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Spring 2014
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CONTENTS
Going Local….
IN MARCH & APRIL
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Whilst working on this issue of the magazine and over the past few months, I’ve come across a common complaint, “locals don’t go local”, and this feeling has come from a wide and varied source of people. I’ve recently been helping The Garden House get ready for their coming season, and I’ve been very surprised at how many local people I’ve spoken to who know the garden is there but haven’t visited it for years – a crying shame for what is one of Britain’s finest gardens. Similarly whilst chatting with Nick Viney about her stunning tented holiday accommodation (as featured in this issues Great Escapes), she has as yet not had one booking that has come from someone locally. One of this season’s ‘Hidden Gems’ (on page 55) Tina Hursford’s Traditional Puddings, has a stand in Tavistock’s Pannier Market and she and other traders in the market also feel that if it weren’t for tourists they would really struggle, as locals just don’t bother coming in to look around and see what is new. This attitude simply amazes me. We have so many wonderful places to visit and excellent local businesses to support and yet we all complain when we see more and more closing down. Hopefully this bumper issue of the magazine, with our bulging What’s On section will encourage you to spread your wings just a little (but not too far!) and explore all the superb local opportunities we are lucky to have, right here on our doorstep. Thank you as always, for your excellent assortment of ideas, events and editorial contributions. We are looking forward to receiving more for our next issue, Summer 2014 (out on 9th June). Our deadline for all editorial is Friday 2nd May.
Lizzie Lizzie Watt, Editor editorial@moorlinks.co.uk We would like to say a big thank you to our many local contributors, who help to keep our magazine so interesting to all. If you would like to help or have a story or event you would like to see published please do get in touch. Please contact us via email (editorial@moorlinks.co.uk), telephone 01822 853110 or visit our website www.moorlinks.co.uk. Editor/ Director: Lizzie Watt Deputy Editor: Rosemary Best Writers: Rosemary Best, Nichola Williams, Pat Woodgate and Lizzie Spiers Graphic Designers: Terri Reeves and Rachel Marsh Front Cover Image: With huge thanks to Photographer, Tony Cobley for his wonderful portrait of ‘Spring’ www.tonycobley.co.uk
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CONTENTS 4. School Spotlight
Walkhampton Pre-School - ‘The best job in the world’
6. Local People
Jonny Kurzman, Nick Lane and Patricia Fawcett
11. Charity Focus
Kidney Donation and a trip to Ghana
12. Looking Good
Tennis Tips and the dreaded Hayfever
20. Gardening
Quirky Topiary, an update from The Garden House and Sue Fisher’s Top Tips
24. Property
Mill Meadow, Horrabridge
30. Feature
Changes to the Ten Tors Challenge
46. Great Escapes
Tented Living, Near and Far
52. Totally Locally - Hidden Gems Our first ‘Hidden Gems’ as voted by you
54. History
Daffodils in the Tamar Valley
58. Last Word
Floss Williams tells us her experiences of the Ten Tors Challenge
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SCHOOL SPOTLIGHT
SCHOOL SPOTLIGHT
There have been lots of articles written about the preschools in the area and we all have a lot in common- we all follow the curriculum in a fun way and are very aware of health and safety and working in partnership with parents. So this is mainly an article to paint a picture of our day in Walkhampton Memorial hall and we would love for you to visit us. We staff at Walkhampton Pre-school are very happy with our lot- Our job involves working with the best people imaginable- creative, happy and full of fun. We work with children from 18 months to when they sadly leave us to go to primary school. The children come in to a colourful well set out hall, with the climbing frame and carpets of toys and messy play. When they arrive it is lovely to watch them often heading straight off to explore, or those less confident can have a story with one of us and talk to us while we listen. The children often come out with the best comments, sometimes very random. We get to watch them make little achievements which they are so delighted with and want to share it with us. Sometimes it can be that they have used the toilet by themselves(!), or they draw a recognisable person, usually mummy or daddy, having only done squiggles before. As staff we can be silly and get away with it, and the children love to join in dancing 4
wildly or pretending to be an alien or pirate. The play park climbing frame becomes the ice cream shop for some and the sand pit often becomes an island with buried treasure. We are a community helping create a stimulating environment for our children to play in; it is not just somewhere to drop the children off each day. Parents help maintain the playhouse, vegetable boxes and picnic areas in our lovely garden. Parents can join our committee and help organise fundraising events for the children and the local community, who are very supportive of the pre-school and attend events such as Easter egg hunts; a Halloween disco for all local children; quizzes for the grown-ups and the now infamous Walkstock which is a live music and fancy dress event- this year happening on March 22nd.
ready to start pre-school, having formed good relationships with ourselves and the other children. Handing children back at the end of the session, it is a pleasure to hear them tell their parent or carers about how they went to the moon or were a knight in a castle. When a parent comes to tell us their child has started dancing to music on the radio or role playing imaginatively at home, it makes us realise why we do this job. www.walkhamptonpreschool.co.uk
Pat Woodgate
It is a privilege to see the children change from babies to walkers to talkers when they come to parent/ toddler sessions on Tuesday and Friday mornings 9-11.30. We watch them grow in confidence until they are editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
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LOCAL PEOPLE
Jonny Kurzman Screenwriter
Driving down a rough track most unsuitable for my car I come upon the Walkham running in full spate beside a house in the woods with chimneys puffing and small dogs yapping. Jonny greets me, smiling with a cup of tea and we settle in the snug sitting room. He is not the flash LA screen writer you’d imagine, although his trim goatee beard is a nod towards creative flare. Born in Cardiff to a Welsh mother and an Austrian father, he boarded at Dartington Hall School from age 11. He attended Art College in both New York and London before embarking on a career in film and TV production. Jonny worked with a number of leading directors, including Mike Newell, Lindsay Anderson and Anthony Minghella, as well as lecturing at the Royal College of Art. In 1996 he co-produced the low budget feature film Bob’s Weekend that debuted in competition at the Edinburgh film festival. He also directed two award winning short films, Tigers!! and Bad Dreams that can be seen on Vimeo.com Throughout his youth Jonny had written and drawn comics but had stopped when he went to art college. Then, in the 90’s Jonny tried his hand at screenwriting and found it came very naturally. With hindsight he talks about the similarities between the two mediums, both tell stories using pictures. In 2000 Jonny’s adaptation of the science fiction novel Night of Light won the Grand Prize at the Rhode Island International Film Festival and his feature film script ‘Leonardo Secret Agent’ was picked up by the UK’s DNA Films. He became a full time writer and most of his work since has been in children’s television including programmes such as MI High, Wolfblood and The Sparticle Mystery. His writing is described as fun and refreshing with one colleague saying that his work has a twinkle in his eye. “I love writing children’s television. The budgets may be low but the ambition is huge and I get to indulge my love of
LOCAL PEOPLE
Nick Lane
genre, whether it’s spy movies or sci-fi”. He also enjoys the feedback received when he visits schools to talk about what he does.
always rising to new challenges and experiences. Nick has a great love of learning, never happier than when his head is in a book, or learning some new skill.
Retired Merchant Navy and now Bee Keeper
Leonardo Secret Agent was never made, but Jonny eventually got the rights back, re-wrote it with LA in mind, and in 2000 it was picked up again, now called simply Leonardo, this time by Universal Pictures. Selling a script in Hollywood has led to lots of new opportunities and now he juggles projects on both sides of the Atlantic. I ask him if he is ever frustrated by seeing his scripts altered during the long process from page to screen and he is sanguine “A script is for others to interpret: a director, producers and actors, the whole process is collaborative and you have to let it go”. He has so many ideas and wishes there were more hours in the day. He recently completed a stint on Sky 1’s Strikeback and his current slate include an adaptation of the novel “Appointment with Venus” about a WWII mission to rescue a pedigree Guernsey cow from Nazi occupied Channel Islands and also a Napoleonic heist movie. Jonny playfully says that he resents interruptions to his work as he enjoys it deeply and needs time to write he is not one who can work on demand and needs a little inspiration and perspiration ensuring a flexible, unstructured day with a few distractions. He and his wife Alli moved down from London ten years ago after falling in love with this cosy house by the river. They now have two children and a small pack of Jack Russells. It would perhaps make sense to relocate to America but this little piece of Devon has a strong hold, his writing room, full of memorabilia looks out onto the meadow and it has served him well as a place of inspiration. Besides, his goatee would look commonplace over there. Nichola Williams
Father Christmas’ doppelganger can often be seen in Buckland Monachorum. Nicholas Lane has the same glorious bushy white beard, twinkling eyes and jolly demeanour, and having joined the Merchant Navy at a very tender age, he is equally well travelled. Born in Buckinghamshire in 1941 Nick was one of four boys born to a Rifle Brigade Captain who died in a parachute accident during the war. His mother later joined the Red Cross and was sent to Malaya where she remarried. At four Nick went off to join his brothers at boarding school in Dorset, where the Nuns ran a strict regime, and the young Nick soon learnt the consequences of misbehaviour and a respect for authority. Having decided at the age of six that he wanted to follow his Grand and Great Grandfather and go to sea, he joined the “Indefatigable National Sea Training School”. The boys spent a lot of time in small boats in all weathers learning to respect the sea, and its power. Unfortunately, having a TB history he was refused entry to the Royal Navy, but with the Captain’s recommendation he was put forward for an apprenticeship with the Asiatic Steam Navigation Company based in Calcutta and in January 1957 sailed from Glasgow to India. He spent four years travelling the world, learning the ropes and in due course qualified as Second Mate. In 1968 whilst in London to take his Masters Ticket he met Edith working in a bank on “Nicholas Lane”. They seemed fated to marry and did soon after. In 1974 Nick was posted to Tokyo as the Shipping Representative, Edith and the children joined him and they soon became happily rooted in Tokyo life. Promoted to Master at 31 Nick has sailed in container, general cargo and passenger ships, tankers and bulk carriers. His desire to learn and gain new experiences has lead to a variable career, he believes that “Change is a great stimulus and a degree of discomfort is necessary for growth”
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In 1988 Edith was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis a degenerative disease, at a time when Nick was working for “Kanoo Shipping Agency” in Saudi Arabia. Edith joined Nick in Saudi and they remained based there for 16 years. Nick speaks highly of the support received from the Kanoo family and a Sri Lankan nurse who looked after Edith when he was travelling. In 2004, after restructuring and modernising the Kanoo Shipping Agency Division, when Edith’s condition had progressed to the point where she required more care, Nick decided to retire. They returned to their house in Buckland bought in 1975, and he became her full time carer; he says “It was a privilege to care for her, she never complained despite the pain.” In 2006 having always been interested in bees and wanting to learn more whilst being on hand for Edith, Nick took a course in bee keeping at Duchy College. He joined the BBKA, a group of apiary enthusiasts in Tavistock and met professional bee keeper Duncan Simmons whom he still assists today. He now has eight hives in his garden which he tends regularly. He and Duncan make hives, breed queens, collect honey and make a variety of bee products for Simmons Apiary in Saltash. Edith died in 2009 “Marrying her was the smartest thing I ever did” he tells me, “She had that rare ability to befriend anyone although she was not a self confident woman she was an absolute rascal!” I feel the same can be said of Nick although he disputes this. You will rarely meet such a loyal, kind, rascally gentleman. Nichola Williams
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LOCAL PEOPLE
CHARITY FOCUS
Patricia Fawcett Local Author
Patricia Fawcett is an author of over 20 romantic novels. Her books have been hugely popular and she has a loyal fan base around the country. She lives in Grenofen and divides her time between writing, being a lively grandmother and a volunteer at Buckland Abbey.
room guide. This gives her a great opportunity to meet and chat with people, which she feels is essential for a writer.
Patricia joined a writers’ circle and realised straightaway that this was what she wanted to do. “Talking to other writers was a joy and it gave me much needed encouragement. The best thing is that moment when the story ‘takes off’ – you never know quite when that is going to happen but when it does, believe me, you know. After that happens, you can’t wait to get to that desk. The worst thing is slogging through those initial stages when it feels forced and you have to almost drag yourself to the desk.”
Her advice to others wishing to start writing: “Join a writers’ group, preferably one run by an established writer as my group was. Listen to advice offered and don’t be too precious about your work. I would never have been published if I had not been prepared to accept criticism and act on it.”
Recently she has been writing a book a year, which she has found very challenging but as she states, there are no rules about this. She suggests that anyone wishing to try writing, that it is a good idea to set personal deadlines to avoid the danger of unfinished work. Patricia also works as a volunteer at Buckland Abbey as a
Patricia’s latest books include Best Laid Plans (published by Robert Hale Ltd) and Calculated Risk (published by Cloudberry, a fiction imprint of Tavistock-based publisher Luscious Books Ltd). www.patriciafawcett.co.uk and www.cloudberrybooks.co.uk/patricia-fawcett
She will spend 4 weeks of her summer break on a number of projects: Library building, Children’s Home Development, Disaster Planning and Orphan Welfare. These schemes provide essential support and create sustainable initiatives within the country, giving the volunteers, all aged between 16 and 24, a chance to experience work in the development and charity sector. “In 2013 I did the 35 mile 10 Tors challenge with a great team from the Dartmoor Plodders organisation” said Fen. “But this is my GCSE year at Tavistock and I really wanted to concentrate on my studies”. Having spotted ThriveAfrica on Facebook however she was intrigued. “I really like working with children and the chance to do something in a completely different culture was very appealing” After discussing it with her parents Fen committed herself to the trip departing on 26th July.
