southbristolvoice August 2018 No. 34
www.southbristolvoice.co.uk
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The best news in South Bristol by quite a long way
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Another year of delays at Temple Gate DRIVERS, cyclists and pedestrians face at least another year of delays and inconvenience after news that roadworks around Temple Gate will not be finished until late next summer. Work to remove the Temple Circus roundabout and simplify the complex junctions around Temple Meads station will now take until the summer of 2019, with resurfacing work expected to continue for weeks longer. It means the project will be a year over schedule – it was first expected to be completed by the autumn of 2018*. It’s claimed changing the roundabout system into a Continued on page 9
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• THE MAYOR: On the arena and high-rises 10-11 The Metrobus M2 route from Long Ashton is open – to cyclists to Page Nowhere go:3 Perretts Park was home to Owen Smith and Przemyslaw Maciejewski, pictured with friend Vince Randall, who helped them out That’s the message to traders in Bedminster STORY: Pages 4-5 Story: Page 3
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2 Paul Breeden Editor & publisher 07811 766072 paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk Ruth Drury Sales executive 07590 527664 sales@southbristolvoice.co.uk Editorial team: Beccy Golding, Alex Morss, Martin Powell & The Wicked Witch. Deliveries: Greg Champion
Intro
ARENA FACTS THERE’S no doubt that the arena is the biggest South Bristol-related problem on the mayor’s desk. That’s why when we met Marvin Rees for a lengthy interview, we spent most of the time talking about the pros and cons of a Temple Meads site for a music venue. The mayor is adamant that he will make a decision based on facts, not emotions. It’s striking, though, that many of the facts he presented weigh against a Temple Meads option. An arena on Arena Island will bring less jobs and investment than an alternative use, he says. A big venue will
You can find South Bristol Voice on Facebook and Twitter facebook.com/ southbristolvoice Twitter: @sbristolvoice Next month’s deadline for editorial and advertising is August 15th inevitably attract lots of cars, and where will they park, or wait to pick up concert-goers, he asks? And is a 12,000 seat venue big enough for the top tours these days? Mr Rees makes a good point when he says the main thing now is to decide if the arena should be at Temple Meads. It’s not a binary question of either the city centre or Filton, he says. But is his mind almost made up? Read our report (p10-11) and watch the video. • The SBV YouTube channel has several amateurishly filmed videos which are more or less watchable. As well as our interview with the mayor, see cabinet transport chief Mhairi Threlfall explain the Temple Meads roadworks, the odd music segment, and more: tinyurl.com/youtubeSBV
August 2018
How do I get in touch with ...
My councillor? By post: (all councillors) Brunel House, St George’s Road, Bristol BS1 5UY
Celia Phipps Labour, Bedminster By phone: 07469 413312 By email: Cllr.celia.phipps@bristol.gov.uk Mark Bradshaw Labour, Bedminster. By email: Cllr.mark. bradshaw@bristol.gov.uk By phone: 0117 353 3160 Stephen Clarke Green, Southville By email: Cllr.stephen.clarke@ bristol.gov.uk Charlie Bolton Green, Southville By phone: 07884 736111 By email: Cllr.charlie.bolton@bristol.gov.uk
USEFUL NUMBERS Bristol City Council www.bristol.gov.uk 0117 922 2000 Waste, roads 0117 922 2100 Pest control and dog wardens 0117 922 2500 Housing benefit 0117 922 2300 Social services 0117 922 2900 Police Inquiries 101 Emergency 999
Fire Inquiries 0117 926 2061 Emergency 999 Action Greater Bedminster Forum for the public, councillors and community groups. Next meeting: TBA facebook.com/Action Greater Bedminster
My MP? Karin Smyth MP By email: karin.smyth.mp@ parliament.uk By post: Karin Smyth MP, House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA By phone: 0117 953 3575 In person: A surgery will be held on Friday June 8 and 22. Call 0117 953 3575 for an appointment.
EDITOR’S NOTE: South Bristol Voice is independent. We cannot take responsibility for content or accuracy of adverts, and it is advertisers’ responsibility to conform to all relevant legislation. We strive to conform to the NUJ Code of Conduct for journalists: • nuj.org.uk/about/nuj-code Feedback is welcomed: call editor Paul Breeden on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk. All stories and pictures are copyright of South Bristol Voice (unless otherwise stated) and may not be reproduced without permission in this or any other plane of the multiverse. South Bristol Voice Ltd | 18 Lilymead Avenue, Bristol BS4 2BX
August 2018
n NEWS Top-flight gym to open in former gallery
southbristolvoice
A HISTORIC Bedminster building which was once the Wills Tobacco staff theatre, then the town library, and more recently the Grant Bradley art gallery, is to open in the early autumn as a gym. To be known
PLANNERS have turned down a planning application for a large digital advertising hoarding in Winterstoke Road – cheering campaigners who have been trying to have the LED signs outlawed. Officials said putting up the 6m by 3m sign at 5 Winterstoke Road, where it would be seen by traffic approaching the Parson Street gyratory, would be an “incongruous, visually intrusive addition to the townscape”. Campaigners at Adblock
as the Luxe Fitness Club, it will be led by Bristol Olympian Allyn Condon. Relay sprinter Allyn said the new gym will employ six staff and 12 personal trainers. The Grade II-listed building is being restored “to its Victorian glory”.
Bristol, led by Southville resident Nicola Skinner, would like the new LED displays banned from Bristol. They say they consume too much energy and are a distraction to drivers, as the adverts change every 10 seconds. However, the Winterstoke Road plan was turned down partly because the static advertisement which is already there does not have planning permission. Attention is now turning to another planning application for a digital hoarding at West Street,
also near the Parson Street roundabout. Ellie Freeman, chair of community group Action Greater Bedminster, opposed the billboard as a distraction to road users near the busy junction. In addition, billboards often advertise unhealthy products such as fast food, or show over-idealised images of women, she said. Way Out West, the West Street community group, also opposes the new hoarding.
HBH star at the Balloon Fiesta FRESH from appearing on national TV, the enterprising volunteers at Help Bristol’s Homeless will have a central position at the 40th Bristol International Balloon Fiesta from August 9-12 (see pages 24-25). Jasper Thompson and supporters will be showing off one of the containers they have made into a temporary home, at the Ashton Court showground. Since Jasper appeared on BBC1’s The One Show, support is starting to snowball, with John Lewis and builders’ merchant Selco the latest to offer help. bristolballoonfiesta.co.uk
Upfest update THE VOICE is being printed before Upfest hits the streets from July 28-30. So we can’t include a report in this edition – but we will have news and pictures in the September issue.
Bringing High Street travel direct to you Introducing Bedminster’s local, independent travel service:
AT LEAST one part of the Metrobus route from Long Ashton is now open – the cycle and footpath alongside it. Metrobus buses will start using the M2 guided busway route through Ashton Vale and Southville in September, the Voice understands. Meanwhile the cycleway is open – but users have been warned to watch out for other traffic. First Bus is using the route to train drivers, while work is still going on to install iPoint ticket terminals at every stop. The route runs from Long
Ashton Park & Ride to Spike Island and connects to other walking and cycling paths including Festival Way, the Avon Cycle Trail and new paths on the • European Beach Breaks South Bristol Link. • Caribbean Metrobus asks users not to cross the busway except when • Cruising using the crossing points. • Flights It asks people to pay attention to buses on the busway, as buses • Accommodation cannot steer on the guided • City Breaks sections. And it requests users to follow • Round The World Adventures any signs that are in place when • UK Weekend Breaks the walking and cycling path is being used to service the busway. High Bringing Street travel direct to you • Gap Year Travel travelwest.info Introducing Bedminster’s brand new independent travel service:
Green gym
Garage is open!
DO YOU want to get fitter but find exercise boring? Volunteers at the Northern Slopes Initiative have won £1,200 in Lottery cash for Green Gym, a group which ‘works out’ by clearing paths and other work. The money paid for tools such as scythes and loppers. The group meets at 10am every Thursday next to 105 Wedmore Vale. Details on 07932 368172. northern-slopes-initiative.co.uk
To advertise, contact sales@southbristolvoice.co.uk or Ruth on 07590 527664
Winterstoke LED sign refused but what about West Street?
Metrobus cycle path open
That’s music to my ears!
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Charlotte Hingston Travel Counsellors
• European Beach Breaks
• Australia and New Zealand Charlottespecialist Hingston Travel Counsellors
Unlike a normal High Street agency, Charlotte Hingston Travel Counsellors likes to make things a little more personal. We believe travel should be about the experience you want.
Fully ATOL protected, with 24-hour assistance. Whether WINTERSTOKE Garage in that be a family fun holiday in Spain, cruising the Caribbean sea or • Flights experiencing the bustling cities of South East Asia, your trip should be about you. • Accommodation Luckwell Road is open for Email charlotte.hingston We’re an independently owned and operated business right here in the heart of • City Breaks business, despite the impression South Bristol and with 15 years experience in the travel industry we can plan your @travelcounsellors.com • Round The World Adventures holiday from start to finish. What’s more we bring the agency to you! We offer face given theBreaks June issuetoofface the • UKin Weekend visits either at your home or the local coffee Phone 829 shop 867to plan your next • GapWe Year Travel Voice. wrongly saidadventure. the That way we can take 07982 the time to make sure your trip is exactly as you • Sporting Trips want it down to the last detail. 0117 405 7570 garage had shut in advance of an Whatever your plans, we expected housing development can arrange a stress-free from start to finish. on the former Kellawaybreak builder’s Fully ATOL protected, with 24 for hour assistance. merchant site. We’re sorry the error and happy to set the record Email charlotte.hingston@ straight – the garage istravelcounsellors.com open for Phone 07982 829 867 repairs, serving and MOTs.0117 405 7570 • Caribbean • Cruising
Unlike a normal High Street agency, Charlotte Hingston Travel Counsellors likes to make things a little more personal. Whether that be a family fun holiday in Spain, cruising the Caribbean sea or experiencing the bustling cities of South East Asia, your trip should be about you. We’re an independently owned and operated business right here in the heart of South Bristol and with 15 years experience in the travel industry we can plan your holiday from start to finish. What’s more we bring the agency to you! We offer face to face visits to plan your next adventure. That way we can take the time to make sure your trip is exactly as you want it.
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
August 2018
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n NEWS WE’RE BACKING BEDMINArt shop for We’re Backing Bedminster – your views LAST month the Voice good quality women’s clothing. should you venture through independents announced a campaign Although cheaply-made walkway adjoining the old Wills ANOTHER quirky independent trader has opened on North Street. Alice Astbury, who describes herself as “a maker with a love of anything odd”, is behind Trylla. Alice has a pottery in the basement and will be selling handmade pieces she’s made herself as well as work by other local artists. The kiln is available for rent to other artists. There will also be the chance to learn art and craft skills in small groups at the back of the shop or in the ceramics studio at 8 North Street. Facebook @tryllashop
Search for acts
A COMPETITION to find the UK’s best unsigned music acts is coming to South Bristol. Open Mic UK is holding auditions at the SouthBank Club in Dean Lane, Southville, on Saturday September 15. Singers, songwriters, rappers and vocal groups of all ages are welcome. Acts will audition in front of experienced music industry judges. The UK winner will record an album and video. openmicuk.co.uk
New director TOBACCO Factory theatres has a new executive director, Mary Caws. Mary will share the leadership of the North Street venue with artistic director Mike Tweddle. The theatre boasts average attendance of 85 per cent and is preparing to open a new studio venue in October.
on the need for change to make Bedminster a more prosperous place for traders and the community. Here are some of your views ...
• YES, IT is sad to lose Bon Marché and particularly Argos from East Street. However, if BS3 is as you say “Bristol’s second biggest shopping area after the city centre”, then it’s also good to make way for a wider range of independent shops as well as the existing chains. Although BS3 is bursting with fantastic independent cafes and food outlets, it doesn’t have one single independent shop selling
clothes are available at Asda and Peacocks, and preloved bargains can be found in our zillion charity shops, until BS3 has at least one good indie clothing shop, it can’t cater to local women’s shopping needs in the same way as Gloucester Road, Clifton Village, Park Street and – if that’s your bag – Cabot Circus. Rina Vergano, Southville • YOUR review concerning East Street, Bedminster, unfortunately does not reflect the East St I am familiar with, the one that I avoid if possible with its rough sleepers, beggars, and various undesirables; add to this the stench of urine
building. Alan Crabb, Bedminster • WALK from the London Inn end of East Street to Bedminster bridge – what a mess. Outside Asda’s main entrance has got to be the worst bit – litter, cigarette ends everywhere, and all thrown into the flower beds despite litter bins nearby. Why aren’t more street cleaners despatched to Bedminster instead of Broadmead and Cabot Circus? If the litter police visit Bedminster and issue a few fines, perhaps that will deter a few people. Johnny B Once a proud resident, BS3
Retailers urged to vote to stick together to thrive TRADERS in Bedminster are being urged to vote to back the town’s Business Improvement District – with a promise it will be good for all of them. It’s the second time this year retailers have been balloted on whether they want the BID. For the past five years, a two per cent levy sliced off traders’ business rates has released about £600,000 for the Bedminster Town Team to spend improving and promoting the area. Town team manager George Grace is sure the efforts have made a difference – most visibly
Personal Assistants/Carers wanted For young independent disabled lady in the Whitchurch area. I require help with personal care, daily living including cooking and domestic tasks, and travel to appointments and social activities. An interest in animals preferred. Able to drive an automatic car; no more than 3 points on licence. Pay: £10.00 per hour, paid four weekly. Looking for someone who can work Monday evening, Wednesday morning, plus 8-hour shifts Saturday and Sunday. Some flexibility required – hours and holiday cover to be discussed at interview. For an application form call WECIL Ltd on 0117 947 9911 and quote ref. BFW17785
by reducing the number of empty shops. “If we look at the hard evidence, the best measure is the number of vacant units in the Bedminster shopping area, which the city council tells us has reduced by 34 per cent. “I like to think that we have been partly responsible for that,” he told the Voice. In addition the Town Team has organised a host of activities, from Christmas shopping promotions to supporting the two most popular street events in South Bristol – the street art festival Upfest, and the Winter Lantern Parade. Mr Grace believes the vast majority of traders are behind the BID – 70 per cent voted in favour in a poll held in the spring. However, the casting vote was held by Asda – and without telling anyone, it voted against. The poll was weighted according to rateable value, and Asda is so much bigger than any other trader in BS3 that its vote outweighed the majority in favour. Asda voted ‘no’ in spite of the fact that it was receiving an 80 per cent discount on its
contribution to the BID. Now the voting area has been redrawn to exclude Asda. Mr Grace is fairly confident that this time, businesses will vote to keep the BID going. “We did plenty of consultation to see if it was appropriate to go again and it was very positive,” he said. A Town Team presentation, which is being sent to every business, promises more action in the next five years – to promote the shopping area, boost footfall, fund street improvements and coordinate efforts to fight crime. Simon Dicken, chair of the BID and manager of Wilko in East Street, said retailers need to stick together more than ever. “With ... the growing impact of the internet, the growth of out-of-town retailing (Cribbs is planning to increase by 50 per cent) and economic uncertainty, it is clear the challenges for traditional retail are very serious indeed,” he said.
