The Bath Magazine December 2022

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PLUS... SO MUCH MORE IN THE CITY’S BIGGEST GUIDE TO LIVING IN BATH ISSUE 238 | DECEMBER 2022 | thebathmag.co.uk | £4.25 where sold Sweet ballads from Yorkshire The mellifluous sounds of Kate Rusby at Christmas Football inclusivity Jane Jones on Bath City Women’s Football Club Heritage crafts The importance of specialist hand-made traditions On the mantel Why the mantelpiece is a monument for family stories (as well as for hanging stockings on)
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Contents December 2022

5 THINGS 8

Great things to look forward to this month

CITYIST 10

We meet Flavia whose husband Gaius Tiberinus commissioned the building of the Roman Baths, and bring you some news highlights

NOTES ON A SMALL CITY 16

Richard Wyatt wonders just how many supermarkets the city needs...

SWEET TONES 18

Emma Clegg talks to folk singer Kate Rusby, aka The Barnsley Nightingale, ahead of her Christmas show at the Forum

SPARKLE AND SHINE 22

Anthropologie has some seasonal suggestions to create a glamorous sartorial spectacle

WHAT’S ON 26

Our monthly guide to all the things to enjoy in and around the city

GALLERY WATCH 35

Jon Benington gives insight into a sculpture from Victoria Art Gallery’s permanent collection

ARTS & EXHIBITIONS 36

Here’s our monthly round-up of artistic goings-on

CRAFTS WITH HERITAGE 42

Handmade or machine made? We opt for the former and ask six traditional crafts practitioners why their skills are so valuable

FOOD FLAVOURS 54

Festive fare includes mulled sake, chocolate brownies and essential larder purchases, from cranberry jelly to stuffing mixes

More content and updates discover: thebathmag.co.uk

Follow us on Twitter @thebathmagazine

FESTIVE DRINKS 56

Recommendations for spirits, bubbles, whites and reds, as well as non-alcoholic selections from The Great Wine Co.

BOOKS NOOK 58

Make everybody’s Christmas with reads ranging from grown-up fairy tales and agony aunt advice to recipes involving toast

CITY NEWS 60 Business stories and updates

KNOWING THE SCORE 64

Emma Clegg talks to Jane Jones about the launch of Bath City Women’s Football Club, why the Lionesses were an inspiration, and what lies ahead

PAVING THE WAY 74 Andrew Swift has a ghostly wander around Frome

HOMES & INTERIORS 76

Discover the reasons why the mantelpiece has taken on such a significant role in our interiors ... and go and rearrange yours...

GREEN WELCOME 78 Watch us make a festive wreath with fresh foliage

THE WINTER GARDEN 80

The garden still appreciates some care in December

ON THE COVER

Folk singer Kate Rusby, who is performing with her band at the Forum on 9 December. Photograph by David Lindsay

Follow us on Instagram @thebathmagazine

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Iwant a hippopotamus for Christmas, only a hippopotamus will do.” These opening lines of the Hippo for Christmas song express an eccentric hankering, and not one that’s likely to be fulfilled, unless you work in a wildlife park. Pygmy hippo Sirana used to live in Bristol, but now she’s moved to Florida. There are two common hippos at Longleat Safari called Spot and Sonia, if the fancy takes you. And another two called Godzillia and Ernie who live in Flamingo Land in North Yorkshire, which will please folk singer Kate Rusby because she is the one singing The Hippo Song on 9 December at Bath Forum, and her home is in Yorkshire. To be honest, she probably knows that already. I didn’t check that with her when we spoke (see page 18).

Drifting away from hippos to football, I asked Jane Jones, Community Director of Bath City Football Club, about the introduction of the women’s club, which played their first match in September. She told me that the women’s game is no different to the men’s game, and when you have a thrilling competition it doesn’t really matter who is on the pitch. The club has their core women’s team, but want to build up a reserve and a development team, and are welcoming enquiries from players with a level of experience. See page 64.

This time of year is good for making things and so we asked six craftspeople who work in different heritage crafts – from basketry and stone-carving to leatherwork and ironwork – about their specialist skills and why it’s important that they continue. “What the machine is yet to replicate is the soul of the maker,” said iron art specialist Andy Thearle. Here’s to more soul, we say. See page 42.

There’s plenty more this month, including some historical thoughts on mantelpieces (see page 76), and a fair few scrumptious, heart-stopping, essential, engrossing, uplifting, and thoughtful present ideas for you – all more accessible than hippos – scattered throughout these pages.

Be merry when you get there; in the meantime, keep the lights sparkling and draw up lots of lists for ticking off as you go.

Emma Clegg, Editor

Giving-back gifts

The Bath Christmas Market is back and hospice care charity Dorothy House’s wellbeing brand Ubiety has a chalet opposite the Bath Thermae Spa. With body and home care products including Birchwater and Neroli Facial Mist, Frankincense and Lavender Calming Body Salve (£25 for the two); Lemongrass and Cedarwood Soothing Hand Lotion (£16); and Mandarin, Grapefruit and Cedar Uplifting Natural Candle (£15), 100% of the profits on sales support end of life care. findubiety.com

2 Princes Buildings, George Street, Bath BA1 2ED; 01225 424499 www.thebathmag.co.uk

Editor Emma Clegg 01225 424592 emma@thebathmagazine.co.uk

Financial Director Jane Miklos jane@thebathmagazine.co.uk

Assistant Editor/Web Editor Daisy Game daisy@thebathmagazine.co.uk

Production Manager Jeff Osborne production@thebathmagazine.co.uk

Advertising Sales Liz Grey liz@thebathmagazine.co.uk

To advertise tel: 01225 424499

Publisher Steve Miklos steve@thebathmagazine.co.uk

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THE EDITOR
FROM
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© MC Publishing Ltd 2022

THINGS TO DO IN DECEMBER

Feel festive

Christmas is always a wonderful time of year at Bath Abbey; from spectacular carol services and concerts –including Viennese Christmas Spectacular by Candlelight on 8 December, A Christmas Celebration on 10 December, Family Carol Service on 18 December and the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols on 23 December –to festive tower tours and knitted Nativity fun trails, there’s something for everyone this season. Visit the Bath Abbey website for further information on Christmas events: bathabbey.org

Have a laugh

The Natural Theatre Company returns to the Rondo Theatre for a cracking Christmas show! After the success of last year’s Panto and the Pea,The Natural Theatre Company brings you a brand-new story, filled with famous characters, great songs, and lovely frocks. A brilliantly bonkers family treat. Playing from 8 to 18 December at the Rondo Theatre. Tickets from £14, available at rondotheatre.co.uk

Swing into Christmas

Celebrate the festive season in style with the vocalists and instrumentalists of the Down for the Count Orchestra, as they ‘Swing Into Christmas’! This is a Christmas celebration like no other, as the orchestra recreate the music of Nat ‘King’ Cole, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra and more in a luscious 28-piece orchestral setting. Expect to hear faithful recreations of the best music of the swing era, including I’ve Got You Under My Skin and ‘S Wonderful, alongside jazz and festive classics including Winter Wonderland, This Christmas and The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting). On at The Forum, Bath, 7 December, 7.30pm. Tickets from £25, plus booking fee, available from downforthecount.co.uk

Enjoy jazz

Visit Iford Manor this December and enjoy live jazz from top musicians alongside a delicious, leisurely lunch prepared by award-winning Head Chef Matthew Briddon and team: what could be finer? Food sustainably and locally sourced, much reared, grown and foraged on the Iford Estate. The bar opens from 11.30am, with music from 12–2pm (including a short interval). Food orders will be taken at the time for which your table is reserved, but feel free to arrive earlier to be seated and enjoy the bar and music. Iford’s Sunday Jazz Lunches 2022 will take place until 18 December. Mains from £21. See the Iford website for details of performers, the menu and to book: ifordmanor.co.uk

Explore the forest

Elves have made their way to Westonbirt, The National Arboretum to decorate for Christmas. But they’re running slightly behind schedule… will the trail be ready for Father Christmas? This wellloved experience will take visitors on a journey through beautiful woodland, transformed by colourful twinkling lights. In the Christmas village, festive food and drinks will be available, alongside fairground rides and market stalls. Witness the wonder of Westonbirt’s Christmas trail until 21 December. Tickets available through advance booking only, via the Forestry England website: forestryengland.uk

ZEITGEIST
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Credit: Johnny Hathaway

The cityist

MY BATH Flavia

Flavia is a Roman lady, born around 30 AD. Her husband Gaius Tiberinus commissioned the building of the Roman Baths in Aquae Sulis –Flavia loves to spend time there, and she has a large collection of sandals.

Why did you make your home in Aquae Sulis?

Well it’s so much cleaner here than smelly old Londinium, and of course you have the wonderful baths here! My husband Gaius Tiberinus actually commissioned them, you know, so in a way, you have me to thank. They truly are a marvel of this colonial backwater you call Britannia –the only selfheated baths this side of the Empire! The waters have their healing properties from the blessed power of the Goddess, so Aquae Sulis really is the place to be in Roman Britannia.

Why did your husband fund the building of the Baths? And what is his role in life?

Well Gaius has always had a nose for the next big thing, and when he heard about this healing spring near the Mendip Hills, he just had this instinct it would be the perfect place to establish a bath house. You know, before we came along, it was little more than a muddy old puddle! The local Celts really had no idea how to harness the power of this spring, but we Romans are very good with water –you may have heard of our aqueducts? We’re jolly clever!

As for Gaius’ role, well… to me, he’s the man who funds my caliga addiction. He’s a government official, a procurator, so he’s in charge of the local money pots. Honestly, I’m not all that interested in what he does, so long as he keeps the denarii rolling in.

Where do you like to spend time in the Baths? The Great Bath itself. I love to submerge myself in the warm waters –being careful to keep my wonderful hair dry, of course –and relax with a cup of wine and some oysters. It’s where I catch up on the latest gossip

Glossary

Caliga –Roman sandal Apodytereum –changing room

Legate –governor of a Roman province Dobunni –Iron Age tribe living in the British Isles prior to the Roman conquest of Britain River Abona –River Avon Camulodunum –Colchester

Saturnalia –Roman festival held on 17 December of the Julian calendar Caldarium –room with a hot plunge bath

With thanks to The Natural Theatre Company for enabling this interview with Flavia; naturaltheatre.co.uk

around Aquae Sulis with my lady friends. Though don’t believe anything Octavia Sabina tells you –she has a silver tongue!

Have you ever commissioned a curse tablet? Of course! I mean, who hasn’t? It’s like an unfortunate right of passage here. I had a glorious winter cloak that was taken from the apodytereum at the beginning of last spring. I was livid!

Have you ever met a Roman Emperor? I have! Vespasian. Though, technically he wasn’t an emperor when I met him. He was just Titus Flavius Vespasianus, the legate of the second legion, Augusta. He’s actually a lot shorter in person than you’d think.

How do you and your family manage your energy consumption?

Darling, underfloor heating is the only way to go! It gets terribly cold here in Britannia during the winter months, and nothing can beat having warm feet. It really is worth it, even though the child slaves moan about getting into the crawl space to stoke the fires.

Do you ever mix with the Iron Age Britons? Only when I have to. As the wife of an important politician, I have to help grease the wheels of our alliance with the Dobunni tribe. It makes life easier, even if they do have a bit of a pong. They bathe in the cold waters of the River Abona with this strange animal fat and ash mix… It looks revolting and can’t possibly get them clean –not properly! Olive oil and a good sweat in the caldarium or nothing, that’s what I say!

Goddess Sulis Minerva or Father Christmas? Father Who? Oh, you must be referring to that new religion in the south of the Empire. One god? Ridiculous! No, no, of course Sulis Minerva is the best. I doubt this Father Christmas can heal aches and illnesses or possesses a fraction of her wisdom.

Do you like this time of year and what delicacies will you be eating at Saturnalia? I’m not all that fond of this time of the year. I’m a creature of the warmth, and it gets so chilly and dark in Britannia over winter. I was born in the old capital of Camulodunum, but my blood yearns for the warmth of Italia. Saturnalia is the only highlight –I adore a good party! I already have my order in for peacock brains and the plumpest dormice they can import.

What do you think of the people who come to the Baths, but don’t get in the waters? Well, they’re just missing out, aren’t they? It’s the ones who ask if they can drink the water that I find particularly odd. Why would you

want to drink bath water? I suppose it takes all sorts. I just wish they wouldn’t bother me with their disgusting habits.

Do you think life has improved in Aquae Sulis over the centuries?

Well I do like all these new market stalls you have here now –I am fond of a bit of retail therapy, as you 21st-century people call it. But in many ways, it’s much the same as it was in my day with so many different languages spoken and people from across the globe making pilgrimage to the Baths. I’m not that fond of your carriages, though –far too noisy and smelly. Horses at least have a certain majesty, but these metal boxes are quite hideous.

Would social media have been beneficial for the Romans?

Oh, it would have made life a lot easier! I like to keep up with the latest trends and fashions of Rome, but it can take up to six months for news of what the Empress is currently wearing to reach me here in Aquae Sulis. It would be a different story if we had Instagramus at our disposal. With an Empire as big as ours, it’s so important to keep news and information flowing. You modern folk have no idea how lucky you are!

The roads in modern Aquae Sulis are more chaotic than in your day. What’s the answer? I cannot stand all your wiggly roads. They’re just so complicated and unnecessary! If you want to get somewhere, just have a straight line from point A to B. That’s how we do it with our roads. I love a straight Roman road. And get rid of all these metal carriages! If you need something to transport you, just hire a couple of servants to carry you around in a litter. There’s nothing like having two strapping men heaving you about on a big pile of cushions –far fewer emissions and much easier on the eye! ■ romanbaths.co.uk

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City updates

Museums are more than just collections of objects; they also reflect and help to shape how we see our culture and place in the contemporary world. A lecture by Dr Tristram Hunt on 19 December at BRLSI considers issues around the civic and the global, the V&A and the cultural mission of museums.

Dr Tristram Hunt is the Director of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, arguably the world’s leading museum of art, design and performance. The V&A’s founding commitment to design, education and industry continues to define it today. Tracing the museum’s genesis from its Victorian roots, Dr Hunt will consider how the V&A’s civic foundations – the national and the global – engendered a world-class collection, and today, the creation of a nationwide family of museums, from Dundee to Stoke-on-Trent. His talk will consider the challenges and opportunities for a major museum in the context of current financial challenges and cultural anxieties.

Tristram Hunt: the civic and the global pm– the V&A and the cultural mission of museums, 19 December, 7.30–9pm, BRLSI, 16 Queen Square (or online), Bath £4–£7, brlsi.org

Stained-glass windows publication

A new book called Glass and Glory has been published on the history of the world-class, hand-crafted Victorian stained glass windows in St Stephen’s Church, Lansdown. Written by art historian Carolyn Cowley and photographer Alastair Chalmers, the richly illustrated book covers the history of the church’s stained-glass windows and Victorian Gothic revival fittings. The foreword is by Mark Angus, the Bath-born, internationally acclaimed stained-glass artist who designed and created the last contemporary window installed in 1982. All other windows are Victorian, handmade by the period’s renowned artisan craftsmen and stained-glass luminaries. Collectively they form a parade of the period’s best known and internationally famous makers: Clayton & Bell, Burlinson and Grylls, James Powell and Sons (formerly Whitefriars), and Messrs Campbell and Smith.

The book stands as a definitive reference for architectural historians, ecclesiastical history enthusiasts, stainedglass connoisseurs and those who appreciate the beauty of classic Victorian churches. Available to order for £55.

To order email carolyn.cowley@yahoo.co.uk

Bath Abbey's Footprint Project has brought the city's parish church honours at the first-ever National Churches Awards ceremony held in London. Along with Bath-based architects Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios, the Abbey has been jointly awarded the Presidents’ Award which honours excellence and creativity in church architecture.

The Footprint Project was developed with architects Feilden Clegg and Bradley Studios, and was given for the best example of new design in re-ordering, alterations, extensions and new buildings which are specifically for liturgical use. The project aims were to repair the Abbey’s collapsing floor, install a new eco-friendly heating system using Bath’s hot springs, and provide new, improved spaces and facilities to ensure the Abbey is more sustainable, hospitable and useable for all visitors.

A new scheme of energy-efficient LED lighting was installed, which reduces energy consumption and allows the unique interior of Bath Abbey to be fully appreciated. The Abbey has also made use of the Roman Great Drain, which carries over 1 million litres of hot spring water each day, as a low-carbon heat source. Beneath the Abbey, in the pavement vaults and in the adjacent Georgian terrace, spaces have been reorganised and new spaces created.

The judges recognised the immense challenges and complexity of the project as well as the innovation behind the heating scheme. The Presidents’ Award, an historic silver Chalice and Paten, will be lent to Bath Abbey for a year and it also receives a £500 prize. bathabbey.org

Bath-based illustrator Alice Tait has designed the branding for The Enchanted Garden of Light, the sparkling festive trail at the American Museum & Gardens that runs from 1–31 December. Alice has also created this unique hand-drawn map of the trail, which will be given to visitors on arrival.

Alice is a British illustrator and designer whose artwork has been commissioned by Waitrose, Vogue and renowned fashion houses, Carolina Herrara and Chanel. Best-known for her map illustrations, including a best-selling map of Bath, her prints and merchandise have also been sold in Habitat, John Lewis, Foyles, WH Smiths, and even the Royal Palaces. Alice has also created cover art for Nigel Slater’s cookbooks, Sue Townsend’s modern classic Adrian Mole, and a series of books for children published by Walker. The Amazing Christmas Store at the American Museum & Gardens will be stocking Alice Tait products and books. americanmuseum.org/Christmas

Presidents’ Award for Footprint
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Map of The Enchanted Garden of Light Victor Suchar Christmas lecture

John Rutter at Bath Abbey

Bath Camerata is welcoming back John Rutter to Bath as the conductor of its Christmas Concert. You can join them in the Abbey on 19 December for an uplifting celebration of festive music. There will be Christmas songs, old and new, alongside some favourite carols for the audience to join in with – all presided over with gusto and style by ‘Mr Christmas’ himself. Here John whets our appetites:

Q: Can you give us a bit more information about what to expect from the Christmas concert?

A: First and foremost, we will be featuring the great traditional Christmas hymns and carols. There are some for the audience to join in, like O Come, All Ye Faithful and Hark! The Herald Angels Sing, and some for the choir to sing on their own, like The Holly and the Ivy and In the Bleak Mid-Winter. We are fortunate to have Bath Abbey's own outstanding organist Huw Williams to supply the organ accompaniments and to play two dazzling organ solos. With Ukraine so much in our thoughts this year, I wanted to include a Ukrainian carol in the programme –called A Ukrainian Alleluia, it is based on a traditional Ukrainian melody. We will also be premiering a new carol arrangement (Shepherds, Awake) that I have done specially for Bath Camerata.

Q: I see you are doing Christmas Celebrations in a number of venues across the UK – is Christmas your most favourite time of year?

A: I enjoy Christmas, and in particular I enjoy contributing to everyone's seasonal festivities in music; I hope to make their Christmases merry. But I am active for the other 11 months of the year!

Q: How do you adapt your programme to suit the different locations/venues?

A: That takes time, experience, and thought. It helps that I know Bath Abbey and I know Bath Camerata very well as a guest conductor.

Q: Your musical life includes composing, conducting and producing recordings. What gives you most pleasure?

A: Anything musical gives me great pleasure, and I enjoy alternating between my different musical activities. The highlight in 2022 has been to experience the full return of choirs to singing as it was before the pandemic, and to visit the different countries where I've conducted this year: America, Italy, Iceland, the Netherlands, and Denmark. More to look forward to in 2023.

Q: How would you describe your taste in music, and do you like to explore new pieces and new composers?

A: Eclectic; I enjoy many different genres. No barriers. Indeed, I do like to explore –if we didn't make new discoveries, we would all stagnate. And one of my greatest pleasures is to get to know young composers just starting out.

Q: What does Christmas itself hold for you and will there be live music during the holiday break?

A: Relief that I can relax on 25 December after a whole series of Christmas concerts! Live music? Probably a visit to King's College Chapel in Cambridge for their Christmas morning service.

Bath Camerata’s Christmas Concert with John Rutter, 19 December, 7.30pm, Bath Abbey. Tickets, from £10 to £30 with half-price tickets for under 25s, available from: bathboxoffice.org.uk bathcamerata.co.uk

Enhanced pacemaker developer wins award

Bioelectronic company Ceryx Medical, a spin-out from the Universities of Bath and Bristol, has won the 2022 Business Start-up Award from the UK’s Institute of Physics, which praised the company’s revolutionary bioelectronic devices.

Ceryx was formed in 2016 as a joint venture exploiting the neuronal technology patented by the University of Bath and the know-how in cardiac neuromodulation at the University of Bristol. This innovative research created microchip technology for medical devices that restores the natural synchronisation of biological rhythms, including a neuronal cardiac pacemaker, which has the potential to provide the world’s first curative therapy for heart failure.

“These bioelectronic devices help restore the lost physiological functions within the body. This approach allows revolutionary therapies with no side effects to be employed,” The Institute of Physics said in its award citation.

Unlike conventional pacemakers which apply metronomic stimulation, the neuronal pacemaker produces minute adjustments to heartbeat intervals to resynchronise the cardiac and respiratory rhythms. This has the effect of saving the heart energy, reverting the debilitating symptoms of heart failure by giving the heart the opportunity to repair itself.

“An estimated 30 million people suffer from heart failure and, once the cycle of heart failure is established, current therapies can do little to prevent disease progression. We believe we can change that,” said Dr Stuart Plant, Ceryx Chief Executive Officer. bath.ac.uk; ceryxmedical.com

Same-day hip and knee replacement

Sulis Hospital, the award-winning hospital based in Bath, has become the first in Bath and Bristol to offer same-day hip and knee joint replacement surgery, without the need for an overnight stay.

In line with its mission to adapt, keep ahead of medical advancements and constantly improve its practices, Sulis Hospital has defined a medical pathway aimed at aiding overall recovery and reducing post-operative complications such as DVT. This enhanced recovery programme (ERP) or enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) aims to help every patient recover from surgery more quickly and is based on NICE guidelines.

Historically, patients who undergo knee or hip joint replacement surgery would spend an average of three days in hospital to recover; however, a team of experts at Sulis Hospital has been able to reduce this number to just an average of one day spent in hospital with many going home on the day of surgery.