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Tavistock school student Fenella (Fen) Eastaugh has organised the biggest challenge of her life so far. At just 16 years of age she is planning a trip to the African country of Ghana to help the UK and Ghana based charity ‘ThriveAfrica’.
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As this is not a school-based scheme and the charity is based in London, Fen will not meet some of her fellow volunteers until she arrives at Heathrow. “That is scary,” says Fen “but I have been in contact with some of them through Facebook and I may get a chance to meet a few at an information evening” There is a minimum sponsorship level of £995 that Fen must raise before the end of June otherwise she will not be allowed to take part. “My parents will help me with the additional costs for visas, vaccinations and flights but it is still a large amount to raise” says Fen. www.moorlinks.co.uk
“The sponsorship money gets used in various ways,” continued Fen. “ Some will buy trees to prevent land erosion. As volunteers we then plant them as part of the Disaster Planning project. We will be building and creating libraries, painting walls, making shelves, planting and developing the vegetable gardens at the Children’s home and undertaking various maintenance works on projects established by previous volunteers”. “I have had a few ideas about raising funds,” says Fen. “My first was a ‘Sponsored Silence’ lasting 3 days in January. My parents and a number of my teachers at school seemed quite keen on that idea. The first person to sponsor me was my brother!”. If you would like to help Fen raise her sponsorship you can donate online through her ‘Thrive Africa’ webpage http:// thriveafrica.co.uk/fundraising-page/?id=538 Alternatively you can contact her through her parents Chris & Julie Eastaugh, The Rosemont B&B, Greenbank Terrace, Yelverton PL20 6DR. Tel: (01822 852175). Thank you for your support.
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CHARITY FOCUS
CHARITY FOCUS
Every year three hundred people in the UK suffering from kidney disease die because a kidney transplant is not available to them; yet many of us have a spare kidney that we could manage perfectly well without. Most of us who are reasonably fit and healthy can donate a kidney with little inconvenience and risk to ourselves and change a stranger’s life or even save a life.
represents a saving to the NHS of £20,000 a year. Recently the NHS stated that a transplanted living kidney should be viable for twenty years, so each donation could save £400,000. Clearly and understandably donating a kidney to a stranger is not for everyone but I would ask you to just think about it, have a look at our website at www.giveakidney.org and discuss it with your family and friends. It is not something strange; it is something most of us can do with comparatively little trouble to ourselves. What everyone should do today is make sure you are on the national organ donor register and that you have discussed this with your loved ones, (www. orgadonation.nhs.uk).
I had decided that other than my immediate family and a few close friends nobody would know what I was doing, I was concerned people might think I was showing-off. Then, three weeks after the donation I received a letter from the woman who had received my kidney; obviously she was very grateful but more importantly she explained how her life had changed. She had been on home dialysis, connected to a machine for nine hours every night. She had to follow a very restricted diet and take account of all the fluids she drank. Because of the constant threat of infection she was not able to go swimming or even take a bath; chronic kidney disease controlled her life, or rather her existence. But all this had changed virtually overnight she told me. I then decided that it did not matter what people thought about me, I wanted to ensure that everyone should know about altruistic kidney donation. I thought that if enough people knew the facts then sufficient numbers would come forward and we would make a real difference. Today, this is exactly what is happening.
Visit Give a Kidney, a charity that aims to raise awareness of altruistic living kidney donation, at www.giveakidney.org David Hemmings, kidney donor and author of this article.
At about this time the charity Give a Kidney was being formed, I immediately got involved with other donors and healthcare professionals. Our aim is to raise awareness of altruistic kidney donation and give support to those who may be considering donating by putting them in touch with someone who has already donated. Our goal is that no one should have to wait for a transplant for want of a donor, in effect to create a waiting list of donors. Altruistic kidney donation became legal in 2006 and in the first eighteen months there were just 6 donations but last year 107 people donated a kidney to a stranger. Each donation means someone can come off dialysis and restart enjoying all those things that the rest of us take for granted. Incidentally, it is worth mentioning in today’s economic climate, for every patient no longer needing dialysis 10
Keith Parsons, kidney donor recipient, winning a silver medal at the World Transplant Games, Durban, South Africa editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
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LOOKING GOOD
LOOKING GOOD Dr Mary Nichols, Yelverton Surgery
The term Hay Fever is an inaccurate description of a common plague of symptoms that affects about one in five people in this country to varying degrees. It is neither due to hay nor associated with a fever. The term was first mentioned in medical Journals by John Bostock in 1819 when he described his own symptoms which occurred during hay making time and which resulted in a multitude of symptoms which we now know as the season affliction of allergic seasonal rhinitis or hay fever for short. Who gets Hay Fever? It commonly first develops in school children but older people can become susceptible to it and is more likely if you suffer with asthma or eczema and there may be a family history of the condition.
What causes it? It is an allergic response by the body when it produces a substance known as an antibody to a particle such as flower pollen which should normally cause no reaction. As a result the body releases a chemical called histamine.This triggers a variety of symptoms
It is impossible to avoid pollen but people can reduce their exposure if they are prone to the condition by: Wearing wrap-around sunglasses to minimise the exposure of pollen to the eyes. Avoiding grass being cut as the pollen lifts and can trigger symptoms. Listen to the weather forecast for the daily bulletins of the pollen count .These are given during the summer months, and when the count is high, sufferers would be wise to limit their time outside.
Treatments These are best started early in the hay fever season and if possible before major symptoms commence as none work immediately and can take some time before they give relief. They include The symptoms can vary greatly in severity. Most commonly sneezing, watery eyes and an itching throat and nose. Less frequently there can be a loss of the sense of smell, pain over the face as the sinuses become involved in the allergic reaction and, for those who have asthma their symptoms of wheeze and shortness of breath can become worse. Some triggers for hay fever includeTree pollen- most commonly in the spring Grass Pollen –usually late spring and early summer Weed Pollen-aggravating symptoms in the autumn
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Antihistamine nasal sprays which can help combat sneezing and itching and help stop the nose running. Other sprays include steroid nasal drops and decongestants.
ii) Antihistamine medicines which are available in tablet and liquid forms. Newer, second generation antihistamines are available from pharmacists. They are longer acting and have less sedative effects. Older formulations work well but they have the complication of potentially causing drowsiness and should not be used if driving or operating machinery. You should discuss with your pharmacist to ensure that they do not interact with other medications that you may be taking for other conditions or if you may be pregnant.
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iii) Eye drops either steroid based or containing anti-allergy medication such as sodium chromoglicate which can be bought over the counter from your pharmacist. Contact lenses wearers or those with other eye conditions should seek the expert advice of their pharmacist. If severe, hay fever can have a devastating effect on people’s lives causing lack of sleep, tiredness and poor concentration. In very severe cases other treatments are available but are only considered when simple over- the-counter treatments have failed to improve the situation .These include desensitisation therapies which are only available via a referral to a Specialist. The majority of people can self-treat with the help of their local pharmacist, treating in the early stages and reducing exposure as much as possible to pollen.
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LOOKING GOOD
LOOKING GOOD
Roger Froud, head coach at Yelverton Tennis Club, gives those who think they know what they are doing a few coaching tips… in the same way your hand would have. Now you know a little more about the grip and the swing let’s look at what the ball is doing. A good starting point is to make contact with the ball after the top of the bounce, as it is falling and at about waist to knee height. Try to keep the ball in front and to the side of the body as this will allow the racket swing to keep moving up on impact on its way to your cheek/shoulder and so lifting the ball over the net. Voila, you now have the basics of a forehand drive. A few tips to help you get the best out of your swing. - Keep your wrist firm and swing from the shoulder. - As you hit the ball keep the racket head roughly level with the hand.
Tennis made simple. Yes, I know, a bold statement but it’s true. Let’s look at hitting a ball on the right hand side of your body (if you’re left-handed on the left side), this is known as the forehand drive. Imagine you are hitting the ball with the palm of your hand swing your hand to hit the ball and allow the back of the hand to finish touching the left cheek (right cheek if you’re left-handed) with your thumb close to your shoulder, that’s your swing style. Now, time to hold your racket as if you were shaking hands with it (as you gain more confidence you can turn the grip so as the strings of the racket face slightly down on impact, this will encourage you to hit harder), this will allow you to swing your hand as before but now the strings of the racket will hit the ball
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- After you hit the ball and the racket nears the cheek/ shoulder use the other hand to catch the racket and point your elbow in the direction you want the ball to go, this will help you turn your shoulders on the follow-through improving power. - When the ball comes over the net, try and guess where the ball will bounce for the first time and move to where you think it might bounce the second time, this will give you more time to get ready to hit the ball - Finally, try to take your racket back before the ball bounces on your side of the court, this will help to give you more time to hit the ball back.
“Our Chiropodists and Podiatrists are all HPC Registered and offer clinics Monday to Saturday” Krista Linnen BSc (Hons) Home visits available upon request editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
Roger Froud is an LTA Senior Performance Coach, PTR Professional and has represented his county at both junior and senior levels. He is the head coach at Yelverton Tennis Club and The Manor House Hotel in Okehampton and can be contacted on 07814560988.
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VILLAGE NEWS
VILLAGE NEWS
A hardy bunch of Yelverton Bowlers have been hard at work through the extremes of our winter weather, extending the bowling green at Yelverton Bowling Club in Meavy Lane, Yelverton. The team have worked tirelessly and given up their own time and labour to bring the development of the green within the small budget allocated for the work.
A full house enjoyed the last night of ‘Aladdin’ in The O’Flynn Theatre in Bere Ferrers on 18 January.
The club is aiming to increase the size of both its green and pavilion with greater access to all including those with restricted mobility. The extending of the green is the first phase in its ambitious plans and it is hoped that by 2015 the club will be hosting county games as well as accommodating its growing membership.
We were treated to a production that was a riot of colour, comedy and song. This was no ‘wish-washy’ (sorry!) performance; it was polished and classy. The members of the cast were splendid in their sumptuous costumes and the quality of the acting and singing was of the first order
The green is being extended so that the playing of bowls competitions can be made in line with the Laws of the Sport of Bowls. Currently this is only possible in one direction of play. The first phase will be completed in time for the Club’s open day to be held on Sunday 27th April at 2pm. If you would like to find out more about the club visit the web site www.yelvertonbowling. co.uk or you can ring the secretary Heather Glassbrook on 01822 854560.
Naturally, the wicked Abanazar (played by John Chadwick) was greeted with boos and hisses at every opportunity, but it was difficult not to have a secret liking for him. His character brought a lot of humour to the proceedings – some of it off-the-cuff in true panto tradition.
Do you need help in achieving your ambitions? If you live or have grown up in the Civil Parishes of Buckland, Burrator, Princetown or Horrabridge and are between the ages of 16 and 25, you can apply to the Trust for a one-off grant to help you with your educational or vocational training needs. The Trust can make a limited number of awards at the discretion of the trustees, to qualifying applicants who can demonstrate that a grant would help their own efforts to achieve their ambitions. For application details please apply to nigelahoskin@aol.com or The Lady Modiford Trust c/o Mr Nigel Hoskin, Fieldside, Dousland, Yelverton, PL20 6NN.
6th January 2014 saw the official opening by the Mayor and Mayoress of West Devon of a new community path at Buckland Monachorum. With support from the local community and several other agencies, Buckland Monachorum Parish Council had successfully bid for a grant of nearly £7500 from Natural England’s ‘Path For Communities’ scheme . These are funds made available to Natural England from the Rural Development Programme for England and governed by the European Council, to create a new ‘accessible for all’ path in the heart of the village. The Parish Council was delighted as it was the only project in Devon to be successful in obtaining this grant. A key aspect of the project was the community support - the Parish Council was over the moon at how local residents came forward to help with the project - from tidying up scrub along the new path to making delicious home made refreshments for the opening party. The Parish Council would like to sincerely thank everyone involved.
Completed application to be returned by 1200 on Friday 6th June 2014 for consideration by the Trustees.
Ken Render made a fine pantomime dame as Widow Twankey, the lovable and harassed boss of the Chinese laundry. The audience was generous in its sympathy towards her assistant Wishee-Washee (Christine Fine) who endured the taunts and jibes of various doubtful characters. What a pair of nincompoops the father and son team of Isaac and Owen Kelly presented as Mustapha Napp and Ali Khatt. So many other characters who were central to the plot flitted in and out, all gorgeous in their attire and professional in their portrayal. This production would not have been so successful of course, had it not been for the dedication of the co-directors Jane Hamlyn and Monica Mitchell and the unstinting efforts of all the background crew who took care of props, makeup, wardrobe, front of house, lighting, sound and music. The special effects were indeed special and a big congratulation must be given to the designers and constructors of a magnificent set. Lizzie Spiers
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VILLAGE NEWS
VILLAGE NEWS
Yelverton and District Festival of Scarecrows The Garden House at Buckland Monachorum will provide the perfect abode for dozens of scarecrows throughout August this year, and the Festival will be promoted as a major event in the South-West with the aim of attracting large visitor numbers to the area with high levels of press and media coverage. It is hoped that businesses, schools, charities, service organisations and individuals in the PL20 postcode will support this initiative by making their own scarecrow to go on display. There will be opportunities to promote participating organisations both at The Garden House and through associated publicity. There will also be some free entry benefits to The Garden House for the creators of each handsome/chic/trendy (or even scruffy) scarecrow! What sort of scarecrow? It may be a good idea to make one (or 2 if being displayed as a couple) which reflects the nature of your business or occupation e.g. butcher, fireman, mechanic, hair-dresser, computer analyst – or anything you like! There are wonderful examples of scarecrows online, as well as guidelines on how to make one – easy and good fun. The Garden House will provide the necessary support to display each scarecrow to its best advantage, even if yours is riding a bike or pushing a pram.
