February / March 2019 Delivered to 9,000 homes
Issue 59 | FREE
A Free Magazine for Ripley, Marehay, Codnor & Waingroves
RIPLEY EDITION
Packed full of useful information and local advertisers
Your independent community magazine
Inside:
Win a 2 course Sunday lunch for 2 people at The Bulls Head in Denby Win a bottle of Champagne FREE FLOWERS Nominate someone deserving!
CONNECTING LOCAL PEOPLE WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES
WouLd you Like cLeaner carpets? Competitive prices. Latest equipment & cleaning fluids. Friendly and reliable service.
Let me bring your carpets back to life. For a free quote call Roy Milner:
07980 254050 (Based in Kilburn Village)
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Stunning Garden Rooms
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Call into our show site and see 23 of our stunning buildings on display. Let us help you create the perfect garden room escape. Find us at: The Rose Gardens, 251 Toton Lane, Stapleford, Nottingham NG9 7JA Call today for your free no obligation design visit: 0115 932 8888 See website for 2019 offers: www.cabinmaster.co.uk www.arcticcabins.co.uk Our sister companies:
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The Pet Servant Your pet is much more than just an animal – it’s a member of your family. And you wouldn’t trust just anyone to look after a family member, would you? Luckily, you can turn to Fiona, The Pet Servant, and relax in the knowledge that when you’re out or away, your beloved pet will be looked after by someone who truly cares. Offering a range of services from dog walking to overnight pet sitting at home, for animals from dogs and cats to chickens, Fiona is a qualified canine first aider and registered with NARPS (National Association of Pet Sitters and Dog Walkers). “I’m called The Pet Servant because I am literally a servant to your pet’s every need! I never rush animals, spending quality time with them to provide the care and attention they deserve as well as catering for their practical needs. A half-hour dog walk is always a full half-hour, from ‘paw to floor’. I also believe that one size of walk doesn’t fit all, so I offer a tailored service – I don’t walk large groups, taking only up to two dogs at once or three if they’re from the same household.”
be nervous natured and need a caring, patient approach. “I love looking after the animals I’m entrusted with; I get to know them as individuals and enjoy learning their characters.” To continue her support of animals in need, Fiona makes a quarterly donation from The Pet Servant profits to a different animal charity. She also offers pet portraiture, which began as a hobby but is now increasingly in demand! If you’re looking for kind, caring, reliable pet care, or pet portraiture, call Fiona on 07488 392162 or search ‘The Pet Servant Derbyshire’ on Facebook.
Fiona has always been an animal lover, volunteering for many animal charities over the years. She’s experienced with the special requirements of rescue animals, who can
I like All Things Local magazine because….. It is a fantastic way to hear about good local services and trades people in the Belper area. J.B from Belper August / September2012 June / July 2012 | Issue | Issue Delivered to 9,000 31 | FREE32 | FREE Delivered homes to 9,000 homes Holbrook Lower Kilburn Coxbench Milford Kilburn Denby Horsley Morley Duffield Woodhouse Horsley Smalley Little Eaton
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August / September June / July 2012 | Issue 2012 | Issue 24 Delivered 31 | FREE | FREE 9,000 homes Delivered toto 9,000 homes A Free Magazine for Belper Residents
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Your
August / September June / July 2012 | Issue 2012 | Issue 20 Delivered 31 | FREE | FREE 9,000 homes Delivered toto 9,000 homes A Free Magazine for Ripley, Marehay, Codnor & Waingroves
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on er Editimagazine ge magazine Belp Villa t community independent community Your independen
Inside:
All Things Win a Spa Day for 2 Local is at Ragdale Hall celebrat ing its anniversary too!
Your
Win 2 tickets to see The Fisherman’s Friends at Derby Assembly Inside: Rooms Win plus a signed a Sunday book & CD Carvery for 2 at the Marquis of Ormonde Win a £20 voucher Win Sunday Lunch atforRedd Therapy Rooms 2 at The Bell, Smalley Win a bottle of Champagne Win a bottle FREE FLOWERSof– Champagne nominate someone deserving! YOUR HANDY FREE GUIDE – CONNECTING CONNECTING PEOPLE LOCAL WITHLOCAL LOCALPEOPLE BUSINESSES. WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES.
School Uniforms Official Scout & Guide Shop
SPORTSWEAR
Alla SpaThings Win Day for 2 Local is at Ragdale Hall celebratin g its Win 2 tickets to anniversa see ry too! The Fisherman’s Friends
Your
Inside:
at Derby Assembly Inside: plus signed book Rooms Win aaSunday Carvery& CD for 2 at the Marquis of Ormonde Win Sunday Lunch for a £20Bell, 2Win voucher at The at Redd Therapy Smalley Rooms Win a bottle bottleofofChampagne Champagne FREE FLOWERS – nominate someone YOUR HANDY FREE deserving! CONNECTING LOCALGUIDE – YOUR HANDY FREE GUIDE PEOPLE WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES. – CONNECTING PEOPLE LOCAL WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES.
NEW TOY LINES AND LATEST CRAZES ALL IN STOCK
School Uniforms Official Scout & Guide Shop SPORTSWEAR
Alla SpaThings Win Day for 2 Local is at Ragdale Hall celebratin g its Win 2 tickets to anniversa see ry too! The Fisherman’s Friends
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For a free consultation, telephone today 01773 853358
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at Derby Assembly Inside: Rooms plus signed book Win aaSunday Carvery& CD for 2 at the Marquis of Ormonde Win Sunday Lunch for a £20Bell, 2Win voucher at The at Redd Therapy Rooms Smalley Win a bottle bottleofofChampagne Champagne FREE FLOWERS – nominate someone YOUR HANDY FREE deserving! CONNECTING LOCALGUIDE – YOUR HANDY FREE GUIDE PEOPLE WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES. – CONNECTING PEOPLE LOCAL WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES.
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Bookkeeping & accountancy services
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Hello readers I hope you all had a wonderful Christmas and New Year. We had a great time. I’m still enjoying my 50th year. Good friends of ours Peter & Maria live in Shepperton (famous for its film studios) and invited us to stay with them for a few days just before Christmas. Maria also turned 50 last year and to celebrate our half-centuries, they’d bought us tickets to go and see an Adam Ant concert at The Roundhouse in Camden with them. Wow! What a venue and what a gig! To fill the void between Christmas and New Year, we’d booked 3 days in Riga, the capital city of Latvia. Ruth who works with me on this magazine, together with her husband Ed and two other friends Jane and Grant joined us. Well, you could’ve knocked me over with a feather when our transport to East Midlands Airport arrived; Ruth and Ed had arranged a beautiful stretch limo as yet another 50th surprise! Thank you both so much, it was a wonderful start to a wonderful city break. Riga is a beautiful city with plenty to see and do. I’d highly recommend it.
EDITOR’S LETTER ADVERTISEMENT BOOKING DEADLINE FOR APRIL/MAY 2019 IS WEDNESDAY 20 FEBRUARY 2019. Advertising Enquiries: Ruth Brown E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk T: 01332 883140 or 07545 261034 W: www.allthingslocal.co.uk
Winners’ Corner
CONGRATULATIONS David Kitchen from Belper who has won a bottle of Champagne.
Thank you to The Bulls Head in Denby for providing a 2 course Sunday lunch for 2 people as this edition’s crossword prize. Before I go, here’s a quick reminder to put your clocks forward an hour on Sunday 31 March. Mother’s Day falls on the same day.
CONGRATULATIONS Linda Hunt from Kilburn who has won a 2 course Sunday lunch for 2 people at The Kings Head in Duffield. Friends in Riga.
Have a lovely couple of months and I’ll be back in April. Karyn Karyn Milner, Publisher/Editor E: karyn@allthingslocal.co.uk T: 01332 882882 or 07977 272770 W: www.allthingslocal.co.uk Follow us on Twitter @ATLMagazines
Helen Young – Editorial Copywriter & Coordinator.
Contents Competitions & Puzzles Prize crossword – Win a 2 course Sunday lunch for 2 People at The Bulls Head, Denby Children’s Puzzles Friendship Blooms – FREE FLOWERS! Champagne Sudoku
6 52 57 61
Business & Professional Lifestyle Food, Drink, Entertainment Health, Beauty, Fitness Motors Home & Garden Children & Education Community
2 11 15 20 25 28 50 54
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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Prize Crossword
Win a 2 course Sunday lunch for 2 people at The Bulls Head, 17 Denby Common, Denby Village DE5 8PW. Drinks excluded. Across
1. Chewing (6) 4. Acquiesced (6) 9. Garbage (7) 10. Religious images (5) 11. Points on a saw (5) 12. Rising (7) 13. Impersonations (11) 18. Evolve, mature (7) 20. First-rate (5) 22. Arm joint (5) 23. To carry out, to perform (7) 24. Robin red-_____ (6) 25. Modifies for purpose (6)
Down
1. Explodes, pops (6) 2. Item of furniture (5) 3. Not that or this (7) 5. Sorrow, sadness (5) 6. Wearing away (7) 7. Blueprint (6) 8. Deep thinker (11) 14. Mobile, transportable (7)
15. Alternatively (7) 16. Word describing an action (6) 17. Crawls, inches (6) 19. Grassy gardens (5) 21. Rotund (5)
Just complete the simple crossword, cut out and return to: Prize Crossword, All Things Local, 74 Woodhouse Road, Kilburn, Belper, Derbyshire DE56 0NA. Remember to provide your name, address and telephone number. Closing date: WEDNESDAY 13TH FEBRUARY 2019. All entries are destroyed after the closing date and no information is given to any third party.
Life List Additives Fad-itives If you read the ingredients on most processed foods you’ll quickly learn two things: you need stronger reading glasses and those lists use language differently. An anticaking agent sounds like early closing at the baker’s, while bulking agents immediately makes me think of pies, pasties or chips. Maybe those two agents could cancel one another out? Surely stabilisers belong on a bicycle and what is a sweetener if not a bribe? (Doubly so, if the bribe is chocolate.) Food colouring – something you’d assume we could get from the actual food itself – actually dates back as least as far as the Egyptians! The only thing we used to consider to be an antioxidant, especially in a crowded room, was smoking. When I see the words ‘flavour enhancers’ I can’t help thinking of good old-fashioned condiments – most things perk up with a pinch of salt, or perhaps some brown sauce. (Not so good with desserts though.)
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There can be no better thickener than Reality TV, which is also the biggest contradiction. The only glazing agents I’m familiar with are egg white or glass – for entirely different reasons. Apparently, there’s an additive called tracer gas, which naturally conjures up images of Brussels sprouts, cabbage or lentils. (And not just images.) And a special mention must go to additive sulphur dioxide. Yes, it’s a preservative, and yes, it smells like a burnt match, but why, oh why, have some of us started spelling it with an ‘f’? By Derek Thompson
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Supply and fitting of all Domestic and Contract Carpets Supply and fitting of Domestic and Contract Vinyls Supply and fitting of Real Wood and Laminate Floorings Supply and fitting of Karndean Floorings Supply and fitting of Sisal and Natural Floorings Supply and fitting of Border Work for Carpets and Carpet Runners
We Offer: • Guaranteed Workmanship (following TSI approved code of practice) • Free Fitting Service • Free Estimating and Measuring • Free Disposal of old carpet and floorings • Free Moving & Replacement of Furniture • Trimming of doors • Insurance work undertaken & free Insurance quotes
Opening times:
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday - 9am to 5.00pm Wednesday 9am to 12.30pm & Saturday - 9am to 4.00pm
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL Business &&Professional Legal Matters Shacklocks Solicitors Authority, or alternatively a FENSA
Legal Matters:
Thinking of Moving Housefrom in 2019? In each edition legal advisors Shacklocks deal with important legal topics. Ahead! This month Marion Vesey Think (pictured) invites us to think about
makingaaproperty decision that Selling can will be abenefit wearisome future generations. process, but it can be made less Making a Will business. planning It is a stressful withis aa serious little forward time which gives many people cause to and careful stop some and think aboutdecisions. how they want to be
remembered when they are gone. Firstly, find the title deeds for your property. This isMany particularly if youby have the peopleimportant are attracted theowned idea of property prior to 1985. Compulsory registration of doing something to help others less properties the themselves Land Registry wasthey introduced fortunate at than after pass in Amber Valley on 1stifApril If you away, particularly their1985. family are owned your property before that date, are that adequately provided for the or ifchances they have no the property will not be registered at like the Land Registry. close family. Whilst some still the idea In case, it will be extremely to there sell the ofthat supporting major national difficult charities, property providing your solicitor with the are manywithout who prefer to benefit more local original deeds.close The same might be true if the causes title or causes to their heart, possibly property has have been had in thea family sinceinvolvement before 1st where they personal April 1985. Ifsupport you acquired your property after 1st or received during their lifetime. April 1985, then the details of the property and Something thatofour team will discuss withLand your ownership it will be registered at the clients inalthough this situation is the of setting Registry, providing youridea solicitor with any up their own charitable whichwill canstill be of pre-registration deeds and trust documents continue to provide support for charitable help to them. causes of their choosing long after they have passed away. your ownorcharity Think about anyCreating works, extensions repairs means out thattoyour provide carried yourtrustees propertycan since you bought it. support to those who help most. and Your buyer’s solicitor willneed require certificates There can be a great sense works, of satisfaction documents relating to certain so ‘dig in knowing that your will carry them out’ so you havetrustees them ready to passout to your your wishes after you have that In solicitor as soon as an offer hasgone beenand accepted. your name will be associated with such good particular, extensions or structural alterations may deeds even after you Permission are no longer around. have required Planning or Building Regulations Approval. If you cannot locate the At Shacklocks we have set up a number of paperwork, it might be wise to contact the charitable trusts over the 150 years or so we Local Authority with a view to obtaining copies have been in business and we still look after in advance. those trusts today. One of the charitable
trusts we look after, for example, was Any new windows installed 2002toshould either established by a will in thesince 1940’s provide have Building Regulations Approval from the Local accommodation for elderly residents.
[knowledge+application] www.shacklocks.co.uk
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certificate from a FENSA registered window installer. For any electrical work carried out 70 later thesince trust2005, is stillyou will need to to years your property providing that accommodation. provide the certificates given to you by your electrician. Similarly any gas boilers or gas fires Another of the2005 trusts we look installed after should have been installed by after up by who a client a Gaswas Safeset engineer will have provided you who to help people certificate. The with wanted the relevant compliance with particular medical absence of documents and certificates could be a conditions. Herit kindness problem when comes to has your sale. enabled her trustees to provide financial support to a gifted Before marketing the property, you will need to young musician who has experienced a obtain anofEnergy This is number healthPerformance issues that Certificate. have interfered required under law. Iftoyou are selling through with her education, enable that child to an estate agent, then estate agent will usually be educated in theyour most appropriate arrange this. environment. give some theupprofessionals AFinally, Charitable Trustthought can betoset either you choose. When itwith comes to choosing during your lifetime savings and your solicitor, it can be aup bigalready, advantage choose a investments built or to alternatively solicitor with a soundprepared knowledge of that the area, through a specially Will will whotake is experienced in property only effect following yourtransactions, death and andtherefore who is close hand, soyou youof cancapital meet them will notatdeprive or face-to-face andyour they lifetime. can guide you through the income during whole process. Our team at Shacklocks have a particular speciality in preparing arrangements this The information given above is for general of guidance kind andadvice also of acting as professional only and should always be sought for your trustees enable wishes to be fulfilled and particulartocircumstances. instructions to be followed. David Woodhead is a Chartered Legal IfExecutive you are thinking of supporting in the property team charities at through yourLLP Will or during your Shacklocks . Shacklocks LLPlifetime have offices with a lump sum, whyRipley not talk us about in Allestree, Belper, andtoMansfield. the different ways inofwhich wehome can help If you are thinking moving in you benefit those good causes,no-nonsense, and how to make 2019 and want practical, the most of the taxadvice, rules that enable a on face-to-face legal contact David charitable causeor toemail benefit. 01773 822333 davidw@shacklocks. co.uk to find out how Shacklocks can help. Call us at Shacklocks to talk about how we can help you to help your favourite local causes.
