Derby December 2019

Page 1

COUNTRY

Derby Edition - December 2019

Steve Orme interviews

Les Dennis

on a

wick a prayer

&

A quick glance at

Duffield Cruising gently along

the Rhône

EXPLORING

The Isles of Scilly

Measham Hall

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Welcome to the last edition of 2019

T

ime flies as they say.

Much has happened during the year to challenge businesses, and yet with great resilience people in the community have all risen to the task once again to provide us with goods and services of the highest order.

Les Dennis

Our hearty thanks to all our loyal customers, readers, distributors and last but not least our dedicated team of employees all of whom work together to produce Country Images, County Golfer and Walk Derbyshire. This edition champions the high street at its busiest time of the year. If we all support local business then our communities will continue to thrive with smiles on all our faces. Please enjoy this issue. We look forward to seeing you in 2020.

Lighting

Candles

Duffield

Country

Unit 5 Keys Road, Alfreton, Derbyshire. DE55 7FQ Tel: 01773 830344 info@imagespublishing.co.uk Editor: Garry M Plant. Advertisement Executives: Lisa O’Reilly, Carol Wilson, Lisa Johnson Editorial Features: Brian Spencer, Maxwell Craven, Steve Orme, Amanda Volley, David Clay. Each month we produce over 30,000 copies of Country Images Magazine, which are delivered into homes and stocked in over 70 outlets across Derbyshire & Nottinghamshire, read online at www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk and downloaded from the Apple app store and Google Play. All editions are produced FREE to read and download.

Country Images Magazine is conceived, written, designed, printed and delivered in Derbyshire 4 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Images Publishing Limited is a totally independent publishing company and is not connected with any other newspaper group. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part without written consent is strictly prohibited. The publishers do not accept responsibility for any views expressed, or statements made, in signed contributions or in those reproduced from any other source. No responsibility is borne for any errors made in any advertisement, or for claims made by any advertiser which are incorrect. The publishers reserve the right to refuse advertising deemed unsuitable for any reason. All material submitted is done so at the owner’s own risk and no responsibility is accepted by the publishers for its return. Copyright Images Publishing Limited, Unit 5, Keys Road, Alfreton, Derbyshire, DE55 7FQ. Origination by Images Design & Print Limited 01773 830344


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1

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Drawn in nights cause for cosy lighting. Here are some lovely ideas. 1.Peyton Light Pendant

3. Kew

A large industrial style pendant with a prismatic glass shade and diffuser with satin nickel detailing. A modern fitting that is perfect over a kitchen island or dining area. For local stockists visit www.darlighting.co.uk

A gold tinted glass lamp complimented by a mink faux silk shade. Supplied with an inline switch and suitable for use with LED lamps. For local stockists visit www.endon.co.uk

2. Hampstead Floor Light

4. London Wall Light

by DAR Lighting

by Garden Trading

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8 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Add a Scandinavian touch to a vacant corner of the home with the Hampstead Floor Light. The Carbon coloured tripod style legs have been juxtaposed with the oversized handmade shade. For local stockists visit www.gardentrading.co.uk

by Endon

by David Hunt Lighting

A classic single wall light in solid brass with an antique brass finish; matching arm and back plate. For local stockists visit www.davidhuntlighting.co.uk


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CLASSIC 2.0 BY BORA Bora classic is a combination of a highquality extractor and various powerful cooktops. For local stockists visit: WWW.BORA.COM TWILIGHTY BY PRESTIGIOUS TEXTILES The sleek and sumptuous twilight range from prestigious textiles is the perfect way to get that all important relaxing feel in the home this season. For local stockists visit: WWW.PRESTIGIOUSTEXTILES.CO.UK

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LOCAL BUSINESS

T. Nutt & Sons Flooring Centre T. Nutt & Sons Ltd in Clay Cross are celebrating…they’ve recently been awarded a highly sought-after accolade from consumer champions, Which?

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HE flooring centre, which has a long-standing history in the town going back over 150 years, has been awarded a Which? Trusted Traders’ Certificate of Distinction. Becoming a Trusted Trader is, in itself, not an easy process – the business has to be carefully assessed by trading standards professionals. The Certificate of Distinction, however, represents a much higher level of achievement! This new award is presented only to the top performing Trusted Traders: “The Certificate of Distinction gives customers confidence that this is a business they can count on.” Which? is a brand that consumers trust. They’ve earned a reputation since 1957 for championing the cause for consumers and raising standards. They’ll only associate their name with businesses they can 100% trust and are happy to endorse. In order to gain the Certificate of Distinction, T. Nutt & Sons had to fulfil a number of criteria including: receiving very few

complaints but demonstrating outstanding complaint resolution and handling; receiving a steady stream of customer reviews highlighting customer satisfaction; demonstrating outstanding fulfilment of the ongoing requirements of Which? Trusted Trader. Managing Director David Nutt explains: “We are extremely proud of being awarded the Which? Trusted Traders’ Certificate of Distinction as, although we know we always work hard to make sure our customers are thoroughly happy with our products and service, this shows that we’ve come out as one of the top performing companies in the Trusted Trader scheme. That means a lot! Visit the showroom at 43-47 High Street, Clay Cross, Chesterfield S45 9DX to view an outstanding range of top quality flooring from leading manufacturers at competitive prices. For more information call 01246 863148 or visit www.nutt.co.uk.. MS

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2 Reflections November 2019

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Cruising gently along

the Rhône

PART ONE - ARLES TO VIENNE Brian Spencer takes a cruise up the River Rhône, one of the major waterways of France.

T

ravelling with Midland Mainlines meant we arrived at St Pancras in good time for the midmorning Eurostar to Paris, Gare du Nord. What should then have been a quick ride to Gare de Lyon seemed to take an age; Parisian traffic was as bad as I remembered it from my last visit decades ago. What it did do was to give us plenty of time to spot ‘Frexit’ signs everywhere! What have we started? I had never travelled on one of France’s TGV super-fast trains and I must say I was impressed. The only difference between them and our proposed HS2 trains is that the French system runs mostly through open countryside. What seemed a blink of the eye, or maybe because I slept

14 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

most of the way, the journey from Gare de Lyon to Avignon was the quickest, most comfortable train ride I have ever experienced. Our water-borne home for the next week, MV Lord Byron, was moored about a hundred yards, or should I say metres downstream of Avignon’s famous broken bridge where for some reason ‘l’on y dense tout en rond’. (‘Everyone is dancing in a circle’). The story behind this ancient bridge is that it was half demolished in a flood and when no one bothered to repair it, it became a tourist attraction, helped no doubt by a children’s song. Known officially as the Saint-Bénézet Bridge or Pont d’Avignon, originally the bridge was 899 metres long with 22 arches; but in 1226 it was almost totally destroyed by Louis VIII,


The Pont du Gard is an ancient Roman aqueduct bridge built in the first century.

The Palais des Papes is a historical palace in Avignon, Below: The MV Lord Byron.

and many subsequent floods. Attempts at restoration failed and the bridge has been a ruin since the 17th century. The city was by a Gallic tribe and later settled in turn by the Romans, Goths Saracens, Franks and the Holy Roman Empire. Avignon’s 15th century city wall still keeps traffic to a walking pace, protecting the sumptuous remains of the Papal Palace. Commissioned during the so-called Avignon Papacy when a total of seven popes reigned from Avignon, far away from trouble in Rome, it combines two buildings – the old Palace of Benedict XII which sits on top of the impregnable Rocher des Doms, and the ‘New’ Palace of Clement VI. After the death of Clement VI, the papacy eventually after much www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 15


Vincent van Gogh’s Yellow Café: The Cafe Terrace on the Place du Forum.

The Pont Saint-Bénézet, also known as the Pont d’Avignon, is a famous medieval bridge in Avignon

Two-tiered Roman amphitheatre is probably the most prominent tourist attraction in the city of Arles

argument, reverted to Rome. Remains of brightly coloured frescos adorn the chapel walls where musicians and singers are still attracted by the perfect acoustics. The rest of the medieval city is immaculately preserved within the surrounding walls; pavement cafes, restaurants and colourful shops selling lavender-based products will tempt even the most blasé visitor, for here is a town designed for strollers. An evening cruise took us downstream to Arles. Here we were following in the footsteps of Vincent van Gogh. He came to this Provençal town, seeking its better light than Paris, using the region for many of his well-known works. He started almost immediately with ‘Starry night’, the riverside view he spotted on leaving the train. All around Arles it is easy to imagine him sitting outside places like his favourite ‘yellow’ café, or enjoying the tiny walled garden hidden away behind another of his watering holes. Hopefully he soon found the light he was after, but he wouldn’t have been so lucky if he came with us – it rained cats and dogs, fortunately the only serious rain for the whole trip.

Part of the almost complete Temple of Augustus and Livia in Vienne.

16 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Mental problems led to the eccentric earsevering incident and he spent time in the local hospital. Learning of plans to put him in an asylum he took himself off to nearby Saint-Rémy-de-Provence where he continued


to paint. It was here that he produced some of his most renowned outdoor pictures, such as the ‘iris’, or his sunflower studies and mountain views of les alpilles, the bauxite limestone ridge above St Rémy. Long before van Gogh came to Arles, the Romans made it the administrative centre for the lower Rhône Valley. The town has an open-air Roman theatre still capable of accommodating thousands of spectators in the remarkably well preserved auditorium, and close by almost hidden amongst narrow back streets, the arena can still be used for bull fights. In the Provençal form of bull fighting, the bull is not killed and has a number of rosettes tied to various parts of his body. These must be snatched before the bull can attack the participants, who often come off rather badly for their efforts. Coaches took us a few miles to the west, beyond the Rhône to the Pont du Gard. This amazing feat of Roman engineering carries water across the River Gard carrying water from the Fontaine d’Eure to the city of Nîmes 20 km away. Although this city which had over 60,000 citizens was only 20 km away, due to the rough terrain the aqueduct had to travel about 50km. Even so, the difference between the start and finish was a mere 2.5 centimetres, in order to allow the water flow gradually into the wells and fountains of Nîmes. The three tiered aqueduct was built without mortar with each stone interlocking like pieces of Lego,

miraculously without any significant loss of water. From the Lord Byron moored overnight back at Avignon, coaches took us into the Ardèche Gorges, a deep-cut ravine cut by a 30km meandering stretch of the River Doux to the west of Tournon, a small riverside town above Valence. The Doux has cut its way through massive layers of limestone, not unlike a series of cliffs like our High Tor as it towers above Matlock. Starting at the village of Lavas the river runs east in sharp twists and turns, flowing downstream until it comes to Aiguèz. A scenic motor road making even more torturous meanders, runs hundreds of feet above the river, following the line of the gorge, with view-points colonised by feral goats waiting for hand-outs. During the war, resistance groups created hideaways in the impenetrable shrub-covered moorland plateau, at one time hiding Jews fleeing from persecution. During much earlier times, ancient Cro-Magnon peoples made their homes in many of the caves lining the cliffs. One of the caves used by these early settlers, now called the Madeleine, is within easy access of the Nature Reserve Information Centre, about half way along the gorge. It serves as a good introduction to the reserve, and an interactive display shows how the gorge was formed and describes the impact of human

beings on the area. Stunning views of the ravine can be enjoyed from an easily accessible observation deck. Further upstream and close by the road, the river has carved its way through the rock to form a natural arch known as the Pont d’Arc. Following a night moored at Tournon we passed through three massive locks, travelling upstream along the Rhône as far as Vienne. This ancient Roman stronghold was established by the famous Julius Caesar, but even before his time it was the capital city of the Allobroges tribe, whose chieftain’s sons were described by Caesar himself as ‘men of outstanding courage’. Like its ex-Roman sister cities, it still has a steeply tiered theatre, the setting for countless plays and displays. Unfortunately it was closed during our visit, with the French equivalent of JCB diggers helping repair the ravages of time. From the solid remains of palatial Roman villas dotted around Vienne’s back streets, it is easy to imagine the place in its hey-day. One of the best remains stands in the centre of a quiet square just off the Rue Joseph Brenier; this is the almost complete Temple of Augustus and Livia, the deified Roman Emperor Augustus and his wife Livia. The temple is open on three sides; originally there was a statue of the emperor in front of the closed rear side. Slightly away from the north side, a modern sculpture of a metal cow makes the hint of a sacrificial offering. www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 17


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Joseph Wright’s portrait of Edward Abney (1751-1827), the second owner of the hall, painted by Joseph Wright. [Philip Mould]

Measham Hall

Measham Hall from the SW, 1860s, possibly by Father Abney. [J. Darwin]

W

ell informed readers might be tempted to say, on seeing the subject of this article, that Measham is not in Derbyshire at all, which seems all wrong in view of the fact that we try to present histories of lost Derbyshire houses. All it not quite as it seems, however, as Measham was until 1897 very deďŹ nitely part of Derbyshire, one of a number of enclaves entirely surrounded by Leicestershire, which tidy-minded legislation of 1889 set out to resolve. Furthermore, the church of Measham was originally a chapel-of-ease of Repton parish church.

The

Lost Houses of Derbyshire by Maxwell Craven

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 21


Above left: Revd. Canon Edward Abney, photographed by W W Winter in the 1880s. [Private collection] Above right: Sir William Abney KCB, FRS photographed by Winter. [M. Craven] Left: Measham Hall from the SW, c. 1855, probably photographed by Revd. Edward Abney. [Private collection]

These enclaves were formed in the tenth and eleventh centuries by assarting (clearing of woodland for cultivation) by Derbyshire people in land that had not at that time been fully shired in the wake of the unification of re-conquered Mercia with Wessex to form the Kingdom of England. The southernmost was Ravenstone; others included Chilcote, part of Donisthorpe, Oakthorpe, Packington, Snibston, Appleby Parva and part of Magna, Stretton-en-le-Field and Willesley (the hall at which we have already dealt with). We lost Clifton Campville and part of Edingale to Staffordshire and received both Seals, Over and Nether, in return. The ancient manorial estate was from the Conquest with the de Measham family, but in 1308 it passed via an heiress to the Bereforts and thence to the Blounts of Barton Blount, Lords Mountjoy, from whom it came in the Civil War to the 22 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Sheffields, Dukes of Buckingham and Normanby, then the Wollastons, who sold much of the land, long heavily mined for its coal, to Robert Abney in 1730. The Abneys probably originated from the village of that name in the Peak, the first known representative being William son of John Abney of Hope, not so far away, living 1310. Just over a century later they inherited Willesley, where they remained until 1858. George Abney of Willesley who died in 1579 left three sons. The eldest continued at Willesley, whilst the second Edmund was a Leicester merchant, married a daughter of a mayor of the place and their son Dannatt Abney was also mayor there. A descendant, Paul, served in the navy on the frigate HMS Josiah and died in Virginia, where his posterity remained and flourished mightily as prominent landowners and attorneys.

