The Local A NSWER
GLOUCESTERSHIRE’S BIGGEST LOCAL MAGAZINE COTSWOLDS
MARCH 2023
GLOUCESTERSHIRE’S BIGGEST LOCAL MAGAZINE COTSWOLDS
MARCH 2023
Spring is finally here and what better way to embrace the new season than to freshen up your home interiors. From adding colour and patterns, to styling a spring tablescape, Gill Greenwell shares her ideas in her Interior Design article.
In his latest Sport feature, Roger Jackson interviews former jockey Robert Thornton, looking back on his successful career and how it felt to ride at the Cheltenham Festival.
Police and Crime Commissioner Chris Nelson shares his Police Budget for 2023-2024 with us. Read more about his plans for the year inside.
The 2023 event calendar is really starting to fill up, so check out our What’s On section for a selection of events happening around the county over the next month or two. If you’re planning an event and would like to promote it with us, you’ll find more details on page 16.
If you use the services of any of our advertisers, please tell them you found them in The Local Answer!
ACCOUNTS
Jamie Kirby
Ingredients:
For the base (makes 2 pizzas) 300g strong bread flour; 1 tsp instant yeast; 1 tsp salt; 1 tbsp olive oil.
For the topping 400g jar of tomato and vegetable sauce; 100g dairyfree grated cheese (or mozzarella if you eat dairy) Your mum’s favourite toppings. These could include: a few halved cherry tomatoes, black olives, sliced red onion, sliced button mushrooms, sliced green pepper and fresh basil.
For the base
1 Put the flour into a large bowl then add the yeast and salt.
2 Make a well, pour in 200ml warm water and the olive oil, and bring together with a fork.
3 Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead for five minutes. Cut into two even pieces.
4 Roll out to your desired size, pop onto two baking trays and leave to rise somewhere warm for about 15 minutes.
For the topping
5 Preheat the oven to 220°C (fan 200°C/gas mark 7).
6 Spread the tomato topping over the base, leaving a thin gap around the edge. Sprinkle the cheese over the top, then arrange your choice of vegetables.
7 Cook in the oven for around 15 minutes or until the cheese has melted and the edges of the base are crispy and golden.
8 Garnish with fresh basil. Always ask an adult for help when chopping vegetables and using a hot oven.
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No Smoking Day is an annual health awareness day in the United Kingdom which is intended to help smokers who want to quit smoking.
The first No Smoking Day was on Ash Wednesday in 1984, and it now takes place on the second Wednesday in March. Smoking is very harmful to your heart, and can seriously increase your risk of developing heart and circulatory diseases. You can make small lifestyle changes to help you quit smoking and keep your heart healthy.
What does smoking do to my heart and circulatory system?
The chemicals in cigarettes make the walls of your arteries sticky. This causes fatty material to stick to the walls, which can begin to clog your arteries and reduce the space for blood to flow properly.
• If the arteries that carry blood to your heart get clogged, it can lead to a heart attack.
• If the arteries that carry blood to your brain get clogged, it can lead to a stroke.
Smoking can also affect your heart and blood vessels by:
• Increasing risk of blood clots.
• Causing an instant rise to your heart rate.
• Causing an instant rise to your blood pressure.
• Reducing the amount of oxygen delivered to the rest of your body.
What are the benefits of quitting smoking?
You might notice benefits sooner than you think.
• Heart rate and blood pressure will begin to return to normal after 20 minutes.
• Sense of smell and taste will begin to improve after 2-3 days.
• Your breathing will begin to improve, and exercise may be easier, after 2-12 weeks.
• Risk of a heart attack is half that of a smoker after a year. It’s never too late to benefit from stopping smoking. On average, men will add 10 years to their life if they quit by the age of 30. Many people will add three years to their life if they quit by the age of 60. Being a non-smoker can also improve your chances of being more physically active and healthier as you get older.
How can I quit smoking?
If you quit smoking, you will improve your health and the health of everyone around you. It may feel hard to resist the temptation to smoke, but you can make small changes to make it easier to stick to.
• Try to think positively – even
if you’ve tried to quit before and didn’t manage it, don’t let it put you off trying again.
• Set a date to quit and tell your family, friends and colleagues so they can help and encourage you.
• Plan how you will deal with your cravings when you’re at events and times when you would usually smoke.
• If you usually smoke after meals, eat foods that can make cigarettes taste bad like cheese, fruit and vegetables, or change your routine to keep your mind busy when you would usually smoke, like washing the dishes straight after eating.
• Cravings usually last around five minutes. Plan short activities you can do to stay busy when you get cravings.