The patients who have so far undergone day case Joint Replacement Surgery within a three-month period total 44, with an average of 0.96 days spent in hospital. By recovering in their home environment, each patient is also encouraged to take ownership of their recovery, increasing independence. Alongside this, day case surgical procedures will help to reduce the backlog of patients waiting for surgery, which is currently standing at a record high of 7 million people in England alone. sulishospital.com

CITY| UPDATES 14 TheBATHMagazine | deceMber 2022 | iSSUe 238
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NOTES ON A SMALL CITY

Richard Wyatt

Columnist Richard Wyatt assesses the impact of a new supermarket built on land owned by Bath Rugby. There are opposing arguments: it helps secure the club’s future at Lambridge, but does it leave us with too many supermarkets?

It’s fair to say Bath Rugby Club has already opened its biggest Christmas present this year. This is the proceeds of an exchange of contracts on part of the land it owns on the London Road at Lambridge with the supermarket chain Lidl GB. According to the club’s press release, it will deliver “a modern and bespoke food store beside Bath RFC’s existing training facilities.” At the same time, the club says it has permanently transferred the adjacent training pitches and clubhouse to BATH RFC, thus “securing the amateur club’s long-term future at Lambridge.”

It’s not surprising that since emerging from the pandemic Bath Rugby has been reviewing its assets, and talks about this land transaction as providing financial investment in the amateur club. But this is going to be a sizeable sum of money and, with all ‘legal obstacles’ now cleared, must surely inject a few coppers into the club’s long term ambitions for a permanent stadium at the Rec? Although I do hear that the idea of more ‘permanent’ structures on this green lung –belonging to the citizens of Bath –might still throw up legal challenges.

I must admit I heard rumours about a land sale on the London Road some time ago and was not surprised when it was officially announced.

As you see from exerpts to the right, Bath Rugby says it was impressed with Lidl’s “high-quality sensitive design, with consideration to the local setting and sustainable features, such as proposing to incorporate local Bath stone, natural timber cladding, air source heat pumps, a green roof and electric vehicle rapid charging facilities.” However, all of this is subject to an official planning application which hasn’t yet been submitted to the local authority.

Lidl say a new store on this site would “enhance access to Lidl’s high-quality and affordable produce for local residents, on the eastern side of Bath and outlying villages.”

I can see the arguments for and against occupying some social media space before too long.

I can see that this supermarket, which prides itself on being one of the cheapest chains on the high street, would be welcomed by people living on the east side of the city and, as l keep hearing, it’s all about providing ‘choice’ –but do we really need yet another store?

With people moving back into newly created city centre flats, there is some sense in new mini-markets opening around them to serve their domestic needs. But we are already well-served at Lambridge. Just a bit further along this busy and polluted road is Morrisons, and more importantly the little shopping centre in Larkhall ‘village’ would be under threat. Apart from the Co-op store, there are longestablished and well supported family businesses that might find it hard to survive a mass exodus of locals.

The media release talks about an “extensive public and pre-application consultation with the local community” which will take place before a planning application is submitted, and that “plans and initial proposals will be shared with the public and local businesses in due course.”

All very considerate, but that doesn’t detract from the fact that the company has bought the land with the single intention of building a supermarket, whatever is said in mitigation.

I also can’t help thinking that with any proposed store needing a fair-sized car park, this site could have made an ideal mini east of Bath Park and Ride!

As has already been pointed out to me, this will attract more traffic to an already congested stretch of road. Its access issues would mean re-designing the T-junction with the old Gloucester Road and probably scrapping the bus lane in front of this site. It would also contribute to the destruction of an area of mature woodland which buffers the city boundary and become yet another example of ‘ribbon development’, sticking suburban fingers into our green and rural surroundings.

No doubt nothing will come before B&NES planning department until well into the new year, but I cannot see the proposal being unopposed.

If it all goes through, as it probably will, Bath will be supermarket ‘book-ended’ with a Lidl on the way into town and another on the way out, whichever way you approach our World Heritage city.

All the above is my personal point of view, and I like a cut-price bargain like the next person. I just think it’s a shame if an established and well-served local community has to suffer as a result of yet another supermarket store.

As a ‘Lidl’ aside, someone recently suggested that this ‘supermarket’ site and the practice ground could have provided an alternative site for a brand new rugby stadium!

P.S. Happy holidays! n

PLans foR neW suPeRmaRket

“Since emerging from the pandemic Bath Rugby has undertaken a review of all its assets, including Lambridge. This land transaction unlocks the potential of land directly adjacent to the amateur club’s training facilities, and will provide investment in the amateur club.

"This will create funding opportunities for the amateur club, helping the facilities at Lambridge to be revitalised. This will also enable Bath Rugby to invest in our wider community rugby programmes, and the women’s pathway and professional team, assisting amateur rugby to grow and thrive in the long term.

"We were impressed by Lidl GB’s commitment to deliver a high-quality sensitive design, with consideration to the local setting and sustainable features, such as proposing to incorporate local Bath stone, natural timber cladding, air source heat pumps, a green roof and electric vehicle rapid charging facilities.”

Richard Wyatt runs the Bath Newseum: bathnewseum.com

CITY | NOTEBOOK
Bath Rugby chief executive Tarquin McDonald
16 TheBATHMagazine | DeCeMBeR 2022 | issue 238
Local Green Cllr Joanna Wright joined other locals outside the London Road field that Bath Rugby have sold to Lidl to build a supermarket
THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 17

The Barnsley nightingale

Many singer-songwriters feel compelled to move away from their familiar homeland in order to reach for the stars, striving for national and international recognition. Folk singer Kate Rusby’s perspective is different; she is grounded in the South Yorkshire region and in the old ballads and traditional songs she grew up with. After 30 years of performing, her music still reaches out to followers all over the country, and on 9 December she and her band come to the Forum for her annual Christmas concert. Expect Hippo for Christmas and B.B.B.B. (Big Brave Bill from Barnsley), both numbers that have been added to Emma Clegg’s Christmas playlist

Photograph by Mike Ainscoe

Folk music is woven into the very fabric of Kate Rusby. In 1999 at the age of just 26, she was named as one of the Top Ten Folk Voices of the Century; now celebrating 30 years of touring, and with 19 albums to her name, folk and acoustic influences remain rooted in her music. Kate is known as the ‘Barnsley Nightingale and one YouTube comment I came across describes Kate as having “a voice to melt concrete” –having listened to many of her songs in recent weeks, I couldn’t phrase it better.

The folk roots do go deep; with both parents folk singers and with a childhood surrounded by music, perhaps the folk tradition was an incontestable destiny. “I was brought up in a musical house; my folks both sing and play, that’s how they met, so that’s how I got into music. My brother, sister and I all started playing the fiddle when we were six or seven. There were always instruments and music about and my parents taught us folk songs. We learnt so many travelling up and down in the car – my dad was a sound engineer and had to travel to festivals. So we were taken on lots of long journeys and they would sing us songs and get us singing harmonies, so I had this whole wealth and knowledge of folk songs.”

Kate Rusby is coming to Bath Forum on 9 December to perform one of her much-loved Christmas concert tours. This time of year brings out the folk music more than any other in her South Yorkshire home, where the tradition is to sing carols in the crowded pubs. “Where I live in Barnsley, there is this whole history of South Yorkshire carols that are sung in pubs in these parts. They used to be sung in churches up and down the country, but when the straightlaced Victorians came along they threw out a lot of the happy versions of these carols. So people that loved to sing them took the carols to the pub, where they could combine a good old singsong, a catch up with their mates and a pint of beer. These songs have been passed down the generations and they have remained a special little nugget of gorgeous treasure in this region.”

Every year the songs start the weekend after Armistice Day and go on until New Year’s Day. “It’s only certain pubs that do it, but people have started to travel from miles around. And it’s people from all walks of life, not just a folky thing. Usually there is a brass quartet or quintet playing and there are many versions of the same song – there’s over 50 versions of While Shepherds Watched their Flocks by Night.”

That’s a lot of versions. But that means there is an endless supply of songs to which Kate can apply her particular brand of folk music alchemy. “It’s been fabulous to do this tour for so many years, but people keep saying to me ‘Surely you are running out of Christmas stuff!’ Then I say that we’ve only recorded six versions of While Shepherds… so far, and so we’ve got a long way to go. One of my favourite versions is called Sweet Bells – it’s got a huge singalong chorus that people wait for in our gigs now. When we perform it, you see the faces in the audience light up, the adults who have passed this song on to their kids.”

Five out of Kate’s 19 albums are Christmas ones; the latest, Holly Head, released in 2019, includes songs such as The Holly King, Yorkshire for Christmas and B.B.B.B. (an acronym for Big Brave Bill from Barnsley, a miner and ‘hero’ who loves drinking tea).

Kate’s December gig is made up of traditional Yorkshire carols, standard carols that people will recognise, and some more unusual ones like Santa Never Gives me a Banjo, and Hippo for Christmas Check these out; I’d say they are essential additions to the festivities. “One year I made our tuba player dress up in a big hippo costume, and he had his big grumpy face on, but he loved it really. It’s the end of the year for us as a band, and we all love playing these songs, and the audience come with a different expectation and atmosphere because it’s Christmas and they are letting their hair down.”

Kate’s most recent album, Hand Me Down (2020) includes songs that reinterpret relatively recent hit songs, such as Shake it Off (Taylor Swift), True Colours (Cindi Lauper), Friday I’m in Love (The Cure) and Manic Monday (The Bangles). “My husband Damian and I love working together and experimenting with songs and I have favourite songs that are outside the folk theme as well, which was why it was so lovely to do that covers album. We had to keep the original gorgeousness of the song, but also make them our own, dress them up in a different outfit. For me it was a celebration of the songwriters who have written some of the songs that have been with me through my life and the musicians and singers that have performed them.”

Kate is markedly modest about the enchanting quality and tone of her voice. “When I look back, I had no idea when I started that I was going to end up being a singer. I firmly believe at this end of my career that music chose me, and it wasn’t the other way round.

“When we were choosing subjects at GCSE I just had no idea. And then when I was 17 a friend of ours who was running Holmfirth Folk Festival called in. I was sat in our garage on the piano that my dad had got from this pub that was throwing it out and it stank of cigarettes and booze, so my mum banned it to the garage, but I loved it in there, because the reverb was so much better. So I’d sit there and I’d work out chords to accompany songs. Our friend stuck her head in the garage and said, ‘Oh, you are getting quite good at that; you should come and do a slot at the festival, do you fancy it in a couple of weeks?’ My head nodded, but straight after she had left I said to myself, ‘What on earth are you doing, I don’t want to sing in front of people, this is crazy!’. I was nearly sick beforehand because I was so nervous. But that was how it started, and then it grew organically.”

Kate went to a performing arts college in Barnsley, majoring in drama, and over this period she was being asked to sing regularly at festivals and other gigs. Then, unsure of what to study at university, she took a year out. “My dad was looking for something new to do at that time and we decided to set up our own record company, and record my first album.”

When Pure Records was set up, it was 100% a family affair, with Kate’s dad Steve at the helm, her mum doing the accounts, her younger brother Joe as sound engineer and her older sister Emma in a marketing role. When her dad officially retired at the beginning of lockdown, her sister Emma took over. And Kate’s husband Damian O’Kane is now guitarist and producer.

“It’s not all been smooth – there have been points where we’ve disagreed,” says Kate. “We’re a family where if we do have an argument over something we all go our separate ways and come back together and say, ‘Right I’m sorry for shouting, and how are we going to get round this problem?’ And I do think we have this closeness, this bond, that grew out of the music when we were kids. We were a really tight family unit going to all those festivals.”

“ I am so lucky that I go along to a venue like the Bath Forum and people come along,” says Kate. “That’s all I can do. I can sing a song and pass on that human connection and emotion on to other people. And that’s what folk music is, isn’t it? The music of the people.” n

Kate Rusby –Christmas 2022, 9 December, The Forum, Bath, doors 7pm; show 7.30pm, £30/£20 under 16s; bathforum.co.uk; katerusby.com

I can sing a song and pass on that human connection and emotion on to other people. And that’s what folk music is, isn’t it?
THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | deceMBeR 2022 | TheBATHMagazine 19
Photograph by David Lindsay
LUXURY CHRISTMAS GIFTS FROM BATH’S SHOP OF WONDERS Lalique Bulldog Sculpture £390.00 Tanzanite and Diamond Bracelet £12,995.00 Diamond Pendant £4,495.00 CHRISTMAS AT MALLORY Sapphire and Diamond Earrings £8,495.00 Tanzanite and Diamond Ring £6,550.00 Diamond Ring £18,950.00 Chopard Chopardissimo Mini Tote £790.00 Diamond Bracelet £8,950.00 London Blue Topaz and Diamond Earrings £995.00 Chopard Happy Sport £5,550.00 Montblanc Sartorial Document Case £905.00 Diamond Earrings £4,500.00 Montblanc Star Cufflinks £310.00 Diamond Ring £9,500.00 Omega De Ville Prestige £4,200.00 Georg Jensen Sky Ice Cubes £41.00 Tahitian Pearl and Diamond Earrings £1,895.00 Mallory, 1 - 5 Bridge Street, Bath, BA2 4AP Tel: 01225 788800 mallory-jewellers.com 20 THeBATHMagazine | deceMBeR 2022 | issue 238
THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 21

Life of

the
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What’s on inDecember

MUSIC AT GREEN PARK BRASSERIE

n Green Park Brasserie, Green Park, Bath

Enjoy live jazz/funk/soul/swing at Green Park Brasserie on Weds and Thurs from 6.30–8.45pm and Fri and Sat from 6.30–9.45pm. Music includes dynamic duos, modern trios and a Hot Club style quintet. greenparkbrasserie.com

FESTIVE ABBEY TOWER TOURS

Until 11 December

n Bath Abbey Climb 212 steps to the top of the tower, with stunning views from the highest point in the city. 45-minute guided tour, with free mulled wine or hot chocolate at the top of the tower. Tours run Monday to Saturday, times vary. bathabbey.org/christmas

JAZZ SUNDAYS AT IFORD MANOR

Until 18 December

n Iford Manor Estate

Enjoy fantastic, live jazz from top musicians alongside a delicious, leisurely lunch prepared by award-winning head chef Matthew Briddon and team. Food sustainably and locally sourced, much reared, grown and foraged on the Iford Estate. See the Iford website for details of performers, menu and to book. ifordmanor.co.uk

ELVES SWAPSHOP

Until 20 December

n Elf-o-Matic machine, Abbeygate Street

Children can bring an old toy to the Elf-oMatic machine in Abbeygate Street, exchange it for a golden token, before it is upcycled by the elves for a new lease of life. Children can then exchange their golden token for a newly upcycled toy, spreading Christmas cheer and encouraging a sustainable approach to the season. Children

will also be able to meet Father Christmas who will be hot-desking from the Swapshop! To purchase tickets for the Elves’ Swapshop, visit welcometobath.co.uk/christmas

HATCHING THE PAST: AMERICAN DINOSAUR EXPLORERS

Until 31 December n The American Museum & Gardens, Claverton Down

A look at the life of dinosaurs through their eggs, nests and embryos. Captivating for all ages, visitors are invited to touch real dinosaur bones and reconstructed nests, dig for eggs, and see animated videos. This multi-media experience gives credence to the theories that dinosaurs and birds are closely related. americanmuseum.org

CHRISTMAS AT THE CRESCENT

Until 31 December

n No.1 Royal Crescent Christmas –but with a period twist! The 12 Tales of a Georgian Christmas experience immerses you in all the stories, sights and scents of a Georgian Christmas. See how Christmas was celebrated in this authentic Georgian home, and try to find all the country mice who are helping prepare for the festive season. no1royalcrescent.org.uk

BATH ON ICE

Until3 January

n Royal Pavilion, Royal Victoria Park Monday to Friday 11.45am to 10pm, Saturday to Sunday 10am–10pm. Prebooking required. bathonice.co.uk

WINTER WONDERLAND

Until 11 February

n Milsom Place

Visit Milsom Place and feast your eyes upon a magical winter woodland scene, capturing

the essence of this wonderful time of the year. Acelebration of the beauty of the natural world in the heart of the city, this wondrous diorama created by Planet Gold Decor exclusively for Milsom Place takes viewers into a dazzling polar landscape illuminated to enchant all ages. milsomplace.co.uk

THE ENCHANTED GARDEN OF LIGHT

1–31 December

n The American Museum & Gardens Families and friends will be transported into a magical after-dark adventure through light displays which will emblazon the entire house, gardens and woodland in glorious magical colour. Tickets available at americanmuseum.org

BATH MINERVA CHOIR: “ON EARTH, PEACE...”

3 December, 7.30pm

n St Swithin’s Church, The Paragon

Join Bath Minerva Choir for a heartwarming concert of beautiful Christmas music featuring Vaughan Williams and Gerald Finzi and including carols for audience participation. Tickets £15/£12, from bathboxoffice.org.uk

BEAUTIFUL STAR: CHRISTMAS WITH THE HANDFUL

3 December, 7.30pm

n St Mary the Virgin, Bathwick, BA2 4EB

The Handful presents a festive programme that centres around two major works: four movements from Ringeltanze by Libby Larsen, written in 1983, and Quatre motets pour le temps de Noel written by Francis Poulenc in 1951–52. The concert will also feature choral favourites and new discoveries from the 16th century to the present day. The Handful will be joined by the talented

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Reindeer at Wild Place Project The Enchanted Garden of Light Milsom Place

music students of Prior Park College. Tickets £15 (£5 for under 25s, free for under 16s). bathboxoffice.org.uk

A WINTER WALKING SAFARI

3 December –8 January n Wild Place Project Grab your hats and gloves and head to Wild Place Project to go on a magical adventure on the Winter Walking Safari. Experience the beautiful nature trails across the 50-acre site, while spotting amazing animals from around the world. wildplace.org.uk

BEAR FLAT ARTISTS’ CHRISTMAS ART FAIR & MARKET

3 December, 10am–5pm

n Methodist Church Hall, off Wellsway, Bruton Avenue, Bear Flat Bear Flat Artists present a fair and market to showcase local creativity, with unique artwork and handmade gifts for sale including ceramics, painting, jewellery, sculpture, photography, printmaking, glass, illustration, cards, festive tree decorations and more. Buy direct from artists and makers and find out about the making processes. Free entry, all welcome. bearflatartists.co.uk

VOCAL WORKS GOSPEL CHOIR: FUNKY DIVAS

3 December, 7.30pm n Bath Pavilion

The amazing and dynamic vocalists from the Vocal Works Gospel Choir pay tribute to the Funky Divas of the soul and pop world –with a show bursting with inspiring and uplifting songs. VWGC will be giving classic songs the full on ‘gospel choir’ treatment together with their band – the VW Soul Collective. Expect incredible versions of hits from the best and funkiest divas, such as Diana Ross, Lizzo, Gloria Estefan, Beyonce and Mariah. Tickets £19. bathboxoffice.org.uk

SS GREAT BRITAIN: VICTORIAN CHRISTMAS WEEKENDS

3–4 and 10–11 December n SS Great Britain

For two weekends, the award-winning SS Great Britain attraction will be transformed into a Dickensian winter scene, complete with falling snow and a host of 19thcentury characters. ssgreatbritain.org

MARY PAYNE: GARDENING IN THE FUTURE

6 December, 7.30–9pm n University of Bath Gardening Club, Room 1 Level 1, East Building, East Car Park, University of Bath, Claverton Down Gardeners have got to adapt, not only to climate change, but to a more sustainable way of gardening. Mary will talk about the use of fossil fuels, plastics, composts and pest controls, along with water management and planting styles. Open to all, Membership £20, Visitors £6. ubgc.org

CAROLS AT THE REC 7 December, 6.30pm–7.30pm n Bath Recreation Ground

With traditional carols, a live brass band, mince pies, mulled wine, family fun and a message about the reason for the season, there’ll be something for everyone in what’s set to be a merry and memorable occasion. Enjoy an evening of festive fun for the whole family at this year’s Carols at the Rec. carolsattherec.com

THE ‘UNEARTH’ WORK IN PROGRESS EXHIBITION

7–11 December, open daily 10am–5pm

Late night opening 8 December, until 8pm n Milsom Place

The ‘Unearth’ work-in-progress exhibition showcases a range of responses to national and international design competition briefs (from Design Innovation for Plastics, the Royal Society of Arts, Porada and Starpack) by Bath Spa University Furniture and

Product Design final year students.Work includes furniture, product and packaging design, as well as more conceptual solutions – rooted in material or social sustainability principles. milsomplace.co.uk

ALADDIN

8 December –8 January n Theatre Royal Bath Wishing for the best family pantomime this Christmas? Your wish is the Theatre Royal Bath’s command! The amazing story of a boy, a lamp, and a genie returns to spread magic across Bath. Tickets from £9, available at theatreoyal.org.uk

CAROLS BY CANDELIGHT

9 December, 7.30pm n BRLSI

An exclusive evening of Christmas carols, fun festive readings and warming mulled wine (or mulled apple juice) in a candle-lit venue within the Bath Royal Literary & Scientific Institution. Music will be provided by Tim Snowden’s Bath Celebration Choir and friends. Tickets £15–20, available from brlsi.org/whatson

CITY OF BATH BRASS BAND: FAMILY CHRISTMAS CONCERT

9 December, 7.30pm n St Michaels Without Join the City’s Brass Band in its centenary year with a festive concert of traditional and seasonal music. Join in with carols and listen to ever popular arrangements of beloved tunes. Tickets £10 Adults; £5 under 16; family ticket £24 (two adults and three under 16), available from bathboxoffice.org

BATH PHILHARMONIA: THE SNOWMAN

10 December, 3.30pm n The Forum, Bath Join Bath Philharmonia for its annual familyfriendly Christmas show with orchestral music to delight every age. With Raymond

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City of Bath Brass Band Bath Philharmonia: The Snowman at the Forum
THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 29

Brigg’s charming and poignant animations projected on the big screen, the orchestra will play Howard Blake’s score live to the film. Adult tickets £18.50/ £12.50 (child 2–18), available from bathboxoffice.org

A CHRISTMAS CELEBRATION

10 December, 7–8.30pm

n Bath Abbey

A selection of well-known Christmas classics for choir, organ and audience. Tickets from £10, available from bathboxoffice.org.uk

