Westminster, Yeovil, 9.15pm ‘Nevertheless’, Rock Covers, Edgar Hall, Somerton, 6.00pm, £15. ‘Livewired’, Rock Covers, The Bell Inn, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘One Tree Hill’, Acoustic, The Old Barn Club, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘Slipstream’, Rock Covers, Stoke Sub Hamdon Working Mens Club, 9.30pm ‘Milk and Alcohol’, Dr Feelgood Tribute Band, The Westminster, Yeovil, 9.30pm ‘Dead Man’s Clique’, Rock Covers, The Railway Hotel, Yeovil, 10.00pm ‘Project 17’, Pop/Rock, The Phoenix, Gillingham, 9.00pm ‘Silverback’, Rock Covers, The Railway Hotel, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘Loose Rock’, Indie Pop/Rock, The Bell Inn, Yeovil, 9.30pm ‘Named and Shamed’, Pop/Rock, Half Moon Inn, Stoke Sub Hamdon, 9.30pm ‘AC / ZZ UK Band’, AC/DC & ZZTop Tribute, The Lord Nelson, Norton Sub Hamdon, 9.30pm ‘Mountain Music’, five piece string band, North Cadbury Village Hall, 7.30pm ‘The Tracks Band’, Pop/Rock, The Old Pound Inn, Langport, 8.30pm ‘Rexes Hollow’, Rock/Pop Covers, The Westminster, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘Lewis & the Sound of the Suburbs’, Ska & 2 Tone, Fleur De Lis, Stoke Sub Hamdon, 9.00pm ‘The Axxeman Greg Winters’, Yeovil Labour Club, 8.30pm ‘One Tree Hill’, Acoustic, The Tippling Philosopher, Milborne Port, 9.00pm ‘The Rhythm Collective’, Rock/Pop Covers, The Great Lyde, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘Bad Edukation’, Classic Rock, The Railway Hotel, Yeovil, 9.00pm ‘Project 17’, Pop/Rock, Coronation Club, Gillingham, 9.30pm ‘Twisted Vinyl’, The Bell Inn, Yeovil, 9.30pm ‘Warthogs’, Pop/Rock, Stoke Sub Hamdon Working Men’s Club, 9.30pm
MUSIC
NEW ALBUM IS A RARITY! By Ross Owen Williams, presenter on Radio Ninesprings 104.5fm
Find out why when Ross Owen Williams reviews local artist’s new album Only Decades Amongst the many pleasures of doing the Sunday afternoon show on Radio Ninesprings is that I get to meet and interview a local music act each week – and, judging from what I’ve seen so far, Yeovil is jam-packed with both quality people and quality musicians. One such individual is Jamie Witt, who I’ve had the great pleasure of performing alongside whenever he has deputised for one of my band’s guitarists. Jamie’s incredible talent with a guitar is on full display for the world now with the release of his first album Only Decades, available to stream through Spotify and purchase through Amazon, iTunes, and in-store in HMV Yeovil through their ‘Live and Local’ initiative. The album is a rarity – a guitar-led record without any vocals which takes the listener on a journey through ten fantastic tracks. Jamie explained that, while writing this album, he considered adding lyrics but felt that it would have compromised the quality. I have to agree – with the focus entirely on the music, it’s the incredible guitar work that shines through as the superstar of the album, absolutely justifying Jamie finishing in the top 10 in MusicRadar’s worldwide Guitarist of the Year competition. Away from the recording studio, Jamie is an advocate of music in the community, regularly visiting schools in the area and, on multiple occasions, donating guitars to music departments at his own alma-mater of Westfield School, as well as Preston School and Buckler’s Mead. Feeling that he was given great support by the school when he first picked up a guitar at the comparatively late age of fourteen, Jamie is keen on giving back to the next generation of musicians. Being left handed myself, I was quite taken with the tale of Jamie’s very first student, a southpaw who found that while his right-handed counterparts could walk into the school’s music room to pluck and strum away, he would have to buy and bring his own. Due to this, Jamie collaborated with Martin from Yeovil Guitars to donate left-handed guitars to ensure lefties weren’t left-outs. Above all else, Jamie is delighted to be part of the Yeovil music scene, commenting that he doesn’t feel there’s any of the competitive edge that he’s noticed in other regions, and that everyone is supportive, friendly, and pushing each other to constantly improve and enjoy making music. When it results in tremendous work like Only Decades, I can only agree.
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@conduitmag
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MUSIC
A MUSICAL NOTE!