Telephone Shacklocks on 0845 602 2344 or email me at marionv@shacklocks.co.uk. David Woodhead
Business & Professional
Money Matters: A Winter Tale
As I write this in early New Year 2019, we are not in the grips of winter weather as we sometimes know it. However, we seem to have some winter blues with the investment markets. We have been here before. Since the start of October ‘18, we have seen many investment markets suffer some of the biggest falls in the last 7 years. It’s possible that, by the time you read this, the markets will have recovered or fallen again. Some of our clients are quite sensitive to these changes, others less so. The difference between the clients is usually philosophical and acceptence versus emotional. Currently, America is engaged in a spat with China over trade tariffs, the Federal Reserve is putting up interest rates quicker than was expected (to slow down the gigantic US economy), Europe has political uncertainties and of course Brexit. All of this will happen and pass; the consequences will come and go. Whilst past performance is no guide to future performance most of these events and spats will wash through and we will emerge again and markets will rise. They will also fall again; as sure as eggs is eggs! The key to the survival is having time to invest. Without the necessity of duration, investors can realise real losses should they be thinking of drawing funds from the markets during these adverse conditions. With time and patience – and some nerve – you can emerge unscathed, as we can look back to the global crisis in the markets of 2007/2008 and subsequent recovery.
Why do people invest? Usually it’s because there is a conscious (or subconscious) understanding that, to make your money grow in real terms (i.e. to beat inflation), you must consider investing in some other assets besides cash. It is not to say cash is a bad place, but in real terms over the long term its value is often eroded significantly because of the continuing low rates and rising costs of living. Your pound doesn’t go as far as it did last year, more often than not, as prices rise in most cases. Other assets include (not exclusively), property, equities, GILTS and corporate bonds. Associated with each of these main assets are various risks including market, inflation, taxation, political, sequential, longevity, and legislation risk. Experience shows that another major risk is investor sentiment. When the going gets tough, irrational fear can step in and can make investors pull the plug on assets which are acting in accordance with expectation such as drops in value. Such hasty emotion-driven actions can result in crystallising losses when more patience, time and tolerance could see recovery and healthy returns. So, what happens between the writing of this article and you reading it is unknown. But the world will continue to turn and so will investments. My New Year top tip is to relax and give things time to do what they are supposed to do.
By Kevin Glover, Belper IFS This information is general only and is not intended to address your particular requirements. The data above should not be relied upon in its entirety and shall not be deemed to be or constitute advice. No individual or company should act upon such information without receiving appropriate professional advice after a thorough examination of their particular situation.
10 Chapel Street Belper DE56 1AR
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Lifestyle
Just a Thought... All the Small Things Time really is marching on (see what I did there – March … hilarious …) and for some of us our well made plans for a ‘new year, new me’ may have started to wane a little. Maybe those 10k runs are a little less frequent? Or the ‘salad only’ eating plan has decided that chocolate raisins still count as one of your five a day? (They absolutely do, by the way.) Or life has gotten so busy you’ve resolved to never make another resolution again…! To you, dear readers, I say this: small things. It’s very easy to become overwhelmed by a giant goal or an abstract concept of what we will/should achieve. However, I have decided that I am going to concentrate on all the small things in my life and, when you add them up, things can actually
look pretty terrific. I may not be Gwyneth Paltrow but I have started eating more vegetables and fruit. I may not be Paula Radcliffe but I’m out walking more and getting lots of fresh air. I may not be Superwoman, but I am juggling two children (figuratively, honestly!), one husband, a household and several projects … and I still leave the house in shoes rather than slippers! So please, give yourself a break – you really are doing just fine and actually, when you break it down, the small things in life really are better; which is another excuse to open that box of perfectly sized chocolates and pour a little glass of wine. Hurrah to that!
By Fliss Goldsmith of Belper
Dolly’s Fabrics Nether Heage
Supplier of garment making materials and accessories including calico, poly cotton, netting, yarns, zips, buttons etc
WORKSHOPS Dressmaking, General Sewing Skills Young Sewers 8yrs +
Please call Vanessa 07807 019839 34 Malthouse Lane, Nether Heage DE56 2AS OPEN 10 -2 , Mon, Tues, Thur, Fri & 10 - 4 Sat To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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Lifestyle
Short Story La Chouette “Mum, come in here,” Jennifer whispered, dragging Doreen into the downstairs toilet. “Have you seen what Gary’s got in his rucksack?” “No love,” Doreen replied, steadying herself on the towel rail; it was a tight space for two people and a rucksack. “I don’t go nosing through your brother’s belongings, and neither should you.” “Shhh, he could be out of the shower any minute,” Jennifer said. “I need to show you something. Have you noticed he’s been behaving a bit strangely this week?” “He has been a bit jumpy,” Doreen agreed reluctantly. “I thought it meant love was in the air.” “Me too,” Jennifer nodded. “You know how I said he should take Elaine somewhere special for Valentine’s Day?” “You wouldn’t stop going on about it!” Doreen interrupted, sternly. “I had to!” Jennifer declared. “The poor thing, all he ever does is take her for walks in the countryside. What woman wouldn’t rather be wined and dined somewhere fancy?” “She’s the outdoors type,” Doreen shrugged.
“What are you trying to say, Jennifer?” “Well, what if Gary just imagines that Elaine’s his girlfriend?” Jennifer said carefully. “What if he’s just been watching her from afar with these binoculars?” “You mean like a stalker?” Doreen shook her head. “Our Gary’s not like that.” “And you know how he finally agreed to book a fancy restaurant, La Chouette, for tonight? Well I googled the restaurant,” Jennifer said. “It doesn’t exist.” Doreen went pale.
“Honestly Mum, is she a woman or a Labrador?” Jennifer shuddered. “They even go out in the rain.”
“What are you two doing hiding in here?” Gary surprised them both by opening the door. He frowned. “Why have you got my bag?”
“He seems happy,” Doreen said.
Jennifer took a moment to compose herself.
“That’s what I thought,” Jennifer said. “I just had this notion that he might be planning on popping the question tonight.” “What a lovely thought!” Doreen gasped.
“How do you explain these?” She held up the binoculars. Gary’s face froze. “They’re for this evening,” he snapped, “and none of your business.”
Jennifer continued, “I had this hunch that I if looked in his rucksack I’d find an engagement ring.”
“We know La Chouette doesn’t exist,” Jennifer said. “It’s time to come clean.”
Doreen grasped Jennifer’s arm. “And did you?”
Gary stared at her and then his face softened. “I said that just to get you off my case,” he said. “Elaine really isn’t interested in fancy restaurants.”
“No.” Jennifer opened the drawstring of Gary’s bag. “I found these. They’re night-vision binoculars, a thermos and some cheese sandwiches.” Both women looked at each other in horror. “Mum, tell me honestly, have you properly met this Elaine?” Jennifer asked. “He says she’s quite shy,” Doreen offered.
“Where are you going then?” Jennifer asked suspiciously. Gary sighed, “I’m taking her barn owl spotting.” “So you’re not stalking her then?” Doreen asked. “No, Mum,” Gary laughed. “She really is my girlfriend.” “That doesn’t sound very romantic,” Jennifer pouted.
“Don’t you think it’s odd that he only invites her round when we’re not here?”
Gary smiled. What Jennifer had failed to find was the diamond engagement ring he’d hidden in the lid of the thermos flask.
“I assumed he wanted some privacy.” Doreen felt flustered.
By Jackie Brewster
1212
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Lifestyle
And Another Thing... Tom and the Monkey Wrench
I drained my cocoa, turned off the bedside lamp and lay prostrate to await the Sandman’s dusty grip. Judging from the rhythmic breathing emanating from Sarah (My Dearly Beloved), I guessed she might already be far away in the Land of Nod. I was just about to begin my ritual slow motion leg flailing to avoid the cold spot when I heard it. Drip, drip… drip. That blasted pipe under the bathroom sink again. I prayed to the plumbing gods for it to stop. But no matter, Sarah was definitely asleep – or maybe not: “Tom can you hear that? Tom? Tom?” (Shove) “Mmmm…” “Don’t pretend you’re asleep. I told you to get that tap fixed. Did you ring Billy the Pipe?” Wrinkling my nose I buried my face into the pillow, pretending that I’d temporarily awoken, only to plunge back into the inky depths of slumber.
Sarah burst out laughing. “Monkey wrench? Where do you think you are? Screwfix?” Extracting myself from the cabinet I strode downstairs, through the kitchen and into the garage to locate my tool bag. If a job’s worth doing, etc. etc. Opening my bag of man implements I found: some used sand paper, an old biscuit tin full of nails, a toffee hammer, a fountain pen, a packet of tiny screwdrivers and - yes! Unbelievably, the one thing I needed. Triumphant, I bounded back upstairs to attend to my emergency DIY. I clamped my implement onto the offending nut. I pressed and I turned this way and that. Nothing.
“I’ll ring Billy tomorrow, I’m sure he’ll err…mmm…” Then, disaster – the duvet was flung over me like a massive folded omelette and out she went. Now doubly insulated, I squirmed under further, trying to make myself invisible.
Eventually Sarah tapped me on the shoulder. “Tom, what on earth is that?”
Through the endless folds of Egyptian cotton I could hear rummaging and shoving. But this was not Lady rummaging (clothes, dishcloths, bag of lipsticks) – this was Man rummaging (metal, wood and screws!). It was against the natural order of things, it was wrong. And then, horror of horrors – I heard banging! Banging? A woman doing man’s work! Humiliation heaped upon shame, I padded out to the bathroom where I stood rubbing my eyes and hovering as Sarah, with only her hind quarters visible, cussed and tutted under the sink. Desperately, I tried to formulate a sentence that would avoid annoying this virgin plumber. “Err, shall I fetch a torch darling?”
“That’s your Auntie Rita’s nut cracker. She’s been asking about it since the Christmas before last. You looked me in the eye and swore blind you didn’t know where it was. You fibber!”
“You can fetch me a plumber.” Testosterone taking over, I decided to wrest control. “Here, let me see.” Sarah withdrew angrily and, with less than sincere gesticulations, invited me to investigate. “Go on then, let’s get an expert opinion shall we?” Using my iPhone torch, I peered up at the tangle of copper pipes and fittings that looked more like a modern art installation than a method of carrying water to a tap. Gingerly, I massaged the offending joint as a teardrop of water enveloped my finger. “Pass me the monkey wrench.” I commanded.
“My monkey wrench.”
“Well she won’t miss it, Uncle Willy’s loaded.” “That’s not the point! Anyway, what possible use is that?” “Well, that thing under there is a nut isn’t it?” “Listen mate, there’s only one nut in this bathroom.” And with that, the dripping stopped. There, sorted. Unfortunately the dripping was replaced by a hiss and then a jet of pressured water that began soaking my slippers. “Tom! Right that’s it, ring that emergency number – now!” “At three o’clock in the morning? How much will that cost?” “A lot less than a divorce.” Two hours later a proper man in overalls stepped over the pots and pans and in a jiffy resolved the issue. Tired, wet and £135 poorer I retired to bed, joined by Sarah holding Auntie Rita’s prized possession. “Why have you still got hold of those? There’s no nuts need cracking in here.” Clicking the grips together Sarah replied, “Don’t be so sure Thomas, don’t be so sure.” By Tom Hughes Follow Tom @groomsdaybook
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Lifestyle
Travel Etosha National Park, Namibia Mountains, desert or ocean, Namibia is amazing – but did you know it was the first country in the world to include conservation in its constitution? Today, with its national parks alongside game and nature reserves, over 40% of the land is protected, a haven for the wildlife, so varied and abundant. The top viewing area is the Etosha National Park created in 1967 on a former game reserve, across the Kalahari basin up in the north-west. The name means the ‘Great White Place’, referring to a salt pan so large it can be seen from space. It’s a desert in the dry season, a land of mirages and sweeping wind, but during the summer rains it all comes alive as huge flocks of flamingos and other migrating birds return to their seasonal lagoon. Beyond the pan, which covers 23% of the park, the savannah ranges from open grasslands to dwarf shrubs, thorn bushes and trees, most common the acacias and the lovely Mopane whose leaves are shaped like butterflies. Wildlife thrives in all areas but some species have favourite habitats – for instance, elephants like to shelter under the trees; lions, on the other hand, find the perfect camouflage in tall golden grass, so the best way to tick names off your list is to trust the local guides. Sightings are guaranteed, they say, within three minutes of entering the park, though during the wet season, so beautifully lush and green, this may be more difficult. However, the dry season, June to October, is always rewarding, as animals wander across the arid land on their way to the waterholes. Best safari times are early or late in the day – be prepared for the cold – but what matters is not the distance covered but an attitude in tune with
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nature: slow down, stop and wait, look around, listen and, for sure, something will happen. So what might you see in such a pristine place rising like a dream out of this world? 113 species of mammals, 350 of birds, 110 of reptiles, amphibians and even fish. Once endangered species, such as elephants, lions, rhinos and the black-faced impalas that can jump 11 metres, are recovering well, but most common are zebras and gambolling springboks. Lucky visitors may spot a lonely leopard, a cheetah with her young or a speeding hyena, but the elegant giraffes and the long-horned creatures are there for all to see, be it a red hartebeest zigzagging away to escape a predator, a solitary greater kudu, an eland – the largest African antelope – or an oryx, the national animal. Then there are the little ones: the rock hyrax, the yellow mongoose, the black-backed jackal, the smallest antelope or dik-dik, and of course the birds: hornbills, plump red bishop, yellow masked weaver, lilac-breasted roller and many more. As the sun sets over the savannah, the gently floodlit waterholes are pure magic as animals approach ever so carefully, waiting patiently for their turn to drink under a starlit sky. By Solange Hando
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Food, Drink & Entertainment
Recipe
Salmon with Tomato and Coriander Salsa This low-fat supper is quick to make and is packed with flavour. If you prefer, replace the salmon with trout or sea bass fillets. Serves: 4 Ready in: 30 minutes Ingredients: 4 ripe tomatoes, halved 1 red onion, peeled and finely chopped 2 tbsp freshly chopped coriander ½ red chilli, deseeded and very finely chopped (optional) 2 tbsp lime juice 2 tbsp olive oil Salt and freshly ground black pepper 4 salmon fillets Boiled long-grain and wild rice, to serve
Serve the salmon fillets on a bed of boiled long-grain and wild rice, topped with the salsa.
Method: To make the salsa, scoop out and discard the tomato seeds and dice the flesh. Place in a bowl with the red onion, coriander, chilli (if using) and 1 tbsp each of the lime juice and olive oil. Season to taste with salt and freshly ground black pepper and set aside.
If you prefer to oven bake the salmon fillets, wrap in individual foil parcels and place on a baking tray. Bake in a preheated oven at 190C / fan 170C / gas mark 5 for 25 minutes.
Heat a large non-stick frying pan over a medium heat and add the remaining olive oil. Place the salmon fillets in the pan, skin-side down, and cook for 5-6 minutes. Turn each fillet over, sprinkle over the rest of the lime juice and cook for a further 5-6 minutes or until the fish flakes easily.
