FREE CHISWICK, ISLEWORTH, BRENTFORD & OSTERLEY
AUGUST - SEPTEMBER 2018
Summer OF JAZZ
Chiswick BOOKFEST Celebrates ten years
BRENTFORD
Festival
Tidefest on the river
Cook Book FESTIVAL
New this year
Community happening
Brentford Festival • Tidefest • Fuller’s Open Day • Watermans summer activities Gunnersbury Museum • Chiswick Book Festival • Cook Book Festival • Jazz Chiswick House Dog Show • Chiswick Curve Public Inquiry • New cycling courses Bee rescue • Islamic Arts and Crafts
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2018
Connecting SMEs
to each other
to Heathrow
to the World
Heathrow Business Summit: Tuesday 27 November 2018
Invitation The Heathrow Business Summits are a series of events to connect small and mediumsized businesses to opportunities in Heathrow’s supply chain. This year, ten Business Summits are being held throughout the UK, offering SMEs the chance to win business from some of Heathrow’s 1,400 suppliers and discuss exporting opportunities with the Department for International Trade. For 22 years, the Heathrow Business Summits have given SMEs the opportunity to connect and trade with each other and large companies, creating new growth opportunities locally, nationally and internationally.
Register at: www.heathrowbusinesssummit.co.uk
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AUG - SEPT 2018
Contents 9 GET IN TOUCH ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Gerry Devine gerry@fhwem.com Tel: 020 3940 1819 Mob: 07710 574 479
EDITOR Bridget Osborne
bridget.osborne@googlemail.com Tel: 020 3858 0084
PUBLISHER FHW Events & Marketing Ltd 7c West Street, Ewell Village, Surrey. KT17 1UZ www.fhwem.com Tel: 020 3940 1105
INSIDE
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Regulars 4 6
Letter from the Editor & Editor’s Tips Hen Corner Sara Ward
Features 8 Watermans Summer Courses For children and young people 9 Fuller’s Open Day Beer, barbecue and brewery tours 10 Brentford Festival Community event 11 Tidefest Enjoy the river 14-15 Gunnersbury Museum Reopened to the public 16 Get back on your bike Refreshers for timid cyclists 18 Chiswick Book Festival Best line-up of authors yet 19 Cook Book Festival Hear the cook talk and taste the food 21 Chiswick House Dog Show Has Your Dog Got Talent? 22 Jazz at George IV Hot jazz for cooler evenings 24-25 Chiswick Curve Public Inquiry Inspector’s report due 26 Islamic Art Emery Walker’s collection
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Published by: FHW Events & Marketing | Printed by Direct Colour | ©2018 FHW & out&about magazine. While we endeavour to make sure that all published information is accurate, the publishers cannot be held responsible for mistakes or omissions or any loss resulting from non-publication of an advertisement. While all reasonable care is made to ensure accuracy of information, the publisher accepts no responsibility for the views or claims made by any of the contributors, advertising or editorial content included. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is strictly prohibited. The views expressed by contributors are not necessarily those of ‘out&about’ or the editor. Terms and conditions apply. Please recycle your magazine.
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EDITOR'S LETTER
Welcome Welcome to the August – September issue of out&about There are loads of interesting things for young people to do over the summer with courses in everything from bee-keeping at Hen Corner p 6 to gymnastics and simple electronics at Watermans in Brentford p 8 and wood-carving and printmaking at Gunnersbury Park p 14-15. Classes for adults too and conducted walks through Princess Amelia’s gardens and talks by the curator of the newly reopened Gunnersbury Museum, home to the Rothschild family, beautifully restored after a £26m refurbishment.
Jazz returns to George IV in September with the UK’s premier exponents of ‘gypsy jazz’ Trio Manouche p 22. Chiswick House Dog Show takes place on Sunday 23rd September, this year with a circus theme p 21. Emery Walker’s house in Hammersmith, reopened last year after renovation, is beginning to explore more fully its treasure trove of contents with a closer examination of the collection’s Islamic art and the influence it had on the English Arts & Crafts movement p 26.
September is festival time, with Fuller’s Open Day p 9, the Brentford community festival p 10 and Tidefest p 11, an opportunity to learn more about the river and try your hand at water sports. Chiswick Book Festival boasts the best line-up of authors ever I think, with Anthony Horowitz, Kate Mosse, Joanna Trollope, Max Hastings, Charles Spencer, Charles Cumming, Roger McGough and Julian Clary amongst others p 18. The Book Festival, now in its tenth year, has spawned a Cook Book Festival, taking place for the first time this year with a pretty impressive line-up of its own including Australian Masterchef presenter John Torrode and British food writer Ella Mills, (‘Deliciously Ella’) with opportunities not only to listen and take note, but also to taste p 19.
September it’s also back to business with two major reports due which will affect the quality of life in Chiswick and Brentford: the report on the Chiswick Curve Public Inquiry, the Planning Inspector’s recommendations based on a four week hearing p 24-25 and Transport for London’s report on changes to their proposals for Cycle Superhighway 9. In 2016, 18,477 cyclists were injured in reported road accidents in Britain, including 3,499 who were killed or seriously injured. The cycle lane is part of the Mayor’s attempt to make cycling in the capital safer, but the proposals put forward by TfL are controversial. While we await their revised plans, Hounslow Cycling Campaign have been busy organising refresher courses for nervous cyclists who would like to get back on their bikes p 16.