Congratulations to Clearbrook Village Hall on achieving the quality standards of all three of the Devon Hallmark Awards issued by the Community Council of Devon for community buildings. The Hall built as a Millennium project has also received awards for its construction. It serves both Clearbrook and Hoo Meavy communities putting on many activities including Pilates, Yoga and Art Classes. Come and see for yourself on Saturday 22nd March when the Louise Parker Quartet will be playing modern arrangements of some great jazz classics. Tickets £10 from 01822852584.
British Beds Worldwide would like to invite all local residents to attend an informal meeting to discuss any ideas and suggestions for ways to improve the look of Yelverton roundabout. British Beds Worldwide recently undertook the financial burden of maintenance of the roundabout from the Parish Council and has already included more bulb planting, which will be noticeable this Spring. In addition, they would like to improve the look of the roundabout for the longer term, in order for it to become more of a landmark and ‘gateway to the Moor’. They feel this would encourage visitors to stop and spend more time in Yelverton, 18
We are confident that a large community of scarecrows occupying the beautiful setting of The Garden House would feel very much at home, and the Festival will prove a novel opportunity to publicise all that Yelverton and its surrounding district has to offer.
Here’s some really good news! An application by Buckland Monachorum Parish Council for a grant to replace play equipment in the Buckland Monachorum Play Park has been successful. Under the National Lottery’s ‘Awards for All’ scheme, £9,800 has been granted which will allow the Parish Council to replace the wooden tower slide kit that has sadly come to the end of its useful life. It is hoped that the work will be completed within the next 6 months. The new play kit is an exciting and colourful combination of different play elements and is aimed at the the younger children. Supplied by local company Green Scheme Ltd, the new play kit is made from durable and low maintenance recycled materials. The Parish Council is also delighted that it has been able to re-home part of the kit to be replaced to a local community group which has kindly offered to dismantle it too to help keep costs down. Volunteers are also being sought to help the Parish Council put down the rubber matting safety surface when the new kit is being installed. If you’d like to help, just e-mail the Clerk on clerk@ bmpc.info The Awards For All scheme is aimed at relatively small projects which will benefit local communities. It is simple to apply for a grant and decisions are usually made within 6 weeks. So if you have a good idea, have a go!
When I wrote an article about Yelverton War Memorial Hall for last Autumn’s Moorlinks, I couldn’t have imagined where it would lead. I chose to write about the history because, although I knew that it was the War Memorial Hall, I didn’t know why. As a relatively recent immigrant from the Home Counties that wasn’t surprising, more so was how little anyone knew. I was unable to trace the history back further than a parchment with eight names in St Paul’s church and may have left it at that if Lizzie Watt, Moorlinks Editor, hadn’t asked me questions which made me feel that we should know something about these men. I asked Yelverton Local History Society if they could help. As a result I soon received a thoroughly researched, detailed biography of the nine Yelverton residents killed by enemy action during World War II from Peter Hamilton-Leggett. It is a compelling read, with an understandable bias towards the navy, it is almost a microcosm of the conflict: one died on HMS Hood; one on a submarine; one onshore at Portsmouth near to the Victory; another was a senior civil servant who died in Changi prison in Singapore, tortured by the Japanese; another, in the SOE, died mysteriously in Italy. As each lost his life in a different theatre of war, so they rest variously in France, Italy, Athens, Iraq and Singapore, or the ships they went down in. Having rediscovered this piece of history the Hall Committee is planning to have a memorial plaque put up in the Hall with the names of the fallen. We hope to have this dedicated on the Sunday following the 6th June (the 70th anniversary of D-day) to serve as a permanent reminder.
What next? At this early stage, we just wish to know if you would like to participate. To express an interest or request further information, please contact Sue Allen at office@thegardenhouse.org.uk
For more details, please contact me on 01822 854521, or caroleanne.thompson@btinternet.com
Fortescue Garden Trust - Charity No. 203722
Carole Thompson
in turn potentially increasing spend with local businesses and boosting the local economy overall. Roger Charles of British Beds Worldwide said: “We’ve had a number of letters and suggestions since our last mention in Moor Links, and so would like to share these with others and be able to move forward with a general consensus of opinion, before we take our plans to the various local authorities.” Yelverton Church Hall. Saturday 5th April at 11am. Tea, coffee and light refreshments will be served.
editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
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GARDENING NATURALIST
GARDENING
At a stunning, tranquil riverside location on the Bere peninsula lives a man who wants to make the locals smile through the gift of topiary. Topiary is the art of trimming bushes, hedges and trees into decorative shapes and Frank’s aim is to site topiary creations throughout West Devon and the Tamar valley.
A very important recent publication – Bird Atlas 2007-11 - shows up the many changes that have occurred in our bird populations over the last 40 years. Fieldwork over four winters and summers by 40,000 volunteers resulted in maps of the breeding (and wintering) distribution of every species in Britain and Ireland; it follows similar atlases in 1968-72 and 1988-91. Many species have increased in range, e.g. Little egret, Buzzard, Dartford warbler, whilst others have decreased – Turtle dove, Nightingale. There have been large declines in waders (e.g. Lapwing, Curlew) in the South West. The atlas shows just how important Dartmoor is for a number of species – Dunlin, Snipe, Cuckoo, Ring ouzel, Whinchat, Wheatear, Meadow pipit, etc. Quite a number of species show declines in southern England, but increases in Scotland and Ireland, e.g. Cuckoo, Willow warbler and House martin. There is a huge amount of information and well worth careful reading. Barn owl numbers crash. The Barn Owl Trust (based at Ashburton) said that Barn owl numbers in Devon have crashed since their last full survey in 2003. The two cold winters of 2009/2010 and 2010/2011, two very wet summers in 2010 and 2011, and the wet June of 2012 all had a devastating effect and killed many nesting owls. Spring 2013 was the second-coldest on record, and led to a high mortality of adult barn owls. The Trust’s 2013 survey of over 1000 breeding sites showed very few pairs bred in Devon in 2013 and those that did raised only one or two young. After what has been (at least up to early February) a mild but very windy and very wet winter, we can now look forward 20
to the first returning spring migrants from Africa. By now Wheatears should have arrived on the coast and will soon be back on the moors, Sand martins will appear hawking insects over Burrator, and the earliest Swallows should be seen later this month. Next month Cuckoos should return from their African holiday. Of the four male Dartmoor Cuckoos fitted with satellite tags last May, three have now sadly probably died; Dart and Ryder died on their migration south (in Mallorca and the Sahara respectively), and no signals had been received from Tor’s tag since 4 December, when he was close to the Gabon-Congo border. However, Whortle is still alive and he was still in Congo when his tag last transmitted on 3 February. Will he make it back to Dartmoor? Watch this space! (or check www.bto.org/cuckoos . If you feed the birds, do remember to clean and disinfect your feeders regularly. Diseases such as Salmonellosis and Trichomonosis can easily be spread among small birds that gather to feed. A recent survey showed that over 80% (4 out of 5) of Collared doves were affected by Trichomonosis.
He has several hundred overgrown plants taken as cuttings several years ago which now have potential for sculpture but are in need of unearthing, trimming and replanting. Frank would like to offer workshops throughout the summer to a group of novices who would like to learn more about this amusing art then take away their creations and plant them in publicly visible gardens and spaces. Frank hopes that by holding free lessons and giving away his plants not only can he clear his plot to make way for new creations but also pass on his fascination and knowledge of this idiosyncratic art form.
If you are interested in learning more about topiary or joining one of the summer workshops please contact Frank by: Email : topiary@macace.net Text : 07955246759 Photos copyright ©FrankRHD Nichola Williams
For a decade or more passing river craft passengers have been able to view his quirky topiary designs such as Felix the languorous cat, Brian the snail (in progress) and much missed Charlie the cockerel who passed on after relocation. Frank tells me his sculptures are like pets that need attention little and often. He likes to tend them with a glass of red wine in hand and takes inspiration from the plants, “They lend themselves to certain shapes and creatures but you have to coax and encourage the plant the way you want it to grow. Topiary isn’t about filling a pre-shaped wire frame...that’s like painting by numbers”.
Dousland Garden Machinery
One of the glories of Devon is our Devon banks in spring. These will, in a few weeks time, burst into a riot of colour with red (campion), white (stitchwort) and blue (bells). The hedges are also miniature nature reserves since, as well as flowers, they are home to numerous insects, mammals and birds. And finally, for those of you lucky enough to have nesting Swallows – remember to leave the doors of stables and outhouses open/ajar when they arrive so that they can gain access to nest.
SERVICING & REPAIRS
www.mikedgm.co.uk
Tony John editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
His interest in topiary perhaps began when as a child he visited a garden with a topiary fish family all leaning in towards the centre as if feeding. He has since created many topiary artworks and is keen to share both his knowledge and his plants.
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GARDENING
GARDENING
Sue Fisher with Joe Swift and June Ashburner during filming of the Great British Garden Revival
Following one of the wettest winters on record, what a joy to welcome spring. A case of botanical spring fever seems to have broken out at The Garden House – everything has suddenly burst into bloom!
A new season
The winter months have been busy for everyone. An attractive leaflet giving plenty of up-to-date information has been introduced, which includes a beautifully illustrated garden map created by talented artist, Michelle Keith. We know the availability of this lovely free leaflet will do much to enhance the visitor experience this year. Extreme weather has meant that the South African Garden has struggled to flourish in recent years, so a complete refurbishment of this garden area is underway. Its exciting replacement is the new ‘Summer Garden’, to be filled with flowing swathes of herbaceous plants more suited to providing a long season of colour on a north-facing slope of a Dartmoor garden than the plains of South Africa! So, something to look out for this summer. The main Tearoom has also had a facelift over the winter, and the new curtains you will see have been designed and generously donated by Carol Kennedy, a Yelverton-based Interior Designer. A varying menu continues the theme of ‘new for 2014’.
The
GARDEN House
So much to see the whole garden is inspirational... Fortescue Garden Trust – Charity No. 203722
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Activities at Easter – so much to see and do for all the family
A later Easter means that the garden will be at its spring best, making it especially pleasurable for the visiting plant enthusiast. Gardens are also magical places for children, and to add to the family’s enjoyment, a new ‘Find the Animal Trail’ is launched at Easter. Children will also be invited to ‘Sow a Sunflower’ to take home, so that they can watch the fruit of their labour grow into the tallest sunflower in the neighbourhood!
Coming to The Garden House this August … THE YELVERTON & DISTRICT FESTIVAL OF SCARECROWS Look out for more news of this major summer event. Prepare for a scarecrow invasion!
Not visited us for a while?
Gardening shouldn’t be all work and no play. Visiting other gardens not only makes for a great day out but is often a wonderful source of inspiration - and plants. Around the Dartmoor area we are lucky enough to have some gorgeous gardens. To the north of Chagford is Stone Lane Gardens, a magical 5-acre woodland garden created by modern-day plant hunter, the late Kenneth Ashburner, and now world-famous for National Collections of birch and alder trees. Stone Lane was recently featured (myself included!) on The Great British Garden Revival. The trees have beautiful bark in many colours, so the garden is a delight to visit at any time of year. Also home to the annual Mythic Garden summer sculpture exhibition. Near Ivybridge, Lukesland is another glorious woodland garden, with a wealth of acid-loving shrubs including rhododendrons and azaleas that look spectacular in spring, as well as many fine specimen trees. The stream, pools and waterfalls that thread through the garden create a wonderfully tranquil atmosphere.
Spring is a great time to become a Friend of The Garden House. Free admission for a full 12 months enables you to pop in and see the garden, shop in Plant Sales, or relax in the Tearoom whenever you wish right through the open season. A great day out for all the family, right on your doorstep.
Around Buckland Monochorum, readers will already be familiar with The Garden House, a delight to visit through the seasons, right through to a grand finale of autumn colour. Head towards Denham Bridge to find Wildside, where Keith Wiley has created a dramatic and colourful garden. The adjacent nursery is a must for plant enthusiasts.
The Garden House is open 10.30am – 5.00pm: Mar & April – Tue to Sun (open Easter Mon), May to Aug – daily, Sept & Oct – Tue to Sun. www.thegardenhouse.org.uk
Many private gardens open for charity on occasional days, too numerous to list here, but do check out the National Gardens Scheme – affectionately known as ‘Yellow Book’ gardens – and those open for St Lukes Hospice.
Hardy veg to sow outside include lettuce, carrots, beetroot and mixed salad leaves.
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Hard prune clematis that bloom in late summer.
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Trim lavender once the weather becomes mild, to maintain dense, bushy growth.
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Lift, divide and replant overgrown clumps of lateflowering perennials such as Michaelmas daisy.
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Catch weeds when young, hoeing off on dry, breezy days.
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Keep on feeding the birds with good quality bird food, but ensure peanuts are in proper feeders so fledglings don’t choke on whole nuts.