WINTER UNION 11 December

n Chapel Arts Centre

Five leading lights of the British roots scene join forces to create a festive folk band like no other. Expect soaring harmonies and exquisite musicianship in a repertoire of brand new songs and fresh arrangements of traditional carols. Advance tickets £18 (£20 on the door) available from chapelarts.org

COLD AND MAGIC: WINTER BAROQUE 11 and 14 December, 7.30pm

n The Mission Theatre, Bath ‘Cold and Magic: Winter Baroque’ invites audiences to experience the music of 17thand 18th-century Europe, with a distinctly icy and mysterious tone. Join countertenor Joe Levy accompanied on the piano by Leila Kermani, for a selection of Baroque pieces. You will hear the works of Handel, Purcell, Bach and Vivaldi, alongside lesser known composers such as Lambert and Grandi. Tickets £12, available from joelevymusic.com/live

A BAROQUE CHRISTMAS

17 December, 7–8.30pm

n Bath Abbey

The Abbey Choirs are joined by Baroque instrumentalists Rejouissance playing on historic instruments. Tickets from £10, available from bathboxoffice.org.uk

BATH FILM SOCIETY: IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT 16 December, 7.30pm n BRLSI, 16–18 Queens Square, Bath Frank Capra’s screwball comedy won all five major Academy Awards. The comic rapport between pampered socialite Claudette Colbert and puckish reporter Clark Gable crackles with sexual chemistry and innuendo –in ways unheard of once Hollywood’s prudish Hays Code took effect after the film’s release in 1934. To join Bath Film Society, contact the Membership Secretary: mail@bathfilmsociety.org.uk | bathfilmsociety.org.uk

CITYSOUND VOICES: CHRISTMAS FANTASIA 17 December

n St Stephens Church, Lansdown, Bath Popular Bath-based choir, CitySound Voices, directed by William Stevens, perform Vaughan Williams Fantasia on Christmas Carols and other traditional and modern seasonal music. Baritone Alexander Learmonth, members of the Cardiff Chamber Orchestra and The Harmonics from Corsham will also feature. The concert will support the Alzheimers Society. Tickets are £15, under 16s free, from choir members or at the door. citysound.org.uk

IT’S THE MOST WONDERFUL TIME OF THE YEAR 17 December n Chapel Arts Centre Bath’s cult cabaret crooners swing their sleigh ride into town to kick-start the festive season as only they can! Their uplifting blend of stylish swing is a heady Yuletide tonic flavoured with the spirit of Christmases past, sprinkled with knockabout shennanigans and served smooth. Advance tickets £20 (£22 on the door) available from chapelarts.org

UPROAR! CHRISTMAS SPECIAL 12 December, 7pm

Komedia Bath and Bath Mencap are proud to present a festive edition of the club night exclusively for adults with learning disabilities, their families and carers. Tickets from £5, carers go for free. komedia.co.uk

RELIVE: FLEETWOOD MAC’S RUMOURS BY THE BELGRAVE HOUSE BAND

15 December, 7pm

ReLive presents one of the most critically acclaimed and culturally significant albums of all time: Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours - performed by Leeds based sensation The Belgrave House Band. Tickets from £15. komedia.co.uk

THE MINISTRY OF BURLESQUE: CHRISTMAS CABARET 16 December, 8.30pm

Prepare to witness amazing aerial displays, breathtaking feats of human grace and the daring antics of scantily clad showgirls. Hear songs from the sultriest of sirens and be entertained by the edgiest comedy and cabaret maestros. Tickets from £10–£17.50. komedia.co.uk

THE ABBA TRIBUTE LIVE IN CONCERT 22 December, 7pm

Knowing Me, Knowing Yule Christmas Special. Let’s ABBA Good Night –expect a jam-packed 90 minutes with classics including Mamma Mia, Dancing Queen, Gimme! Gimme! Gimme!, Take a Chance On Me! and Super Trouper. Tickets £10/£15. komedia.co.uk

THE BIG DISCO NYE PARTY 31 December, 10.30pm

The team behind Bath’s biggest Saturday night out will be throwing the ultimate New Year’s Eve Party to see 2022 out in style – with with guilty pleasures and pop anthems to keep your feet stomping right into 2023! Advance tickets £16, from komedia.co.uk

LOCAL | EVENTS
It Happened One Night with Clarke Gable and Claudette Colbert The Belgrave House Band play Fleetwood Mac
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KOMEDIA FESTIVE ROUND-UP n Komedia, Westgate Street, Bath
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CAPPELLA

LULLABY

NOVA: A CHRISTMAS

17 December, 7.30pm

n Widcombe Hill, Bath

‘The sheep upon the meadow, the ram, the lamb, the ewe, are watching with their shepherd and must thou needs watch too.’

With words by Eleanor Farjeon, A Christmas Lullaby is a carol written especially for Bath chamber choir Cappella Nova by the Icelandic composer Hafliði Hallgrímsson. This beautiful carol will receive its first performance at the concert, in a programme of carols, other Christmas music and readings. Tickets £12, under-18s free. Advance online booking at widcombeassociation.org.uk. Tickets also available on the door | cappellanova.org.uk

LOOKING AHEAD

U3A MONTHLY TALK: THE IMPACT OF THE POOR LAWS OVER THE CENTURIES | PETER MARTIN

5 January

n The Pavilion, Bath Monthly talks start at 10.30am. Doors open at 9.45am for coffee. Admission is free for members but a donation of £2 for non-members. If you join U3A in Bath at the meeting then your admission fee is refunded. u3ainbath.org.uk

BATH JAZZ WEEKEND

6–8 January

n Widcombe Social Club

The third Bath Jazz Weekend features a remarkable line up of bands and soloists of international standing from across the British jazz scene. Performers include the Parisian-inspired Esprit du Jazz quartet, newcomer violinist Theo May’s folk-intojazz Odd Unit quintet, solo pianist Matthew Bourne and many more. Tickets available at bathjazzweekend.com

NEW YEAR CONCERT: A CEREMONY OF CAROLS

7 January, 7pm

n Bath Abbey To mark the church festival of Ephiphany,

FAMILY CAROL SERVICE

18 December, 5–6pm

n Bath Abbey

Children are invited to come dressed as a shepherd, angel, wise man or citizen of Bethlehem to take part in a retelling of the Nativity with a real donkey! Arrive early to avoid disappointment (no reserved seating). Tickets from £10. bathabbey.org

BATH CAMERATA’S CHRISTMAS

CONCERT WITH JOHN RUTTER

19 December, 7.30pm n Bath Abbey

Join Bath Camerata for an uplifting celebration of music for the festive season. Tickets £10–£30, half price for under 25s. bathcamerata.co.uk

CITY OF BATH BACH CHOIR: CAROLS BY CANDLELIGHT

21, 22 and 23 December, 7.30pm

n The Pump Room, Bath

For Bath Bach Choir’s 75th annual entertainment of Christmas music, lighthearted banter and audience participation, the choir bring you two maestros for the price of one: introducing new director of music, Benedict Collins Rice, who will share the podium with retiring conductor Nigel Perrin. Tickets from £12, available at bathboxoffice.org.uk

FESTIVAL OF NINE LESSONS

23 December, 5pm and 7.15pm

n Bath Abbey

A beautiful service based around nine Bible readings interspersed with Christmas hymns and carols sung by the Bath Abbey Choirs. Tickets at bathabbey.org/christmas

Abbey Girls’ choir sing Benjamin Britten’s beautiful and challenging work A Ceremony of Carols in the magical setting of Bath abbey, accompanied by harp. Tickets from £15. bathboxoffice.org.uk

THE ART SOCIETY BATH: JOSUHA REYNOLDS, THE CREATION OF CELEBRITY LECTURE

9 January n Widcombe Social Club / Zoom Joshua Reynolds wanted to establish a new

Sir Joshua Reynolds, the Creation of Celebrity. Etching and engraving by John Keyse Sherwin

golden age for British art in the grand style of Italian History painting; he raised portraiture to the top rank of art whilst simultaneously elevating his patrons’ –as well as his own –reputation. Become a member of The Art Society Bath at theartsocietybath.com n

32 TheBATHMagazine | deceMber 2022 | iSSUe 238
Festival of Nine Lessons at Bath Abbey Bath Jazz Weekend Family Carol Service at Bath Abbey

Suddenly I’m back in fashion

Call me Mr Green

We have been aware for some time now that newly manufactured goods contribute to emissions of CO2 and what are the consequences. What we may be less aware of is the quantity of CO2 emitted by seemingly innocent consumer purchases.

According to a study conducted by Small World Consulting, the carbon saving to be made by choosing second-hand over new is staggering. We can all make some serious reductions to our personal carbon footprints simply by avoiding the new. Whether you fancy an exotic 17thcentury cabinet at auction or a scratched-up old coffee table from a charity shop, there is zero carbon involved in either decision.

It came as a great shock to me to learn that a newly manufactured mechanical watch uses approximately 800kg of carbon. Given that the average individual carbon usage for the UK, including travel and all consumption, is 13 tonnes, 0.8 of a tonne is quite a big deal. A secondhand sofa will save over half a tonne of carbon and a vintage gemstone set ring will save 0.42 tonnes over a newly made one. Even a humble handbag uses about 200kg of carbon to make.

The world is changing fast. The same survey found that 18–25 year olds are most likely to seek out old clothes, jewellery and watches, while 25–44 year olds are more likely to buy collectables and furniture second hand than any other age group.

The reasons for this shift are various. The main stated reason for buying second hand for 62% of those questioned is, “we love a bargain”. Then comes eco-friendliness, followed by quality of craftsmanship and then the individuality of non-mass produced goods. The stories, history and potential increases in value still all have some appeal, but in smaller ways.

This all may sound very convenient for an antiques dealer to spout off about, but that doesn’t make it any less true. The antiques trade may yet play its part in saving the planet? n

beaunashbath.com; 01225 334234

34 TheBATHMagazine | DeCeMBeR 2022 | issue 238

Plasticine model

Before his recent retirement, Victoria Art Gallery Manager Jon Benington chose an artwork from the gallery’s permanent collection. With children’s presents on our mind, a sculpture of plasticine inventor William Harbutt felt an appropriate selection

In the portrait sculpture shown below, William Harbutt is depicted very much as a thinker and inventor, not unlike Rodin’s famous statue of The Thinker Dressed for the outdoors, his hand stroking his beard, he gazes into the distance as if contemplating a knotty problem.

The sculpture’s integral bronze plinth makes the sitter’s identity and eminence abundantly clear, for the bust was modelled by his favourite pupil in plasticine, the material that he invented. In years to come plasticine was the go-to modelling material for children, available in a range of bright colours and often found wrapped in festive paper as a present beneath the family Christmas tree. Few of the recipients knew, however, that plasticine was not only invented in Bath but also, until the 1980s, exclusively manufactured in Bathampton. For generations to come the Harbutt family kept the material’s formula a closely guarded secret.

William was born in North Shields, Northumberland, the son of Thomas Harbutt (c.1803-1880) and Elizabeth Whitehouse Jefcoate (1804-1883). Thomas worked as a bookkeeper in 1841, a spirit merchant in

1851 and latterly became an iron galvanizer (his effects were valued at under £800 for probate). At the age of about 17, William moved to Jersey in the Channel Islands where he worked for his brother-in-law, William Barkas, as a bookseller’s assistant.

Between 1869 and 1874 Harbutt studied at the National Art Training School (part of the Royal College of Art) and qualified to teach elementary and architectural drawing. From 1874 to 1877 he was head of the School of Art in Bath but left after a dispute, following which he swiftly opened The Paragon Art Studio at 15 Bladud Buildings, Bath with his wife Elizabeth (Bessie). She was a well-known miniature portrait artist who exhibited works at the Royal Academy and the Chicago World’s Fair. In 1887 Bessie was

Prince Albert. William and Bessie married in 1876. Number 15 Bladud Buildings was at the opposite end of the Paragon to the Municipal School of Art, which occupied premises at number 33 between 1864 and 1896.

Harbutt invented Plasticine around 1897 as a non-drying modelling clay for use by his students. At the time he was living in Hartley House, Alfred Street, Bath. Later he moved to The Grange on the High Street in Bathampton. The original modelling material was grey, but after commercial production commenced, four colours were produced for initial sale to the public. The mixture comprised 65 per cent bulking agent (principally gypsum), ten per cent petroleum jelly, ten per cent lanolin and ten per cent stearic acid. Unlike clay it could not be hardened by firing, melted when exposed to heat, and became flammable at higher temperatures.

After being awarded a trademark in 1899, Harbutt established a manufactory in 1900 based in an old mill on the banks of the Kennet & Avon Canal in Bathampton. William travelled far and wide in order to promote the product, while also disseminating his theories about the teaching of art by allowing children free expression.

He and Bessie had seven children, six of whom survived infancy and worked in the family business. The Harbutt company, owned and run by Harbutt’s descendants, continued to manufacture Plasticine in Bathampton until 1983, rebuilding the factory after it was accidentally burnt down by a contractor in 1963.

William died of pneumonia while on a trip to New York City in 1921. His remains were returned to Britain so that he could be buried in the graveyard of St Nicholas Church, Bathampton. At his death his wealth came to a substantial £15,113 15s. 2d. n

Tours of the permanent collection in the art store at Victoria Art Gallery take place on certain Thursdays. The next tour is on 15 December, from 12–12.45pm; victoriagal.org.uk

commissioned by Queen Victoria to produce portraits of herself and her late husband
...the bust was modelled by [Harbutt’s] favourite pupil in plasticine, the material that he invented.
William Harbutt (1844–1921), c. 1910, by Edwin Whitney-Smith Photograph by Will Ireland

ARTS AND EXHIBITIONS

Winter Exhibition Gallery Nine, 9B Margaret Buildings Bath BA1 2LP, until 31 December

Artist and designer Katie Mawson returns to Gallery Nine with her collages using antique cloth-bound books. Ceramicist Anna Lambert makes handbuilt earthenware ceramics using various techniques including slab-building, modelling, and painted slips.

Jeweller Duibhne Gough’s work is defined by simple forms, and jeweller Helen Noakes works in resin and silver with miniature figures incorporated into the designs.

gallerynine.co.uk

Modern ArtBuyer Winter Open House

Modern Art Buyer,1 Cliffe Drive, Limpley Stoke BA2 7FY 3–4 December, 10am–4pm

Modern ArtBuyer is hosting its Winter Open House pop-up in Limpley Stoke, featuring an extensive selection of contemporary limited edition prints and original paintings in a relaxed home setting. Whether you’re on the hunt for the perfect gift or an inspiring piece for yourself, please pop in and enjoy a coffee or a glass of prosecco with us.

modernartbuyer.com/blog

The Holburne Museum, Great Pulteney Street, Bath, all exhibitions run until 8 January

Nalini Malani: My Reality is Different Malani has created new video animations featuring famous paintings from the National Gallery and the Holburne. Encompassing over 40 meters of wall, the 25 striking new animations immerse

the viewer in a panorama of nine large video projections, played in a continuous loop, with the inspiration including pictures by Caravaggio, Bronzino, Jan van der Venne and Johann Zoffany. By overlapping the nine video projections, Malani has gone beyond the Western linear view.

Rodin –Degas: Impressionist Sculpture Representations of the human body by Auguste Rodin and Edgar Degas, and their expression of its energy through both dynamic and static poses.

Elisabeth Frink: Strength and Sensuality

Featuring themes such as storytelling, animals, humour and violence, here is a selection of Dame Elisabeth Frink’s bronzes and works on paper. holburne.org

Revolution, Propoganda, Art: Printmaking in Modern China, The Museum of East Asian Art, until 3 June 2023

This exhibition showcases a series of prints selected from Muban Educational Trust’s collection of over 6,000, and tells the story of China’s 20th-century wars, revolution and rejuvenation. Artistic trends, political movements and technical developments in modern Chinese printmaking are explored, and viewers will be invited to consider some fundamental issues of Chinese culture in the 20th and 21st centuries. meaa.org.uk

New work by Ruth Brownlee, Nick Mackman and Chris Keenan

Beaux Arts Bath, 12–13 York Street Bath, until 23 December

This new exhibition features the work of three artists. One of Shetland’s best-known artists, Brownlee paints the island’s everchanging dramatic conditions, exploring the relationship with land, sea and sky; Mackman is a sculptor of one-off, Raku fired clay animal models; and Keenan works in hand thrown Limoges porcelain to create beakers, bowls, cups and more.

beauxartsbath.co.uk

ART | EXHIBITIONS
Farnhill White Path Bowl and Grass Woods Jug by Anna Lambert Precious by Maria Rivans
36 TheBATHMagazine | deceMBeR 2022 | iSSUe 238
Nick Mackman Li Qun, Late Return in Early Spring , 1988. Image © Li Qun
THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 37

Rocking with the Weapons of Creation and Destruction, acrylic on canvas, 160 x 160 cm

Sandra Higgins Art is delighted to exhibit works by Bath artist, Mark Elliott Smith.

Meticulously painted in flat, crisp colour, Mark’s large paintings embody the movement and animation of music; in turn, they impart an energising, positive sense of possibility to the space that surrounds them.

“There is a rhythm and symmetry within the apparent chaotic nature in my work; organised in such a way that a moment of perfect balance and harmony, within the explosive noise, is formed.”

Visit the online gallery to view Mark’s latest work or contact Sandra to arrange a private view or studio visit. sandrahiggins.art; sandra@sandrahiggins.com

Wrappings, The Artbar, Abbey Hotel, North Parade, Bath, until 8 January

An opportunity to buy affordable art, prints and cards by six local artists: Charlotte Farmer, Sue Porter, Sarah Bull, Dean Jenning, Natalie Bedford and Jet Pictures (Jason Dorley-Brown and Emma Taylor). abbeyhotelbath.co.uk

The award-winning monthly Bath Contemporary Artists’ Fair (BCAF) is back on Sunday 11 December. Committed to bringing the best of contemporary art from the city and beyond to the heart of Bath, the fair has created a regular space where artists can network, share ideas, connect with the public, and where the public can connect with art. Visitors can browse the works of local artists and admire fine art, photography, sculpture, textiles, ceramics and much more, all under the vaulted glass roof of Green Park Station. For updates and exhibiting artists visit the website. bcaf.co.uk

“I aim to present a contemporary perspective on some familiar places. I often focus on the darker side of Bath architecture with peeling paint and stained stonework.”

David’s work is being exhibited at The Claremont Pub, 5 Claremont Road, Bath; and at The Old Crown, Weston, Bath. Custom prints are available online in a range of sizes – see the website: real-images.com

This exhibition features over 100 new oil paintings and prints by the ever-popular Bath-based artist, ‘Pete the Street’. The exhibits follow his footsteps through the streets and green places of Bath and Bristol, as well as places further afield and domestic scenes from his home. Having worked with the gallery on a number of occasions, Brown is perfectly suited to updating the tradition of visually recording life in Bath – a legacy well represented in the gallery’s permanent collection, encompassing Turner to Sickert. victoriagal.org.uk

ART | EXHIBITIONS
David Ringsell: Contemporary Art Prints and Paintings of Classic Bath Architecture Mark Elliott Smith at sandrahiggins.art Image: Gothic Winter, A2 framed giclée print by David Ringsell. This building with a brooding background is viewed from the Kennet and Avon canal
38 TheBATHMagazine | deceMBeR 2022 | iSSUe 238
Bath Contemporary Artists’ Fair, Sunday 11 December, 10am–5pm Green Park Station, Green Park Road, Bath Painting by Gill Cox Artwork by Sarah Bull (Dipdot Designs) Peter Brown: Bath, Bristol and Beyond Victoria Art Gallery, Bath, until 15 January 2023
Bedroom, 7am January 2022
THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 39 www.masanauction.com Over 30 years experience • Competitive commission rates Direct contacts in Hong Kong and China • Sales every month 2 Princes Buildings, George Street, Bath BA1 2ED Tel: 01225 318587 Ma San Auction In Bath SPECIALISTS IN ORIENTAL WORKS OF ART Offering free valuations & home visitsNow consignmentsacceptingfor futuresales! A single owner collection of Chinese snuff bottles from a local Bath estate. Sold £15,000+

How to look at modern art

As a collector and dealer of Mid-Century Modern (MCM) art, I am surrounded by an evergrowing collection of unique, distinctive and often very charming array of paintings and prints.

The term ‘Modern’ in art refers to a massively wide genre that encompasses a myriad of different styles or movements –think Impressionism, Cubism, Fauvism, Minimalism, Expressionism, Abstract Expressionism, the list could go on and on. If you are familiar with these movements, you’ll be able to identify them in ‘Modern’ paintings quite quickly. But I think it is also worth knowing a different approach to appreciating art, one that is less about understanding historical contexts or agendas, and more about trusting your gut, letting your eyes wander, and allowing yourself to feel.

To give you some context, Modernism is an art movement that rejects the old way of realistically depicting people or objects, and moves towards experimentation with form (the shapes, colours and lines that make up the work), and an emphasis on materials, techniques and processes.

Artists working under a Modernist ethos don’t want to represent things simply as we see them. They want to incorporate their own emotions and bring attention to the things we normally overlook. By not depicting what they see around them in a realistic way, they can embrace their imagination and their unconscious, and unleash their creativity. They don’t have to work within the rules of the natural world, and are free to play with new inventions, and transport themselves (and the viewer) to different worlds.

For example, if you look at a realistic painting of a view out of a window, you’ll notice the view. But a Modernist painting might try to make you notice the actual paint on the canvas, the shape of that window and how it plays with the shapes of things within the view. The artist might also change up the colours completely, so that you get an idea of the artist’s mood and emotions in the process of painting.

So, here are my top three tips for learning how to look, and appreciate, modern art:

1. Let go of trying to ‘understand’

There is an art book by John Berger, from 1972, called Ways of Seeing. Berger began with the assertion that a baby learns to see before it learns to talk, read or compute things in the world. A child reacts to its surroundings with electrons and neurons firing off in the brain to form new connections and knowledge centres. This act of visual perception leads to thoughts and verbal reactions, much in the same way that art stimulates first the eye, then the brain.

So, relieve yourself of the idea that you need to ‘understand’ an artwork. Although it can be interesting and useful to know what the artist was thinking, or how different factors (political, social or physical conditions) affected his or her hand, your personal relationship with a work of art, however superficial, is just as (if not more) important to your own understanding or appreciation of the work than any prescribed meaning the artist was striving for.

If Modernist artists were working under the ethos of freedom, then freedom should be your guiding light to looking!