August 2018
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n NEWS THE BEDMINSTER Lanterns parade, which was threatened when Asda pulled out of helping to fund it, has been saved. The area’s biggest business may not have wanted to support the Lanterns, but locals did – they smashed a target of £3,800 by several hundred pounds. More than 120 people signed up to a Fundsurfer appeal,
pledging money to buy Lanternrelated rewards. Goodies ranged from the chance to have your name on one of the Lanterns in the December parade – price £10 – to coffee and cake at the Milk Shed café for £8. Other pledges included £30 for a tour of the Heart radio
studios, a £25 voucher for Rare butchers in North Street, and £200 to be a parade sponsor. The total raised was £4,300 – more the enough to allow planning to start. Though the parade takes place in December, the funds have to be in place in July. Schools start work on their
lanterns in the new term from September, and artists need to be booked to help the children. A message on the Lanterns Facebook page showed how delighted the organisers are: “Thank you again for being so brilliant. Go ahead and give yourself a high five.”
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departments such as parks, and outside agencies such as the police, local NHS, Bristol Waste, and the Bedminster Business Improvement District.” So far there have been almost 20 responses. The survey can be filled in online and copies have been taken to many local venues. Public meetings to discuss the community plan are expected in September. AGB has been involved in discussions about how to spend CIL, or community infrastructure levy, from developers. So far the only project to receive backing in Bedminster is for new planters in the Chessels. tinyurl.com/bedsplan
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VOTING BALLOT papers go out to traders in Bedminster on August 16. They must be returned by September 13. If the vote is positive, the BID team will officially restart on November 1. bedminster.org.uk/business
To advertise, contact sales@southbristolvoice.co.uk or Ruth on 07590 527664
At least we know the Lanterns are safe!
There’s still time to say what you want for Bedminster WHAT should be the priorities for Bedminster as a community? There’s still time to comment on the community plan being drawn up by Action Greater Bedminster (AGB). The aim is to produce a blueprint that shapes future developments in Greater Bedminster. AGB says: “Policies might be reducing litter and waste, improving our parks and green spaces, supporting local retailers, dealing with broken pavements, and ensuring planning proposals are of high quality and relevant to local needs.” Proposals can then be reviewed against the policies in the plan. AGB says: “It will contain specific policies to carry out the community’s goals, as identified through this consultation, and will be used in discussions with councillors, city council
WE’RE BACKING BEDMINSTER
David Phillips Opticians, established 1984
230 North Street BS3 1JD
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Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
August 2018
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n NEWS
August 2018
southbristolvoice in Bristol The Best UK Stand Up Comedy
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‘Mr Hunt - we would like our money back!’ says MP MP KARIN Smyth told the then health secretary: “Mr Hunt - we would like our money back!” over the way NHS buildings are run from Whitehall. “Put simply, poor planning and costly bureaucracy are endangering local services like the Knowle West health centre, and stunting the growth of South Bristol Community Hospital,” the Bristol South Labour MP said.
Speaking at a debate she called in Westminster Hall on July 4, she addressed her appeal to long-serving health secretary Jeremy Hunt – shortly before the Cabinet reshuffle changed his role to foreign secretary. Ms Smyth believes that Tory health reforms are endangering NHS services in South Bristol. A 20 per cent stake in South Bristol hospital used to be held
Chance to get a virtual job
‘Wake up to Universal Credit before it’s too late’ warning
NEW COURSES in computer gaming are on offer on South Bristol’s doorstep. A diploma in Games VR and VFX (virtual reality and and visual effects) will run from September at the Engine Shed, Temple Meads. The new course, run by post-16 education provider boomsatsuma, promises to use industry-standard equipment and an experienced team of professionals. Creative director of boomsatsuma, Mark Curtis, said: “There is a whole world of creative roles associated with the gaming industry now and the demand will only grow, particularly in the world of VR.” The courses are free to join. Students ideally will have a C or above in English and Maths GCSEs. They may be able to take these exams while studying for the diploma. Creativity and a passion for the gaming industry are important, say organisers. boomsatsuma.education/ gamesvrandvfx
I
MANY people who are going to be affected by the rollout of Universal Credit across South Bristol don’t realise the impact it could have on their finances. A host of community groups and official bodies have offered claimants help getting to grips with the new benefit system, which went live in South Bristol in early June – but so far few people are seeking help. Officials fear that many people who need to apply for Universal Credit are worried about how to do it but are sticking their heads in the sand and won’t do anything until desperate. New claimants won’t receive any money for five or six weeks – which means it’s important to claim as soon as possible. Universal Credit rolls up several benefits including Jobseekers Allowance and Housing Benefit. All new claimants in South Bristol have
by the old Bristol South West primary care trust (PCT). That PCT has now been abolished – meaning the hospital building is now owned 40 per cent by Whitehall. Services at the £54 million hospital in Hengrove, opened in 2012, include a minor injuries unit, GP care, day surgery, stroke rehabilitation, cancer clinics and more. It won a CQC rating of
to apply for it, and existing claimants whose circumstances change may be transferred too. People have to apply online, using a computer. Payments are made every month, not every week or fortnight. And money has to be paid into a bank account, which some people don’t have. Organisations such as The Park community centre in Knowle, and Knowle West Health Park have been offering advice sessions, telling people how they can get online, and how to open a basic bank account. But so far very few people have signed up to get advice. “Some people are just pretending that it’s not happening to them,”Heather Williams, chief executive of Knowle West Health Park, told a gathering of community groups who are working on the issue. Problems can arise because people may not realise that when
Outstanding in 2017, but Ms Smyth says growth is too slow. It’s in no-one’s real interests to put the hospital at the core of local health service thinking, she told the Voice. “The lack of leadership and accountability is draining millions of pounds from the local health economy, while making it impossible to get problems fixed or questions answered,” she said.
they receive the benefit it may include money for their rent, which was previously paid direct to their landlords. “I have heard some horror stories from other areas, of people who weren’t aware of this, thought it looked like a lot of money, and just spent it,” said Ian McIntyre, the Universal Credit and welfare reform manager at Bristol city council. • Your MP: Page 46
WHAT CAN I DO? • You can get a loan to manage during the first month. But this has to be paid back over a year. • You can use a computer at any library, the Citizen Service Point at 100 Temple Street, or at many community venues such as The Park centre in Daventry Road, Knowle. There’s a list here, plus more help: bristol.gov.uk/universalcredit
ASK A VET: Should I be cleaning my dog’s ears?
DEALLY you should check your dog’s ears weekly. Inside the ear canal is an ideal place for bugs to grow, and ear infections can develop quickly. If your dog’s ears are red, itchy, smelly or squelchy then it’s time to see the vet. But if they are just waxy, then giving them a good clean can prevent an infection from developing. Dogs that love to swim, have floppy ears or suffer with allergies will benefit from regular ear cleaning. So how do we do it? You will need ear cleaner (available from your
vet), some damp cotton wool and possibly someone to help you. Flip your dog’s ear over so you can see the inside clearly. Gently wipe away any dirt or wax with a piece of damp cotton wool. Insert the nozzle of the ear cleaner into the ear canal and squeeze gently until the cleaner overflows out of the ear. Don’t push the nozzle in too far. Flip their ear back, and massage the base of the ear to allow the cleaner to get to work in the ear canal. Most dogs enjoy this bit, but
it can cause them to shake their head and send the cleaner flying out! Wipe away any excess ear cleaner with a piece of damp cotton wool, and apply any ear drops that have been prescribed. Important notes Do not use cotton buds as there is a risk of putting them too far in to the ear canal, causing damage. If you notice any unusual discharge, see your vet. If your dog is not happy with you cleaning their ears, then don’t struggle. There are always qualified nurses in
UK COMEDY TOURS - AUTUMN 2018
Brand New Shows From The Best Touring Comedy Acts In The UK
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Fresh off the back of her new BBC Radio 4 series (Appisodes), multi-award winning comedian Felicity Ward embarks on her second nationwide tour. "Sharp, upbeat and self-mocking" The Guardian
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SLOSS practices that are able to help. If you would like advice, speak to your vet practice or call Ashton Veterinary Surgery on 01275 832410.
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August 2018
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n NEWS
Shoppers hand back the plastic wrapping SHOPPERS in South Bristol gave their backing to campaigners against plastic packaging, in the latest peaceful protest in a movement that has spread around the world. Around a dozen activists gathered outside Lidl in Sheene Road, Bedminster on July 9 – after gaining permission from the store – to urge shoppers to remove all the plastic wrapping they thought was unnecessary. All the shoppers the Voice spoke to were in favour of the campaign. “I think this is a great idea,” said Lydia Bannon of Bedminster. “I think any way we can reduce the amount of plastic
THE BROADWALK CENTRE Wrap banned: Grant and Katrina Taylor sign a petition against unneeded plastic packing at Lidl in Bedminster with Green councillor Martin Fodor, right
packaging is great. It sends a message to the shops that we don’t want this.” Like many shoppers, she intends to visit a shop where she can buy refills of cleaning
PLASTIC-FREE SHOPPING Where you can buy food and household goods without plastic • Fox & West 172 Wells Road, Totterdown foxandwest.co.uk • Chi Wholefoods Chapel Court,
products and buy food loose (see panel). Keiran Fox of Marksbury Road was alerted to plastic pollution of the oceans by David Attenborough’s Blue Planet. He Chapel Street, St Philip’s chiwholefoods.co.uk • Zero Green 12 North Street, Bedminster zerogreenbristol.co.uk • Better Food Company Gaol Ferry Steps, Wapping Wharf betterfood.co.uk
was tearing wrappers off the fruit and veg he had bought. “I can do without it – you can always wash it afterwards,” he said. “Lidl is convenient, the quality is good and the prices are low,” he said, but added: “Part of me thinks I should get more things from a greengrocer, and it’s probably cheaper.” Grant Taylor of Bedminster said he was also a fan of Lidl – but he would consider using another supermarket that made efforts to get rid of plastic. Organiser Alex Morss was delighted with the turnout. More than 200 people signed a petition, and a trolley was filled with the unneeded plastic – only half of which can be recycled locally. The Plastic Attacks started in Bristol and Keynsham earlier this summer led by Alex, who is also the Voice’s nature writer, and local campaigners. The idea has been picked up around the world – and there are plans to hold a co-ordinated action worldwide on World Clean-Up Day, September 15. Facebook: One by One Conservation
Don’t miss your chance to have a direct impact on local health services Free event: Health, wellbeing, community – and you • Work with us on exciting ways we can make a bigger impact. • Help us challenge barriers so our services work for everyone. • Revolutionise the way local people shape what we do and contribute directly to our five-year strategy. • Doing some incredible work in the voluntary sector? Come and shout about it. We want to work together so our community thrives. • Ask challenging questions and offer ideas about how to do things better. • When & where? 10 Sept, 12.30-4.30pm, The Station, Silver Street BS1 2AG. Free lunch provided. Bristol Community Health is a not-for-profit social enterprise providing NHS community healthcare services to local people. These include diabetes care, physiotherapy, community nursing, children’s therapies, health visiting, tackling loneliness and more. www.briscomhealth.org.uk
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Britain’s greenest school! VICTORIA Park primary school has added to its green credentials by winning the national Sustainable Schools Award. The school won the prestigious prize from the Times Educational Supplement for making green living a daily part of school life. Though the school sits on a triangular concrete site sandwiched next to St John’s Lane, it crams in a garden and a pond. Pupils hold a weekly shoe swap which raises money for bird
Pupils at Victoria Park primary on a regular litter patrol. The TES judges said: “Victoria Park is an amazing sustainable school. It takes a whole-school approach, including its values, pupil voice and wellbeing – not just a few activities.”
feeders, bringing blackbirds and blue tits to their outdoor classroom. Each class has an Eco Rep, and a Green Team of pupils writes a newsletter with sustainability tips. Other activities include a book exchange for adults, a Switch Off Fortnight campaign and a Waste Week. Activities are led by the head, Jack Lacey, and teacher Eleanor Walker, who has won the WWF Green Ambassador award.