The youngest son settled on an estate at Newton Burgoland, and his great grandson was Robert, whose elder surviving son became a mill owner at Oldbury, Staffs., in the Black Country (then a lot less black, of course) whilst the younger, William (1713-1800) was given the land at Measham to develop the coal. This must have proved rewarding, for in 1767 he resolved to build a house on the land, and indeed seems to have spared little expense in so doing, being aided in this by his wife, Catherina, who he had married in 1743 and who later inherited an estate at Little Canons, Herts. from her father, Thomas Wootton. By 1767, they had four young sons and two daughters and probably needed a house of sufficient size, commensurate with their status, and to build it at Measham was probably the ideal site.


The Palladian building which resulted is not fully understood as there seems to be no proper survey surviving, but it was a two and a half storey brick house, seven bays wide on the main (south) front with the central three bays breaking slightly forward under a pediment. This contained a round carved stone cartouche set unusually low down on the cornice containing the family crest (a demi-lion issuant or holding between the paws an ogress) flanked with palm fronds. The ground floor end bays had each a tripartite window set in rusticated surrounds, whilst the rest of the windows had gauged brick lintels. There was a sill band at first floor level and a plat band between the first and second floors with rusticated quoins at the angles, all topped by a rather perfunctory cornice supporting a hipped roof with central light well. The side elevations were of three bays, where the fenestration was set in stone surrounds and the windows on the first and ground floors were embellished with triangular pediments, whilst the central top-floor window was octagonal. The entrance was to the east. The interior was apparently of some pretension, with a mahogany staircase rising through the height of the house in the central well with three turned balusters per tread. Unfortunately, little detail has survived otherwise, although the portrait of Jedediah Strutt by Joseph Wright, now in Derby Museum, hung in the house from the mid nineteenth century, where it was recorded in 1907.

in common with the somewhat more elaborate Measham Hall The eldest son, Robert Abney, died without surviving issue, when the estate was inherited by his next brother, the Revd. Edward Abney from whom it descended to the grandson, Capt. William Wootton Abney (1807-1866), who also died without surviving issue, leaving everything to his brother, another Edward. This Edward (1811-1892) was a parson, living in a grand Regency house on Burton Road outside Derby called The Firs (still extant, albeit altered). He was long the vicar of St. Alkmund’s church, having been instrumental in its rebuilding by Henry Isaac Stevens in 1847-48. He

had married Katherine, daughter of the younger Jedediah Strutt in 1833. He was also Dean of Derby and a close friend of the neighbouring Mundys of Markeaton Hall, where he met their brother-in-law, W H Fox-Talbot, who interested him in photography and, in the 1840s, he taught his élève, the young Richard Keene the art, too. On inheriting, he seems to have added the canted bay onto the garden window of the drawing room, rusticated to match the end bays and probably also the work of Stevens. He also partly reglazed the house with plate glass (to its detriment in my view). His son was Sir William Abney KCB FRS (1843-1920), a pioneer of scientific education and also

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In true Palladian style, the house was flanked by two smaller pavilions joined to the main building by short single storey links. These were on one and a half storeys three bays wide under a pyramidal roof. The ground floor windows were set in a blind arcade and a first-floor sill band extended under a panelled parapet over the links. In all, it made a very satisfying ensemble. The well-wooded park extended to thirty acres. The architect of the house is not known for certain, but in the 2001 third edition of The Derbyshire Country House I opined that it might have been William Henderson of Loughborough, a close contemporary of Joseph Pickford. Now I know more about Henderson, I do not think he was involved, but instead would suggest William Harrison (c. 1740-1794). He started in Derby, son of a joiner and was styled ‘architect and surveyor’ by the time that Measham Hall was begun. He was building the Clergy Widows’ Almshouses at Ashbourne at that same period. It is possible that working for the Abneys brought him in contact with potential clients at Leicester, for he settled there soon afterwards. His magnificent Leicester Asylum has stylistically much

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of photography, presiding over the first steps towards polaroid photography and colour printing. His wife’s sister married Revd. Canon J C Cox, FSA, a notable Derbyshire antiquary. It was Sir William’s son, Lancelot who moved away, selling the house to the Measham Colliery Company, in an echo of the similar and contemporary sale of the hall at Shipley to the local colliery company. From thereon, its fate was sealed. Nevertheless, it was lived in by the colliery manager and partly used as offices, but nationalisation of the coal industry led to its being instead crudely divided as flats. The fact that the company had extended workings beneath the house from 1928 was one thing, but in the virulently egalitarian post-war world, with the well-remembered class warrior Emanuel Shinwell as Minister for Fuel and Power, it was felt that, as at Shipley, Stainsby House, Erddig in Denbighshire (and more so at Wentworth Woodhouse), to mine away the coal left beneath the house would be acceptable. Inevitably, the building soon began to suffer subsidence problems with the result that in 1958 it was evacuated. In 1959, therefore, this fine house was cleared away in the name of progress: a serious loss in terms in landscape and heritage, things we now tend to value much more than in the age of austerity.

Measham Hall prior to demolition in 1959.

24 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Capt. William Wootton Abney, by an unknown artist. (1807-1866) [Kate Jarvis]


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A quick glance at

Duffield

By Maxwell Craven

C

oming in to Duffield towards Derby on the A6 - over the railway bridge just past Moscow Farm and a little short of the turning to the Chevin golf club - it takes quite ten minutes (allowing for traffic lights, panda crossings and general hold-ups) to reach the southern boundary of the parish marked by the turning to Burley Hill, a quarter of a mile short of the lodge to Allestree Hall: that’s how extensive Duffield is. Before 1847, when its limits were rationalized, though it was a great deal larger, for the parish included Belper, Windley, Turnditch, Milford, Makeney and the whole former Royal Forest of Duffield.

Even today it has three centres: the northernmost is mainly an estate of spacious Victorian villas clustered around the site of the Norman castle (demolished entirely after the fall of the last Ferrers Earl of Derby in 1268) with a modern estate to the east on the other side of the A6; the present centre of the village, roughly from King Street to the lodge of the hall opposite a fine late 18th century house called The Meadows and the last, another clustered but discrete settlement stretching from the Baptist Chapel to the parish Church and the bridge over the Derwent. Then, as you proceed nearer to Derby, you pass the junction with Broadway, the latter a 1927 private bypass which arose from the re-development of the Hall’s estate, linked up by the County Council to join the Wirksworth Road in 1962, followed by a longish row of ribbon development called Flaxholme before one reaches Burley Meadows and the southern limit of the parish. In medieval times it was even more puzzling. The Castle, north of the village, was the third largest in England, after Dover and the White Tower, stood guarding the way north up the Derwent Valley, with Horsley Castle further East doing a corresponding job for the de Ferrers, who also controlled the Royal Forest. The village may be presumed to have grown up around the southern flanks of the castle to service the requirements of the household of a great Norman baron.

The Meadows: the roofline (hipped at the right and gabled to the left) suggests that the builder originally intended to erect a semi-detached pair of large villas, which never went fully ahead.

Duck Island: the Mill House from the Bridge.

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Yet the church is three quarters of a mile away south, by the river (and since 1840, the railway) at the foot of Duffield Bank, which itself morphs into Eaton Bank going south. Historians have always been at something of a loss to explain this, but one must remember that the castle had a domestic chapel which would have been used by the entire community of the fortress, whilst the Frith (forest) and its scattered communities did not necessarily require a centre in the castle’s shadow. Furthermore, the church could then have been reached by boat without danger prior to the drastic climate changes of the 1340s, which saw the weather get much wetter, winters strikingly colder, summers wetter and rivers much more prone to flood – just like today really. Not for nothing was the medieval crest of the local Bradshaw family a hart with its attires tangled in a vine. Not only that, but the de Ferrers’ hundred or so manorial estates fell, after their disgrace, to the Duchy of Lancaster, the wide bounds of which hereabouts were not finally privatised by the Crown until the 1630s, when the Duffield Hall and Duffield Park estates were created, to go with the existing rectoral manor estate, centered on Daypark, and the lay proprietorship of the church, held by the Pindars (later Lygons, until 1977 Earls Beauchamp).

Tamworth House. The acroteria (‘bunny ears’ at the angles). are a Regency addition.

Archway House: the part to the left, called Ivy House underwent a Victorian re-build.

Thus, by the end of the Civil War, there were a number of resident grandees, and a thriving agricultural community, re-inforced by the passage of Wirksworth lead through the village en route to Derby and points south. This is why the village became so prosperous; after all, it’s almost a small town rather than a village, with a wonderful core embellished dozens of (listed) stone built cottages and small houses ranging from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, when prosperity continued to increase, thanks to the coming of the railway, supplementing the turnpike road of 1759. You can hardly do justice to so interesting a place in a short space: it took Bill Watson, whom I had the pleasure of knowing, two hardback volumes to write up its history, and to do it to, say, VCH standard, would require more. Pevsner hardly does it justice either, bar the account of the church. For our recent visit we parked by the Ecclesbourne Valley Railway station in Chapel Street (take a trip on it to Wirksworth - most satisfying), named after a boxy 1840s chapel close to the railway. What we really wanted to do was to get to grips with the core of the historic village. First, though, we travelled along a footpath with the railway close by to the NE and the Ecclesbourne to the SW, the latter being in considerable spate. This took us through the rural east of the village, and enabled us to visit the delightful nature reserve and see Eye Meadow. Thereafter, we finally debouched onto Town Street just south of the junction with Wirksworth Road. Opposite us was an array of really good village houses as estate agents jargon them: slightly to the right, almost on the corner of Wirksworth Road, a Neo-Classical house striving to look like the work of Robert Adam: Gervase House of c. 1780. But looking south was the arched centerpiece of Archway House, once two houses, the northern part formerly a notable butcher’s and now extended very tactfully as apartments. Excellent railings with gadrooned finials. Beyond again, the best of the lot, The Ferns, in the style of Francis Smith of Warwick with rusticated stone dressings and a simple pediment. Unfortunately, its exterior condition is atrocious with three window key-blocks cracking, one, part missing, the other two moving south relentlessly. As all the houses in Town Street, it is divided as flats, which is never the best solution for such modest houses, but one supposes that the A6 traffic would put off the single occupier. Not that a single occupier has been put off living in The Meadows, opposite, of c. 1790, old fashioned in style for its date, with Joseph Pickford-style blind arcading separating the bays.

Duffield Hall, June 2013, prior to restoration as a private house.

38 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Even more so, the Hall, back on the west side, which has now been triumphantly returned to its original role as a private house. Of the 1660s, but with an earlier core, it was long St. Ronan’s School before falling into dereliction and then being saved by the Derbyshire Building Society, but at the cost of scattering the grounds with hideous concrete buildings. Now, mercifully, these have been cleared away after the Society put too much loot into a dodgy Icelandic Bank and was forced to sell.


Walking back north along town Street, there is much to enjoy, despite a wide variety of building types, the only solecism being the decision in 1960 to demolish another gem, Duffield House and replace it with quite the most unforgiving Co-op shop, especially in this context. This is in contrast to The Gables next door, seventeenth century and splendidly irregular, betokening many ad hoc alterations. What struck us was that, apart from the Co-op and the newsagent’s, there was a kitchen shop, no less than two bridal shops and quite three hairdressing/beauty salons; we could only assume that the ladies of the village must be amongst the best presented in the County! We turned up Tamworth Street, which enabled us to enjoy two fine houses: on the left the porticoed Regency north front of Duffield Park as rebuilt c. 1815 by Bryan Balguy (the other side is much earlier although much mutilated) and on the right, as the street turns to cross the Ecclesbourne, Tamworth House, probably by Francis Smith of Warwick for Robert Shirley, son and heir (styled Viscount Tamworth) of 1st Earl Ferrers, built sometime after 1711. After years of institutional use this house, too, has been wonderfully restored as a single residence. Beyond, as you cross the river, a fine brick façade presents itself: three storeys and three bays. It looks mid-eighteenth century but is probably late seventeenth and originally had smaller cross windows, as the ornamental string courses had to be interrupted by the gauged brick lintels of the present sashes when they were inserted. Left again, it is worth re-crossing the stream to enjoy Duck Island, once the town mill, an island because the race lies on the south side. The surviving mill house is c. 1800 and handsome. Holloway Road and Snake Lane both have lots of decent stone built cottages, and the north side of the stream affords access to the 11 mile footpath to Wirksworth, the Ecclesbourne Way, and also to the much longer (25 miles, Ilkeston to Ashbourne) Centenary Way. For the less energetic, it is best to turn up Crown Street, which is notable for the Arts-and-Crafts Patternmakers’ Arms, probably by Duffield’s tame architect, Richard Waite of Greystones, in Chapel Street, a former collaborator of W R Lethaby. A little further up and probably also the work of Waite, is the astoundingly pretty single storey Working Men’s Club and Women’s Institute, dated

1893 with verandah and beautifully carved portico tympanum of leaves, flowers and branches above the motto Ad Marjoram Dei Gloria (To the greater glory of God). This was built at the behest of the Misses Miles in order to improve the lives of Duffield’s surprisingly large working class population, Christian values not being then at such a discount as today. Crown Street leads you to King Street, notable for a large, very red, brick Methodist chapel by John Wills of Derby, ironically facing a grim stonefronted Masonic hall of 1905. Returning to Town Street, one encounters the King’s Head, a good 18th century building with Richard Waite designed extension, past the south side of which the main road ran prior to the railway line forcing a change in the 1860s. Beyond, a delightful group consisting of a brick house of 1894 (‘Rosslyn’) with a wonderful curly gable, a late-Regency cottage containing Bradman’s Wine Cellar, where you can taste the wares, and another late 19th century gabled house built as the Duffield Club in 1894. Mention of the King’s Head and the Wine Cellar merely acts as a reminder that there was plenty of choice for refreshment. Town Street hosts the much-improved White Hart inn, old-fashionedly Arts-andCrafts, despite having been barely finished when the war broke out, and on the other side, in a nice stone fronted late 18th century building, the Town Street Tap, an agreeable micro pub, handily next door to the vet’s. There’s so much more you could see. Hazlewood Road, with its variety of impressive villas, one or two quite early. Going south, of course, one might instead opt for the tranquility of the church (the tranquility subject to railway scheduling, mind you) which is especially impressive, notably the chancel and the Bradshaw Chapel, all best approached on foot via Church Walk, the lane leading to it via a railway footbridge. Beyond, across the river, lies another large friendly pub, the Bridge Inn, presaging the delights of some memorable villas on Duffield Bank. The handsome bridge itself is an 1803 rebuilding by County Surveyor Isaac Marshall of an earlier one by Thomas Sykes. The view of the village across the meadow from Makeney Road can be stunning in the right conditions, and neatly sums up the attraction of the place.