EDITOR’S TIPS
COVER IMAGE
Food Market, Chiswick Dukes Meadows, Chiswick W4 Sunday 5 August – Birds of Prey free event Static birds of prey display next to the food market and then flying display at 12.00pm in the field behind. Sunday 19 August – Punch & Judy free event Shows at 11.00am, 1.00pm & 3.00pm at the paddling pool behind the market
Tabard Theatre Bath Rd, Chiswick W4 Children’s theatre Meet the Teaspoons by Nick Bromley, 8 – 26 August
Trio Manouche
Playing at George IV on Thursday 27th September
Fish Eye by Lucas Kavner, 14 - 18 August
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In a previous interview (with magazine Inner surrey) Beata said:
“There are as many curves and shapes on a horse as there are on a woman. It makes me look at the aspect of the horse from different angles. I am fascinated by bones, muscles, tendons and their mechanisms. To me, [horses] represent sacred spirit - spirit of the earth.”
Interview with James Brewer January 2018
The artist paints the femaie figure as part of the animal world - the horse’s world; by showing animal and human features, the subject of the horse is humanised. It’s a practice of experimentation and implementation. The world that lies behind those figures stems from inspiration drawn from our roots, our beginnings and the movement of visual arts.
T: 020 8995 2451 M: 07903 962366 E: beata.k@beataexpressions.co.uk W: www.beataexpressions.co.uk
HEN CORNER
YOU CAN NEVER TELL WITH
Bees..
Sara Ward is having a good summer with her bees at Hen Corner
Bees are part of our everyday language, which shows how through history what an important part they've played in our lives.
‘Busy as a bee’ or ‘a hive of activity’ refer to their diligent, conscientious work. Calling someone ‘Honey’ is term of endearment, due no doubt to its sweetness, and having a ‘bee in your bonnet’ expresses agitation. As someone who has experienced a bee within the veil of my bee suit, I can confirm that ‘agitation’ nowhere near describes the fear & panic that it caused!
Great West Rd swarm. Thomas, my fellow bee-keeper, already had them cornered in a cardboard box
We’ve had honey bees here at Hen Corner since 2011. Keeping bees is an ongoing learning experience as you are constantly trying to second guess nature - the whim of the weather and the preference of the pollinators. As I write, we have four colonies (families) of bees here in the garden. Two have been building up slowly, are in good shape and have started making honey. The third has been without a queen bee for a couple of months and whilst they are working hard on the honey front, the workforce is starting to diminish as we wait for a new queen to start laying eggs to replenish it. The fourth and newest colony was recently re-homed from the A4 Great West Road. I was at home on a sunny afternoon when I received a message about a swarm spotted by a dog walker, near the entrance to a local primary school, hanging from a low fence, so I donned my bee suit, packed up a spare hive and went to rescue them. My fellow bee-keeper Thomas had already coaxed them into a cardboard box. We collect swarms as a public service when they take up unwanted residence in chimney pots, garden sheds, empty lofts or water butts, but it also means more bees for us! They’re now destined for a primary school in North Kensington. But as Winnie The Pooh says: ‘You never can tell with bees…’
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If you'd like to learn more about keeping bees or preserving the crops that they pollinate here at Hen Corner, check out our courses over the next couple of months, full details on the website: Full Day Bee Keeping Thurs 16th Aug, Tues 4th Sept Pick & Pickle Tues 11th & Thurs 13th Sept Fruit Wines & Liqueurs Tues 18th Sept
HenCorner.com
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Calendar THE CHISWICK
The Chiswick Calendar is a local website which tells you what’s going on in our area on a day to day basis. Beautiful photographs by local photographers - Page per day listings of what’s on, constantly updated - Interesting videos - Our own events. Subscribe to the weekly newsletter and get a free club card, giving you access to deals and discounts from quality local businesses.
Go to www.thechiswickcalendar.co.uk
WHAT’S ON AT WATERMANS
WHAT'S ON AT WATERMANS
this Summer
31 July-16 Aug 2018 Summer at Watermans has three weeks of creative activities for children and young adults, inspired by the wonderful world of words, books and stories. Watermans is running several special events with authors including leading UK rapper Karl Nova in a Rhythm & Rhyme workshop, creator of Rastamouse Michael de Souza and local author and environmentalist Richard Dikstra. You can also book classes in acrobatics, screen printing, drama adventure and dance. For 4-8's
For 12 +
Aerial Stories / Bring a Book to Life:
Books that go Bang! / Aerial Stories at a more sophisticated level
The Elephant and the Bad Baby / Screen Printing Book Bags / Books that go Pop! Simple electronics. For 8-12s Longer workshops. Children are not accompanied.