Sue Fisher is a garden designer and writer based on the Bere Peninsula. Tel 01822 841895. Email: suefisher@talktalk.net Website: www.suefishergardens.co.uk
What to do in the garden:
Not visited us for a while?
•Stunning vistas around every corner and a plantsman’s paradise •Relax in the Tearooms and sample our delicious homemade cakes before taking a little of that garden inspiration home with you from our Plant Sales Shop •NEW THIS EASTER! Activities for the family - a ‘Find the Animal Trail’ and why not ‘Sow a Sunflower’ - take it home and watch it grow!
OPENING TIMES
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March & April - Daily Tuesday to Sunday 10.30 am – 5.00pm (Open Easter Monday) May to Aug - Daily Sept & Oct - Daily Tuesday to Sunday The Garden House, Buckland Monachorum, Yelverton, PL20 7LQ
Tel. 01822 854769
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www.thegardenhouse.org.uk editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
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Start composting if you don’t already. Most garden and kitchen waste can be recycled into wonderfully nutritious soil conditioner. Put in new hardy plants so they can get well established before the growing season is in full swing. Buy plug plants, pot up and grow on a sunny windowsill to plant out after the frosts.
www.moorlinks.co.uk
Design and Installation Waterfalls and Streams Planting and Stocking Water Features Renovation Leak Repair
Dartmoor Pond Services Ellis Taylor
Tel: 01822 852699 M: 07836 576722 www.dartmoorpondservices.co.uk 23
PROPERTY
PROPERTY
Mill Meadow, Horrabridge
Mill Meadow, Horrabridge occupies a truly idyllic setting on the banks of the river Walkham and offers a rare opportunity to purchase not only an immaculate and beautiful family home but also one with a fascinating history.
In the Middle Ages and up to the Industrial Revolution, Devon was one of the leading industrial counties, based on the all important wool trade, as well as the better remembered tin mining. It is not known when the woolen factory beside the River Walkham was built but the name ‘Mill Meadow’ appears on early deeds of the property and certainly from 1850, Messrs Hamlyn & Co “fellmongers and woollen manufacturers” were employing 400 workers here. Approximately 140 years ago the factory suffered a disastrous fire. The ruins can just be distinguished. There is some evidence of a saw-mill, but what is certain is that a long building bordering the river was divided into three cottages. It is believed that these were originally the factory washing-sheds where the fleeces were rinsed in the soft water of the Walkham.
the extension to form a large living room bridges the leat, with a window in the floor allowing for viewing of the cascading water below. The property has both formal and wildlife gardens, a paddock with stables and river frontage with double bank fishing rights, all set in around 3 acres. It enjoys a mostly private location with the grounds and river providing a haven for wildlife including otters, kingfishers, trout and salmon. All rooms take full advantage of the stunning location and views of the
river and gardens. It has four good sized bedrooms with the master bedroom benefitting from en-suite facilities and a balcony also overlooking the river. Mill Meadow is being marketed through Ward & Chowen Estate Agents, Yelverton. For more details please call 01822 856370 or visit: www.wardchowen.co.uk
The cottages were later added to with a more modern extension, making this a substantial family property. The old cottage living room is now the dining room and
www.johncolton.co.uk t: 01822 85 44 08 mail@johncolton.co.uk
MY KNOWLEDGE from over 25 years of selling homes in this area means I am well placed to provide excellent service in a challenging market. MY BUSINESS A refreshingly straight forward approach is what I offer...and I am not VAT registered which means you save 20% on the rates of my competitors.
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Here are 3 good reasons to choose John Colton
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FOR SALE
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Are you thinking of moving this spring?
YELVERTON - Guide £495,000
An exemplary bungalow adjoining the down
FOR SALE
MY REPUTATION Speaks for itself... “His knowledge of the property market and of the area combined with his excellent interpersonal skills ensure that in John Colton you will find a dependable, realistic and conscientious estate agent whom I would thoroughly recommend.” Mrs R. B., Yelverton (see website for further testimonials)
Serving Yelverton and surrounding villages since 1830
If you are looking to sell or rent call David, Rachel or Jacqui today for your free no obligation market appraisal
CRAPSTONE - Guide £450,000 A modern take on the Longhouse
01822 856370 www.wardchowen.co.uk
If you have instructed another agent then the terms of the contract should be considered to avoid paying two commissions
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editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
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PROPERTY
ADVERTISEMENT PROMOTION
Exciting times ahead... and some important points to think about when looking to let your property. M&B Residential Lettings have started 2014 with a bang! Not only do we now have a new image (see our advert on the previous page), but we now have a new Managing Director too. Michelle Stacey was one of the original directors of M&B Residential Lettings ,which started seven years ago, but she has now purchased the business and is operating independently. Michelle, is a local Tavistock girl and has worked in the industry for 16 years. Michelle is very excited about both her new role as Managing Director and also moving M&B forward to become the leading Residential Lettings agency in the area. Michelle is supported by a dedicated team of whom all know how important it is to keep up with changing legislation and are governed by several recognized organisations. Michelle and her team are fully qualified with NAEA and ARLA status.
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As Michelle points out: ‘it is vital to be giving clients correct, up to date advice and I am proud that myself and my team are fully qualified Letting Agents – ensuring our clients and their money are fully protected. At times too many landlords are left in disastrous situations and facing financial problems because their chosen Letting Agent was not in a position to offer them the full protection they needed, often down to a basic lack of professional qualifications’.
Top tips in choosing the right Letting Agent 1.
It is always advisable to choose a letting agent who is a member of a professional organisation, such as the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) the National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA), both are bound by a code of practice.
2.
It is important to remember that agents offering low charges are not necessarily the best agents to use. Opt for those who provide a comprehensive service and can demonstrate success in the local market.
3.
Choose a letting agent which lets properties similar to yours, and which you think would attract the right kind of tenant with suitable references and achieve the highest possible rental price.
4.
Provide your letting agent with as much information as possible about the type of tenant you want. For example, stipulate whether you want a young professional or married couple, a personal or a corporate let, and whether you are looking for a long-term tenant.
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Landlords benefit by having long-term tenants as it excludes ‘voids’ (periods when the property is empty). 5.
Just as with selling your home, first impressions count for everything when it comes to property, so it’s vital your home looks its best for potential tenants.
6.
Make sure all aspects of your property are up to scratch and meet all of the required standards to give you the best chance of finding the right tenants and achieving the best price.
7.
Before you can let your property, you need to consult a number of parties: • Your mortgage lender - your lender may ask that you let your property on an Assured Shorthold basis • Your insurance company - if you don’t inform your insurance company that you have let your property, you may not be covered in the event of damage, fire or theft in the property • Your freeholder (if you have one) - important if you wish to let a leasehold flat, for example. • You may also find it useful to get advice from a solicitor and an accountant.
For a free valuation or general lettings advice, please contact Michelle or one of the team at M&B Residential Lettings on 01752 759905 or call in to the office at 77 Upland Drive, Derriford, Plymouth.
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FEATURE
FEATURE Officer Training Corps (volunteer undergraduate officer cadets who are members of either Exeter or Plymouth Universities) on behalf of 43 (Wessex) Brigade. Over the event weekend progress of teams can be followed on the Ten Tors website. Updated every fifteen minutes, a table will show those teams whose status has changed since the last update - eg those who have reached new Tor checkpoints. This is a nervous time for supporters anxious for news of their loved ones progress.
For the first time in 30 years new routes will be used during this year’s Ten Tors Challenge, aimed at improving safety of this high profile youth event on Dartmoor. Nichola Williams (whose own daughter, Floss, has participated) looks into the event in a little more detail...
Prior to the 1950s, opportunities to participate in adventurous outdoor activities were limited in Britain. In September 1959 three British Army officers from the Junior Leaders Regiment, Royal Corps of Signals were monitoring an adventure training exercise for their young trainees on Dartmoor and decided to open the challenges of navigating, bivouacking, and field cooking in wild country to young civilians. In September 1960 a ‘Ten Tors Expedition’ for youths 16 to 18 attracted twenty ‘patrols’ of ten servicemen each and one ‘patrol’ of three civilians from Exmouth. The ‘entrants’ were handed a list of ten checkpoints, which could be visited in any order. The ‘best choice of route’ was calculated to be ‘about 55 miles’, and the Finish was back at Denbury Camp. The ‘Expedition’ has seen many changes since then, with the introduction of three distinct distances and ‘patrol’ size reduced to six persons as well as the numbers who enter for the challenge growing hugely. The Ten Tors Challenge now takes place annually in May and is limited to 2,400 individuals – four hundred teams of six teenagers in any male/female combination - aged between 14 and 19 - from schools, youth organisations (Scouts, Guides, Youth Clubs) and Service cadets based in the seven Counties of South West England. Many of its participants will remember the event with pride for the remainder of their lives, and for some it may even be a life-changing experience. The teams, depending on age, face hikes of 35, 45 or 55 miles (56, 72 or 88km) visiting ten nominated tors over two days. The teams must be self-sufficient, carrying all that they need to complete their route safely despite the terrain 28
Safety and environmental protection have always been priorities. 1974 saw the introduction of a compulsory kit specification, and in 1977 ‘Kit Scrutineering’ joined ‘Team Briefing’ as pre-event requirements. 1982 saw the first Managers’ Training Weekend and this has since been replaced by a mandatory annual briefing to be attended by all team managers.
and the weather. The latter can be very changeable and at times quite extreme, and success or failure can depend very much on the extent to which a team has been trained for all eventualities.
The Ten Tors Challenge is organised by the Army, specifically 43 (Wessex) Brigade, from its Moor Group Headquarters at Okehampton Camp. It is assisted by the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force alongside Dartmoor National Park Authority, the emergency services, Dartmoor Search and Rescue Group, Devon Air Ambulance Service and many other voluntary organisations and individuals to ensure that no one comes to lasting harm. In parallel with the Ten Tors Challenge, The Jubilee Challenge is a trekking expedition designed specifically for young people with special needs, both physical and educational. Incorporated within the Ten Tors Event in 1977, it is organised and run by the members of Exeter University editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
2010 witnessed the 50th Ten Tors (foot and mouth disease had caused a cancellation in 2001). A visit by the event’s Patron, HRH The Duke of Edinburgh, on the Sunday added to the significance of the weekend with some finishers receiving a royal welcome. A Ten Tors Award was introduced to recognise the work of many dedicated volunteers who annually train the participants for this fine event. From the outset the weather has played a huge part and on Dartmoor weather can be extreme. In 1967 dense mist settled on the moor all weekend. Icy rain combined with the dense mist made it an endurance test of the highest order, and over one hundred participants were still on the moor on Monday morning, ensuring that Ten Tors 1967 remains legendary! In 1968 Dartmoor Rescue Group was formed, and since 1970 it has contributed invaluable safety cover during training and at Ten Tors itself. During Ten Tors 1996 after heavy snowfall a mass evacuation from the moor was organised and during Ten Tors 2007 two thousand participants were rescued from the moor because of torrential rain and fast flowing rivers.
the impact on the landscape (footpath wear and tear) and reduce the reliance on helicopter support, especially in poor weather conditions. “Changes have been introduced without compromising the original aims of the event. These include developing teamwork, practicing navigation which if anything will be more demanding, experiencing and appreciating a high moor-land location and its associated weather conditions in a challenging environment.” Brigadier Piers Hankinson – Director Ten Tors. Many thanks are due to the servicemen and civilians who make the organisation and execution of The Ten Tors Challenge appear stunningly easy, and who provide the essential safety net. More importantly, congratulations and considerable admiration are due to the many teams who accept the Challenge. For those taking part it is an unforgettable experience of camaraderie, motivation and physical and emotional strength. As the event’s Founder once said: “If there is anything more important than the will to succeed, it is that the will shall not falter.” Long may it continue. Nichola Williams
This year will see new routes aimed at improving safety and control aspects of this event even further. Safety Control Points will be located close to road heads in order to facilitate vehicle support, provide first-aid assistance if required and enable overnight camping areas for 35 mile route teams. Manned Check Points will be located on the moors and have a much reduced profile than those used in previous years. These safety improvements will reduce the need for participants to cross some major rivers, reduced use of roads and contact with vehicle traffic. It will also reduce www.moorlinks.co.uk
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WHAT’S ON
MARCH 22 March WALKSTOCK
Walkhampton Memorial Hall, 7.30-11.30pm. Live music from The Avatars, Longfaces and Three’s a Crowd. £7.50 a ticket. Fancy dress theme:- film characters. Bar available or BYOB. Raising funds for Walkhampton preschool.
22 March Murder at the Abbey
Enjoy a murder mystery evening at Buckland Abbey. Dressing up is encouraged and a three course meal is included. 7:00pm. All tickets £35. See bucklandabbey@ nationaltrust.org.uk
22 and 23 March Daffodil Weekend Cotehele
Come and see the beautiful collection of new and historic daffodils either at your own leisure or on a guided tour of the estate. There are also activities for children. 11:00am – 4:00pm cotehele@ nationaltrust.org.uk
24 March Grow Walkhampton – Planning your Vegetable Garden
With Sally Whitfield Walkhampton Memorial Hall at 7:30pm www.growalkhampton.weebly. com contact Rachel 01822 855962
28 March Plymouth Area Police Choir Rock Methodist Church, Yelverton. 7.30pm A varied programme – something for everyone. Entrance £6 on the door.