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Gardening in December with Mark

Smith

R

egular readers to my article will

know at this time of year I like to look back on the year. Well it’s been a mixed selection of weather for gardening, we had extremes of heat and long dry periods to the recent rain, rain and more rain, which has affected large parts of the county. The expected comment from customers was “at least you don’t have to water!” most people forgetting that usually there are a large quantity of plants under cover. And how can I remember all of this ?

My ‘Golden’ tip – invest in a note book to record all your successes but also note the weather too as this does play a big part if crops or ornamental plants are going to succeed. If you don`t really like writing things down use a digital camera, I’ve started using a lot more pictures in my notes.

Allotment or Vegetable Patch:

If you haven’t done so already, wrap grease bands around the trunks of fruit trees to protect them from winter moths, I tend to leave grease or bands on all year.

40 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Finish any winter pruning of apple trees.

Now is a great time to lift rhubarb crowns and divide them, using a sharp spade, into equal parts and re-pot or re-plant until they grow again. Get ready for planting asparagus crowns in spring, removing weeds and dig over the soil, enrich it by adding homemade compost. Now is the best time to plant new fruit trees, bushes and cane fruits, as the selection of varieties in nurseries will still be good.

In the Greenhouse:

By now you should have insulated the greenhouse with bubble polythene, the large bubble wrap is the best. Check weather forecasts closely to ensure you’re setting greenhouse heating accurately, and open vents on warm days. Remove any late falling leaves and wash glazing inside and out to let in more light - and remember to compost those leaves !

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Bring all watering equipment indoors, including hoses and sprinklers etc, and wrap insulation around outside taps. Check garden birds have water to drink, especially on frosty days when it might be frozen and remember to top up seed and nut feeders.


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3 plants that will look fantastic over the winter months: Skimmia rubella: A slow growing, compact evergreen shrub. Bright scarlet flower buds from late September to late January, it then comes into flower until mid March. Likes a full sun or partial shade position in light to heavy (clay) soils. Ideal for a small garden or great in a container. 3ft x 3ft. Viburnum tinus “Eve Price”: A compact growing evergreen shrub that is pink / red in bud opening to pure white flowers in late winter and spring, followed by blue / black berries in autumn. Can be used as an informal hedge or as a great container plant, clipped to shape. 4ft to 5ft high x 4ft wide.

Skimmia rubella

Sarcococca confuse: Fantastic shrub that’s evergreen with white scented flowers – ideal for a container so you could bring it closer to the house. Gets to about 5ft and grows best in part to full shade.

Viburnum tinus

Please keep contacting me with your gardening problems (If you can please include a photo or as much detail as you can think of as this will help a lot). garden.guru@virginmedia.com Please get in contact if you require a gardening talk for a Gardening Club or W.I. in 2020 or 2021.

Sarcococca confuse

42 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk


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Ricky Gervais offered him a part in his series Extras. “People kept saying it was a brave move but it gave me a chance to show that I’ve got a sense of humour about myself. I took it with both hands and it’s opened me to a whole new demographic.”

Steve Orme interviews

Les Dennis

IMAGES LEISURE TIME Celebrity Interview | Walk | Diary | Gallery | Food & Drink

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 47


“Jack of all trades, master of some.”

That’s how serious actor, soap star, comedian and gameshow host Les Dennis sees himself after almost 50 years in showbusiness.

A

fter an amazing year in which he made his Royal Shakespeare Company debut, the all-round entertainer is preparing for a season in panto and he can hardly wait to return to Nottingham, a city that has so many fond memories for him.

Les is relishing coming back to Nottingham where he will appear in the Theatre Royal’s festive feast Cinderella.

When we spoke on the phone Les held nothing back as he told me what made him go into the business in the first place, how he credits Ricky Gervais with reviving his career and how he’s determined to return to Stratford to do more serious theatre. Les is relishing coming back to Nottingham where he will appear in the Theatre Royal’s festive feast Cinderella. “I know Nottingham really well. I did panto at the Theatre Royal in 1987, Babes in the Wood. I was also there not long ago when we did The Addams Family musical and then of course I did Family Fortunes from Lenton Lane (Central TV’s studios) for many years. I used to spend at least three weeks a year in Nottingham. “I love the city. I love the atmosphere there. It’s a beautiful theatre to work, intimate and lovely.” In Cinderella Les will be reunited with his Coronation Street nemesis Connor McIntyre. In the soap Les played former convict Michael Rodwell while Connor was Pat Phelan, regarded by some people as “the ultimate soap baddie”. They will team up again in Cinderella as the Ugly Sisters, with their characters renamed Phelina and Michaela. “It works great,” says Les. “The Uglies aren’t dames – it’s men in dresses but they’re the villains. Of course when you get two villains there’s always one badder than the other one and that certainly has to be Phelina.” The pair were in Cinderella in Manchester last year. Now the same show is coming to Nottingham. The only difference is that Sooty and Richard Cadell who plays Buttons have been added to the bill.

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Photo by Helen Maybanks (c) RSC Les can hardly wait to work with Connor again: “When we were in Corrie we shared a dressing room and when I knew that the end of Michael was going to be at Phelan’s hands, I was delighted. I thought I would rather that than go off in a taxi to the airport. “Michael was his first victim. In a way it was crueller than the others because he didn’t kill me – he let me die, which is in some ways sadistic and weird. But it was great to work with him.” Last year’s Cinderella was Connor’s first panto: “He said ‘I’m completely in your hands’,” says Les. “He let me explain exactly how a gag will work. Once he started he took to it like a duck to water. I should imagine this year he’ll be teaching me a few things.” Les agrees with my assertion that panto is really hard work: “It’s two shows a day every day. I’ll have a holiday in January. “You have a responsibility in panto because the kids are seeing theatre for the first time. You’ve got to get it right and you’ve got to make them want to come back again.” Leslie Dennis Heseltine was born on 12 October 1953 in Garston, Liverpool. When he was 17 he went on a school trip to Stratford to see Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night and thought “Oh, I really want to do this.” But he’d already started playing working men’s clubs as a comedian and an actor’s life seemed out of reach when he won the ITV talent show New Faces. He joined Russ Abbot on his television show before forming a comedy partnership with fellow impressionist Dustin Gee which ended with Gee’s unexpected death in 1986 at the age of 43. Les then hosted Family Fortunes for 15 years. He’d been divorced from his first wife and during the quiz show’s run he married actress Amanda Holden. While they were separated Les appeared on Celebrity Big Brother. Although he finished runner-up he had what the press perceived as a breakdown live on television. Afterwards the phone didn’t ring for a while. Then Ricky Gervais offered him a part in his series Extras


Photo by Helen Maybanks (c) RSC as a washed-up, middle-aged television star who is cuckolded by a younger man.

“I play an ageing clairvoyant. We shot it in three weeks in Bristol on a very low budget but it looks amazing.”

“People kept saying it was a brave move but it gave me a chance to show that I’ve got a sense of humour about myself. I took it with both hands and it’s opened me to a whole new demographic.

Les is now looking forward to Cinderella which will be watched by all his family. He has a grown-up son from his first marriage as well as 11-year-old Eleanor and Tom who is eight. He married their mother Claire Nicholson in 2009. “They’re a total joy,” he says.

“There was a poll recently about which was the best episode of Extras and I’m in the final. Which is amazing when you consider you’re knocking out Kate Winslett, Samuel L Jackson and people like that.” He worked with Gervais again on the series Life’s Too Short with Warwick Davis, Keith Chegwin and Shaun Williamson. Then, in 2014, it was announced that Les was joining Coronation Street where he stayed for twoand-a-half years. “It was brilliant and I loved it. But it got to the stage where I wasn’t allowed to do other things that I wanted to do because you’ve got to commit to Corrie. In the end I thought it was time to move on. “When I did leave I went straight into The Addams Family and then into other theatre jobs that I really enjoyed. “I think if you’ve got a name before you go into a soap, you’re not defined by that soap when you come out.”

In the future he wants to return to Stratford: “I did consider going back next season but I just want to do some other things first. I haven’t done Shakespeare yet but it’s something I want to do.” He’s also in talks on a “really exciting” project. “I can’t reveal what that is at the moment but it’s something that’s close to Nottingham’s heart and maybe we’ll bring it here.” By this time I’d worked out that Les probably wouldn‘t be offended by anything I asked him. So my final question was a bit facetious: did he regard playing alongside Sooty in Cinderella as the pinnacle of his career? He took it in the spirit it was intended: “I’m so excited to work with Sooty. And Sweep. It is a pinnacle. It’s on my bucket list.”

Cinderella is at the Theatre Royal, Nottingham from 30 November until 5 January

In 2014 Les showed his acting prowess at Derby Theatre when he played Victor Smiley in Peter James’ play The Perfect Murder. Then earlier this year Les was cast by the Royal Shakespeare Company in two Restoration plays in its smaller Swan Theatre. He played a corrupt senator in the tragedy Venice Preserved by Thomas Otway, acting alongside his niece Jodie McNee. He was also in John Vanbrugh’s comedy The Provoked Wife. “It was a real bucket list job,” says Les. “I had a ball there and worked with some amazing directors and actors. It’s like a kitemark – suddenly you’ve got ‘RSC actor’ behind you. It kind of makes you more legitimate.” He’s also thrilled to have played the lead in a new film, Sideshow, which the producers are hoping will be released in cinemas next year. www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 49


IMAGES WALK

with Rambler:

TEGG’S NOSE AND THE UPPER BOLLIN VALLEY 5 MILES (8km) of moderate to strenuous walking on well-defined footpaths and by-roads. 492-foot (150m) descent and ascent.

Leisure Map Sheet 2, The White Peak. BUS SERVICES: High Peak number 58, hourly on weekdays and twohourly on Sundays and Bank Holiday Mondays.

RECOMMENDED MAP: Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 scale, Outdoor

CAR PARKING: Pay and Display Tegg’s Nose Country Park REFRESHMENTS: Tegg’s Nose Car Park Café and also Leather’s Smithy on the road between Langley and Macclesfield Forest.

F

or this walk we are going over to the western edge of the Peak District, into the Cheshire Highlands. This region unexpectedly is one of the few places where a real peak can be found in the Peak District National Park. The district’s highest point is Shutlingsloe, the 1660 foot (506m) true peak whose graceful slopes can be seen over to the south west of the A537, Buxton to Macclesfield road. The area is quite historical in its way, as discovered for example, when exploring the footpaths on either side of Wildboarclough, one of the many places where the last wild boar was supposed to have been killed. There are several friendly pubs along the way, many of them gaining high renown for the standard of their catering. In fact, Leather’s Smithy the pub half way round this walk has gained several awards and acclaim. Another feature is Forest Chapel just a little way off the route of the walk. This tiny stone moorland place of worship is one of the few places in the British Isles where the floor is spread with fresh rushes on the nearest Sunday to the 12th August each year. The walk just touches a small part of an area better known by walkers and cyclists coming from east Cheshire and Greater Manchester. Having once lived in that area, we developed a love

Norma Gent Derbyshire Artist

and knowledge of the moors and valleys surrounding Shutlingsloe, and are still tempted back every now and then to renew our memories of times past. This walk is just one of the many we know and have enjoyed. It starts and finishes at Tegg’s Nose Country Park; its car park is accessed from Buxton Old Road – leave the A537 at Walker Barn and turn left (if coming from Buxton) and drive down the old road; Tegg’s Nose Country Park car park is signposted about half a mile further along the narrow road. Tegg was a mythical giant who inhabited these high moors. The name is possibly a corruption of Tegga, a pre-historic local chieftain who was buried on the Naze, or

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Nose, again a corruption, in time gone-by. Early on in the walk allow time to explore the collection of restored old quarry machinery displayed in the hill-top sandstone quarry. From the quarry the walk follows part of the Gritstone Trail, a long distance footpath from Lyme Park near Stockport to Mow Cop on the outskirts of the Potteries. Dropping into the headwaters of the River Bollin, a left turn at the first of four reservoirs begins the climb back by way of Macclesfield Forest. The mature plantation of pine forest, along with the reservoirs has been claimed by wildlife, ranging from badgers and foxes, to semi-rare water fowl such as crested grebes.

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THE WALK

old farm now restored as a modern house.

1. Leave the car park by walking back towards the road, but do not join it. Turn left along a wide well-made path leading by way of two kissing gates, to the rear of heather-covered quarry spoil heaps.

10. Climb over the stile and go diagonally left across the road to another stile on your left of the large house. Cross this and walk down the field, then across the heads of two shallow side valleys. Climb with the path, half right away from the second and furthest valley.

2. At the second gate, go through it and turn left to climb the stoneflagged steps, uphill. At the top of the climb, pause for breath in order to admire the view by way of Macclesfield Forest to Shutlingsloe and beyond. A nearby outdoor exhibition on the old quarry floor displays a collection of stone-cutting machinery, together with examples of stone walling and masonry techniques. A yellow boot waymark superimposed by a brown letter ‘G’ indicates that the path is part of the Gritstone Trail.

Pause at the crest of the last valley and use it as an excuse to admire the view. Tegg’s Nose is in front and slightly to your right, with Langley Reservoirs in the valley bottom. Beyond and to your left is Sutton Common and its strangely adorned telecommunications tower. In the far distance you can probably make out Jodrell Bank telescope as well as Mow Cop further on into Staffordshire. The prominent little hill of Mow Cop is topped by a folly built in the shape of a ruined castle.

3. Turn left away from the main path and following Gritstone Trail waymarks, go down a flight of stone steps and follow the path steeply through woodland, downhill to Tegg’s Nose Reservoir.

13. Follow the path to the sharp bend in the main road, here marked by the one-time Setter Dog Inn, now a private house. 14. Turn left away from the A537, on to the Old Buxton Road, following it back to the car park, N.B. Take great care on this narrow side road as it often becomes a race track with traffic using it as a rat-run in order to gain a few minutes on the drive between Buxton and Macclesfield. A537 To Buxton 7

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Walker Barn

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on O Buxt

Warrilow Head Farm

Ashtree Top

6. At a small car park, turn left through a narrow belt of trees and then bearing right, walk uphill along a forest access track.