Aerial Stories, using acrobatics and aerial cocoons / Books that go Bang! Make an interactive book that makes sounds and pops up, using basic electronics / Poetry in Motion / Bring a Book to Life: The Magic Finger – Roald Dahl’s story brought to life with music, drama and puppetry / Metallic Foiling, textiles class
Activities cost from £3-13 per ticket and there’s also a range of free drop in activities including a dressing up chest to transform yourself into your favourite character, or create a book for Watermans giant bookshelf. FAMILY WORKSHOPS For families and friends to do together
Yoga stories / Bollywood Dance Party / The Tiger who came to Tea Party / A Wordy Treasure Hunt / Poetry in Motion: Shadow Boy
Please do check the website for full listings and more information. www.watermans.org.uk 8
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FULLERS
FULLERS
OPEN DAY
Come and meet the dray horses and sample the latest brew Once a year at the beginning of September Fuller’s Griffin Brewery holds an Open Day. With the brewery open for free tours, a range of beers to try, live music, activities for children, the brewery’s Shire horses to admire and plenty of street food, including a barbeque, there’s something for all ages. This year the brewery is proud to show off its new ‘visitor experience’ aka shop. Reminiscent of a theme park shop, it has everything you could possibly want that could conceivably be associated with Fuller’s – all the beers and ciders, but also wines exclusive to the Fuller’s shop, spirits and food from the Fuller’s kitchen, T shirts, hoodies, tote bags
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and satchels, beer mats, bottle openers and key rings. What makes it a ‘visitor experience’ as opposed to just a shop is the Pilot Brewery at the back, where small batch beers will be brewed, trying out new recipes in collaboration with other brewers and the tasting bar where you can sample and buy. Once it starts production you will be able to buy your glass jug, a ‘growler’, fill it with the beer of your choice at the Growler Bar, take it home to drink it and bring it back for a refill, with either the latest Pilot brew or one of Fuller’s classic beers. Fuller’s held its first Craft Beer Festival earlier in the summer; more than 40 of London’s finest breweries took part, showing the variety of the London brewing scene. They are hoping that
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the Brewery will be a place not just where beer is made and huge lorries come and go distributing it to pubs, but where local people come and visit and try out different beers and given their feedback. The Open Day is on Saturday 1st September from 11am to 4pm. If you’d like a free tour of the brewery (usual price £20) get there early. (Unless you are a member of The Chiswick Calendar Club Card scheme in which case you can have a free tour – see www.thechiswickcalendar.co.uk for details). All proceeds from the day will be going to Fuller’s new corporate charity - Special Olympics GB – offering year round sport for people with intellectual disabilities.
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BRENTFORD FESTIVAL
Brentford FESTIVAL
Kick back and enjoy the last days of summer
The Brentford Family Festival is at Blondin Park on Sunday 2nd September from 12.00pm - 6.00pm. Now a tradition on the first Sunday in September, this popular event is free to enter and is a community engagement day for all the family. Enjoy some sun in the park on the last weekend before the school term begins. The first Brentford Festival took place in 2005 and has grown into a major community event in West London with visitors growing from 3,000 to over 10,000. This year as in previous years there will be live music, a range of interesting street food, and attractions including classic vehicle displays, performers and local craft stalls. Stalls include everything from Ealing’s Historical Association to the British Cactus Society, including Hounslow’s Toy Library for children with disabilities, Boston Manor Residents’ Association, Osterley Bookshop and many other community groups and local businesses. Crafts include cards, jewellery, local prints, glass ware, Celtic designs, hand blocked Indian prints, handmade gifts and scarves. It’s a chance for local organisations, charities and businesses to display their activities and their wares. The organisers are Hen Corner’s Sara Ward, Friends of Boston Manor, Made In TW8, who run cookery classes for kids, ‘community champion’ Linda Massey and Red Routemaster, which operates nine buses around London, hiring them out for weddings, parties and corporate events. They are on the look-out for volunteers, who will be rewarded with free refreshments. It’s a great opportunity to catch up with neighbours and friends who live locally and see what’s going on in the community before everyone is head down, focused on work and school again. brentfordfestival.org.uk
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TIDEFEST Tenor Madness
Cory Band
TIDEFEST A celebration of the River Thames
Tidefest, the festival of the River Thames, takes place at Strand on the Green in Chiswick and in Brentford on Sunday 2nd September from 10.00am – 6.00pm. Designed to encourage enjoyment of the river and the riverside, activities include children’s games, foreshore walks, an angling competition, boat trips, paddle-boarding, river-dipping and kayaking. Visitors can also enjoy nature reserve visits, water games, stalls and displays, talks and film shows, live fish tanks and the work of local artists. Tidefest offers entertainment, food, music and generous discounts off admissions to the London Museum of Water and Steam and the Eel Pie Island museum on the day of the festival. It is part of the month long Totally Thames Festival, a whole programme of events throughout the month of September all along the tidal Thames, including art, music and theatre, talks and exhibitions and is sponsored by Thames Water, Fuller’s Griffin Brewery and Tideway, the company delivering the new Thames Tideway Tunnel to clean up the river. Last year 50 anglers took part in the Tidefest Angling Championship which saw some good weights of bream
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taken from Strand on the Green with the winner Mike Smith landing over 28lbs from his peg beside Kew Railway bridge. A small barbel was landed at Chiswick and most competitors caught several eels; it’s considered a good sign to see them returning to the river. The seine netting produced a number of baby bass, which shows also what an important nursery area the Thames has become for this popular species. The tidal Thames holds over 120 different species of fish and is home to a tremendous array of birds yet surprisingly few people are aware of just how much wildlife there is here in the heart of London. Gordon Scorer, Chief Executive of London Wildlife Trust said: “Tidefest celebrates the recreational value and wonderful wildlife of the Thames, a river that keeps getting better, year after year. It’s a wonderful opportunity to discover the wildlife that lives in and close to the river, and to partake in exciting and inspiring events and activities. We hope to see you there!”
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COPING WITH A DRY SUMMER ‘Andy Eddy, Head Gardener at Osterley Park and House, tells us how to cope with a dry summer in your garden.
One of the main ways that we help our garden to survive at Osterley during a long, hot summer is by looking after the soil all through the year and this is something that is easy to replicate in even the smallest of gardens or allotments. The important thing to remember is organic matter – this can be anything that you would use to make compost i.e. vegetable peelings, mown grass, weeds (except horrible ones like bindweed!), autumn leaves etc. All of these when composted and used to dig into planting holes or spread on beds in the spring will all help to make for a lovely, crumbly soil structure and this will retain moisture for much longer than a dry, impoverished soil. We find that beds that are mulched on a regular basis will not need extra watering during the summer months and that all of the plants will grow more strongly and thrive. This cuts back on using water from the mains which can be expensive and also not good practice.