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29 March
South West Chamber Choir Concert- Buckfast Abbey The choir will be performing Salve Regina, a Choral tribute to the Virgin Mary. Tickets £10 (student and under 16, £5) from the Buckfast Abbey Gift Shop or at the door. 7:15pm See http://www.buckfast.org.uk for further details
30 March Mothers Day Craft Fair
Morwellham Quay are hosting a traditional craft fair with stalls and demonstrations. 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
30 March Pentillie Castle Garden Open Day Come and Explore Pentillie Castle and garden with the restored Mausoleum (and learn about the exciting discovery of Sir James Tillie’s hidden vault!). £6 entry per person (children under 12 free). No booking required. Plant sale. Refreshments available in the castle.. Open from 11am-4pm.
30 March Mothering Sunday LunchesThe Garden House
Celebrate Mothers day with a special lunch at the Garden House followed with a walk around the spring garden. Free admission if pre- booked. 3 courses £19.50. 2 courses £16.50. Enquire for children’s menu. Booking essential. Tel: 01822 854769. Email: office@ thegardenhouse.org.uk. See www.thegardenhouse.org. uk for details.
APRIL 3 April Civil Service Retirement Fellowship
Meeting at 12.30pm at the Prince of Wales, Princetown. The guest speaker will be Colin Vosper from the ‘Kelly Tin Mine Preservation Society’
4 April Annual Fortescue Garden House Lecture
‘Tresco Abbey Garden – A Mediterranean Paradise’ Guest speaker Mike Nelhams, Curator of Tresco Abbey Garden. 7pm Drinks, 7.30pm Lecture £14pp. Booking essential. www. thegardenhouse.org.uk or email office@thegardenhouse.org.uk Venue: Plymouth Postgraduate Medical Centre, Derriford.
5 & 6 April Art Exhibition
Following the success of their exhibition of West Country artists in 2013, Sampford Spiney Parochial Church Council are planning to hold another event in Gallery 26 at the Bedford Hotel which will be open to the public from 10am to 9pm on Saturday and 10am to 4pm Sunday
6 April Wild Tribe
6 April Lions Club – Boat Race
Help celebrate the University Boat Race by taking part in the Lions Club of Tavistock’s own boat race on the Tavistock canal. Starting at the bridge by Meadowlands at 3pm Boats made from paper according to specifications on website: www.tavistocklions.org.uk. All proceeds from the event will go to Meadows Makeover Group. Entry £1 per boat. Prize for the best boat!
5 to 21 April Easter Holiday Fun
Enjoy a wide variety of Easter activities for the whole family at Buckland Abbey.
8 April Tony Cobley Ladies Photography workshop
See What’s On Extra section for more details.
9 April Family Felt
Come and create your own felt art at Buckland Abbey at a family drop in workshop run by wool artist Claire Packer. Normal admission plus £3 per child. 11:00 am – 4:00pm For more information contact Claire Packer at 01822 859157 or claire@wetfeltingcompany.org. uk
10, 11 and 12 April “Natural Causes” by Buckland Monachorum Drama Group
A black comedy by Eric Chappell. Tickets on sale in due course. From tickets@ bucklandmonachorum.org.uk
12 and 13 April Letter boxing weekend at the Miniature Pony Centre Try the letterboxing challenge at the miniature pony centre and be rewarded with a prize at the end. See http://www. miniatureponycentre.com/ for more details
12 April Flower arranging for EasterThe Garden House
10:00- 12:00 am OR 2:00 – 4:00pm Professional florists, Barbara and Nicky are providing two workshops to show you how to make an Easter Wreath and a Vintage Teacup flower arrangement. All foliage provided by our Head Gardener. Each workshop £25 pp inc coffee/tea. Booking essential. Tel: 01822 854769. Email: office@ thegardenhouse.org.uk. See www.thegardenhouse.org. uk for details.
18 April Good Friday Children’s Service
Sampford Spiney Church will be holding its traditional Good Friday Children’s Service at 11am. This service has proved increasingly popular in recent years and we hope to see you there with your children and/or grandchildren.
18 to 21 April Easter Egg Hunt at Buckland Abbey
Follow the clues around Buckland Abbey with the Easter Egg trail and receive a Cadbury’s Easter egg at the end. There is also the opportunity to take part in spring crafts. 10:30- 4:30 Child £2
21 April Pentillie Castle Garden Open Day Come and Explore Pentillie Castle and garden with the restored Mausoleum (and learn about the exciting discovery of Sir James Tillie’s hidden vault!). £6 entry per person (children under 12 free). No booking required. Plant sale. Refreshments available in the castle. For further information contact the office on 01579 350044. Open from 11am-4pm.
Join Dartmoor rangers at Castle Drogo and learn a huge variety of new outdoor skills from fire lighting to bush craft. Suitable for families with children between 5-12 years. £2 per adult and £4 per child. Booking essential - up to 48 hours prior to the event on 01647 433356.
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WHAT’S ON 23 April CSRF – St Georges Day Mystery Lumch
Coach transport provided to an excellent hostelry not too far away. The venue is traditionally kept secret, but is guaranteed to be an excellent choice. Booking is essential - Ring Mike on 01822-890799.
23 April Vintage Rolls Royce Cars – The 20-Ghost Club
Members of the oldest car club in Great Britain will be arriving at The Garden House at approx. 12.30pm. A chance to see some of the most beautiful Rolls Royce cars including the iconic Silver Ghosts. Normal admission to The Garden House applies. www.thegardenhouse.org.uk
25 April Spanish Evening
Enjoy Spanish food and entertainment at St Paul’s Church Hall, Yelverton. Tickets £6 7:00- 9:00pm
28 April Grow Walkhampton – All About Bees
chefs supper Call 01822 613221 to book tickets
See http://www. miniatureponycentre.com/ for more details
2 to 5 May Canzart Exhibition
10 and 11 May Pirate Weekend
Canzart is a collective of artists from West Devon and East Cornwall whose work is inspired by Dartmoor and provide a rich assortment of affordable art. Tavistock Town hall. 10:00am – 5:00pm
3rd May Grow Walkhampton - PLANT SALE 2-4pm Tea and homemade cakes too Walkhampton Memorial Hall Hosted by G.R.O.W. www.growalkhampton.weebly. com
3 and 4 May Mask Making
Buckland Abbey is offering the chance for families to create medieval masks. 12:00- 4:00pm Free Event
3 to 5 May Annual Art and Craft Exhibition by Buckland Art Group
An informative talk on bees and plants that bees like best in your garden Walkhampton Memorial Hall at 7:30pm Refreshments afterwards www.growalkhampton.weebly. com contact Rachel 01822 855962
Buckland Monachorum village hall, between 10am and 5pm each day. An exhibition of more than 100 original paintings by local artists alongside craft stalls displaying a variety of locally made goods. Tea and cakes will be available to enjoy while viewing. Entrance is free.
MAY
10 May Pony Care Day
2 May Comedy Night
Enjoy a night of comedy at the Bedford Hotel Tavistock. £20 per ticket which includes a 32
A day of pony care where children will be taught feeding, grooming, and mucking out as well as getting to spend the day meeting some of the ponies. For children aged 7 to 12.
The Barbican and Sutton Harbour will once again be hosting a weekend of pirate themed fun for all the family in Plymouth. 10:00 am – 4:00pm See www.visitplymouth.co.uk for more details
11 May Cream Tea
Enjoy a Cream Tea at St Paul’s Church Hall, Yelverton with all proceeds going to charity. 2:30- 5:00pm
14 May First in series of Summer Evening Talks
The Garden House, Buckland Monachorum. Illustrated talks on topics of local interest. Garden open at 6.30pm for an early evening stroll. Drinks available from 7.30pm. Talk starts at 8pm (lasting approx.. 1 hour) Further dates: 11 June, 9 July, 13 August, 10 September. More details on each topic: www.thegardenhouse.org.uk
15 May CSRF - Day Trip
Mountain (75 miles). Route from Ivybridge, Buckfastleigh, Princetown, Burrator and back to Ivybridgge. Cycle on your own, with friends and family or join one of our organised groups lead by an experienced leader. For more information : 01392 279244, dsmith@ devonwildlifetrust.org
22 to 24 May Devon County Show
Celebrate the best of Devon at the Devon County show with everything from fashion to farming, live music to food and drink. Westpoint Arena, Clyst St Mary, Exeter See www.visitsouthdevon.co.uk for more details
25 and 26 May Tavistock Garden Festival
Enjoy exhibits and stalls from
specialist plant growers, gardening equipment and furniture suppliers, local artisan food and craft producers. 10:00am to 4:00pm
26 May Barbecue/Dog Show
On the Bank Holiday, Sampford Spiney PCC will be holding a community Barbecue and Dog Show at Playing Field on Plasterdown. Tickets will be available from members of the PCC or direct from Simon Hill on 01822 859098 or pompi@ btinternet.com
26 May Grow Walkhampton – Plant and Seed Swap
Walkhampton Memorial Hall at 7:30pm Bring along any seeds or plants that you no longer want or need and swap them!
Refreshments www.growalkhampton.weebly. com contact Rachel 01822 855962
28 May Family Felt
Come and create your own felt art at Buckland Abbey at a family drop in workshop run by wool artist Claire Packer. Normal admission plus £3 per child.11:00 am – 4:00pm For more information contact Claire Packer at 01822 859157 or claire@wetfeltingcompany.org. uk
All event listings in the What’s On section are FREE. Send us event details for our Summer issue (June - Sept) by Fri 9th May editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
FILM PROGRAMME SPRING
Day trip by coach to North Devon with the Civil Service Retirement Fellowship (Princetown Group) visiting two places of interest and including a late lunch. For more information and/or reservations - ring Mike on 01822-890799.
Saturday Evenings Cafe Cinema
Tuesday Matinees
Children’s Cinema
Doors open at 2pm, feature starts 2.30pm
Saturday mornings: 10.45am, feature starts 11.15am
April 26th Captain Phillips (12A) May 17th Philomena (12A) June 14th Blue Jasmine (12A)
April 29th Captain Phillips (12A) May 20th Philomena (12A) June 17th Blue Jasmine (12A)
April 26th Epic (U) May 17th Turbo (U) June 14th Justin and the Knights of Valour (PG)
17 May Cycle challenge raising money for Devon Wildlife Trust
BYO and refreshments available £4 on the door
Suggested Donation £3 Refreshments available
Suggested Donation £2 Refreshments available
Choose your route from Classic (46 miles), King of the editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
For film details please check our website www.yelvertoncinema.co.uk
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WHAT’S ON EXTRA
WHAT’S ON EXTRA
“Creative Photography with Natural Light” A day suitable for all abilities at the very beautiful Lukesland Gardens near Ivybridge. You will learn how to find, compose and capture a creative nature photograph and also get the best expression, mood and background from your people photographs. We’ll show you how to understand composition and to control and work with different types and qualities of light, all without getting too technical or gadgetty! We will
BHS Southwest and Venture Co are pleased to announce a seminar that explores the BHS Challenge Rides and how these unique riding itineraries are put together. Venture Co has been providing original riding itineraries for the British Horse Society since 2001. This talk explores how we research new destinations and develop unique itineraries. Our portfolio of rides is broad but not all riding holidays make good challenge rides. BHS Welfare: works to improve the lives of horses across the UK. BHS has more equine Welfare Officers than any other UK organisation allowing them to offer a lifeline to more than 8,000 horses in 2013. Current initiatives include the “Think before you breed” campaign; the “Friend at the End” support scheme (FATE); and the “Grass Sickness” campaign 2014. The presenter: Mark Davison worked as a guide in Africa 34
then discuss the resulting images, learning from each other’s experiences. Bring any camera, no matter how big or small ! For more details contact Tony Cobley Photography www.tonycobley.com or 01752894491
for many years; he has led expeditions and travelled independently throughout much of Africa, South America and India. His day job is running Venture Co, an ATOL-bonded tailor-made travel company based in Tavistock, established in 1999. He is a firm believer that the world is best viewed from horseback. He is Secretary of the Book Bus Foundation, a charitable project that promotes literacy in the developing world. Dates: Thursday 3rd April and Thursday 1st May 2014. Time: talks begin at 18:00 hrs and last about 45 mins with informal Q&A after. Price: £5 per seat. 100% donated to BHS Welfare. How to book: call 01822 61 61 91 to reserve your seat or mail@ventureco-worldwide.com editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
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WHAT’S ON EXTRA
WHAT’S ON EXTRA
One of the biggest gatherings of traditional West Country craftsmen and women demonstrating their skills will take place this year on Mother’s Day at Morwellham Quay It promises to be an ideal day out for all the family, from grandparents to children, with numerous craft stalls and demonstrations throughout the day from blacksmiths, lace makers, potters, ropemakers, and weavers to name just a few. There will be opportunities for children and adults alike to ‘have a go’ and try their hand at some of the crafts. Television celebrity Dr Alex Langlands (an archaeologist and historian best known from the BBC series of programmes about the Victorian/Edwardian Farm and Channel 4’s ‘Time Team’), is the special guest for the day and will be giving demonstrations and signing books throughout the day.