Teggs Nose

7. Follow a set of waymark arrows uphill and into the forest.

Macclesfield Forest

Leather’s Smithy

8. Turn left at a four-way signpost and go past an old barn. Follow the forest path downhill. 9. Look out for a sign pointing to Walker Barn, low down by a gap in the wall. Turn right here and follow the path uphill until you reach a wall crossed by a stile in order to reach the access lane to Ashtree Top, an

12. Heading for Walker Barn Farm, go over a steep stile and turn right along the lane passing the farmhouse, then left through the farmyard.

To Macclesfield

4. Go through a kissing gate and bear right to cross two adjacent dam walls. Turn left on reaching the valley bottom road. 5. Walk along the road as far as Leather’s Smithy pub and then take the left fork in the road. Follow this side road for about a quarter of a mile.

11. Keep to the left of the farmhouse at Warrilowhead Farm and walk away along its access drive until it reaches a sharp right-hand bend. Bear left here, going down towards a group of farm buildings.

To Forest Chapel & Wildboar Clough

To Langley Ridgegate Restaurant

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Tel: 01332 291808 www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 51


Diary of Events diary@imagespublishing.co.uk Royal Centre Nottingham & Concert Hall 0115 989 5555 www.trch.co.uk NOV 25-30 We Will Rock You 30th November to January 5th Cinderella DEC Coronation Street’s Les Dennis and Connor McIntyre will swap the cobbles for clutch bags as the Ugly Sisters, alongside Pop Idol star Gareth Gates as Prince Charming, with Richard Cadell and Sooty starring as Buttons. Jack McNeill will be playing the role of Dandini. Jack will be returning to the Theatre Royal following his star turn in last year’s pantomime as Peter Pan. Hannah Grace Lawson will make her pantomime debut as Cinderella after recently starring in the West End as first cover for Cosette in Les Miserables. With mischievous comedy, jaw-dropping special effects and plenty of boos and hisses, Cinderella will be packed with festive fun for all the family from those aged 3 to 103. So polish off your pumpkins, grab your glass slippers and get ready to head to the ball! 4 Craig Ogden & Manchester Camerata 6 The Australian Pink Floyd Show 7 Nottingham Harmonic Choir: Messiah 8 The Glenn Miller Orchestra - The World Famous Glenn Miller Orchestra, directed by Ray McVay, will be dusting off the Maestro’s original arrangements of your favourite Miller numbers together with a selection of wonderful seasonal specials. 14 Dr Hook 50th Anniversary Tour 16 The Bootleg Beatles 17 The Hallé Christmas Concert 17 Dec 2019 20 Kate Rusby 22 Sunday Piano Series: Dina Duisen & Martin James Bartlett 31 Sinfonia Viva New Year’s Eve Gala JAN 5 I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue - BBC Radio’s multi award-winning antidote to panel games returns to the stage in 2020 with its sell-out touring show. Join Tim Brooke-Taylor, Tony Hawks, Miles Jupp, Rory Bremner and host Jack Dee for an unmissable evening of inspired nonsense. Colin Sell provides piano accompaniment. 6 National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain: 8-12 Moscow City Ballet Buxton Opera House & PavilionArts Centre. 01298 72190 www.buxtonoperahouse.org DEC 7 Cara Dillon 7 The Brighouse & Rastrick Band 10 Jenny Graham - Riding around the world in 124 days 12th Dec to Jan 1 Cinderella Buxton Opera House’s pantomime is a real family favourite, so don’t miss out. The palace clock’s counting down to midnight and tickets are selling fast, so book now

13 Anella Quartet 13 Rick Wakeman 20 Adam Kay - Following the million-selling success of This Is Going To Hurt, Adam Kay delves back into his diaries for a hilarious peek behind the blue curtain at Christmastime. 31 New Year’s Eve Gala Concert JAN 2 Russian State Ballet of Siberia - Sleeping Beauty 3 Julian Liu - Coffee Concert 3 Russian State Ballet of Siberia - The Nutcracker 3 Buxton Buzz Comedy Club - January 4 Russian State Ballet of Siberia - Swan Lake 4 All About Eve By Joseph L Mankiewicz 12 The Kinder Chorus Sings Your Favourite Choral Classics 17 Lost In Music The ELO Experience 25 The ELO Experience are the world’s foremost tribute to The Electric Light Orchestra. With a sensational string section, a stunning light show and large screen projection to further enhance the experience, why not come along and enjoy this incredible show which accurately reproduces the songs and sounds and takes you on a magical musical journey through time. The ELO Experience have been bringing the music of Jeff Lynne and The Electric Light Orchestra to the live stage for over 12 years. Derby Live. Box Office 01332 255800 www.derbylive.co.uk Dec 7 to Jan 4 Peter Pan Back by popular demand, Best Dame nominee Morgan Brind, Emmerdale and Coronation Street’s Bill Ward as Captain Hook and Katrina Bryan from CBeebies’ Nina and the Neurons and Molly & Mack as Tinker Bell. Read more here. Peter, Tinker Bell, Wendy and a very odd looking woman, who refuses to grow up, are in for a high-flying action-packed adventure. The lost boys and musical mermaids will take on some very potty pirates and the most dastardly villain of them all – Captain Hook! Second star to the right and straight on till morning! The team behind Beauty and the Beast and Jack and the Beanstalk are back to fly you to magical Neverland. With spectacular effects, barrel loads of laughs, jokes that grab you hook, line and sinker. The croc is ticking. Hook your tickets now! Derby Theatre Box Office 01332 59 39 39 www.derbytheatre.co.uk Little Red Riding Hood 4 December 2019 - Saturday 4 January 2020 Grandma… What big eyes you have! Its Christmas Eve and Grandma is not feeling too well…luckily, Little Red has a basket of supplies to save the day. Just keep to the path, don’t stop to pick the flowers, don’t talk

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to strangers and don’t mention Grandmas whiskers! Hiccup Theatre bring you a brand new version of the classic story that is all the better to entertain you with! Hilarious and heartwarming, magical and musical…it’s another festive treat from the team that brought you Goldilocks and The Three Bears and The Gingerbread Man. Featuring beautiful puppetry, fantastic storytelling, a girl with attitude, a wolf with an appetite and amazing live music and original songs! Nottingham Playhouse 0115 941 9419 www.nottinghamplayhouse.co.uk NOV 22 -11th January Sleeping Beauty DEC 11 to Jan 4 Pinocchio Filled with music, dancing and plenty of chances to join in, this updated version of the classic tale is plenty of fun and packed with surprises. One day Pinocchio learns that he isn’t a real boy as he’d always thought. He’s actually made of wood! Struggling to fit in, he sets off on an exciting adventure with his trusty sidekick cricket to find out how to become a real boy. Along the way, Pinocchio makes friends with a whole host of larger-than-life characters. The only trouble is, he can’t help but tell lies and each one makes his nose grow! Can cheeky Pinocchio stop telling fibs? Will he find the secret to becoming a real boy, or can he learn to accept himself the way he is? 29 Becoming Electra JAN 11 Ballroom Dance 14 An evening with Katherine Parkinson 15 Judy Collins Palace Theatre Mansfield www.mansfield.gov.uk/palacetheatre 30 Nov — 5 Jan Cinderella Those with children will recognise the infectious smile of Olivia Birchenough as Cinderella. Olivia was born in Cheshire and has been singing, dancing and acting since a young age. Her studies – which included aerial acrobatics, gymnastics and circus skills – paid off when she was given a presenting role on channel 5’s Milkshake! Olivia can’t wait to put on her (glad) rags and head to the Ball this Christmas. This is her third time playing the title character of Cinderella for UK Productions and is a part she won for Best Leading Female at the 2017 Great British Pantomime Awards. She says: As the town’s premier entertainment venue have already announced, funny man Adam Moss will be back in Mansfield by popular demand, this time in the role of Buttons. After having a hand in re-working parts of Snow White last year, Adam can’t wait to get his hands on this year’s script and add his trademark ‘Mossy mayhem’:


The Clock is Ticking!

Cinderella at the Palace Theatre Mansfield. 30 November - 5 January Fans of BBC comedy Gavin and Stacey are in for a double treat.

Melanie Walters is swapping Wales for her magic wand and heading to Mansfield Palace Theatre to play the Fairy Godmother in Cinderella. Those with children will recognise the infectious smile of Olivia Birchenough as Cinderella. Olivia was born in Cheshire and has been singing, dancing and acting since a young age. Her studies – which included aerial acrobatics, gymnastics and circus skills – paid off when she was given a presenting role on channel 5’s Milkshake!

The Bootleg Beatles

The Royal Concert Hall Nottingham Monday 16 December 7:30pm This year celebrating 40 years since their debut on the West End stage in ‘Beatlemania’, the world’s Premier Beatles band continues to draw critical acclaim with their flawless recreation of the greatest songbook of all time. Tracing the Fab Four’s journey through the swinging 60s, every tiny detail is forensically observed from their authentic period costumes and instruments, to their witty stage banter and “inflection perfect” vocals. With a little help from their own orchestral ensemble, and featuring a special set to mark the 50th anniversary of Abbey Road, this show is an absolute must for Beatlemaniacs of all ages.

Murder at the Red Mill Derby Live 14 February

The Laughlines cast are well known for their hilarious comedy shows at Makeney Hall Hotel and new for 2020, ‘Murder at the Red Mill’, is a French themed ‘joie de vivre’ cabaret parody dinner show inspired by the famous ‘Moulin Rouge’ and set to delight audiences. Whether you’re after a fun evening out or a Valentine’s gift, this is a perfect show for a night of laughter, music, and interaction, all brought to you by the very best professional actors and ‘West End’ singers. Book early for this one.

Sleeping Beauty

Buxton Opera House Thursday 2 January 2020, 7:00pm Sergei Bobrov Artistic Director Anatoly Tchepurnoi Music Director and Chief Conductor Formed in 1981, the Russian State Ballet of Siberia has quickly established itself as one of Russia’s leading ballet companies and has built an international reputation for delivering performances of outstanding quality and unusual depth. The soloists and corps de ballet are superb, and never fail to delight audiences with their breathtaking physical ability and dazzling costumes. Sleeping Beauty is every child’s favourite fairy tale, the classic story of love and innocence, mystery and magic set to Tchaikovsky’s sublime score. Stunning choreography, sumptuous costumes and wonderful sets form the fantasy world in which the Lilac Fairy struggles against the evil Carabosse. Accompanied by the Russian State Ballet Orchestra.

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Diary of Events diary@imagespublishing.co.uk

Birdwatching for Beginners walks at Carsington Water. Birding for beginners walks. Over the winter months the wild fowl are in their finest breeding plumage. Visiting thrushes, redwings and fieldfares feast on berries and a great northern diver takes shelter in the reservoir. Why not join us on one of our FREE beginners walks held on the first Sunday of every month? Booking is advisable as numbers are limited, contact Carsington 0330 678 0701. Future dates are, Jan 5th, Feb 2nd, Mar 1st and April 21st Darley Abbey Historical Group Wednesday 18th December Sheila & Roy’s “Guess the Object Quiz” followed by a fuddle – Please bring food and drink for yourself and to share with others. The Church Fellowship Room at 7.30pm. There is a charge of £1.50. For further information contact Maria Gibson on 01332 552837 Derby RSPB Local Group Indoor Meeting on Wednesday 11 December at 7.30pm. Susan and Allan Parker to talk about “Nuclear Nature”, describing the wildlife around nuclear power stations. We meet in the Grange Banqueting Suite, 457 Burton Road, Littleover, Derby, DE23 6XX. Admission for members is £2.50, for non-members £3.00 and juniors £1.00. More details on the RSPB Derby local group website www.rspb.org.uk/groups/ derby Also Derby RSPB local group invites you to join them on Sunday 15 December for a FREE bird watching walk at Attenborough NWT Reserve, Nottingham. Meet at 9.30am in the Barton Lane car park by the visitor centre. There should be plenty of wildfowl and a chance of water rail and possibly kingfisher and bittern. The walk will finish at about 12.30pm.Toilets and cafe on site. More details on the RSPB Derby local group website www.rspb.org. uk/groups/derby Spondon Historical Society Monday December 9th at 7.30pm in Spondon Village Hall Sitwell Street Spondon DE21 7FG. Helen Chambers will

be in Tudor costume to give a talk on ‘A Tudor Christmas’. This is the last meeting for this year so it would be good if as many people as possible came. Members £2.50, visitors £4.00 and all are welcome to come. The new season begins on January 13th 2020.’ Derbyshire Dales Woodcraft Club Derbyshire Dales Woodcraft Club meets in Wyaston village hall (DE6 2DR) on the first Saturday of each month from 10:00am to 2:00pm. We have a mixed programme of visiting demonstrators, hands-on sessions under the guidance of more experienced members and a monthly competition. 2nd. December - A.G.M. and Fuddle. (Members only day) 4th. January 2020 - this is a hands-on meeting. Come along and try a new craft. First visit and refreshments are free. Arts Society Derby December 3rd 2019 A talk by Imogen Corrigan. Meet at 7.15 pm at Landau Forte College, Fox St, Derby DE1 2LF. New members of the society are warmly welcomed; for details see https:// theartssocietyderby.com/membership/ or phone 01332 751574. Non-members may attend as guests for a charge of £5 per person. Derby Chamber Music Society Friday 6th December at 7.30pm at the Multi-Faith Centre, University of Derby, Kedleston Road, Derby, DE22 1GB A concert by the Ugnius Pauliukonis (piano) Mozart: Piano Sonata in D, K.576 Chopin: Four Mazurkas Op.24 Chopin: Etudes Op.25 No.5 & Op.10 No.12 Chopin: Ballade No.4 in F minor, Op.52 Ravel: ‘Miroirs’ Chopin: Piano Sonata No.2 in B flat minor, Op.35 Tickets £15 and £14 (concessions) available at the door and online through WeGotTtickets at www. derbychambermusic.org or telephone 01332 830585 The Derwent Singers Derby Concert Band Saturday 16th December, 2017, 7.30 pm