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It is also very easy to install water butts under any downpipes to catch and store rainwater for using to water pots etc. We also use shredded bark which is a by-product from the tree work that we do in the winter; this is used to mulch all of our shrub borders where, as well as helping the soil to retain moisture, it also acts as a weed suppressant and thus a little time spent doing this task in the winter will save a lot of time the following year.
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All of the above can also be accomplished using garden compost and or bark chippings bought from your local garden centre and it will be money well spent’.
Summer holidays at Osterley Park and House 26 Jul - 2 Sep 2018 This summer make the most of the sunshine with our family programme. From family gardening to a whole summer of sport, you'll also find weekly activities to see you through all of the holidays. #nationaltrust
Call 020 8232 5050 for details nationaltrust.org.uk/osterley
Š National Trust 2018. The National Trust is an independent registered charity, number 205846. Photography Š National Trust Images.
GUNNERSBURY MUSEUM
Gunnersbury MUSEUM
Gunnersbury Museum reopened to the public earlier in the summer after a £26m renovation. The former home of the Rothschild family, the house has been refurbished beautifully and the museum celebrates not just the Rothschilds, though their presence is everywhere throughout the house, but the previous history of the site and the development of this part of west London as well. The original Gunnersbury House was built by Sir John Maynard, a lawyer and politician during the time of Oliver Cromwell. In the 18th century Princess Amelia, daughter of George II, used it as her summer home. After her death the original house was pulled down and replaced by two mansions. Both were bought by the Rothschild family in the 19th century and purchased for the nation in 1926.
Home to the Rothschild family The museum is light and airy and easy to get around, with some rooms unfurnished, leaving it to your imagination what life would have been like at the big house, and others full of artefacts and photographs and an interactive video screening on the walls with actors playing the roles of the Rothschilds’ servants and family members. During the 19th century, the Rothschild family possessed the largest private fortune in the world, built on generations of banking. They entertained the most influential aristocrats, politicians and businessmen of the time. Benjamin Disraeli, who went on to become prime minister, wrote that a Gunnersbury banquet was ‘not to be surpassed in splendour or recherché (the rare and exotic) even at Windsor or Buckingham Palace.’
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You can see where Leonora Rothschild married her cousin Alphonse de Rothschild in 1857 in the presence of four rabbis, and where they held the wedding breakfast. An engraving in the Skylight gallery shows the wedding presents laid out for guests to view. There’s a photograph of the servants lined up posing in 1914 and early examples of autochrome photography taken by the family themselves. Alfred de Rothschild c. 1910
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Marie de Rothschild c. 1910
Rennie Pilgrem
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GUNNERSBURY MUSEUM
PROGRAMME OF SUMMER ACTIVITIES The museum is open 10.00am – 4.30pm, Tuesday – Sunday and Bank holidays. Entrance is free. There is a programme of events for young children, ‘little flamingos’ and for older children, such as ‘Meet the Victorian Servants’, wood carving and print making. Teddy bears’ picnics draw inspiration from the Acton based Farnell Toy Factory, whose cuddly bears inspired the Winnie the Pooh stories. There are adult workshops, talks, tours and special exhibitions and also nature walks through the gardens and talks by the head gardener.
Activities for families and children Make and Take – drop-in workshop
7th / 14th / 28th August, 10.30am – 12.00pm Free family activity for children of all ages Teddy Bears’ Picnic
8th August 11.30am – 2.00pm £10 per child, (adults free) story-telling session. Bring your own picnic. Woodcarving Workshop
15th August, 10.00am – 3.30pm £30 per child, suitable for ages 7 – 13 Little Flamingoes Paint & Play
15th August, 11.00am – 12.00pm £5 per child, £3 for additional siblings, suitable for toddlers
Print-making Workshop
20th August, 10.00am – 12.00pm or 2.00 – 4.00pm £15, suitable for ages 7 – 13 Mini-beast Safari and Pond-dipping
31st August, 10.00am – 12.30pm £10 per child, (adults go free)
Traditional Lawn Games
2nd / 9th / 16th/ 23rd/ 30th August, 11.00am – 2.00pm Free. Children must be accompanied. Historic Kitchens Tour
Activities for adults
11th August, 11.00am – 12.00pm & 2.00 – 3.00pm £6
Adult Workshop – Printmaking
Archives Tour
11th August, 10.00am – 4.00pm £50
21st August, 11.30am – 12.30pm Free
Heritage Garden Walk
Curator’s Tour and Talk
16th August, 11.30am – 1.00pm Explore the gardens of Princess Amelia and the Rothschild family Adult workshop – Woodcarving 18th August, 10.00am – 3.30pm £50
22nd August, 11.30am – 1.00pm & 7.00 – 8.30pm £8
Linda Bloomfield Tristan V Christann For September events and to book tickets go to www.visitgunnersbury.org
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HOUNSLOW CYCLING CAMPAIGN
ARE YOU A
NERVOUS CYCLIST? Karen Liebreich says help is at hand
In September a new scheme will be launched in Chiswick to enable nervous cyclists who may like to get back on their bikes to cycle with their kids.
for adults and children. Tabards will be supplied, bikes and helmets are being sourced to try out. Lessons will include safety, courtesy and road legislation. The course will be fun and safe. For those who complete the course there will be rewards and gifts (mainly for the kids!)
and Barring Service, a government department which carries out checks to prevent unsuitable people from working with vulnerable groups, including children). They have carried out thousands of hours of training, with adults (eg. lorry drivers), primary and secondary school pupils.