With the bad weather we have experienced this winter SWEP have been inundated with ponies that have been abandoned, emaciated or injured on the Moor. Our current yard based in Yelverton has space for fifty two ponies, and we are completely full. SWEP has just been granted planning permission for a new yard that will allow us to offer excellent care to many more ponies. The proceeds from the The Spring Ball will go towards the build of this much needed new facility. The Ball will be held at the China Fleet Club, Saltash on the 11th of April 2014. Tickets are £50 this includes a 3 course meal, live band and an auction. The China Fleet Club has offered guests attending the event, members rates on rooms. If you would like more information, or to reserve a ticket please contact Abi in the SWEP office. Tickets are non refundable and please specify any dietary requirements. Tel: 01822 854823 or www.swep.org.uk
Buckland Monachorum Drama Group’s have been working hard on set design, costumes, poster production and of course their excellent performances to bring you their spring production - this year will be a black comedy “Natural Causes” by Eric Chappell. Performance dates are: Thursday to Saturday (25th – 27th April) at 7.30pm. Full details can be found on the Buckland Monachorum website: www. bucklandmonachorum.org.uk and tickets are available from tickets@bucklandmonachorum.org.uk
Sport Relief supports some of the poorest and most disadvantaged people in the UK and around the world. Half of the money raised by the public for Sport Relief is spent on grant making in the UK and half on grant making across the world. In the UK, money raised gives shelter to young people living on the streets and protection to those living with domestic abuse. Across the world, help is given for education, providing fresh water and life saving vaccinations. And that is just the start. Local Events to join and help Sport Relief:
Event opens: 10:30 | Event closes: 14:00 Take part in the Sainsbury’s Sport Relief Mile in Bere Alston Dust off those trainers and walk, jog or run (or hop, skip, jump) in a choice of 1, 3 or 6 mile routes! Don’t delay; snap up your place in The Bere Pen Mile today!
Elaine Sylvester from Love Dartmoor Fitness, is organising a cycle challenge weekend for May Bank Holiday – to complete the 95 miles of the new Dartmoor Way. This would be an ideal opportunity to attempt a challenge cycle (or to use it as preparation event for a sportive like Dartmoor Classic). Mountain Bikes and road bikes are both suitable. Elaine is a local cycle leader and fitness trainer. If you would like to register your interest with Elaine, please contact her via www. lovedartmoor.com or contact her on: 07989 575182
Meadowlands, Tavistock is hosting the Sainsbury’s Sport Relief Swimathon. Take on a challenge at the pool between 21-23 March 2014. Snap up your place and enter now! You can do your Swimathon on your own, or in a team of between two and five people. Distances of 1.5km, 2.5km or 5km
www.sportrelief.com
We meet at 7-00 pm in Meavy Parish By Deborah Morris
Exquisite wedding flowers individually designed to compliment you, your personality and your memorable day 01822 859081 info@dartmoorflowers.co.uk www.dartmoorflowers.co.uk 36
Hall on the third Monday of most months for talks on a wide range of topics related to gardening. Visitors are always welcomed or call 01822852984 for more information. Our Fun Show on 17th March will have Peter Argles of Champernowne Nurseries as the judge, there will be competitions, a raffle and refreshments. editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
We specialise in rescuing and rehabilitating ponies from Dartmoor and Bodmin Moor. Our Welfare Department attends different call outs from mares struggling to foal, to road traffic accidents and emaciated ponies. Every pony who comes into the yard receives the veterinary treatment and care they need to recover fully.
You can donate to SWEP by post, online or text.
Follow us on www.facebook.com/SouthWestEquineProtection or www.swep.org.uk Unit B5, Yelverton Business Park, Crapstone, Devon, PL20 7PE Tel: 01822 854823 E-mail: contact@swep.org.uk
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WHAT’S ON EXTRA
MUSIC & ART
An opportunity to sing choruses from the famous operas, including Carmen and Madame Butterfly, at a workshop with Marcus Alleyne - Musical Director of Plymouth Phoenix Chorale Marcus Alleyne took part in his first opera playing the lead role of Tamino in Mozart’s Magic Flute with Sterts Theatre Company at the age of sixteen. He went on to study Music at Plymouth University focusing on choral and orchestral conducting. In the last two years he has taken on the role of musical director for Plymouth Phoenix Chorale and Saltash Town Band, and become resident conductor for Plymouth’s Music of the Night Choral Foundation.
Take a break from the hustle and bustle of 2014 this May Day Bank Holiday and join Miss Ivy and her team as they transform the hotel and gardens of the delightful Moorland Garden Hotel into a veritable vintage wonderland, to help the hotel celebrate its 80th Birthday. The ‘Moor Things Vintage & Lovely’ Spring Garden Fete is to be held on Monday 5th May from 10.30am until 4pm. The celebration will include music from the local ‘Metropolis Swing Quartet’
and dancing from the talented ‘Mad about Swing.’ There will be an abundance of quirky stands for all you lovers of Vintage including clothes, jewellery, crockery and kitchenalia. Lots of talented, local craftspeople will be showcasing their amazing creations and there will also be various demonstrations throughout the day including painting and card making. To entertain the children, we have Dan Brazier with his walking magic.
Traditional games including Hook the Duck and Coconut Shy will also be available to play within the stunning garden area. A Vintage day out wouldn’t be complete without Afternoon Tea! The Moorland Garden Hotel will have their very own Vintage Tearoom. There will also be a Hog Roast and BBQ served in the stunning gardens. Entry is £2.00 (under 12’s free). The Primrose Foundation will be supported at the event. More details can be found at www. missivyevents.co.uk or by calling Jo on 07739033476.
The workshop is being held at Congress Hall, Armada Way, Plymouth and costs £12. Registration opens at 9:15am and the workshop will run from 10:00am to 4:30pm culminating in an informal concert from 5:00 to 6:00pm. Copies of ‘Opera Choruses’ will be available for use on the day. Hot drinks and light refreshments will be provided; participants should make their own arrangements for lunch. Email rosemary101@orangehome.co.uk to book a place.
The twelfth Tavistock Festival will be opened on Friday 21st March by the Town Mayor of Tavistock, Cllr Harry Smith, and will be followed by a concert with Stannary Brass Band. The 2014 festival features music to suit all tastes from classical to jazz to folk and includes a performance by the Chamber Ensemble of London as well as a wide range of talented local musicians, with events taking place in almost twenty venues in and around Tavistock over the eighteen days. As in previous years, the festival is supported by the Arts Trail which covers a number of exhibitions and events over a four-month period at venues around Tavistock, including
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the Wharf’s art gallery and café, the Bedford Hotel and The Terrace Restaurant. The Festival concludes with the Drake Lecture at the Wharf which will be given by Professor David Southwood and attended by the Tavistock Festival president, Adam Hart-Davis. Festival brochures with a full listing of events can be obtained from the Tourist Information Centre until the end of March and details can also be found on the Tavistock Festival website www.tavistockmusic.co.uk. The Wharf is acting as box office for many of the ticketed events.
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MUSIC & ART
MUSIC & ART
I’m beginning to think they are putting something in the water at Walkhampton.. The number of talented creative types is ..well, anything but normal. And so on to The Normals- 5 musicians living in and around Walkhampton, delighting locals with their ‘pumping brass duo and tight Rhythm section.’ James Hills, Lead vocalist, guitarist and songwriter, met Tom Chesborough ‘bearded bass player’ and Chris Spreadbury, both former Tavistock College students lead instrumentalist and trombonist, in Walkhampton and soon began playing in the Walkhampton Inn. Inspired to form a proper band, they recruited Lauren Carroll, a talented trumpeter, with a background in brass bands and Jonny Payne on drums. After three years of gigging, they have just released their first album ‘A Suitcase full of Shoes’ to great reviews. James, the songwriter of the band has managed to ‘piece a story or message together that can be easily understood or that strikes a chord with the listener.’ Several of the songs do indeed ‘all tell their own little tales of the one thing that hits you harder than a freight train.’ For example, ‘Love Grows’ was written for friends of James who were getting married and is a bright and cheerful song that John Govier likes to play on his Saturday morning Radio
Drawn to the Valley have been working in association with the Tamar Valley AONB for several years now, indeed their support was fundamental in the early years of the group, allowing DTTV to go on from strength to strength. Our members are to take part in an exhibition at the Tamar Valley Centre in May. The exhibition will very much relate to the successful collaborative Harvesting Time Project in 2012.
Despite having at various times shared a bill with Mad Dog Macrae, The Levellers and Seth Lakeman, you can still often catch them playing, either as part or full band, on Open Mic nights at the Walkhampton Inn. The Normals are some of the many great musicians to be seen locally. Google them, buy their album (iTunes or from Walkhampton and Burrator Inns) and whenever possible catch them live before they get too big for their (suitcase full of) shoes. And somebody ought to be bottling that water in Walkhampton. www.thenormals.co.uk Pat Woodgate
.CO.UK
Preliminary drawings and sketchbooks will be on display to delight and provoke people’s thoughts about the future of the valley and what makes it an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Artists have been asked to create a contemporary piece, which celebrates the history of the valley, its community and heritage. Works may take any format, any dimension, be an installation, a performance, film, fine art, textiles, ceramics, metal, print/printmaking, paint or mixed media. It promises to be another exciting show, which will delight and enthrall the public!
Devon show.
A range of bikes, clothing and accessories to suit all needs
WE ARE MOVING! Come and visit our larger shop, with more room for an even better choice. Do you have a Will ?
Wills are cheap and simple to prepare when you consider what could go wrong if you don’t make one. If you die without a Will, you die Intestate and your estate will pass according to the Intestacy Rules, potentially benefitting those who you would not have chosen to inherit.
Do you have a Power of Attorney?
If you lose the mental capacity to make decisions, your family is not automatically entitled to deal with your affairs unless you have prepared a Lasting Power of Attorney.
For more information please contact Lucy Atwill or Victoria Fordham at Curtis Whiteford Crocker Solicitors on 01752 204444 or lucy@curtissolicitors.co.uk If you are not able to attend at
A wider selection of bikes, an expanded clothing range, more accessories and improved workshop facilities. Quality Brands, Quality Service and Friendly Expert Knowledge Harrowbeer Mews, Leg O’ Mutton, Yelverton, Devon 01822 258 022 Open 7 days a week. Free parking.
the office, don’t worry, we offer HOME VISITS! 40
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NATIONAL TRUST
BOOK REVIEW
Review by Simon Church, Book Stop, Tavistock Warm greetings from everyone here at Buckland, let’s hope this Spring is as warm! We hope you’ll pop over and see our spectacular show of daffs, fritillaries and bluebells. There will be guided bluebell walks when they’re at their best, contact us from April to find out more. Our Murder at the Abbey event is booking up so give us a ring soon if you fancy yourself a sleuth (22nd March, £35 including three course meal). For Mother’s Day there’s free entry for mothers, a special menu in the restaurant and free paper flower making all weekend. Enjoy a variety of daily crafts throughout the Easter holidays plus a Mummers play, archery demonstrations and our Cadbury’s Easter Eggs trail (5th-21st April). Our Sheep Day will be full of adorable lambs and rural activities on 27th April. We’re celebrating Plymouth History Month in May with Lecture Lunches (2nd, 9th, 16th and 23rd) and a Medieval Magic day with dance and a masked parade (5th). May
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half-term is a festival of nature with Charcoal Weekend and a host of ’50 things to do before you’re 11¾’ - climb a tree, dam a stream, cook over a campfire or build a den (24th26th). Of course the biggest news is still hanging in the balance – is it or isn’t it a Rembrandt, and why does it matter? We’ve sent off our painting, once considered to be a studio copy, to be cleaned and analysed, with the prospect of it returning as a certified Rembrandt self-portrait. While the experts investigate, we’re creating a top notch exhibition space within the Abbey, ready for the painting’s return on 14th June. Come and see all the evidence for yourself and find out what the experts think. Best wishes from Anwen and the whole team! For opening times, events and information, please see our website www.nationaltrust.org.uk/bucklandabbey or call the main office on 01822 853607.
A 1984 and a Brave New World for the 21st Century, this is a quite brilliant novel by literary American writer, Dave Eggers. Set in the near future, the book follows the vertiginous career progression of Mae as she joins West Coast techno giant, The Circle, a corporation just a few years old, but growing exponentially, wielding ever more influence and exercising ever greater power. Seen through the naïve eyes of Mae, we see the wondrous potential of The Circle to make the world a better place, whilst as the objective reader, we see the deeper reality; that unrestrained technological advancement in the hands of unanswerable corporate enterprise will result in a very different outcome. As with the very best dystopian fiction (Orwell’s 1984 included) this book is as much about the world we live in now as it is a warning of what may occur in the future, but unlike Orwell’s opus, it comes with the odd laugh as well. It is at once a gripping thriller, a savage satire, and a moving tale of human fragility in the face of corporate nihilism.
5 Great Reads for the Spring: Stoner by Richard Williams – Recently revived 1960s classic American novel. A favourite among reading groups – Publisher: Vintage; £8.99 Life after Life by Kate Atkinson – Winner of this year’s Costa Novel Award – Publisher: Black Swan; £7.99 Return of a King by William Dalrymple – History of Britain’s ill-fated campaign in Afghanistan of the 19th Century – Publisher: Bloomsbury; £9.99 Shock of the Fall by Nathan Filer – This year’s overall Costa Prize winner; a brave and groundbreaking first novel – Publisher: Borough Press; £7.99 Goth Girl by Chris Riddell – Costa Children’s Book Award 2014 winner from the ever reliable Mr Riddell – Publisher: Pan Macmillan; £9.99
Publisher: Hamish Hamilton; £18.99
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PIGGY’S WALK
PIGGY’S WALK brings you to the lovely Leather Tor Bridge (9), which is good for a doggy swim, then take the track on the left before the bridge to get back to the carparks.