By Ryan Leese, Manager of Waterloo Music As we start to move towards our peak time of year in the shop, it’s so exciting to see all of the new stock arriving. And here’s a taste of the new products arriving at Waterloo Music, in this case, from Hofner Guitars. These were born in the 1960s, Hofner Verythin guitars were developed to appeal to mainly ‘beat’ groups that were emerging across Europe, as rock ‘n’ roll took the imagination of youngsters everywhere. The original concept of a lightweight semi acoustic, for a wider range of uses, still holds good today! The thin body makes it one of the most comfortable guitars in its class to play, at the same time, the Verythin offers a huge range of tones, making it one of the best allround instruments available and it’s under £350. Come and take a look, or try one of these in store, we’ll be happy to help you. Did you know that we stock all sorts of music books in-store? That includes music examination, grade books as well as the latest popular titles. If we haven’t got it, we can order it for you, contact us for more information. There’s so much more to running a music shop than simply selling instruments and accessories, and that’s what makes it so enjoyable!
Antiques & Collectables
AUCTIONS, FAIRS AND SALES On 1 and 22 October, Dukes in Dorchester will be holding an Avenue Auction comprising a sale of Toys & Collectables, Vintage Clothing & Accessories at 10.30am. Please note viewing is every Saturday prior to sale from 9.30am-12.00noon and on every Monday prior to sale - 9.00am7.00pm as well as on the morning of the auction day from 9.00am. On 26 September at 10.30am there will be a sale of Art and Design Post 1850 – check the website to see all the beautiful items that are for sale: https:// www.dukes-auctions.com/auctions . On the 9 October look out for the auction of the contents of Athelhampton House, one of the finest Tudor Manor Houses in England. Entry to the viewing is strictly by catalogue only. Catalogues will be available two weeks prior by post (£35), or on the door (£25). On 17 October Dukes is holding its Autumn Fine Art sale. Auction house Lawrences in Crewkerne has General Sales taking place on Wednesdays on 25 September, 2 and 23 October. There is also a sale of Silver Vertu on 8 October, starting at 10am; a Decorative & General Antiques Sale on 9 October followed by Jewellery, 19th/20th Century Design & Ceramics on 10 October and Pictures, Furniture, Clocks & Rugs on 11 October. All general sales start at 9.30am
and viewing is from the Tuesday before the sale from 9am to 7pm. For more information call 01460 73041. Bridport Auction House has its sale of Collectables and Antiques on Friday 27 September, starting at 10am. Viewing Days are Wednesday 24 and Thursday 25 July (9am-5pm), and on the morning of the sale. For more information call: 01308 459400. Mendip Auction Rooms in Binegar, Somerset has a sale of Victorian and Later Effects on Tuesday 1 October. Note that sales of Antique, Fine Art & Collectables are held on a monthly basis on Saturdays starting at 10am. Entries of items are invited. For more info, call: 01749 840770. Yeovil Auction House has a sale coming up on Saturday, 28 September. Yeovil Auctions is located at Court Ash - opposite the main car park in the town centre we hold an auction, usually of antiques and collectables, every month. Call: 01935433965 or email: yeovilauctionrooms@gmail. com. On Saturday 19 October Sherborne’s 15th Annual Autumn Craft Fair will take place at The Digby Church Hall, Digby Road. The event is organised by West Country Fairs, from 9.30am to 4pm. Contact: 01749 677049 for further information.
TOP PRICES PAID FOR OLD TOYS - any condition
We are always keen to buy antique silver and old Sheffield plate at current prices Please telephone or call into the shop
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Tel: 01935 507330 shop@waterloomusic.co.uk 16 Hendford, Yeovil, Somerset www.waterloomusic.co.uk FB/waterloomusic
38 CHEAP STREET, SHERBORNE DORSET DT9 3PX
01935 816828
enquiries@henrywillis.co.uk
www.henrywillis.co.uk
Trains, cars and lorries, soldiers, etc Britains, Dinky, Corgi, Hornby, Meccano, Tri-ang, etc
01935 816072 (07527 074343) Pastimes of Sherborne, 3 Westbury (in front of the Abbey)
CLOCK REPAIRS
ANTIQUE AND MODERN CLOCK REPAIRS
Long Case Clocks a speciality Free pick up and delivery 40 years experience
01935 477582
ANTIQUES
BRUTON DECORATIVE ANTIQUES FAIR 18-20 October 2019
Trade Preview Friday 18 October 11 am – 2pm Haynes International Motor Museum Sparkford, Somerset BA22 7LH Bruton Decorative Antiques Fair 2019 bounces back for the fourth edition with a theme of rustic to refined luxury - antiques in the contemporary home. The luxurious and spacious venue of Haynes Motor Museum will be transformed to an interior design hub with curated and inspirational stands from more than 50 exhibitors The fair has established itself as a hybrid combining relaxed traditional and decorative antiques for house and garden, from country house furniture and humble folk art to mid century design attracting a sophisticated trade audience, interior designers and a fleet of smart home owners and collectors from the region and across the UK. It celebrates younger dealers working in the antiques trade today who re-imagine the use of traditional furniture in C21st interiors, Exciting debuts for 2019 include Lorfords Antiques, Tetbury founders of one of Europe’s largest and most inspiring collections of decorative and traditional antiques. And not forgetting