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STRAIGHT FROM THE HORSE’S MOUTH! “We have been advertising with All Things Local since 2014 and have been very pleased with the results. Ruth is a delight to deal with and we would not hesitate to recommend advertising in this publication.” Leeva Plumbing & Heating Ltd
Advertising in All Things Local REALLY WORKS. To advertise contact Ruth on 01332 883140 or 07545 261034 or send an email to:
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Truffles
Cafe & Takeaway
Afternoon Teas Embrace 2019 with a commitment to stylish dining and elegant living. Truffles, Ripley, are renowned for luxe patisserie and flavoursome savouries, with an afternoon tea that delights the people of Ripley. Enjoy comfort and relaxation in our elegant bistro, making memories to be cherished. Our thoughtful recipes, refined décor and genteel clientele ensure that you will enjoy the Truffles experience. Offering a chic treat for the ladies-at-lunch and an
essential indulgence for discerning patrons, treasure those mellow afternoons with this quaint English tradition. Each three-tier cake stand is plentifully laden with dainty finger sandwiches, wholesome quiches, and seasonal puddings. Smoked salmon and cream cheese, ham and spiced chutney, cheese and caramelised chutney - our generous fillings are delectable. Always tasty, our glorious ingredients are perfectly matched for an inspired culinary journey. Fruity rich jams and lashings of clotted cream accompany our freshly baked scones which are made to our own, much-revered, secret recipe. Cute quiches are succulent and moreish, with satisfying fillings and a crunchy pastry base. Our mini trifles and Eton Mess are a feast for the eyes. Chocolate mousse and raspberry desserts are divine. Melt-in-the-mouth meringues sit beside luscious Victoria sponges. Scrumptious cakes are in abundance, iced and piped with imagination and flair. The balance of flavours and choice
of treats are sure to thrill the palate and revive the senses. With vintage-style tableware, aromatic Suki teas, rich coffees and good service, you are assured of a warm welcome that will charm and delight. Truffles are happy to accommodate any special dietary requirements. All our dishes are truly home-made, lovingly baked and served with panache.
Book now for a special treat – you deserve it! Call 07514 341234 Home cooked Breakfasts • Snacks Light Lunches • Cakes Takeaway too!
42 Oxford Street, Ripley DE5 3AP Open Monday to Saturday from 9.00am
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Food, Drink & Entertainment
Word on Wine Majestic Wines is great for finding interesting wines, as they have wines open to taste that you may have previously passed by. On a visit to their store in Derby, I found an unattended table with glasses and a bottle. On the bottle was a label that said ‘free tasting’. Intrigued, and not wanting to offend, I poured a small tasting into the glass only to find a smooth easy drinking red wine with lots of fruit flavours. Not only that, but the label on the bottle also amused me – the wine is called ‘Desire, Lush and Zin’ with a picture of a tattooed lady. The wine is a Primitivo wine from Puglia, in southern Italy, made by Pasqua Vigneti e Cantine Spa in Verona, Italy. The Primitivo grape is southern Italy’s main red wine grape, particularly in the region of Puglia. DNA testing has proved that the Zinfandel vines of California are the same vines as the Primitivo of Italy. It is thought that the Italian emigrants to North America took the vines with them or that they found the climate in California the same as back in Italy. It has also been proven by DNA testing that the Primitivo grape is the same as an ancient Croatian variety called Crljenak Kaštelanski. It is thought that the vines were brought over from Croatia to Puglia in the mid-18th century. In 1799 a priest from Croatia selected some cuttings from an old vine to plant at his new church in Gioia del Colle in Puglia. He noticed that the fruit on the old vine matured earlier than that of other vines, so he named the ‘new’ vine ‘Primitivo’ from the Latin ‘primativus’, translated as ‘first to ripen’.
Alcohol by Volume: 13.5% Food match: Pasta, pizza, lamb and pork dishes. Available from: Majestic Wine, Ashbourne Road, Derby £12.99 per bottle. (£9.99 mixed case offer) For more information on this wine, visit www.majestic.co.uk. If you like wine and would like to learn more, why not come along to one of our monthly meetings? Visit our website at
www.kilburnwinecircle.weebly.com
or contact me on 01159303712 for more details on our meeting and the variety of wines we will be tasting.
By David Savidge, Kilburn Wine Circle
WANT TO BE SEEING FEWER OF THESE?
The wine, ‘Desire Lush and Zin’ is made from 100% Primitivo grapes grown on sandy and clay soil with the intense sunlight of the area and the fresh breeze, that gently blows in from the Ionian Sea. This climate creates a wine with a distinct character, a complex structure and elegant aromas of extraordinary intensity. Technical Details: Grapes: 100% Primitivo Appearance: Clean – cherry red Nose / Aroma: Aromas of plums, dark cherries and chocolate. Taste: Soft and velvety with fine rich flavours of plums, red cherries, spice, vanilla and coffee.
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Food, Drink & Entertainment
Beer Amber Valley CAMRA Pub of the Year 2019 We are extremely lucky in the Amber Valley region to have some exceptional pubs on our doorstep; some may be unspoilt gems, which are destination pubs and may require a bit of an effort to get to, others could be located in a housing estate, in the middle of town or may even be a back-street bar. The Amber Valley CAMRA Pub of the Year seeks to find out which of these pubs have delivered, in terms of service, quality of beer being served, atmosphere and community focus. It is my view that transparency always helps people understand how and why a certain pub may be nominated and why their own favourite watering hole maybe wasn’t, so I’m taking this opportunity to outline the voting and judging procedure. Since the beginning of October 2018, all members of Amber Valley CAMRA were canvassed and asked to nominate up to 5 pubs that they felt worthy of being put through to the judging stage. Some members decided to vote for just their own local, others took it in the spirit it was meant, by considering all the pubs they visited throughout the year and nominated five hostelries. When the voting closed at the end of November, the 8 pubs with the most votes formed the shortlist. The shortlisted pubs this year gave a relatively good spread of nominations from the region and included the Angels, Belper; Holly Bush, Makeney; Old Oak, Horsley Woodhouse; Ripley’s Little Ale House, Ripley; Steampacket Inn, Swanwick; Talbot Taphouse, Ripley; Thorn Tree, Belper and last year’s winner the White Hart, Bargate.
During the months of December and January, these shortlisted pubs were visited by over 30 judges and were scored using a consistent set of guidelines. As this is a CAMRA award the criteria that carried the most weight related, of course, to the quality of the beer/cider available. Did the pub offer a good range and was the choice available served well and of good quality? Other categories included the style/décor and cleanliness of the pub; the service, knowledge and welcoming of the staff was of equal importance. As we all know, the pub aims to be the hub of the community, so all shortlisted pubs were judged by their community focus and atmosphere along with their alignment with CAMRA principles (prices and opening times clearly displayed, full measures or a top up without asking, for example). All marks were scored on a judge’s visit and were not given based on any preconceived opinion; that’s what makes this competition unique. The scores will be handed in at the end of January and the winner will be revealed at our AGM at the end of March. With so many good pubs making the shortlist, a couple making the list for the first time – Thorn Tree on Chesterfield Road in Belper and Ripley’s Little Ale House on Oxford Street – why don’t you plan a visit to one of the shortlisted pubs and see for yourself why it’s been nominated?
2018 winner, The White Hart, Bargate 2018 winner, The White Hart, Bargate
By Sean McKeown ambervalleycamra.org.uk Facebook: Amber Valley CAMRA
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"We’ve been working with All Things Local magazine for about seven years now and we have nothing but positive things to say! Ruth is professional, knowledgeable and always very friendly. The efficient yet personal emails to remind us it's time to update our adverts are very helpful. It’s a pleasure to work with Ruth and we look forward to many more years of business with All Things Local!" Glendair Dental Practice, Alfreton
Advertising in All Things Local REALLY WORKS.
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Health, Beauty & Fitness
Derbyshire Walking: Betty Kenny Walk Walk Type: Hilly countryside with several steep climbs, passing quarry edges. Distance: 4 miles (6.8 km) Time: Allow 3 hours Parking: Ambergate Railway Station Car Park, Grid Ref: 348516 Waymarking: Routeway 12 OS Map: Landranger (1:50,000) 119 Buxton & Matlock; Explorer (1;25,000) 269 Chesterfield and Alfreton Start: Ambergate railway station car park (Grid Ref. 348 516)
The Route 1. Go out of the car park entrance and down the steps on the left. Go down to the main road (A610). Turn left to go under the railway bridge and left again to walk along the A6. 2. Cross the road (beware of traffic) opposite Holly Lane. Walk down Holly Lane with the church on your left, and over Ha’penny Bridge. If you glance to your right over the bridge, you will see where the River Amber joins with the River Derwent.
Shining Cliff Woods is an ancient woodland. It was part of a Royal Hunting Forest called Duffield Frith owned by the de Ferrers family of Duffield Castle. The family was disgraced after the Barons Revolt against Henry III; the castle was destroyed and the lands given to the King’s son Edmund. Local legend has it that a local man gave his magnificent white horse as a gift to Edmund and in return received the ownership of Shining Cliff Woods. In 1690 the wood came into the ownership of the Hurt family and remained with them until several years after World War I. Most of the woodland is now managed by the Forestry Commission. 3. Continue through the barrier and follow the path. After 1/4 mile take the right fork to follow the path downhill for a short distance.
Turn right and follow the single-track road that runs along the bottom of the woodland. Continue for 1/4 mile and take the public footpath on the right (no vehicular access). Follow the path as it leads down through the old wire works. Continue all the way through the works following signs for the YHA until you reach the woodland. At the woodland do not continue to follow signs for the YHA but go straight ahead through the woodland (a mixture of sweet chestnut, oak and sycamore of approximately 100 years old) travelling parallel with the River Derwent and A6. Whilst in the wood, follow the wooden posts with the white stripe at the top.
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Shining Cliff Woods is a Site of Special Scientific Interest due to the huge variety of plants and animals found in this ancient woodland. The wood supports a diverse bird community including warblers and flycatchers and in the winter bramblings and other finches. You will see that the species of trees and the management of them changes through the woodland. Notice the coppiced sycamore trees, beneath which in spring is a carpet of bluebells. PLEASE STICK TO THE MAIN PATHS. 4. After 1/2 mile take the main path on the left. Follow this uphill (marked by white posts) with pine trees on your right. Halfway up the hill, take the path on your
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Health, Beauty & Fitness right uphill into the pine trees. The white posts lead you to the remains of the Betty Kenny Tree.
Betty Kenny (Kate Kenyon) and her husband Luke lived during the late 1700s in a huge yew tree reputed to be 2000 years old, the remains of which you can see. Their house was formed within the yew tree. It probably had a turf roof. The Kenyons raised 8 children. Local legend has it that a bough of the tree was hollowed out to act as a cradle for their children. Local legend also suggests that this is the origin of the nursery rhyme “Rock-a-bye Baby”. Luke was a charcoal burner and he and Betty became favourites of the Hurt family. They had their portraits painted by James Ward of the Royal Academy. 5. Follow the path beyond the Betty Kenny tree down the hill, head towards the stone wall at the edge of the wood. Cross the public footpath and continue ahead, skirting the edge of the wood next to the stone wall. (Over the wall are views of the Hurt family home, Alderwasley Hall, and their estate.)
8. Join the path again and follow it as it gently travels down through the wood. Eventually the path joins a wider path. Do not follow the path to the YHA but continue ahead. At the junction turn left to continue downhill. This area of the wood belongs to the Grith Pioneers. The Grith Pioneers group originally began life as the Grith Fyrd, or Citizens Peace Army. They were formed in the early 1930s, a time of great social deprivation especially amongst the working class. Unemployed young men were given the opportunity to live a lifestyle which encouraged selfsufficiency and cooperation with others, coupled with the chance to be part of and to understand their natural environment. The pioneers still uphold their original ideals and welcome folk into Shining Cliff Woods so that their beauty can be enjoyed by all.
9. At the bottom of the hill turn right to travel back the way you came through the old wireworks. Follow the path along the bottom of the wood and turn left along Holly Lane. Cross the A6 (beware of traffic). Turn left and then right to go under the railway bridge, right again, and right again up the steps and back to the railway car park. Walk supplied by Amber Valley Borough Council and Groundwork Creswell, Ashfield and Mansfield, as part of their ‘Routeways’ series of walks: www.visitambervalley.co.uk/get-active/walking-and-riding.
6. Follow the path and go over the boardwalks. Continue straight ahead, climbing through the woodland. Take care to keep away from the old quarry edge: keep children and pets under close control. 7. At the top of the hill take time to briefly leave the path and look at the view. Take care near the edge. There are good views down the Derwent valley. Landmarks such as Heage Windmill and Crich Stand can been seen on a clear day.
We have taken reasonable steps to ensure that this walk is safe and achievable by walkers of a realistic level of fitness. The publisher accepts no responsibility for any injuries caused to readers whilst following the walk. Always wear appropriate clothing and footwear. Walk details correct at time of going to print. It is advisable to carry the relevant OS map with you when walking the route.
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Health, Beauty & Fitness
Alex Robinson Why Use a Personal Trainer? You can exercise yourself – at home, outdoors, at the gym – so why use a personal trainer? Well, there are a number of reasons why training with a PT will help you to train better, go further, and achieve great results…
4. It helps with unique requirements
Everyone’s abilities and requirements are different when it comes to exercise. You could be working round an injury, your age may be a factor, you may need to make adjustments for illness or perhaps you have a certain phobia? Whatever it is that may otherwise stop you exercising, a PT can find a way around it.
5. It keeps you motivated
1. It’s educational
If you don’t know which exercises are most effective for the goals you have, you are less likely reach them. Also, understanding how to perform an exercise safely is essential in reducing the risk of injury, which could impact health and fitness for a long time. Having someone trained in how to execute certain tasks will greatly reduce the level of risk and increase the effectiveness of your fitness routine.
2. It offers accountability
We all need someone to answer to! You are far more likely to make sure you get your exercise in if you know you’ll be asked what you’ve been doing between appointments, and you’re less likely to skip a session if you’ve got to give a good reason (‘I can’t be bothered’ won’t cut it!).
3. It helps perfect form
sure you’re doing it right – the most effective, efficient and safest way. Only perfect practice makes perfect.
A personal trainer won’t just tell you what to do, they’ll make
Self-motivation can be incredibly difficult, especially with lots of other demands on your time. A personal trainer can help you to prioritise things in your life; they will push you to achieve more, with personal challenges and achievable goals.
6. It can work with your schedule
A personal trainer is a versatile tool to aid with fitness; they can work around your busy schedule and, within reason, tailor appointments to suit you. So, what are you waiting for?!? A personal trainer could make a huge difference to your attitude to and enjoyment of exercise … as well as the results you see. By Alex Robinson View Alex’s profile on the National Register of Personal Trainers (www.nrpt.co.uk) and the Register of Exercise Professionals (www.exerciseregister.org). Contact Alex on 07817 337861 or email alex.robinson.pt@gmail.com.
ARR - Personal Training
ARR-Training Alex Robinson PT
‘If you have been thinking about improving your fitness or want to lose weight, I can help’.
Hatton Boxing for Fitness A non contact boxing fitness class, using pads and gloves for all fitness levels. Tuesdays 7:30pm to 8:15pm Little Eaton Village Hall Wednesdays 7:30pm to 8:15pm Milford Riverside Gym Thursday 7:30pm to 8:15pm Ripley School of Boxing (Ladies Only) Saturdays 7:30am to 8:15am Little Eaton Village Hall £5 per class, booking is essential as class numbers are restricted
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• I have been a Personal Trainer for over 15 years, supporting and helping people to meet their goals in fitness and lifestyle changes, from losing weight to running marathons. • Over the years I have competed in various amateur sports to a high standard, including 24 hour endurance running to cross training events. • I am a Level 4 Personal Trainer with additional qualifications in GP referrals - Pre & post natal exercise Master Trainer in corrective exercise Hatton Boxing for Fitness - Boxercise Master Trainer REPS & NRPT registered.