2. Notice shape, form, colour and texture

Lead with your eyes and notice the physical qualities of the artwork. Let your eyes scan the artwork from left to right, up and down, background to foreground, and then all around. Pick out shapes and forms, notice if they repeat throughout the picture. Pay attention to the texture of the paint: is it thick or thin; does it have any other material added to it; do you see areas of impasto (where the paint is applied so thickly it stands proud of the surface)? If you’re looking at a sculpture or a relief work, see if you can spot any shadows cast by its form. If it is a painting, pay attention to whether the artist has let the canvas show through. If they have, more often than not that is a conscious attempt to remind you that this is paint on a surface, and not an imitation of reality.

If a painting is framed, it can be quite enjoyable to look at the frame as a work of art in itself. Often a wide-profile frame can draw your focus inwards towards the painting and encourage you to focus in on details. Colours on the frame can play with colours within the picture, highlighting certain shades or tones that would otherwise go unnoticed.

3. Lastly, can you find your ‘hook’? Whenever I speak to people who are new to collecting or buying art, I always encourage them to start with a piece that reminds them of a place they’ve been to, someone they know, or a piece of music they’ve listened to.

Even if an artwork doesn’t resemble anything recognisable, its texture, colour or tactility could make you feel a certain way. Perhaps you want to reach out and touch it, or perhaps it gives you the ‘heebie-jeebies’ (and don’t forget a negative response still means it had an impact!). The same way listening to music can make you feel a certain way, art is much the same, if you let it.

Conclusion

In a nutshell, remember that enjoying art doesn’t have to be about names, dates, and historical context. One of the main reasons why I buy and collect Modern Art is that it reminds me that I don’t always have to make sense of things; sometimes it is important to let go. As Pablo Picasso said, “The world doesn’t make sense, so why should I paint pictures that do?” n

Saira Kalimuddin is co-founder of The Discerning Palette, a Bristol-based online art gallery and educational resource for Mid-Century Modernist art. Follow @discerningpalette on Instagram, and view the collection ondiscerningpalette.com

Art collector and dealer Saira Kalimuddin shares some advice on how to appreciate Modernist art
40 TheBATHMagazine | DeCeMber 2022 | iSSUe 238 ARTS | GALLERIES
BELOW LEFT: The Trio, a whimsical oil painting depicting three extended human heads outlined in red, seemingly in conversation; BELOW RIGHT: A selection of artworks from The Discerning Palette

ICARUS JEWELLERY

THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 41
with
Handmade
love 3 Pulteney Bridge, Bath BA2 4AX 01225 463693 info@icarusjewellery.com www.icarusjewellery.com icarusjewellery icarusjewellery icarusjewellery

Crafts with heritage

Machine-made, mass-produced products have a lot to answer for, their accessibility having sidelined the skills and artistry of handmade, traditional craftwork, once a rich source of industry. However there is a resurgent interest in all things hand-made and in restoring older items to their former glory. Here we talk to six specialists who all work with their hands and for whom every new project is a fresh hand-crafted journey

Geoff Travers, basketmaker

What is the appeal of basketry?

Willow baskets do not pollute the oceans, they are incredibly long-lasting and can be composted at the end of their life. A basket can be made with a few simple tools and some willow.

What is the earliest history of stone carving?

Stone masonry is one of the oldest crafts in history, dating back to the Stone Age. Many of the tools I use today have not changed for thousands of years. We still follow the architectural styles of Ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome and we use the same basic principles.

Are there any issues in practising stone-masonry in the modern era?

As with most old crafts, it’s the time and cost involved with stone masonry. With so many mass-produced materials around now, there are a lot of cheaper alternatives. They’re not as good though!

Explain your approach to basketry

Baskets can be made from hedgerow materials for simple rustic baskets. However using locally sourced commercial willow from the Somerset Levels it is possible to create more complex and traditional English baskets as our ancestors did, with different willow varieties providing beautiful rustic colours.

What are the skills involved in basketry?

Basketmaking pre-dates pottery and has assisted mankind in gathering food and materials for thousands of years. It has been said that humans have an intuitive ability to weave a basket, just as a spider weaves its web or a bird makes a nest.

Do you encounter any difficulties with your basketry business?

Recently it has been challenging to obtain home-grown UK willow due to the increasing interest in basketmaking and the demand for willow coffins.

Why is it important that basketry products continue to be made?

My goal was, and remains, to keep the traditional basketmaking techniques alive and to enable rural crafts to continue to provide an active place in the modern plastic age. There are some types of baskets that are on the heritage crafts endangered list and without a few basketmakers keeping the craft going, it could be lost forever. gtravers-basketmaker.co.uk

Kenny Dixon, stonemason (Doric Stone)

What is the appeal of carving in stone?

The main appeal is being able to create something beautiful with your hands. I get great satisfaction from walking through Bath and saying “I did that!” when we pass a building that I have worked on, much to my family’s annoyance!

What are the skills involved in stone carving?

Being methodical is the most important skill. Most people imagine it’s a big, satisfying flurry of creativity, but the reality is it’s more like a dusty factory where you have to go through the correct process or things will go wrong. Good hand and eye coordination goes a long way, too.

Why is it important that stone-carving continues as a craft?

These days, with the advent of CNC machines, some of the bigger companies only have a couple of masons in the workshop to tidy up anything the machines have missed, but it would be a great shame to lose the skills. I think it means so much more to people to look at a wonderful building and know that the stone was shaped and laid by skilled hands, not by a machine. doricstone.co.uk

Tanis Brain, leatherworker (TPJB Leather)

What is the appeal of leatherwork?

As a horse owner I wanted a career in leather. I subsequently qualified as a saddler, but found my real passion lay in creating and repairing a variety of pieces that have lasting appeal and function.

How far does leatherwork go back?

The earliest leatherworking tools date back to the Stone Age. Looking specifically at saddlery, the Worshipful Company of Saddlers is one of the oldest livery companies in London with the earliest surviving record from 1160AD.

Are there challenges running your business in the modern era?

Sadly there are only a few tanneries left in the UK, so sourcing some types of leather can be difficult, especially when trying to match up colours and substance.

Why is it important that the craft of leatherwork continues?

I feel the sustainability of good leatherwork is very important. If an item is well made, it’s usually repairable, and so with care it can last for many years. I see this with many items that arrive at my workbench.

What are the processes involved in leatherwork?

I start with whole hides of leather and I hand-cut, hand-stitch and hand-finish each item. I have a treasured head knife for most cutting work and most often work is double hand-stitched for strength. tpjbleather.co.uk

TRADITIONAL | CRAFTS 42 TheBATHMagazine | deceMber 2022 | issue 238
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Aspen (Populus tremula) on the riverbank, in late summer
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CLOCKWISE FROM RIGHT: Dandelion coat rack (detail) from Iron Art; Carved stone detail from Doric Stone; leatherworker Tanis Brain in her workshop; baskets by Geoff Travers; and detail of spine in book by bookbinder Kate Holland
TRADITIONAL | CRAFTS 44 TheBATHMagazine | deceMber 2022 | issue 238
Andy Thearle in the Iron Art workshop CLOCKWISE FROM BELOW, A balustrade in a private house near Box by Iron Art; a bookbinding of The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer by Kate Holland; and a detail of a woodcarving by Charles Oldham
“What the machine is yet to replicate is the soul of the maker, and as long as we seek the imperfections and perfections of the hand, then hopefully we will still be needed”

Charles Oldham, woodcarver

What is the appeal of woodcarving?

It’s about working with your hands with lovely tools in a natural material. As a dyslexic boy, the only book in the school library that was of any interest to me was Tippings’ Grinling Gibbons and the Woodwork of his Age, a large book with great black-and-white photographs of fantastic woodcarvings.

What skills are important for woodcarving?

You really have to think and work in three dimensions. You have to understand outline and shadow and you have to think ahead to find and process the wood to a state when you can start carving it. From that point it is a very immersive process, and with a good piece of wood and an interesting subject it can be a total joy.

How far back does the history of woodcarving go?

In some cultures, such as Maori, Haida, or Yoruba, the craft of woodcarving goes back in an unbroken tradition to prehistoric times, and it remains central to those cultures. There are also the medieval wooden Stave churches in Norway, where the construction techniques are known to have been used for buildings from the Viking Age.

Are there challenges specialising in this craft today?

In England the woodcarving trade as it once existed has shrunk to critical levels because much cheaper carving has been imported from factories in Indonesia, China and India. On top of that modern technology means that with 3D scanning and CNC work some aspects can be made without the use of traditional carvers. Woodcarving is also associated with the folk tradition. As an individual woodcarver working in architectural woodcarving and in restoration, I have never regarded it as a reliable engine of wealth. Running carving classes, working on individual commissions as well as carving my own art works means I am busy, but not wealthy!

Why is it important to maintain woodcarving as a craft?

Because it is so versatile. In what other craft can you produce lasting sculpture out of a living material with such a range of a scale, from Japanese netsuke to Haida nation totem poles? In an environment that is moving so far away from nature, woodcarving can seem a bit folksy, but imagine if you were living in a plastic box on Mars how it would feel to be carving a piece of wood into the shape of a bird. charlesoldhamwoodcarving.co.uk

Kate Holland, bookbinder

What first drew you to the craft of bookbinding?

I originally studied Mandarin, but chance led me to a job running an antiquarian bookshop in Bloomsbury next to the old British Library, where I enrolled on a part-time bookbinding course and I was immediately hooked. Over 25 years later I am still as passionate about it.

What are the processes involved?

Bookbinders are said to need to be more accurate than brain surgeons. It is imperative that the book looks beautiful and that it functions perfectly. The skills range from leatherwork to gilding, dyeing to painting, sewing to boxmaking. I oversee the whole process from proofreading, typesetting and layout, to printing and binding, from one-offs to runs of up to 500 or more.

What is the history of bookbinding?

The book structure, or codex, that we are familiar with has been around since Roman times and in the UK the monasteries were producing similar bindings around 700AD. The bone folder is one of the earliest tools used by humans, and the materials, such as leather, vellum and gold, have remained unchanged for centuries.

Are there any difficulties in running a bookbinding business today?

Many predicted the death of the book, but sales of physical books have never been greater. However, there are now no full-time courses in bookbinding in the UK. I teach in colleges and schools to promote bookbinding and open students’ eyes to the joys of making with your hands. I am delighted that, from 2023, Bath Spa University will be running an open module in bookbinding available to all students.

Why is making handmade leatherwork products important?

Making with our hands is part of what makes us human. Crafts have a hugely beneficial, therapeutic effect, improving mood and lowering stress. As our world moves further into the digital, having tangible objects becomes more meaningful. Making beautiful books is socioculturally and artistically important; it is a protest against the digital and against globalisation, against everything that is poorly, and massproduced. It’s the same thing that William Morris was protesting against in the Industrial Revolution. katehollandbooks.co.uk; @katehollandbook

Andy Thearle, Iron Art

What is the appeal of ironwork and what first drew you to the craft?

To be able to manipulate a cold, hard material into pretty much whatever shape you like. While doing a degree course at Wolverhampton Polytechnic in 3D Design in Wood, Metals and Plastics, I quickly gravitated to the metal workshop.

What are the principal processes involved in ironwork?

For millenia prior to the machine age and the advent of the electric welder during World War I, most ‘crafted’ ironwork was made by blacksmiths. The seven key skills of the blacksmith were fire-welding, drawing down, upsetting, punching, cutting, twisting and bending; with all those elements mastered, literally anything is possible in iron.

How far does the history of ironwork go back?

Archeologists believe that iron was discovered by the Hittites of ancient Egypt somewhere between 5000 and 3000 BCE. In the UK we have been working iron since c. 750 BCE

Are there any barriers or difficulties with your traditional crafts business in the modern era?

Plenty! A society that forgets that mastering a craft such as ours takes many years and thinks that cheap machinemade, mass-produced imports can replicate the subtleties and creativity of the human hand and spirit is a hard thing to fight.

Why is it important that ironwork continues as a craft?

We have been producing ironwork for millenia, and to properly care for what we have, then we need to retain the skills that made it.

From a practical point of view, we need it in our lives –we all touch and feel something made of iron on a daily basis. Pretty much any functional item the blacksmith used to make can now be made by machines. What the machine is yet to replicate is the soul of the maker, and as long as we seek the imperfections and perfections of the hand, then hopefully we will still be needed. ironart.co.uk n

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TRADITIONAL | CRAFTS

Present perfect

The festive season is upon us so let’s express our love and appreciation to those who have been in our thoughts all year. Here’s a wondersome show of gift inspiration from the finest local ateliers, stores and online retailers. You know the drill, scan the QRs for some pronto gifting

GLOVELY GIFT IDEAS FROM DENTS

Celebrate the season with stylish Dents’ gloves, gifts and head turning accessories.

Whether it be winter essentials or a special gift for a loved one, you will discover a dazzling selection of gloves, accessories, gifts, handbags and much, much, more. We love this pair of Bella long-sleeved satin opera gloves , £20 and available in a wide range of colours.

Dents Factory Shop, Furnax Lane, Warminster, or shop online at

dents.co.uk

FINE ART DOG PORTRAITS

Commission a contemporary styled dog portrait painted by award winning artist: Tracey Bowes. Her works are personalised by using styles and colours to suit her clients. Tracey combines her design skills with her traditional fine art practice to create breathtaking pieces. Prices from £25.

thefineartistshop.com

CAPTURE FAMILY MEMORIES BEAUTIFULLY

Bath based creative photographer Helena M captures the beauty of family life. Treasured times from maternity and newborn, the whole family or intergenerational portraits, she captures natural moments within the setting of Bath and surrounding areas. Helena M is now offering luxury gift vouchers in time for Christmas.

Vouchers start at £50*

*Prices and availability are on her website

HelenaMphotography.com

FIVE GOLD RINGS

Offering high-quality, beautifully designed jewellery, Jody Cory is an established independent designer goldsmith with over 30 years experience, and her shop in Bath is not only home to her work but also displays a range of wonderfully inspired pieces by many local and national designers. Not only are there beautiful pieces on display to cater for all budgets but Jody’s fine individual creations and her commission work makes her shop a popular destination for the highest quality jewellery. Shown here is a stack of dazzling coloured diamond stacking rings. Prices start from £485. They are available in 9ct yellow and white gold . Visit Jody Cory, 9 Abbey Churchyard, Bath.

jodycory.co.uk

ARTIST DESIGNS AT GALLERY NINE

These long silver penguin earrings with seaside charm are a wonderful creation made by Helen Noakes jewellery, £125. They are just one of the fantastic items by many talented artists and designers whose work is on show and available to buy at Bath’s contemporary arts & crafts gallery, Gallery Nine –Well worth a visit.

Gallery Nine, 9B Margaret Buildings, Bath. gallerynine.co.uk

SHOPPING | CHRISTMAS
46 THeBATHMagazine | DeceMBeR 2022 | issue 238

THE DRESSING ROOM FOR BEAUTIFUL THINGS

Since opening in Bath in 1985, The Dressing Room has maintained its reputation as the ‘go to’ place for the finest in lingerie, beach and nightwear.

Featuring lingerie brands such as Marie Jo, Aubade, Prima Donna, Empreinte and Lise Charmel (amongst others) the shop also has a wide range of basic t-shirt bras and invisible briefs.

The beachwear collection features brands including Melissa Odabash, Maryan Mehlhorn, Aubade, Prima Donna, Rosa Faia and Nuria Ferrer, whilst nightwear comes from Hanro, Louis Feraud, Diamond Tea, Marjolaine, Luna di Seta and Lise Charmel –to name but a few. Shown here are pure silk pyjamas from Marjolaine, £395.

With experienced and professional staff ready to help you, why not pop in for a look

7 Quiet Street, Bath BA1 2JU dressingroombath.com

CHRISTMAS LIGHTS

The sensual fluid shape of the Cobra candleholder is undoubtedly one of Georg Jensen’s most recognisable and iconic designs. This set of three candlesticks – small (160mm), medium (200mm) and large (240mm) – form a beautiful natural group that, like a cobra, seem to sway this way and that. Made from stainless steel with a mirror-polished finish, the three candlesticks are durable, weighty and stable. £184 for set of three.

Mallory, 1-5 Bridge Street , Bath.

mallory-jewellers.com

ROBERTS REMEMBERS ‘AMY’

In a collaboration that sees a percentage of profits going to the Amy Winehouse Foundation the Roberts 'Amy' celebrates the life and legacy of one of Britain's most beloved musicians. Inspired by the outfit Amy wore to perform at the 2008 Brit Awards, the reimagined Revival iStream is truly an expression of the artist's iconic style. Bold leopard print front, deep red back panel and engraved details on the handle anchors make this a Revival that looks as good as it sounds.

Available from Moss of Bath –the city’s premium audio visual retail specialists. 45 St James's Parade, Bath.

mossofbath.co.uk

THE GIFT OF ‘YOU TIME’

The Orangery beauty salon in Bath is one of the city’s most respected salons and the highly qualified team offer a full range of the very best in treatments. Ever popular at Christmas are their beauty care gift vouchers which can be redeemed on the full range of treatments at the salon as well as skincare products. Beautifully presented they make a lovely gift of ‘you-time’ for someone you love. The Orangery, 1 Argyle Street, Bath.

theorangerylaserandbeautybath.co.uk

WINE PUZZLES

They are challenging, addictive, and make a delightful, grown up gift. If you are familiar with Water & Wines then you’ll know they create next-level jigsaw puzzles that will take you on a journey through the world of wine. This new Champagne region puzzle is the latest addition to a delightful collection and will make the perfect gift this Christmas. Curated in collaboration with Master of Wine and champagne specialist Essi Avellan, the puzzle highlights the main regions of Champagne, the Grand Cru villages, and the region's rich history. Learn as you play as the puzzle box also features lots of information about champagne-making and food-pairing tips! The puzzle itself is beautifully illustrated by hand. Pick them up at Harvey Nichols or order your puzzle and see the full series at:

waterandwines.com

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SUSANNAH WAY CONTEMPORARY JEWELLERY

Having worked with a number of the west country’s top goldsmiths and jewellers, Susannah Way creates her own range of contemporary jewellery. Her designs are charming and inspire - We love this mushroom print pendant, inspired by the preciousness of mushrooms and their mutually beneficial relationship with trees. It is available in 9ct gold £439, or silver with gold plate £149 and in sterling silver £99. Visit her Etsy online shop (SusannahWayJewellery) or find more details at: swayjewellery.com

LOVE ENTWINED

Always a popular destination for gift ideas, The Silver Shop of Bath never fails to inspire. This classic sterling silver Entwined necklace, £65 and earrings, £42 with their beautiful sloping twists and turns really caught our attention. The perfect gift for someone special this Christmas.There’s plenty of other ideas to be found too. Shop at 25 Union Passage, Bath.

thesilvershopofbath.co.uk

NICHOLAS WYLDE DESIGNER JEWELLERY

The south west’s leading designer jeweller, award-winning Nicholas Wylde has been designing original, high quality jewellery since first opening his Bath store in 1987. Nicholas Wylde is a perfect destination for anyone looking for that unique piece of jewellery to add that extra special sparkle this Christmas.

12 Northumberland Place, Bath BA1 5AR nicholaswylde.com

A TRUE GENTLEMAN

Thomas Fortin menswear brings to the world its hand-finished accessories crafted from beautiful fabrics woven and printed in England. Shown here: a blue Walking Canes scarf with 100 tassel fringe, £165, 128cmx24cm (fabric length). This unique in-house design depicts a drawing of 3 gentleman’s walking canes laid over the trademark Thomas Fortin circular repeat design. The 100% silk twill is printed in England. The silk is cut and made into a scarf with 50 knotted tassels added on each end. The variations in colour in the thread pick out the blues pinks and yellows of the scarf design and give the final 13cm fringe a very fullbodied feel.

It is part of a range of scarves and other men’s silk accessories which can be found online at thomasfortin.com

THE LAMORNA CANDLE BY CREAM CORNWALL

Inspired by Lamorna Cove this lovely candle is infused with myth and magic from the far southwest of Cornwall. The intoxicating blend contrasts fresh sea sprays with masculine wood notes and amber musk conjuring up the smell of this magical place, transporting you straight to the waters edge. Lamorna is one of Cream Cornwall’s most popular fragrances - it's warm yet fresh and everyone loves it. Visit the store at 29, Milsom Street, Bath.

creamcornwall.co.uk

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PRINT IS A BETTER READ

If you subscribe to our weekly newsletter then you’ll be very familiar with Daniel McCabe’s regular review of some of the coolest and most inspired magazine reads he sells at his excellent shop, Magalleria. Magalleria is a unique store selling one of the largest collections of international, independent and niche magazines in Europe. It imports magazines, journals and zines from all over the world, with many exclusive to its range. Perfect for gifting and finding new and delightful reads this is the place to pick up a gift card and let the print lover find their magazine nirvana. Magalleria, 5 Upper Borough Walls, Bath BA1 1RG

magalleria.co.uk

BERRY CHRISTMAS KIDS

Hats off to Up to Seven! Designed and handmade at their workshop in Bath, these adorable, roll-edged hats are all knitted in anti-tickle wool, and can be machine washed at 30 degrees. Available in five sizes (and also in navy), they are priced at just £16, making them the perfect gift. They can be matched with Up to Seven’s beautiful handmade cardigans, baby shoes and mittens. Up to Seven, 6 Pulteney Bridge, Bath.

uptoseven.co.uk

DELIGHTFUL HANDMADE JEWELLERY

Camilla Frayling is a jewellery designer and maker from Bath with over ten years experience. Camilla now runs her own small business, Cami-Lou Jewellery Designs where she uses precious metals, semi-precious and precious gemstones creating fabulous, interesting pieces with beautiful textures and lovely detail. Shown here, 9ct yellow gold and sterling silver handmade organic arch style earrings with tassel. £75

See more on Instagram: camilou_jewellerydesigns or visit her online shop at: www.camiloujewellery.co.uk

FINE CRAFTED JEWELLERY

The Gold & Platinum Studio is one of Bath’s most beloved independent jewellers. On display in the studio are many unique and beautiful pieces while upstairs in the workshop client commissions are being designed and created by a team of highly skilled goldsmiths. The studio is owned by renowned goldsmith and designer Michael Parsons. Michael has always been fascinated by gemstones and is a qualified gemmologist. He specialises in sourcing gemstones and crafting bespoke, one-off fine quality pieces. Shown above is a Watermelon tourmaline ring in 9ct gold, £1650.