54 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

St. Luke’s Church, Parliament Street, Derby, DE22 3RL Tickets £10.00 50% discount for under 25 years Uppertown Social Centre Saturday December 7th The last live music event of the year. Pat Jordan and Finians Rainbow will have you singing along, laughing and dancing as they play all your favourite music. Food included. Cash bar. 7pm for 8pm. £13 entry supper included. Telephone Eddie to get your tickets...this will be a sell out.” Uppertown, Ashbourne, Derbyshire. S45 0JF 07966 154798 www.uppertown.org Heanor Floral Art Group Monday 18th November flower demonstration by Paula Routledge from Notts . Entitled By the Fireside, time 7oclock. Venue The Wilmot Street Welfare Centre, Wilmot Street, Heanor. Everyone welcome, visitors £5. For further details Telephone 01332-880 Allestree Flower Group Tuesday 19th November 2019 Flower Demonstration by National Demonstrator Jonathan Moseley Entitled “Let’s Get Creative” 6.30pm for 7.30pm Venue: Robert Ludlum Theatre, Duffield Road, Derby Admission: £15.00 For further details telephone 01332 558540 Sing in harmony with Grand Central Chorus. Are you male? Do you enjoy singing but have nobody to sing with? Afraid your vocal technique may be inadequate but feel you want to put it to the test with others? Grand Central Chorus has the men, it has the music, it has the harmonies and it has the vocal coaches to introduce you to a cappella singing. Singing is proven to enhance both physical and mental wellbeing, improve your voice, your confidence, your breathing and (not least) your social life! For more details and to register for courses call or text Bryan on 07549049551 or e-mail him on bckc50@sky.com To find out more about the chorus visit our website www. grandcentralchorus.com

Contact Country Images: diary@imagespublishing.co.uk


The freedom of flying Luxury coach travel with guaranteed seats & local boarding points

A

light aircraft flying over Derbyshire gives you an unobstructed grandstand view of the fabulous natural environment in which we live. Experience the joy and excitement of flying, soaring above the beautiful Derbyshire countryside. Take a bird’s eye view of your favourite landmarks – maybe it’s Carsington Water Reservoir, Dovedale, Froggatt Edge, Chatsworth House, Ladybower Dams or your own home area. Taking hold of the flying controls, you can really experience the freedom of flying. Derby Aero Club offers a wide range of flying services including tuition for the Private Pilots Licence. Flying from its home base at Derby Airfield, Egginton, the club caters for all ages. Recently a number of our younger students have achieved their first solo flight at the youngest legal age of 16. Derby Airfield is also the home of the Comet Racer restoration project. A team of volunteers are working hard restoring Comet Racer G-ACSP that was originally flown by Amy Johnson and husband Jim Mollison in 1934, in the air race from England to Australia. Why not come along to the airfield on a fine day and sit with a cup of tea, watching the aeroplanes come and go, or purchase a ‘trial lesson’ as a gift for someone special or even for yourself ? A trial flying lesson makes an ideal present, gift vouchers are available from the Derby Aero Club.

BRITISH COACHING CHRISTMAS IN CUMBRIA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23-27 Dec (FB) £528 BOURNEMOUTH SPECIAL OFFER 99p BAR10-14 Feb 20 (HB) £199 MYSTERY WEEKEND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 08-09 Feb (HB) £114 SCOTLAND INVERNESS ALL INCLUSIVE . . 29 Mar-02 Apr (AI) £409 LUDLOW & SHREWSBURY AT EASTER . . . . . . 10-13 Apr (HB) £265 SPRINGTIME IN KENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-17 Apr (HB) £408 WALES CRICCIETH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20-24 Apr (HB) £352 EASTBOURNE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27 Apr-01 May (HB) £285 YORK & YORKSHIRE COAST . . . . . . . . . . . 27Apr-01 May (HB) £367 MYSTERY WEEKEND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 02-03 May (HB) £112 SCOTLAND FIRTH OF FORTH STEAM & CRUISE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 03-07 May (HB) £435 SIDMOUTH DELIGHTS OF DEVON . . . . . . . . . . 05-09 May (HB) £393 VE DAY 75 YEARS CONCERT ROYAL ALBERT HALL* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 08-09 May (BB) £212 BOURNEMOUTH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-14 May (HB) £354 LOOE CORNWALL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-15 May (HB) £365 DORSET & WONDERFUL WESSEX . . . . . . . . . . 18-22 May (HB) £406 PORTSMOUTH & SOUTHSEA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18-22 May (HB) £365 EASTBOURNE SUSSEX BY THE SEA . . . . . . . . 22-25 May (HB) £299 WALES LLANDUDNO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24-28 May (HB) £395 ISLE OF WIGHT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25-29 May (HB) £331 HISTORIC LINCOLNSHIRE & RUTLAND . 29 May-01 Jun (HB) £312 WATERWAYS OF LONDON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 01-04 Jun (HB) £338 MARY POPPINS (LONDON)* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 04-05 Jun (BB) £194 GLOUCESTER WEEKEND BREAK . . . . . . . . . . 05-08 Jun (HB) £288 GREAT YARMOUTH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-15 Jun (HB) £406 VINTAGE RAILWAYS OF NORTH WALES . . . . 15-19 Jun (HB) £456 SCARBOROUGH YORKSHIRE COAST . . . . . . . 17-21 Jun (HB) £332 ISLE OF MAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23-27 Jun (HB) £501 BABBACOMBE TORBAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24-28Jun (HB) £325 WEYMOUTH DELIGHTS OF DORSET . . . . . . . . 26-29 Jun (HB) £318

EUROPEAN COACHING HOLLAND TRAMS, BOATS & BULBFIELDS . . . . . . . . .10-14 Apr (HB) £504 IRELAND SLIGO & DONEGAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 07-13 Jun (HB) £655 ITALIAN DOLOMITES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Jul-03 Aug (HB) £891 IRELAND KILLARNEY & THE RING OF KERRY . . . . . 14-20 Sept (HB) £702 FRANCE AUVERGNE LAND OF VOLCANOES . . . . . . 23-30 Sept (HB) £761 FRANCE ARRAS CHRISTMAS MARKET . . . . . . . . . . . . 06-09 Dec (BB) £307

DAY EXCURSIONS EARLY BOOKINGS ADVISABLE

STRICTLY COME DANCING*

Admission included*

Adult / OAP / Child

WED 05 FEB £71

AIR HOLIDAYS JERSEY FROM EAST MIDLANDS . . . . . . . . . . VARIOUS DATES FROM £459 GUERNSEY FROM EAST MIDLANDS . . . . . . . VARIOUS DATES FROM £439

2020 BROCHURE OUT NOW Telephone 01629 582826K.V & G.L SLACK LTD, THE TRAVEL CENTRE, UPPER LUMSDALE, MATLOCK, DE4 5LB

Website: www.slackscoaches.co.uk Email: enquiries@slackscoaches.co.uk www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 55


T H I S

C H R I S T M A S

with

56 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk


Considering a divorce but unsure what to do next? Flint Bishop’s team of family law experts can help you make the right choices for you and your family. The breakdown of a marriage and subsequent decision to divorce is stressful and will affect people in different ways. You might be worrying about what is involved and have lots of questions such as, how much does a typical divorce cost? What will happen to your money, your house and other valuable possessions? How will this affect your children? Flint Bishop’s family solicitors are well known for their personal touch and will take the time to understand your needs to empower you to make informed decisions. Contact us to arrange a meeting at either our Derby or Ashbourne office to explore your options and plan your next steps.

Derby

01332 340 21 1

Ashbourne

01335 342 208

For regular legal updates, follow us on social media or visit our website:

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 57


COMING UP AT DERBY THEATRE

Presented by Selladoor Productions, Matthew Townshend Productions, Belgrade Theatre Coventry and Perth Theatre at Horsecross Arts

MON 20 – SAT 25 JAN

T H E O R I G I N A L T H E AT R E C O M PA N Y P R E S E N T

S TA R R I N G G W E N TAY L O R

MON 27 JAN - SAT 1 FEB Box Office 01332 593939 Book Online derbytheatre.co.uk Text: 07717 346 964 58 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Derby Theatre is part of


Let ’s MAKE Christmas Find the perfect Christmas gift with a selection of beautiful handmade crafts from local makers and designers

Saturday 19 October - Tuesday 24 December derbymuseums.org

A FESTIVE FAVOURITE FROM CHRISTMAS PAST A DERBY THEATRE PRODUCTION

ORIGINAL STORY BY CHARLES DICKENS ADAPTED BY NEIL DUFFIELD

FRIDAY 29 NOV - SATURDAY 4 JAN

01332 593939 derbytheatre.co.uk Text: 07717 346 964

Derby Theatre is part of

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 59


Gent’s Cartier Santos 100 XL Chronograph watch. Estimate £30,000-£35,000.

T

he glitz and glamour of an exquisitely fine object has the ability to bring normal saleroom activities to a standstill. Just occasionally, staff are stopped in their tracks to admire an impressive find. Such was the impact when a gent’s Cartier Santos 100 XL Chronograph watch in 18ct pink gold arrived at our Derbyshire HQ - shimmering with more than 400 diamonds. Several people were drawn to admire the head-turner thanks to Cartier’s ability to craft something quite extraordinary. It is one of the most prestigious makers of luxury goods in the world. The watch is dazzling to behold. It boasts so many diamonds, it’s impossible to estimate the number at a glance. They smother the sides and clock face and sparkle at you from every angle. Most are small but the watch winder features a large diamond encased in gold. Its estimate is £30,000 to £35,000 but its retail value would have been far more. For keen collectors, it’s an attractive buy. Designer watches from top makes are sought after – a trend that appears to be gathering momentum with every passing year. We regularly see watches soar to success in the saleroom. For example, a Tudor Rolex steel Oysterdate wristwatch bought for £300 at a Nottingham jeweller’s shop around 1971 and worn in the garden, fetched £51,100 at last year’s Christmas Fine Art Auction. With the buyer’s premium, the total price paid was £63,364. Rolex watches of any type tend to fair well. In a recent watches auction, lot 314, a gents 18ct gold 1960s Rolex Oyster Perpetual Day-Date Superlative Chronometer wristwatch, made £4,600. That’s an impressive return on a watch purchased more than 50 years ago. Often people drop into our saleroom with a watch they have inherited thinking it’s worthless, only to discover the opposite.

Lot 34, extensive late Victorian silver canteen of King’s pattern cutlery, reached £3,100. Diamond jewellery is in demand, too. Lot 177, a diamond solitaire 18ct white gold ring, featuring a princess-cut diamond, reached £3,900. Then there was lot 194, a diamond octagonal cluster white gold ring which was sold for £3,800. When it comes to silver, those old canteens of cutlery can also excel. Lot 34, an extensive late Victorian silver canteen of King’s pattern cutlery reached £3,100. And we can’t forget a silver spoon from 1654, found at the back of a Derby cutlery drawer, which sold for a total of £1,200 in October. The early seal top spoon, made by silversmith Jeremy Johnson of London, was a collector’s item. But how it came to be in a house in Littleover nearly four centuries later is a complete mystery. Free jewellery and watch valuations are available on Mondays and Fridays, 10am-4pm, at Hansons, Heage Lane, Etwall, Derbyshire, DE65 6LS. Alternatively, email hsmith@hansonsauctioneers.co.uk. Free general valuations are available at Hansons’ Etwall saleroom on Wednesdays, 5-7pm, Fridays, 10am-4pm, and Saturdays, 9am-noon. Twitter: HansonsUK Facebook: HansonsAuctioneersUK Instagram: hansons_auctioneers

Rare timepieces are a major success story of recent years. Desirable watches are likened to rare cars and wealthy collectors will stop at nothing to acquire the best examples for their collection. Other makes that sell well include Omega, Longines and, of course, French brand Cartier. Founded by Louis-François Cartier in Paris in 1847, the company remained under family control until 1964. In 2018, it was ranked by Forbes as the world’s 59th most valuable brand. It boasts a long history of sales to royalty. Our own King Edward VII referred to Cartier as ‘the jeweller of kings and the king of jewellers.’

Christmas Fine Jewellery, Watches & Silver Auction Thursday 5 December

For his coronation in 1902, Edward VII ordered 27 tiaras and issued a royal warrant to Cartier in 1904. More warrants soon followed from the courts of Spain, Portugal, Russia, Siam and the House of Orleans among others. Back to the present and The Duchess of Cambridge is said to admire Cartier along with numerous celebrities including Angelina Jolie, Naomi Watts and Kylie Jenner. If royalty and stars across the globe are dazzled by Cartier’s luxury and attention to detail, it’s hardly surprising we are too. If you have a vintage timepiece gathering dust at home, do dust it down and bring it in for assessment. You may be pleasantly surprised. As well as designer watches, another hot auction trend is pearls. In our Autumn Fine Silver, Jewellery and Watches Auction lot 175, a natural pearl necklace, was contested to £9,800.

Please contact Helen Smith on 01283 733988 or hsmith@hansonsauctioneers.co.uk An Edwardian opal, pink tourmaline and diamond fringe necklace Sold for £600

Lot 177, a diamond solitaire 18ct white gold ring, sold for £3,900.

Seal top spoon, made by silversmith Jeremy Johnson of London in 1654 sold for more than £1,000.

60 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

The Auction Centre, Heage Lane Etwall, Derbyshire DE65 6LS

Free Home Visits Probate & Insurance Valuations

All captions: Hansons

Cartier timepiece shimmering with 400 diamonds shows why luxury make is royal favourite


Food & Drink Keep food miles low,

visit Robin Maycock Family Butchers and Bakers Famous for their fresh, locally sourced meat, bakery and deli counter.

Christmas Poultry Orders

Locally reared Turkeys, Free range Geese, Fresh English Ducks, Fresh English Chickens, Local Pheasants, Mince Pies.

Set in beautiful Derbyshire countryside with free parking outside AWARD WINNING HOLLOWAY VILLAGE BUTCHERS Lea Shaw Road, Holloway, Nr Matlock, Derbyshire DE4 5AT

Stockists of the perfect produce for the

Festive Season…

Delicious range of seasonal meats locally sourced from farms in and around the Peak District. Stockists of tasty cooked meats, homemade meat pies, quiches and pork pies including 2lb and Gala pork pies made to order. A full range of jams and chutneys also available, the ideal gift idea.

ORDERS NOW BEING TAKEN FOR CHRISTMAS FOR ALL YOUR CHRISTMAS FAYRE AND TRIMMINGS R.G

. Stafford Ltd ,

72 Western Road, Mickleover, Derby.

T: 01332 514087 Qu

ality Butchers

01629 534333 www.robinmaycockbutchers.co.uk

Specialising in a mixture of fantastic Italian dishes and more traditional English dishes.

COMING SOON our brand new

POSH PIZZA BAR! Large variety of pizzas cooked in our beautiful NEW PIZZA OVEN takeaway service available lunchtime and evenings.