• When you’re out, hold your drink with the hand that used to hold cigarettes and use a straw. This will help to keep your hands and mouth busy.
• When you get a craving, remind yourself of why you are quitting. You may want to carry a picture of your family with you to look at if you’re tempted to smoke.
You are not alone. Aside from your family and friends, you can get support from healthcare professionals, stop smoking programmes and nicotine replacement therapy. You can also make an appointment with your GP, pharmacy or practice nurse. They will be able to help you find a way to stop smoking that works for you.
Regardless of where we are on our fitness and wellness journey, every so often – as in the case of New Year’s resolutions – it’s good practice to take stock, reevaluate what is important and make appropriate changes.
While the challenge of sustaining these changes is ongoing, committing to a health and wellness lifestyle is the single most important investment you can make in your life.
A good place to start is to be clear about your end goal(s). What will your intervention look like? A stronger body?
Weight loss? Optimum mental health? What will it feel like and, more significantly, what will it make you feel like?
Once you have clarity about the end, you can then begin to do the work required to bring it to life. Like many people having work done on their house, the experience has given me pause for thought. What makes a house strong? Is it building material, paintwork, roofing material, the skill of the builder?
You’ve probably guessed that it isn’t any of these very important ‘bits’ – rather, it is the foundations on which the house is built that provide its true strength. A house’s ability to withstand the weight and pressure of external forces is determined by the strength and stability of its foundations. Similarly, the key to our own strength is hidden in plain sight, in our basic human movements. Our foundation – our skeletal system – is built for movement, which results in the release of endorphins (hormones that help
to relieve pain, reduce stress and improve your sense of wellbeing) along with three main neurotransmitters: Dopamine, Noradrenaline and Serotonin. These are modulated by exercise and help to make us feel better and manage stress.
Our bodies are designed as a self-regulating circuit. By moving more, we release more of the hormones and neurotransmitters that help relieve stress, reduce pain and optimise physical and mental wellbeing.
There are many trainers who focus on teaching advanced movements, or use fancy bits of kit in an effort to challenge your body. While all of these are great in getting people exercising, in their efforts to maximise their following, they often leave out or overlook many key elements necessary for building a solid foundation.
My main concern for beginners or less experienced people is that many of these
programmes can challenge your body in ways you’re not physically prepared for, which increases the risk of injury.
As you seek your optimal exercise modalities, whether you engage in traditional or ‘modern’ training/workouts, consider the following:
• Build a base of functional strength. There are seven basic movements the human body can perform – Pull, Push, Squat, Lunge, Hinge, Rotation and Gait (or walking). All other exercises are variations of these.
• Are your equipment and environment safe, and do they meet your needs?
• Is the technique biomechanically sound and the intensity progressive?
• Is the exercise or training method sustainable over the rest of your lifetime?
If you manage to nail these points, you’ll be on the right track.
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Nanny jobs in Gloucestershire
We have a wide range of nanny jobs in Gloucestershire available, so if you are a childcare professional in this area then please don’t hesitate to get in touch.
For more information please contact Laura:
The Dave and Darcy series is based on a real horse called Dave, whose goofy, loveable personality inspired the funny, engaging stories for children ages 3-7. Dave has fans up and down the UK, and further aeld in Iceland, Texas USA and even Australia!
★★★★★ “My two-year-old absolutely adores them! They have become a top favourite and we read them most nights. Such great quality and lovely stories. Would highly recommend!”
★★★★★ “My four-year-old requests them most bedtimes, she loves hearing about the adventures.”
Throughout March, I’m offering a huge discount on the bundle of five books. The individual stories and the Colouring and Activity Book will also be discounted (no code required) if you’re looking to add a title to your child’s existing collection.
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This month I wanted to touch on a rather delicate topic: moods. Yours and your children’s, and how to handle them when they change more quickly than the weather on a March morning.
I was asked to address the ever-changing emotional range of a five-year-old and how to handle it, and I thought it was a great topic as it allows me to cover a few things.
Firstly, a five-year-old has very little regulation, as their amygdala (the integrative centre for emotions and emotional behaviour) is still forming and not yet capable of ‘holding in’ what it needs to express.
Secondly, so many things contribute to how we ‘feel’, including how hungry or thirsty we are, how much energy we have, how stimulated (or not) we are and how safe we feel in our current setting.
I am sure you are already aware of the need for carrying that enormous bag filled with drinks, snacks, a change of clothes, a coat, an extra jumper, wellies and sun cream wherever you go, aren’t you? Exactly –to keep your little one as comfortable as possible at all times.