Other Services:
1 Day Body Shock Boot Camp 10 Days Intensive PT • Boot Camps
Call me on 01773 512410 • 07817 337861 alex.robinson.pt@gmail.com
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Motoring
Motoring
Smart Motorways Explained Smart Motorways are being created across the UK. Here’s how to drive on them. Vast swathes of UK roads are being transformed into ‘Smart Motorways’. They are cited as the solution for congestion, with the hard shoulder being used as a live lane and overhead gantries displaying variable speed limits with cameras enforcing them. Highways England says the introduction of Smart Motorways has ‘increased journey reliability’ and reduced personal injury accidents. But this new network requires a new way of driving, as well as a better understanding of what the overhead signs mean. Are there different types of Smart Motorway? There are, and different types of Smart Motorway are dotted throughout the country. The first is a controlled motorway, which retains its hard shoulder for emergency use. The remaining lanes are subject to variable speed limits, which are displayed on overhead gantries, and enforced by speed cameras. If no speed limit is displayed, then the national speed limit is in place. Then there are all-lane-running sections of motorway, where all lanes are live, and there isn’t a hard shoulder. In the event of an incident, a red ‘X’ is displayed above the closed lane. Any driver who ignores this will receive a £100 fine and three penalty points on their licence. Again, overhead speed limits are enforced by cameras. Finally, you’ve got a dynamic hard shoulder, which can be opened to live traffic during periods of congestion, with overhead gantry signs showing whether or not it can be used. It shouldn’t be used if the signs above the lane are blank or displaying a red ‘X’. Again, this is enforced by the overhead cameras. What happens if I break down on a motorway with no hard shoulder? Look out for an emergency refuge area (ERA), denoted by blue signs with an orange SOS telephone symbol, and dotted at 1.5 mile intervals along the highway.
If you’re unable to get to an ERA, you should attempt to get onto the verge (providing there is no barrier), switch on your hazard lights and exit the vehicle safely via the nearside door. If you can’t get to the nearside of the motorway safely, stay in the vehicle with your seatbelt securely fastened. If you can get out of the car, contact Highways England via one of the phones placed in the ERA. However, if you can’t exit the vehicle, you need to call 999 from your mobile. Can I get caught for speeding even if a limit isn’t displayed above the road? Highways England states that: “All mandatory speed limits are enforced by police, as is the national speed limit of 70mph when no speeds are shown. If you break the speed limits you will be caught.” The best advice is simply not to exceed the speed limit.
Do Smart Motorways actually work? According to Highways England, Smart Motorways are helping to keep roads moving. Published statistics say that journey reliability has improved by 22 per cent and personal injury accidents have been reduced by more than half. Highways England also says that where accidents did occur, their severity was much lower overall. By James Baggott
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Services from £59 MOTs - only £39.99 FREE ‘Collect & Deliver’ Service NHS workers - 10% discount Air Conditioning from £45
Locally based Driving Instructor offering professional, friendly and patient tuition
First 5 hours tuition £100 (beginners only).
Service and MOT from £79 Exhausts & Clutches
Beginners, Refresher, Motorway & Pass Plus.
Diagnostics & Repair Open: 8am-5pm Mon-Fri & 8am-12pm Sat
contact Richard on 01773 744354 / 07889 680213 or visit my web-site for further details
www.masondriving.co.uk www.buxtonpaintandbody.co.uk
YOUR LOCAL, FRIENDLY, EXPERIENCED TEAM FOR CAR PAINT AND BODY REPAIRS • MINOR TO MAJOR ACCIDENT WORK
• MOTORHOME SPECIALIST
• COSMETIC REPAIRS
• INSURANCE WORK
• SCRATCHES AND STONE CHIPS
• INVOLVED IN A NON-FAULT ACCIDENT? DON'T WORRY GIVE ME A CALL FOR HASSLE FREE ASSISTANCE.
• COURTESY CAR AVAILABLE
• PARKING SENSORS FULLY FITTED FROM £199 INC VAT.
• PAINTLESS DENT-REMOVAL
• LOW BAKE OVEN
MARTIN BUXTON PAINT & BODY REPAIRS
• MAJOR CARDS ACCPETED
TEL: 01332 883080
email: buxtonpaintandbody@yahoo.co.uk
unit 5, lady lea road, horsley woodhouse, derbyshire DE7 6AZ To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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Richard Fearn
Plumbing, Heating & Gas Engineer
Over 12 years experience
546452
Local engineer providing a professional, friendly reliable service to help with all your plumbing and heating requirements including: • Boiler installations, servicing and repairs • Bathroom installations • Full gas central heating systems • Gas cooker installations
• Gas safety inspections • Landlord gas safety certificates • Domestic legionella risk assessment • Leaking taps. Faulty toilets
Please call for a FREE no obligation quotation - no job too small
07583 146838 E: rfphs@btinternet.com
DRIVEWAYS • TARMAC • BLOCK PAVING • RESIN • PATIOS • FENCING LANDSCAPING • GENERAL BUILDING • DRAINAGE • DROP KERBS FOR ALL ENQUIRIES, CONTACT JOE TODAY 01773 434 087 • 07502 388844 E: info@hsconstruction.co.uk www.hsconstruction.co.uk @H&SConstruction
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
For All Your Garden Machinery Requirements
FREE
collection and delivery
Service • Sales • Repair Low cost • Fixed price
Petrol lawnmowers serviced from £49.95 Ride on Lawn Tractors serviced from £104.95 Petrol Strimmers serviced from £29.95 Petrol Chainsaws serviced from £29.95 Blade and Chain Sharpening available Let us quote on your new garden machinery - call for best prices Prices quoted include parts and labour
Top Quality
Painter & Decorator Reasons to choose me: ◘ I am experienced in ALL ASPECTS of painting
and decorating and am HAPPY TO GIVE ADVICE.
◘
I can carry out all of your INTERIOR OR EXTERIOR decorating needs - domestic, commercial or industrial.
◘
I offer a CLEAN and RELIABLE service which is why people RECOMMEND ME.
◘ ◘ ◘ ◘
I employ an experienced FEMALE decorator to offer PEACE OF MIND in certain situations. I’ve been established SINCE 1986 so you can be rest assured of a PROFESSIONAL JOB. I CARE about my customers and RESPECT their property.
(01332) 882882 or 07980 254 050
I offer a friendly FREE estimate with NO OBLIGATION.
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
‘Based in Kilburn’
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Roller Garage Doors – Industrial Shutters – Awnings Retractable/Fixed Grills – Glass Verandas
We also supply sectional garage doors and composite front doors
High Security | High Quality | Wide Range of Colours Fully Insulated | Quiet, Smooth Operation Remote Controlled | Emergency Override
10 years warranty on all Worcester Boilers
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
BELMONT MOWER CENTRE DOMESTIC AND PROFESSIONAL GARDEN MACHINERY SPECIALISTS
Sales - Service - Repairs - Parts - Warranty
68 -70 Alfreton Road, South Normanton DE55 2AS
Tel: 01773 86 39 39
Open Monday to Friday 9am - 5pm Saturday 9am - 1pm
• KITCHENS
• BATHROOMS
• BEDROOMS
• HOME OFFICES
• Free quotes & 3D Computer design • Choose from samples in your own home • Convenient, complete service • Carpentry, Plumbing, Electrics, Building,Tiling
I offer a complete personal service from design to fitting
• Top brand appliances, suites, showers etc • Over 15 years’ experience
Tel : 01773 511 255 Mob : 07773 660 498 Email : sales@arcticinteriors.co.uk
www.arcticinteriors.co.uk
Quality bespoke interiors without the expensive showroom prices To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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Create your own bathroom and relax We offer a comprehensive range of furniture and accessories to design your perfect bathroom • • • • •
Wet rooms Baths and showers Furniture Radiators Accessories
123a Old Nottingham Road, Derby, DE1 3QQ www.brownsbm.co.uk Call now on 0800 0029926
Specialising in General Building and Roofing Materials Now Derby's Premier Roofing Merchant Large stocks of various manufacturer’s roof tiles Marley, Sandtoft, Forticrete, Redland, Lagan, Natural and fibre cement slates All roofing accessories, battens, felt, lead, ventilation products Extensive brick stocks for immediate delivery
Find us at Chequers Road, West Meadows Industrial Estate, Derby DE21 6EN Also at Nottingham Road branch specialising in Landscaping, Plumbing and Heating. Bathrooms and Showroom.
Branches open Mon-Fri 7.30 - 5 & Sat 8 -12
01332 292911 Main number for both branches Both trade and DIY welcome. Look out for our special offers!
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
KEEP WARM THIS WINTER WE OFFER A GREAT SELECTION OF QUALITY COAL, SMOKELESS FUEL AND SEASONED HARDWOOD LOGS AT SUPER COMPETITIVE PRICES. Available in opensack (50kg) and pre packed (cash and carry) along with kindling, firelighters and paraffin etc. Kiln/barn dried logs are available in either nets or bulk bags All excellent quality.
FREE DELIVERY • BULK PURCHASE DISCOUNT EXPERT ADVICE • APPROVED COAL MERCHANTS Our service is first class. Open Mon Fri 8 4 & Sat 8 12
Please call us on 01773 747027 Old Sta�on Yard, Whiteley Road, Ripley DE5 3QL
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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H&H House & Garden Maintenance 07943 821 016 RELIABLE, AFFORDABLE AND FRIENDLY SERVICE Services include:
Garden Maintenance • Jet Washing Painting and Decorating Internal and External Guttering Cleaning and Replacement • Man with a Van
www.hhhouseandgardenmaintenance.com Hannah & Hanks Office: 01773 741 069 Mobile: 07943 821016/07734 663021
Belper Chimney Cleaning Services Please call Pete 01773 826956 • 07971 944676 Established over 30 years Friendly and reliable
TO DO
1. Find more local customers 2. Sort out advertising
3. Ring RUTH at All Things Local
01332 883140 07545 261034 SORTED!
GATES • RAILINGS HANDRAILS All made to your requirements
FREE MEASURING SERVICE Unit 1a Taylor Lane Industrial Estate, Loscoe, Derby DE75 7TA
01773 533393
www.ornamentalengineering.com Also on Facebook
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Be
inspired at our
Home Improvement Centre High Quality Service, Windows, Doors & Conservatories.
We have the
Largest Showroom in the Midlands so why not call in for a look around and friendly advice
Our ranges include Windows, Bi-folds, Entrance Doors, Rooines, Extensions & Conservatories We offer full design & project management and full 10 year guarantee
OPEN Mon-Fri: 10am-6pm, Sat: 10am-3pm, Established in Derbyshire since 1993
Sun: 10am-2pm
Navigation Retail Park, 810 London Road Alvaston, Derby DE24 8WA • 01332 755551
www.tradewindows.com
JHC SECURITY LTD
INTRUDER ALARMS & CCTV
We can provide you with a range of security solutions to suit your budget and tailor-made to suit your needs Specialising in the installation, repair and maintenance of various security systems including Intruder Alarm, Fire Alarm systems, Police Monitored Systems, CCTV and Access Control We also install Outdoor Security Lighting Our team are experienced and dedicated, giving you peace of mind Call to book a FREE no obligation survey RipIey, Derbyshire 01773 424005 info@jhcsecurityltd.co.uk www.jhcsecurityltd.co.uk Fully insured
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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YOU CAN RELY ON US IF YOUR BOILER BREAKS DOWN
WHAT ELSE CAN WE DO FOR YOU? Bathroom Installations
Gas Appliance Servicing
Plumbing Repairs
Landlord Certificates
Power Flushing
Boiler Repairs
Call us today
01773 749713 leeva@btconnect.com • www.leevaplumbing.co.uk • Est. 2000
203414
WHY CHOOSE HOLTAMS?...
• Best value for money • Free design and planning service • Quality 18mm colour co-ordinated cabinets • Extensive door styles to choose from • Granite, solid surface and laminate worktops • Latest CAD 3D design software • No pressure selling • Large car park • Experienced friendly designers
Established in 1985
VAT free Eco Kitchens* Offer ends 1st March
VAT free Fitting* VAT free Bedrooms*
Offer ends 1st March From our family to yours
As a family run, independent business with over 30 years’ experience we pride ourselves on being able to provide a fully personalised and expert service which is unrivalled by larger retailers. Our extensive showroom boasts an impressive range of kitchens, worktops, bedrooms, tiles and accessories. Our team of highly experienced designers and installers are here to help with anything from replacing an appliance to a full kitchen or bedroom design and installation.
* Terms & Conditions apply (ask in store for details)
before
after
WORKING TO YOUR REQUIREMENTS
before
after
EXCEEDING YOUR EXPECTATIONS
01773 828863
74 Mill Lane, Belper
40 40
before
after
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Homes & Gardens If your soil is heavy and wet, and if it is alkaline or chalky, summer raspberries may struggle, so grow autumn fruiters as they can withstand the adverse conditions. First, choose a sunny, sheltered spot and weed thoroughly so the raspberry canes are not competing with weeds for moisture and nutrients. If your garden is very hot and sunny in the summer then light shade for the raspberries from a nearby tree is recommended; otherwise, they like sunshine. Summer-fruiting raspberries need a support system – sturdy posts at a spacing of about 1.8m (6ft) and galvanized wires at a spacing of about 30cm (12in) will do the trick. Autumn-fruiting raspberries should be fine without support but you can tie them in if you wish. The canes are available now and in their ‘dormant’ state (looking like a bundle of sticks) respond well to planting now. Space the canes 40-45cm (15-17in) apart and allow about 2m (6ft 6in) between rows. Dig in plenty of well-rotted manure and plant each cane at a depth of 5-8cm (2-3in), spreading the roots out well so they establish better. Firm the canes in then cut each one back to about 25cm (10in) above ground level and water in well if the soil is dry.
Gardening
Remarkable Raspberries If you want to grow soft fruit then I recommend raspberries for value, reliability and ease of growth. The canes, best bought bare root, are available now, so here are my top tips for planting and growing great raspberries. Raspberries like moisture, without being soggy around the roots. Improve light and sandy soil by digging in plenty of bulky organic matter such as compost or well-rotted manure before planting. Summer-fruiting raspberries crop in midsummer, while autumn fruiters crop from the end of summer, often until the first frosts, so if possible plant a few of each. There are different varieties of summer and autumn-fruiting raspberries, and the ‘Fallgold’ variety even has yellow fruits.
Summer-fruiting raspberries fruit on the previous year’s growth, so planting now will be much better in 2020 onwards than this year. Autumn fruiters produce their crop on the same year’s growth, so expect a decent crop this autumn then heavier ones from 2020. These should crop until the first frosts. Mulch raspberries each spring with well-rotted manure. Once finished cropping, cut the fruit-bearing canes of summer-fruiting varieties back to ground level, and tie the newly formed canes to the wires ready for next year. With autumn-fruiting raspberries, cut back the old canes at the end of winter and the new canes will appear in spring. By Pippa Greenwood Visit Pippa’s website www.pippagreenwood.com and join ‘Grow Your Own with Pippa Greenwood’ for great vegetable plants and weekly advice from Pippa, stylish cloches, the fantastic SpeedHoe, gardening tools, Grower Frames and signed books!
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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TCA
RIPLEY RUBBER ROOFING
20 YEAR WARRANTY
PAINTING AND DECORATING
Derek Bonser 07812 995 634 • 01773 302222 info@ripleyrubberroofing.co.uk
Friendly and reliable Interior and exterior Domestic and commercial
www.ripleyrubberroofing.co.uk
Free quotation with no obligation Fully insured and DBS checked
call 07955 743124 or 01773 825226 tcapainting@gmail.com
G Wheeldon Home & Garden Maintenance HANDYMAN Based in Kilburn Village
No Job too small
Please call Graham 07753 198929 graham.wheeldon1956@gmail.com
See me on facebook
Polite/Friendly/Reliable Free Quotation no Obligation
Central Heating Installations We have built our business over many years from recommendations with many satisfied customers. All our engineers are fully qualified & we pride ourselves on expert service at a competitive price. s 'RANTS AVAILABLE TO UPGRADE YOUR HEATING SYSTEM CALL FOR DETAILS (Established 20 Years) Meadow Road, Ripley DE5 3EP Email: sales@markdenton.eu www.markdenton.eu
01773 513208
• Complete Energy saving systems - designed & installed • Boiler and Radiator swaps • Boiler servicing & landlord’s certificates • All aspects of plumbing undertaken
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35688 35688
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
TME Electrical
All Types of Domestic and Commercial Work Undertaken Sockets - Lighting - Fuseboxes - Rewires Kitchens - Phone - TV Emergency Call Out Service. Free Quotes Periodic Inspections, Landlords Certification, Rolec EV Chargepoint Authorised Installer.