‘Sorry’ as Temple Gate works to last at least another year Continued from page 1 crossroads (pictured) will speed up traffic – especially vehicles coming south on Temple Way – and make life easier for cyclists and pedestrians using the Brunel Mile route from Millennium Square to Temple Meads station. Bristol city council has apologised for the delays, saying they are due to the discovery of many uncharted utility pipes underground. This meant the rigid pipework which had been made for the heating network had to be remade, lengthening the delays. Cllr Mhairi Threlfall, cabinet member for transport, said, “We are very sorry this has happened but we are working very closely with the contractor to make the delays as short as possible.” Also uncovered were several buried cellars, thought to date from the Victorian era. Nothing of archeological interest was found, and the cellars were photographed and reburied. You can see Cllr Mhairi
WHAT YOU SAID Comments to SBV on Facebook: ‘Being a pedestrian and a cyclist, getting to work every day has been an utter nightmare. You never quite know which path/ pavement/ route/ crossing is going to be open.’ ‘I have lost count of how many hours I have lost via Temple Meads over the past year.’
Far off: How the junction will look
‘We should have a bridge over the road carrying traffic one way only. Oh wait! Didn’t we have this?’
Threlfall explaining the changes – and discussing some of the other proposals for the Temple Meads area – on our video: youtube/32x-Akz6XD0 She also invites public views on what should be built in the area – for example, on the site occupied by the derelict Grosvenor hotel (which could be compulsorily purchased), and the car park known as Plot 6 along
the side of Temple Meads station, next to the Friary. * Cllr Threlfall stretched the timetable somewhat, stating that the work started last autumn (it actually began on June 26, 2017) and was expected to finish in winter 2018 (it wasn’t – the end date was given as autumn 2018). • More pictures of the new Temple Gate junction at Facebook: SouthBristolVoice
TEMPLE MEADS STATION A £200 MILLION makeover of Temple Meads station is being planned to allow for passenger numbers to double from 10m to 22m by 2030. A new entrance to provide access from the east of the city is planned, along with new developments in Temple Quarter. The Grade 1 listed Victorian building is almost the UK’s last
unimproved mainline station. Tim Bowles, mayor of the new West of England combined authority, has put £2m into a masterplan, involving Bristol city council and Network Rail. “A transformed station will give us a railway station fit for the 21st century, acting as a gateway to the West of England,” said Bristol mayor Marvin Rees.
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METROBUS THE SECOND Metrobus route, from Long Ashton to Temple Meads and the city centre, is expected to open in September. Adjustments to the out-ofalignment guided busway are complete, and testing has finished. Operator First Bus is now training drivers to work on the route, to be known as the M2.
A South Bristol underground may be on track BUILDING an underground route through South Bristol is a real possibility, says mayor Marvin Rees. A second feasibility study will report at New Year; if it’s positive, the plans will start to progress, he told the Voice in an interview (see pages 10-11). Three routes have been pencilled in – the most important being the route under South Bristol to lead to the airport. Not all of the route would be underground – but the first tunnel could be from Temple Meads, under Southville and Knowle, to emerge near the A38 on the way to the airport. “We have three provisional routes but the first is connecting Temple Meads out through Bristol south to the airport. That’s about connecting the airport as an area of high employment opportunity,” said Mr Rees. The airport has stressed the difficulty of connecting with areas where jobs are needed, he added. Has any investment been attracted to the scheme, estimated to cost £4 billion? Not yet, said Mr Rees, it’s too early for that, but there have been several offers from companies offering tunnelling technology and non-rail options including guided vehicles on rubber wheels. Importantly, the catchment area is big enough that there are enough customers to make the scheme pay, said Mr Rees. “Let’s see if it’s feasible,” he says. “If we can do it, we will be on the verge of unlocking a chapter change in the way we do transport around Bristol.”
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
August 2018
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n NEWS Lack of parking, too few seats and better alternatives for the site – all reasons why Marvin Rees may not back a Temple Meads arena
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HE ARENA debate is not an either-or question, says mayor Marvin Rees: we shouldn’t be asking whether to put it at Filton or Temple Meads. The important point is what is the best use of the island site, he told the Voice, in a wide-ranging video interview in which we focused on the arena. Mr Rees has been criticised for not backing a city centre arena after councillors on the scrutiny committee in June discovered contractor Buckingham was willing to build it on-budget at £122 million after all – months after it had been assumed that the cost had soared by ten of millions. Consultants KPMG had given Mr Rees a report saying a Temple Meads arena would be expensive and wouldn’t provide as many jobs as alternative uses – but failed to discover Buckingham’s cut-rate offer. Buckingham and the arena’s potential operator, Live Nation, told the scrutiny committee they had both improved their offers to the council last year. Mr Rees, though, is adamant that these offers weren’t put
THE MAYOR SPEAKS Watch the videos of the Voice’s interview with Marvin Rees – about the arena, tall buildings and his first two years as mayor – at tinyurl.com/ youtubeSBV
‘If we had built it six months ago, we would have built the most expensive arena in the UK’
The arena: Let’s ask the right clearly to the council in 2017. “Why wasn’t that presented to us? That is a good question,” he tells the Voice. The first question, he says, is whether a city centre arena is affordable. “If we had built it six months ago, we would have built the most expensive arena in the UK,” he says. Now, after Buckingham’s apparently cast-iron guarantee, he accepts the cost is affordable. The next question, he says, is whether it’s the best use of the land. The site has been known for some years as Arena Island; perhaps tellingly, Mr Rees refers to it as Temple Island. “Some people have tried to create this binary, good or evil debate, and it’s not,” he says. “We
have to grapple with the [KPMG] report which says that an arena would bring £350m of economic uplift and 650 jobs, whereas the alternative plan brings you £900m and over 2000 jobs. “If you are going to walk away from that, you have to … talk to the city about what you are going to do to make up that £500m and those 1,500 jobs.” But, asked the Voice, those alternative plans for the Island site – for a conference centre, hotel and housing – are a long way from reality, while the arena plan is drawn up and has planning permission. In fact, says Mr Rees, the people that are suggesting the alternative plans “are very credible organisations, have a
good relationship with government and have a track record of delivery”. Government departments are very supportive of the way the council is approaching the decision, he says, partly because of the reputation of these organisations. He also questions whether the arena is needed as a catalyst to regenerate the area – one of its major selling points when it was first planned. Now, though, there is soon to be a £300m new campus for the University of Bristol at Temple Meads, alongside a £200m revamp of the station itself. “The catalytic role of the arena is no longer there,” he says. But his criticisms don’t end here. “Is a 10,000-seat arena really
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southbristolvoice
THE ARENA, TALL BUILDINGS AND AMBITION FOR BRISTOL
‘The skyline of Bristol is going to change, that’s going to be inevitable’
questions, says the mayor big enough? Are we building an arena for the world as it was six years ago? Most places are expanding the size of their arenas now.” (The offer by developer YTL for a Filton arena is for a bigger, 16,000-seat venue. The Temple Meads plan was for 12,000 seats but has apparently been cut back – perhaps to save money.) The other big problem, the mayor says, is parking. “The modelling tells us you would have 3,500 cars coming into the city for a sellout event. That’s huge.” Parents will want to ferry their offspring to and from gigs, he says. Many South Bristol residents are also worried about parking. But in 2016 it was stated that
there would only be 20 sellout events at the arena each year, leading Totterdown’s Tresa community group to believe that the traffic impact of an arena could be less than for other, more intensive uses of the site. Mr Rees questioned that projection, saying he believed an operator would want as many sellout events as possible. “We don’t think you can do it without car parking [near the arena],” he says. Where? That’s a real challenge, he agrees. He says he won’t make easy political gains by jumping to a popular decision (councillors voted decisively for a Temple Meads arena earlier this year, and the idea is backed firmly by Bristol South MP Karin Smyth).
‘We are not looking to release a Wild West of
development in Bristol’
TOWERING AMBITIONS
here, physically develop the jobs market, make sure there’ an inclusive economy, make sure that economy is sustainable, make sure that people can actually get around the city.” He’s clearly excited by the prospects for Western Harbour – his vision to knock down the concrete swing bridge between Ashton and Hotwells, and build 2,000 homes or more, along with a new harbour crossing – perhaps even a tunnel. Like the plan for an underground, it’s a tall order – but Mr Rees says there is plenty of ambition to get things done in
“I WAS at a conference centre in Singapore and somebody said to me, this used to be [under the] sea. “Why is there this assumption that we can’t make big things happen [in Bristol]?” Marvin Rees is talking about the determination he meets in other cities to get big things done, and what he calls the “village mentality” that can affect Bristol. One thing that demonstrates ambition is tall buildings, he has said. But a recent consultation on high-density housing found overwhelming opposition to
residential tower blocks. Proposals for buildings of up to 22 storeys on Bedminster Green and 16 storeys on Bath Road at Totterdown are also solidly opposed by residents and local councillors. Is the mayor really prepared to pursue his high-rise ambitions against the wishes of the people? The skyline of Bristol will change – “that’s going to be inevitable” – to meet the desperate need for housing, he says. He sees tall buildings as needed, even though he is on track to meet his 2,000 homes-a-year target by 2020. But they will be “appropriate” and the process will
involve local communities, he says. “We are not talking about building loads of blocks like there were in my mum’s road when I was growing up [in Easton],” he says. “We are not looking to release a Wild West of development.” But homes are needed for the thousands of people on the council waiting list and hundreds in temporary accommodation. “You can’t go through the growth in population that we are going to have without Bristol looking different. Otherwise the question is where are we going to put the 50,000 or 100,000 people that are going to come into Bristol?
So the skyline will change.” It will, he insists, be appropriate development so the city remains an attractive place to live. He becomes more heated when the conversation moves to the desire to preserve Bristol’s skyline and the vistas to landmarks such as St Mary Redcliffe. “If all you think about is the skyline, you risk looking up and tripping over the person that’s lying in front of you on the pavement.” The skyline is one of the things the council has to think about: “We are balancing the need to develop the city so that people can live
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Bristol. “Take Channel 4 [the hope of getting the broadcaster to move its HQ to Bristol]. One of the early bits of feedback I got was that we hadn’t got a hope. Now we are on the shortlist!” Western Harbour is already attracting serious interest from investors, he says. It’s also helping put Bristol on the map as a city with credible plans which the Government recognises. “It’s a fantastic spot, it’s on the waterfront, it’s got views to Avon Gorge and Ashton Court. We’ve left that land sitting under a flyover for all those years, and developers are very excited about it.”
Mr Rees has already shown he’s prepared to take the flak for delays in order to reach the right decision – in 2016 he walked away from the original arena
contractor, Bouygues UK, because the deal wasn’t working. The buck stops with him, he says. A decision on what to do with Temple Island – or Arena Island – will be taken at the cabinet on September 4. The Voice asked Mr Rees why he hadn’t pitched the idea of a Temple Meads arena on his trips to the Far East and Cannes, wooing investors to the city. The arena didn’t even appear in brochures of the area. But the arena had a budget; it didn’t need investors, responds Mr Rees. He is seeking funds for a £1bn sustainable energy scheme called Leap, and ambitious projects like Western Harbour, he says. “You weren’t telling investors about it either,” said the Voice. “I wasn’t not telling people about it!” he responds. Nevertheless, the mayor’s many views on why an arena might not be the best use of the island site which has waited empty for so long will leave many wondering whether he has already made up his mind.
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BEDMINSTER GREEN
At last – there will be a masterplan
Public will be consulted before any development
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A FRAMEWORK plan for the whole of Bedminster Green is being prepared in conjunction with all the developers hoping to build on the site – and nothing will happen until it’s been consulted on. That was the message of council officials to community planning group WHaM in July. Four developers are working on plans for six major plots around the Green. While they all talk to each other, none of them is responsible for coming up with a masterplan. The city council now appears to have taken the bit between its teeth and promised a framework within two months. Plans have come and gone for different parts of the Green since 2015, when a framework was first
DEVELOPER MAY TAKE ON PARK LODGE DANDARA, the developer pitching to build on two of the five plots around Bedminster Green, may be asked to revive the derelict parkkeeper’s lodge in Victoria Park. The Dandara plan would mean demolishing the ‘GreenHouse’ in the middle of Bedminster Green used by the charity Social Farms & Gardens (SFG). The building is owned by the council but is let to the charity on a 50-year lease at a peppercorn
ALTERNATIVE VISION
HEAT FROM AVONMOUTH
AN EXHIBITION at Bristol’s Architecture Centre gives people the chance to describe their own vision for Bedminster Green. Set up by Muf architecture/art, the display arranges a gallery as a one-bedroom flat, and invites people to explore the possibilities for Bedminster as a neighbourhood for high-density growth. The exhibition is at the Architecture Centre on Narrow Quay, next to the Arnolfini, until September 16.