Hounslow Cycling Campaign, in conjunction with the London Borough of Hounslow and Ealing Council, has organised accredited trainers.
Anyone who has watched their child do Bikeability at school, or seen how much their kid likes cycling in the park and thought they would like to have a go once more, can get back in the saddle. Courses are tailored to the participants.
For further information, or to book your place, hounslowcycling.org facebook.com/HounslowCycling-158234940982882/ Email: training@hounslowcycling.org
The pilot scheme – completely free will run over four Saturdays, starting on 15th September, in Chiswick. There will be two adult-centred classes (2 hours each), followed by two classes
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Trainers are accredited with the Department of Transport, fully insured, with DBS check (Disclosure
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Karen Liebreich is a member of the Hounslow Cycling Campaign, and one of the organisers of the training.
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GOLF TUITION
MEMBERSHIP
Our award winning PGA Professional Chris Hamilton is on hand to deliver first class of golf coaching to all levels of golfer here at The Wyke Green Academy.
Wyke Green is delighted to announce that our 5 and 7 day memberships are now available.
AT WYKE GREEN GOLF CLUB
AT WYKE GREEN GOLF CLUB
With a wide variety of membership packages to suit all there is a membership for everyone at Wyke Green.
TYPES OF TUITION AVAILABLE; • Group Coaching • Individual 1 to 1 lessons • Lesson Packages • Junior Coaching • Beginners to advanced level players
We pride ourselves on being a club run by the members for the members. With a host of events both on and off the golf course for our membership to take part in the real question is “why wouldn’t you join Wyke Green?”
With packages to suit all budgets Chris is your man to help you improve your golf. Contact Chris on cbhamilton19@hotmail.com or call 0208 847 0685 to book
Contact our dedicated Marketing Manager, Tim Owers on timo@wykegreengolfclub.co.uk or 0208 560 8777 (option 3) to arrange a visit to the club to see all we have to offer
Don’t worry if you have no clubs as all equipment can be provided.
Bring this magazine with you to receive
Bring this magazine with you to receive your FIRST MONTH’S MEMBERSHIP
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YOUR FIRST LESSON
WYKE GREEN GOLF CLUB
PRIVATE EVENTS AND FUNCTIONS
GOLF DAYS AND SOCIETY OUTINGS
With our very comfortable and flexible clubhouse, Wyke Green is the perfect venue for all sorts of celebrations and gatherings.
We are very proud of our free draining course here at Wyke Green. It represents a great challenge to golfers of all levels and remains playable throughout all four seasons.
AT WYKE GREEN GOLF CLUB
AT WYKE GREEN GOLF CLUB
We are delighted to be able to offer a wide variety of catering options to suit all tastes and budgets.
Having played host to numerous county matches and indeed the Middlesex PGA Championships on more than one occasion, Wyke Green is a hidden gem.
With a capacity of up to 150 guests our professional team of staff are on hand to ensure each and every visitor has a wonderful experience at Wyke Green.
With packages that start from £29 per player and a variety of catering options for your players before, during and after the golf. Selected dates are now available on weekends too.
So, if it’s the office Christmas party, the young ones christening, perhaps even a Wedding reception our dedicated Marketing Manager Tim Owers will sit with you to design a bespoke package to suit all your needs whatever the nature of your function.
To book contact our Marketing Manager, Tim Owers on timo@wykegreengolfclub.co.uk or call 0208 560 8777 (opt 3)
Contact Tim on timo@wykegreengolfclub.co.uk or 0208 560 8777 (opt 3) to arrange a tour of our facilities.
Mention this guide when booking your day to receive a
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WYKE GREEN GOLF CLUB, SYON LANE, OSTERLEY. TW7 5PT
CHISWICK FEATURE BOOK FESTIVAL
Anthony_Horowitz
CHISWICK BOOK
Festival Director Torin Douglas reflects on ten years of the Chiswick Book Festival
Kate Mosse
Joanna Trollope
The Chiswick Book Festival is celebrating its tenth year with a stellar line-up of authors: Anthony Horowitz, Kate Mosse, Joanna Trollope, Max Hastings, Charles Spencer, Charles Cumming, Roger McGough and Julian Clary amongst others. Former BBC Media correspondent Torin Douglas is the festival director.
For several years, I had discussed launching a Book Festival with Father Kevin Morris, the vicar of St Michael & All Angels. It couldn’t be that hard, we thought! The Bedford Park Festival – Chiswick’s biggest community event - provided a good model. We had the venues – the church and the parish halls. We knew how to find speakers and attract audiences and look after them, using volunteers from St Michael’s and elsewhere. We knew how to sell tickets, attract sponsors and use a Festival to raise money for good causes. We’d built up a good relationship with Waterstone’s in Chiswick High Road and local publishers and publicists – notably Jacks Thomas (then managing director of Midas PR) and her husband Malcolm Edwards (then deputy chairman of Orion), who supplied lots of new books for fund-raising events. In less than three months in the summer of 2009, we put together a programme that surprised us all. I had suggested starting small and gradually building the Festival up. Jacks’ and Malcolm’s idea of starting small was persuading Lady Antonia Fraser, Anthony Horowitz, Jacqueline Wilson, Lynn Barber, Michael Frayn and more than a dozen other leading authors to take part. The attendances and feedback were terrific and the Festival was on its way. In truth, we had underestimated what it takes to put on a book festival, but with lots of volunteers and goodwill it grew from strength to strength.