CHRISTMAS MENU NOW AVAILABLE

LUNCHTIME MENU 2 courses £10.95 3 courses £12.95 Sunday Lunch served 12noon - 5pm

01773 825050 | Hopping Hill, Milford, Belper DE56 0RL www.newinnmilford.co.uk | bookings@thenewinn.net Open Monday to Saturday 12 noon – 9.30pm, www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 61


on a

wick a prayer

& As

places go, Tissington is a picture-perfect crowdpleaser. From the minute you pass the towering lodge gates and meander along the lime tree lined avenue, there’s a sense you have discovered a magical village that time forgot.

Tissington’s popularity (as many as 35,000 visitors during well dressing week) explains why a village with around 120 inhabitants has a butcher, some bakers (producing cracking cakes for Tissington Hall’s tearooms) and a

nationally renowned candle-maker. Follow your nose to the former village forge and Annie Maudling, founder of On a Wick and Prayer, offers the warmest of Tissington welcomes. In my case - a hug, a mug of coffee and the chance to warm cold hands over a pot of melted wax on the brazier. This enthusiastic greeting is far more than I deserve because – after promising to stay in touch – it’s been 20-years since I last visited On a Wick and a Prayer. Back then, Annie had just moved her candle-making from the kitchen stove at Yew Tree cottage (every inch as gorgeous as it sounds) to a converted pigsty in the garden.

“I’ve been very busy,” she laughs when I ask for a ‘quick’ catch-up. “It’s 22 years since I started making candles with my daughter’s unwanted kit and a grotty pan which I could never use again as it made the gravy taste of lavender.” I wonder what happened to the pigsty. “We needed more space so, with the blessing of my landlord Sir Richard FitzHerbert, we moved into the old blacksmith’s forge next-door to the cottage,” Annie says. “We hand-pour around a thousand candles per day – sometimes more - and I have ten part-time members of staff. My husband Ed even asked to join the team as he said it ‘looked like fun’. It works well, as long as he does what he’s told.”

Picture-perfect Tissington is home to an amazing cottage industry. Right: A small selection of their 1000 candle a day output.

Self-confessed ‘foodie’ journalist Amanda Volley showcases all that is great about food and drink in Derbyshire. 62 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk


Annie says the turning point for her company came about after a chance meeting at a trade show. “Someone came to our stall and explained the National Trust shops were looking to stock more local products and asked if I would be interested,” Annie (54), recalls. “It was a case of ‘Er, give me half a second to think about it’ before saying yes. It proved a massive leap forward. Before I knew it, we were supplying candles to 60 shops throughout the country.” In 2005, with orders coming in thick and fast, Annie took on another unit in nearby Ashbourne. Within a matter of two years – they’d outgrown it. “I have a friend whose husband worked from a base in Dovedale. He was moving to larger premises and she asked if I’d be interested in his unit,” Annie says. “It was perfect – offering four times the space. I’d finally found a place big enough to make custom candles for other businesses (including some top London hotels), store the packaging and do the product photography. It also allowed me to achieve a life-long dream of buying a kiln and making a range of pottery called Dovedale Ceramics.” As Annie and I chat, there is a steady stream of people visiting the small but perfectly fragranced shop which is on the side of her workshop. Even though most visitors are there by chance - hikers, cyclists, tourists – they all leave with a candle, or two. “The workshop is really popular. We often have people who come in – smell a few candles – and because they are out walking or cycling say they’ll come again with the car and fill

their boot. I’m pleased to say most do,” she says. “We did a survey recently and asked our customers ‘why us?’ I was expecting a variety of answers but 95 per cent said they loved our fragrances. I remember when I first started I was so desperate to please I’d find myself obliging all requests to make anything from Parma violet to roasted mushroom scented candles. Then I learned to have faith in my own fragrances as each one can take weeks – even years – to perfect.” Annie agrees there has been a craze for candles which evoke a favourite smell as opposed to a parfumier’s scent. Annie’s own collection includes Starched Linen, Vine Tomato and the best-selling Hot Toddy. “I try to avoid trends and, even when I’m developing something new, I ask if it fits in with our story,” she says. “For instance, I’ve fallen in love with Norway and spent six years perfecting a blend which brought to mind the smell of a ‘Nordic Forest’ as opposed to a toilet cleaner.” Annie is unperturbed if people don’t like the scent (known in the trade as the throw) of a certain candle. “Two girls came in the other day and one loved a candle but the other said ‘Ew – no’,” she laughs. “We’ve all got a very different sense of smell. I test my fragrances on the ten members of staff and we’re all experienced enough to know when something is right. The rest is down the to personal taste.” One trend Annie is happy to embrace is that of recycling; “We tried launching a refillable

eco candle – made from the bottom of wine bottles - 15 years ago. It was just too far ahead of its time,” she recalls. “I know a lot of my customers have cupboards full of spent candle containers they’d like to reuse. We do offer a popular refill service but I wanted to help those who’d prefer to make their own candles.” Annie wrestled with the idea of how to make candle-making accessible to all; doing away with the need for moulds, thermometer and jugs. As usual, divine inspiration struck. “One night I went out to buy a pint of milk. The next morning, I woke up and had a light bulb moment – put the wax in the bottle. Milk bottles are one of the most re-cyclable of all plastics, they can withstand heat and it’s a ready-made pourer for melted wax,” she explains. “We previewed the idea at a craft show last November and it was really well received. We had lots of questions and our response was ‘It’s easy’. That’s how Eazi Candle was born. We went to more craft shows and the response was amazing and I was invited to talk about making candles on Create and Craft TV.” Since that initial screen debut, Annie has been asked back many times and even has two TV personas – ‘Annie Candle’ and ‘Mrs Eazi’. “Appearing on TV doesn’t faze me at all as candles are my passion and I don’t have to think about what to say,” she says. “In fact, at trade shows my staff sometimes tell me to tone down the passion and just point to the candles and say ‘How many do you want?’.”

There has been a craze for candles which evoke a favourite smell as opposed to a parfumier’s scent.

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 63


Part of the range of Dovedale Ceramics To prove they really are idiot-proof; Annie sends me off with everything I need to refill one of my own empty candle containers (I also have a cupboard full) and even provides a scent blend to emulate the smell of the former candle; namely ‘Frosty Morning’. “There’s nothing I enjoy more than bringing a candle back to life,” Annie smiles. “A couple of Christmases ago a friend asked for help with a £300 designer candle given to her by her son as it had ‘stopped working’. She’d lost the wick in a tunnel of wax. I scooped it out, filtered the impurities out, added some new wicks and, two years on, it’s still going.” As for the future, Annie has promised to work on creating a better work-life balance after

having a dramatic wake-up call.

head off to Norway for a few weeks.

“October to December is always a busy time for candle-makers. About six years ago, we’d had an especially crazy run-up to Christmas before dashing off to stay with some friends in Leicestershire for New Year,” Annie says. “We decided to catch-up with other friends but, on the way over, we had a car accident on a bend which nearly killed us. Ed cracked eleven ribs and punctured his lung and we had to close the workshop. I think the universe was telling us both to slow down. These days we run the business rather than let the business run us.”

“Once there, we switch off completely. We go to bed when we’re tired and eat when we’re hungry. It’s a much simpler way of life,” Annie smiles. “Running my own business is not easy at times, particularly when I walk out of my own home and it’s there on the door-step. Travelling all the way to the remote parts of Norway is the easiest way to get a proper break. It’s the one place on earth where I can forget about everything – it’s bliss.”

Since then, the couple stop work at 5.30pm and, every year, they cram Ed’s fishing gear into their trusty Belingo-turned-camper-van and

Visit on a Wick and a Prayer at The Candle Workshop, The Avenue, Tissington DE6 1RA or visit the on-line shop onawick.co.uk

Candlemakers Derbyshire

The Candle Workshop Tissington, Ashbourne DE6 1RA Tel : 01335 390639 www.onawick.co.uk 64 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Opening Hours Monday to Friday 10am till 5pm Saturday, Sunday & Bank Holidays 12 noon till 5pm


on a

wick a prayer

&

How to refill an old candle container

S

crape out any remaining wax and wick with an old spoon

Place your container in a bowl of boiling water and wait for the remaining wax to melt then wipe out with old cloth Remove any old sticky labels with white spirit or nail varnish remover Wash in warm soapy water Refill with your new candle wax (follow Easi candle instructions on the bottle) Before use:- Trim the wick to a quarter of an inch If the candle is more than three inches in diameter, burn it for two/three hours until a pool of wax appears across the candle surface. Believe it or not wax has a memory and if you extinguish a new candle too soon, it will only melt to the outer rim of that first melt leading to tunnelling and wax waste To extinguish, flick the candle wick into the wax and bring out again using scissors tips or the end of the old spoon. Scoop out any debris left by matches or the wick Safety first – never leave a candle unattended, always place on heat proof surface and keep out of the reach of children and pets.

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 65


From milk round to farm shop

H

ow does something like that happen?

Through hard graft, that’s how. Andrew Wint owner of Oakfield farm shop started out his working life at 14 on a milk round. In his mid teens he was offered the round to buy, so he bought it and for the next seven years worked 7 days a week without a holiday. Now that’s commitment.

Just before this, he met his wife to be, Karen. So, when you walk into the spacious welcoming Oakfield Farm Shop on Stanley Common, and see the full array of quality home reared beef, exciting fresh fruit, vegetables and cakes, you will appreciate how hard Andrew and his wife Karen have worked to grow their business. A couple of years ago they realised that to move their business forward they needed to expand, hence the new large farm shop and coffee shop complete with roaring log fire. Rearing his own cattle for over twenty five years means that the meat on display has a provenance which gives peace of mind. Andrew’s experience in raising cattle and selling his meat, which in the early days, was, freezer packed, puts him ahead of the game and quality meat and products are stocked and sourced locally. “What makes you different?” I asked Andrew. “ We just are” he said, “We like to stock a wide variety of products and change them regularly to provide our customers with a good choice.” “How do you manage it all?” Andrew replied, “ We have to plan ahead. Turkeys have to be ready for December so they need to be ordered in February. The cattle have to breed and we currently have fifty coming through the process” . Completing the new farm shop last year has certainly proved a success for Andrew and his family. The quality of workmanship and attention to detail in the building is evident to see. The tables in the coffee shop are all individually hand made and have some fascinating features, this is definitely not your normal coffee shop. The shape of the lighting and details in the doors and joinery certainly shout ‘different’. As Andrew said “We just are”. As we were speaking the coffee shop was filling up nicely. The Oakfield Big Breakfast priced at a reasonable £7.95 was proving very popular, as was the smaller version at only £6.50. There are specials every day on the board including Pie of the Day, Quiche of the Day and many more. Tea coffee and cakes are always popular for those wanting a fast stop whilst buying their weekly provisions. Whilst enjoying coffee one lady was showing her young daughter the horses that wander around the manége just outside the coffee shop window. A sure hit with any child having their orange juice and cake.

Andrew is rightly proud of his meat produce

Watching the horses whilst having coffee is so therapeutic. Oakfield Farm Shop on Stanley Common is easily accessed from Derby on Belper Road, just off the main Derby to Heanor Road. The Shop and Cafe are open from 10am through to 4pm from Sunday through to Thursday. Friday and Saturday they open up an hour earlier at 9am closing again at 4pm. Contact details for the Cafe & Shop - 0115 930 9099. Postcode DE7 6FP. You’re assured a very friendly welcome.

Providing customers with quality and tasty produce. Orders now being take for your Festive Fayre

Why not visit our extensive Farm Shop and Cafe for tasty breakfasts, lunches, cakes and desserts. Teas and Coffees.

Purveyors of seasonal meats and vegetables, dairy produce, cheeses, sausages, pork pies and sausage rolls.

Telephone: 01159 309099

The smart welcoming entrance.

A wide selection of fresh cakes every day.

66 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Opening Daily: 10 am – 4 pm Oakfield Farm, Belper Rd, Stanley Common, Derbyshire DE7 6FP email:info@oakfieldfarm.co.uk Facebook: oakfieldfarmshop

www.oakfieldfarm.co.uk


The Dragon Wins Leisure and Hospitality Award

T

he Dragon Pub and Restaurant, in Willington, picked up the top leisure and hospitality award at the 2019 East Staffordshire and South Derbyshire Business Awards at Pirelli Stadium earlier this month.

Around 270 guests filled the Pirelli Stadium, in Burton, to celebrate all the 2019 finalists and hear the winners announced from 11 different categories and the overall Business of The Year. The event is in its 10th year, and once again the whole evening focused on showcasing and celebrating the very best business success and talent across the region! Lee Carvell, Senior Executive of the Dragon, collecting the award said “We are delighted to receive this award. We have a lot of great staff who, because we are so busy, work under extreme pressure to continually deliver the level of service we require. Recognition like this goes a long way to acknowledge their great efforts”. The Dragon, which backs on to the Trent and Mersey canal, in Willington, offers an exciting menu, of classic and contemporary dishes, a wide range of wines and spirits and a selection of fine ales, many brewed by their sister company The Boot Beer, who was also up for an award. The Boot Beer, handcrafts their ales in Repton Derbyshire, was shortlisted as a finalist in the Manufacturer of the Year category and narrowly missed out on the main prize. “This would have been icing on the cake” said Head Brewer, Jon Archer, who since joining the business two years ago has transformed the offering and the quality of the beer, picking up several top beer awards on the way.

Manager Rick Graham and his team offer a warm welcome every time you visit.

Rosette Award for Culinary Excellence

01283 346047 thebootatrepton.co.uk Gold AThe ward for Boot, Repton, Derby DE65 6FT

Supported by Head Chef, Matt Allsopp, who creates award winning dishes.

Accommodation

We produce our own Boot Beer, in a 6 barrel micro-brewing plant, offering a series of ales with exciting, dynamic tastes created by Head Brewer, Jon Archer.

The Boot is a traditional pub serving a selection of award-winning classic and contemporary dishes, fine wines and real ales that are hand-crafted in our micro-brewery.

We have 9 uniquely designed and furnished bedrooms offering luxury accommodation. Ideally situated for business and for touring the Derbyshire countryside.

The recent addition of our beautiful garden room has now enabled us to offer a dining experience for larger groups of people.

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 67


We’re here for you in your time of need, day or night…

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Season’s Greetings from everyone at Coxbench

Come and arrange your pre payment plan or your loved one’s funeral in the tranquil setting of Findern village just a few minutes from Littleover and Mickleover. All your needs catered for by our qualified staff Pre-Payment plans designed to suit you Monumental Mason Service Available

25, Main Street, Findern, Derbyshire DE65 6AG Telephone 01332 425022 Also at 23, York Street, Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire DE14 2LX Telephone 01283 562299

Contact us

office@coxbench-hall.co.uk Alfreton Road, Coxbench, Derby DE21 5BB

01332 880200

www.murraysfunerals.co.uk

Country

Located in rural Derbyshire, just 2 miles from Mickleover and 4 miles Located in rural Derbyshire, justonly 2 miles from Mickleover only 4 miles from Derby City from Derbyand City Centre.