BEDMINSTER Green could be heated by waste industrial heat from Avonmouth, it has emerged. In as little as 10 years, heavily-insulated pipes could be laid from Avonmouth into the city to provide hot water and heating to the 1,000-plus new homes on the Green. Council officials told a meeting of pressure group WHaM – Windmill Hill and Malago planning group – that the heat could be fed into energy centres built into the
lower storeys of new blocks on the Green. It might remove the need for one big energy centre with a gas plant big enough to heat 2,000 homes, and a 100ft chimney to vent the fumes, on site. But gas power may be needed until the Avonmouth plan can be assessed. The city has a goal of being carbon neutral by 2050. Other plans being explored include a heat exchanger to extract residual heat from the water in the Floating Harbour.
suggested by Clifton developer Urbis. But that plan – and its timetable which would have seen much of the work completed by now – has become redundant. Last month the Voice revealed that consultation had shown huge public opposition to tall buildings as a way of solving Bristol’s housing shortage. It’s unclear how much that has influenced official thinking.
Mayor Marvin Rees (see interview, pages 10-11) still believes tall buildings have a role to play but insists the designs will be “appropriate” and local communities will be involved. The council said that the plan “... will consider a number of issues to agree the best direction for the developments, including improving local connectivity and how Malago Road and nearby
side roads accommodate future development effectively. The public will have an opportunity to comment once it has been published, which is expected within the next couple of months.” The news seems to delay further any decision on plans by Rollo Homes for 215 flats on Malago Road – the only scheme on the Green so far to have a planning application submitted.
rent. The council is considering asking Dandara to repair the Victoria Park lodge as a base for SFG ( which is the successor to the old Federation of City Farms). Dandara would also be asked to install new public toilets and a café in the lodge. But it would spell an end to a plan by Victoria Park Action Group and Steve Sayers, chief executive at Windmill Hill City Farm, to raise money to repair the lodge and then use the café income to subsidise community projects.
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southbristolvoice
Mel’s fitness idea is set to become a worldwide success A RUNNING group started by a South Bristol mum as a way to get herself fit is now on the brink of becoming a worldwide business after winning backing from major investors. This Mum Runs started with a single Facebook post in 2014 when Mel Bound decided she wanted to find some other women to run with. Now the idea has grown into a company with 35,000 members signed up online – and Mel is aiming for global success. “At the very start, it was a personal need, because I had become very inactive after having kids,” said Mel, who lives in Southville and is mother to an eight- and a four-year-old. Her appeal to other mums to join her in a non-competitive jog uncovered a huge demand – 75 women turned up to that first run around Greville Smyth park. “I knew I had immediately tapped into this need,” she said. This Mum Runs was born – offering women the chance to get fit at their own pace in an unpressured environment. The social runs are free, and This Mum Runs also offers paid-for classes. The firm has expanded into fitness clothing and gifts – even men are now customers, as many buy running-themed presents for
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THIS MUM Runs founder Mel Bound has a view on how the authorities should be encouraging businesses that are trying to improve people’s health. Bristol city council is planning to charge businesses like dog walkers and fitness instructors that use parks. This Mum Runs won’t be affected – they mainly run around the streets – but Mel thinks it’s a backward step. “You look at the cost of inactivity, and the consequences in obesity and diabetes, and their cost to the city – to then charge small businesses who help people become more active is quite difficult,” said Mel.
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Wanted: Keen gardeners who want to share their passion
New growth: Gardening is a great release for people in care
Mel Bound (third from left): Aims to get 250,000 more women running their partners. This Mum Runs has groups in Bristol, Bath and London, with 5,500 active members in Bristol alone.Investment of £150,000 from a group called Bristol Private Equity Club will help Mel employ two staff to help her build a template which can be used to start up branches anywhere. The plan over the next two to three years is to build a global brand with up to 250,000 mums running in branded clothing in towns and cities across the world. Mel was the ideal person to make a success of her idea. She has a degree in sports marketing, and worked for UK Athletics as well as for major tech and car companies. “It built on all the experience I had built over the years in sport and marketing and as a mum,” Mel said. She is determined that the expansion will not ruin This Mum Run’s personal touch. She is struck by how “relentlessly positive” its members are in the way they support each other. The work will involve training more Run-Makers, who are paid, qualified coaches, and recruiting more volunteers – Run Angels – who accompany every run and make sure everyone is happy. “We probably could have expanded faster but I have been trying to protect the integrity of
the experience we give to the women who come,” she said. “A lot of the mums who come haven’t exercised for a long time and if they turn up and it’s a rubbish experience, they won’t come back.” Mel is also a Facebook ambassador, travelling abroad to give talks under the title She Means Business. That’s after winning a string of other accolades, including a place in the Sunday Times Top 100 Disrupter Brands. She wants to show that a home-forged business can grow into a major success – even when you have to juggle life with two small children.
PEOPLE with green fingers who want to share their passion are being invited to share their skills with older people. Growing Support is a group which works in South Bristol to enrich the lives of older people living in care. It’s holding a workshop on Tuesday August 7 to show volunteers how they can spread their enthusiasm for gardening to older people who no longer have their own gardens. Volunteers work with an expert social and therapeutic horticulture facilitator to help care home residents get all the benefits of taking part in activities outdoors. Find out more from Sarah Mountford, volunteer coordinator, via email at volunteers@growingsupport.co.uk or 0117 377 4756. The sessions are organised by the charity Alive. aliveactivities.org
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WILDLIFE SPECIAL – DEER, HEDGEHOGS & BUTTERFLIES
Yes, you can believe B your eyes – there are deer roaming and thriving here in South Bristol
POPULATION EXPLOSION
Deer? We had no idea! But they’re not so rare as you think, writes Voice wildlife expert Alex Morss
A
CITY centre park might not be where you’d most expect to bump into a wild deer … but sightings in South Bristol during July have caught many people’s attention. Ben Hennessey filmed a deer in a garden on Windmill Hill on July 7. “It headed off to the church and then disappeared,” he said. Then people began posting
RITAIN’S deer population is believed to be at its highest level for 1,000 years, and to have doubled in the last year 20 years. The British Deer Society, which monitors populations, says: “They are increasingly entering areas close to our towns and cities as they take advantage of more urban habitats.” Last year, a study by the University of East Anglia recommended culls of half the muntjac and 60 per cent of the roe deer populations in some areas. High deer populations can heavily graze the understorey of
unprotected woodlands, which wipes out some important ground flora and food sources for birds and
sightings on social media of what appears to have been the same deer. Carolyn Hecker was the next, asking: “Has anyone else just seen a deer skipping around Victoria Park, or are me and my children going mad?” She added: “I was so amazed in the moment that I didn’t even think to get my camera out until it was too far away.” Caroline
Daisley agreed: “There have been a couple of other posts about a deer in Totterdown running through gardens.” Avradeep Chakrabarti said there had also been talk about a deer being seen on North Street around the same time. Karen Bowers saw a deer in Arnos Vale too. Others reported sightings at Conham and Crews
Muntjac: Widespread in the UK PHOTO: ©Peter Trimmings, Creative Commons
Elgar House Open Day - Wednesday 1st August
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WILDLIFE SPECIAL – DEER, HEDGEHOGS & BUTTERFLIES DEER FACTS
small mammals, as well as causing economic losses to farmers and commercial forestry. Some people have suggested we should be allowed to hunt more deer to reduce numbers to more sustainable levels, given the lack of natural predators apart from humans, but the Deer Act of 1963 restricts that practice. Others have called for more rewilding of Britain, with more wild areas to support our native fauna, so animals are not so much in conflict with other land uses, and reintroducing wolves, which were the natural predators of deer until people wiped them out. Hole along the River Avon. I was contacted by many residents who saw what looked like a baby deer roaming gardens and streets in and around Victoria Park and Totterdown. Deer are shy, so people are surprised when they see one. Around June to July, the young fawns are born. It’s normal for the mother to leave her fawn hiding in the undergrowth and revisit every two to three hours. It’s best to stay away and keep dogs under control so they don’t chase them. Generally, deer are most active at dusk and dawn, and will wander into gardens and parks during quiet periods and often under cover of darkness, to graze
Garden visitor: A muntjac deer snapped by Ben Hennessey in early July
• BRITAIN has six common deer species. Red and roe deer are indigenous. Fallow deer were believed to be native but have died out and been reintroduced twice, by the Romans and the Normans. Three alien species, Reeves’ muntjac, Chinese water deer and sika deer, have arrived since the 19th C. • The muntjac may be the most abundant deer species in England. The muntjac is from Asia, and was introduced to Britain at Woburn Abbey, but quickly spread across England and Wales. Now they turn up in urban gardens as well as woodlands and scrub. • The muntjac has a more hunched appearance than other deer, as its rump is higher than its shoulders. It has a wide, flat tail, which is raised when disturbed, with a white underside. The muntjac screams when frightened. The doe and fawn communicate with squeaks. The male muntjac has small, straight antlers, with black stripes on his face. Females have no antlers, but a dark crown on their heads.
on flowers, herbs, fungi, berries, grass, nuts and sometimes tree bark. There could be more than one deer involved, but all the photos I saw were of an adult female muntjac. Even the adults are quite small. The young usually
including the river ways, railway lines, parks, alleys, waysides and gardens. Members of Bristol Naturalists’ Society have even seen deer swimming across Avon Gorge from Leigh Woods side. They’ve also been seen along the canal near St Anne’s.
have cream or white spots like Bambi, the fur soon fading to rusty brown. They suckle from their mother for about three months. We have green corridors through our city which help lots of wildlife to traverse across,
Please don’t forget the hedghogs
Elgar House supports patients to make the transition from hospital to home and it is focussed on enablement and recovery. Our highly skilled and enthusiastic Nurses work in partnership with patients by encouraging and empowering them to be as independent as possible. We are excited to be holding an Open Day on Wednesday 1st August, 10.00-14.00. This will provide a fantastic opportunity to learn more about the department and see for yourself the fantastic work that is happening. Elgar House can provide an excellent opportunity for Registered Nurses
working in a nursing home or similar setting, looking for a supported return to the NHS. There is an award-winning Practice Development Nurse who supports staff to learn new skills and become part of this amazing team. For any enquiries relating to the event, please email George.Duffield@nbt.nhs.uk or Bev.Davies@nbt.nhs.uk Elgar House, North Bristol NHS Trust, Southmead Hospital, Southmead Road, Westbury-on-Trym, Bristol, BS10 5NB
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HEDGEHOGS are in decline all over the UK, but at least one hedgehog family is doing well thanks to the attention of a Redcatch Road resident. Roc Walker and his family are putting out food and water, and have even built a hedgehog hut. An automatic camera has captured at least two adults and two young hogs, born this year. Remarkably, they appear to be getting on with local foxes – even drinking out of the same dish. Foxes have been known to kill hedgehogs, even adults. “What really surprised me was the fact that we have two foxes around most nights and foxes and hedgehogs seem to take very little notice of each other,” said Roc.
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... and look out for butterflies!
Caught on camera: A fox and hedgehog don’t seem bothered to be sharing the same water bowl in a Knowle garden. But foxes do eat hedgehogs.
WHAT HEDGEHOGS NEED • Water • Food – cat or dog food, not bread and milk • Access – a small hole in a fence
WILDLIFE broadcaster Sir David Attenborough is asking people all over Britain to take part in the Big Butterfly Count – and nowhere is the need more vital than in South Bristol. Some parts of the area – notably Bedminster – have less wildlife than anywhere in Bristol. The hot summer is ideal basking weather for butterflies – but there are fears that if there is a drought, butterflies could suffer as plants wither away and caterpillars starve to death. The Big Butterfly Count runs until Sunday August 12. To take part, just spend 15 minutes outdoors noting all the butterfly species you can see. There’s a guide on the website below. Readers are also welcome to send their sightings to the Voice. bigbutterflycount.org
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
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n NEWS Easy way to get online
August 2018
Brownie groups face closure
DO COMPUTERS confuse you? If you’re over 55 and you’d like to get to grips with the digital age, visit the Over 55s Social and Computer Café. There’s no need to book – just turn up and ask for support with a computer, tablet or mobile. Sessions at Mezzaluna café in West Street on August 13 and 27 from 1.15-3.15pm, and at the Tobacco Factory in North Street on August 3, 17 and 31, 10.15am-12.15pm. Details from Stella on 07868 743 653 or email stellakyriacou.techtalk@gmail.com.
Litter patrol MEMBERS of Ashton Vale Together gather to pick up litter on August 2 at 10am, meeting by the railway arch on Ashton Drive. The group meets to discuss local concerns at 6.30pm on August 7 at Ashton Vale community centre, Risdale Road. Details: ashtonvaletogether@gmail.com
Not enough helpers to keep Girl Guiding going in some areas
GIRLS across South Bristol could soon miss out on the Guide, Brownie and Rainbow groups they love because of a shortage of adult leaders. Two, three or even four Brownie and Rainbow groups in Bedminster Down are on the brink of closing as soon as October because there aren’t enough people to run them. More groups in Hartcliffe face the same imminent risk, while one Rainbow group in Bedminster is merely hanging on and may not last much longer. Rainbow leader Rebecca Leatherland told the Voice that many experienced leaders are nearing retirement – and there aren’t enough people coming forward to replace them.