Torin Douglas, Festival Director with Charles Spencer
For our 10th Festival, we’re delighted to be welcoming back Anthony Horowitz, to talk about his new James Bond book, along with other headliners from previous Festivals: novelist Kate Mosse, historians Max Hastings and Charles Spencer, spy writers Charles Cumming and Jane Thynne, globe-watcher Tim Marshall and Masterchef presenter John Torode, who heads the lineup at our new sister venture, the Cookbook Festival. We also have well-known authors speaking here for the first time: novelist Joanna Trollope; poet Roger McGough; historian Kate Williams; economist and broadcaster Dharshini David; food writers ‘Deliciously Ella’ Mills and Jack Monroe; and children’s author Julian Clary.
DO JOIN US!
The 10th Chiswick Book Festival runs from 13th to 17th September at various venues. Details and tickets from www.chiswickbookfestival.net
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COOKBOOK FESTIVAL John Torode, photograph by Yuki Sugiura
Cookbook FESTIVAL
A celebration of food and drink in print
A totally new and refreshing festival is happening this September, for all who love cookbooks and the world of food and drink. Little sister to the established Chiswick Book Festival, some of the most interesting names in cookery writing will be there - with samples – so you can taste as well as hear about their creations. This is where cookbooks come to life!
Come along and meet a diverse collection of authors, chefs, restaurateurs and food industry experts, in various locations across Chiswick. 12-16th September 2018
Among the line-up of world-renowned authors are Australian Masterchef presenter and restaurateur John Torode; British food writer Ella Mills, whose food blog launched her brand Deliciously Ella and a delicatessen in Mayfair; Melissa Helmsley, one half of the Helmsley sisters, whose food business Hemsley + Hemsley has pioneered modern healthy home cooking (The Art of Eating Well and Eat Happy, published earlier this year); Jack Monroe, a blogger of the ‘make-do-and-mend’ genre, writing on how to get by with very little money, with City Harvest, which redistributes surplus food to those who need it
most; Jo Pratt, TV cook and author of five books on food and cooking; Niki Segnit, whose first book, The Flavour Thesaurus, won the André Simon Award for best food book, the Guild of Food Writers Award for best first book, and been translated into thirteen languages; La Cucina Caldesi, the only Italian cookery school in central London; Silla Bjerrum, restaurateur and Chef best known for her expertise in sushi; and Malika Basu, who offers recipes for easy to make Indian food. They will be discussing their work, food and culinary experiences alongside tastings prepared by experienced chefs.
To find out more and book tickets go to www.cookbookfestival.org Ella Mills, photograph by Sophia Spring
Melissa Hemsley
Jack Monroe
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CHISWICK HOUSE DOG SHOW
Roll Up! Roll Over! SAYS DOG SHOW CHAIR JAN PREECE
The 14th Annual Chiswick House Dog Show is on Sunday 23rd September this year. The Show is run by local volunteers for the enjoyment of the whole community and aims to raise money to maintain and improve Chiswick House Gardens. Entry is free. It’s a fun day out for all the family – you don’t have to own a dog to come along and enjoy it. Classes range from Waggiest Tail to Prettiest Bitch, and from My Dog’s Got Talent to Next Top Model. Enter your pooch into one (or more) of the 18 classes: all dogs are welcome - big, small, pedigree, tea-pot, miniature, cross-breed, rescue, naughty – there’s a class for every dog.
The theme of this year’s show is ‘Circus250,’ commemorating 250 years since the first circus was held in London, by ex-army officer Philip Astley and his wife Patti, who established Astley’s Riding School on the South Bank, where they did tricks on horseback accompanied by music. This should give those entering the Fancy Dress competition (for adults/ dogs/children) plenty of scope. The usual raft of surprise celebrity judges will be present: last year’s included Mel Giedroyc, Wayne Sleep, Richard Lintern and David Caves (from Silent Witness) and Neil Dudgeon (from Midsummer Murders). The Dogs Trust will hold a re-homing parade for potential dog-owners
looking for a new ‘best friend,’ as well as running the ever-popular “Doggy Dash” for all those trying to get the fastest time (and enter the Pawsecco Book of Records). The Womballs Flyball Club will be on hand throughout the day to entertain everyone with their exuberant and enthusiastic exercises. There will be a wide variety of food stalls, as well as BBQ, beer and wine bars. This year the show has gone ‘international’ with a Swedish company selling ice-cream for dogs. Another 40 or so stalls provide an eclectic range of dog related stuff - pet portraiture, charities, local artists, dog treats, and every form of dog accessory imaginable!
To find out more about the Dog Show, please visit the website at www.chiswickhousedogshow.org.uk If you would like to volunteer to help with the show please contact Caroline at volunteer@chiswickhousedogshow.org.uk Sunday 23rd September 2017, 11am to 4.30pm, Cricket Pitch (Staveley Road entrance), Chiswick House and Gardens.
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JAZZ AT GEORGE IV
Jazz
AT GEORGE IV
Larry Pryce brings some Hot Jazz To Keep Us Warm This Autumn. After such a brilliant summer you will be glad to hear that jazz is back on the menu in Chiswick in the Boston Room at George IV, 185, Chiswick High Road W4 as Live Music To Go present some more of the capital’s hottest jazz acts to warm us up for the winter months ahead.
Thursday 27th September
Thursday 25th October
Thursday 22nd November
Enjoy an evening of hot swing and Gypsy Jazz from the UK’s leading exponents of the genre, Trio Manouche.