WEATHERSEAL Windows, Doors & Conservatories Full Insurance Backed Guarantee High Security Internal Glazing Bead as Standard Hook Bolt Door Locks as Standard
For a friendly reliable service call Tom
Tel 01773 513723 Mobile 07974 798768 email tmeelectrical@live.co.uk www.tme-electrical.co.uk
All Kinds of Repairs Undertaken No high pressure sales. No sub contractors
01773 747265 07967 419 504 E: weatherseal01@live.co.uk Local Family Run Company
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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• Tree Surgeon - Insured & Qualified. • Hedges Trimmed or Removed. • Fencing - Installation & Maintenance. • Other work includes, Jet Washing, Decorating, Gutters & General Handyman.
www.thegardenguy.co
Your
LOCAL BUILDER TDB Building Over 20 years experience For all your building needs including:
■ Extensions ■ Loft Conversions ■ Roofs ■ Joinery ■ Renovations ■ Property Maintenance
Call Derek - Waingroves based 01773 302222 / 07812 995634
LTD For all your electrical requirements ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓
Rewires & Partial Rewires. Wiring of New Extensions. Showers Installed. Extra Sockets, Extra Light Points & Switches.
Telephone Points. Exterior Lighting. TV Points (Not Aerials). Extractor Fans, Kitchens & Bathrooms. Free Quotations - No Job Too Small. Part P Registered.
For a friendly reliable service call Andy mobile 07833 684981 email aheserv@hotmail.co.uk Little Eaton based
McPherson-Davis & Sons
Electrical & Plastering Services A family run business based in Denby Village Here are just some of the services we offer
Additional sockets to full re-wire
Kitchen or bathroom tiling
New board with RCD protection
Wall or room replastering
Additional sockets installed from £40 Full re-wire from £2000 • Board change from £250 Full room plastering (4 walls and ceiling) from £250 Prices inclusive of materials and relevant electrical certificate
Call to arrange your free no obligation quotation
01773 742038 • 0779 304 6896 neil@mcphersondavis.com
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
LORDS ROOFING CONTRACTORS
Looking for a reliable Roofing Contractor whom you can Trust and Rely on? Lords are a well established Father and Son roofing business with over 40 years’ experience.
ALL ROOFING WORKS UNDERTAKEN
FIRESTONE FLAT RUBBER ROOFING
• New Re-roofing • Re-roofing Tiles • Re-roofing slates • Flat Roofs (in Firestone Rubber Cover) • UPVC Fascias and Soffits • All types of Leadwork • Pitched Conversions • Including Roof Repairs
40 year guarantee
Ask to see our Portfolio of 1000’s of Satisfied customers
Domestic roofs covered in one seamless sheet Maintenance free – fit and forget All installations by our own accredited Firestone approved fitters
YOUR CHOSEN CHARITY
We’ll make a donation to your local hospice for all orders undertaken.
01332 581001
www.lordsofderby.co.uk
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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Homes & Gardens
Property Matters
your first port of call. Their imagination and vision can yield unexpected results from even the most awkward of sites.
Too much garden and not enough time for gardening? Some of you out there have very large gardens that you either don’t want or don’t need. Turn them into building plots, make some money, put your lawn mower away and put your feet up…
Is it the right time? Most Local Authorities are short on housing supply – they need more sites with planning approval for houses. Whilst they would love to meet this need with just large sites of, say, 300 houses, the small sites with just one or two plots still contribute to their housing targets. So, why wait? If you think you may be sitting on a plot of land you have nothing to lose!
Are You Sitting on a Building Plot?
Not everyone can do this, but if you have an unusually wide and/or long garden, especially if you live on the corner of two streets, there’s a strong chance you may have a building plot!
Watch points: PROPERTY MATTERS Getting planning permission in a conservation area is a
bit trickier. As a general rule you can’t apply for outline Your questions answered by Local Jon Planning permission in a conservation area – most Authorities will ask for a full detailed planning permission. Ltd Pilkington, Jon Pilkington Architecture
Reduce the risks and maximise your profit Small scale developers and certainly individuals looking to build their dream home need the comfort of knowing the site has planning permission. It doesn’t cost a lot to get what’s known as ‘outline planning permission’ compared BEDROOM BYyour toNEW the uplift in the value CAN of the LIFT land. VALUE Don’t waste money having full designs prepared and obtaining full A QUARTER! planning permission – the people thinking of buying your site may havebytheir own ideas and be unwilling to pay Research Nationwide Building Society more for your expensively arrivedoratloft design solution. suggests that an extension conversion
which acreates a double bedroom can add Employ good designer the average price of with yourexperience home. in A12% good to local architectural practice But, get research also suggests housing thatthis………..the knows the local planning policies should be creating its own bathroom could increase the average price by as much as 23%! Bearing in mind that moving up the property ladder from a three-bedroom to a four-bedroom house costs an average of £40,000 (not including legal fees and other moving costs) a two storey extension or loft conversion can be accomplished for around £30,000 - £35,000.
Not much difference you may say but consider this……..with a two storey extension you also gain the floor area downstairs. This could be for that much-needed study/home office, family area for the kids,
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As with conservation areas you can’t get outline permission on listed buildings. You have to prepare and submit a fully detailed design and planning application.
simply to extend kitchen. If or you’re in greenbelt landthe – forget it! You can usually squeeze in a in The only things generally permitted greenbelt those that preserve the groundare floor cloakroom as well! open nature of the greenbelt, like a golf course. The research also suggests that a 10% Jon increase Contact on in floor area of a home addsorapproximately 5% 07768 523901 email to its value. jon@pilkington-architecture.co.uk
As the number of homeowners prepared to put their homes on sale is falling, extending an existing home is becoming increasingly attractive to many. Many contractors are still quoting competitively, while a surge in re-mortgages, confirmed by the Council of Mortgage Lenders, suggests many homeowners could have raised finance for building work. So….if this type of project has been something you’ve been considering then take advantage of the free initial consultation offered by Pilkington Architecture.
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Deluxe Window Cleaning Your local Window Cleaner
Fully insured for:
Tree Surgery, Hedge Cutting, Hedge Removal, Pruning, Landscaping Free Quotes Local, Reliable, Professional and Mature Businessman
www.clipemandfellem.co.uk Please call Steve for advice and a free no-obligaton quotation.
Window, Conservatory, Gutter & Fascia Cleaning Tel: 01773 718797 Mobile: 07896 820350 Web: www.deluxewindowcleaningheage.com Email: info@deluxewindowcleaningheage.com
T: 01773 856602 M: 07739 834553
All Taps Fitted Radiators, Thermosatic Valves Shower Replacements & Pumps, Toilets Bathroom Installations, Walk-In Shower Enclosures Heating System Power Flush, All General Plumbing No job too small!
Claxton PLASTERING
Plastering - Dry Lining - Rendering Fully insured & work guaranteed Quality work, competitive prices No job too big or too small Insurance work undertaken FREE quotes provided
07929 206777
claxtonplastering@hotmail.com To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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A
s a family run, independent business with over 35 years’ experience Roform are specialists in steel fabrication and welding services. Roform is run by Phil Brookes, his son Jack along with the “Beam Team”. We are aware that the name, Roform does not explain what this family business is about. Roform based in Pye Bridge Industrial Estate, Pye Bridge, Alfreton fabricates and sells steel Beams, RSJs, Lintols, Balustrades, Balconies, Handrails, Staircases, Fire Escapes,
Mezzanine Floors and much more. Roform is open to the building trade and the general public and all our work is fully EN1090 CE marked compliant and certified. “If you need steel, welding or general fabrication then Roform is happy to help with your building project” says Phil. Roform offers onsite welding, site erection and installation. A collection or delivery service is available throughout the East Midlands. “I suppose you could call us the one stop, steel shop,” says Phil.
Roform prides itself on being a fast, reliable and a friendly service and are safety certified by SSIP, CHAS, AVETTA, MPQC/SPA and are a Derbyshire County Council Trusted Trader. So if you are a builder in need of steel services or someone planning a building project the “Beam Team” at Roform will happily provide a no-obligation quotation. Please contact the “Beam Team” on 01773 540136 or 07742 866594, visit the website at www.roform.co.uk or email sales@roform.co.uk.
ROFORM
Tel: 01773 540136 Mob: 07742 866594
• Steel Lintols, RSJs and Beams • General Steel Fabrication • Steel Staircases, Fire Escapes, Spiral Staircases, Ladders, Handrails, Gates, Security Grilles, Balustrading, Fencing & Much More • Onsite Welding Services • Site Erection & Installation • Collection or Delivery Service • Fast, Reliable and a Friendly service Pye Bridge Industrial Estate, Pye Bridge, Derbyshire, DE55 4NX Email: sales@roform.co.uk • Website: www.roform.co.uk
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Homes & Gardens
Book Reviews: Books to Get You Talking This month’s books are perfect for discussing at your book club, dissecting over dinner and chatting about on social media. The Silence of the Girls Pat Barker The Silence of the Girls is a vivid retelling of Homer’s Iliad. However, this time the focus is on the minor characters, namely the women taken as ‘spoils of war’. Queen Briseis is taken as a sex slave by Achilles when he destroys her city. Through Briseis we hear of the other female slaves in the encampment – women who are forced to serve the men that killed their husbands, fathers, brothers and sons. This is Going to Hurt Adam Kay From 100-hour weeks to moral conundrums and emergency operations, the life of a junior doctor is far from easy. Adam Kay reveals all through six years of diary entries. Surprisingly, This is Going to Hurt is an incredibly funny book, particularly the numerous footnotes explaining hospital lingo. However, Kay also gives us an insight into the stark reality of life on the frontline of the NHS. Once Upon a River Diane Setterfield A man stumbles into The Swan Inn carrying the body of what appears to be a dead girl in his arms. A few hours later, the little girl stirs. But who is she? Part adult fairy tale, part folk tale, Once Upon a River celebrates the art of
storytelling and weaves numerous stories into one rich tapestry. Thoroughly enjoyable. Codename Villanelle Luke Jennings If you loved the BBC’s Killing Eve, don’t miss the book it was based on. Villanelle is a cold-blooded assassin who you just can’t help but root for. Eve is the woman tasked with stopping her. The storyline is quite different from that of the TV series and has less dark humour, but there’s still plenty of suspense to keep you reading. Roar Cecelia Ahern Ahern’s latest book is a collection of satirical short stories. Each focuses on an unnamed female protagonist and most are a literal interpretation of a stereotype or saying. The trophy wife’s partner builds her a shelf to sit on, where she can be admired by his friends and family. The woman who feels invisible to society starts to slowly disappear. There are plenty of themes to digest and discuss and a lot of enjoyment to be had in each tale. Sunny Side Up Susan Calman Comedian and Strictly star Susan Calman is on a mission to encourage ‘joy, kindness and community’ with her latest book. There are anecdotes from her own life and examples of random acts of kindness that have been shared by her fans. Sunny Side Up is full of warmth, positivity and (of course) plenty of humour. By Kate Duggan
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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School Information Belper Long Row Primary Belper School Codnor Community Primary School C of E Controlled Denby Free C of E Primary Ecclesbourne School Frederick Gent School Fritchley CE (Aided) Primary Heage Primary Heanor Gate Science College Herbert Strutt Primary Holbrook C of E Primary Horsley C of E Primary Horsley Woodhouse Primary John Flamsteed Community School Kilburn Infant & Nursery School Kilburn Junior Langley Mill C of E (Controlled) Infant School & Nursery Little Eaton Primary Lons Infant School Loscoe Primary School (C of E) Meadows Primary Milford Primary Morley Primary Pottery Primary
®
01773 823319 01773 825281 01773 742537 01332 880416 01332 840645 01773 811737 01773 852216 01773 852188 01773 716396 01773 822771 01332 880277 01332 880782 01332 880403 01332 880260 01332 880449 01332 880540
Richardson Endowed Primary School 01332 880317
Ripley Infant School Ripley Junior School Ripley Nursery School St Benedict St Elizabeth’s Catholic Primary St John’s CE Primary, Belper St John’s CE Primary, Ripley Street Lane Primary The Ripley Academy Turnditch CE VA Primary Waingroves Primary School William Gilbert Primary
01773 743354 01773 742281 01773 745014 01332 557032 01773 822278 01773 822995 01773 742457 01773 742717 01773 746334 01773 550304 01773 744106 01332 840395
School Terms 2019
All dates taken from www.derbyshire.gov.uk
Term 3 Monday 7 January 2019 to Friday 15 February 2019 Term 4 Monday 25 February 2019 to Friday 12 April 2019 Term 5 Monday 29 April 2019 to Friday 24 May 2019 Term 6 Monday 3 June 2019 to Monday 22 July 2019 01773 713429 Term 1 Tuesday 3 September 2019 to Friday 25 October 2019 01332 831471 Term 2 Monday 4 November 2019 to Friday 20 December 2019
Websites
01773 744319 01773 713396 01332 840305 01332 841316 01332 831295 www.connectbelper.co.uk 01773 823383 www.ecclesnav.org.uk
Are you unhappy with your current advertising? Advertising in All Things Local could make your business stand out in the crowd and put the smile back on your face.
For low cost advertising to over 67,500 local readers* Call Ruth at All Things Local magazine t: 01332 883140 m: 07545 261034 e: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk w: www.allthingslocal.co.uk * In total there are 27,000 copies of All Things Local distributed across 3 editions - Village Edition, Belper Edition and Ripley Edition. The readership figure is based on the assumption that, on average, each copy is read by 2.5 people.
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Children & Education
The Diary of a Local Mum Energy Levels There are obviously lots of differences between children and adults, but a major one that can often prove problematic when you’re charged with caring for small humans, is the difference in energy levels. Kids attack everything with gusto. And I mean, everything. Whether it’s getting out of bed, cleaning teeth, putting on socks… you name it… it’s accompanied with a leap, a shriek, a flourish, a funky dance. It’s as if, from the moment they wake, they’re hypercharged and exuding excess energy that they just can’t wait to burn off. It’s impressive. It’s admirable. It’s exhausting. Somewhere between childhood and adulthood (probably during the teenage years) this is lost. As adults, everything (getting out of bed, cleaning teeth, putting on socks…) takes far more effort and, rather than having endless supplies of the stuff, energy seems like a precious commodity that you have to summon when it’s most needed – and, like cheap batteries, it doesn’t last as long either. While a small child can dance around the kitchen for hours, joining in as an adult is fun for a short while but the need to ‘sit down for a breather’ is upon you before the final bars of the song have finished and you realise you need to save some of your precious reserves for cooking the tea (which is what you were trying to do in the first place before the impromptu disco began). Keeping up with kids is exhausting. When running around with them becomes all too much, there are thankfully other ways to harness their energy and engage their interest, so you sign them up for every sports club out there. ‘Ha!’ You think. ‘This will do it!’ But, after two hours of non-stop activity they come out buzzing, dying to show you all they’ve learnt, involving interactive demonstrations and even more of a battle to get this hyped up child into bed – while you’re even
more exhausted than usual just from taxiing them around. Sometimes, however, it’s easy to take this relentless energy for granted. They’re always keen to do yet another activity until the hamster wheel of life is spinning so fast you realise they haven’t had any downtime for what seems like weeks and you notice an almost imperceptible decrease in pace. Their leap out of bed is a little lower. They brush their teeth without the accompanying silly dance. They put on their socks sitting down. Kids these days get a lot of stick for being permanently attached to a technological device; for lying prone on the sofa; for spending their life vegetating, and while that seems to very rarely be the case in our house there’s definitely a happy medium to be achieved somewhere along the line. When you notice the spring has gone from their step, their joie de vivre is beginning to wane, their relentless energy is ebbing away… it’s time for a glorious pyjama day: a guilt-free day of nothingness while they recharge to turbo-level and you recuperate to something just the right side of exhaustion. Well, I say ‘pyjama day’ – in reality, while you’ve got your sights set on a TV marathon, the kids’ batteries can fully recharge in a fraction of the time that it takes to get yours out of the red zone. No sooner have you got the blankets out and made the hot chocolate, decided on a film, and agreed a comfortable position for everyone to sit, they’re up. They’re dancing to the opening credits, re-enacting their favourite scene, dragging you off the sofa to play your part too. Oh well, it was good while it lasted, briefly.