“It’s really painful, because we have a waiting list of girls as long as your arm,” said Rebecca. “We have 22 girls waiting to join the Rainbows in Bedminster Down and the group only has 22 members! It would be so heartbreaking to have to close.” Already the shortage of leaders is having an effect on the activities the girls can do. “It means we can’t go out and take them on more exciting trips because we need more adults to do that,” said Rebecca. The time needed is not great
Such fun – girls in a South Bristol Rainbow group find out about firefighting. There’s a waiting list of girls wanting to join, but no adults to help them – only an hour a week for Rainbows – and adults can choose what they do. Each group is led by a trained leader and other adults can help out with games or crafts – or perhaps just lend a hand with the paperwork. At the moment there are so few leaders that if one is away, a group sometimes has to shut. All the groups are for girls only – Rainbows is for 5-7 year-olds, Brownies for 7-10s and Guides for 11-14s. To find out more, email south westdivision@girlguidingbsg.org.uk
August 2018
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NEWS ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE Sandie Respected A place to Smith: Southville is buzzing head signs off experience with creativity, with a picnic everything she says THE HEAD teacher of a South Bristol primary school has retired after a teaching career lasting 48 years – all of it spent in Bristol. Sandie Smith, who has led Southville primary school since 2004, was feted with a picnic for pupils and families on July 23, the last day of term. Sandie faced what she called the biggest challenge of her career when, in 2015, she managed a major expansion, opening a new site for the school’s Key Stage 2 children at Myrtle Street, just off North Street. The purpose-built building allowed the school to grow from one form in the reception year to three forms, opening it up to a wider BS3 catchment area. Throughout the difficult split onto two sites – the bulk of the school is still at Merrywood Road – she kept the school’s Ofsted rating of Good. She also hung on
to her child-centred approach, finding enjoyment in learning. Sandie said: “Southville primary has been an exciting school to work in and is based in a community that is never still, always buzzing with energy, ideas and increasing in diversity.” Sandie has spent almost all her career teaching in Bristol. Her second son, Ollie, was disabled and sadly passed away aged 11, giving Sandie a particular interest in children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). She said: “I believe this area is grossly underfunded. I’ve always had a connection with children with SEND and we’ve had many families through our doors. When we get a breakthrough, it’s really rewarding.” • A longer version of this story is on the Voice website.
Bridge Learning Campus
William Jessop Way, Bristol BS13 0RL bridgelearningcampus.org.uk OOK at us! Which one of us can program a computer game? Which of us can cook up a storm in the kitchen? Which one of us can read DNA sequences? Which of us can discuss Chinese politics? Which one of us can build a plane? Answer – we all can! How? Through expert teaching and an inspiring curriculum! We’re given the opportunity to try anything, experience everything. Learning isn’t bound by classroom doors. Our resources let us create and innovate. We are supported and challenged by our peers and teachers, we respect one another.
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Experience isn’t bounded by the classroom: Bridge Learning From Nursery to GCSE we are a community. We expect and we deliver, we aspire and we achieve. Independence and resilience are the basis of our culture. Successes are shared and rewarded. Enrichment is as inclusive and personalised as our learning. We are preparing, for building brilliant futures – so come and look at us.
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August 2018
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n FEATURES
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OOD news for bee geeks, literary bears and other honey lovers: South Bristol now has a bee factory. For many years, the Tobacco Factory on North Street has been a hive of industry and a social hub, and now the ultimate urban social insects have buzzed in on the act. Southville Honey is raising the roof, with about 100,000 honeybees busy at work, up top. It’s the ultimate penthouse sweet spot, with panoramic views over the gardens and parks where the bees forage for pollen and nectar. Tobacco Factory buildings manager Tim Myers is also a beekeeper, and he serves on Bristol’s “swarm watch” – on standby to capture and rehome honeybees that occasionally swarm in the city. This happens when the old queen bee leaves to form a new colony. “Yes, people can call the Tobacco Factory if they have a swarm,” said Tim, swathed in his beekeeping suit. We inspected three hives on the roof, teeming with honeybees. “Each one probably has 30,000 or more bees in at the minute,
Top of the world: beekeeper Tim Myers on the roof of the Tobacco Factory with George Ferguson, who owns the building, and the beehives which produce the new Southville Honey, above. MAIN PHOTO: Alex Morss
Bees love their rooftop home but there can be more,” Tim enthused, whilst puffing a cloud of calming smoke over a colony so he could check the combs. The roof is crammed with solar panels too. As we wriggled
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We created a comic to tell our story Writer is helping learning-disabled group show what their life is like
the
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August 2018
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past to reach the hives, along with former Bristol mayor George Ferguson, who owns the building, the pair revealed they have set up even more hives and a market garden just outside Bristol, growing food to serve in city venues. The honey will be sold in the Tobacco Factory too. “If I’d had more time as mayor I would have liked to have spent more time looking at how local farms supply Bristol’s food,” said George – although he is now doing that anyway, and also hosts a Sunday market at the Factory selling local, eco-friendly produce. We also pondered whether the roof could squeeze in some other wildlife habitat ideas. There is barely any space left, but a few possibilities are being considered. While I was taking in the impressive rooftop views across
Bristol, what struck me was the panoramic desert of grey that makes up our city’s upper veneer. The street tops looked like a huge lost opportunity, a dirty barren crust of slate, tile and concrete. How valuable many of these roofs could become if they offered something for the environment, such as nesting spaces for bees, bat roosts, bird boxes and feeders, nectar hotspots, caterpillar food plants, rain butts, solar panels and modest green roof planting. Honey champion Winnie the Pooh famously once said: “Sometimes the smallest things take up the most room in your heart.” I left wondering if Bristol’s half a million hearts could each make room for one small wild thing on their little grey space … Alex Morss
A BEDMINSTER writer has helped create a comic with a group of people with learning disabilities to dispel a few myths about their lives. Anita MacCullum, who also runs creative writing classes at the Rope Walk pub in Bedminster, was one of two artists who created the comic, called Rhythm of the Night. The driving force was a social and theatre group of learning disabled adults called the Misfits. They have been enjoying a monthly night out dancing at the Trinity Centre in Lawrence Hill – a massively popular event that attracts up to 150 people. But not all of them are able to
Comic creators Anita MacCallum and Jenny Drew, left, and members of the Misfits, above, with their comic, Rhythm of the Night stay out as late as they would like. The comic, called Rhythm of the Night, puts a Cinderella-like twist on the story, with lost mobile phones taking the place of the glass slipper. Anita, who has been working with the Misfits for over 10 years,
created the story behind the comic with graphic artist Jenny Drew, guided by the group members. “The group came up with the characters and picked everything, down to the shape of their eyebrows,” said Anita. The
project started as a play, scripted by Anita, who added, “It was performed a couple of times but a play is a transient thing, it reaches a limited audience.” The comic, produced with Lottery funding, will have wider appeal, and the members of the Misfits are very proud of it. It shows learning disabled people as having needs and desires just like anyone else, from staying out late to having a snog. Phil, one of the group members said, “Spreading the word about staying up late is a really important message. The comic gives the readers an insight of what we are like and what our lives are like. It has changed my life, me as a person I have realised that staying out late is important to me.” Rhythm of the Night will be available at Bristol Central library. It can also be ordered for £5 from: misfitstheatre.com
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Plenty of wild creatures PEOPLE looking for wildlife often focus on the cuter, furry animals, so it’s good to report that there have been plenty of sightings of humbler creatures. Winner of our photo competition this month is Stephen Brain of Ashton Vale, who photographed (and then released) a beautiful elephant hawk moth. There are plenty more to see – one member of BS3 Wildlife Group recorded 29 species of moth in one June week. We also had a lovely picture of a cinnabar moth from Isabel Kearney of Upper Perry Hill –
Aluminium, PVCu and Timber Windows and Doors Elephant hawk moth ©Stephen Brain sorry, Isabel, no room to print it, though we’ll try to publish a selection of all your pictures later in the year. To contact BS3 Wildlife Group, email benbarker@ blueyonder.co.uk.
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August 2018
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DO YOU find it hard to get around unexpected hazards when you’re walking around Bedminster? A project called Let’s Walk Bedminster is continuing to tackle problem areas, whether it’s rubbish on the pavements or obstructions, such as signs that get in the way. There are now more than 20 street wardens who report incidents like dumped mattresses to the council, and keep an eye out for any problems. Campaigners have also mounted regular clutter patrols to make retail streets more walkable, with the help of the police and the council. A new Bedminster Access Group aims to improve access to businesses for older people, the disabled and those with buggies. To find out more, email ruth. green@bs3community.org.uk
Bright ideas from BS3 to keep gardens looking lush TWO SOUTH Bristol companies are doing their bit to make Bedminster’s gardens brighter. Bloominster, the innovative start-up that delivers subscription boxes of plants to people who aren’t expert gardeners, is celebrating a successful first summer. Partners Susy Feltham and Alice Evans have made boxes for every season, starting with a “sparkle box” in January to bring some winter colour, a spring selection in March, and a box of bright colours for summer display in June. Each box has care cards to tell those without green fingers how to look after the plants. The pair have also put together a box of edible plants,
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sourced from plants grown at Windmill Hill City Farm. They have also linked up with Feed Bristol, part of Avon Wildlife Trust, to develop a bee-friendly box of plants sown from wild flower seeds collected from the group’s meadows around Bristol. Meanwhile, an entrepreneur from Ashton Vale has developed a new material that he hopes will help plants in pots and hanging baskets survive hot weather, even with gaps in watering. Marcus Stone founded Maxswell to exploit a new material, developed with input from Exeter University. He says it works by swelling up to 300 per cent on contact with water, then releasing it slowly over 7-10 days. Produced as discs which can be soaked to pre-swell, the material can be used as a liner in hanging baskets and pots, troughs and other containers.
Marcus said; “By making the most of all available water and storing it near where the roots go, the liner can help plants survive better in hot weather. It also prevents any water running through the soil and our trials have shown a reduction in water use by up to 70 per cent, which is good news if there is a hosepipe ban or for those on a watermeter.” The material is a new type of polymer and is non-toxic. Marcus says it returns to shape when dry and can be re-used over many seasons. The company has applied for a patent for its invention and is selling discs directly to gardeners and gardening groups. The material is manufactured in the UK and the firm has plans to recycle the discs at the end of their lifecycle. Facebook: Bloominster maxswell.co.uk
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Zero Green, the first Zero Waste shop in Bristol, has been open for 3 months!
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ADVERTISING FEATURE
Healthy alternatives on your doorstep Mark’s Bread
Bristol Fish
291 North Street, Bristol BS3 1JP Café 0117 953 7997 Wholesale 07910 979384 www.marksbread.co.uk info@marksbread.co.uk Open Mon-Sat 8am-4.30pm
252b North Street, Bristol BS3 1JA 07902 293312 bristolfish.com
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SUSTAINABLE EATING
NEWS Making streets easier to walk
August 2018
UPPLYING the local community, restaurants, shops and events with hand-crafted, fresh bread since 2009; experts in artisan sourdoughs, continental and speciality loaves, at Mark’s they use organic flour, salt, water and sometimes seeds and fruit, with no artificial preservatives or additives. The bakery counter is in the vibrant, licensed café space. You can see the baking through the café window! The Bakery Choose from a wide range of daily breads, pastries and pizza; deliveries to 24 Bristol cafes, shops and restaurants. Special event orders are taken. Bread-making courses, held every month, are a fun, informative day and great as a gift! Includes breakfast, lunch with local beers & soft drinks, and take-home goodies. The Café When you pop in for a loaf or two, sit down and re-fuel with one of Mark’s famous all-day bacon sarnies or a full cooked breakfast with homemade sauces. Or choose from summer smoothies, freshly-squeezed orange juice, granola with yoghurt and homemade preserve, and hand-shaped pastries baked every morning. Also served is Canton loose leaf tea or expertly-brewed Extract coffee. Cakes are served
So fresh: Sourdough from Mark’s with afternoon tea and cake and on Friday it’s cream-tea time! Lunches of refreshing, healthy salads, sandwiches, tarts, grilled cheese toasties, or the daily special, are all brought to you by new chef, Vincent. All can be eaten in or taken away. Top it with a Luscombe soft drink, local wines, ales and lager. The Grocery Items used in the bakery and made in-house are now on sale in small quantities. On the shelves are preserves, pickles, granola and dukkha, as well as Shipton Mill flours and Extract coffee plus some seasonal produce like stollen, cookies and crackers. You can take them in Mark’s cloth bags which will keep your loaves fresh for days. Cakes Mark’s loves cake. They are made by Marja, the talented in-house cake-maker, producing a wide range of cakes for the café as well as beautiful celebration cakes. These are made to order using top quality ingredients and decorated for the individual. See the website (above) for photos. Special diets are also catered for.
BRISTOL FISH The legendary fishmonger Sam Yellow-Wellies has more than 10 years’ experience in the fish trade!
• Local fresh and smoked fish and shellfish • Sashimi • Tuna • Tiger prawns
Open Wednesday-Saturday 252b North Street, Southville BS3 1JA www.bristolfish.com 07902 293312
HERE is a lot of concern these days about knowing where the fish you eat has come from, and rightly so. Sam ‘Yellow Wellie’, the fishmonger at Bristol Fish, is determined to sell the finest fish and to source it ethically. He buys mainly from local fishermen in the South West, and with more than 10 years’ experience in the trade, he knows how to buy the best. All the usual varieties of fresh and smoked fish are there, including shellfish, tuna and tiger prawns, plus the finest sashimi. To show off his wares, he’s offering a whole side of salmon to a Voice reader. This is boutique Var salmon, from the Faroe islands, farmed without antibiotics or chemicals. The open-sea farm mimics natural
Var salmon: Prized in Japan
WIN A SIDE OF SALMON To win a side of Var salmon, value £25, tell us: Where does the Var salmon sold by Bristol Fish originate? Email paul@ southbristolvoice.co.uk or post to 18 Lilymead Avenue, Bristol BS4 2BX, by August 14. conditions as much as possible and the result is the finest salmon, sold for sushimi in Japan and the US.