We have a very special tribute from two of the UK’s leading jazz vocalists, Shireen Francis & Sarah Moule as they celebrate two of the greatest jazz singers of all time, Peggy Lee and Ella Fitzgerald in “When Peggy Met Ella”.
A special Thanksgiving Blues Evening, features the hugely talented Blues Engineers who have played with and supported some of the very best blue artists in the business including BB King, Van Morrison and Bill Wyman. Singer and guitarist John 0’Reilly is internationally acclaimed for his amazing slide and steel (resonator) guitar playing, having worked extensively in Europe on the festival circuit. Together with the multi-talented saxophonist, flautist and harmonica player Nick Payne, who regularly plays with top stars such as Bill Wyman’s Rhythm Kings, their atmospheric repertoire covers an impressive range of Country and Urban blues classics as well as their own highly distinctive material.
They will be performing inspired re-worked classics from the legendary Gypsy Jazz guitarist, Django Reinhardt as well as presenting some of their own highly acclaimed material along with some highly atmospheric arrangements of traditional swing greats such as Nat King Cole. “Excellent, I was hooked just after 8 bars, your band swings beautifully ……” Sting.
Accompanied by the acclaimed pianist Simon Wallace and the noted bassist Dave Green, these two exceptional vocalists will be performing some of the greatest songs of the 20th century, from the understated purr of “Black Coffee” to the infectious swing of “Cheek To Cheek” and exploring how Peggy and Ella’s turbulent lives shaped their singing careers.
Jazz at George IV - 7.30pm start. Tickets £10 in advance online from Eventbrite (£8 for Chiswick Calendar Club Card holders) & £12 on the door. 22
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CHISWICK CURVE ENQUIRY CGI created for developer Starbones
THE CHISWICK CURVE PUBLIC INQUIRY Should a 32 storey skyscraper be built at Chiswick roundabout? This summer while others are on the beach or lazing beside a pool, Planning Inspector Paul Griffiths will be considering the evidence presented to him during a four week Public Inquiry during June and July on whether or not there should be a 32 storey skyscraper built at Chiswick roundabout. He has until early September to make his report, which will then go to the Secretary of State for a decision.
Gateway to the global capital Developer Starbones and architect Christophe Egret put forward their proposal for a building which would be five storeys of office space with 27 storeys of residential apartments above. The London Borough of Hounslow turned it down because it was too big. The developer appealed against LBH’s decision, which led to the Public Inquiry. The developer maintains that the Golden Mile needs a statement building to mark the ‘gateway’ into
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London, ‘the global capital’. Russell Harris QC on behalf of Starbones told the Inquiry that London needed a building of high quality design by a leading architect to impress people as they come in on the M4 from Heathrow. “The potential to mark that place, that moment, with a building of world class quality by one of Europe’s most lauded and talented of architects is one that the planning system should not let slip” he said. Ranged against the developer were the Royal Botannic Gardens, Kew, English Heritage, the Kew Society, Strand on the Green residents’ association,
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the West Chiswick and Gunnersbury Society and other local opponents. Their main argument was that such a tall building, of such great bulk and mass would stand out on the skyline and do ‘substantial harm’ to the many listed buildings and conservation areas we have in this part of West London, not least to Kew Gardens, which is one of four World Heritage sites in London, where people go to find a “safe haven in this busy city”, said Counsel for the Royal Botannic Gardens James Maurici. In the view of the developer, Christophe Egret’s design will be www.fhwem.com/publishing
CHISWICK CURVE ENQUIRY recognised as a “world class” building of “immense quality”… A building which represents the best of the new: “a symbol of a diverse, sensitive, postmodern culture that has something of its own to add to the centuries of history upon which it is overlaid”. The architect described his vision of the future and explained that he had designed the building as part of a “new urban layer” which will be added to Chiswick and Brentford. ‘London’ he said, ‘is a growing city, and new designs need to be celebrated like new children in a family. The skyline will be altered, new vistas will arrive’.
‘Narcissistic bling’ Far from being a world class example of fine modern architecture, fellow architect Barbara Weiss, a founder of the ‘Skyline Campaign’ described the building’s design as ‘narcissistic bling’ and said it would be a contender for the Carbunkle Prize awarded by Building Design magazine each year for the ugliest building in the United Kingdom built that year, if it were built. Other opponents described the impact on local infrastructure, pointing out that the roads around Chiswick roundabout are already in frequent gridlock without the addition of so
Describing the Chiswick skyline as he imagined it would look in a few years’ time, Christophe Egret said: “The landscape is being redrawn by a number of developments.” With reference to the housing already being built as part of the Brentford FC stadium complex and at Wheatstone House beside the petrol station at the roundabout, as well as several other proposed developments currently in various stages of the planning process in East Brentford, he explained that the view from the river would not be of one lone tower, but of a new layer of development. “You have to go a little bit taller to make sense of developments” he said, defending the tower’s height. many more people, both adding more cars and slowing down the flow of traffic as they crossed the road on foot at a very busy junction. Both Kew railway station and Gunnersbury tube station are overcrowded at rush hour times as it is.