Visit the Studio at: 19 Northumberland Place, Bath or shop online

goldandplatinumstudio.co.uk

ART PRINTS OF BATH

Custom prints of original paintings by local artist David Ringsell will give you a different perspective on the striking classic architecture of the city.

Shown here: Heaven and Earth, a stained stone chimney stack contrasts a distant St Michael's Church. There’s also a special offer on art prints , 15% up to 25th December.

Get a beautiful and affordable contemporary Giclée art print of an original painting. A2, A3 and A4 sizes Buy online with coupon code XMAS. The full gallery of David’s artwork can be found at: real-images.com

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ADOPTIONS AT WILD PLACE The perfect present! Help care for animals as well as supporting the Wild Place’s conservation work across the globe by adopting either a European brown bear, giraffe, ring-tailed lemur or a zebra, £30. For all the details visit:
ANIMAL
wildplace.org.uk

LANSDOWN BEAUTY CARE

The perfect Christmas gift or treat for yourself. This incredible duo from Baed Natural will revitalise your body care routine.

Luxurious and replenishing for silky smooth skin.

Lansdown Body Duo with lavender & orange, £33.

Baed Natural also has beautiful body care products named after many of Bath’s areas, so if you’re more Larkhall, Bear Flat, Bathwick or Camden (to name a few) then there’s a scent just for you.

baednatural.co.uk

SNOW BETTER GLASSES

Established in 1979, Ellis and Killpartrick is one of the south west's leading independent opticians, and as well as a loyal following of patients the shop boasts a fabulous display of designer sunglasses from the most desirable brands.

How about a pair of Oakley Jawbreaker sports glasses in polished white and neon green with green mirror lenses. The ultimate sport design! £170.

With so many elegant designs in both sunglasses and in the optical collection Ellis and Killpartrick are well worth a visit. 18 New Bond Street, Bath. ellisandkillpartrick.com

‘TWAS THE TIGHTS BEFORE CHRISTMAS...

New for the 2022 festive season, these cute festive printed tights feature robins, pine cones and holly. Perfect for the Christmas season! Available in two colours. Top quality, made in Italy. £12.99. Buy from Flock 12 – 13 The Corridor, Bath flockbath.co.uk

SHELL STONE EARRINGS BY ICARUS JEWELLERY

Icarus Jewellery is an independent shop founded by talented designer Dilek Koroglu. Her silver pieces are thoughtful, intriguing, and beautiful. We love these Shell stone wire hooked sterling silver earrings  priced at £135. see these and many more beguiling designs at the shop on 3 Pulteney Bridge, Bath.

icarusjewellery.com

ANTIQUE DISCOVERIES

Shown here is a stylish pan for gently warming brandy over a candle. Made in London in 1795, £795. Life is good.

Visit Beau Nash, Bath’s specialist antique silver shop to see this and an ever impressive range of beautiful and interesting artefacts to treasure and enjoy. Happy gifting! 31 Brock Street, Bath.

beaunashbath.com

FINE STATIONERY & FRAMES

The Bath Framer, owned by Kelly, is a friendly boutique picture framers that has a beautifully quirky front-of-house and a workshop, stacked with all kinds of frames. It’s a joy to visit not only to see beautiful print and frames but also to watch how frames are created. As well as a bespoke framing service, there’s an whole selection of unique cards, gift wrap and some very interesting traditional brass stationery (shown above) –perfect gifts for a maker or creator.

14–15 Walcot Buildings, London Road, Bath BA1 6AD

thebathpictureframer.co.uk

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A SHINDIG GIFT CARD

Shindig Festival 2023 has you covered this Christmas! Give the gift of a magical experience you and the whole family will look forward to. Enjoy four days of world class music and arts from 25 to 28 May, in the heart of the Somerset countryside. Simply give this gift tag to your loved ones and pay later (kids under 12 come free!). To share the love this Christmas, Shindig will make a donation to local charity Boys In Mind/Girls Mind Too, when you use code SUPPORT at the checkout.

In the words of Jazzie B from Soul II Soul, Shindig is “…a proper party for proper party people!”

shindigfestival.co.uk

THE URBAN GARDEN AT CHRISTMAS

Everyone loves the Urban Garden on the edge of Victoria Park, it’s always packed with beautiful, interesting things and with an extended range of festive gift ideas they have really got Christmas covered. Get your Christmas tree there too. The Urban Garden, Marlborough Buildings, Bath theurbangarden.org.uk

THE BEST IS YET TO COME

This sterling silver bangle by Honey Willow can be personalised with names, dates, messages or phrases, £90, it is hand stamped with up to forty characters. An intimate gift that really can mean something.

THERE’S A NEW SALON IN THE CITY

It’s Saqua Beauty and it can be found in The Corridor. Under the direction of Swiss beauty expert, Sevcan Caglar - a biologist aesthetician she specialises in skin care, delaying ageing and creating younger looks - Saqua offers a full range of high quality beauty treatments as well as skin care products. They make great gifts and a good opportunity to pop in and see Saqua for yourself. Shown here is: the REFINE Youthful skincare set by Image, normally £199 RRP, you can pick one up at Saqua for just £125, saving £64.

Saqua, 18 The Corridor, Bath saqua.co.uk

BEADED BRACELETS BY JIYA

Handmade in Bristol, Jiya is a collection of semi-precious, pearls, gold, silver and beaded jewellery, with colour and craft at the heart of everything they create. All jewellery is designed and handmade by local artisans. Shown here is the easy to wear and well-boho Havana bead bracelets £25 each or just £95 for a set of five. Order online jiyajewellery.co.uk

TEXTILE ART BY CAROLE WALLER

Silk scarves are lovely gifts at Christmas and Carole Waller’s pieces are completely unique handpainted originals. Prices range from £65 - £195 and her Christmas collection is inspired by the soft earthy tones of the North Yorkshire moors - and an unusually colourful croquet game played there last summer!

Make an appointment to visit Carole at Waller&Wood on Box Road where her studio and showroom can be found between Batheaston and Box - or choose from the selection online carolewaller.co.uk

,
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ARTISAN CRAFTS & GIFTS

Artisan Homeware is an independent Bristol-based homewares business bringing traditional craftsmanship to contemporary interiors. They sell handmade Boleslawiec stoneware from Poland, UK-made luxury merino wool blankets and cushions and a huge range of fairtrade and eco-friendly Fairtrade Christmas decorations from just £5.95.

Shown here: Medium Lasagne dish £61

artisanhomeware.co.uk

FABRIC DESIGNS BY ISABELL BROWELL

With an interior design background, Isabell Browell’s love of fabrics was the motivation to learn the art of lampshade making. Using  handwoven Ikats from Uzbekistan and vintage silk sari fabrics from India, Isabell aims to create lampshades which make a statement and transform a room. She can also offer a bespoke lampshade service for specific interior room schemes. Isabell is based in Bath. Shown here: a black /red and a red/ivory Ikat cushion, 10 x 24 inches (80% silk/20% cotton mix),  £69 each, and a 14 inch green/blue/ivory silk Ikat lampshade, £160. Isabell’s lovely products can be viewed on her website:

browellinteriors.com

HOMEFRONT FOR INSPIRED GIFTING

THE LINEN BREAD BAG

Every baker needs a home for those prized loaves. This breathable linen bread bag handprinted by designer Lauren Holloway will become an essential kitchen accessory, available in mustard, green or grey, £32. See this and many more fabulous, sustainable bags and accessories by Lauren Holloway on her website.

laurenholloway.uk

homefrontinteriors.co.uk

THE NATURAL BLANKET COMPANY

It’s Christmas all wrapped up! Check out these super-soft, merino lambswool christmas throws (£112.00) to help you wrap-up warm and cosy this Christmas. You can visit The Natural Blanket Company’s Christmas chalet in Milsom Street (opposite Waterstones) until 11th December. See these beautiful blankets and many more online.

thenaturalblanket.co.uk

SMEG APPLIANCESALL GIFTS GREAT AND SMALL

Coopers Home Appliances are one of a few specialist retailers (globally) awarded Premio Partner status by SMEG. You can now enjoy the full range of large and small SMEG appliances –including high-deisgn special editions by Dolce & Gabbana as well other item not normally available such as the SMEG pots and pans collection. Cool and covetable, and a must for 'Foodies' who love spending time creating great things in the kitchen. See inside front cover for a special offer too.

Coopers Home Appliances 13/15 Walcot Street (opposite Waitrose), Bath coopershomeappliances.com

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Homefront Interiors in Margaret's Buildings is one of Bath’s most appealing independent shops offering a carefully curated treasure trove of beautiful sustainable living and artisanal homeware products from local artists and makers. Shown here are Nkuku Ngolo T-light lanterns - the medium size is priced at £28. Just a few of the many beautiful things you can discover at this superb shop. Homefront, 10 Margaret's Buildings, Bath.

FRUIT PRESERVE GIFT BOX

Single Variety Co’s Fruit Preserve Gift Box contains four Great Taste Award Winning preserves, all handmade in their family run jam factory in Bristol.  Maravilla Raspberry, Seville Marmalade, Passionfruit Preserve and Ben Hope Blackcurrant Preserve, all made with much more fruit and less sugar than traditional jams. A perfect gift for any food lover! £22.50.

Available online at:

IT’S 6 O’CLOCK SOMEWHERE

Like sloe gin, this damson gin is hand made in the traditional way; in small batches, using hand-picked British damsons and a moderate amount of sugar to produce and intense, fruity dryness. A thoroughly festive and traditional tipple (try saying that after a tot or two!) 70cl bottle, £35. Order online or see local stockists

6oclockgin.com

BELLY LAUGHS BATH WITH YUUP

From £10 per adult. Bristol’s favourite pop-up food and comedy festival has just launched in Bath to banish the January blues! Independent Bath venues will be serving up delicious food whilst guests are entertained by a surprise comedian. Great fun.

Find this and many more gift ideas at yuup.co

HAPPY CHRISTMAS FROM THATCHERS CIDER

Thatchers are unveiling a Christmas surprise –their very first Thatchers 12 Days of Christmas Cider Gift Box.

Available online and from the Thatchers’ Cider Shop at at Myrtle Farm in Somerset, the 12 Days of Christmas Cider Gift Box contains a selection of Thatchers’ family favourites all made on the farm. It costs just £34.99 (plus delivery if ordering online). In the best traditions of Christmas gift boxes, it’s a complete surprise as to which of the ciders you’ll find when you open each door. But in true Thatchers style, there’s a Somerset cider for everyone included. Happy Christmas.

thatcherscider.co.uk

AXE THROWING WITH YUUP

£25 per adult. This is a great gift for anyone that likes the outdoors and has a competitive streak. Try out different types of axes, play competitive games, enjoy the woodland scenery, and go full Viking just outside of Bath!

Find this and many more gift ideas at yuup.co

LOW COST CHRISTMAS LIGHTS

Vist Francis DIY in Moorland Road for a wide variety of the best festive fairy lights from the Noma lighting range - Noma’s products are very low use energy and many have easy timers. Francis also have a range of battery operated fairy lights. So no need for a bleak house - we think this Dickensian snowman will cheer things up nicely Rather dapper, he measures 1 metre, with 120 warm white and white duo LED’s, 10 metre cable and easy timer, £129.00. Plenty more in store visit: Francis DIY, 39 Moorland Road, Bath

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francisdiy.com

FOOD & DRINK HIGHLIGHTS

Here’s some seasonal cheer: Mulled Sake

Do Christmas differently this year, by swapping out wine for sake in this Japanese take on a traditional festive classic. Robun’s warming and spicy twist on mulled wine brings together a combination of citrus fruits and the sweet spicy scent of star anise, along with a combination of plum liqueur, wine, along with the all-important sake.

You will need:

50ml Futsushu sake

50ml red wine (ideally Cabernet Sauvignon)

25ml Briottet plum liqueur

1 x orange peel piece

1 x lemon peel piece

1 x star anise

Dried orange or lemon, to garnish

Method:

1. Peel a strip of orange peel and a strip of lemon peel.

2. Combine the sake, red wine, liqueur, freshly peeled citrus fruits and a piece of star anise in a large saucepan.

3. Stir to thoroughly combine all the ingredients.

4. Heat on low to medium temperature, ensuring not to simmer or boil the mixture.

5. Carefully test the mixture for its temperature, ensuring it is drinking temperature before serving.

6. Once hot, serve in a tall latte glass or in your favourite festive mug and garnish with a slice of dried orange or lemon.

New Year’s tasting menu

Plan for a memorable New Year's Eve by enjoying a spectacular tasting menu and dining experience at The Elder in Bath.

You'll be served bubbles in the form of Krone Borealis MCC, and then a farmhouse loaf with salted butter and bullshot tea. The six-course feast that follows includes Scottish langoustine; smoked potato agnolotti; Bathurst Estate fallow deer Wellington; poached fillet of south coast brill with seashore vegetables; baked Vacherin Mont d’Or; poached pear, walnut and raisin toast; and passionfruit and dark chocolate soufflé, with many of the courses offering two options.

If you’d prefer to leave it to the experts, head across to Robun who will be serving mulled sake throughout the festive period, alongside a Christmas menu with beautiful dishes rooted in Japanese culinary tradition. Robun also has a

Squares of heaven

private dining room that can host 40 people seated and 50 people standing, for any festive celebrations in December and January.

Robun, 4 Princes Buildings, George Street, Bath; robun.co.uk

Après Ski Bar is back

The Elder’s wild food offering is unique; wild deer herds are manage on private estates and venison is processed in the restaurant’s own FSA regulated larder.

Book using The Elder’s reservations page or by emailing enquiries@theelder.co.uk.

The Elder, 2–8 South Parade, Bath; theelder.co.uk

Chatley Farm Brownies have been bringing chocolate love to Somerset for 16 years, with delicious brownies handmade in the professional kitchens on their beautiful farm, near Bath. Put simply they use the best Belgian chocolate and locally sourced ingredients to create delicious squares of heaven. The Brownies are coming to Bath Christmas Market once again, so you can encounter the chocolate delights in Abbey Chambers until Sunday 11 December. What’s more Bath Discovery card holders get 10% off. chatleyfarmbrownies.co.uk

The Abbey Hotel Bath is bringing the Alpine ambience of the ski slopes back to the heart of the city this Christmas with its twinkly, snow-topped Aprés Ski Bar on the terrace of the Abbey Hotel. The bar opened its doors in November and is open daily from 12pm to late, until the end of the festive season.

The Après Ski Bar offers the perfect place to rest weary feet after a day exploring the Bath Christmas Markets. It’s a magical wonderland for children (big and small) to capture the perfect festive snaps in the purpose-built snow globe, or next to the bright and interactive mural that adorns the side of the chalet, created by local artists Jason Dorley-Brown and Emma Taylor of JET Pictures.

With sparkly lights, alpine lodge décor and festive music, expect traditional après ski fare including mouth-watering bratwursts, winter cocktails, indulgent luxury hot chocolates, and locally sourced mulled cider. Braver souls can sit outside on the terrace under Bath’s starry skies, enjoying the festive atmosphere wrapped up in a snuggly blanket. abbeyhotelbath.co.uk/ apres-ski-bar

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Come try thebutcher ‘s larder

Larkhall Butchers combine passionate, traditional butchery with a modern take on the profession. Supplying to Bath and the surrounding areas, they have a reputation for produce of the highest quality and stock not only meat and poultry, but also fish, game and condiments. The friendly staff are also happy to help to provide you with the knowledge and ideas to bring to the table. Using close ties with local farms, the company ensures that the meat is being sourced humanely and ethically, as well as being of the best quality.

Larkhall Butchers storecupboard essentials for Christmas include mint sauce, hot English mustard, goose fat, mint jelly, gravy, stuffing and bread sauce, with examples shown below.

Wild Sage and Roast Onion

Wholemeal Stuffing Mix, 150g

Wild Sage and Roast Onion

Wholemeal Stuffing Mix is a family favourite. This is perfect with chicken, pork or turkey. £2

Shropshire Spice Co Bread Sauce Mix, gluten free, 100g

Simply add milk! A classic spooning sauce with a hint of garlic and cloves. Perfect with roast chicken, turkey and game dishes. £2.50

Wilkin & Sons Cranberry Sauce, 340g

A luxurious sauce made with juicy wild cranberries. Perfect as an accompaniment to turkey, goose or duck. £3

Larkhall Butchers, 1 Lambridge Buildings, Bath; tel: 01225 313987; larkhallbutchers.co.uk

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Chin chin at Christmas

Christmas is fast approaching and it’s time to start thinking about the all-important drinks for the big day. To give you some ideas here are some delicious spirits, bubbles, whites and reds, and non-alcoholic selections recommended by Tom Bleathman of The Great Wine Co.

hite wines not only make a refreshing aperitif but are often the popular lunch-time choice. A fine option is Kate Sauvignon Blanc (£14.40), from Southern French youngsters, Aubert & Mathieu. Their wines all come from organic vineyards around the Languedoc Roussillon region and the quality is top drawer. This example is an aromatic wine with zesty and tropical fruit flavours dominating the palate. A perfect apéritif, it would also match well with smoked salmon blinis or white meats. If you’re looking for a classy white to complement the turkey, try Pomino Bianco(£13.95) from Tuscan heavyweight, Frescobaldi. This producer makes a myriad of first-class wines from fizz, rosé and of course classic reds, but this blend of Chardonnay and Pinot Bianco is spot on, showing pear and citrus notes.

While white wines do partner well with turkey, reds do go so well with all of those trimmings. Cerasuolo Di Vittoria DOCG (£18.85) from Planeta is a silky blend of two indigenous Sicilian varieties, Nero d’Avola and Frappato. You’ll find flavours of wild cherry, strawberry and pomegranate alongside a fresh bite of acidity and at 12.5% it won’t knock your socks off either! If you favour a bit more grip and intensity, Chateau des Gravieres (£15.50) is a perfect choice. A classically structured Bordeaux with flavours of red fruit and a

Whint of vanilla on the palate with a nice round structure. This provides great value for money in comparison to other Bordeaux wines. Alternatively, try the Renegade Shiraz-Grenache (£17.50) from South African icon Ken Forrester’s take on a southern Rhone blend. Shiraz spice and Grenache’s bold elegance work perfectly with a full traditional Christmas dinner.

Festive events need showstopping sparkling – so look no further than the incredible Gramona Imperial vintage (£33). Not cheap by any means, but Gramona is comfortably one of Spain’s best producers, and the most awarded sparkling wine producers bar none. Situated in Catalonia, they produce exceptional quality, ageworthy bubbles, which easily rub shoulders with the best Champagne houses. Operating with organic and biodynamic processes, these guys are hugely sustainable. Expect supersoft aromas of baked brioche and apple-making, this is a great apéritif or the perfect way to toast Christmas with the family.

The low- and no-alcohol category is bigger now than ever and with a growing selection, it can be overwhelming picking out something that is suitable for everyone on Christmas Day. Pentire Adrift (£28) is a great place to start, made using organic ingredients which are foraged along the Cornish coastline, it

acts as a genuine gin alternative with fresh, citrusy, herbal flavours which help to create a complex G&T. Crossip’s Dandy (£22.50) offers a smokey, cocktail-inspired alternative. This is created by combining flavours like Lapsang tea, cayenne, black pepper and cloves to create the intense, warming drink without any of the alcohol. Fantastic mixed with soda or as the base of a non-alcoholic Old Fashioned.

After a big meal, a digestif is often much needed and none fits the bill better than the west country’s finest, Somerset Cider Brandy (£44). Perfect to sip neat with glorious flavours of apples, vanilla and cloves, but you can also try this alongside a selection of local cheeses, or the seasonal flavours of a wonderfully rich Christmas pudding. Saliza Amaretto (£28.50) is a festive essential, and a wonderful digestif. Notably finer than the popular brand of Amaretto we all know, this is made using crushed almonds rather than extracts or concentrates. Finally, if you’ve overconsumed from the meal, a kick of caffeine may be what you’re craving, if so Conker Cold Brew (£30) will do the trick. It’s made from highquality coffee, a touch of Demerara sugar and distilled British wheat spirit. Amazing neat, but you can also make your own Espresso Martini from this, just add water, ice and shake! n

Digestifs

If you’d like advice, inspiration, or fancy a browse, please pop into The Great Wine Co. Bath shop so we can help you celebrate your Christmas in style. Whatever you’re drinking this Christmas enjoy your choices on the big day!greatwine.co.uk

FOOD | &| DRINK
Red White Sparkling Lowand no-alcohol
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THEBRISTOLMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | THE BRISTOL MAGAZINE 57 JAZZ SUNDAYS | SUPPER CLUBS | WORKSHOPS | TASTINGS & MORE www.ifordmanor.co.uk/restaurant IFORD MANOR CAFÉ & KITCHEN Seasonal | Locally Sourced | Homemade Multi-Award Winning Head Chef Matthew Briddon Just 15 minutes from Bath WINTER OPENING TIMES: Friday to Sunday Café: 10:00 - 15:30 Restaurant: 11:30 - 14:30 Reservations via website below

Holiday reads

’Tis the season to cosy up with a great read or three –and also to find some well-considered presents for people with passions from grown up fairy tales to salvage diving. Meet Agony Aunts, encounter parallel worlds, browse through avantgarde transport options and find new ways of devouring toast –this selection will make everyone’s Christmas...