AwArdwinning BAkery & CAfé Supplier to loCAl reStAurAntS
Ltd • Delicious home-made café treats • The best local ingredients, including Shipton Mill organic flour • We deliver bread to 26 local restaurants by bicycle • Celebration cakes made to order • Breadmaking courses with founder Mark Newman
Mon-Sat 8am-4.30pm (or until last loaf sells) 291 North Street Bristol BS3 1JU www.marksbread.co.uk 0117 9537997 Find us on social media
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
August 2018
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NEWS Record-breaking run continues for XPECT to see something really special floating pharmacy team above the skies of Ashton
August 2018
southbristolvoice
ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE
Happy birthday to Bristol Balloon Fiesta
Shirley Jamieson and June CambridgeRose at one of two award ceremonies where the pharmacy took home trophies
BEDMINSTER Pharmacy has continued its record-breaking run of national awards for a third year. At the Pharmacy Recognition of Excellence awards held at the Dorchester Hotel in London, delivery person Shirley Jamieson was awarded the Pharmacy Champion Award for her care and attention to customers, while June Cambridge-Rose was awarded the Pharmacy Counter Intelligence Award. Later at the annual Chemist and Druggist Awards, Marisa Maciborka won the Pre-Reg Pharmacist of the year 2018. The team also came second in two categories – as the Best Pharmacy Team and the Best Independent Pharmacy in the country. The team also received a first ever special highly commended award for this feat. The pharmacy tries to go above and beyond in serving the Bedminster community: instead of merely handing out medicines it tries to offer advice at every step, and point customers towards sources of free help, whether to stop smoking, lose weight or heat their homes to a healthy level. The business has won an unprecedented 20 national awards in the last 24 months. Their admirers include the Prime Minister Theresa May, who acknowledged the essential role they provide in the community. Ade Williams, pharmacist and owner of the pharmacy, was also nominated by Bristol South MP Karin Smyth for the Patient Champion Award at the NHS70 Parliamentary Awards.
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Court at this year’s Bristol International Balloon Fiesta – a birthday cake with candles. Cameron Balloons, the Bedminster-based founders of the festival and the world leader in hot air balloons, have dreamed up some wacky creations in 40 years of the fiesta, but we’re promised that this one will take the biscuit – or rather the cake! As it’s the 40th year since the event was started by Don Cameron, there will no doubt be some surprises, and there will certainly be lots more amazing special-shape balloons. Bertie Bassett, the licquorice allsort, will be returning for the first time in 15 years and there will be appearances from the Michelin Man and the Superbike – one of the most difficult shapes possible to turn into a balloon!
Inflated opinion: There’s no doubt that the balloon fiesta is the biggest and best balloon event in Europe
BRISTOL INTERNATIONAL BALLOON FIESTA August 9-12 WHAT’S ON THE EVENT starts with a mass ascent of 100 or more balloons at noon on Thursday. As regular watchers know, this is dependent on the right weather – strong winds can ground the balloons for days. That aside, there will be
mass lift-offs at 6am and 6pm on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The spectacular Nightglow and fireworks take place at 9pm on Thursday and Sunday. And of course there’s a full programmme of arena events on Saturday and Sunday, and Ashton Court will be full of entertainment stalls, food and drink, and live music. Full details at bristolballoonfiesta.co.uk
Experience a Champagne Balloon Flight, floating on high over historic Bristol. “A unique way to see the city”
Black tie generosity THE JOLLY Colliers pub in West Street, Bedminster, has raised an impressive £1,800 for charity at a single event – a black tie evening with an auction and dancing. The money raised was split equally between children and young people’s cancer charity CLIC Sargent and the Alzheimer’s Society. Businesses pulled together to donate prizes for the raffle and auction and Danny Ryall provided entertainment. Pub manager Gerry McClusky, who welcomed 120 guests to the sold out event, said: “We only had three weeks to put this together and I’m gobsmacked by the support and generosity of everyone who attended.”
Available online at www.bristolballoons.co.uk or call 0117 947 1030
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A GOOD CAUSE THIS year’s balloon fiesta is raising money for St Peter’s Hospice, which wants to spend £1.5 million on its Brentry centre. GETTING THERE ENTRY to the Fiesta is free but parking costs from £10. Premium parking is closer to the event; best to pre-book. Buses leave from the Centre and Temple Meads every 10 minutes.
Skyburst
11 Nelson Parade, East Street, Bedminster BS3 4JA 0800 0744 636 skyburst.co.uk AVE you heard of a pyromusical? Maybe not, but if you’ve seen a Nightglow at the Bristol International Balloon Fiesta then you will have experienced one. The Nightglow, with its stirring vision of dozens of tethered balloons, each one firing its gas jet in time to the music, is rounded off by a spectacular firework display. You’ve probably been amazed at how the dazzling explosions and colours of the fireworks are timed so precisely to the music. That, dear readers, is a pyromusical, and it’s the speciality of Alan Christie and his family-led team at Skyburst. Skyburst spend the year travelling the UK putting on firework spectaculars of all kinds – from a wedding (they did Jamie Oliver’s) or a birthday party to grand events such as the Battle Proms series, held at stately homes. Modern digital technology makes it possible to plan a pyromusical display precisely, and
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Amazing every time: The annual Skyburst fiesta fireworks display ignite all the fireworks at just the right time, by computer. Bristol has cause to be grateful to Skyburst, because the fireworks shows at the Balloon Fiesta are given to the city for free, and have been for more than 20 years. That’s not all that Skyburst does. The firm can provide any kind of firework display, laid on by an experienced team who make safety their first priority. And from their Bedminster shop, they can also supply fireworks for private parties and advise on how to use them safely.
Bristol Balloons
23-51 Winterstoke Road BS3 2NP 0117 947 1030 bristolballoons.co.uk
Unforgettable: A balloon ride
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RISTOL Balloons aim to give everyone a pleasant, enjoyable and safe flight. Ballooning is an adventure, a magic carpet ride, something not to be rushed. A flight will normally last for about one hour, while the whole outing usually takes between three and four hours. Ballooning, like serendipity, is the art of making happy and unexpected discoveries by chance. Where you go is entirely dependent upon the wind. No two flights are the same. The average distance travelled is 10 miles, affording you stunning views of the surrounding scenery. Age is no barrier to enjoying this spectacular journey – passengers’ ages range from nine to 90 plus! It is never too early to start thinking about flying yourself or celebrating others special date in the year ahead. Enquire or book via the website (address above) or call 0117 947 1030. Bristol Balloons’ experienced staff look forward to taking you on a memorable experience.
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
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n FOOD SPECIAL: Profile 1
southbristolvoice
‘Farming should be a conversation with nature’ Meet the farmer who wants you to visit to see how his food is made – there might be a bit of a party going on, mind ...
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UKE HASELL doesn’t live in South Bristol – but he wants to have an impact here. Luke is a farmer, based at Herons Green Farm in the Chew Valley, but for many years he’s been a part of the Bristol food scene. Have you been to Yurt Lush, the quirky Mongolian yurt serving daytime meals in a yard behind Temple Meads station? Or Root, the veg-oriented restaurant set atop Wapping Wharf’s shipping containers overlooking the harbour? Both are collaborations between Luke and Michelin-
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starred chef Josh Eggleton, who runs the Pony and Trap at Chew Magna (and is, incidentally, a Windmill Hill resident). More recently, Luke has started a solo venture at Wapping Wharf – Meatbox, a butcher selling only locally-sourced meat from high-welfare farms including his own. If that wasn’t enough, the farm is also home to Valley Fest, the Bristol area’s own familyfriendly weekend festival, which is almost upon us (see panel). But all of this almost didn’t happen. Sixteen years ago Luke was an engineer working for the giant Kier Group as a project manager, and about to emigrate to Australia for a new posting. Then: “My dad suddenly died. There was no question, I moved home to help my mum on the farm,” he said. “Tragically, mum
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August 2018 A FARMER WITH A VISION
Luke Hasell: Serving up home-reared meat at his very own festival was also diagnosed with cancer, and they passed away within a few years of each other. “My parents loved the land, they loved sharing food and having a laugh with family and friends. Which is why I did two things when I took over the farm. Firstly, I made it organic. Secondly, I started a festival!” More than a decade on and Luke has made several of his ambitions reality, and seen consumers become more interested in where their food comes from – particularly their meat. “Organic farming is really important to me,” he said. “We shouldn’t be poisoning the land, farming should be a conversation with nature and done in harmony with the land and wildlife.” Aware that many people are wary about how animals kept for meat are treated, he sells only meat from named farms whose animals are pasture-fed and outdoor-reared. Some. not all,
are also organic. “To farm the way that we farm is good for the health of humans and the planet,” he said. “That’s partly why I do Valley Fest. I want people to think about the environment and where their food comes from. “Having a festival on a working farm means that people can get a better understanding about farming, they can run their hands through the soil. They can do foraging, have a look round the farm, meet the farm animals, pick veg, and enjoy talks and workshops on everything from fermenting to cider-making. “This is why it’s a great family festival – to show kids where their food comes from and teach them about the land is wonderful – this is the next generation of environmental stewards.” This approach has not gone unnoticed: Luke was nominated for BBC Food & Farming’s Outstanding Farmer of the Year award in 2014.
WIN A FAMILY TICKET TO VALLEY FEST But be quick!
the ethos, with a fancy dress banquet on Friday night, a giant Midnight Feast on Saturday and a Sunday Picnic involving chefs like Josh Eggleton. HOW TO WIN We have a family ticket for two adults and two children under 12 to Valley Fest, worth £110, including camping (but not parking – money raised from that goes to the Teenage Cancer Trust). To win just tell us: What’s the backdrop to Valley Fest? Answers by email to paul@ southbristolvoice.co.uk or by post to 18 Lilymead Avenue BS4 2BX by July 31. Give your name, full address and phone number. BS3 and BS4 residents only.