The French Collection, based at Lorfords The Hangars, with French mirrors, decorative furniture and accessories. Also, joining from London, will be Sassie with a selection of Louis Vuitton luggage, small furniture and accessories, Virginia Ashton Lamps, London, Thomas Spencer Fine Art, Wiltshire with modern & contemporary art and La Boheme Collectables with mid century glass from the Czech Republic. Names returning in 2019 include a clutch of dealers based at Lorfords The Hangars, -plus Kore Purchase, with furniture and accessories for domestic and interior design trade, King George Antiques, with country house furniture, sculpture and antiques for the garden and Rudge Antiques, furniture and objects for relaxed interiors. Youll’s Antiques from Hungerford specialise in French provincial furniture and mirrors, Elham Antiques, Kent, decorative pieces for the country home and garden, Somerton dealer Mary Hossack of Life Interiors, who cleverly combines classic country furniture and upholstered pieces from the C19th with contemporary lighting, art and mirrors to inspire a new generation of homemakers and collectors. TV antiques specialist and decorative antiques dealer Mark Stacey Antiques, Linda North, Hertfordshire, with antiques for the garden and conservatory, John Read Smith, Herefordshire, countryhouse pieces and upholstery. Library furniture, period portraits and mantiques are a speciality of William Morris Antiques, Rug Addiction, who trades from The Malthouse in Stroud, will bring a dazzling selection of jewel
Photo credit lorfordsantiques.com
Bruton Decorative Antiques Fair 18–20 October 2019 Haynes International Motor Museum, Sparkford, Somerset BA22 7LH Trade Preview Friday 18 October 11–2 pm For Complimentary tickets email info@cooperevents.com Call 01278 784912
coloured antique rugs and upholstery, Quillon House Antiques, Bruton based, with fine English oak and country furniture, decorative accessories and equestrian paintings, Somerset based Terry & Marie Kelly and Cotswolds based Erna Hiscock and John Shepherd with folk art, naive paintings, small country furniture and collectible early glass and pottery. Dorset based Guy Dennler will use a trio of rooms to showcase his country house furniture and collections of botanic prints. Sleek contemporary leather and steel named designer furniture and accessories from Denmark will be on show from returnee Scandinavian By Design from Dorset and mid century design will also be shown by Not Wanted on Voyage from Oxfordshire who specialises in interesting art and design of the 20th century. Cambridge based art dealer Granta Fine Art returns C20th British paintings. Followers of Bruton Decorative Antiques Fair will be delighted to hear that antiques industry celebrity Mark Hill, BBC Antiques Roadshow expert, author and lecturer will return to Bruton 2019 for a Mark Hill Selects expert tour on Saturday 19 October. Visitors will be invited to join Mark as he leads tours around the fair when he will engage in person with both his audience and exhibitors and followers on social media. Mark’s talks and advice will be streamed on social media channels throughout the day.
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BEAUTY
LET’S GET PHYSICAL
By Carly Douris, Another Little World
Despite writing this on a dull, grey day in September, I am still surrounded by lots of UV: the light bulb in my lamp, the screen on my laptop and of course my mobile phone - not forgetting the light through the window I’m sat next to. Unless you are sitting in a pitch black room (I really hope not!) you will be ‘attacked’ by UV. Did you know there are two different types of sunscreen: chemical and physical? Let me explain the difference so you can understand why we at ALW only use a sun protection factor (spf) that creates a physical barrier between your skin and UV rays. Our Alumier MD mineral sunscreen (not containing nano particles) uses titanium dioxide and zinc dioxide to give a physical barrier on the skin for the sun rays to hit on to and bounce off. This is considered one of the most safest and affective ways to protect you, your family and marine life too. Most sunscreens using chemical filters contain tiny particles allowing penetration through the skin into the blood stream, reaching our vital organs within 30/60 minutes. This can cause endocrine disruption, fertility problems in both male and female, skin allergies, and thanks to penetration through the skin it has even been found in mother’s milk. The spf rating of a chemical sun protection depletes by 95% within 90 minutes meaning you need to keep adding these 40
nasties very frequently. Not only are we causing harm to ourselves we are endangering our marine life. This can be through swimming in the sea directly and through waste water from showers. How are chemical sunscreens affecting our marine life? They have been found to impair growth to green algae and photosynthesis, deform our young coral, sea urchins and mussels, decrease fertility and reproduction in fish. It also can accumulate within the tissue of dolphins, coral and much more spreading it to their young. You can check toxicity levels by heading to EWG Skin Deep website where they rate the naughtiest of the nasties, giving 8/10 of a high hazard to oxybenzone - funnily enough the most common ingredient that is found in chemical sunscreen along with avobenzone, octisalate, octocrylene, homosalate, octinoxate. Please book in for a free Alumier MD consultation where we will explain more about safe sun protection.