By Helen Young *Warning: Battery power running dangerously l…*
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Get into Learning...
Get skilled, have some fun! To find a course or a centre close to you, visit
derbyshire.gov.uk/adulteducation or ring 01629 533090 /AmberValleyACE
/ErewashACE
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Counselling Arts & Crafts ESOL Digital Photography Languages Pottery Upholstery BSL – British Sign Language Understanding Autism Food Safety Yoga Many of Personal our courses Development are bookable Maths online English ICT Childcare Employability Apprenticeships Traineeships
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18/06/2018 14:24:09
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Community
Your Horoscope February and March 2019 February really gets going on the 4th with a powerful new moon in the benevolent and humanitarian sign of Aquarius. This quirky new moon encourages us all to be independent and to contemplate in which areas of life we may be able to offer help and support others. This new moon also ushers in the Chinese New Year – the year of the Earth Pig. On a personal level, during this year well-considered actions will be rewarded much more than risk taking. Dynamic Mars arrives in practical and down to earth Taurus on the 15th; this placement offers excellent opportunities to fine tune and advance your practical projects. The love planet Venus is resolute and determined after her arrival in Capricorn on the 4th. Is this the year when romantic relationships get serious? Wait for Valentine’s Day and find out! March starts out with rather a mystical flavour as the Sun and Neptune are in close contact in gentle Pisces, offering a magical and spiritual energy that could help with a kinder and more humanitarian outlook on the world stage. Mercury, the planet of ideas and interaction, moves into the retrograde phase on the 5th to the 28th. As always, this is a time of reviewing and double checking anything to do with communications, travel or important written documents. Mars is in the down to earth sign of Taurus all month, highlighting practical energy and the need to get things done. The Spring Equinox falls on the evening of the 20th; day and night are equal and we should all start to feel that spring is well on its way. The new moon is in Pisces on the 6th and the full moon is in Libra on the 21st. ARIES: MARCH 21 - APRIL 20 February: Dynamic Mars remains strong in your sign during the first half of February; excellent opportunities for innovative new ventures will be coming your way. Venus arrives at the highest point of your chart on the 4th suggesting that this is the perfect time to make a go of anything career related. March: The powerful alignment of planets in your career sector at the start of the month brings your personal charisma to fabulous new heights. Anything to do with new prospects or promotion is very well favoured. The maverick planet Uranus is in the last degree of your sign; be prepared for exciting or sudden changes in your life. TAURUS: APRIL 21 - MAY 21 February opens up opportunities for further education and detailed travel plans. The new moon on the 4th is particularly important as its powerful energy encourages you to broaden your horizons particularly on the career front. The Virgo full moon on the 19th offers up a romantic opportunity. March: Venus, your planetary ruler, spends most of March in quirky Aquarius, highlighting your goals and ambition. New and unexpected people can suddenly arrive in your life, pay close attention as they are there for a reason. Dynamic Mars, strong in your sign, brings those breakthrough moments that you have been waiting for. GEMINI: MAY 22 - JUNE 21 February suggests that your financial plans will need some reviewing. Venus, joining Saturn and Pluto in responsible Capricorn on the 4th should help you to make some practical, long-lasting decisions. The pioneering Aquarian new moon on the 4th ensures that you have some innovative new ideas to increase your prospects. March: A spectacular alignment of the Sun and the planet Neptune highlight the career angle of your chart this month, allowing scope for intuitive and creative thinking for your new projects. Mercury, your ruler, goes into retrograde motion on the 5th; be sure to check all your important documents, not once but at least twice! CANCER: JUNE 22 - JULY 22 February: The first half of February offers you a great deal of energy as dynamic Mars highlights your career prospects and ensures that the time is right to take the plunge and begin a brand new project. The powerful Mars/ Uranus conjunction around the 13th offers exciting new developments; remain open to expect the unexpected! March: The new moon in Pisces on the 6th of March illuminates all forms of learning, travelling and generally broadening your horizons. This is a good time to review a cherished dream and start to plan your best way forward to making it a reality. Exciting new ideas can boost your personal objectives, particularly after the 28th. LEO: JULY 23 - AUGUST 23 February: The Sun and Mercury are strong in your opposite sign during February, emphasising any difficulties in your relationships. The new moon on the 4th throws some light on an issue that’s been troubling you for a while. Your finances come into view around the critical Virgo full moon on the 19th. March: Your funds and assets are in the spotlight this month as the Sun/Neptune configuration brings financial matters to a head. Optimism and positive thinking should make a vital difference to current plans and help things to go your way. You need to go with your intuition as interesting offers come your way. VIRGO: AUGUST 24 - SEPTEMBER 22 February offers some big changes to your day-to-day living; be on the lookout for some important new information related to your plans. This is a good time for new ideas, particularly around the full moon in your sign on the 19th. A career opportunity turns up around the 15th as Mars enters Taurus. March: Mercury, your ruling planet, goes retrograde on the 5th of March; be sure to reflect on your progress so far. Take stock, and don’t make any major decisions until after the 28th when you will have a clear picture of your way forward. The full moon on the 21st emphasises your potential and your powers of persuasion.
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Community LIBRA: SEPTEMBER 23 - OCTOBER 23 February: New and exciting creative opportunities are suggested during February. Romantic encounters are also in strong focus, particularly around the time of the Aquarian new moon on the 4th. Your finances are highlighted as Mars enters your money area on the 15th; practical advice for restructuring may come your way. March: Venus, your ruler, is in Aquarius for most of March, illuminating romantic relationships and highlighting optimism and luck. The most important thing is for you to be independent and stay true to yourself. The full moon in your sign on the 21st demands that you follow your heart and pursue your ambitions. SCORPIO: OCTOBER 24 - NOVEMBER 22 February puts you in a rather assertive mood, as you strive to take on a more independent approach to life. The Aquarian new moon on the 4th offers radical change, particularly in your domestic area. Jupiter continues to be positive where money is concerned; big ideas can lead to brilliant results if you stay optimistic. March: The radiant Sun and mystical Neptune are highlighting the love and romance sector of your chart. Cosmic indicators show that your powers of attraction are strong and you should have the knack of finding just the right company. Creative talent is also favoured; the more you express yourself, the happier you will be. SAGITTARIUS: NOVEMBER 23 - DECEMBER 21 February’s exciting Aquarian new moon highlights all types of communication and gives you extra powers of persuasion to reach your goals. Go ahead and make some major decisions, particularly around the 15th as dynamic Mars arrives in practical Taurus enhancing your organisational skills and personal resourcefulness. March: Mars remains in steadfast Taurus indicating that this is an exceptionally dynamic time; be sure to make the most of a powerful surge of determination and self-confidence, particularly in work related matters. After the spring equinox on the 20th unexpected contacts bring some good news your way. CAPRICORN: DECEMBER 22 - JANUARY 20 February: Dynamic Mars enters Taurus on the 15th of February, stirring up matters of the heart and suggesting that a new love interest may be on the horizon. Positive thinking is the way forward. Meanwhile, the exciting Aquarian new moon on the 4th in your financial area could bring some great opportunities your way. March: An abundance of planetary activity in your sign suggests that this is the time to back your hunches and take chances in life. Prepare to be well organised ahead of new opportunities that will soon arise. Try to avoid misunderstandings and disagreements, particularly after the 5th as Mercury goes retrograde. AQUARIUS: JANUARY 21 - FEBRUARY 18 February is your birthday month and the favourable new moon on the 4th ensures that positive change is not far off. The Virgo full moon on the 19th highlights your financial area; use your analytical abilities and problemsolving skills to make important changes – don’t miss any vital information. March suggests that financial support and new opportunities may derive from unexpected sources and your own generosity may now be repaid. Venus is in your sign until the 27th; ensure that optimism allows you to forge ahead with your personal ambition. From the 7th Uranus, your ruler, illuminates big changes on the domestic scene. PISCES: FEBRUARY 19 - MARCH 20 February urges you to push forward and review career matters; Jupiter demands that you take full advantage of this chance to usher in a whole new era of confidence and success. The new moon on the 4th stirs up some emotional issues; you may be wise to keep your options open for the time being. March: Mars is powerful in your financial sector suggesting that a review is now long overdue. Important initiatives should get enthusiastically underway now, but avoid hurrying things too much! You’ll start to view events from a new perspective after the spring equinox on the 20th as you welcome in innovative and beneficial change.
NAVIGATE YOUR WAY TO SUCCESS IN 2019 Take a look at your year ahead and plan with in-depth knowledge and cosmic awareness.
Christine Chalklin Inspirational Astrologer and Life Coach, www.restyleyourlife.co.uk Christine@restyleyourlife.co.uk Telephone: 07813 483549
Become aware of your potential and tune in to positive and productive planetary cycles. Find out how to become more successful in life and in business. Consultations are available on Skype or telephone; please contact me for more information.
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Community
Upbeat
Derbyshire Police Re-launch Public Messaging Service The public messaging service Derbyshire Alert has been re-launched across Derbyshire by the Police and Crime Commissioner, who honoured his manifesto pledge to reinstate the hugely popular information service following public appeals. The system allows members of the public and businesses to register to receive information from the police and the commissioner regarding crime and information relating directly to the area where they live. Alert is the national messaging system used by Action Fraud and is utilised by the Home Office for national and regional surveys to help educate the public to protect themselves against Cybercrime and fraud. The commissioner Hardyal Dhindsa has been working with the Constabulary to extend the service and has funded this latest development. He said today: “This latest service is really good news for local residents and businesses. We have worked with the Constabulary to deliver exactly what they have asked for: localised,
(L to R): Mike Douglas, Neighbourhood Alert, Lynn Farrar, Neighbourhood Watch, Carole Woodall, Derbyshire Alert Coordinator, Gary Knighton, Deputy Chief Constable, and Kevin Gillott, Deputy Police and Crime Commissioner
(L to R): Mike Douglas, Neighbourhood Alert, Lynn Farrar, Neighbourhood Watch, Carole Woodall, Derbyshire Alert Coordinator, Gary Knighton, Deputy Chief Constable, and Kevin Gillott, Deputy Police and Crime Commissioner
accurate information about crime and community safety issues delivered in real time by the neighbourhood officers on the street. “As requested people will receive pertinent information direct to their preferred device which could help to reduce their risk of becoming a victim of crime. The reaction from the Neighbourhood Watches at the meeting tonight was really positive and I know that they will help us encourage more people to sign up to receive alerts about their area.” Chief Constable Peter Goodman said: “The system is an excellent tool for engaging with the public, gaining their views and opinions and building in procedures and systems to assist with tackling crime. “Other Social Media platforms do not reach the whole of Derbyshire and there is a need to find other solutions to liaise with the public in relation to crime in their area.” If you are interested in receiving messages log on and sign up at www.derbyshirealert.co.uk.
Margaret’s Florist
Florist For All Occasions Specialist In Funeral & Wedding Flowers
We also cater for all types of floral needs, including: births, birthdays, anniversaries, one-off small dinner parties to a large company dinner. For more information please don’t hesitate to contact us:
Tel: 01773 740243
Margaret’s Florist, 14A Chapel Street, Ripley DE5 3OL Opening Hours: Mon, Tue, Thurs, Fri: 9am - 4.30pm. Weds: 9.30am - 12.30pm. Sat: 9am - 2pm.
www.margaretsflorist.biz
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Community
Friendship Blooms Show your appreciation for a fellow member of the community; it may be a friend, a family member or maybe someone you’ve come into contact with who Hurst of provides a wonderful service Julie Margaret’s Florist or who works hard to make a difference. Let All Things Local surprise them with a fresh bouquet of flowers. All Things Local has joined forces with Julie Hurst (pictured) from Margaret’s Florist in Ripley, to offer readers the chance to show their appreciation for a fellow member of the community. The recipients of this issue’s bouquet are Jean & Pete Corby of Ripley. They were nominated by Jean’s daughter Maxine Howseman also from Ripley. Here is what Maxine wrote: “I would like to nominate my Mum and Step dad, Jean and Pete Corby. For the past 20 years they have raised money for charity. They have raised thousands for lots of local charities, including Ripley Hospital. Last year they raised over £6,000 for the Breast Cancer Test Appeal. Each autumn, together with their friends’ help, they organise and run a fantastic fun afternoon of line dancing with live artists, tombola, bingo and more. They started fundraising over 20 years ago to support their best friend Jean (who was also my mum-in-law), who had breast cancer but has now sadly died. They truly are an inspiration to us all and I love them with all of my heart.” Maxine Howseman
Maxine Howseman (centre) presents the bouquet to Jean & Pete Corby
Blooms’ as the subject. Please include your full name, address and daytime telephone number on your nomination. All nominations are kept on file and you will be contacted if your nomination has been selected. Contact information is only used by All Things Local; no information is given to any third party.
Closing date for nominations for the next issue is Wednesday 20 February 2019.
Nominate someone to receive the next bouquet. All you have to do is state, in no more than 100 words, who you are nominating. Include their address and the reasons why you are nominating them. You can nominate more than one person if they are living/working at the same address… and remember – flowers don’t just have to be for women! The only rule is that the person receiving the flowers must live or work within the Ripley postcode area (DE5). Just write your nomination on a piece of paper and send to Friendship Blooms, All Things Local, 74 Woodhouse Road, Kilburn, Belper, Derbyshire DE56 0NA or email your nomination to karyn@allthingslocal.co.uk putting ‘Friendship To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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Little Black Book
Clubs, Societies, Groups, Classes Codnor & Waingroves 3rd Codnor Scouts For girls and boys aged 6-14. All clubs meet at the Old Cricketer’s Bungalow at the side of the Old Welfare, Codnor. Beavers – Tuesdays 5.15pm till 6.30pm. Cubs – Tuesdays 6.45pm till 8.15pm. Scouts – Fridays 6.30pm till 8.15pm. Ann Cantrill 07817 636232. Amber Valley Rotary Club Meets Tuesdays 6:45 for 7:00pm at Codnor Castle Inn, Ormonde Fields Golf Centre, Nottingham Road, Codnor. New members are welcome. Please contact us first if you are interested. Contact us on 07850 440001 or by our ‘Contact us’ page on www.rotary-ambervalley.org.uk Codnor & District WI 2nd Tuesday each month, 7.15pm at Methodist Church Hall, Mill Lane, Codnor. 01773 714098. Codnor Bowls & Social Club Goose Lane, Codnor. Social Club Thursdays 10am-12noon. Table top games, occasional speaker, drinks/refreshments, good company; all welcome. Crown Green Bowls played during the season, Belper & District League. New players welcome. Contact Chris: 01773 744898. Jog Codnor Jog Derbyshire Group. Meets at the Poet & Castle Pub. For all abilities. Tuesdays at 7pm Contact: Ben 07500 600171 Stay & Play At Waingroves Methodist Church, every Wednesday during Term Time, 1.30pm - 3pm. Contact Ruth Beresford: 01773 743345. Walking for Health Waingroves Woodland Walk, first Tuesday each month 11am – 12.30pm. Meet at The Marquis of Ormonde, Codnor Denby Lane DE5 9SP. Info: Ripley Leisure Centre 01773 514727.