However, by the time they start school you are not on hand to solve every problem and indeed they are one of a group of kids who are all beginning to learn to problemsolve for themselves.
From eating and drinking enough, and releasing stress through activity at playtime, to sitting still and not fiddling with their best friend’s hair at story time. Those little brains are working so hard to learn, grow, navigate and retain information, and behave in a way they have been taught is socially acceptable (no matter what their bodies are telling them).
So when they emerge at 3pm and have a complete meltdown at the gate because you didn’t bring their scooter –which you promised you would that morning –and they don’t want to go to the shop – even though you need to buy dinner – and they ‘hate you’ – because you forgot to pack their most favourite toy in the world for show and tell… Breathe.
Remember that the real reason they are being like this is
because you are their safe place!
They feel safe to release all the confusion, frustration and rage that has built up in them all day and they have kept hidden from their teacher. You, dear parent/guardian, are the first safe place to release it all. I know it sucks, but they behave like this because they feel safe enough, loved enough and accepted. It is a compliment, really.
So before you head out to pick them up from school at 3pm, remember to have a cuppa, eat something, stretch a little, take some deep breaths, watch cute cats on TikTok and have a little cry in the loo if you need to. Because, you know, you are an adult with a fully formed amygdala and you can, for the most part, regulate your emotions. Your little one is relying on you to hold it together so he or she doesn’t have to.
March brings with it all the moods, so let’s navigate with style and grace, shall we?
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Email: enquiries@rtfp.co.uk
Website: www.rtfp.co.uk
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Think granite! If you’ve any interest in geology, perhaps you are imagining Ulster’s Mourne Mountains, Switzerland’s Gotthard Massif or the stone heart of California’s Sierra Nevada. Or maybe the fabled coast of Brittany’s Côtesd’Armor department, just a short ferry trip across ‘La Manche’. It’s close; and, if you’ve never been, well worth visiting.
From name to reality, the spectacular Côte de Granit Rose – from Plestin-les-Grèves to Louannec – is about the pink gorgeousness of every cliff and boulder. Plus all the other good things, including those delicious galettes and dry white wines, associated with Brittany.
Whether you stay local, base yourself here for wider exploration, or drop in after a longer trip, the Côte is visually stunning and always inspiring. In Port de Ploumanac’h, we recommend the lovely Hotel
des Rochers overlooking the harbour’s lines of moored yachts. It’s hard to imagine a more relaxing few days than exploring the village and its nearby coastline.
Many granites include hints of red, but few display the intensity of this littoral as it takes geological ‘vie en rose’ to the breathtaking max. To fully savour the landscape – it’s Hercynian granite with a high percentage of pink-giving microcline feldspar – follow the romantic Sentier des Douaniers (‘the path of the customs officers’) around to Perros Guirec – once home to author Joseph Conrad.
There and back, the walk past Phare de Men Ruz lighthouse –built of local granite; the name means ‘red stone’ in Breton – is about 12 km. At Perros Guirec, overlooking Trestrau beach, reward yourself with takeaway baguettes from Au P’tit Creux; cheap, filling, quintessentially Breton and, after the bracing clifftop air, delicious. Just watch out for marauding ‘mouettes’!
Stroll the sands and watch the windsurfers for a while. Then return the same way for new perspectives as the setting sun and its long shadows accentuate the salmon-pink rock.
It’s not just the colour either; the shapes sculpted by the ocean and weather are captivating. I challenge you not to imagine all kinds of human and animal forms in the rock –and that’s before downing something delicious with supper.
If you become ‘pinked out’ and want to explore further afield, many Breton attractions are within a couple of hours’ drive. Go south to Quiberon and Carnac’s stones, east to St. Malo and Mont-Saint-Michel, or head for Pointe de Corsen, the French mainland’s westernmost extremity.
Whatever you choose, it’s not too late to plan your Breton ‘life in pink’ for this summer!
I’m Shaun Taylor, the “Approved Car Buyer” – here to make selling your used car or van as simple and quick as possible. I come to you, so there’s no need to leave your home or place of work.
Everything we do is free of charge:
FREE Appraisal & valuation at your convenience
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At the Approved Car Buying Centre we pride ourselves on a swift, simple and helpful service and are always at the end of the phone ready to help with any questions you may have or advice you need.
Please think of us when selling
vehicle – we would like to be “The Local Answer” for selling your vehicle in Gloucestershire.
We buy and collect vehicles in every corner of the county, including the Cotswolds. If you prefer, you can also book an appointment to drop your car off at our Buying Centre at Coombe Hill.
appointment form.
We look forward to hearing from you soon!