Christmas 2019 Now taking bookings for Christmas Parties! 28th November to 30th December (excluding Christmas Day)
Lunchtimes and Evenings New Years Eve Celebrations Normal Menu Available 9pm until late
Call now to book your party! The Orchard Inn, High Street, Galhampton, Yeovil, BA22 7BA Tel: 01963 440 751 Email: info@orchardinngalhampton.co.uk www.orchardinngalhampton.co.uk
Food & Drink
FOOD & DRINK
MAKE THE MOST OF AUTUMN’S BOUNTY! By The Stag’s Head Inn, Yarlington Here at The Stags Head we’re continuing to make the most of Autumn’s bounty: over the past ten days we’ve been out carefully collecting rosehips which will be made into rosehip syrup, to be used in various ways in our wonderful puddings throughout the winter; for the second year running we have our Blackberry Whisky on the go; plus we have been identifying the most heavily fruited sloe bushes for berry collecting a little later in the season, for our Five Year rolling production of Sloe Gin! We’re also turning our thoughts to this year’s Festive Cocktails, which will almost certainly have all of the above as key components. Our Christmas Party Menu has recently taken shape, the
creation of which has been an exciting challenge for Robbie our Head Chef, turning his mind to all things wintry to provide some deliciously different dishes of the season, alongside the traditional Roast Turkey and all the trimmings.
Wine, Shallot and Onion Jus. Or instead how about Wild Mushroom, Parsnip and Chestnut Tarte Tatin with Caramelised Onion, Smoked Applewood Cheese, Spiced Red Cabbage and Braise Baby Leeks?
Baked Vanilla and Hazelnut Cheesecake accompanied by braised rhubarb, clementine curd and hazelnut praline..... and of course we couldn’t get away with not having our everpopular sticky date pudding on offer!
So for starters, we’re thinking of Pork, Pistachio and Confit Duck Leg Terrine, accompanied by a Spiced Pineapple and Pink Peppercorn Chutney and a Sage Brioche Bun, or Red Pepper Pesto and Goats Curd Arancini, with Beetroot and Rhubarb Puree, and a Balsamic Reduction.
Turning our thoughts to the finale of a special meal out, we have some ridiculously decadent puddings for you to choose from, alongside our traditional Christmas pudding with Brandy Sauce. There’s a dark and rich Black Forest Chocolate Torte with Plum Puree and Honeycomb or
So consider booking your Christmas Party, Lunch or Supper at The Stags Head Inn, where you’ll not only be able to experience our delicious festive fayre, but also to try our new Festive Cocktails and sample a tot of our Limited Edition Five Year Sloe Gin (...for as long as it lasts!)
Ringing in the main courses we’ll have a treat for meatlovers - Ale Braised Beef Blade with Celeriac Mash, Carrot Puree and a rich Red
Corton Denham, Sherborne, Somerset DT9 4LR
Christmas Party menu AVAILABLE 1ST – 23RD DECEMBER Monday to Saturday 2 courses £27, 3 courses £32
£10 non refundable deposit is required at time of booking, pre orders required 7 days before dining.
Christmas Day Lunch
12-2PM Prosecco on arrival, 3 courses, tea/coffee and petit fours £95 per person 50% non refundable deposit due at booking
New Years Eve Party
£10 ENTRY, LIVE MUSIC Selection of hot and cold food available to purchase Tickets on sale now and limited in number.
Visit www.thequeensarms.com/festive offers
Tel: 01963220317 | Email : relax@thequeensarms.com Web: www.thequeensarms.com
The Mitre Inn
Sandford Orcas
Nr Sherborne, DT9 4RU
01963 220271 FREEHOUSE
Allen & Cheryl welcome you with a cosy bar & great food. Wed to Fri - Senior Citizens 2 course lunch £11.00 Sunday Roast - £9.95 Adult, £8.95 OAP and £6.50 children 2 En-suite double rooms now available Tuesday - Saturday 11.30 - 2.30, 7.00 - 11.00 Sunday 12.00 - 3.00, 7.00 - 10.30 (Monday drinks only 7.00 - 11.00)
www.MitreInn.co.uk
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FOOD & DRINK
WHY YOU NEED TO PAY A VISIT TO SHERBORNE’S AWARD WINNING HOTEL! The Eastbury is tucked away in the pretty market town of Sherborne, where ancient buildings and independent shops line the winding streets. Inside this charming townhouse you’ll find a wonderful blend of Georgian and contemporary design, and fabulous artwork hanging from exposed stone walls.