Centre. in rural Derbyshire, just 2 miles from Located We are veryand proud be celebrating Mickleover only to 4 miles from Derby our City Centre. We aresince very proud be celebrating our service service 1984toand are devoted to since 1984 and are devoted to providing ‘Care, providing ‘Care, Comfort Security’ Comfort and Security’ all ofand our residents. We are very proud to befor celebrating our service for all1984 of our since andresidents. are devoted to providing ‘Care, Comfort and Security’ for all of our residents. For information, contact us on 01332 82 46 00 or For information, contact us on email info@wheathillshouse.co.uk For information, contact us on 01332 82 46 00 or email info@wheathillshouse.co.uk or email Wheathills House, Brun Lane, Derby, DE6 4LU www.wheathillshouse.co.uk Wheathills House, Brun Lane, Derby, DE6 4LU www.wheathillshouse.co.uk

01332 82 46 00

info@wheathillshouse.co.uk www.wheathillshouse.co.uk

Wheathills House, Brun Lane, Derby, DE6 4LU 68 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

app

it’s FREE to download today… and tomorrow… and the day after that too!! We go one better than a free trial, County Images app is always free to download, so get it now and read every Country Images Magazine on your smart phone or tablet today. Just another reason we’re Derbyshire’s best read lifestyle magazine! or visit www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk


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My life My home My favourite chair by the ďŹ re

Home care and live-in care from Blurbird Care

Care visits and live-in care at home a realistic alternative. Email the Bluebird Care team to find out more about our home care service: ambervalley@bluebirdcare.co.uk or call us on 01773 880055

70 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

bluebirdcare.co.uk /amber-valley /derbyshire-dales


Live-in Care a real alternative to residential care, with Bluebird Care For many people, as they grow older, a little support with day to day tasks is enough to help to keep them safe and comfortable at home. For others who need more support, it is reassuring to have someone around for all or most of the day.

the clock’ support to either a single person or a couple; making sure that their household and life continues to run the way they want it. Although, living-in and available, care assistants need their rest, so this option is not a choice for someone needing a lot of support during the night. Additional support would be required. The care assistants are supported by a dedicated team who make sure that the quality of support required is available at short notice to provide backup for any issues that may arise.

Naturally, most people choose to stay in familiar surroundings and want to carry on living in the place that they know and love for as long as they can. Home is the place where we belong: with memories of happy family occasions, much loved possessions and comfort in the familiarity of our day to day routines. That is why Bluebird Care provides live-in care, which allows people to remain in the comfort and in the familiar surroundings of their own home, with family, friends and neighbours nearby. This balances the promotion of independence and flexibility of living at home, with the security and reassurance provided by having a trained professional on hand at all times. This makes live-in care a preferred option for many people rather than moving to a care home.

Sometimes you’re cared for at home by a family member. We’re happy to provide short term support for when they need a break or want to go on holiday.

We can provide long term live-in care assistants, who we recruit locally, and who are experienced and trained to provide ‘round

Whether we provide a carer for a short break or long term we believe in ‘going that extra mile’ to make sure every day is a good day for you. Our live-in care assistants will support you with household tasks including cooking and shopping, and they can accompany you on medical appointments and social visits. We always remember that it’s your home and your life and we’re here to make things as easy as possible for you whilst maintaining your independence and choices. If you would like to receive further information or would like someone to come to discuss this with you, with no obligation, please contact our office in Belper on 01773 880055.


e r a c o t e m i t A Y

ou may have heard about Life Interest Will Trusts, sometimes referred to as property protection trusts, but what are they?

Within your will you can include a trust which gives someone an interest in your property, or your share of your property or other assets, for their lifetime only. For example, if your home is placed into a Life Interest Trust, the person with the life interest can live in the property for the rest of their life. On their death the property will be distributed in accordance with the terms of your will. Life Interest Will Trusts are useful for many reasons, however they are particularly useful for couples concerned about the future costs of care fees. The cost of long-term care often means that family homes have to be sold leaving no inheritance for the next generation. If couples include Life Interest Trusts in their wills of their share of the family home, this allows the surviving partner to continue to live in the home. Whilst ensuring that the share of the property in the Life Interest Will Trust of the deceased partner, cannot be used to pay for the survivor’s care fees. For further information, please contact Astle Paterson on 01283 5361366

Milford Care bag 3 more awards for commitment to care A leading care provider based in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire has recently scooped 3 more awards for their dedication to care. Milford Care, who have 6 homes across the counties, attended the glitzy Great British Care Awards 2019 at the East Midlands Conference Centre. The awards were well received by staff members for Ashbourne Lodge and Milford House. Two of those awarded were Lemmy Nolan and Annie Cleare of Ashbourne Lodge. Lemmy was awarded the Dignity in Care Award and was celebrated for having ‘taken her extensive experiences within care and continues to endeavour to show compassion and dignity to each of her residents’. Annie received the Palliative Care Award for her support for residents and their families during their final days. Another award for the care group was to Tanya Whelan of Milford House. Tanya was awarded for her contribution to residents with dementia with the Dementia Carer Award. She was described as ‘a passionate, patient and understanding care leader’. With over 30 years’ experience in the industry, Milford Care always puts residents at the forefront of their ethos. They have endeavoured to consistently progress and improve the service, building a team of truly passionate, trained and experienced staff who are dedicated to offering the highest standard of care in the Midlands. Pierre Falleth, Director of Milford Care said: “It’s amazing to be able to celebrate the achievements of our hardworking staff. It’s very important to us that all our residents and their families feel respected and valued at every stage of care, and we feel all our staff reflect this. We’re very proud of everyone and look forward to striving for more success in the future.” Milford Care specialise in residential care, dementia care, nursing care, palliative care, respite and day care. For more information visit www.milfordcare.co.uk 72 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk


Protect your assets from Care Fees with a Life Interest Trust

When you make a Will, you want to be sure your assets go to the people you choose. With a Life Interest Trust, you can ring-fence your estate to protect your assets from Care Home Fees and disinheriting children if your partner remarries. Talk to one of our specialist solicitors about how a Life Interest Trust can protect your estate.

AstlePaterson When trusted experience matters

Alex Rivers Head of Wills & Probate

01283 531366

www.astlepaterson.co.uk

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 73


e r a c o t e m i t A

Country

2020 Calendar AVAILABLE NOW

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tudies suggest that 1 in 3 people over the age of 65 will have a fall, and having had a fall there is a 50% chance of another fall within 6 months. The increase in falls has been seen to lead to brain damage from hitting the head, also 95% of hip fractures in older people are as a result of falls which increase the risk of dying within one year.

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Being afraid of falling, increases the risk and leads to inactivity, depression, lack of stability, and ultimately reduced proprioception. A less active lifestyle is a factor in being overweight which compounds the problem with extra strain on weight-bearing joints such as the low back, hips, knees and ankles. Forward head posture, where the head is forward of the shoulders is seen to increase the risk of falling. It also increases the curvature of the neck, a contributing factor in the incidence of nerve root irritation - the cause of numbness, or pins and needles in the arms, hands or fingers. The additional strain on the posterior neck muscles can be a factor in sub-occipital headaches.

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Wildlife Artist Richard Whittlestone Wildlife Artist Richard Whittlestone is proud to present his Winter Exhibition inspired by the beauty of his surroundings in the Peak District and particularly the Chatsworth estate.

RICHARD WHITTLESTONE Wildlife Gallery

O

ver twenty new paintings will be shown to the public for the first time from November 16th - December 8th in his well appointed gallery, just a stone’s throw from the Chatsworth farm shop (AA signposted).

It has been a busy year for Richard, with invitations to exhibit in Scotland and Italy, plus a full refurbishment of the gallery which now provides more wall space for his larger paintings.

WINTER EXHIBITION Sat 16th November – Sun 8th December 10am – 5pm

(AA signposted) Broomes Barns, Pilsley, Chatsworth DE45 1PF 01246 582720 www.richardwhittlestone.co.uk

Richard began painting aged five and sold his first paintings at 13. “I love and live what I do”, says Richard, “My aim is to convey the beauty of my subject in paint and bring to life the animal or bird in front of the viewer’s eyes”. His paintings sell all over the world now and carry his trademark tiny fly, often hidden somewhere in the composition. “It began as a point of interest in earlier pictures but since 1990, all paintings have one. “I do get customers who bought work from me in the 1980’s - pre fly - who want me to paint one on!” Well worth a visit, the exhibition is open daily from 10am to 5pm (11am - 4pm Sunday) and together with the originals are a wide selection of limited edition prints, greetings cards and 2020 calendar. www.richardwhittlestone.co.uk www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 75


Add some

R

egal Ice, a rare and usual fine aquamarine 6.23cts set into 18ct white gold with on either side blue sapphires and white diamonds. Designed in-house by Ben Stevenson this is a sensational show-stopper of a ring. Just one of the many beautiful pieces of jewellery on display at John Stevenson Jewellers, 2A Glumangate, Chesterfield, Derbyshire S40 1TP

Sparkle

N N

ow available at Jillian Hart Fashions a stunning range of cocktail and evening wear by Michaela Louisa, the shop also stocks a great range of accessories including evening shoes, bags, jewellery and scarves. For more information call into the shop at 40-44, Babington Lane, Derby or telephone 01332 347647

ow that December has arrived, The Alphabet Gift Shops at Burton and Mickleover are well and truly in the festive spirit! There’s a unique choice of beautiful gifts for every member of the family as well as decorations, candles and foliage to make your home into a festive feast! Personalisation is available on many gifts by the “elves” upstairs at the Burton shop (and can often be done for you whilst you enjoy a festive drink or scrumptious lunch in the licensed coffee shop) For opening times and more information please visit www.thealphabetgiftshop.co.uk or visit www.facebook.com/thealphabetgiftshop”

76 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk


Stunning Range Of Winter Coats & Outerwear Boots, Bags, Jewellery, Scarves and Xmas Gifts

40-44 Babington Lane Derby Tel: 01332 347647 Opening Times: Monday - Saturday 9.30am - 5.00pm

New Season - New Brands - New Look!

Friendly personal service from assistants who care, in a truly independent store that’s big enough to stock the quality brands you want.

Ripley Store We will be open Sunday 22nd & 29th December 10am-3pm & Christmas Eve

Full Store

Winter Sale

Starts Friday 27th December Doors open 9am

8-18 Grosvenor Road, Ripley Tel: 01773 742151

Belper Store

Belper Food Festival Sunday 8th December 10am-3pm Also open Sunday 8th, 15th, 22nd & 29th 10am-3pm.

Winter Sale

Starts Friday 27th December Doors open 9am

30-32 King Street, Belper, Telephone Tel: 01773 525358

www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 77


Add some Sparkle T

udor Jewellers, a family run business, located on South St. in Ilkeston and the High St. in Alfreton offer a great selection of jewellery and gifts from Nomination, Coeur de Lion, Hot Diamonds, Royal Crown Derby, Diamonfire and Willow Tree. With their service of jewellery and watch repairs they are certainly worth a visit. Always helpful with friendly advice, visit Tudor and support your local high street.

W

hen the weather turns chilly, Seaham from Joules is the perfect choice. Cut to exactly the same fit and shape as our best-loved design, this jumper is crafted in textured chenille for a sumptuously warm and soft feel that will make it your new-season staple. A beautiful range of winter jumpers for all occasions at Clarkes, Grosvenor Road, Ripley.

A UNIQUE & EXCLUSIVE WEDDING VENUE OPEN DAY Sunday, 12 JANUARY 2020 12-4pm www.swancarfarmcountryhouse.com Swancar Farm - All yours!

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wancar Farm Country House is an exclusive venue which has been established since 2011 and is all yours to enjoy with your loved ones. Set within pretty countryside, the beautiful house that you see as you meander up the sweeping drive is just the start of your Swancar journey - having exclusive use means that it is just yours for your special day. Host your ceremony in the Barn and Gallery with its rustic beams and sparkling chandeliers. Enjoy drinks and canapes in the Lower Barn and pretty courtyard and make your way through to the beautiful Oak Hall for your wedding breakfast and reception. End your day in style in the individually designed elegant bedrooms and wake up the next morning to a hearty breakfast in the Old Farmhouse Kitchen surrounded by your loved ones. When you choose Swancar you are actually booking your big-day home and gaining a family that comes with it - a passionate, dedicated and experienced team that is as excited about your day as you are. Our wedding planners and event team will work with you and support you every step of the way, to make sure your day is just what you dreamed of.

78 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Get in touch to book your private viewing. Telephone: 0115 9306528E: hello@swancarfarmcountryhouse.com www.swancarfarmcountryhouse.com


Watch Servicing & Repairs

Official OMEGA Service Store We also repair jewellery from sizing a ring to remodelling an older item with our designs

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The pre-owned Rolex specialists Exquisite watches bought and sold

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Photography background features Le Corbusier’s visual art “OTHELLO” | © FLC / 2019, ProLitteris, Zurich.

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for all fine Swiss made watches including


Natural cosmetics with a difference

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ur brand is much more than a chic logo – it denotes our cosmos. Our selected medicinal plants are certified organic and help the skin to help itself and to regenerate. We respect our inner beauty just as much as our outer beauty. We are obsessed with quality and have been manufacturing on the same Swabian site for over 50 years, using methods that are still largely manual. In a company that is a Foundation and has no need to think about shareholders. It needs only to respect itself, civil society and the natural environment.

Colour Correcting Powder £25

Fresh and refined: Dr. Hauschka Colour Correcting Powder. This powder from Dr. Hauschka includes four different translucent shades to perfect and even out the complexion. The pistachio tone neutralises redness, apricot emphasises your natural skin tone, a hint of vanilla brightens shadows, and light brown combines all four shades in our beautifully balancing Colour Correcting Powder. Apply the powder directly to the skin or on top of your chosen foundation. It is suitable for all skin tones.

Foundation £30, 30ml

The natural make-up base. Dr. Hauschka Foundation provides lightweight, even coverage that blends seamlessly with your natural skin tone and luminosity. The mineral pigments contained in the formulation reliably cover up skin irregularities and redness. Use our Foundation as a natural base for your make-up or to balance parts of your complexion with the concealer brush. Discover the versatility of this Dr. Hauschka Make-up must-have. Allow your regular day cream to absorb before applying the Foundation.