Park at the top end of Burrator Reservoir by Norsworthy Bridge (SX569693). From the carparks, cross the bridge and take the footpath on the right (1). Although it can be muddy, this is a charming path littered with dark mossy stones – Piggy always searches for Dartmoor pixies. At its top, go through the gate and cross over the track (2) to continue along the path to the leat (to avoid a scramble turn left on the track and take the first right). Turn right along the leat, walking through pine woodland for about half an hour. Go through a gate (3) onto the moor. Still following the leat – cross it via the first or second bridge so you are on the left bank – continue until you see the waterfall tumbling down the valley opposite (4). Reach it by crossing the leat’s aqueduct over the Meavy. The wooden planks can be slippery, so take care. A few minutes’ climb brings you to the 44
top of the waterfall with magnificent views to Plymouth, Leather and Sharpitor and more besides. After about 150 metres, cross onto the right bank at a sluice gate (5). The path becomes flat and wide, looping around the top of a shallow valley to another sluice. Continue past a pile of granite blocks – neatly cut but never used. Crazy Well Pool is down hill on your right. Go to the next pile of cut granite (6), where a path leads to its left-hand side. (A bit further along the leat is a granite cross.) Despite the legends, Crazy Well Pool is not bottomless, but 5 metres deep at most – still it is impressive. Walk down to its lowest bank and up the other side (7). From here a faint path snakes left along the shoulder of the hill and into the valley above the reservoir. You will soon see a stone track that leads back to Norsworthy Bridge. Going right at the fork (8) editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
Dogs and Adder Bites
attention if your dog is bitten by an adder, or if you suspect this might have happened.
Adder bites are normally seen in dogs during the spring or summer months, and can be serious if not treated straight away. Adders are the only poisonous snake native to the UK and are commonly found on the moors and on the edge of woodland areas. A bite usually occurs when a dog stumbles across an adder and disturbs it, causing it to bite in self-defence. Bites from younger adders at the start of the season tend to be more venemous than bites that occur in late summer.
Do not attempt to try and suck out the venom. Carry your dog to the vets rather than let him walk as this helps to reduce the spread of the toxin around the body, and try to keep him calm. Treatment involves putting the dog on a drip and administering pain relief, anti-histamines, antibiotics and anti-inflammatories, and in some cases a specific adder anti-venom. Cases are rarely fatal, and with prompt treatment most dogs make a full recovery.
Within minutes a bite site can become swollen and painful, and other signs then develop including pale gums, drooling, vomitting and lethargy. If left untreated this can progress to low blood pressure, collapse, increased bleeding tendency, heart damage, brain damage and even death. It is important to seek immediate veterinary www.moorlinks.co.uk
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GREAT ESCAPES
GREAT ESCAPES For those of you un-familiar with Huckworthy, I would urge you to take a little detour one day and include it within a journey to or from Plymouth to Tavistock. It is a small hamlet made up of several pretty little cottages, the old mill and the most picturesque stone bridge and river you would find hard to beat anywhere.
Tucked away not far from the bridge is ‘Leewood’ owned and run by artist Nick Viney (whom we featured within our ‘Local People’ section of the Winter issue of the magazine) and her mother Hazel Viney. The Vineys own the land along the valley, following the river Walkham, with approximately a mile of river frontage. In order to diversify, Nick has not only opened her new artists workshop but also decided to set up alternative holiday accommodation too - described by Alistair Sawdays Canopy and Stars site as ‘somewhere between traditional safari tents and a sturdy cabin’. The ‘Ark’ as her first tent is known, was so popular last year it was booked solid for the whole summer season and personally I can see why. Nick now has two tents within the 30 acre site, her second known as the ‘Nest’ with its mediaeval feel – including antique tapestry wall hangings! The tents quite literally hold every home comfort you could dream of and are totally private (each tent sits within its own very private field in the valley.) Bohemian chic, with their enormous super king sized beds laden with fluffy duvet, hand quilted throws (made by Nick’s mother), and cushions – all looking out across the south facing valley to the river, ensuring visitors have no need to surface! Comfy cane armchairs, carved wooden furniture and cosy rugs all add to the rustic beauty of the tents. The interiors are also as warm as toast, thanks to wood burners and the heavily insulated lining of wool blankets. The Ark has a truly romantic feel with its lining of billowing parachute silk – a honeymooners dream!
taking the armchairs out and soaking up the summer sun (we hope!), to a separate kitchen area for open fireside cooking with everything provided. With all ‘camping’ there comes the issue of cold, cob-webby privvies and icy shower water – no such thing here. Nick has turned one of her outbuildings (a short walk away from the tents) into a purpose built wet room and separate toilet facility - private washrooms with underfloor heating, large mirrors and everything you would normally expect to find from a five star hotel – not a campsite. Leewood is an ideal base for those wanting to get away from it all and enjoy the tranquillity and beauty of its surroundings but yet is right on the moor , with walking tracks and the National Cycle route 274 easily accessible. For those wishing to fish along the river, you may be in luck with trout, sea trout and salmon or perhaps just go wild swimming in the many deep pools. Alternatively, join Nick in her artist’s workshop and enjoy learning a new skill. So I urge you to not only visit Huckworthy, but to book a break right on your doorstep and discover the true beauty and peace of the area we live in. I’m certainly looking forward to booking a stay – children are welcome and can have their own separate tents pitched in the field - but personally, as much as I love them, I’d quite like to visit without them! Lizzie Watt For more information visit: www.canopyandstars.co.uk or www.leewood.co.uk
Nick has thought of everything, from a separate verandah for 46
Mark Davison worked as a guide in Africa, Asia and South America and now runs VentureCo in Paddon’s Row, Tavistock. Amongst a broad range of travel activities, VentureCo organises the bi-annual Mongolia Ride for the British Horse Society. Mongolia is “a long way from Kansas” to borrow a line from the Wizard of Oz; the national sports are unconventional: wrestling, archery, falconry and above all horse racing. The horses are divided according to age (age of the horse, not the rider!) with 2 yr olds racing over 10 miles and graduated distances for older horses up to 17 miles max. The jockeys range from 5 to 12 years old. There is no fixed course, just a starting point and finishing line. Mongolians hold horses in high esteem, matched by their respect for young riders. From this unstructured racing tradition, the remarkable Mongolian Derby has evolved which involves 35 riders, 850 horse, a 620 mile course and about 52 miles per day. Brutal!
When is the best time to go? During our summer months: outside June to Sept the weather is harsh. Family friendly? Yes. If your family enjoys the outdoors, Mongolia is your natural habitat. Affordable? Expensive to get to, cheap once you’re there. Traveller’s Tip: stop-over in Moscow and see the city sites en route What about food and drink? fair to say that you don’t go to Mongolia for the food! Fermented mare’s milk and boiled mutton aren’t to everyone’s liking! But seriously – the food is fine and very international nowadays..
Tailor-made Travel
We organise a number of trips each year to Mongolia, usually based around the Nadaam Festival which is an annual extravaganza dedicated to the national sports. We always incorporate a night or more in a yurt; after all, this is the origin of the yurt! VentureCo speaks directly to yurt
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owners, horse wranglers, camel cart operators, and guides to put together unique experiences in this remarkable country.
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est 1999
01822 616191
Treks : Rides : Safaris : Beach Holidays Paddons Row, Tavistock 01822 616191 www.ventureco-worldwide.com l mark@ventureco-worldwide.com 47
FOOD & WINE
With squid ink risotto, dressed rocket, herb, shallot, caper and tomato dressing Dressing Having just returned from a very purposeful gathering of my fellow Wine Merchants … and yes, there was the essential and ever so arduous task of sampling many wines … I can report two definites. Firstly, there is a very positive vibe in the Wine Trade; sales are up as is customer’s insatiable interest in ‘all things wine’. Secondly, no surprise here, the weather continues to cause concern to the wine producers the world over. As a nation, our love affair with fermented grape juice continues to thrive. With our naturally inquisitive nature, our open minded approach and our eagerness to seek out a bargain, it has been proven that we are as a nation, the best informed when it comes to wine. Wine for many is very much a part of our daily routine. The intriguing options now available, the very tangible link between modern cuisine and the contemporary developments in wine development have ensured sales continue to be very buoyant. You might be forgiven for being confused by the constant new concepts and variations that appear on the shelves of the wine outlets. Yes, there is a limit to grape varieties available – 970 to be precise! Yet it is how and where these grapes are planted (the soil, the altitude, the irrigation …) and the nurturing they will receive that will affect the style of the finished wine. Each winemaker will have his or her perception of how to maximise quality and ~ or the yield. They will decide if their fruit will benefit from any oak integration, the length of time wines are aged before release … so many considerations, and yet, the one key and controlling factor is the one totally out of their control, that being the weather. This can really make or break a wine. Not only does the weather affect the size of yield, the overall quality, the aging potential, but more importantly, will always affect the price. One has to sympathise with wine producers the world over. On July 23rd 2013, a hail storm ripped its way through Burgundy devastating the crops, resulting in some producers losing up to 90% of their precious fruit. Frost, hail, wind, too much rain, a drought, the lack of sunshine and so forth, can all have a devastating affect on the vines that are at their mercy. Brace yourself for a few sharp price rises. Chablis 2013 is destined to rise, as much as £2 per bottle, and there is every chance the stock will run out before the next vintage is ready. 48
2 table spoons of dill, basil,chives, flat leafed parsley chopped 2 large banana shallots chopped fine 3 table spoons of fine capers drained 1 small punnet of cherry tomatoes cut into quarters 200ml of olive oil 100ml balsamic vinegar Seasoning
Method With all this gloom it is gratifying to know that on global terms, there is no shortage of wine, maybe now is the timeto venture into other wine regions and countries. If you haven’t yet tried it, my wine of the moment is Carmenere. A grape that when unblended offers cherry, eucalyptus, damson notes with a hint of mint. Combine this with a dash of the better known Cabernet Sauvignon, the blackcurranty cassis adds yet another dimension … With a trio of great Carmenere options, all made by Chile’s top producer ‘Casa Silva’ we are very well placed to enlighten you into our current grape of the moment. Times are Changing… Now, with the approval of the editor, I have been permitted to fly my flag (just briefly), and update you into a key development at the Wine Warehouse.. As the way private customers choose to buy their wines changes, I am not so naïve to assume that my Company is exempt from the impact of on-line buying and influence of the supermarkets. To that end, I have decided to play to my strengths and really focus on our trade accounts. Do not for a moment think I am turning my back on the private market. As a positive and sensible business move I am relocating all my business operations (public and trade) under one roof. As from mid March, we shall be housed in my distribution warehouse just 100 yards up the road. To help with my business development, I am actively recruiting new staff to push our trade business further.
• In a small pan add your olive oil bring up to 80° centigrade • Add the shallots and remove from heat and cool • Add the balsamic vinegar, chopped herbs, tomatoes and season to taste. Set aside ready to use.
Risotto
2 cups of risotto (Arborio) rice 2 table spoons olive oil 2 banana shallots peeled and diced finely 1 stick of celery and 1 large carrot peeled and diced 100ml white wine 3 sprigs of thyme
Method
• In a heavy bottom sauce pan heat your oil and sauté the vegetables till translucent (about 3-4 minutes) • Add the risotto and fry off on a medium heat for 2-3 minutes • Now add your white wine and thyme leaves • Reduce the heat to a simmer • Add the squid ink and season to taste then simmer gently for a few minutes (It will look rather black at first but after a while will turn to a dark grey colour) • Heat your stock till boiling and add half to the risotto • Keep stirring the risotto with a wooden spoon making sure the risotto does not stick • Slowly add the stock bit by bit till the risotto is cooked out (it should take no longer than 10- 12 minutes on a low heat) (Keep the risotto wet) • Just before serving add the chopped herbs and season to taste with salt and fresh ground pepper
Christmas and New Year 2013
OUR 80th ANNIVERSARY YEAR
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2014
Join us in 2013…
Join us to celebrate 2014 Valentine Masquerade Ball - Friday 14th February £32.00 per person or stay over from £72.00 per person
As with the wines I supply, and the way I sell them … times are changing!