CGI created for developer Starbones
Peter Eversden MBE, speaking on behalf of the London Forum which represents residents’ and community groups all over the capital, said: “This site is at a location of considerable noise, air pollution and dangerous access across main highways. It is not suitable for a building containing a large number of homes”. CGI created for developer Starbones
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CGI created by independent expert Mike Spence for LBH
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CGI created by independent expert Mike Spence for LBH
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ISLAMIC ART
Treasures EMERY WALKER’S
Lucinda MacPherson explains how Islamic art influenced the English Arts & Crafts movement
The collection on display at Emery Walker’s house in Hammersmith shows how much Islamic arts and crafts influenced the English Arts and Crafts movement. The photographer and engraver Emery Walker (18511933) and his family went on holiday to Moorish Spain and Morocco and brought back with them a wonderful collection of rugs, silver jewellery, leather goods and ceramics.
by David Bryce, a Scotsman who specialised in miniature books, at the turn of the 20th century.
In this age of cheap travel many of us also have little treasures collected on our holidays, but the Walkers were definitely ahead of their time. Professor James Allan, Emeritus Professor of Eastern Art, St Cross College Oxford says the collection of Moroccan artefacts is of particular academic interest, as Moroccan material of that period was not common in the UK: “Morocco was in the Spanish or French sphere of influence, and hence not part of the British Empire: as a result perhaps Morocco was not widely visited by British people.” Ceramics like these were first introduced to London society through the 1871 Annual International Exhibition held in South Kensington.
Their great friend the playwright Bernard Shaw was a little circumspect about the objects they picked up on their travels. "Walker has just paid 3 1/2 francs for a three-spouted brass thing supposed to be a lamp, but really a sort of candle-snuff incense burner which would stink him out of Hammersmith Terrace if he attempted to use it” he wrote.
Artist Sara Choudhrey, from Shepherd’s Bush, who specialises in Islamic art, has made a study of the Islamic artefacts among the collection at Emery Walker’s house and found out more about their history. Among her finds is a miniature Qur’an measuring just 2.5 cm in height, produced
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The Walkers were great friends of the Arts and Crafts artist and designer William Morris (1834-96) and his family, who lived nearby. It seems Morris was inspired by the geometric, arabesque and calligraphic designs he saw.
The colourful collection (an almost identical collection to which is held by the Victoria & Albert Museum) can be seen at Emery Walker’s House, which is open on Thursdays and Saturdays for guided tours. You can read more about what Sara discovered about the Islamic collection on the website emerywalker.org.uk
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UNIVERSITY OF WEST LONDON
FREE R&D SERVICE FOR LONDON FOOD AND DRINK BUSINESSES
Research and development is a vital part of the process of turning a bright idea into a fantastic product, but this important work can be a struggle for small and medium-sized food and drink businesses in London which don’t have a big-business budget to spend on perfecting the next big thing. Research and development is a vital part of the process of turning a bright idea into a fantastic product, but this important work can be a struggle for small and medium-sized food and drink businesses in London which don’t have a big-business budget to spend on perfecting the next big thing. Getting the recipe right is never more crucial than in the ultra-competitive food and drinks sector, where there is a heavy burden of necessary regulation to protect customers, who demand to know more about the production process behind the great taste. But now small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) in London have a helping hand, thanks to the University of West London (UWL) and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF). The West London Food Innovation Laboratory (WLFIL) offers a way to do this vital research and development work. The best thing about it is that this service is completely free of charge for eligible London-based companies. The ERDF contributed £739,000 to the project and UWL has provided funding totalling £739,000.
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WLFIL has already worked with many eligible start-ups and SMEs on projects ranging from vegetarian and vegan products to artisan bread, alternative protein products and healthier ‘street food’ desserts. The process works like this: the expert WLFIL team develops a ‘protocept’ – an early prototype - of the new concept, or proposes alternative paths in the production process. They then experiment in WLFIL’s development kitchen, ensuring technical feasibility and regulatory compliance. The scientific team explores the texture, structure and nutrients of the product. A range of tests reveal any changes which may affect its shelf-life at different stages of the production and storage process.
Professor Alexandros Paraskevas, the WLFIL Academic Lead said: ‘We are delighted to assist small food and drink entrepreneurs turn their dreams into reality. We also learn so much from their innovative entrepreneurial thinking which allows us to explore new areas and develop knowledge that we transfer in the classroom, making the whole project a solid win-win.’
To find out more, email foodinnovation@uwl.ac.uk or call 020 8231 2286
At the heart of this detailed consultation is the business client. There are opportunities to evaluate the taste, smell, appearance and texture of alternative protocept in booths specifically designed and equipped for sensory evaluation. This process aids good decision-making on design, optimisation and quality assurance. It all contributes to an outstanding final product. wwwfhwem.com/publishing
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Aut umn ART FAIR
20 & 21 October 2018 10am - 5pm
Admission £4, Concessions £3, U16s & LAC Members FREE
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ASHTON HOUSE SCHOOL
ASHTON HOUSE SCHOOL
50/52 Eversley Crescent Isleworth Middlesex TW7 4LW
50/52 Eversley Crescent Isleworth Middlesex TW7 4LW
Want toagive your child a Choosing school for your child? Choosing a school for your child? first class education? Ashton House School has for the past
Ashton House School has for the past a happy, 80 years beenfrom offering highpurposeful quality primary education to children environment with high academic standards and an education the surrounding areas; enriched by to children from enrichingprimary broad-based curriculum which aims at a purposefulthe environment with high surrounding areas; enriched by ‘adding inordinate value’ to each child’s learning. academic standards and an inspiring, a purposeful environment with high broad curriculum. We have an We have academic an and excellent exam andand scholarship standards an inspiring, excellent exam scholarship record and our assessment data makes us a highly record with the vast majority of broad curriculum. We have an achieving independent school. children moving on to the school excellent exam and scholarship
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