Bookworms old and young, rejoice: Fairy Tale by Steven King is a spellbinding novel about seventeen-year-old Charlie Reade, who inherits the keys to a parallel world where good and evil are at war, and where the stakes could not be higher –for their world or ours. Legendary storyteller Stephen King goes into the deepest well of his imagination with this crowd-pleasing novel –perfect for long, cosy nights spent in front of the fire and the glowing lights of the Christmas tree. Hodder & Stoughton, £22 Those searching for a slightly more cerebral read might do well with Pulitzer Prize Winner Cormac McCarthy’s The Passenger. A sunken jet, nine passengers, a missing body... McCarthy’s novel –his first in 16 years –tells the story of a salvage diver, haunted by loss, afraid of the watery deep, pursued for a conspiracy beyond his understanding, and longing for a death he cannot reconcile with God. Pan Macmillan, £20

Moving from the realm of fiction into the realm of non – Madly, Deeply: the diaries of Alan Rickman isfor the cinephiles. From his breakout role as Die Hard’s villainous Hans Gruber to his heartwrenching run as Professor Severus Snape, Alan Rickman remains one of the most beloved actors of all time. Rickman’s diary entries detail the extraordinary and the ordinary in a way that is anecdotal, witty, and candid; reading the entires is like listening to Rickman chatting to a close friend. Canongate Books, £19.99

Here’s another close friend in non-fic-guise: Dear Dolly: on love, life and friendship introduces Agony Aunt Dolly Alderton, or, in novelist Elizabeth Day’s words, “Nora Ephron for the Millenial generation”. Since early 2020, Dolly has been sharing her wisdom and wit with the countless people who have written in to her Dear Dolly agony aunt column in The Sunday Times Style. Their questions range from the painfully relatable to the occasionally bizarre. From breakups and body issues, to families, friendships, dating, divorce, and everything in between. Dolly leads us by the hand through the various labyrinths of life, proving that a problem shared is a problem halved. Penguin Books, £16.99

The perfect companion to a comfort read is a comfort dish –and what’s more comforting than toast? If you top it with a few cleverly paired ingredients, it can be a full meal, not to mention pure bliss. Prue Leith’s Bliss on Toast: 75 recipes for things on toast will help you make quick, delicious and versatile meals year-round –for working-from-home lunches and cosy Sunday suppers, to light bites, indulgent treats or impressive canapés. £12.99, Bloomsbury Publishing

We’ve done toast –now how about some transport? The luxurious magazine VÉHICULE is a new high-end journal dealing in avant-garde transportation. Issue 01 explores the murkier side of offshore powerboating, starting in the 1970s, and specifically drug smuggling that is highlighted through the life and times of boat racer and smuggler Ben Kramer. £50, available from Magalleria, 5 Upper Borough Walls, Bath.

Finally here’s something to take with you into 2023, Days Like These: An alternative guide to the year in 366 Poems by Brian Bilston. In this playful collection, Bilston writes a poem to accompany every day of the year. Each poem is inspired by a significant – often curious – event associated with that day: from Open an Umbrella Indoors Day to the day on which New York banned public flirting; from the launch of the Rubik’s Cube to the first appearance of the phrase, “the best thing since sliced bread”. Perfect for reading aloud and sharing with friends, Days Like These will take the blues out of Monday, flatten the Wednesday hump, and amplify that Friday feeling. £16.99, Pan Macmillan

Here’s a poem from 7 February, in honour of Periodic Table Day:

Periodic Updates

Radox –Crouton –Jargon –Bourbon Brassic –Jolene –Oxymoron Decaf –Sliver –Shebanganese Aquarium –Pleather –Anti-freeze Horlix –Triptych –Pandemonium Antipathy –Einsteinagogium Zilt –Pantyline –Podum –Tedium Kimkardashium –Lint –Delirium Feline –Bosphorus –Condominium Nectarin –Vermoutb –Thanksamillium

BOOKS
58 TheBATHMagazine | deceMBeR 2022 | issue 238

NEWS

Seeds of change

The volunteer programme at the Urban Garden –described as the “smallest garden centre with the biggest heart” –has had a clear impact on those taking part in 2022, says Director Matt Smail.

“Even before we opened, The Urban Garden became a popular destination for those wanting to contribute to a project while meeting new friends, reducing isolation and learning new skills. We have continued with this in 2022 with 10 volunteers attending our general volunteering day when we are closed and 2–3 people when we are open Thursdays to Sundays. This adds up to almost 5,000 hours of volunteer time.

“We ask volunteers to fill in a questionnaire that maps changes in their health and wellbeing, and improvements (or not) in practical skills. Of the last 12 volunteers surveyed, 90% of people scored a +1 or +2 using a range of skills and wellbeing criteria. Making new friends was the top scorer.”

One recent volunteer said “The Urban Garden took me on a pathway back to wellbeing that I feel I could not have found elsewhere –it gave me back a confidence and interest in life.”

Support The Urban Garden by visiting this Christmas, open Thursdays to Sunday; theurbangarden.org.uk Instagram: @urbangardenbath

New public park

The largest new urban public park in the south west for over 50 years has received planning permission. Bath-based landscape architects Grant Associates are leading on the six-acre public space design for Brabazon Park, set to be a modern reimagining of Britain’s historic tradition of urban parks and the beating social heart of Brabazon, the thriving new neighbourhood being built on the historic former Filton Airfield.

The design takes inspiration from aviation engineering, aiming to capture the historical, cultural and ecological uniqueness of the former airfield. The lake will be the focus of the park, creating a distinctive waterside and wetland environment, as well as being an integrated part of the overall sustainable urban drainage system for Brabazon. brabazon.co.uk; grant-associates.uk.com

More investment in full fibre rollout

Bath-based Truespeed has announced a £22 million investment across multiple south west locations including South Gloucestershire, North Somerset and Bath as it continues to rollout its ultrafast full fibre broadband throughout the region Truespeed has added 12 new areas to its rollout plan, expanding its network to South Gloucestershire where it has added Thornbury, Almondsbury, Bradley Stoke, Patchway, Stoke Gifford and Chipping Sodbury. In Bath, Truespeed is expanding its footprint in Bathwick, Widcombe and Combe Down. It is also adding the North Somerset areas of Uphill, Banwell and Sandford located to the south and east of Weston Super Mare, to its full fibre network.

This latest investment is set to bring guaranteed speed, ultrafast and ultra-reliable broadband to a further 43,000 properties across the region. Truespeed delivers guaranteed, symmetrical upload and download speeds of up to 900Mbps for residential customers and 10Gbps for business users. Truespeed has frozen prices until May 2023, offers a 30-day money back guarantee and has a Bath-based call centre that aims to answer calls within 30 seconds. truespeed.com

SAQUA Beauty has opened in the heart of Bath. Director Sevcan Caglar is a biologist aesthetician specialising in skin care, delaying ageing and creating younger looks. Born in Switzerland, she has degrees in Biology and Health Institutions Management. Sevcan has successfully completed over 50 training programmes in fields related to skin, face, body and their treatments.

Beauty boost for Bath

Caglar creates a special mix of serums bespoke to a client’s needs and focuses on creating visible results. SAQUA treatments include dermal fillers (Juvaderm and Lumifil), anti-wrinkle injections (Botox and BoCouture), micro-needling (DermaPen), Fibroblast (Privé), mesotherapy (Paris Shine NCTF 135+, Toskani), skin care and facials with Image products and Casmara masks. All treatments are covered by insurers.

SAQUA awaits you in its new location in ‘The Corridor’, with five floors comprising retail shop, treatment rooms and offices. Sevcan Caglar at SAQUA is looking froward to beautifying everybody in Bath. SAQUA: info@saqua.co.uk; saqua.co.uk

Supporting local foodbanks

Mogers Drewett is launching a new campaign this Christmas to help support three foodbanks local to their offices in Bath, Sherborne and Wells. Sean McDonough, Managing Partner of Mogers Drewett, explains, “Mogers Drewett has a long history of supporting local charities and community activities. This year, we have decided to support our local foodbanks as we can see how deeply the cost-of-living crisis is affecting our communities and we really want to help.”

The Mogers Drewett office is accepting donations of long-life products, cleaning products and toiletries such as shower gel and deodorants, and launching a Christmas raffle. Raffle tickets cost just £1 and can be bought at The Mogers Drewett offices on the Lower Bristol Road, Bath. Prizes range from an overnight stay at an award-winning luxury hotel in Dorset, afternoon tea at the 5* Bath Spa Hotel to tickets to Bishop Palace in Wells, plus much more. All proceeds will go to support Bath Foodbank, Sherborne Foodbank and Wells Vineyard Foodbank. To learn more visit bath.foodbank.org.uk or donate at bath.foodbank.org.uk/give-help/donate-money/

CITY | NEWS CITY
60 TheBATHMagazine | deceMber 2022 | iSSUe 238

Christmas, contact & grandparents’ rights

Given the lockdown restrictions over the last few years many grandparentswill not have seen their grandchildren during this special time and will be looking forward to being able to do so this year and now that restrictions have eased.

However, for grandparents who have a child(ren) that have separated, Christmas can be a difficult time of year, regardless of Covid, when it comes to spending precious time with their grandchildren.

The family team at Mogers Drewett often get asked what rights grandparents have to see their grandchildren when their parents have separated.

The law and legal process

Unlike the children’s parents, grandparents have no automatic legal right to see their grandchildren. Grandparents seeking to establish or maintain contact with their grandchildren following a separation have two options open to them.

•Agreement with parents – be that directly, at mediation or via solicitors

•An application to Court for a Child Arrangements Order

For grandparents, an application to Court is often a longer and as a result more expensive 2-stage process, as they will need to request permission from the court to make an application in the first place.

Court proceedings are the last resort and wherever possible you should try and reach an agreement with the parents.

Tips for the Christmas period

Given that Christmas often becomes a very emotive time of year, with separated parents themselves often finding it hard to agree arrangements, communication and discussions early on is key.

Don’t take sides

Whilst communication with the parents can be difficult, try not to take sides and remain neutral. The festive period can be a stressful and hectic time for parents and so offering some respite to both parents during the holidays can provide them with support and also allow you to spend time with your grandchildren.

Be flexible

If seeing your grandchildren on Christmas Day itself is not possible, explore other opportunities for contact in the lead up to Christmas and in the New Year. It may be that you pick a day and treat is as your Christmas Day where you exchange Christmas gifts and have festive treats. There may also be opportunity to attend school plays/carol concerts this year as restrictions ease.

If seeing your grandchildren in person is not possible, perhaps due to location, then make arrangements for a skype/zoom or telephone call where, for example, watch them unwrap your Christmas present and play games remotely.

If you are not able to reach an agreement before the Christmas break and would like some advice on your rights as a grandparent, the Mogers Drewett family team are here to help. You can contact Victoria Cobham on 01225 750000 or email Victoria.cobham@mogersdrewett.com

Tel:

Enthusiastic, professional staff!

We are very proud to employ excellent staff, and even more when their efforts are recognised by their professional bodies.

Emily Cocking is our Payroll Senior and member of the Chartered Institute of Payroll Professionals (CIPP). Let Emily take up the story:

“I was invited to the recent CIPP annual excellence awards at Celtic Manor in Wales. I have a good relationship with the CIPP and have been to their offices to film an interview that is on their website, and have featured regularly in their monthly magazine this year – I feel very lucky to have had these opportunities!

Recently I was invited as a guest to the annual CIPP excellence awards as a result of my hard work during NPW (national payroll week). To celebrate I made a NPW cheesecake for the office, created a payroll quiz for everyone and connected with other payroll professionals in the industry, setting them a quiz! I posted every day on Linkedin with everything I was doing and the CIPP wanted to reward me!”

Our congratulations go to Emily and we are pleased to have her as a team member.

Payroll is of course only one of the services we provide, but one that has become more complicated with issues such as the furlough scheme, and more recently the changes in national insurance contributions, on top of SSP, SMP etc. Please don’t hesitate to contact us if you need assistance.

Next month we’ll be back with the usual tax saving tips, easy to understand explanations of tax and business opportunities – and we wish you all a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 61
141 Englishcombe Lane, Bath BA2 2EL
01225 445507 www.oclaccountancy.com ocl ACCOUNTANCY
For tax saving tips contact us – call Tristan Wilcox-Jones, Samantha Taylor or Lucas Knight on 01225 445507 Call Tristan Wilcox-Jones, Samantha Taylor or Lucas Knight on 01225 445507 to arrange a no-obligation meeting
62 TheBATHMagazine | DeCeMBeR 2022 | issue 238
House Farm, Broughton Gifford A collection of six beautifully designed homes ranging from two to four bedrooms, including five bungalows and one detached house. 01225 791155 |ashford-homes.co.uk| Discover our newsletters Stay well informed. Stay well-informed. It’s like a mini Bath Magazine! Subscribe for free at: www.thebathmag.co.uk Our weekly newsletter is a specially curated mini-guide to help you make the best of your time in Bath. Bulletins of news, commentary and culture, as well as lifestyle ideas, things to do, great reads and so much more delivered direct and free to your inbox just in time for the weekend.
Red

Annuities – On the Rise?

Since the global financial crisis, we have been in an environment of historically low-interest rates as the Bank of England attempted to stimulate the economy. Although this had some benefits, one less wellknown consequence was on the annuity market.

Annuities are simply products that pay a guaranteed income for life. Typically, you take your pension savings to an insurance company and exchange it for this guaranteed, lifelong income stream. This was the standard approach to retirement planning in the past. However, as the Bank of England lowered rates, the rate of income you received in return for your pension savings also decreased.

Pre-2008, a retiree might expect to get paid £7,908* per annum from an annuity in exchange for a £100,000 pension pot. By 2016, this figure had dropped to £4,696*. Throw in George Osborne’s pension freedoms in 2016 and many people began to turn away from annuities.

More recently interest rates have been rising and annuity rates have once again reached potentially attractive levels. Today, a 65-year-old retiree might expect to get an annual annuity of c£7,608* (04/11/2022) from their £100,000 which is a significant change.

With current rates, annuities may once again be worth considering. When we advise clients on retirement, we look at several scenarios and income options to ensure we can achieve their retirement objectives in the most efficient manner possible. We’ve always considered annuities as part of this, however, at current rates they deserve more attention.

*Based on a single life, level annuity with no death benefits. A pension is a long-term investment. The fund value may fluctuate and can go down. Your eventual income may depend upon the size of the fund at retirement, future interest rates and tax legislation. The value of units can fall as well as rise, and you may not get back all of your original investment.

info@mathesoncharles.com 01225 683 156 www.mathesoncharles.com 6/7 Trim Street, Bath, BA1 1HB

Matheson Charles Ltd is an appointed representative of In Partnership the trading name of The On-Line Partnership Limited which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Matheson Charles Ltd FCA number: 954458. Registered No: 13410532, Registered address: 6/7 Trim Street, Bath, Avon, United Kingdom, BA1 1HB, Registered in England & Wales.

Source – Annuity Rates – sharingpensions.co.uk - https://www.sharingpensions.co.uk/annuity-rates-chart-latest.htm - figures from 04/11/2022

THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 63

Embracing the game

The Lionesses gained international attention in August this year, their Euro win over Germany signifying the top tier pinnacle of the game of women’s football. Things needed to change, they said afterwards, so that future generations of female players would have the support and opportunities that had not been open to them. Emma Clegg talks to Jane Jones, Community Director at Bath City FC who has recently launched the Bath City Women’s team

After England’s Lionesses Euro 2022 2–1 win over Germany at Wembley in August – the country’s first major trophy since the men’s side won the World Cup in 1966 – the then Prime Minister Boris Johnson tweeted: “Football has come home! A stunning victory by the Lionesses. Football pitches across the country will be filled as never before by girls and women inspired by your triumph.”

Prime ministers have departed and arrived since then, but Boris’s words still ring true. The Lionesses’ thrilling win has given a new dynamic to women’s football and the sporting aspirations of girls all over the country. It has been described as a ‘legacy win’ that will inspire present and future generations to invest more in women’s football.

This was the luminous highlight of decades of campaigning, promotion, training and competition by those advocating the development of women’s football and those taking part. It had started way back in 1972 when UEFA recommended that national football associations incorporate the women’s game, with the ban on women playing on English Football League Grounds also overturned that year.

After their win at the Euros, the England players wrote an open letter to Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss, the candidates in the Conservative Party leadership election, in which they declared their “legacy and goal was to inspire a nation”. The letter pointed out that only 63% of British girls could play football in school PE lessons and concluded: “We – the 23 members of the England Senior Women’s EURO Squad – ask you to make it a priority to invest in girls’ football in schools, so that every girl has the choice.”

In tune with the rising prominence of the women’s game just before the Euro win – and with the help of founding sponsor, local financial services firm Novia Financial – Jane Jones was in June appointed as Community Director to Bath City FC with a brief to set up a Bath City Women’s team.

Jane, who works for the team in a voluntary capacity, has the perfect pedigree. Always a massive football fan, she was the Communications Director for the British Paralympic Association (BPA) between 2007 and 2015.

“That was an amazing role,” says Jane. “My first Paralympic games was in 1996 in Atlanta when there were no spectators and very limited TV coverage. When I joined the BPA in 2007, the movement had grown but it took our home games in London for the country to really take Paralympic sport to its heart. I think the success of the women’s team at the Euros has had a similar effect on women’s football.

“An awful lot of women have been playing the game for years,” says Jane, “but what has been transformative for women’s football is that it is now far easier to watch on TV, the Premier League clubs are embracing it more, and we’re seeing larger crowds going to the games.”

Jane is passionate about the allure of women’s football. “When you have a thrilling competition it doesn’t really matter who is on the pitch. It’s 11 versus 11. What you want to see is a hotly contested game – that’s what keeps you gripped. I’m hoping I can bring some of what I’ve learned about promoting sport that is sometimes overlooked to the women’s game.

“When I was asked to do this I had support from the FSA (Football Supporters’ Association), who put me in contact with clubs up and down the country who have successful women’s teams. What I found was that not all women’s clubs are part of the main club. They use the name, but aren’t embraced fully by the club. As a community owned club since 2017, our ethos is to be inclusive, therefore we wanted our women to be treated as equally as possible at this level; so everything we do for the club is no longer just for the men, it’s for the men and the women.”

The women’s game is absolutely no different to the men’s game ... and when you have a thrilling competition it doesn’t really matter who is on the pitch

Players were recruited shortly after the funding from Novia Financial was confirmed in May. The first priority was to find a head coach – and Matt Abreu was taken on at the beginning of July. Jane says, “I was keen to get a very good coach because for some women’s teams the standard of coaching hasn’t been the same as in the men’s game. And if you are going to develop, progress and get promoted then it starts with good coaching.

“Matt is local and he’s been coaching football since he was 18. He told us that he didn’t have much interest in the women’s game until he had a daughter, and then he became aware of the fact there were not the same opportunities for girls as there were for his son, in terms of learning the game and playing competitively at a young age.

“We had a recruitment day and from that we got a nucleus of a team. We attracted some experienced players, who had played at a higher level than we are currently playing, but were excited about the opportunity to play in a proper stadium and for a club with the reputation of Bath City. We also got some of the most promising younger girls who were over 16, and a few people in their 20s, looking for a new challenge, and we have carried on slowly adding to the team where we’ve needed to, and we’re still getting enquiries from people.” The ultimate plan is to have a first team, a reserve team and a development team for Bath City Women.

Jane explains the league system: “The women’s football pyramid has seven tiers and the top tier, the Women’s Super League, is where the likes of Liverpool Women and Manchester City Women play. As a new team we have to start at the bottom in Tier 7, which is the Somerset County Women’s League. We will need to win the league to progress into Tier 6. We are ambitious, though, and want to move up the pyramid as quickly as possible.”

SPORTS | INTERVIEW
64 TheBATHMagazine | deceMBeR 2022 | iSSUe 238

Before the establishment of the new women’s football club at Bath City, the only choice for a girl of 16 wanting to carry on playing locally after school was at Larkhall Athletic, who play in Tier 4 which is a big step up from age-group football, so Bath City Women hope to plug this gap and therefore to keep more girls actively playing.

What has been notable at the matches that have been played since September is the level of support from the younger generation. Jane describes how, “In one recent Sunday morning match the Bath City Youth under 10s team came along as mascots, and afterwards they met the players and asked for autographs, even getting their football boots signed by the players, who are really pleased that they are inspiring the next generation of Bath City Women.”

I ask Jane if she has had any experience of encountering old-school views about football not being a woman’s game. She says, “It is not something I’ve witnessed – I’ve only ever heard supportive comments. I can’t speak for all of the 1200 regulars that go on the terraces, but what I do know is that recently one of our young players, Ceris Evans, scored at Twerton Park. Her mum and dad never miss a men’s home game, and now a women’s game either. Ceris has been volunteering since she was young, has risen up the ranks of Bath City Youth, and now she plays for the women’s team. There was a clip of her goal on social media and that went down really well, because people can see that she is one of our own.

“Obviously we are playing at a different level to the men, but if you have a closely contested game it can be just as gripping as anything that people might be used to seeing at Twerton Park. Entry to our games is free and we want as many people as possible to come along and cheer us on.” n

If you are interested in playing for Bath City Women FC, email the club on bathcitywomen@bathcityfootballclub.co.uk with your name, date of birth, phone number and playing experience, or email with any other queries about playing women’s football locally. Games kick off at 2pm on Sundays; bathcityfc.com

SPORTS | INTERVIEW THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | decemBeR 2022 | TheBATHmagazine 65
ABOVE, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Ali Diegutis (defender) and Emily Bristow (winger) in a game against Banwell Ladies; Ceris Evans (defender/midfield) celebrating a goal; Liv Davis (midfield); and Community Director Jane Jones, captain Tara Taylor and head coach Matt Abreu PREVIOUS PAGE: The Bath City Under 10s team come in vocal support of the Women’s Team

EDUCATION NEWS

At the Core in partnership with King Edward’s School

At The Core and King Edward’s School, Bath have announced an exciting collaboration designed to support exercise and movement within the whole school community.

At The Core was established in 2020 to help people maintain fitness and the ability to stay active well into later life. Co-founded by former Exeter City football manager Paul Tisdale and chartered physiotherapist Adey Saunderson, their careers in professional sport make them the perfect partnership to

achieve their ambition –to help the people of Bath lead long and active lives.

It is widely known that physical exercise is important in maintaining positive mental health. At King Edward’s School, the wellbeing of students is of utmost importance and the Sports department aims to promote a positive mindset towards physical activity, laying the foundation for all pupils to be able to follow active and healthy lifestyles.

The partnership sees At The Core providing the following support to the school:

• Safe play at key school derby matches by provision of a pitch-side physiotherapist

• Performance coaching and careers advice to pupils

• Wellbeing talks to the school community

• Providing staff development with a bespoke programme of ‘coaches coaching’ sessions

• Preferential clinic rates for the staff, students and parents

David Chapman, Assistant Head and External Relations lead at King Edward’s School, Bath, says of the partnership: “We are delighted to be working in partnership with

At The Core to support the wellbeing of our pupils, staff and parents. As well as offering physio and rehabilitation support, among other services, the team at ATC will also be providing pitch-side assistance at various fixtures, performance coaching and valuable careers advice to our pupils. We believe the partnership will prove hugely beneficial to the KES community and we are looking forward to working with ATC.”

Typically young, active sports enthusiasts benefit from bespoke nutrition programmes, physiotherapy and rehabilitation to manage and treat sport-related injuries and performance coaching for injury prevention.