VALLEY Fest, from August 3-5, is a small family-friendly festival set against the backdrop of Chew Valley Lake. Music highlights this year include St Paul and the Broken Bones, Rae Morris and My Baby. Kids and adults can meet the farm animals, pick vegetables, learn skills like fermenting and take part in cookery workshops. There are wacky games like hobbyhorse gymkhana, eating challenges like fluffy bunnies, and a big dose of fancy dress. Sharing food together is also a big part of
To advertise, contact sales@southbristolvoice.co.uk or Ruth on 07590 527664
August 2018
n FOOD SPECIAL: Profile 2
Meet the chef who believes cooking can heal the troubles of the soul Beccy Golding meets Barny Haughton, founder of some of Bristol’s best-known restaurants and also of a unique kitchen for the community
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ARNY HAUGHTON was brought up in Yorkshire and moved to Bristol in 1985, with plans to open an ethical restaurant. “Bristol had a feel of somewhere things could happen, and I’d not lived in a city before - it had the opportunities you don’t get in a provincial town.” He opened Rocinantes on Whiteladies Road in 1988, a pioneering tapas bar and restaurant. “The ethos was that good food needs good ingredients, and good ingredients come from good soil. For the first three years we didn’t mention it was organic, with its association with hippies, lentils, and so on. It was about the style of eating – not posh – I remain really anti posh food. Barny traded with his brother Phil, who set up Better Food Company on Gloucester Road. His sister Liz Haughton’s Cooking Company runs the cafes at the Folk House and Spike Island. “I come from a family of 10 children. We all became competent in life skills early, by necessity. But I had an extra interest than my siblings – I’ve always loved cooking.” As a young chef Barny worked in the south of France. “I was tasting different food – not Yorkshire food! And going to
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27 A CHEF FOR THE COMMUNITY
PHOTO: Beccy Golding
Barny Haughton: ‘Cooking and eating together is a healing process’ beautiful markets – it was a revelation – what you’d be having for dinner was defined by what was in the market. This has defined my cooking and teaching.” Barny’s next Brisol restaurant was Quartier Vert: “it was a statement of sustainability and eco-gastronomy [a term invented by Carlo Petrini, founder of the slow food movement]. As well as the restaurant we had a bakery and a cookery school.” Launched as an antidote to fast food, slow food aims to preserve traditional and regional cuisine and farming. Barny is a visiting professor at the University of Gastronomic Science, also founded by Carlo Petrini, in northern Italy. Twice a year he goes there to teach food education – plus what happens at the Square Food Foundation, which Barny set up at The Park community centre in Knowle West. Barny’s success led to an offer from a property developer of a huge space on the Harbourside. In 2006 he opened Bordeaux Quay (17,000 sq ft, compared to QV’s 1,600 sq ft). “It was an opportunity and a millstone,” he says. “The objective was a unique food hub that adhered to the principles of sustainable gastronomy – building materials, water, electricity, gas, were all taken into account, and we hired a manager of sustainable development. We had a brasserie, restaurant, school, shop and bakery. “We made an impact – we
made food more discussed in Bristol.” And the downsides? “We opened just before the big crash, with huge borrowings [£3million]. And we failed conspicuously in that we didn’t cross social values – other than the teaching. BQ was only relevant to middle class people in Bristol.” Barny was fired as a director of Bordeaux Quay “because we weren’t paying our loans back quickly enough. It was a pretty unpleasant ousting of me over six months – and then the classic situation – I was phoned and told to clear my desk. It’s hard to talk about, in fact I had to sign a non-disclosure agreement. “I’m writing a no-holds barred book – it will all be in there. “I went into clinical depression. It was an amazing revelation into what some of my clients experience. I am open about mental health issues, I talk about them with my students. I went through it, I know – it’s an
HOW TO BE A CHEF THIS three-day-a week, 12-week programme is for 16-25 year olds who may not have many qualifications but want the chance to show their love for food. “This could be a turning point in their career, and their life. Good chefs will never be out of work,” says Barny. To inquire about places call 0117 903 9780 or email info@ squarefoodfoundation.co.uk
important part of our work here, addressing people’s mental health challenges. “Cooking and eating together is a healing process for people in distress or lonely – it makes people better.” This is a mantra Barny is clearly strongly committed to – it runs through all the work he does now. The Square Food Foundation opened in 2011 on the site of Merrywood secondary school. As we’re talking Barny has been preparing food – frittata for The Park’s café in what used to be the school’s kitchen. “I knew I wanted to start a different kind of cooking school that had clear goals as a community food education business. “The principle is teaching people from all walks of life to cook good food from scratch. And from this, things in life make better sense.” Masterclasses, corporate events and private parties all help pay for community work with groups including people with learning difficulties or mental health issues, children in primary schools, women from One25 (the charity that works with Bristol’s street-sex workers), and over-55s – “a cornerstone of what we do – they cook and eat together, and also prepare food for the One25 group – there’s a circular economy feel to it.” Barny is excited about his new project starting this autumn. How To Be A Chef brings the principles of eco-gastronomy to “develop the next generation of young chefs. It will enable a joyful relationship with everything to do with the story of food. The first recipe is how to make compost. “When I first began Quartier Vert, I knew it would be a long journey – 50 years – I’m halfway through. You need to be patient, have faith, you need amazing people around you – which I have. I’d like to see our beloved mayor pay more attention to the importance of the connection with what you eat and your health – and for us to be part of the policy development of food education in our city, getting funded for what we do.” The best thing about working in South Bristol? “I am constantly discovering my own relationship with the world through the people I work with and the people in the community of Knowle West.” squarefoodfoundation.co.uk
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
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n PLANNING APPLICATIONS Bedminster ward: Awaiting decision The Old Tabernacle, Palmyra Road BS3 3JQ Change of use from offices (Use class B1a) to eight dwellings (Use class C3). Lynwood House, Lynwood Road BS3 3HH Demolition of building and erection of five oneand two-bedroom flats (Use class C3); refuse and recycling store, and cycle store. 9 North Street, Bedminster BS3 1EN Conversion of buildings to front and rear into seven flats and small shop unit. Units 3-4, Charnwood House, Marsh Road BS3 2NA Change of use of offices (Use class B1a) to residential: eight flats (Use class C3). Gaywood House, North Street, Bedminster BS3 3BA Partial demolition of garages to be replaced with external parking; replacement doors and windows to Gaywood House main building, clad with EWI insulation and brickslips to match facade, replacement of balcony screen and replacement of the roof edge protection. Advertising next to 267 West Street, Bedminster BS3 3PZ Replacement of internally illuminated 48-sheet advertising display with LED 48-sheet digital advertising display. Bedminster ward: Decided Land adj to 18 Victoria Place BS3 3BP Removal or variation of condition 10 (Restriction of
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parking level on site) attached to permission 14/00826/F: 4-bedroom dwelling on land adjacent to 18 Victoria Place. Refused 11-15 Winterstoke Road BS3 2NN Demolition of dwellings (three flats) and erection of five 2-bedroom flats and one 1-bedroom flat. Granted subject to conditions Costa Coffee, South Bristol Retail Park, Wedlock Way Details in relation to condition 9 of permission 16/07015/F: Proposed pod unit. Granted Land adj to 5 Winterstoke Road BS3 2NN Replacement of internally illuminated 48-sheet advertising display with 48-sheet digital LED display. Refused 31 West Street, Bedminster BS3 3NS Roof alterations to create additional upper floor. Refused 16B Chessel Street BS3 3DP Use of part of 18 Chessel Street for parking, waste storage and cycle parking. Granted subject to conditions 21 Irby Road BS3 2LZ Two storey side and rear extension with rear extension to main roof. Granted subject to conditions Southville ward: Awaiting decision St Catherine’s House, Dalby Avenue BS3 4HH Details of condition 3a (Design details) of permission 17/05699/F: Two storey extension and external alterations to St Catherine’s
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House to provide an additional 14 flats. Garages, 16 Mill Lane and 2-4 Stafford Street BS3 4DG Convert garages to two flats. Land to rear of 171-178 Coronation Road BS3 1RF Details in relation to condition 5 (CMP), 6 (Road works) and 7 (Delivery management plan) of permission 17/04057/F: Change of use from offices (Use close B1) to retail (Use class A1) of ground floor commercial space in Block A. 33 Allington Road BS3 1PS Rear dormer roof extension and insertion of roof lights to front. Fiddlers Club, Willway Street, Bedminster BS3 4BG Removal of condition 3 following grant of planning permission 99/02681/F: To extend trading hours from existing: Monday -Wednesday 11am-1am, Thursday-Saturday 11am-2am, Sunday 11am-11pm. 48 Bedminster Parade BS3 4HS Details in relation to condition 2 (Landscaping) of permission of 17/07073/ LA: Three storey building for three flats. Revised application following Listed Building Consent 17/01489/LA to enlarge ground floor flat. 125-131 Raleigh Road BS3 1QU Demolition of buildings and erection of 5-storey block comprising offices and seven flats with access from Cigar Factory. Flat 1A, Boot Lane BS3 4HR Redevelopment of site to create one 1-bedroom flat and one twobedroom flat (self-build). 12 Stillhouse Lane BS3 4EB Landscaping following outline permission 17/06438/P: Demolition of buildings and erection of 10 flats. 16 Mill Lane BS3 4DG Conversion of building to four flats, and new building containing three flats.
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21-25 Nelson Parade BS3 4HY Refurbishment of buildings to provide 10 flats; erection of
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August 2018
one single storey residential unit to rear, installation of enclosed external staircase to rear and provision of retail/cafe unit and workshop to ground floor. 172 Raleigh Road BS3 2AR Change of use from retail (Use class A1) to residential (Use class C3). 86 Bedminster Parade BS3 4HL Construction of eight flats. Southville ward: Decided St Catherine’s House, Dalby Avenue BS3 4HH Construction hoarding signage advertising forthcoming development on site. Granted subject to conditions 2 Boot Lane BS3 4HX Construction of two flats on top of residential building. Refused LPW House, Princess Street, Bedminster BS3 4AG Change of use from car showroom to fitness/martial arts gym. Granted subject to conditions
August 2018
southbristolvoice
n THE MAYOR
MARVIN REES Mayor of Bristol
Our summer of festivals shows what a diverse city we are
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UMMER is in full swing, and Bristolians are making the most of our reputation as a festival city. St Pauls Carnival returned for its 50th anniversary, coinciding with the 70th anniversary of the Empire Windrush. Fears had been expressed that the carnival might have been lost to the city but with the perseverance of community activists, council officers, and partner organisations such as the Arts Council, it was a huge success. The week after was Bristol’s main Pride event. Many people see Pride as a carnival – a time to have fun. That is an important part of it, but of course it represents so much more than that. Pride is an active stance against discrimination and violence towards the LGBT+ community. The event itself was
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really well attended, and a huge celebration of diversity, recognising the significant value that it brings to our city. This year’s Harbour Festival, our annual showcase of the city’s culture and maritime heritage, had a huge range of things to do, across three miles of the city centre. Building on last year, its focus returned to water-based activities, bringing us back again to the heart of the city and putting a focus on the
Harbourside, our traditional gateway to the world. Upfest represents a more modern view of Bristol and its reputation as a street art destination. The event, now in its tenth year, brings an estimated 50,000 people to see the art up close. Of course, the high point for many is the Balloon Fiesta. A key event in our world class calendar of events, we have worked in partnership with the organisers over many years to establish and build the fiesta as a major international event and we continue to support this uniquely Bristol celebration. Finally, I’d like to mention a different type of festival we are currently developing. We are planning on hosting a housing festival which will look at new and innovative ways of providing housing over the coming years. This will explore a host of new approaches, re-imagining better ways of living for everyone in cites. I am hoping the event will bring forward solutions for the housing crisis – a key priority for my administration. All of these events bring so much to our city, not just to our own experiences, but also the economic benefits of having a strong tourism offer and building our international profile for being a vibrant festival city. I hope you are able to enjoy as many as possible this year.
Southville Lodge, Southville Road BS3 1DG Ash, pyracantha, horse chestnut, silver birch, lime and copper beech trees: crown lift and other works. Granted 16 Stackpool Road BS3 1NQ Sycamore tree: fell. Granted Windmill Hill City Farm, Philip Street, Bedminster BS3 4EA Refurbishment of nursery kitchen and staff room, demolition of storage building and replacement with new staff facilities. Granted subject to conditions 16 Mill Lane & 2-4 Stafford Street BS3 4DG Conversion of two flats over garage into four flats by addition of an extra storey. Refused Cutters Row, 126 - 138 York Road, Bedminster BS3 4AL Replacement of windows with aluminium windows to front and rear. Replacement of majority of rear-facing doors with aluminium doors. Granted subject to conditions • The status of these applications may have changed since we went to press. Check for updates at planningonline.bristol.gov.uk
To advertise, contact sales@southbristolvoice.co.uk or Ruth on 07590 527664
FREE FIRST CONSULT FOR NEW CLIENTS* When you register with Ashton Veterinary Surgery
Come and meet our friendly vet team! Ashton Veterinary Surgery 0117 953 0707 15 Duckmoor Road Bristol BS3 2DD
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Ashton Veterinary Surgery is a trading name of CVS (UK) Limited: a company registered in England and Wales. Registered number: 03777473. Registered office: CVS House, Owen Road, Diss, Norfolk IP22 4ER Terms and conditions* Please present this advert to reception on arrival. One pet per consultation. This offer applies to the consultation fee only. This offer does not include any other services, any medication prescribed or products purchased which are chargeable and must be paid in full. The offer has no other monetary value. No cash alternative. This offer cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer or scheme, including The Healthy Pet Club. SA027 18
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
August 2018
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ADVICE FROM A PHARMACIST for example, people with Don’t let the Parkinson’s disease or who have had a stroke; • People with serious mental health heat get the problems; • People on medications that affect better of you sweating and temperature control;
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HE RECENT hot weather certainly makes Bristol a great staycation destination. Although welcome by most , when it is too hot for too long, there are health risks. The main risks from a heatwave are: dehydration (not having enough water) and overheating. Who is most at risk? • Older people, especially those over 75; • Babies and young children; • People with serious heart or breathing problems; • People with mobility problems –
• People who misuse alcohol or drugs; • People who are physically active – for example, labourers or those doing sports. Tips for coping in hot weather Shut the windows and pull down the shades when it is hotter outside. Keep rooms cool by using shades or reflective material outside the windows. Stay in the coolest room in the house and open windows for ventilation when it is cooler. Keep out of the sun and don’t go out between 11am and 3pm (the hottest part of the day).
n ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE Have cool baths or showers, and splash yourself with cool water. Drink cold drinks regularly, such as water and diluted fruit juice. Avoid excess alcohol, and caffeine (tea, coffee and cola) or drinks high in sugar. Wear loose, cool clothing and a hat and sunglasses if you go outdoors. Plan ahead to make sure you have enough supplies, such as food, water and any medications you need. How do I know if someone needs help? Check up on friends, relatives and neighbours who may be less able to look after themselves. Symptoms to look out for are breathlessness, chest pain, confusion, intense thirst, weakness, dizziness and cramps which get worse or don’t go away.
Down on the Farm News from Windmill Hill City Farm with Beccy Golding
School report
Adventurous times
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he Farm Adventurers have proved so popular they are expanding to
Get the person somewhere cool to rest. Give them plenty of fluids to drink and contact NHS 111 or the GP immediately. Remember, at Bedminster Pharmacy we can also help you with sun protection and hay fever remedies, alongside advice for managing and storing your medicines. For those jetting off on holiday, make sure to call our travel clinic for advice and best prices on 0800 7723575. • Bedminster Pharmacy now runs a Meningitis B and Travel Vaccination clinic, offering the lowest prices in the city. • This article by Ade Williams of Bedminster Pharmacy aims to show how all pharmacies can help people with a variety of health conditions and ease pressure on other parts of the NHS.
windmillhillcityfarm.org.uk
to sport by teaching football in a fun, pressure-free environment. They will be running Under 5s sessions at the farm, as well as birthday parties for children up to 10. littlekickers.co.uk
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Y THE end of the summer term the farm’s education team had played host to visits from more than 2,000 school children in 2018. The team offer a range of options for school visits, with sessions including Farm and Garden Explorers; Mini Beast Madness; Pick It, Cook It, Eat It; and seasonal sessions. They are now accepting bookings for the autumn term. For information and early bird discounts visit the website and search School Visits.
Green Day
Outdoor fun: One of many visits by schools to the farm five days a week, mornings and afternoons, from September. Farm adventurers, for 2-5 yearolds, are based in a log cabin in a
www.doorexpresssouthwest.co.uk
August 2018
natural, wooded section of the farm. Sessions provide children with the opportunity to freely explore the outdoors, with activities including animal care, growing and gardening, cooking, mud kitchen, pond dipping, bug hunting and more.