I’ve been looking forward to this one ever since I saw its release pictures in the press.
I drove the e-Tron Q4 last year and it ticked the boxes but, in some unfathomable way, it missed the mark on the objectives. Yes it was electric, yes it was quiet and yes it was stylish. But it seemed to me to be missing something on the quality side of things.
Perhaps I was expecting too much, in which case the error is mine, but I came away from the test feeling somewhat deflated. This was Audi’s chance to level the score – to hit the mark and deliver on the promise of what an electric Audi should be. And, thankfully, it delivered.
The e-Tron GT looks like a fast Audi. It is a fast Audi, that’s probably why. But on paper, strangely, it’s not. It’s not slow, but with a 0-62 time of a little over eight seconds, it’s no way near a Tesla. But, and I can’t really explain this, it feels faster than a Tesla.
I’ve driven Teslas with a 0-60
time of around the 3.5 second mark, so while this was theoretically half as fast in terms of acceleration, it didn’t feel like it. And that makes no sense. When I first hit a straight bit of road in dynamic mode, I put my foot down and was pinned to the seat. I think I actually let out an involuntary ‘woah’.
As a five seat, four door saloon, it is clearly pitched against the Model S from Musk’s stable. And at around the £80k mark, it’s comparable in terms of price and spec. But there’s something about the eTron that felt different. I think I actually prefer it, and I have been a massive fan of Tesla since I first drove one almost eight years ago.
In practical terms, I think the Tesla wins, purely because its regenerative braking is much more effective. In the Audi, you have to ask for it using a complicated pattern on the paddle shifts. I think I got it to work,
but you shouldn’t have to think about it.
But that aside, in fact even with that taken into consideration, I loved it. Sleek, powerful and hunkered down with flared wheel arches and plenty of space inside, it ticked so many boxes. Sadly for me, the only box unticked was day-to-day liveability.
The lack of regenerative braking means that, on a good day, the range is around 260ish miles. In fairness, I tested this in very cold weather, which does have an impact, but even then, Teslas are looking at closer to a 400-mile plus range, and that is a much more practical figure.
And yet, I think where Audi wins, is in the style. The Tesla is a beautiful machine, but they haven’t evolved much in terms of style in almost a decade. The e-Tron GT looks fresher, meaner, and more modern.
This makes choosing between them a very hard decision. Thankfully, not one I need to worry about for now, but if I had to pick… I’m not sure I could!
The Local Answer Event Listings are compiled and presented in good faith with the kind support of many contributors. We recommend you use the contact details provided to check event information updates prior to planning your visit.
The much-loved annual lambing event is back and better than ever, with over 300 lambs expected to be born on the farm. You’ll be able to see live births up close and personal, as well as enjoy talks from the Farm Park’s team of experts about all things lambing. Plus, you’ll be able to participate in all the usual play and exciting activities the park has to offer, from meeting and feeding the animals to exploring the beautiful Cotswold countryside. 9.30am-4.30pm. Tickets available at www.cotswoldfarmpark.co.uk
4 MARCH
By Deer Spirit Events. Over fifty fantastic exhibitors: 1-1 tarot, psychic, shamanic & clairvoyant readings, holistic therapies, self-help, crystals, jewellery, books, arts and crafts, healthy living products. Thirty talks and workshops, inside and out. Refreshments/parking on site. 11-5pm. Pittville Pump Room, East Approach Drive, Cheltenham GL52 3JE. www.deerspirit.co.uk
8 MARCH MAGGIE’S FIREWALK
Can you handle the heat? Challenge yourself, face your fears and walk across hot embers while raising money to support people living with cancer, their families and friends. Registration £15, with an £85 fundraising target per person. 6-9pm. Randall & Payne,
Shurdington Road, Cheltenham GL51 4GA. To register, visit maggiescheltfirewalk23.eventbrite.co.uk
11 MARCH
CHELTENHAM CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Fauré: Pelléas et Mélisande Suite. Debussy: Petite Suite. Ravel: Pavane pour une Infante défunte. Bizet: Symphony No.1. Tickets £20. Students free. 7.30pm. St Andrew’s Church, Montpellier, Cheltenham GL50 1SP. For more information visit www.cheltenhamchamberorchestra.org.uk
12 MARCH
CIRENCESTER VEGAN MARKET