With a range of services to help patients overcome pain, recover quickly from injury or surgery and keep the body in good condition to support an active lifestyle, At The Core supports movement through physiotherapy, nutrition therapy, soft tissue therapy and MBST® therapy. And it is this innovative treatment modality that makes At The Core unique.

As a physiotherapy adjunct, MBST® therapy enables At The Core to support tissue healing and speed recovery. In addition to the traditional services patients would expect of a physiotherapy practice, MBST® is being increasingly used by professional sports clubs to help speed player recovery. n At the Core, Unit 3, The Foundry, Beehive Yard, Walcot Street, Bath; atthecore.health

66 TheBATHMagazine | deceMber 2022 | iSSUe 238 EDUCATION
The At the Core team: Paul and Julia Tisdale with business partner and physiotherapist Adey Saunderson

Baby Sign

Early Years Communication Tool

Would you like to be able to communicate with your baby or toddler before they can speak?

I do face to face sessions for parents at your home or any convenient venue for you in Bath (UK)

If you don’t live in Bath I also do online sessions for individuals or groups.

For more info, please contact me by: Email learn@holavero.org www.holavero.org

I am also very active in my social media, please follow me on: learn_holavero Spanish with Vero

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Would you like to learn Spanish in a fun way with your little ones?

Join me in my Spanish singing sessions group

You will learn a new language through songs and you will make new friends as well.

Thursdays at 9:15am at Weston Free Church

For more info, please contact me by: Email learn@spanishwithvero.com www.holavero.org

I am also very active in my social media, please follow me on: learn_holavero Spanish with Vero

THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 67

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THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 69 BOOK YOUR FREE CONSULTATION ON 01225 311 681 27 Walcot Buildings (Weymouth Street), Bath, BA1 6AD www.jbdentureclinic.co.uk Jaime Brain Dip CDT RCS (Eng) GDC 142490 Jaime and Kevin can help you regain your confidence and your smile by offering: NEW TEETH WHITENING Kevin Milne BDS • Free Consultation • New Dentures Direct • • Denture Repairs • With a lifetime background in fitness my yoga classes build your strength, stamina, flexibility and balance - for a more toned and sculpted bodywhatever your age or level of fitness. In Class we work into gentle challengeand finish every class with a few soothing calm I teach in my home village of Colerne - where my timber
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THE CHRISTMAS SURVIVAL GUIDE

Christmas is coming, and for many of us, it’s a time to celebrate. However, we’re often so preoccupied over the festive period that it’s easy to forget about our health and wellbeing. Here, the specialists

Festive feasting

In the build up to Christmas, many people worry about the weight they imagine they will gain. Sometimes this makes them want to diet beforehand, and sometimes they will try to ignore it, deciding to refocus in the New Year. Either way, it can keep us on the treadmill of dieting, which we know doesn’t work in the long term.

So this year, how about trying a different approach? Clinical psychologist Dr Vanessa Snowdon-Carr explains: “Have you ever reached the end of a packet of something and not really remembered eating it? It’s usually when we’re watching TV or working at the same time. This can be a busy time of year so we might be more likely to eat mindlessly. Research has found that if we are distracted when eating, we feel less satisfied and are likely to eat more.

“Mindful eating, however, means paying attention to our food, like we would if we were eating a lovely meal out; slow down, savour the taste, chew more and notice how your body is feeling. By eating more mindfully around the Christmas period, we can reduce the extra bits of food that we don’t really want or need, and instead focus on enjoying our favourite food at this time of year.”

Even if weight isn’t a concern for you, the excesses of the festive season can still put a strain on our health, in particular our digestive system. Consultant gastroenterologist Dr Amanda Beale says: “A gut suddenly required to cope with large amounts of Christmas pudding, smothered in brandy cream, can sometimes show the strain. Most of these odd gut symptoms will resolve quickly but, if persistent, can suggest underlying bowel problems.”

Dr Beale continues: “Any variation in bowel habit, new pains, or bloating that is still present in the New Year could indicate an underlying bowel problem. This in turn can cause poor absorption of nutrients, leading to anaemia and significant fatigue. If you have any concerns, seek medical advice.”

Spread Christmas cheer, not germs

Unfortunately, the festive season also falls during the winter flu season, and like flu, COVID-19 cases have also increased this autumn. Both flu and COVID-19 are serious illnesses which can cause death, not only in vulnerable groups, such as older people and those with an underlying medical condition, but also among people who are fit and healthy. Nuffield Health Bristol Hospital’s infection prevention co-ordinator, nurse Janice Bowler explains: “You can have either of these viruses and pass them on to others without displaying any symptoms yourself, so being immunised not only protects you, it protects those around you, including family, friends and work colleagues.”

Janice says: “If you are unfortunate enough to have flu or COVID in the run-up to Christmas, rest up and stay away from work until you’re better – even if that means missing the office party! Your colleagues won’t appreciate catching it from you, and then being struck down over Christmas itself. As well as getting the jab, you can help to reduce the spread of germs by regularly washing your hands, and when coughing or sneezing, do it into a tissue or handkerchief, or if you don’t have one, do it into the crook of your elbow, rather than your hand.” There’s still time to get the flu jab before Christmas – and the COVID-19 booster, if you’re eligible – so speak to your GP or a local pharmacist if you would like more information.

Prepare for a stress-less Christmas Christmas is usually portrayed as a happy, social, family time, but for many it doesn’t live up to these expectations. Even for those people who enjoy it, Christmas can still be stressful and there’s a price to be paid afterwards for overindulgence. Bristol GP Dr Gill Jenkins tells us: “The main problems GPs see before Christmas revolve around the stress of trying to provide the ‘perfect’ Christmas, or conversely being aware that you will be alone.

Fear of getting into debt, not meeting loved ones’ expectations, and feeling lonely all lead to increased self-harming, sleep difficulties and panic attacks. A heightened feeling of loss, anxiety and depression occur and the social media phenomena of competitiveness, oneupmanship and ‘fear of missing out’ add to the stress. After the event we see more problems related to overindulgence of food and drink, including indigestion and a realisation that alcohol use may be a problem, and weight gain that needs addressing. It almost makes you wonder why we do it!”

Dr Jenkins suggests: “Planning is key, with a realisation that Christmas is about sharing time and simple pleasures with the ones you care about. Remember to refresh stocks of simple ‘over the counter’ medicine, such as paracetamol, ibuprofen, indigestion or diarrhoea medicines, and ensure you have enough of your regular medicine to last until after New Year. Doctors surgeries and chemists may be closed, but there is always a GP out-of-hours (OOH) service in case anyone does fall ill, or alternatively, call 111 for advice and a GP appointment. Try to avoid A&E, as hospital emergency departments are always overrun at this time of year.”

Nuffield Health Bristol Hospital offers weight loss treatment, gastroenterology clinics, and a private GP service. If you would like to book an appointment with any of our consultants, call 0117 911 5339, or visit our website for more information.

Nuffield Health Bristol Hospital
3 Clifton Hill, Bristol BS8 1BN nuffieldhealth.com/hospitals/bristol
70 TheBATHMagazine | DeCeMBeR 2022 | issue 238 ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE
at Nuffield Health Bristol Hospital offer advice on how to enjoy a healthy holiday season.

Introducing luxury later living in Bath

Launching in Summer 2023, in the historic heritage city of Bath is Pegasus Bath Leat, a stylish collection of contemporary apartments created by later living specialist Pegasus. Comprising 68 one and two bedroom homes, Bath Leat sets a new standard for independent living for those enjoying life over sixty, where comfort and wellbeing are at the heart of the community.

Perfectly placed for Bath city centre and beautifully situated on the River Avon, Bath Leat lets you enjoy the peace of a riverside community with all the perks of the city’s unique heritage on your doorstep. Homeowners will be within 10 minutes walking distance of the city centre where you will find a variety of independent restaurants, bars and cafes including The Pump Room, once frequented by Jane Austen and Charles Dickens. From boutique shops to iconic local landmarks; The Circus and The Royal Crescent, it is easy to spend hours exploring the city. Bath Leat’s prime location is also within easy reach of the picturesque Royal Victoria Park; a beautiful expanse of green parkland spanning 57 acres where there is walking and wildlife watching opportunities aplenty.

Beautiful inside and out, every aspect of the homes at Bath Leat has been thoughtfully considered - from flowing layouts to stylish fixtures and fittings. High ceilings and large windows flood rooms with natural light, whilst contemporary yet cosy interiors create a sense of warmth and comfort. Almost every one of the 68 luxurious apartments features a spacious patio, one or two balconies or a roof terrace, helping bring light, nature and a sense of calm into the homes. Food preparation becomes a pleasure in the kitchen, featuring flawless materials like a Silestone quartz worktop and top quality Neff appliances, whilst shower rooms and en-suites include luxury walk-in showers.

Wellbeing is a core part of life at Bath Leat and this shines through every aspect of the design. This opulent development boasts outstanding communal spaces, built to nurture your health and happiness. The communal lounge provides a great space to relax with a good book or catch up with neighbours, whilst the shared terrace is the perfect spot to toast a glass of wine in the evening. Explore the beautifully landscaped gardens or for special occasions, book the club room and guest suite so family and friends can stay and celebrate with you in style. The shared facilities also include a sauna, stretch studio, hobby room and treatment room, helping you stay fit and well. Whether it's a snug spot for a moment to yourself or a great conversation with friendly neighbours, it’s all here, waiting for you.

Because peace of mind is key to wellbeing, Bath Leat will be staffed by a General Manager and two dedicated Lifehosts, helping you feel safe and secure. Lifehost’s are on hand to ensure life at Bath Leat is as enjoyable and carefree as possible. Whether you have a question about the local area, need help with a delivery or would like to make a restaurant reservation, the Lifehost is available to help no matter how big or small the query.

With great transport links to Bristol, London and beyond, life can be whatever you want it to be at Bath Leat. If you’re looking for a safe and sociable community to enjoy your best years, or a base in which to explore all that the culturally vibrant city of Bath has to offer, Bath Leat is flexible, friendly and above all an exceptional place to call home.

The Bath Leat sales office is now open at House of St John’s, 1 Queen Square, Bath, BA1 2HA. Book an appointment with our knowledgeable sales team to discover more of the fulfilling lifestyle on offer at Pegasus Bath Leat. Call 01225 600 462 or email us at bathleat@lifestory.group

72 TheBATHMagazine | DeCeMBeR 2022 | issue 238
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THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 73 RECEIVE THE BATH MAGAZINE BY POST AND NEVER MISS OUT We deliver to over 15,000 addresses every month, and there’s plenty of pick up points around town. But if you live outside our distribution area or would like us to send a copy to friends or family, we offer a magazine mailing service. Make sure you never miss an issue... all 12 issues from just £33* ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTIONS FROM JUST £33* SUBSCRIBE ONLINE AT www.thebathmag.co.uk/subscribe or call: 01225 424 499

Ghost signs of Frome

This month’s walk is an urban one covering a distance of 1.75 miles –all on pavements, it avoids the muddy tracks that can be encountered in December. The walk traces ghost signs in the back streets of Frome, and is therefore a stroll with an appropriate seasonal feel, says Andrew Swift

Christmas is the time for ghost stories, so this month’s walk takes us on a stroll through the back streets of Frome in search of ghost signs – those faded advertisements for longdefunct businesses on the walls of old buildings, summoning up echoes of times past.

It isn’t just forgotten businesses you’ll encounter. Tucked away in the steep and narrow streets are a host of independent shops and galleries, so there’s also the chance for a spot of Christmas shopping, and when you tire of that, there are cafés, pubs and craft beer bars aplenty.

If you time your visit right, you can also take in one of the most eclectic street markets in the country. On the first Sunday of the month, from March to December, the Market Place and surrounding streets are closed to traffic and given over to the Frome Independent. More than just a market, this monthly celebration of contemporary craft, independent retail and community spirit brings together local food and drink producers, artists and designers, retro, vintage, collectables and street entertainment. A short walk away, in the Cheese & Grain Hall (where Paul McCartney played earlier this year), you can also find the monthly Magpie Market, which features vintage and contemporary gifts, jewellery and home-made crafts and produce.

It is by the Market Cross in the Market Place that our walk starts, however, before diving into the narrow confines of Cheap Street. No ghost signs here, although Cheap Street does boast some of the oldest buildings in town and, in true medieval style, has a leat running down the middle.

Turn right at the end and, when you come to a T-junction, turn right. After 275m, when you come to a mini-roundabout, look right to see the first ghost sign – MINTY – below an oriel window. Minty’s Nursery is nearby, but the connection with it is unclear.

Carry on along the main road, and, just after crossing the end of Victoria Road, look back at the side of the old post office to see a sign dating from 1926, when the International Stores opened a branch here.

Cross the main road and start heading back. Although the ornate building on the corner of Portway Gardens doesn’t have any ghost signs, it has a carved sign – and a creepy gargoyle – courtesy of Joseph Chapman, a monumental mason who established his Marble Works here in the early 19th century.

Continue along the main road – looking out for gorillas in a pond on the opposite side. A little further on, just past a turnpike marker in the wall on your left, cross when the pavement ends and carry on in the

same direction. When you come to the old Lamb Brewery (with a Heritage Trail No 7 plaque) turn right down Gentle Street.

At St John’s Church, turn left through the gates, cross the road and head into Palmer Street. A faded set of signs 50m along on the left marks the site of Weaver & Sons, who sold paint, glass, wallpaper, etc here from around 1922 to 1970. Carry on, keeping left to continue along High Pavement and Paul Street before heading up Catherine Hill. After this it becomes Catherine Street; look up as you pass No 50 to see a recently discovered sign, of which only the first four letters – FRAN –and parts of four more have been revealed.

At the top of Catherine Street, Edwardian tiling at No 23 reveals that Bistro Lotte was once a Grocery and Provision Stores. Two doors further on, at 6a Badcox, Bar Lotte has a superb collection of ghost signs dating from the early 1900s, when Samuel Pont opened a grocer’s here. They were revealed three years ago, but since then the stonework appears to have been cleaned, as the signs, although still visible, are much fainter.

Next door but one is the first of a series of carved heads representing Mirth, Peace and Plenty and the seasons. At the end, carry on round the corner into Castle Street to see a ghost sign on the back wall of the former HODDER’S CHEMIST’S, also dating from the early 1900s.

Over the doorway of the shop on the opposite corner of Castle Street is a much earlier sign, for H BEAUCHAMP who established a baker’s here around 1859.

Carry on along Vallis Way, and, just after crossing the end of Selwood Road, look up to the left to see a repainted sign from 1697 –TIME TRIETH TROTH. Not exactly a ghost sign but a remarkable survival nonetheless.

Turn to head along Selwood Road, and, after passing THE SELWOOD PRINTING WORKS, with its name still proudly carved on the facade – along with a monogram incorporating the initials B and T for Butler and Tanner – turn right into Trinity Street. Turn left downhill by the Lamb & Fountain, and take a right turn at the bottom (by Nut House) along Whittox Lane. At the end, turn left down Catherine Hill, continue downhill and, when you reach the Market Place, turn right and walk along to the bottom of Bath Street … where the best ghost signs in Frome have been saved till last.

On the left-hand corner are two signs dating from around 1920, when Aldhelm Ashby established a photographic business here. As well as selling – and developing and printing – Kodak film, he also published

74 TheBATHMagazine | deceMBeR 2022 | issue 238 CITY | WALK
York’s Motor Works, Yeovil Tractors Ltd – and a much more faded sign for a hot and cold water fitter Probably Frome’s oldest ghost sign, on the corner of Bath Street

picture postcards of the town for almost 40 years. If you look carefully at the sign around the corner, you will see that, as the paint has faded, an earlier sign underneath has become visible – creating something known by ghost-sign aficionados as a palimpsest.

Further up, above the second-floor windows, is some much earlier lettering, not all of which is legible: CHINA & GLASS SHOWROOMS – DINNER SERVICE – TOILET SETS, VASES, STATUARY, …. RES, PORTMANTEAUS, TEA … Bath Street was built in 1810, and, judging by the style of lettering and the products advertised, this sign may well have been commissioned by the shop’s first occupant, which would make it the oldest ghost sign in town by some margin.

Finally, across the road are some even more eye-catching signs, which were revealed only last year. These too are palimpsests, with signs for

York’s Motor Works – which was here from around 1922 to 1962 –overpainted by signs for Yeovil Tractors Ltd, who leased the premises for about three years after that. Not only are they both clearly visible, but, if you look at the sign around the corner, you will see that an even earlier sign, for a ‘hot and cold water fitter’ can just be made out. n

Frome Independent Market, 4 December 10am–3pm (thefromeindependent.org.uk); Magpie Market, 4 December 9am–2pm (www.discoverfrome.co.uk/event/magpie-market)

Ghost Signs of Bath by Andrew Swift and Kirsten Elliott is published by by Akeman Press; akemanpress.com.

THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | december 2022 | TheBATHmagazine 75
WALK The array of signs at 6a Badcox as they appeared when first revealed One of the signs for
photographic business THE KITCHEN PARTNERS DESIGN STUDIO www.thekitchenpartners.co.uk 102 Whiteladies Road, Clifton, Bristol BS8 2QY 01179 466433
Aldhelm Ashby’s

More than a fireplace

The mantelpiece isn’t just part of the architectural context of the fireplace –it has taken on its own identity over the years and has acted as a showcase for how we want to be seen and all that we hold dear. Emma Clegg considers its evolution...

The mantelpiece was clearly invented many centuries after the open fire, so it’s perhaps justifiable to give it a circumspect role in the household annals. Fireplaces and their overmantels are set against a wall, after all, and this indicates a level of domestic civilization, an ornamental postscript, as it were, to the primeval and life-giving force of a fire. The mantel is dependent on the fire, providing it with a frame. However it’s also true that mantelpieces very quickly took on a confident life of their own, one that continues to give them presence and sway in an interior, so that they have developed a cultural power and design authority that has an equal billing to the fire in the domestic environment.

To trace the mantelpiece’s story, let’s go back to the Middle Ages and the tradition of the Great Hall, which was the main room of a castle or manor house. This was a multifunctional living room, even in wealthy residences, where the household, including nobles and servants, would dine together and where many of the household would sleep, too. Here the hall would have had a central hearth used for heating as well as cooking, with the smoke channelled through a roof vent, later developing into a more formally constructed chimney.

From the 12th century onwards, the Great Hall started to be relieved of its centre-of-all-domestic-activity function, increasingly operating alongside additional separate rooms with specific uses, for cooking, dining and sleeping, at which point the central hearth was relocated against the wall. This was when mantelpieces first started to appear. The wall siting was just a more efficient, practical solution in houses where activities were more segregated – and where there is a vertical wall with a fire in it, a surround is needed.

Before central heating, the fire, as the main source of heat in a room, had emotional as well as practical connotations. It provided a reliable, reassuring, cheerful glow, a central focal point and a place to gather round in comfort with your loved ones, no matter how humble your background. From the 1500s, those who could afford it also used the fireplace and mantelpiece as an ornamental feature where the status, wealth and taste of the home owners could be clearly displayed. Those punching high on the impress-visitors stakes might choose to commission heraldry carved in stone or wood as part of the mantel, perhaps in honour of the reigning monarch, which might have been painted in bright colours to impress new visitors. This also gave a clear indication of the wealth

and status of the home-owner.

There’s also the matter of what can be put on a mantelpiece. This is no casual shelf space – this is a centrepiece of a room, a design statement, the representation of the values and breeding (and wealth) of the family, and this could be further broadcast by the items chosen to sit upon it. From the 17th century the mantelpiece became somewhere to display your taste and show off your possessions, and in this period – for those with the means – mantels became larger. Here was a space to display the fashionable blue and white porcelain vases from China and Japan, which arrived in Europe in the 16th century, and were later made specifically for European export. Buying sets of china vases especially for the mantelpiece – called garnitures – was a standard practice.

Even those who didn’t have a budget for elaborate coats of arms or luxury china cared about the impression their fireplace gave and curated their mantels accordingly. In the middle of the 18th century beautifully carved mantels were a real status symbol, along with details such as dentils (small rectangular wooden blocks used as a decoration) and inset panels. Later you could also purchase pre-fabricated overmantels, with shelves at the side and a mirror in the centre.

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By the mid-1800s, the Victorians – still dependent on the fire as the source of warmth in a room – retained the status of the mantelpiece with most rooms having one, used as a heavily laden family showcase. Symmetry was important then –something designers aren’t always so defined by nowadays – with, for example, pairs of Staffordshire figures and candlesticks, clocks and vases carefully weighted and balanced, a reflection of the confidence of a country with a large empire.

Industrialisation meant that households burnt coal rather than wood, grates were smaller with iron baskets, and surrounds were made of iron cast in a horseshoe shape, adopting the flourishes of the Rococo Revival within the casting process.

Cleanliness was next to godliness in the Victorian mantra, so even a humble miner’s cottage in the late 19th century would have been immaculately clean and ornaments carefully placed and cared for. Scaling valuable items down according to circumstance, you might have seen a tea caddy on the mantelpiece (tea at this time was still an item of value) along with flat irons and polished brass. In the early 20th century, perhaps with only one main fire in

PREVIOUS PAGE, FROM LEFT: The North Drawing Room at Ham House, London (1610); and a family scene in a Victorian kitchen, a chromolithograph after T. Webster. The mantelpiece is high and the fire opening is large, to accommodate the heating of several pots at the same time

the kitchen in regular use, mantelpieces might have seen collections of face powders, collar studs and other utilitarian household items alongside the more permanent objects on show.

We can see that the mantelpiece was carried along by the evolution of the domestic household, constantly adapted around the expectations and social fashions and niceties of the day. But the introduction of affordable central heating in the 1970s was a real threat to the cult of the mantel. With the arrival of early deep-set televisions with useful flat surfaces to put things on, here was a new shrine of light on which to gather your glass vases, brass dogs, piggy banks and china shire horses.

The key to the mantel’s survival was its proliferation; they were everywhere in the UK’s mass of Victorian housing stock, and they were built in, part of the domestic architecture. Assiduous developers in the 1960s and 70s did their fair share of ripping out or partitioning off of period mantels (and other vintage architectural details) in the name of modernism and clean living, but thankfully (for the vintage revival) many of them survived.