Loose Powder £27

The lightest touch: Dr. Hauschka Loose Powder. So delicate yet so effective – our Loose Powder perfects your complexion and sets your makeup. Apply the Loose Powder either with our Powder Brush or with the included powder puff. The transparent composition of mineral pigments blends naturally with the colour nuances of your skin or with previously applied tinted products.

For more information visit www.drhauschka.co.uk

Loose Powder This powder is very fine and leaves your skin with a lovely matt finish. Its natural ingredients mean that it doesn’t dry or irritate your skin but gives a lovely finish either straight on to your skin or on top of a foundation cream. A great product. JP 80 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

Foundation A little goes a long way with this foundation. It smells lovely, sinks into the skin naturally and leaves skin looking fab. VP

Colour Correcting Powder This pressed powder is great at colour correcting redness, dark circles and uneven skin tones. Its easy to use and is a light powder. It gives a matt finish. The only down side is there isn’t a brush to apply it with. CB


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Day wear, occasion wear and accessories Designer labels at affordable prices We are presently accepting Winter/Spring wear

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The Fabulous

Leather Shop of Belper YOUR LOCAL RADLEY STOCKIST

2a Chapel Street, Belper, Derby DE56 1AR Tel: 01773 822794

19 Church Street Ashbourne Tel: 01335 343025 Wed 10-1. Tues,Thur,Fri 10-4. Saturday 10-5.

Swancar Farm Country House

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SUNDAY, 12 JANUARY 2020 12-4PM

Photographs by Chris Snowden

PLEASE CALL TO REGISTER YOUR INTEREST

SWANCAR FARM, TROWELL MOOR, TROWELL, NOTTINGHAM NG9 3PQ

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Can you pamper your way to

beautiful skin?

B

eing truthful my beauty regime is pretty meticulous, one day I can be Kim K the next Bear Grylls. I also have to admit to not being particular familiar with facials. I often spend time on a full cleanse once a week, and then make do with any make-up remover and toner that happens to be on offer for the rest. So, as you can imagine I jumped at the invite from Prestige Hair & Beauty Clinic for a facial, not just any facial I may add, an Environ facial! Prestige is located on the marketplace in the heart of Belper, and has been established over 20 years. The owner of this inviting yet professional establishment is Sue llic. And what Sue doesn’t know isn’t worth knowing, with over 16years in the industry she has a wealth of valuable knowledge and a keen eye for perfection. Sue prides herself on keeping ahead of new developments, technology, and the latest trends constantly hitting the market. The Environ facial. I had no clue what this was, but I knew I wanted one! Google to the rescue and the first thing I saw was celebs have them, today was my Kim K day. As I walked into the salon, instantly I was welcomed by one of the staff member’s and the smell of clean hair. My appointment began with a consultation and skin analysis by Sue herself. This was so she could find out exactly where my skin currently is, my routine, what products I use, my general health and what areas I need addressing. Vitamin A was mentioned a lot, and with Sues knowledge she fully explained its benefits and what it actually does. Often overshadowed by more ‘popular’ vitamins and supplements B, C and D, I now know it plays a vital role in healthy vision, efficient neurological function and promoting healthy skin.

Sue agrees this needs addressing (in the nicest way possible) and explains about hydrating my skin at the same time. And well who doesn’t want to look healthier, more plump and younger in 60 minutes. Next I was into the beautiful treatment room on actually the comfiest bed ever, for my targeted facial. And wow, amazing! It was unlike anything I had experienced before. Once Sue had cleansed my face and neck, she applied cool soothing gels and then activated these using a wand that gave off sound waves and electric pulses. I thought “this is fabulous and so relaxing”, then I was asked to prepare for the main event, ‘The Mask’ itself ! It felt like a creamy cool, soft liquid being painted on my face, including over my eyes and my mouth, (Sue did ask me during this if I was claustrophobic and wanted my eyes leaving) but I went all out. Once she had finished painting, another electrical pulse was attached to the top of the mask, she said some people feel a slight tingling but I didn’t feel anything other than sleepy and in heaven. During the 20 minutes of pure bliss, I received a hand and arm massage. The mask peeled off in one piece, which did look slightly funny. Looking in the mirror I looked bright, awake and most importantly, I had a healthy glow. Sue explained that the results come after 1-2 days, and it’s always best to follow a treatment plan for maximum results. Whilst looking in the mirror at my new complexion Sue very kindly fetched some make-up to apply for me (knowing I was heading back out to work after). This was from the Jane Iredale range which I had been eyeing up during the consultation. I have to add, I looked amazing, the make-up was so light I couldn’t feel I was wearing any at all. Two days later I got asked for ID. Lisa Johnson age 34.

Talking about vision, I told Sue one of my ‘problem’ areas was around my eyes, and the arrival of the dreaded ‘crows feet’. UV exposure is one of the causes and I admitted to being a sun bed fanatic in my slightly younger days. During most of my working day I’m looking at a screen whether it be computer or phone, and it turns out I should be wearing a sun screen! What! But yes, it’s true google it…

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Sparkle 82 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk


BEAUTY CLINIC HAIR STUDIO

&

Ch G AV if t ris t AI LA Vou mas BL E O che N rs

New for 2019 Reborn Beautiful Skin Regime Plan On-line or in our Salon

S

electing the right products for your skin and body can be a minefield but here at Prestige Beauty Clinic we offer you the opportunity to have a 60 minute personal consultation, on-line or in salon, with our skincare expert and salon owner, Sue llic.

At the 8 week stage, all our clients on our Reborn Beautiful Skin Regime plan will be offered either a half price 30 minute Environ Collagen treatment in salon or, if you are an on-line client, we will offer you a 30 minute skin consultation and 50% off your next skin care product purchase*.

You will receive a bespoke treatment plan tailored to your own specific needs – and your pocket.

You can be part of our new and exclusive Reborn Beautiful Skin Club, where you will be the first to know about any special offers on product or treatments and be invited to take part in special events throughout the year.

After 2 weeks, we will contact you to ensure that you are happy with your new regime, to check that you fully understand how to use the products and make sure that you are reaching optimum skin health.

LIN

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LIPO MASSAGE LOSE WEIGHT, INCH LOSS, TONING & FIRMING

Go to our new website where you can purchase a life changing skin consultation or give us a call at the salon.

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Add some

Sparkle T

he latest range of leather bags and accessories from Gianni Conti are now available at The Fabulous Leather Shop of Belper, 2a Chapel Street, Belper, Derbyshire DE56 1AR. Telephone 01773 822794.

G

ift shopping the easy way.... We can help you choose from our extensive collections of ladies fashions and jewellery, men’s and ladies shoes, boots, slippers, socks, scarves, hats, purses and wallets. We will also gift wrap them for you free of charge. What could be better? Call into Wigley’s Shoes, 18-20 St John Street, Ashbourne, Derbyshire. Tel: 01335 342884

84 | www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk

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ooking for that designer handbag, jewellery gift, or a fabulous designer dress or shoes then look no further than Second Chance Dress Agency 19 Church Street, Ashbourne. 01335 343025 Designer labels to suit all budgets, stock changes daily.


THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING

YOUR LOCAL JEWELLER

from

Tudor Jewellers‌

81 High Street, Alfreton DE55 7DP Tel: 01773 835990 47 South Street, Ilkeston DE7 5QT Tel: 0115 930 3004

Keep warm and dry this winter in our collection of

H

ardwood Logs recently saw an exciting development with the launch of their new shop. Handmade candles from On a Wick & a Prayer, beautifully crafted wooden sculptures, fire baskets and log stands made by a local blacksmith, are just some of the unique, quality, locally made items on display. Set in a beautifully renovated barn within the farmyard, they welcome visitors to browse or just to have a chat about some of the lovely objects on display. Hardwood Logs, Holly Grange Farm, Lea Moor, Lea Matlock DE4 5RA (01629) 534475

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Sparkle

Leading brands stocked in Ladies and Mens footwear visit our ladies fashion floor for and much more

Tel 01335 342884 18-20 St John Street, Ashbourne, Derbyshire DE6 1GH www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 85


Directory Call 01773 830344 for great series advertising prices including a free artwork design service ROB’S PRESSURE WASHING CLEANING SERVICES

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NEW ALFA ROMEO GIULIA AND STELVI0 New Alfa Romeo Giulia an Stelvio • New infotainment with connected services, touchscreen and completely redesigned humanmachine interface at the heart of the driver-centred concept • New ADAS and level 2 autonomous driving systems across the range • Tangible quality in the new interiors, with updated materials and new layouts • The new range structure offers trims with clear, well differentiated identities

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Model shown is Land Cruiser Icon 5 dr 2.8 D-4D Auto. Official fuel consumption figures in mpg (1/lOOkm): combined 27 .3 (10.3)-30.1 (9.36). Combined C02 201 g/km. Figures are provided for comparability purposes; only compare fuel consumption and C02 figures with other cars tested to the same technical procedures. These figures may not reflect real life driving results. Fuel consumption and C02 produced varies significantly depending on a number of factors, including the accessories fitted (postregistration), driving style, conditions, speed and vehicle load. All models and grades are certified according to the World Harmonised Light Vehicle Test Procedure (WLTP), which replaces the New European Driving Cycle test procedure (NEDC). All C02 figures quoted are NEDC equivalent. This means the C02 figures are based on the new WLTP test procedure but calculated (using a standard European calculation method) to allow comparison with the NEDC test procedure and will be used to calculate vehicle tax on first registration. All mpg figures quoted are full WLTP figures. More information can be found by visiting: www.vehicle-certification-agency.gov.uk/fcb/wltp.asp year

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debut of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) that enable the vehicles to deliver the highest level of autonomous driving currently legal. Level 2 autonomy is achieved when the driver can leave the car to control the accelerator, brake and steering in specific conditions, via electronic systems that require continual monitoring by the driver, but support them to offer greater comfort on long journeys. The Stelvio Super is available with a choice of two engines, a 200hp 2.0-litre petrol engine with allwheel drive or a 190hp 2.2-litre turbodiesel engine with rear-wheel drive, both combined with an 8-speed automatic transmission.

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www.countryimagesmagazine.co.uk | 89


The Scrooge Veterinarian

I

’ve been very good this year (well, 99% of the time!), so I’m optimistic I’ll have a present or two under the Underhill tree. Hopefully your furbabies have got a surprise or two coming their way as well. Before I get to the treats and goodies that they CAN have, I’m going to unleash the Scrooge Veterinarian in me and say what human yummies their tummies CAN’T have.

So, no nuts, grapes or alcohol; what’s next on the naughty list? It’s got to be chocolate, purely down to its commonality in most households. Let’s face it, there are Advent calendars, choccy decorations for the tree, and more tins of chocolates than you can shake a stick at strewn all around the place, perfect hunting grounds for marauding mutts and pilfering puss-cats!

Nuts are a big no-no for your furries I’m afraid. Not only do the smaller sized ones present a choking hazard to cats and dogs, Macadamia nuts are harmful to hounds; their digestive, muscular and nervous systems can all be affected. Alcohol is obviously another nasty for animals to have, although in fairness it doesn’t tend to be as common a problem as food related items. Beyond the odd pet that likes a splosh of lager at the pub with its human, animals don’t gravitate towards alcohol. The problem tends to be when foods have alcohol in them and the effects of alcohol are more concentrated in animals if ingested.

The theobromine in chocolate is toxic to dogs, and even more so for cats; the darker the chocolate, the more harmful it is too. There are specific pet friendly “chocolates” out there, so they can indulge too, if you buy these for them.

We all get a little giddy at this time of year and start to indulge in mince pies and fruit cake (steeped in brandy of course) – not to mention the pudding itself on Christmas Day. Whilst it’s okay for us to indulge in these foods they are toxic to cats and dogs because of their grape/raisin/sultana content The exact toxic element in grapes is unknown but in large enough quantities it can cause kidney toxicity in your beloved pet. Vomiting, diarrhoea and lethargy are all common early clinical signs of their ingestion. The high fat content of pastries, pies and cakes isn’t good for pooch or kitty either; to be fair though, it’s more likely that your dog will wolf a mince pie down, than your cat.

Cheese is easier to deal with, although not so easy for your pet to digest; the lactose can upset their digestive systems although it isn’t usually life threatening. The allium can causes anaemia in cats and dogs, i.e. it reduces the amount of red blood cells (the bodies’ oxygen carriers) in your pets’ bloodstream; this can make them breathless, lacking in energy, and generally feeling a bit rubbish.

Other common hazards are nutmeg, cheese and members of the allium family: leeks, chives, onions, and garlic. Alongside cloves and cinnamon nutmeg is a spice that epitomises the festive season. In small quantities it may “only” cause an upset tummy, but if ingested in larger quantities it can cause hallucinations, disorientation, and possibly seizures too.

Nowadays, nothing is sacred not even healthy foods. Sugar-free sweets and gum, beloved of the health conscious crew, contain xylitol, an artificial sweetener, a sugar replacement. Animals experience a surge in insulin which may lead to vomiting, a lack of

co-ordination, seizures and potential Liver damage. More general hazards lay with high salt-content foods such as salted peanuts or gravy made from stock cubes, rich sauces and stuffings. Also highly fatty foods such as cream and brandy butter. Turkey bones are also clearly a hazard to your pets’ health Let’s get to the part where I say what your fido and feline can have.That doesn’t mean that they can have their very own festive foodmountain though – portion control still needs to be applied. Lean turkey, chicken, goose, duck or whatever meat or fish you’re celebrating with are all permissible for your fur-babies to have, not too much though. As a general rule, Cats aren’t overly crazy for vegetables, but if they want a bit of carrot or swede then why not let them have it. Dogs on the other hand, rarely turn their noses up at anything, so let them have green beans, parsnip, carrot, swede, mashed and new potatoes (not overly buttered though) sweet potatoes and sprouts. This is the perfect opportunity to make your own treats; that way you know that they’re safe for your beloved pet and they’ll more than likely work out cheaper than bought ones to be honest. There are loads of recipes on the internet, on sites such as Pinterest or the animal charities’ sites. I even stumbled upon a recipe for homemade diabetic dog treats, using chopped liver! For cat owners, the RSPCA site has a fab recipe that uses Salmon, but you could adapt it and use Tuna, Prawns, or whatever fish your puss prefers. Homemade treats are pretty speedy to make too, about 30 minutes in total – ideal for us time-poor “parents”. Best of all though, your entire household will be able to sit down, relax, and enjoy some treats. Until next time; stay safe, stay well, and be happy.

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