Denby & Kilburn 1st Horsley & Kilburn Brownies Scout Hut, Highfield Road, Kilburn, Wednesday 6.30pm to 8pm. Call 01332 882535 or 07545 551890 for details. 3rd Horsley & Kilburn Brownies Wednesday 6.30pm to 8pm at Kilburn Methodist Chapel Brown Owl (Trish Rose) 01332 881786 1st Horsley & Kilburn Guides Kilburn Methodist Hall, every Thursday in term time. 6.30pm-7.30pm. Contact: Claire 07545551890 or Amy 07496167260. 1st Horsley & Kilburn Rainbows St Clements Church, Church St, Horsley Thurs 6.00pm – 7.00pm. Contact Sarah 07454224088 1st Horsley & Kilburn Scout Group For boys & girls aged 6 to 14 at Scout HQ, Highfield Rd, Kilburn. Contact: Richard Ward, 01773 857232 or 07795 420505. Chatterbox Café Kilburn Village Hall, Church Street, Kilburn, every second Friday, 10am to midday, in conjunction with Mobile Library sited on car park. Coffee, cakes; relax, chat or read. Enid: 01332 780486. Denby Footpaths Group Maintenance and preservation of local footpaths; community walks, circular routes. Jane: 01332 781305, or e-mail denby-footpaths-group@hotmail.co.uk Intermediate Adults Dance Classes Kilburn Village Hall, Church Street, Kilburn. Latin American and Ballroom, Thursdays 7.30pm to 8.30pm. Patricia Cooke: 01332 660837. Kilburn & Horsley Over 60’s Club Kilburn Social Club, Chapel Street, Kilburn, alternate Tuesdays 2pm to 4pm. Contact Barbara Watts: 01773 745008. Kilburn Christian Fellowship Meet in Kilburn Village Hall, Church Street, Kilburn, 5pm to 6pm on the second Sunday of each month, refreshments. All ages welcome. Godfrey: 01332 781200 Kilburn Community Choir A time of singing and fun, no experience needed. Meet at Old Oak, Horsley Woodhouse 1st & 3rd Thursdays from 7-8.30pm.Contact 07986 450580 or 01332 780276. Kilburn Life Group 8 Sitwell Drive, Kilburn. 10am to 11.30am first and third Wednesday of month. Discuss issues on life matters. Cynthia: 01332 882713. Kilburn Striders Jog Derbyshire Group Meets at car park opposite Pickford Gardens. For all abilities. Meets at various times. Please call Ross for details. Ross: 07791 683056 Kilburn Wine Circle For those who like wine and would like to learn more. Meets 3rd Wednesday each month at Kilburn Village Hall. Info: www.kilburnwinecircle.weebly.com or contact David: 01159 303712
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Stay ‘n’ Play Kilburn Village Hall, Church Street, Kilburn. Every Thursday 9.15am to 11.15am term time only. Tae Kwon-do & Self Defence Kilburn Village Hall. Adult & Junior classes Sat: 10.00-12.00noon. Sun 9.30-10.30am Panthers 4-7 yrs Sat: 9.00-10.00am & Wed 5.00-6.00pm Contact Shirley 07779 812468 http://www.progressive-selfdefence.co.uk The Wednesday Club Kilburn Welfare Social Club Chapel St, Kilburn, 1st Wednesday every month 2pm–4pm. Betty Holloway 01332 880726. All welcome. Toddlers Inc. Meets at Denby Bottles Methodist Church, Danesby Crescent, Tues 10am – 12noon, in and out of term time. Contact: 01773 743104. Walking for Health Every Thursday, meets 9.30am outside Bourne’s Café, Denby Pottery Visitors Centre, DE5 8NX. 60 minute duration. Also, Progression Walk (120 minute duration) meets 9.30am, same location, first Thursday each month. For details of either walk contact Amanda Gowing 01773 523325; amanda.gowing@ambervalley.gov.uk. Whist Drive Kilburn Village Hall, Church Street, Kilburn. Fortnightly on Wednesdays 2pm. 01773 741586
Horsley Woodhouse
1st Sitwell Scout Group Beavers, Cubs and Scouts, aged 6 to 14. Sitwell Scout HQ off Church Lane, Horsley Woodhouse DE7 6AW. Info: www.1stsitwellscoutgroup.co.uk. Email: gsl@1stsitwellscoutgroup.co.uk. Adult Yoga Suitable for beginners, Tuesdays 10:30-11:30, Church Hall, Main Street Horsley Woodhouse. Contact Anita Nathan: 01332 842070, apmr.nathan@icloud.com, Facebook: YogaNita. Dance Night Woodhouse Church Hall, DE7 6AT. Every Monday 7 - 8pm. Line Dancing with Megan. Call Sheila 07803 158235. Gentle Chair Exercise (Age UK) Horsley Woodhouse Church Hall. DE7 6AT. Every Thursday 10-11.30am. £4. Tea, Coffee and Biscuits. Contact Di 07919 116585 Horsley Woodhouse Joggers Meet at the church hall, Horsley Woodhouse 7.00pm Thursdays. £2 per session. Beginners group for new or returning joggers. Contact: Sam Draper 07891 571488. Horsley Woodhouse Pre-School Methodist Church Hall, Main Street. Term Time: Under 3’s Monday & Wednesday 1.00pm to 3.30pm. Over 3’s Monday to Friday 9.15am to 12.15pm. Call 07969 964842 during opening hours. Horsley Woodhouse Royal British Legion Horsley Woodhouse Over 60’s Club meets in the hall, alternate Tuesdays at 2pm. Bingo, dominoes and cards. Outings for members at regular intervals. Subs £8 per year. Come and join our friendly group. Call Don 01332 881379. Monthly Monday Music and Meal Group (Age UK) Horsley Woodhouse Church Hall. DE7 6AT. £10 for 2 course meal and entertainment, £5 to bring own packed lunch and enjoy the entertainment. Details and dates: Di 07919 116585. Orchard Group Dominoes, Scrabble, and Whist at Orchard Community Centre, off Fairfield Road, alternate Tuesdays 2pm. 01332 883240. Sitwell Arms Crown Green Bowling Club New members wanted, all ages welcome. Contact Tony: 07939 004479 or 01332 880858 The Getting to Know You Cafe Horsley Woodhouse Church Hall. DE7 6AT. Alternate Mondays 2-3.30pm. Bring along hobbies and crafts and enjoy tea, coffee and cake. £1.50. Sheila 07803 158235. Walking for Health Every Wednesday, 9.45am meet, 60-90 minute duration. Meets at various points around Horsley Woodhouse. For detailed schedule contact Amanda Gowing 01773 523325 amanda.gowing@ambervalley.gov.uk. Whist Drive British Legion Hall, Main Street, Horsley Woodhouse, every Friday 7.30pm. Malcolm Parkin 01332 880160.
Ripley 1st Ripley Scout Group Cubs, Beavers, Scouts 6/14 years for boys and girls. To join call group scout leader, Ron Ashton on 01773 745420 www.1stRipleyScouts.org 4th Ripley Rainbows For girls age 5+. Visit www.girlguiding.org.uk for details Academy Crafters Meet at Ripley Academy every other Wednesday from 6.30-8.30pm, £2. Get together with likeminded people and craft! Contact gilli.p189@gmail.com or search ‘Academy Crafters’ on FB. Aim Excelsum School of Music Band practice on Mondays – 5.30pm – 6.30pm. Unit F, Sitwell Business Centre, Heage Road Ind Est, Ripley, DE5 3GH. Suitable for 6+ years of age and parents, of all abilities. For further details please email: info@aimexcelsum.co.uk
Little Black Book Alphabet Childminding Group Meet at Denby Institute. Childminders wishing to join the group can call Marion on 07952 798808, Claire 07891 956715, Trina 07875 142583. Amber Valley Access Group Contact Keith Boot 07980 591801. Email info@avag.org.uk www.avag.org.uk
Ripley Classical Music Group Field Terrace Community Centre, Ripley. Meet twice a month, Thursday evening at 7.30pm until 9.30pm. To promote interest in an appreciation of classical music through the recording medium. Concert visits & Christmas social. Contact Philip Outram, Secretary, 01773 746939. www.thefrms.co.uk/affprogs/ripley.htm
Amber Valley CVS Volunteers needed to work with various organisations. Supports older people, families, children, helps and supports local groups giving advice on funding, as well as offering training, facilities and resources. Further details: 01773 512076
Ripley Green Garters Ladies North West Morris Dance Team meet every Tuesday at St Joseph’s Church Hall, Butterley Hill, Ripley, 7.30pm to 9.30pm. Dancers and musicians welcome. 01773 743560.
Amber Valley Movie Makers Marehay Miners Welfare, Derby Road, Ripley, meet alternate Tuesdays 7.45pm from September to June. Geoff Thompson: 01773 748559. avmm@gmail.com . Amber Valley Stroke Group Meet alternate Fridays at St Joseph’s Hall, Butterley Hill, Ripley. Supporting stroke survivors. Call Mary 01773 747813.
Ripley Hospital League of Friends Ripley Hospital, second Thursday of the month at 7.30pm. To raise funds for the health, welfare and comfort of patients and staff. Mrs Phyllis Holmes: 01773 747355
Amber Valley Talking Newspaper People who have difficulty reading can receive tapes of local news (weekly) and magazines (monthly) free of charge. Info: Ellen Hughes 01773 608954. Amber Valley WASPI Women Against State Pension Inequality. Group meets7pm, every second Thursday at Coffee Shop Sainsbury’s Ripley. www.waspi.co.uk or email waspiambervalley@gmail.com. All welcome. Baby Sensory Multi-award winning baby learning and developmental classes suitable from birth to 13 months. Tuesday’s, 10am and 11.15 at Ripley Leisure Centre. Booking essential: www.babysensory.com/en/ClassDetails/centralderbyshire or contact Marie 07989 443734 for details. Beehive Ukulele Club Meets every Thurs at the Beehive, 151 Peashill, Ripley at around 8.15 (teacher arrives at 9.10) £5 per week. Contact Julie Johnson 07968 309191.
Ripley Ladies Group Meet 1st Tuesday of every month 7.30pm at Field Terrace Community Centre, Ripley. New members very welcome. Contact Gill 01773 744580. Ripley Leisure Centre Badminton Club Meet Thursdays 7.30pm – 10.30pm at Ripley Leisure Centre. Players of a club or local league standard are welcome. Ladies, Mens & Mixed teams. Info: Kay 01332 883622 Ripley Memory Cafe Third Thursday of each month 2-4pm, Field Terrace Community Room, Off Slack Ln., DE5 3HL. (Opp. Co-op) Info: Helen Aldridge 01332 208845 or email derbyshire@alzheimers.org.uk Ripley Morris Men Male Cotswold Morris Side, meet every Thursday at at Sawmills Village Hall, 8pm to 10pm. New and experienced dancers and musicians welcome. 01773 743560. Ripley Poetry Reading Group Meet at Ripley Library, Grosvenor Road, Ripley, twice monthly, Thursday afternoons, 2pm to 4pm. Janet Dawson 01773 513247.
Centre Stage Theatre Arts Dance, drama and singing for young people 5 to 18. Every Thursday evening during term time, at Mill Hill School, Ripley. Call 01332 232940 or email enquiries@csta.org.uk for details.
Ripley Professional & Business Women (RPBW) Encouraging women to share ideas and interests. All ages, professional and retired welcome, from Ripley & surrounding areas. 2nd Monday each month, 7.30-9.30pm, Lumb Farm, Derby Road, Marehay DE5 8JN. Contact rpbwmembership@gmail.com
Derbyshire Archery Club Now meet at Main Road, Lower Hartshay. Shooting times are Wednesday and Friday evenings. Frequent tournaments at Keldeston Hall in the summer. Regular beginners’ courses throughout the year. Information on dacarchers.co.uk or phone Neil Bryan 01773 824903.
Ripley Residents’ Association Meetings last Monday of each month 6.30pm, Field Terrace Community Centre, Ripley. Advice and guidance on issues or concerns residents may have in a friendly, supportive setting. Info: Ruth Burton 07815301528.
Disability Derbyshire Join our support group for people suffering from depression and anxiety. Last Tues of each month 10.30am-12noon. Field Terrace Community Room, Ripley. Info & attendance confirmation: Disability Derbyshire 01773 740246. Greenhillock’s Fellowship Club for over 50’s. Wood Street Methodist Church, Ripley, Wednesdays 2pm to 3.30pm. Quality entertainment, speakers, social afternoons, quizzes, day trips. David: 01773 423854. Hearing Help (AV) Social group every 3rd Wednesday 11.45am-2.30pm. Lip Reading Group every Friday 10am-12pm. At 156 Derby Road, Ripley. 01773 570976.
Ripley Rotary Club Meet Tuesdays 6:40 for 7pm at Lumb Farm Country Club, Derby Road, Marehay, Ripley. New members welcome. Contact Secretary on 01773 747415 or email: ripleyrotaryclub@aol.com Ripley Royal British Legion Branch 3669 Meet first Thursday of every month at The Sir Barnes Wallis Public House, Maple Avenue, Ripley 7.30-9.00pm. All welcome. Info: Chair Dean Fowler 07966 442387 or email dean.fowler1@btinternet.com Ripley Running Club Meet at Ripley Leisure Centre, Derby Road, Ripley every Tuesday at 6.45pm Runners of all abilities welcome. More info: Eleanor Robinson on 01773 541950, or mail@ripleyrunningclub.com www.ripleyrunningclub.com
Ivy Grove Surgery Patient Group Meet 7pm last Wednesday monthly (excluding August and December) at Ivy Grove Surgery, Steeple Drive, Ripley, Derbyshire DE5 3TH. New members very welcome. For further information email ivgpatientgroup@gmail.com or visit www.ivygrove.org.uk
Ripley School of Dancing Ballroom, Latin American & Old Time Classical. Adult’s practice/tuition class Mondays 7.30 – 8.30pm. Private lessons by appointment at Marehay Methodist Chapel, Ripley. Brenda Jackson 01773 749948.
Live Life Better Free healthy lifestyles service for Derbyshire residents. Advice and help on a range of health and wellbeing topics. Info: 0800 085 2299 or 01629 538200, llbd.info@derbyshire.gov.uk or Livelifebetterderbyshire.org.uk
Ripley Sub-Aqua Club Meet Wednesday evenings 8.30 pm to 9.30 pm at Ripley Leisure Centre Swimming Pool. John 07792 329738 or Sarah 07920 549142.
Moorwood Moor Angling Club Ponds on Inns Lane, South Wingfield, daily 6am to 10pm. More details on membership, and junior teach-in sessions from John and Kath: 01773 746486
Ripley Tuesday Club Club for over 60’s. Meet every Tues, 2-4 pm at Field Terrace Community Centre, Ripley. Speakers, Bingo, other events and days out. All welcome. Contact Roland 01773 746543’.
Musical Dimension Singing group available for bookings – all monies raised donated to local charities. Practice nights Tuesdays 7.30pm at Marehay Methodist Chapel, Ripley. Call 01773 742017 for details and to book or visit www.musicaldimension.co.uk
Ripley WI Field Terrace Community Centre, Ripley. 2nd Thursday every month at 7pm. Contact: Christine Byard 01773 745170.