Expect to see a wide range of vegan stalls including delicious vegan street food, baked goods and sweet treats, ethical clothing brands, cruelty free cosmetics, arts and crafts, charities and outreach, as well as free samples from our info tent. 10am-3pm. Free entry. Market Place, Cirencester GL7 2NW. www.veganfairs.co.uk
21 MARCH
LADYFRIENDS [A PERIOD DRAMA]
Ladyfriends is a high-octane romp through love letters, third dates, and lesbian period dramas – via the (probably) true stories of Annie Kenney and Christabel Pankhurst. Rammed with live music and film, it digs up real-life queer history to ask the age-old question: “are we dating, or are we just really good friends?” 7pm. £15. Gloucester Guildhall, 23 Eastgate Street, Gloucester GL1 1NS. www.gloucesterguildhall.co.uk
22 MARCH SUBVERSE PRESENTS JENNY MITCHELL & JOSEPHINE LAY
Born in Britain, Mitchell explores her Jamaican heritage, and the legacies of slavery and colonialism, through unsparing and exquisitely crafted poetry which she performs with a powerful and moving stillness. Support comes from poet Josephine Lay, a director of the Gloucestershire Poetry Society. 8pm. £8-£10. The Subscription Rooms, George Street, Stroud, GL5 1AE. thesubrooms.co.uk
24 MARCH
YOUNG ELTON – THE TRIBUTE SHOW
The eccentric and flamboyant youth of Sir Elton John is brought to life on stage by singer and musician Tom Weston. A celebration of one of the greatest singer songwriters of all time, with hits such as ‘I’m Still Standing’, ‘Your Song’ and many more. £21 (£19). 7.30pm. The Bacon Theatre, Hatherley Road, Cheltenham GL51 6EP. www.bacontheatre.co.uk
25 MARCH
SUE RYDER SPRING FAYRE
Spend a day in our historic hospice grounds. A wonderful day of live music and entertainment with a BBQ, pop-up bar, tasty treats, bouncy castle, face painting, family fun activities, raffle, tombola and more! 10am-5pm. Tickets available on the day. Adults £2.50, children under 12 free. More details on the Sue Ryder Leckhampton Court Hospice Facebook page.
26 MARCH
Join National Star’s Sunrise Walk on Sunday 26th March 2023 from Ullenwood, Cheltenham. By putting your best foot forward you will transform the lives of young people with disabilities with every step. The beautiful 12km circular route will give plenty of opportunity to soak up the stunning views around the Cotswold Way. Registration from 4.30am with the walk starting at 6am. nationalstar.org/get-involved/sunrise-walk
28 MARCH
A band of friends that puts on a show of huge dynamic range performed with passion, joy and a liberal dose of fun. Marion Fleetwood joins fiddlers Peter Knight, Brian McNeill, Ian Cutler, Tom Leary and Garry Blakeley, who add the large range of fiddle playing styles to the rock back-line of guitars, keyboards, sax and accordion – all held together by legendary drummer Dave Mattacks. 7.30pm. Tickets from £23. The Roses Theatre, Sun Street, Tewkesbury, GL20 5NX. www.rosestheatre.org
31 MARCH
SIMON EVANS: WORK OF THE DEVIL Simon’s last show, Genius 2.0, provided a hilarious analysis of the departure of any visible sign of intelligence from modern life. But his new show raises the stakes, with his usual excoriating views of a world on fire, given a perspective shift from personal revelations that turned his world upside down this year. 8pm. £17. Sundial Theatre, Stroud Road, Cirencester, GL7 1XA. www.sundial-theatre.co.uk
1 APRIL
Billy Salisbury has been performing at festivals since 2008, working his way up from being a solo singer-songwriter playing on small marquee stages, to
now having a full band of incredible musicians and playing main stages at some of the UK’s best independent festivals. The music is best described as politically-driven acoustic roots reggae folk-hop, with feel-good vibes and a sly sense of humour. 8pm. £18£22. The Subscription Rooms, George Street, Stroud, GL5 1AE. www.thesubrooms.co.uk
1-2 APRIL MODEL
St. Margaret’s Hall, Coniston Road, off Windermere Road, Hatherley, Cheltenham GL51 3NU. Layouts, refreshments, trade support, disabled access, children’s ‘drive yourself’ Thomas. 10am-5pm. Raising funds for Rachel’s Fight For Life as seen on BBC Midlands Today TV. Full details at www.cheltmodrail.org.uk
2 APRIL
There will be a stunning display of Spring bulbs, flowers and pot plants, with plants for sale from local nurseries. Many other stalls. Admission £2.50, children free. 12.30-3.30pm. Pittville Pump Room, East Approach Drive, Cheltenham GL52 3JE.
15 APRIL
If you would like to play more bowls next season then you are welcome to come along to our first 2023 Open Day. Gloucester Spa Bowling Club play midweek and weekend friendlies plus compete in several local Leagues. For more information please ring Steve Morgan on 01452 520534. Beginners of all ages are also very welcome!