Seasons Restaurant, a paradise for food lovers, has notched up two AA Rosettes for its culinary prowess. Expect vibrant dishes such as Carpaccio of Octopus or Blowtorched Sea Trout. Set in the walled gardens is The Eastbury Spa by Amelia Rose, where you can shake off the weight of the world with a Caudalie treatment or a dip in the outdoor hot tub. Also wrapped inside the garden walls are the luxury Potting Shed suites, featuring a private outdoor terrace. The Eastbury has recently been announced on the short list for best hotel and restaurant at the Dorset Tourism Awards and for restaurant at the Blackmore Vale Taste Awards.
LUNCHES | AFTERNOON TEA | DRINKS | COCKTAILS | SMALL PLATES | DINNER
The Eastbury Hotel, Long Street, Sherborne, Dorset, DT9 3BY - Tel; 01935 813131 - www.theeastburyhotel.co.uk 42
FOOD & DRINK
ANNOUNCING ANOTHER GOLD FOR SOMERSET’S NEW FARM RESTAURANT New Farm Restaurant is celebrating again with the news that Taste of the West has awarded it Gold for another year. Situated just off the A303 in the beautiful Somerset village of Over Stratton, this family run restaurant has been recognised by Taste of the West with its top Gold award for another year. To maintain consistently high standards year after year is no mean achievement and the judges acknowledged this when they commented, “Congratulations on another well-deserved Gold Award. Great to have another great report with lots of positive comments.” The Gold award underlines the importance this excellent local restaurant places on local suppliers: “This establishment shows a strong commitment to local sourcing,” commented the judges. Head chef and Somerset farmer’s daughter Jane Bond, who with her partner Crispin and sister Sue Seaton owns the restaurant, decided to showcase local produce and suppliers way before it was fashionable; Jane and Crispin add to the mix from the kitchen garden, along with eggs and honey from their own chickens and bees. The restaurant adopted suppliers within a 35 mile radius from its inception 26 years ago, including small family farms like Kevin Denman, a Merriott smallholder providing vegetables; Hinton Harvest for guinea fowl and salad leaves; B G Priddle, supplier of free range eggs supplementing those produced by their chickens. Meat is from Langport’s Black Sheep Butchers and the nearby South Petherton butcher. Longmans supply milk and cheese including delicious local cheeses like White Lake’s Ewe’s Cheddar. The restaurant is an excellent example of how a Somerset farming family has diversified and made a real success of a restaurant business. Crispin Bond commented, “2019 has been a really good year for New Farm Restaurant with more people than ever visiting us for the first time and discovering why we think Somerset produce is the best ever. Winning Gold in the Taste of the West awards is really the icing on the cake and we are looking forward to introducing even more customers to our seasonal dishes in the months ahead.” He continued, “We were particularly pleased Taste of the West commented that the menu was good value for money as we want to always be able to offer good quality food that is affordable and full of locally sourced produce.” New Farm Restaurant is open evenings on Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 6.30pm. There are regular speciality evenings on the First Thursday of every month, Ladies Lunches on the Second Wednesday of the month, and brand new regular Friday lunchtime opening times plus the last Sunday of each month for Sunday Lunch. Details on: www. newfarmrestaurant.co.uk or telephone 01460 240584.
Picture caption: L-R Jane and Crispin Bond, Sue Seaton and Sue Babb display their new Taste of the West Gold certificate
Festive Dining Parties
Dinner
Rooms
Lunch
Sue, Jane and Crispin Look Forward to Welcoming You Open Wednesday to Saturday Set Price and A la Carte Menus Book Now for a Superb Festive Meal!
Tel: 01460 240584 For More Info Visit www.newfarmrestaurant.co.uk
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HEALTH & WELLBEING
REMEMBER YOUR PETS ON 5TH OF NOVEMBER Sports Centre
By Peter Luscombe BVSc GPCert(Derm) MRCVS, Newton Clarke Partnership
By Gary Shackle, Sherborne Sports Centre
Firework night is looming. Although it may be a few weeks away, if your pet is afraid of loud noises you need to take action now! Nearly 50% of dogs have a genuine fear of loud noises, and as 5 November approaches this can be a most distressing time of year for them.
With the recent republishing of the physical activity guidelines, many people are thinking again about changing their lifestyle. The recommended weekly activity guideline is 150 mins a week.
There are no magic cures for frightened animals but here are a few suggestions, which I hope will help to make things less distressing for your pets.