Weddings can be Murder Mystery Dinner - Friday 21st February £32.00 per person or stay over from £72.00 per person
Charles Steevenson
Moorland Garden Wedding Fair - Sunday 2nd March Free entry, goody bag, over 20 local suppliers
The Cellar Door, Charles Steevenson Wines, Tavistock
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2 table spoons of finely sliced chives 2 small sachets of squid ink (available from your fish monger) 1lt of fish stock Seasoning to taste
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BUSINESS
IT FAQs
BUSINESS Gidon from The Technology Company answers your technology questions
Q. Fibre broadband is now available in our area. Is it worth upgrading and is the upgrade process straightforward? Fibre broadband provides much faster download and upload speeds. If there are a number of household members wanting to stream films and music at the same time this can be a real advantage. If you only have one computer and a decent speed already, you may not notice the difference. The faster upload speeds are useful for sharing files or backing up your data to the Cloud for example. The process for upgrading to this new service still varies amongst suppliers. You’ll need a new modem or router and in many cases an engineer’s visit although some ISPs offer a lower speed self-install option. Q. How do I protect my computer, router and other electrical equipment from power surges? Many electrical devices have delicate components that are sensitive to power surges, often caused by thunderstorms. We recommend connecting these devices to surge protectors
News from Geoffrey Cox MP
Fairer funding for rural areas
which cost only a little more than a standard 4 gang extension lead. You’ll need one with a telephone input for your router. We’d still recommend unplugging sensitive equipment from the mains and telephone if there is a storm in your area. Q. How do I edit and playback HD video from my camera or camcorder? Import your videos into the free Windows Movie Maker (http://tinyurl.com/ttcgetmov) on a PC or iMovie on a Mac. Move the playhead to cut sections from the video and press M to split the clip in Windows and Command-B on a Mac. Then delete the sections of the video you don’t want. You can then add enhancements like transitions and titling to the video if you desire. One of the easiest methods to produce and share the video is to upload to YouTube. Choose this option from the Share menu. If you have any questions now or for a future column, and for all previous articles, please visit thetechnologycompany. co.uk/linksqa.
Securing fairer funding from the Government for rural areas such as Torridge and West Devon has been a key aim of mine since I was elected to parliament in 2005. Historically rural areas have suffered from underfunding for basic services, and I have challenged both this government and the last one, to close the gap between the funding given to rural and urban communities.
Devon is the sixth lowest funded council in England, based on funding per pupil. Devon’s Schools Block funding rate per pupil for 2013-14 was £4,156 compared to a national average of £4,550. Under the new policy, Devon would receive a total of £41m more than we currently do to the direct benefit of children here. The Government has said that it will introduce a new national funding formula, and I will be advocating for an early move to this, as I anticipate that it can only be fairer than the current arrangements. This will reduce the relative hardship that Devon’s schools face in their funding per pupil. It is my hope that this, and many of the editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
Geoffrey Cox MP
At the moment councils in rural areas are allocated less money to pay for the costs of services, although often they are more expensive due to the very nature of the rural environment. I have taken delegations from both Torridge District Council and the Devon Country Council to meet with the Secretary of State, the Rt Hon Eric Pickles and the Communities Minister, Brandon Lewis MP over the past 18 months. Progress is slow, particularly at a time when our countries finances are tight, but at last the unique challenges faced by rural communities in providing services seem to be acknowledged. The Secretary of State for Education, Michael Gove, has set out his intention to introduce a fairer, more transparent, national funding formula for schools, in order to address what he has described as opaque, inconsistent and unfair differences between areas.
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other measures being taken by the Government, will help to minimise the gap in funding between rural and urban areas, and I will certainly continue to campaign for this.
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Based in Crapstone, we are a visiting computer “help” service. We come to where the problem is, which is usually the best way to fix things; it certainly beats lugging the culprit down to us to be told the fault is not there! We are now in our 10th year so we have a wealth of experience in repairing just about anything and setting up new equipment too. We sell computers and laptops from recognised major manufacturers; we do not “build” computers and we do not sell secondhand “reconditioned” equipment. Our normal service will provide you with your choice of computer and our expertise to transfer everything from the old machine to the new one including set up of email accounts and printers. We also sell Microsoft Office software at High Street prices and we recommend, sell and install Norton Anti-virus, but we are happy to install an alternative if you prefer. Our new service is low cost teaching, which is provided by Carol our Office Manager at a time to suit, but generally in the afternoon. This takes place on your computer in your home or place of work and is at a much cheaper rate than a technician’s visit.
The office is now open until 3pm most days, so give us a call
Fluent in Macintosh as well as Microsoft
www.chezvouspc.com & help@chezvouspc.com 51
FEATURE TOTALLY LOCALLY
TOTALLY FEATURE LOCALLY
Traditional Puddings With her puddings literally being transported around the world and enquiries from as far away as Brazil, Tina Hurford spends most of Mondays and Tuesdays stirring and baking her delicious puddings to meet the demand. Tina started Traditional Puddings with a friend some 5 years ago to fill a gap in the market for homemade desserts. She started out at Lydford’s monthly market and now she runs her stall at Tavistock’s Pannier Market 4 days a week (Wednesday through to Saturday.) All Tina’s puddings are made in the traditional way - by hand, in small batches and using the finest ingredients, including free range eggs. Her range includes mouth watering flavours such as; Almond with Cherry Sauce, Chocolate Orange, Sticky Toffee, Zingy Lemon and Jam Roly Poly to name but a few. Due to her own daughter’s strict dietary requirements, Tina now produces Dairy Free and Gluten Free options too. Tina supplies to many local establishments and restaurants and will also supply private parties and events.
Pebbles of Tavistock Sarah Renshaw took on the shop, Pebbles of Tavistock over 7 years ago and this lovely gift shop has gone from strength to strength with a loyal following and offering a great treat for passing visitors. Pebbles contains a range of interesting and often unusual gifts at affordable prices, with something to suit everyone. From a stunning range of jewellery, pottery, gifts for men, gifts for children, handbags and gorgeous scarves, as well as a range
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Visit her on her stand in the Pannier Market (Wednesday to Saturday) or see her website: www.traditionalpuddings. moonfruit.com, for more information and to order online. of perfumes. Pebbles is also the only supplier in the South West, of the exclusive ‘Moorcroft’ collectables. In 2010 Pebbles won Gift Retailer of the Year, for the South and Wales and Sharon Statton, who works alongside Sarah, has been nominated twice as Employee of the Year. Sarah describes Pebbles ‘as a mini-department store, with an eclectic mix of gifts for all’. Both Sarah and Sharon pride them-
selves on their welcoming service and encourage people to come in and browse. Their gift wrapped parcels are a feast for the eyes – far too good to open!
Don’t forget to vote for your next Hidden Gems. Voting sheets can be found all around Tavistock in various establishments or visit the Totally Locally website. www.totallylocallytavistock.co.uk
Pebbles of Tavistock can be found on Brooke Street, Tavistock. Tel: 01822 613137 or www.pebblesoftavistock.co.uk
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HISTORY
The Tamar Valley Flower growing started around 1880 – with its ideal location protected from the northeast winds, good rainfall, the southern slopes in the summer can reach steady temperatures of 70°f providing ideal conditions for the steep slopes to be covered in swathes of daffodils, grown especially to provide early season cheer for the London market. Mr Jackson of Clamoke Farm, Bere Alston displayed in Devonport Market (the main market of the time), some Double White flowers which had been growing at his farm. The Double White was a sport of the flower ‘Pheasant Eye’. It took some 30 years to get enough bulbs to commence commercial growing of this flower. The Double White was a beautiful Narcissi with a lovely perfume. It flowered around the second week in May and was always a very good seller in the markets. When I started work at Calstock Station on the 4th April 1949 flowers occupied more acres than fruit. Flowers became more and more in demand due to birthdays, anniversaries etc. At this time it was estimated some 500 acres were in bulb cultivation. In the 1950’s large amounts of Anemones were also grown. On average in a season around 350,000 packages were despatched by rail to up country markets. Daffodils started in February followed by Double Whites then Strawberries and Raspberries up to early July. Anemones were despatched September to December . For some extra money some would pick Primroses and send these off in small boxes - at times some good pocket money could be earned. The Railway was no doubt responsible for helping to develop the industry. In the 1950’s some £500,000 income resulted for the growers. At this time all the flowers were sent in open bunches where as today flowers are sent in bud bunches. Flowers picked in the gardens were taken to packing houses where the flowers were readied for despatch. Often there would be fires in these houses in order to help force the flowers to open The Southern Railway Staff magazine of September 1949 remarked ‘ The Tamar Valley growers have had a most successful season, both fruit and flowers being heavy. The following despatched from Gunnislake, Calstock, Bere Alston, Bere Ferrers and Tamerton Foliot. Number of boxes of flowers sent 138228 Number of boxes of fruit sent 240564 Passenger Vans despatched 590 Number of special trains run 29 The variety of flowers was written on the boxes 54
John Boylett Electrical Services Domestic Rewires & Installations Part P Qualified In London there were three markets, Covent Garden, Spittalfields and Borough Market. All London traffic was delivered by road to the markets from Waterloo station. When I was Booking Clerk at Bere Alston station I would have to send a telegram to Waterloo station advising the amount of traffic coming forward. The advice would be sent at about 6pm and the Flower vans would arrive at Waterloo at 3.48am the following morning. Growers were allowed a weekly credit account and bills were sent out on Fridays and would be paid the following week. A large number of gardens were on steep slopes of the Tamar Valley. This meant the work had to be done by hand. The ground had to be ploughed using a Syracuse Plough, which was driven by a winch at the top of the garden, power being supplied by a motor vehicle. The bulbs were then planted 3 at a time 7ins apart. A Dibber would be used. The bulbs were planted 6 to 7ins deep. At times earth had to be brought back to the top of the garden by means of an earth scoop.
The Smithy Meavy Yelverton Devon PL20 6PJ
T: 01822 853456 M: 07748 513469
During the war many gardens were ordered to produce food crops. Flower bulbs had to be dug up and many were thrown onto hedges. Today there is still much evidence of this, for in spring time the hedges in the area are covered with daffodils. Ministry officials inspected gardens to ensure food crops were produced. Later growers and farmers planted leveller fields where tractors could be used and bulbs could be ploughed in. This quickened planting and cut down labour. Alhough some fields were replanted after 1945 with new varieties, the trade declined in the 1960s and only local shops were then supplied. Much of this text has been taken from John Snell’s memories. For further information on this subject please contact John Snell at johnsnell1@sky.com With thanks also to: Margaret Willmott and Frances Howard-Pearce editorial@moorlinks.co.uk
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LAST WORD LAST WORD
Last year and the year before that I took part in the 10 Tors Challenge, walking the 35 mile route representing Tavistock and District Outdoor Education Forum. I can highly recommend signing up for the event, as it has undoubtedly changed my life for the better – making my teammates and I stronger people, both mentally and physically. Here are some extracts from my diary (yes, I write a diary!) from the training and event in 2012. Sunday 5th Feb, first training walk – 9 miles: We sang inspirational Disney songs to keep us motivated. The moor looked so beautiful; however I am quite certain that the boys did not appreciate our wonderful voices spoiling the scenery... Sunday 19th Feb, 12 miles: The frost was still on the grass when we began to walk and it looked like everything was covered in glitter. Absolutely breathtaking. Mum could barely lift the rucksack today and my toenail kept being bashed inside my boot and has promptly given up the ghost and turned black. How considerate. Sunday 4th March, 15 miles: Very windy, cold and snowy. 15 miles is a long way when you’re practically walking at a 45 degree angle. The moor is so bleak, yet so beautiful. It was a good test of my map reading skills and is a genuine achievement that nobody died – my feet look like slabs of meat. Sunday 17th March, 18 miles: Think the weather may have broken my Gore-Tex coat – it rained so hard, even the ducks cannot have enjoyed it. I am now nursing a blister the size of a 50p piece. Sunday 1st April, 21 miles: A very exciting part of the day was when a teammate twisted her ankle very badly and the air ambulance flew in to rescue her – we were in the middle of nowhere. The paramedic was rather heroic, I have to say! Saturday and Sunday, 14th and 15th April, 28 miles: 10 miles on the first day, a game of catch the rucksack over a river, tuna pasta bake boil in a bag for tea, 2 hours sleep and ice on our tents in the morning followed by a further 18 miles over frozen tussock grass. A distinct lack of toothbrush: idiot. Saturday 28th April, 23 miles: Thick freezing fog prevented us from camping (have to say that I’m not too disappointed...). Rucksack up to 15kg with kit. Tor recognition was not too bad, considering the visibility levels. THE EVENT: 12th and 13th May: Our course was J1010, which is basically an anti-clockwise circle covering the north and south moors. We awoke on Saturday morning at 5am to delightful, if a tad loud, inspirational music, starting with 58
Chariots of Fire. As the starting cannon blew, 3 helicopters flew over the thousands of walkers like an epic film shot and at this point I realised that it was actually real; even the weather felt motivational. Bright hot sun, blue sky and no wind meant that navigation was easy, however this contrasted with the real and serious issue of dehydration. The adrenalin kicked in and we scampered around the course arriving at our 8th Tor exhausted, but with enough time to rest for an hour at the bottom, quenching our thirsts and cooling off in the river. The evening plan was: tents up, eat tea (more boil in the bag), pierce blisters then sleep. On the second day my raw blisters and black toenails, bruised hips and collar bones were all strapped with tape, padding and plasters before heading off at 6am. With tears of pride pricking in my eyes we finally crossed (I limped) the finish line at around 11, surrounded by cheering crowds and smiling faces. I’m writing two days later and the plasters have ingrained themselves into my skin. Am very proud of myself though. However much hard work it was, it must have left a pretty good impact. I repeated the event in 2013, but this time as a Leader. But that’s another story. My favourite moment of the event was when we had just ran up the steep side of Black Tor and had 4 minutes to get our card stamped to pass through. Unfortunately there was a huge queue of people also waiting. I called out to them that we were very pushed for time and if I could please jump the line. They all stepped aside without thinking. This example of extreme kindness and consideration of others is a prime illustration of the true 10 Tors spirit. Floss Williams Aged 16
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