19 APRIL
GREASE
Cirencester College Performing Arts Department Presents: GREASE. After a whirlwind summer romance, leatherclad greaser Danny and girl-next-door
Sandy are unexpectedly reunited when she transfers to Rydell High for senior year. But can they survive the trials and tribulations of teenage life and find true love once more? 7.30pm. £7-£10. Sundial Theatre, Stroud Road, Cirencester, GL7 1XA. www.sundialtheatre.co.uk
28 APRIL
TAKE A CHANCE ON US
Put on your platform boots and funky suits or just a boa, and have a night of ABBA madness!! A fantastic live show that celebrates the music of ABBA through a fully live six-piece band, voiceovers, costume changes, choreographed dance routines, and light show. Lots of audience participation and all the favourite ABBA Hits!
7.30pm. £20. 01452 503050. Gloucester Guildhall, 23 Eastgate Street, GL1 1NS. gloucesterguildhall.co.uk
Win tickets for this performance at thelocalanswer.co.uk/competitions.aspx MAY – AUGUST 2023
WORLD-CLASS
Enjoy world-class opera in the beautiful surroundings of the Cotswolds at Longborough Festival Opera – a 500seat theatre overlooking stunning views. 2023 includes: Wagner’s Götterdämmerung, Donizetti’s L’elisir d’amore (The Elixir of Love), Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo, and Purcell’s The Fairy Queen. Bring a picnic for the long interval or book a table in the exclusive on-site restaurant. Book online at LFO.org.uk
21 MAY
WELLCHILD’S MALVERNS END TO END CHALLENGE
Take on this 11-mile trek over the Malvern Hills, through stunning woodland and beautiful moors with England’s best views. Your £30 entry will support seriously ill children nationally. Visit WellChild.org.uk to learn more. Dogs welcome.
When I presented my budget to the county’s Police and Crime Panel, I was pleased that a cross-party grouping of experienced councillors and independent members unanimously supported my proposals to strengthen the Constabulary. I was able to report that we had funded
plans to increase the size of the force by over 300 officers, Police Community Support Officers and police staff – most of them already in place, the balance recruited by the summer. I also plan to recruit around 200 more volunteer Special Constables and 100 Volunteer Police Community Support Officers.
We also have over 60 people supporting victims of crime, and youth groups helping to divert youngsters from the possibility of becoming involved in crime.
These increases have been possible due to a combination of sources – extra funding from the Home Office, your hard earned council tax contributions and my team’s success in bidding for financial support from a range of Government outlets. Indeed, in securing over £3M from the Safer Streets initiative, we have outperformed most other forces, acquiring money to tackle anti-social behaviour, male violence against women and girls, and rural crime.
The Chief Constable and I continue to work on a new operating model for the Constabulary, based on an assessment of where crime and police demand are coming from – something which has changed substantially in recent years. The force is working hard to improve its understanding
and recording of all crime incidents, reassessing its ability to prevent crimes at source and capacity to cope with 999 calls.
Our force control room, for most the first point of contact with the police, is now performing better, having benefited from substantial investment in extra call handlers and new technology.
In January, our average answer time for 999 calls was 9 seconds (one second inside the national target), and 101 non-emergency calls answered in 2 minutes 40 seconds (my target is 2 minutes) – our best figures in 2 years.
Still more to do, but we are starting to see significant improvements in effectiveness across the Constabulary, all tangible results of the extra investment from you, the tax payer.
Chris NelsonI went badger watching once, as a teenager with my Dad. It was a warm evening and I hopped out of the car wearing my favourite denim shorts and was immediately set upon by wise adults with armfuls of bug spray.
I was grateful for that repellent as we hunkered down in the woods with the sun dipping and the biting insects coming to inspect their visitors. After a while we were rewarded with black noses sniffing the summer air, followed by those unmistakable humbug faces as the family came out for their evening antics.
Seeing badgers felt surreal. They are one of our iconic woodland creatures, but are rarely seen by most of us. As a result, seeing them in their natural habitat felt almost fantasy-like, as though I’d entered a children’s book.
But although sightings are unusual (or at least they are if you’re a town dweller like me), badgers are very active outside the sett; socialising,
playing and foraging. They may travel a mile to find food, eating a wide variety of plants and animals. Earthworms make up to 80% of their diet –they can eat several hundred in one night, frustrating many a gardener who’s woken to a constellation of holes dug in their lawn.