I know this sounds a lot but if you split it into five days of 30 mins each, then mentally it becomes a lot more manageable. Any level of physical activity has been proven to be useful, with more activity providing more benefit. With that said, balancing the variety of exercises is essential to get the best from your workout. It goes without saying that different activities provide different body rewards. Cardio is great for a hearty heart and resistance training is great for bone density and strength. However if you can do a bit of both you will definitely be onto a winning formula!
Preparing for Fireworks night
GUIDELINES AND RECOMMENDATIONS ON BALANCE EXERCISES
The new guidelines reiterate the importance of balance and co-ordination for older adults as well. They state: “Older adults at risk of falls should incorporate physical activity to improve balance and co-ordination on at least two days a week.” We have recently started a new Stand and Balance class to complement our other well-established classes – Move to Improve, Senior Active and Hydrofitness. With an array of other fitness classes on offer at Sherborne Sports Centre, you’re sure to find the most beneficial variety of exercises that suit your needs. Don’t delay…..call us on 01935 810548 or email gym@sherborne.org for further information.
•
Identify a safe quiet area for your pet. Provide a bed and some familiar items. Providing an unwashed item of your clothing may help so that the dog can smell your scent.
• Consider placing a pheromone device nearby. •
Minimise the noise and light coming into the house by shutting all the windows and drawing the curtains early.
•
Walk dogs early, to avoid going out once the fireworks have started. Keep them on a lead in case un-expected fireworks are encountered
• Try to mask the noise by turning on the television or radio. Try to do this before the first fireworks start. Keep the volume at a comfortable level to avoid adding to the problem. It is better to make these preparations now and not leave it until the last minute. When the Fireworks start •
Encourage your pet to go to the “safe area” and stay there. If they choose to hide somewhere else, let them do so. They will choose where they feel most safe.
142 Preston Road, Yeovil Somerset BA20 2EE Lower Acreman Street Sherborne, Dorset DT9 3EX www.newtonclarkevet.com
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• Let them have a free run of the house. Animals which are frightened will attempt to escape. If their efforts are thwarted they are more likely to become aggressive or destructive. •
Ignore your pet if it shows signs of fear. Although it seems natural to try to soothe or reassure your pet, this would only reward fearful behaviour and makes the problem worse in future.
• Reward calm behaviour with praise or a treat. •
Do not get cross with your pet. Punishment of fearful behaviour will only make them more anxious.
• Try to stay calm and relaxed yourself. Act as a good role model. Medications There are a range of nonprescription as well as prescription medicines that can be helpful for pets with firework phobias. They may be used alone or in combination if needed, but do not replace the approaches suggested above, and should be used as part an anxiety reducing plan. Seek early advice from your vet regarding the use of these medicines if you feel they are needed. They will discuss the most appropriate product for your pet. Behavioural Therapy All the above measures are aimed at coping with the immediate problem of noise phobias. Thinking ahead, it is worth making an appointment with your vet to discuss methods of desensitisation for your pet. It is too late to consider their use before this season, but it may be worth considering as a New Year’s resolution to start after the New Year celebrations have ended.
HEALTH & WELLBEING
FEARS AND PHOBIAS BEGONE!
By Niki Cassar
Do you, or someone you know, suffer from what is known as a phobia, and what exactly does that mean? Phobias are a type of anxiety disorder; in other words, an irrational fear of something that we believe might harm us. The word itself comes from the Greek word phobos meaning fear, and typically, phobic people will become increasingly fearful and anxious over time, actively avoiding certain objects or situations, and may even develop panic attacks. The names for phobias have been created by doctors and other clinicians, usually using a Latin or Greek suffix and then adding the word phobia - for example, Claustrophobia (the fear of being in confined spaces). The list gets longer every year, as new names are added. There is even a name for fear of fear: Phobophobia. The problem is that there is no medication to cure phobias and many people have to live with them all of their life, with the misconception that their condition is incurable. The reality is that they have a strong fear that can be completely neutralised. Doing hypnotherapy with a highly-qualified and experienced hypnotherapist has been shown to be a very successful way to remove the
specific fear permanently, by working with the underlying anxiety that has developed into a major fear. This may take several sessions, so anyone offered ‘quick fixes’ by therapists should be wary. After all, if you were removing pernicious weeds from your garden, you’d know that cutting them off on the surface or half-heartedly digging out just some of the roots would only stop the weeds from growing temporarily. Over the past twenty years, I’ve worked with numerous forms of fear, and providing my clients are willing to work with me and give 100% attention as I do, then the success rate is very high. One client recently described the way he was feeling at the end of our final session as: ‘It’s as if I’ve been dragging a ball and chain around for years, and someone has just removed it. I feel so light and free now.’ If you’d like help in removing your own ball and chain, then please do give me a call on 01963 371 695 or 07973 346 747 for a free, confidential chat. We can either meet faceto-face in Horsington (near Templecombe) or online if you prefer. Remember to quote The Conduit in order to receive a £15 discount on your first session.