Ripley (Amber Valley) Lions Club Meet every first Monday of the month at the Kestrel Inn, Marehay, 8pm. Geoff Bacon: 01773 608786. Ripley Amateur Drama Group Meet every Mon at Mill Hill School. 7.30pm – 9.30pm. Info: Terry Thorpe 01773 743471 Ripley and Alfreton Tennis Club Heage Road, Ripley Derbyshire DE5 3GG. Meet several nights/days each week for social tennis. Secretary, Mr Dean Latham: 07986 149810. www.ripleyalfretontennis.org.uk or www.facebook.com/randatc. Ripley and District Gardening Club Every third Saturday at Field Terrace Community Centre, Ripley 3pm to 5pm. New members very welcome. Ripley and District Heritage Trust Meet Ripley Town Hall Thursdays 2pm-4pm. New members welcome – contact Tim Castledine on 01773 746954. Ripley & District Twinning Association Twinned with Chateau Renault, France. Monthly meetings. Details from Roland: 01773 746543. Ripley & District U3A Monthly meetings at St Joseph’s Church Hall, Butterley Hill, Ripley. Dates vary. Many different interests catered for. Call Rosie: 01773 461360. Ripley Cadets Parade on Monday & Thursday 18.45-21.00 at the Cadet Centre, Mill Hill School. Open to all young people 12-18. Contact: Jo Moody 0785 2102104
Tae Kwon-Do Classes Ripley Infants School, Kirk Close, Ripley DE5 3RY. Tues & Fri at 6pm. David: 01773 744031. Twistin’ Tikes Music for ages 3-5, 1.30-2.30pm, Planet Happy, Heage Rd Ind. Est., Ripley. Contact Jacqui 07977578359, info@twistintots.co.uk, www.facebook/twistin tots. Twistin’ Tots Fridays at Planet Happy, Heage Rd Ind. Est., Ripley. 9.30-10.30 & 11-12 noon. Music and play for under 5s. Contact Jacqui 07977578359, info@twistintots.co.uk, www.facebook/twistin tots. Walking for Health Ripley Health Walk, every Friday, meets 1pm at Ripley Leisure Centre Reception or Ripley Medical Centre, Derby Road DE5 3HR (30-45 minute duration). Also, Follow-on Walk (90 minute duration) every second, third & fourth Tuesday. Meet at the entrance to Ripley Leisure Centre at 11am. For info on either walk contact Ripley Leisure Centre 01773 514727.
TO INCLUDE YOUR NON-PROFIT MAKING GROUP IN FUTURE ISSUES, E-MAIL helen@allthingslocal.co.uk DEADLINE FOR NEXT ISSUE WEDNESDAY 20TH FEBRUARY 2019. Please note that only groups and classes which are held in the distribution area of All Things Local will be included.
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Community
Local History Story in a Bottle “Much of firm’s history remains a mystery” read the 1996 newspaper line under a picture of five men in waistcoats and aprons, standing by their cart proudly painted “W Smedley and Sons, Ripley”.
The business was wound up, and in January 1916, all the fittings and equipment in the factory were auctioned off. They included engines, bottling machines, a syrup plant, three dray carts and “Mary” and “Robber”, two dray horses.
The article seemed to have founded on the discovery of a green herbal brew bottle found in a garden on Heage Road. The writer then talked to some of the surviving workers from Smedleys, and people who remembered them. The “mystery” was when and why the firm closed, though in reality it is a sad tale rather than a mystery.
His brothers and sisters, it seems, wanted nothing to do with the mineral water factory, and who can blame them. Sadly, all that is left now are a few bottles with the Smedley name on them. By Ripley and District Heritage Trust www.rdht.org.uk
William Smedley was a miner who was born in Codnor, working there and moving to Sutton to follow the work. He and his wife Agnes had at least 12 children. At some point in the 1890s, William, assisted by his eldest sons John, Ernald and Percy, took over the brewing business of the Fletcher family, once owned by one of Ripley’s first doctors W.H. Fletcher and his brother. The business was at first on Cromford Road, then in buildings at the back of Greenwich House (the Fletcher family home) on Nottingham Road. Giving up work at the pit to run their own business must have been quite a gamble, but for a time, it seems as though the firm was successful, concentrating on mineral waters: ginger ale, quinine tonic, soda water and hop bitters, according to their advertisement. At different times, most of the children helped in the business, both sons and daughters. However, by 1911, Percy had moved on to become an assurance agent, Harold Ernald, leftleft Ernald,ononthethe an engine driver and the others to various trades, leaving only John and Ernald with their father, now in his sixties, helping. John seems to have left the business soon afterwards,
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and in late 1914, Ernald caught the flu and was ill for some weeks. He had a partnership with a Mr Glossop, but that too was dissolved and he had to move premises back to Cromford Road, to a location he considered unsuitable. On Monday 8th February 1915, he told his wife and workers that he was going to Manchester on business, and was seen on the train at Ambergate. He was not heard of again until his body was found in the Cromford canal at Holloway on Saturday 13th February. A diary in his pocket contained what amounted to a suicide note, including the phrases “I don’t know what to do” and “all seems against me”. The inquest found that he had committed suicide “whilst of unsound mind.”
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Whilst every care is taken to ensure accuracy, the publisher cannot accept responsibility for loss, damage or omission caused by error in the printing of an advert. All artwork is accepted on the strict condition that permission has been given for use in the publication. Adverts are accepted on the understanding that descriptions of goods and services are fair and accurate. All Things Local does not officially endorse any advertising/editorial material included within the publication. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in any retrieval system or transmitted in any form – electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise – without the prior consent of the publisher. Advertiser’s details (other than those provided for inclusion in advertisements) are confidential and will not be given to any third party. Publisher: All Things Local Limited, 74 Woodhouse Road, Kilburn, Belper, Derbyshire DE56 0NA T: 01332 882882 M: 07977 272770 E: karyn@allthingslocal.co.uk W: www.allthingslocal.co.uk Graphic Design: Digital Bear Design Printer: Warwick Printing
Deadlines for April/May 2019 Edition:
Little Black Book & Community Diary: Wednesday 20th February 2019 Advertisement Bookings, Editorials, Cancellations and Copy Amendments: Wednesday 20th February 2019 New Advertiser Copy: Monday 25th February 2019
Just complete the Sudoku grid above, cut out and post to Sudoku Competition, All Things Local, 74 Woodhouse Road, Kilburn, Belper, Derbyshire DE56 0NA. Closing date Wednesday 13th February 2019. Remember to include a piece of paper with your name, address and contact telephone number. The winner will be notified by telephone initially. Entrants must be aged 18 or over. All entries are destroyed after the closing date and no information is given to any third party.
Community Diary February / March 2019 February:
9th: Meeting of the Derbyshire Branch of the Embroiderers’ Guild, 10.30am – 4.30pm. All Day Mini-workshops led by Members. Mary’s Church Hall, Darley Lane, Derby DE1 3AX (bring a packed lunch - or go into Derby) Visitors most welcome. Contact 01773 835995. 10th: Talk by Adrian Farmer: ‘Belper at the Record Office’, 5pm – 6.30pm at No.28 Market Place, Belper. £4 per person incl. refreshments. Booking essential: walksandtalks@belpernorthmill.org.uk. 16th: Morning Bird Walk at Kedleston Hall, Derby. 9am, 2-mile winter walk. £6. Call 01332 842191 to book. Dogs on leads welcome. 16th: Belper & District Organ & Keyboard Club in concert, Belper Congregational Church, Green Lane, Belper. 6.45pm for 7.30pm. £6 members/£7 non-members. 01773827204 belperorganclub@aol.com. 20th – 23rd: Belper Musical Theatre presents ‘Our House’ at Belper Community Theatre, John O’Gaunt’s Way, Belper. Tickets from £12. Visit www.belpermusicaltheatre.co.uk or call 01773 865190. 27th – 28th: Belper Musical Theatre presents ‘Our House’ at Guildhall, Derby. Tickets from £12. Visit www.belpermusicaltheatre.co.uk or call 01773 865190.
March:
1st – 2nd: Belper Musical Theatre presents ‘Our House’ at Guildhall, Derby. Tickets from £12. Visit www.belpermusicaltheatre.co.uk or call 01773 865190. 9th: ‘Painting Waterfalls in Watercolour’ workshop for improvers at Smalley Institute, Main Road, Smalley, 10am – 4pm. Bring your own materials (advice available on what’s required), £45 per person. Email lesleylinley1@gmail.com or 07919 465222. www.lesleylinley.co.uk 9th: Meeting of the Derbyshire Branch of the Embroiderers’ Guild, 10.30am - 4.30pm. A talk by Judith Rowley – ‘My Creative Journey’ followed by afternoon workshop on Kantha Cards. St Mary’s Church Hall, Darley Lane, Derby DE1 3AX (bring a packed lunch - or go into Derby) Visitors most welcome. Contact 01773 835995. 10th: Talk by Alex Gilbert: ‘The Strutt Farms’ 5pm – 6.30pm at No.28 Market Place, Belper. £4 per person incl. refreshments. Booking essential: walksandtalks@belpernorthmill.org.uk. 20th: Fashion Show at Little Eaton Village Hall by Blue Sky Fashions. 7pm – 9pm, tickets £5. Raising money for Trix Academy Gymnastic’s Club’s Elite Display Team to represent GB in Austria. Contact trixacademyfundraising@hotmail.com. 30th: Watercolour Workshop ‘Say it with Flowers’ – spend Mothering Sunday painting flowers with mum or someone else dear to you. 10am – 3pm, Smalley Institute, Main Road, Smalley. £75 for two, incl. materials. Beginners or improvers. Email lesleylinley1@gmail.com or 07919 465222. www.lesleylinley.co.uk Please check events with the venue/organiser as the publisher accepts no responsibility if events are changed/ cancelled following publication. If you have a one-off event or special excursion for April/May 2019 please email it to helen@allthingslocal.co.uk. Deadline is Wednesday 20th February 2019. To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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Useful Numbers Doctors & Hospitals, Emergencies Post Offices Appletree Medical Practice 01332 842288 Arthur Medical Centre 01332 880249 Amber Pharmacy 01332 782844 Crimestoppers 0800 555111 Drug Helpline (24 hour) 0800 776600 London Road Community Hospital 01332 265500 NHS 111 Out of Hours (24 hour helpline) 111 Police (non emergency) 101 Ripley Hospital 01773 743456 Ripley Medical Centre 01773 303591 Riversdale Surgery 01773 822386 Royal Derby Hospital 01332 340131 RSPCA Emergency 0300 1234999 Samaritans (24 hour) 116123 Severn Trent Water 0800 7834444 Water Floodline 08459 881188 Whitemoor Medical Centre 01773 880099
Belper (Strutt Street) 01773 820108 Codnor 01773 742376 Duffield 01332 840105 Heanor Post Office 01773 713034 Horsley Woodhouse 01332 880221 Kilburn 01332 880444 Little Eaton 01332 832780 Ripley (Derby Road) 0845 722 3344 Smalley 01332 882222
Travel Birmingham Airport East Midlands Airport East Midlands Trains Manchester Airport Flight Info National Rail Enquiries Roads - to report a fault Traveline – public transport info * Premium rate
0871 222 0072 0800 083 8759 03457 125678 090 10 10 1000* 08457 484950 01629 580000 0871 2002233
Care Homes For Loved Ones
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Ashmere care homes are dedicated to the care and well being of their residents. Each home has a wonderful feeling of family and belonging. It’s a philosophy we know very well, Ashmere is a family run business spanning three generations.
Codnor Park: 88 Glass House Hill, Codnor, DE5 9QT The Firs: 90 Glass House Hill, Codnor, DE5 9QT Smalley Hall: Main Road, Smalley, DE7 6DS King William: Lowes Hill, Ripley, DE5 3DW
Valley Lodge: Bakewell Road, Matlock, DE4 3BN Kidsley Grange: 160 Heanor Road, Smalley, DE7 6DX West Hallam: Newdigate Street, West Hallam, Ilkeston DE7 6GZ
Telephone: 0845 602 2059 | Web: www.ashmere.co.uk | Email: derbys@ashmere.co.uk
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To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
Community
Index
Accountant: Amber Accountancy Aerials: Aerial Technology Ripley Airport Transfers: Connect Cars Architect: Green 2K Design Architect: Jon Pilkington
4 36 11 37 46
Bathrooms: Arctic Interiors 31 Beauty Therapy: Essentials Beauty 20 Bedrooms: Contour Furnishings 30 Bedrooms: Kitchen & Bedroom Warehouse 45 Builder’s Merchant/Landscaping Supplies: Browns 32 Building Work: H & S Construction 28 Building Work: TDB 44 Café/Takeaway: Truffles 17 Car Body Repairs: B A Kelf 26 Car Body Repairs: Martin Buxton 27 Car Servicing, Repairs, MOTs: Grahame’s Autos 26 Car Servicing, Repairs, MOTs: Little Eaton Garage 27 Care Home: Ashmere 62 Carpet Cleaning: Roy Milner 2 Carpets & Flooring: T Nutt & Sons 7 Children’s Soft Play Centre: Planet Happy 53 Chimney Sweep: Belper Chimney Cleaning Services 34 Computer Repairs: HT Computers 4 Computer Supply, Repairs, Tuition: PC User 10 Dental Practice: Glendair Doors: Value Doors Driving Instructor: Mason Driving School
20 43 27
Education: Derbyshire County Council Adult Education Electrician: Andy Hill Electrician: Ian Wilson Electrician: McPherson-Davis Electrician: TME Electrical
53 44 47 44 43
Fabric Store: Dolly’s Fabrics Financial Advice: Belper IFS Florist: Margaret’s Florist Foot Health: The Chiropody Clinic Fuel: Browns/Signal Fuels
11 9 56 21 33
Garden Living: Cabin Master 3 Garden Machinery Sales, Service, Repairs: Belmont Mower Centre 31 Garden Machinery Sales, Service, Repairs: Easy Service & Sales 29 Garden & Property Services: The Garden Guy 44 Gates, Railings, Handrails: Ornamental Engineering 34 Hair: Louise Brown Hair Studio 20 Hair: The Salon 21 Home & Garden Maintenance: G Wheeldon 42 Home & Garden Maintenance: H & H House & Garden 34
Joinery: R & D Joinery
28
Kitchens: Arctic Interiors Kitchens: Holtams Kitchens: Kitchen & Bedroom Warehouse
31 39 45
Landscaping: Langley Landscaping Loft Ladders: More than Loft Ladders
40 36
Oven Cleaning: Spring Fresh
34
Painting & Decorating: Roy Milner 29 Painting & Decorating: TCA Home Maintenance 42 Personal Trainer: Alex Robinson 24 Pest Control: MW Pest Control 34 Pet Care Services: The Pet Servant 4 Plastering: Claxton Plastering 47 Plastering: McPherson-Davis 44 Plumbing & Heating: Blacks 30 Plumbing & Heating: LEEVA Plumbing & Heating 38 Plumbing & Heating: Mark Denton 42 Plumbing & Heating: MDA Plumbing 47 Plumbing & Heating: Richard Fearn 28 Property Services: R & N Property Maintenance 45 Reflexology: Step by Step Restaurant: Denby Lodge Roofing: Lords Roofing Roofing: Ripley Rubber Roofing
21 16 45 42
Schoolwear: Loop Schoolwear Security: JHC Security Security: Prestige Solicitors: Shacklocks Sports Massage: Essentials Steel Fabrications & Welding Services: Roform
1 36 30 8 20 48
Tree Care: Charnwood Tree Services Tree Care: Clip ‘Em & Fell ‘Em Tree Care: The Garden Guy Tyres & Exhausts: ETS
37 47 44 64
Vehicle Collection & Recovery: Wingerworth Commercials
26
Window Cleaning: Deluxe Window Cleaning Heage 47 Windows, Doors, Conservatories: Trade Windows 35 Windows, Doors, Conservatories: Weatherseal 43 Workwear: Loop Workwear 1
Advertisement Booking Deadline for April/May 19 Edition:
Wednesday 20th February 2019
To advertise contact Ruth: T: 01332 883140 M: 07545 261034 E: ruth@allthingslocal.co.uk
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