They also eat fruits, cereals and insects. Their long claws and strong sense of smell allow them to locate the nests of small mammals including mice, rats and rabbits, and they are hedgehogs’ main natural predator. They can also eat wasp and bee nests, their thick hair and skin protecting them from stings.
Apart from holes in the lawn, a telltale sign that badgers live close by is the presence of their toilets, or latrines. Being clean animals, they like to do their
business in designated places. These shallow pits can be found near sett entrances and food sources, and are used to mark territory. You might spot badger tracks close by, recognisable by having five evenly spaced toes, unlike dogs which have four.
The setts themselves can emerge from large mounds of soil. I know one which is surrounded by bright orange sandy mounds on top of the usual topsoil, as the badgers dig out a completely different type of earth from a meter or more below.
If you’d like to see badgers, you are best going out on a spring or summer evening. Arrive at the sett (keeping your distance and not disturbing the environment) an hour before sunset and settle in. Be still and silent, and if you’re lucky, you might even see the cubs playing when they emerge at dusk. Don’t forget the insect repellent!
March is a lovely month with all the promise of spring, and sometimes a feel of summer!
While the sun may be shining, don’t be fooled into planting out tender bedding plants and other seedlings that you have been nursing; it is quite possible for a cold snap to happen and you would lose everything. Instead, be patient, gradually transfer things from window sills to a cold-frame and get ready with fleece to insulate should the worst happen.
Sow your outdoor tomato seeds now, indoors. Don’t plant too many, but a few extra can always be swapped with friends and neighbours.
It is time to plant chitted potato tubers (traditionally a job for Good Friday). Don’t do it until the soil has had a chance to warm up. Sandy soils warm up more quickly than clay ones. The chitted tubers need to be planted about 10cm deep, rose end up.
They can be planted either in a drill or in individual holes. They will need earthing up when the shoots are 20-25cm tall, or you can cover the soil with black plastic sheeting and plant through this, which excludes the light and the weeds. Early potatoes will be ready to lift in about 13 weeks. March is also a good time to lift, divide and replant clumps of chives into a sunny border. They are so pretty when in
flower, but keep trimming and use to flavour many dishes. You can also sow chervil, dill, fennel and parsley outdoors. There was an old wives’ tale that only the head of the household can germinate parsley seeds successfully –mine germinate fine, so it must be true!
When the weather is not conducive to gardening outside, take the opportunity to look at your houseplants. It is a good time to pot them on if they have outgrown their container, and as it is the start of the growing season.
Make sure the root-ball is thoroughly moist before removing it from the pot and put it into another just one size up with fresh compost. Water well but don’t feed for about four weeks, and keep the plant out of direct sunlight. In a couple of months it can be put outside for a summer treat, but don’t put it in direct sunshine.
Having a spring clean will freshen things up, and giving a room a lick of paint can make a bit of a difference. However, choosing the right colour or colours for your walls and fabrics is key to creating the right mood for you. At Interior Needs we can advise, design and supply everything you need for complete refurbishment projects or to help update your existing decor.
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As I write this in the depths of the English winter I am preparing to fly to Australia. When I am back, spring will be here and I am already thinking of what I will need to do to freshen up my home to embrace the new season. Follow my tips to bring a springtime feel to your home.
One of the easiest ways to add a springtime feel to your interior is to fill it with fresh spring flowers, and there is so much choice at this time of year. Add some cheerful seasonal colour by filling painted pottery jugs or vintage charity shop finds with single-coloured tulips or bright yolk-coloured daffodils. Regular readers of this column will know I love big bowls planted with paperwhite narcissi or white hyacinths; they have such a gorgeous scent.
There is nothing like a new coat of paint to freshen up a room. Picking up the wellness theme, warm and restful natural hues are trending for SS23.
Check out Dulux’s new Wild Wonder shade. Pair with soft lavender, ochre or green. For a bolder modern look, add a bright pop of colour to a scheme by painting the skirting in vibrant Magenta pink –Pantone’s colour of the year.
Create a stunning feature wall with a bold botanical printed wallpaper, think Divine Savages’ Little Botanize in Palm Green or William Morris’ Pimpernel in a new leafy green and buttery yellow colourway.
Another easy way to update your decor is to swap out curtains, cushions and throws. Search out floral patterned fabrics in uplifting colours, use lighter materials like linen or cotton, and mix and match prints for a stylish contemporary look.
Why not switch up a tired old lampshade for one with a pretty patterned shade? Pooky is my go-to brand for lighting and I love Alice Palmer’s candystriped pleated shades.