Exciting new equipment has arrived at The Zone! 01935 818270 www.oxleysc.com Bradford Road, Sherborne, Dorset, DT9 3DA
GET IN THE ZONE WITH MYZONE
By Kate Stancel-Lewis, Senior Fitness Instructor, Oxley Sports Centre As a society we are becoming more and more interactive with each other through various apps and technology such as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter along with fitness apps such as Strava and FitBit. As technology develops so does our understanding on how we can improve our health, both mentally and physically, enabling us to push ourselves to achieve our fitness goals. So why not combine the two? This is where MyZone comes in. It is exciting new software that is taking the Fitness Industry by storm and we are bringing it to Oxley! What is Myzone you ask? Whilst at the gym or during a fitness class you may have heard your instructor talk about your Maximum Heart Rate (MHR) which is the age related number of beats per minute when the heart is working at its maximum. MyZone is an innovative wearable heart rate strap based system that has a 99.4% accurate heart rate reading, equivalent of an ECG. The heart rate strap is far more accurate than your normal fitness trackers such as a Garmin or Apple watch. The monitor uses five different colour zones, which represent a percentage of your maximum heart rate. The wireless cloud technology then logs and tracks calorie expenditure and time used exercising which is then all stored on to an app on your phone or IPad, compactable with either android or iOS. It conveniently monitors your physical activity allowing you to see your progression, helps you to work harder to achieve your fitness goals and allows you to connect with others using MyZone. You are able to compete and connect with others from within your facility, view workout histories and it is great for group training for events such as Tough Mudders. Being able to analyse where the weaknesses are on each team member to then be able to work together to improve and achieve the goal set. There are very few centres in the South West that have the new software and we are excited to announce that MyZone will be coming to Oxley Sports Centre in October. We will have our own hub and MyZone community where our Fitness instructors and Class Instructors will be able to interact with you, set goals, receive challenges, encourage, motivate and talk you through work outs and your targets. The strap stores up to 16 hours of data meaning you can train and exercise outside the centre, away from your phone and app. It will also connect to third party apps such as Google fit, Strava, Facebook and the like. The strap is also waterproof up to 10m which allows you to swim with it on. So let’s use this interactive connectivity to help us achieve that healthier, fitter lifestyle together! 45
WALKING
RACHEL’S RAMBLES By Rachel Kilbee
“Does the walker choose the path or the path the walker?” After parking up in the village of Charlton Adam, we pick up the footpath near to the pub and follow the trail which loops behind farm buildings, through part of the grey-stoned village and along the side of horse and donkey paddocks. It’s easy going, relatively flat and a pleasant, if a somewhat surprisingly quiet route. I have decided to be more organised than usual and consulted my OS map and planned what looks to be a varied 10km stretch. A multi-terrain ramble consisting of fields, pathway, woodland and a short section of road past the National Trust property of Lytes Cary. My day pack is now slightly heavier with the added autumnal variances of cagoule and extra fleece but Oakley and I are enjoying the amble despite the grey clouds which hang heavily before us. The shift from one season to the next is evident, the last haul of straw bales sit patiently around the emptying fields whilst the hedgerows bode a hard winter ahead as their crop of berries weigh heavily amongst the brambles.
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It is as we cross the fields of fading green that we suddenly see the dormant digger and the barricades around the broken footbridge crossing the River Cary. Oakley gives me a momentary glance and leaps into the water - how easy it is to be a labrador. My human feet assess the depth of the water and the bank grown high with reeds and I reluctantly have no option but to consult my map. The initial reaction to a blocked footpath is always one of mild frustration but today we shrug it off and find an alternative track. Yes it involves an element of re-tracing ones steps but who knows where this new route will take us? And so it is as we pass a kindly waving sheep farmer that we walk on through the area known as Nut Hill and see the most splendid lone oak tree…Such a beauty that one could even consider this to be the ethereal purpose for a re-route. And even better yet - for there is more - nailed to the tree is a sturdy wooden ladder! What is perhaps lacking in a view, is rewarded in the childlike glee of being back up high in a tree with privy to a stash of acorns laden
in the boughs - an infantile offering for a squirrel family perhaps? I can not remember the last time I clambered within a tree, but now I am thankful for the broken bridge which made me turn-tail. These simple pleasures which cost not a thing but time are what make the potential challenge of a redirection an absolute bonus. “There are no wrong turnings. Only paths we had not known we were meant to take.”