In our current age, we have enormous

BELOW, FROM LEFT: Illustration from the book Examples of Household Taste by Walter Smith, 1876, “A design which the most exacting household art critic will find no fault with”; and Time Transfixed, 1938, painting by René Magritte, showing a ‘Black Five’ locomotive steaming out of a fireplace in an empty room

affection for our period houses and we use our mantelpieces with the love they deserve, once again a surface that’s part of a framed surround for a fireplace that tells the story of the family who live there. The etiquette has changed – symmetry may no longer be king, eclectic taste abounds, we’re not all obsessed with dusting, and global artefacts say more of our physical journeys than our ability to afford fashionable imported goods – but they remain a shrine and an expression of self.

Design historian Jonathan Glancey has commented on how mantlepieces can also be places of mystery, dreams and transition, and over the years that’s been a source of attraction to artists and writers. René Magritte’s painting Time Transfixed shows how the mantelpiece is a gateway to other worlds and Lewis Carrol’s story of Alice Through the Looking Glass sees Alice stepping into the mirror above the mantel and finding a new magical, eccentric world beyond. Of course, at this time of year

Father Christmas needs a chimney to deliver his presents… so even if we’re not always burning the fire below, let’s keep the mantelpiece, and all it represents, in our nation’s history, and then we can keep all our dreams alive.

Written with reference to The Hidden History of the Mantlepiece broadcast, BBC Radio 4, 2020

THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | january 2010 | TheBATHMagazine 51 THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | deceMber CITY | INTERIORS

Making a Christmas wreath

Having just made one, I can confirm that wreathmaking is rather fun, especially with carols playing in the background. The secret is in the wreath ring, the moss, in this case sphagnum, and in the winding wire. A few insects crawled out of the moss, surprised to encounter endless sprigs of fir and conifer, but that just proves its authenticity, says Emma Clegg

Materials

Wreath ring; green hobby wire; secateurs; wire snips; 8in stubwire; sphagnum moss; conifer branches (fir or pine) for the background, and foliage to embellish (we used Eucalyptus, Grevillia, Pistache, Italian ruscus, globe thistle, holly)

Method

n Form your moss into a circle on your wreath ring (see 3 and 4).

n Cut ‘hands’ of conifer and fix them to your moss circle by winding the wire around the stem. Work around the ring, adding conifer hands as you go (see 5–7).

n Having got your basic conifer ring (see 7), add additional foliage of your choice. Snip your branches into lengths, and strip away the

leaves on the base, allowing the stems to be pushed at least an inch into the moss. Avoid working with pieces that are too big –use smaller ones and more of them.

To keep the wreath stable, add stubwire, bending it into a hairpin shape and inserting the points around the stem being added, then twisting them on the underside.

n I added Italian ruscus (see 8), Eucalyptus (see 9), Grevillia and globe thistle (10) and sprigs of holly (see final image).

n Cut off any long stems at the back of the wreath.

n This wreath focused on fresh materials, but dried flowers, fruit, pine cones, teasels, poppy heads and ribbons can make characterful additions to your foliage creation.

n Fresh wreaths can last up to three months indoors or outdoors.

Two-hour wreathmaking workshops (£65) are being held at The Grapes (14 Westgate Street, Bath) on regular dates up to 10 December. Bath Carnival also has a Christmas market chalet behind the Abbey offering handmade wreaths for sale. All profits from the workshops and the wreath sales go to Bath Carnival. bathcarnival.co.uk

78 TheBATHMagazine | DeCeMber 2022 | iSSUe 238 ARTS | MAKING
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The winter garden

It might be December, but do leave some time for your garden. James Reynolds offers some advice on protecting plants in the cold weather, gardening maintenance and planning ahead for the forthcoming season

You might be guilty of assuming that December is a dormant time for gardens, suspended in a frozen state as festivities proceed, waiting in stasis for the new year’s frost-defying show of snowdrops, winterflowering honeysuckle and witch hazel. This month is indeed a quieter one in the garden, but there are a number of things you can do to keep things shipshape outside as well as starting some essential preparation for the gardening year ahead.

Preventative measures

As soon as frosty weather arrives, be alert for shrubs and plants that don’t deal with the cold so well. Relocate plants in permanent pots to a warmer spot if temperatures drop, as their roots are more vulnerable to the elements. And containers that stay outdoors all winter need to be raised up with pot feet so they don’t get waterlogged.

For tender plants that can’t be moved in cold weather, wrap them up to give them protection during a cold spell. Materials such as fleece, hessian, bracken, straw and polystyrene can be used to insulate tender plants such as Cyatheales (tree ferns), Musa (banana plants), Pittosporum and Cestrum (jessamine), as well as Ficus (ornamental figs) where the embryonic fruit should be wrapped to protect it from the cold.

Now is also a good time to assess the wooden elements in your

garden and to repair fences and gates, and apply a wood preservative to prevent them from rotting when perennial and annual climbers have either died away or lost their leaves. Also check that your tree ties and stakes are firm enough to stand up to any winter storms.

One of the easiest things to do this month is to think about the visiting birds in your garden and ensure that your bird feeders are kept full of wild bird seed or suspend fat balls to sustain your avian visitors during the short days when they have little time to forage. If you have roses, site the bird feeders close to them as birds will helpfully pick off any overwintering pests. Remember to hang bird feeders beyond the reach of cats, and put out fresh water for the birds every day during frosty weather.

It’s also wise to sweep up piles of old leaves that could be hiding slugs and other garden pests and put them in the compost.

Maintenance

Pruning has a big role this month. It’s best to hard prune overgrown shrubs and hedges while they are dormant and it's a good time to prune apple and pear trees. Make sure you prune any Acer palmatum (Japanese maple trees), Betula (birches) and Vitis vinifera (vines) if needed, as they will bleed sap if pruning is done any later. Tall growing rose bushes should be cut back by about half to reduce the risk of wind damage to the roots and stems. Cut back

GARDENING 80 TheBATHMagazine | deceMBeR 2022 | iSSUe 238

ornamental grasses and bamboos if needed.

Don’t prune your hydrangeas, however – leave the faded flower heads on the plant until spring, as they provide invaluable frost protection to the swelling buds further down the stems.

When it comes to compost, turn your compost heaps to mix the ingredients and help the contents to decompose. It’s also a good time to spread a layer of compost over cleared soil using a garden fork to work the compost in. If you have a pond, cover it with netting to catch any falling leaves or debris and leave them on the side so pondlife can escape, before adding them to your compost bin.

Alpine and rockery plants will be grateful to have a loam/grit compost mixture spread around them, to keep the soil well-draining but retaining moisture. Keep watering any newly planted trees and shrubs until the ground freezes. You can also help create a welcome shelter for toads and other wildlife by making a chaotic pile of old logs in an undisturbed corner of the garden.

For gardens with lawns, spike lawns with a garden fork to improve drainage and aeration. Keep the lawn clear of leaves to let the light in and prevent dead patches appearing and put the leaves in the compost bin.

If you have strawberry plants and they are over three years old, order some new ones to replace them. After a certain time strawberries can harbour diseases and tend to lose productivity.

Planning ahead

In December planning ahead is mostly a case of considering what seeds you will plant in the spring and ordering them. You need to order apple trees now for planting in early spring. You should also move your houseplants to a sunny windowsill to give them as much light as possible during the shorter days.

If you have plans for new hedging, order bare root hedging and plant it now while the plant is dormant, inserting plants into your trench at a 45cm spacing. This cost-effective solution might feel

underwhelming initially because most bare root plants are deciduous so they can seem slightly disappointing when they arrive. However, bare root plants have a substantial root system and a decent amount of stem and side shoots, although this depends on the age and height. When spring arrives you will soon see your plants flourish.

Hardwood cuttings can be taken at this time of year, an easy method of propagating deciduous climbers, trees and shrubs such as Buddleia (butterfly bush), Cornus (dogwood) and Forsythia.

Cover any empty beds with fleece or clear (not black) plastic, which will warm the soil so it is easier to work when the time comes and work needs to start again in earnest. n

THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | deceMBeR 2022 | TheBATHMagazine 81 GARDENING
60+ luxury properties for lets 2 nights to 5 months Holidays –For business –Friends & family Temporary accommodation during renovation/relocation Contact: 01225 482 225 alexa@bathholidayrentals.com www.bathholidayrentals.com Providing 4 & 5 star self-catering properties since 2006 Electricians the directory to advertise in this section call 01225 424 499 82 TheBATHMagazine | DECMEBER 2022 | issue 238 Health, Beauty & Wellbeing House & Home Holiday Rental WE BUY Gold, Silver & Platinum in any form or condition. Nigel Dando 11 Pulteney Bridge, Bath BA2 4AY Tel/Fax: 01225 464013 www.nigeldando.co.uk Nigel Dando Jewellery Specialist in commercial & retail and large domestic properties Traditional and Reach & Wash window cleaning services Trusted, professional and fully insured. Tel: Office: 01761 433123 or Moble: 07989 302299 grahams.wcsltd@gmail.com grahamscleaningservices.co.uk WINDOW CLEANING IN BATH AND THE SURROUNDING AREA GCS GCS Graham’s Cleaning Services Ltd Chauffeur/Private Hire @Romanbathprivatehire We provide Executive Bath Airport transfers to and from all major airports in the UK. We use only HI spec vehicles and give a near on chauffeur experience at less than regular taxi prices. Airport transfers • City to city travel • Hi spec vehicles 1-8 seat vehicles available • Wifi available Card payments taken • Prices start from as little as £45 Get an instant quote online Web: romanbathprivatehire.co.uk Email: Info@romanbathprivatehire.co.uk Tel: 01225 484346 AIRPORT TRANSFERS AND TOURS IS AVAILABLE TO PICK UP FOR FREE AT

This is an elegant and stylishly presented 5 bedroom Grade II listed Georgian townhouse, located in a fine elevated position within 5 minutes-walk of Bath city centre.

The flexible accommodation which has a wealth of period features, is presented in excellent decorative order throughout and is arranged over 4 floors. There is an attractive drawing and withdrawing room on the ground floor, both with lovely period fireplaces. On the first floor there is a well-appointed mezzanine level shower room, along with a charming master bedroom to the front and a further double to the rear. The top floor has 3 further bedrooms, one which is currently being used as an office.

From the ground floor steps lead down to the lower ground floor accommodation where there is a mezzanine level office which enjoys access to the garden and sun terraces. In addition there is an impressive kitchen with natural stone flooring, which is linked to the dining room to the rear, along with a large utility room and pantry which enjoys access to the front of the property via stone steps. Double doors lead to the garden and sun terraces to the rear from the dining room.

The garden is a key feature of this beautiful house and extends to approximately 150ft and benefits from being divided into several ‘rooms’. There is a pretty, secluded paved sun terrace which leads from the dining room with steps up to a raised sun deck, this leads to a beautifully manicured lawn with a wealth of mature shrubs and trees and raised beds. Nestled attractively at the top of the garden there is a handsome timber framed garden studio with a further sun terrace.

Cobb Farr, 35 Brock Street, The Circus, Bath; Tel: 01225 333332

Lansdown Road, Bath •5 bedrooms,
and withdrawing room
plan kitchen and dining room
utility room and store
lovely
rooms
and
terraces of
150ft
PROPERTY | HOMEPAGE
study •Drawing
•Open
•Large
•2
shower
•Stunning garden
sun
approx.
•Timber farmed garden studio OIEO £1,000,000
THEBATHMAG.CO.UK | DECEMBER 2022 | ThEBATHMagazinE 83
01225 333332 | 01225 866111 Leigh Farmhouse, Bradford-on-Avon Guide Price £1,200,000 An attractive, detached 4 bedroom period farmhouse offering comfortable accommodation arranged over 3 floors with panoramic countryside views and sitting in mature gardens of approximately 0.5 acres. • 4 bedrooms • En suite facilities • Wealth of period features • Level garden and views • Double garage

• 3 bedrooms

• Mews-style house

• Attractive rear garden terraces

• Single garage with plenty of off-street parking

• Ideal location, adjacent to the canal

01225 333332 | 01225 866111
Beckford Road, Bath Guide Price £895,000 An attractive 3 bedroom semi-detached, mews-style house, with attractive garden terraces, a single garage and plenty of off-street parking, beautifully positioned adjacent to the canal and enjoying lovely far-reaching views, in a sought-after location within 15 minute walk of Bath city centre.

The expert you need to break into Bath’s secret property market

Downsizing is an area of the market that is more complex than people perceive it to be, often people are moving from a family home into somewhere smaller, and this can bring up a wealth of emotions and questions that they didn’t expect. If not handled correctly, then such sales have the potential to fall through when nerves take over and doubts kick in. Peter and his team with many years of experience, have helped countless people to downsize, because they understand and empathise with clients involved in this kind of move.

It isn’t just selling homes that Peter and his team assist, they can also help buyers break into this secret property market through their VIP buyer service. When talking to buyers today, one thing they all have in common is struggling to find their next home, especially in a market where available properties are scarce. As exciting as searching for a new home can be, it can also be very frustrating and exhausting, especially if you simply can’t find what you are looking for.

Buying property has changed over the years, and over the last few years there has been a growth in, what are known as, off-market sales in Bath. Gone are the days when all properties are advertised and marketed through an estate agent; now, many exclusive homeowners are choosing to sell their home discreetly. To break into this secret world of incredible homes you need to know the right person, one who will help you sell your home without all the glare, and in Bath that’s Peter Greatorex Unique Homes.

Peter is a trusted agent and no stranger to the niche and high-end property markets. Having operated for 30 years, Peter founded The Apartment Company and then established Fine & Country Wells & Chew Valley as the market leading agents for premium homes in that area, and he still runs both businesses. Peter and his team found there was a high demand of buyers looking for properties in and around the Bath area, and so breaking into Bath’s premium home market was a smooth and logical process, with successful sales leading to high quality buyer registrations.

His agency Peter Greatorex Unique Homes, as you might expect, differentiates itself into a niche market that specialises in helping clients downsize, as well as being offline sales experts. Offline sales are more common than you probably imagine, in 2021, 300,000 properties were sold offline, that’s a staggering 20% of the entire market.

Their VIP buyer service is a gateway to access these offline homes for sale, as well as those homes that are not currently on the market. Many sellers stall in listing their property because they simply cannot find what they are looking for in a next home. Peter Greatorex Unique Homes will keep you informed of new homes coming onto the market, as well as those selling offline, together with speaking to homeowners who may not have even considered selling.

If you are interested in selling and would like some assistance with your onward purchase, call and arrange a meeting. We can talk through your requirements and explain our VIP buyer service in more detail. For us it’s very important that sellers are in total control on timings and Peter and his team will make sure all the moving parts align.

We currently have a number of properties available offline priced between £1.5m and £5m, so if you would like to find out more about Bath’s secret property market, and how we can help with your move, call Peter or Sharon on 01225 904999

Scan here and see what the market is like for your home 86 TheBATHMagazine | deceMber 2022 | issue 238 www.petergreatorex.co.uk PROPERTY SOLD - BATH £1,600,000 SOLD - Clifton £3,500,000

Why price, presentation and pets are the key to the Bath lettings market

Presentation

Whether you are looking to let a stunning Georgian property, a purpose built 1970s abode or a sleek modern build, they all have something very different to offer. As a landlord, at the top of your consideration list has to be presentation: prospective tenants want an exceptional home, and you don’t want to give them an opportunity to doubt your offering. As Nicola explains “We encourage all first-time landlords to redecorate their apartment, get it professionally cleaned and add quality finishes. You want a prospective tenant to walk into your apartment for the first time and be wowed – you don’t want them to focus on any negative elements. The more exquisitely presented the apartment the better quality of tenant you will attract.”

When it comes to presentation you also need to consider compliance, and this means looking forward and not just in the here and now. Prospective tenants are really energy aware: they know the difference between an apartment with an E EPC rating and one with a C and what that can mean to their energy bills. Although you are currently compliant with an E rating, the government is in consultation to raise the required rating to a C by 2025. Therefore, you should always be looking at what small changes you can make to your property to make it future proof.

Pets

Bath is a unique city; it is one that has a heart and soul. It is no wonder the people that move here love its variety as well as its strong community feel,” states Nicola Wilkes, Lettings & Property Investment Manager. Just as this city is unique so is the lettings market, and, especially in this difficult time, we wanted to give landlords an honest perspective on what is happening, what to consider and, also, what prospective tenants want. It all comes down to price, presentation and pets being the key to the Bath lettings market.

Price

Landlords, you will be pleased to hear demand is still high, enquiries have not wavered but in fact, we are busier than last year, but what has changed is that it is a price-sensitive market. Landlords with inflated guide prices/expectations are having to accept lower offers or realign their asking rents. There was no doubt that the cost of living crisis was going to have an impact, and what we are seeing at The Apartment Company is applicants making offers on a property rather than agreeing to the listed rent. “We are still getting very good rents,” explains Nicola. “Rental incomes being achieved is still higher than those in 2020, there has been an increase in excess of 12.1% since 2021. The market was always going to get to a point where things would flatten off a bit.”

Enquiries from landlords, especially new landlords, have also increased and we have seen a rise in new instructions. Landlords are still investing in Bath and seeing the value which this city and its apartments can deliver.

There has been a slight shift in the market with a notable increase in properties that are furnished, although 80% of our rentals continue to be unfurnished. That being said, furnished properties must be high quality, and this brings us to presentation.

The pandemic saw around 3.2 million UK households bringing a pet into their home, according to figures last year by the Pet Food Manufacturers’ Association. This means that there are now 17 million pet-owning homes, and we know this includes many of Bath’s renters. As a landlord, you are no doubt sympathetic to this plight, as we know many of you have discussed options with us to allow pets within your properties. That being said, on many occasions your hands are tied.

New landlords may not be aware of the need to check the head lease for the apartment building – within its various clauses, which sometimes include how the property can be let, will be a clause on pets. We believe there is often a misconception that it is the landlords’ decision not to allow pets when, in reality, it can be the head lease that is sadly preventing such lets.

Making your investment work for you

Having a deep understanding of Bath and its unique property market ensures that Nicola and her team can help ensure each of our landlords’ investments are the right ones to achieve their goals. If you would like to know more about investing in Bath’s apartment market, contact Nicola today on 01225 303870.

88 TheBATHMagazine | DeCeMBeR 2022 | issue 238 PROPERTY ® 01225 471144 | www.theapartmentcompany.co.uk “
Nicola Wilkes. Lettings & Property Investment Manager
SALES 01225 471 144 LETTINGS 01225 303 870 sales @theapartmentcompany.co.uk ® Widcombe Crescent O.I.E.O £325,000 Great Stanhope Street O.I.E.O £265,000 Great Pulteney Street O.I.E.O £550,000 Spencers Belle Vue O.I.E.O £270,000 Grosvenor Place O.I.E.O £260,000 London Street O.I.E.O £185,000 Georgian Crescent · Grade I listed · Double bedroom · Fabulous views · Sought after location · Close to the City Centre · Beautifully presented · Bright and spacious · EPC C rating · Approx. 579 Sq. Ft. Georgian · Grade ll listed · First floor apartment · Spacious double bedroom · Central location · Close to local amenities · EPC C rating · Approx. 603 Sq. Ft. Grade l listed · Georgian · Second floor apartment · Two double bedrooms · City centre location · Stunning views · Communal garden · EPC D rating · Approx. 1128 Sq. Ft. Portland Place O.I.E.O £275,000 Rivers Street O.I.E.O £320,000 Alfred Street O.I.E.O £425,000 Ground floor apartment · Sitting room · Kitchen · Bedroom · Bathroom · Communal courtyard · Permit parking · EPC D rating · Approx 772 Sq. Ft. Georgian · First floor · Spacious rooms · South facing sitting room · High ceilings · Central location · Short walk to city centre · No chain · EPC C rating · Approx. 418 Sq. Ft. Central location · Second floor · Newly refurbished throughout · Stunning views · Two double bedrooms · Good ceiling height · EPC C rating · Approx. 681 Sq. Ft Georgian · Top floor apartment · Double bedroom · Stunning views · Short walk to city centre · Excellent access to M4 · EPC C rating · Approx. 586 Sq. Ft.
· First Floor · Double bedroom · Central location · Close to local amenities · Opposite · Hedgemead Park · No chain · EPC D rating · Approx. 355 Sq. Ft. FORSALE FORSALE FORSALE NEW INSTRUCTION NEW INSTRUCTION NEW INSTRUCTION SOLDSTC SOLDSTC SOLDSTC
l listed · Georgian · Second floor · One double bedroom · Good decorative order · Close to local amenities · Holiday lets permitted · EPC C rating · Approx 494 Sq. Ft.
Georgian
Grade
www.theapartmentcompany.co.uk ® Brunswick Place £1,275 pcm Green Park £1,800 pcm Raby Place, Bathwick £1,500 pcm Green Park £1,400 pcm Palladian £1,800 pcm Alexandra House £1,600 pcm Lower Oldfield Park £1,400 pcm Park Lane £1,690 pcm North Road, Combe Down £2,250 pcm Furnished · Available 20th December 2022 · First Floor apartment · Central location · No students · Suit professional person or couple · Resident permit parking · Council Tax Band B · EPC Rating D Stunning Apartment · Part furnished · Two double bedrooms · Communal Gardens · Gas central heating · Council Tax Band D · EPC Rating D · Available now Available Now · Courtyard Garden · Own front door entrance · One double bedroom · Plenty of storage · Access to Raby Place private gardens · Contemporary kitchen · Council Tax Band B · EPC Rating C Unfurnished · Available now · Two double bedrooms · Office/Additional storage · Redecorated throughout · Pets may be considered · Top floor apartment · Council Tax Band C · EPC rating C FULLY FURNISHED · Two double bedrooms · Open plan living room/ kitchen · Secure gated parking for one vehicle · Enclosed communal garden · Minimum tenancy 12 months · Council Tax Band C · EPC Rating C Available Now · Open plan living space · Unfurnished · Two double bedrooms · Allocated parking · High specification · Suitable professionals · Council Tax Band C · EPC Rating B Unfurnished · Available now · 880 sq ft · Two double bedrooms · Redecorated throughout · New kitchen & bathroom · Pets considered by negotiation · Council Tax Band C · EPC Rating D Professional person/couple · Two double bedrooms · Redecorated throughout · Allocated Parking · Communal garden & bike store · EPC Rating D · Council Tax Band D · Available now Available Now · Three double bedrooms · Two bathrooms · Balcony over communal gardens · Part furnished · Gas central heating · NO STUDENTS · Council Tax Band E · EPC Rating B LET AGREED LET AGREED LET AGREED TOLET TOLET TOLET TOLET TOLET TOLET

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