Style a spring tablescape
Spring is a time for entertaining family and friends so why not invest in some new tableware? Soft green or blue with white always looks lovely in spring and summer. I love a gingham tablecloth; pair it with raffia mats, and bright colourful plates and glasses.
Always have fresh flowers on the table. I put little blue grape hyacinths and narcissi into mini glass milk bottles. Check out the pretty purple, pink and orange bud vases at Oliver Bonas.
At this time of the year, the new spring/summer home collections are hitting the stores. Grab the opportunity to pick up something new – perhaps a fun bunny planter from Anthropologie, an on-trend bobbin lamp or photo frame from Oliver Bonas, or maybe a beautiful patterned cushion from Next’s new range.
Give your home a joyful refresh and a springlike feel, ready for the sunnier months to come.
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National Hunt racing’s answer to the football World Cup is just around the corner.
Okay, so it’s not quite the same – thankfully the four-day Cheltenham Festival takes place every year! – but it’s an analogy readily accepted by Robert Thornton, a top jockey of the recent past.
Thornton, a keen Cheltenham Town football fan, rode more than 1,100 winners in a standout career, 16 of which came at the showpiece Cheltenham meeting in March.
Rather like the German footballer Miroslav Klose, who scored 16 goals across four World Cups, he often produced his very best on the biggest occasions.
“I’ll take that comparison,” laughed Thornton, who was up against the likes of Ruby Walsh, AP McCoy and Richard Johnson in their pomp for much of his career, a career that stretched over 20 years from 1995.
So what was the secret of his success at the Cheltenham Festival?
“It was always something we targeted,” said Thornton, who was number one jockey for many years for trainer Alan King, who is based just over the county border in Wiltshire.
“It was where we wanted to perform, we waited and waited for the meeting all season.
“It was always our priority, rightly or wrongly.”
Supporters of Thornton – he rode 30 Grade 1 winners so there were plenty – will say he was spot on, of course, with the King/ Thornton partnership realising 10 winners at the four-day extravaganza, including victories in the Queen Mother Champion Chase and Champion Hurdle with Voy Por Ustedes and Katchit, respectively.
“It was a good time, very good time,” said Thornton, who these days is Stud/Racing Manager for Apple Tree Stud just outside Stow-on-the-Wold. “It was obviously very enjoyable.”
Originally from Darlington, Thornton, now 44, moved to the Cotswolds as a teenager, landing his first job with celebrated trainer David Nicholson.
And his move to Gloucestershire was quite deliberate.
“The Cotswolds had that extra appeal because it was so close to Cheltenham Racecourse,” he said.
“Obviously working for David Nicholson was a big attraction but I was just a stone’s throw from Cheltenham.
“Cheltenham was the Mecca, all roads lead to Cheltenham.”
So what is it like to ride at the Cheltenham Festival, which this year runs from 14th-17th March?
“It’s incredible from the moment you get on the horse for the first race,” Thornton said.
“Walking out onto the racecourse, you can hear people shouting your name.
“Everyone wants to see the horses. Cantering down to the
start, everyone is excited and if you’re on one of the fancied horses there’s a wave of noise that follows you.
“When you start, there’s a huge roar and there’s another roar when you jump the first.”
And what about actually winning a race at the Festival?
“That’s indescribable,” said Thornton. “There’s no feeling like it. Winning any race at the Cheltenham Festival is so special.”
Thornton was just 18 when he won his first race at the meeting.
In fact, he won two in two because after steering King Lucifer to success in the Fulke Walwyn Kim Muir Challenge Cup, he won the Pertemps Final on Pharanear.
Both those horses were trained by David Nicholson and Thornton said: “The first win is always very special but I was very young, I didn’t really appreciate it.
“It took me another seven years to win at the Festival again and I made sure I appreciated it when I was older.”
Full story online.
Robert Thornton was a two-time Cheltenham Festival winner with Voy Por Ustedes, including the Queen Mother Champion Chase in 20071 Prizes are as stated and no cash or prize alternative will be offered. 2 Employees of The Local Answer and their families or households are not eligible to enter. 3 The first correct entry drawn at random after the closing date will win the prize as stated. 4 The winner will be notified by telephone after the closing date has passed. 5 The Editor’s decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into. 6 Entrants must be over 18 years, unless stated. 7 Proof of posting is not regarded as
proof of receipt of entry. 8 The Local Answer accepts no responsibility for the provision of the prize, which remains at all times the full responsibility of the prize donor(s). 9 By entering any competition you agree to have your name published in the next issue of The Local Answer should you be drawn as a winner of the prize. 10 By entering any competition you agree to have your details passed to a third party. 11 One entry per household.
– Friday 10th March 2023
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