If you would like to recommend a ramble for Rachel then please email rachel@zestbureau.co.uk You can also see more photos from each walk on instagram: rachelsrambles
Write Your Life Story
Memories and Photos preserved for Friends and Family to treasure Full memoir writing service available (01458) 223251 07969 333940 Please visit: www.mandybloom.co.uk
Bargain Hunters Corner If an item/items are valued at more than £200 there will be a £6 charge. Wanted adverts are also charged at £6. Various electric powered carpentry and joinery tools. All good condition. Please telephone for more information/prices Tel: 01935 824002 Ikea Hovag 3ft single pocket sprung mattress vgc £50.00. Ikea Tustna mattress topper (never been used) £50.00. 3Ft headboard in mink faux suede vgc £15.00 Tel: 07884 058248 (Yeovil) Padders Mens Winter shoes, Black, size 8, Brand New £8.50. Cushion Walk Mens Sandals, Brown, Size 8, Brand New £5.50. Gino Casual Mens Shoes, Brown, Size 8, worn once, £5.00. Slippers, Mens, Navy , Size 8, worn once, £3.50. Tel: 01460 55018 Ilminster Proline Fridge in vgc, hardly used. No defrosting needed. 56.5” high x 21.5” wide x 22” depth. £70.00 Tel: 07884058248 (Yeovil) Pair of wrought iron wall planters/ window boxes. Rare and very decorative large wrought iron window boxes 4feet long 11” high 11” deep. In good vintage condition. Really stunning pieces. £150.00. Large round metal planters. A pair of huge metal pedestal planters 41cm across 82 high. Real statement pieces. £40.00 each or £75.00 for the pair Terracotta plant pots, both vintage and recent. All in very good condition. From £10.00 for 10 Photos of all items Tel: 01460 55105
Dry Stone Walling and Paving All types of stone walling undertaken www.yenstonewalling.co.uk
01963 371123 Patrick Houchen - DSWA member
Professional & reliable service
Natural wicker linen basket with lid and carry handles. Basket is new and unused. £15.00. 4 Wheel shopping trolley with roomy canvas bag with lid, height is adjustable and trolley folds flat for storage. £20.00. Backlit Mirror, fluorescent low energy, on/off hands free sensor, demister pad, shaver socket. Approx 800mm X 600mm. Unused. £100.00. Phillips CRT television, 14 inch screen, complete with remote control and full instructions. TV has had very little use and connections on front of TV can be used for playing old Console games. £25.00. Tel: 01935 824029 W&J Graham’s Port 1999 Vintage wooden display case £35.00. Vini Italiani x 3 Fine vintage 2016 & 2017 Wooden Display case £40.00 Tel: 01935 813582
IN OUR
WORDSEARCH
PUZZLE
This issue of The Conduit has a strong focus on writing, reading and searching out a book by a really good author so you can sit in front of the fire and enjoy a great read as the evenings draw in. Here are some famous authors to provide some inspiration in this month’s Wordsearch. Just find the hidden words in the grid below, ring each word until you have found all of them and when you have completed the puzzle send it to: The Conduit Magazine, Wyvern Buildings, North St, Sherborne DT9 5EP. The lucky winner receives a £10 cheque. The closing date is: MONDAY 21 OCTOBER. Good luck.
GOOD LUCK AUSTEN BAKER BRONTE BUNYAN CLARKE COLLINS DOSTOYEVSKY
ELIOT HARDY JOYCE KINGSLEY LONDON POE POPE SEWELL
STOWE TRESSELL TROLLOPE TWAIN VERNE WILDE WOOLF
Large all wool dense pile traditional rug. Green and pink on cream background. Very good quality, recently cleaned. Nonsmoking and pet free home. 2.35m x 1.52m. Bargain £16.00. Elegant Italian brass floor standing lamp with sliding variable dimmer control. 1840mm high, base diameter 270mm. Very good quality. Bargain £16.00 Tel: 01935 872217
WANTED Dave buys all types of tools. Tel: 01935 428975
GUNS WANTED FOR CASH Any size, any condition, make or model We collect in any area By Registered Firearms Dealer
AIR RIFLES
WIN £10
0 7 9 7 0 7 4 2 4 7 1 AIR PISTOLS
Name:__________________________________________________________ Tel :_________________________Email:______________________________ Address:_________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________
If you would like to know who has won our Wordsearch Puzzles see our website. 47
Providing Dental Care for the Yeovil area since 1864
NEW PATIENTS WELCOME Princes Street Dental Practice are an independent private practice where you will see the same dentist at each visit. We keep up to date with, and like to invest in, new technology. We have invested in a CEREC machine which allows us to fit crowns and bridges in just one visit no impressions!
We are proud to be members of the Denplan Excel scheme. Please feel free to ring and ask any questions, or come in and meet our lovely staff.
45 Princes St, Yeovil BA20 1EG
01935 475962 www.princesstreetdental.co.uk