Pitching in If you fancy having a kickabout on the new pitch, the farm has some great opportunities. Starting on September 12, WHCF Drop-in Footie sessions are for anyone wanting to play football without committing to a team. Every Wednesday, 12.30-1.30pm, £4 per session. Email info@ windmillhillcityfarm.og.uk if you’re interested. Walking football is aimed at people over 50, but many older people take part. With no running allowed the risk of injury is minimal, allowing people to safely return to a sport they love, or try it for the first time. If you are interested in joining the farm’s Walking Football team email info@windmillhillcityfarm. org.uk Little Kickers aim to give children a positive introduction
The farm has been awarded a Green Flag community award for 2018-19. The award rewards the best green spaces in the country, recognising the regeneration and improvement they bring to an area.
Fired Up The FoodFireEarth supper on June 30 was a huge success with around 50 people enjoying fantastic food. There’s another one planned for later on in the year.
Signing on A new accredited BSL sign language course starts in September, along with other courses from the WEA (Workers Educational Association) including art, stained glass, yoga, jewellery making and poetry. Sign up now! Details on the website.
southbristolvoice
31 PRIVATE HEALTHCARE
Are you suffering from varicose veins or thread veins?
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ARICOSE veins are a common problem affecting at least 20 per cent of the UK’s adult population. They occur when small valves inside the veins stop functioning correctly. Rather than blood flowing effortlessly back towards the heart, the blood stagnates within the veins causing aching, tiredness and discomfort. There are many myths surrounding thread veins and varicose veins, such as that you can get them from crossing your legs for long periods of time. This is not true, according to Mr Bill Neary, a consultant vascular surgeon at Spire Bristol Hospital. “You don’t get varicose veins from crossing your legs for long periods but they are more common in occupations where you are on your feet for long periods of time – retail staff and teachers do suffer more than most,” said Mr Neary. What are the symptoms? At first, problem veins may not be visible but symptoms will occur. Sometimes patches of blue thread
veins may be the earliest signs of an underlying problem. Eventually, the abnormal veins may become swollen, enlarged and varicose. This can be embarrassing and painful. Varicose veins are usually blue or dark purple and may also be lumpy or twisted in appearance. While any vein can be affected, varicose veins most commonly develop in the legs and feet – predominantly because standing and walking can put pressure on the veins in the lower body. Are varicose veins harmful to my health or can they be ignored? In the developing stages, varicose veins and thread (broken) veins may be primarily a cosmetic problem. However, if ignored, the condition can deteriorate and a variety of complications can occur such as leg swelling and pigmentation of the skin around the ankles and ulcers. Occasionally, veins can burst, causing bleeding, or the blood within the veins can clot, leading to the painful condition of phlebitis. Not all visible veins in the legs
are varicose veins. Small veins under the skin, known as thread veins, spider veins or reticular veins, may become prominent due to a variety of reasons. Are thread veins something I should be concerned about? They can, rarely, cause local symptoms of aching and throbbing but the most common concern to people is being unsightly. However, sometimes thread veins are an indication of underlying varicose veins which may not be visible on examination. Treatment of thread veins will not be successful unless the underlying problem – for example varicose veins – has been corrected first. Therefore, a thorough venous assessment is necessary before initiating any local treatment for thread veins. Are women or men more likely to get these vascular problems? It can affect men just as much as women. Men tend to cover their legs up more and have more hair, so the problem may be hidden
away and ignored, and some men only seek treatment when their veins become swollen and complications start to occur. Can I avoid having surgery? Fortunately, modern, minimally invasive treatments can often be performed under local anaesthetic as a walk-in, walk-out procedure. This leaves the patient with minimal postoperative pain with practically immediate return to normal activity. Are you interested in learning more about varicose veins or thread veins, the causes, symptoms and the available treatment options? Spire Bristol Hospital is inviting you to attend a free patient information evening this August. The event will allow you the chance to listen to a talk from their consultant specialist and ask any questions which you may have. To book your place please contact Spire Bristol Hospital on 0117 980 4080 or email info@ spirebristol.com.
Joint pain shouldn’t hold you back from tackling life. Don’t wait to let your pain take control of special moments or daily activities. Book your private consultation today. We have a variety of Orthopaedic Consultants and Physiotherapists that are ready to help you get back to a better quality of life. > Hip pain > Knee pain > Foot and ankle problems
> Hand and wrist pain > Shoulder pain > Spine correction
0117 980 4080 Search ‘Spire Bristol’
Farm friends The next Farm Friends members meeting is Tuesday September 18, 5.30-6.30pm. Have your say about how the farm is run. Membership is £10 per year - sign up at the meeting.
To advertise, contact sales@southbristolvoice.co.uk or Ruth on 07590 527664
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
n YOUR COUNCILLORS
A
August 2018
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Help local shops! UGUST is a crucial time for local shops. This is because the second vote for Charlie the renewal of Bolton the Bedminster Green Improvement Southville District (BID) is under way as you read this. Many of you will remember that the first vote was lost because of Asda – this time, Asda are excluded. We could compare a voting system which gives so much power to one organisation with a scene out of Poldark – but, hey, another day. The vote is done both by numbers of shops and on business rates paid. The BID has done an enormous amount for the area because it can raise tens of thousands of pounds a year. This has supported Upfest, the lantern parade, and many other events up and down the shopping streets – which help to make BS3 the brilliant area that it is. So this
Southville
vote will be critical in determining whether or not these things can continue to happen. If you are a local business who has a vote, please, please vote to keep the BID for another five years. If you are a shopper – well, you might just ask the traders you use if they have voted!
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20mph consultation he 20mph limit has such obvious benefits to me that I’d have thought by now everyone would welcome it. However, our council has seen fit to run a review. Named streets for review are North Street and Duckmoor Road. It would be a tragedy if these roads were allowed to revert to 30mph. Both have schools, and both are routes that children walk down. North Street is our local shopping street, while Duckmoor Road also has three blocks of council flats, which have elderly tenants. So – please respond to the consultation (below) and save our slower streets! tinyurl.com/bris20mph
How to contact your councillor: p2
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Upfest
HAT an amazing event Upfest is! How did it happen that, for one Stephen weekend in July, Clarke Southville feels Green like one of the Southville cultural capitals of Europe? It came from a lot of love and work by the organisers, real community engagement and the identification of a niche that Bristol could become famous for. Anyway, lots of thanks.
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Arena … again he decision on the arena location will be announced in early September. In fact, the mood messages from Marvin are that the decision has been taken and, against the wishes of the majority of Bristolians, it will be in Filton. There are many problems with this in my view; not least the fact that South Bristol won’t be getting many of the jobs or extra cash that
comes with the investment. We have already seen the closure of many shops and restaurants in the city centre. Cribbs Causeway 2 may be approved in August, which would mean a doubling of the shops at Cribbs. If the arena goes to Filton, the move away from the centre will become unstoppable. Why Marvin is a party to this I have no idea.
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Football Parking he Long Ashton Park & Ride is now owned by the council but they are still refusing to let it be used for stadium traffic for some arcane reason. Extending residents’ parking to Saturday may provide some protection in Southville but is not going to help Ashton (and may make it worse for them). The Metrobus may help marginally when it opens; we shall see. What should happen of course is that the club should recognise the impact they are having on the community and pay for and implement a full match-day parking scheme.
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Lanterns are Go EDMINSTER Lantern Parade will be taking place later this year after a successful crowdfunding exercise. This annual event is now one of the most popular in Bristol and attracts thousands to our streets. Local schools play a central part in the parade and we know how concerned people were when news broke that it might have to be cancelled due to lack of funding. As Bedminster councillors, we want to salute the organisers for working so hard to save the parade, and the many people who donated money. There are more updates at: site.bwlp.org.uk
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Match day parking e wish all the teams based at Ashton Gate a successful season. But we share the disappointment of residents that there has been no progress in plans for either a match day parking scheme or enforceable parking measures to help improve access and tackle
Mark Bradshaw Labour Bedminster
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Mental health elia was pleased to present the golden motion in full council last month, highlighting the impact of austerity and underfunding of the NHS, specifically on mental health services in the city. The Thrive programme, with 11 work streams to improve mental health in Bristol, is available to read at bristol.gov.uk and pulls together key partners across the city to reduce the stigma associated with mental ill health.
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Contacting us e hold drop-in sessions at Gaywood House on the first Wednesday of the month and a monthly surgery at Mezzaluna, on West Street, on the first Saturday from 10.3011.30am. Our emails and phone numbers are on page 2 of the Voice. We are also on Facebook: @MarkandCeliaforBedminster
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Finding the extra money needed for the Portishead line olleagues in North Somerset have been reviewing progress in getting the Portishead railway line reopened for passengers. North Somerset council is leading on several bids to secure the funding they require. Although North Somerset is outside the West of England Combined Authority, or Weca, we are sure the other councils, including Bristol, are giving their full support. Whatever the ambitions for mass transit in Bristol and the wider area, a key measure of success or failure will be whether Portishead will ever be connected to the national rail network. A reopened line has implications for Bedminster, not least our own support for a new halt at Ashton
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obstructive parking. Although the council’s Parking Services have done some additional enforcement, this is not enough. Realistic alternatives to driving to Ashton Gate are needed; the 24 bus cannot cope and is frequently disrupted on matchdays. Bristol Sport have funded new bus services and publicity for these has been effective, but more is needed, including the park and ride to be open at Long Ashton, Metrobus services and frequent, higher capacity trains to Parson Street. Celia and Mark will continue to keep up the pressure, and you will be interested to know that fire tenders are now fitted with
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Please keep letters as short as possible, LETTERS and provide your postal address.
Hedges can be a hazard PAVEMENTS in BS3 are frequently narrow and easily blocked. Hard luck if you are pushing a buggy, can’t see very well or have mobility issues. At this time of year, hedges can be a significant obstacle. Most people can and do keep their hedges and other plants under control, but sometimes we forget and they do grow so very quickly. Bristol city council has responsibility for seeing that pavements are fit for use and owners of overgrown hedges may get a letter, or a visit. This gives 10 days to cut the hedge back (not a problem for most people). If that’s not done, BCC will give another week or two’s warning and then a council contractor will cut it at the hedge owner’s expense. Much better to do it yourself, but sometimes hedge owners are ill or elderly (or they don’t have any shears) and it’s not so easy. If you know of someone in that situation, why not do the neighbourly thing and offer to help out? Pat Gregory, Bedminster
Colston move is divisive THE LORD Mayor’s role is to promote Bristol and represent its citizens in a non-partisan way. The new Lord Mayor, Cleo Lake, highlights cohesion, inclusion and representation as her main aims. Yet one of her first actions was highly divisive. This was the removal of Edward Colston’s portrait from the Lord Mayor’s Parlour, which was publicised in both local and national press to promote herself and her support for the pressure group Countering Colston. To make things worse, this associates the Lord Mayor of Bristol with the same old half-truths peddled by this pressure group, such as the introductory statement on the Countering Colston Twitter page: “Ending the public & private celebration of Colston in Bristol, a genocidal mass-murderer who trafficked and enslaved my ancestors & yours for personal gain.” Is this how we wish to be represented? As well as the
extremely inflammatory language it includes untruths (slave trading was bad but it does not make Colston a genocidal mass-murderer) and it implies Colston made his money for personal gain when, in fact, he was probably Bristol’s greatestever benefactor in education, social care and poor relief. I have submitted a complaint to Bristol city council about the conduct of the Lord Mayor and await their response. I have suggested that the Lord Mayor should make amends by seeking a resolution of this divisive debate, based on education, not whitewashing or obliterating, explaining the truth about Colston (both good and bad) and Bristol’s role in the slave trade. Mr JE Hill, Knowle
Park bikers are not a surprise REGARDING the article about motorbikes in Victoria Park in the latest SBV, I’m curious as to why the council and police are so shocked by this. When Sustrans put forward their original proposals for their cycle superhighway this was mentioned countless times in resident objections, over several months. These pound shop Evil Knievels could squeeze their way into the park before, so the fact that they’ve widened the gates (and in some places left huge gaps) is just mind boggling. What on earth did our glorious community leaders think was going to happen? Tom Horn, Totterdown
Witches don’t don’t like otters I WAS interested to read about your hunt for the elusive otter. I’ve actually seen a wild otter in Wales. Admittedly, it was exciting to see. But why are we encouraging their return? Is it because they are super cute furballs? Stop! They’re merciless assassins who use their intellects for great evil. I’ve seen a video of an otter attacking a monster carp – as soon as that carp was dead the otter swam away, leaving the body behind, it was just not fun any more. The male otter is slightly nastier than the female (which makes a change). It has been
Write to paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk or to 18 Lilymead Avenue, BS4 2BX
reported that a male otter approached a pup floating on the surface while its mother was diving for food. The male forced the pup underwater as if trying to drown it. When the female surfaced, the male stole her food. Anglers hate them and fisheries have to spend thousands on electrified fencing to try and keep them out. The fact is otters are finely-tuned predators with a dash of evil and if I found a pile of scant I would probably run! Wicked Witch of Knowle
Sad to see our flowers mown AS SOMEONE who has spent several hours working on wildflower sites in Victoria Park, it has been very depressing to see so many sites mowed – in spite of the locations being reported to park and council officials. It must be particularly upsetting for the school children who helped us create some of the sites. The mowing of long grass areas last autumn also chopped up two hibernating hedgehogs. I also think it’s very sad to see mowers across Bristol destroying magnificent displays of buttercups. I know there are people who prefer grass to be neat and tidy, but I think that those of us enjoying the wild flowers and animals in our parks are – or are becoming – the majority. Name supplied Windmill Hill
Amazing kids I WOULD like to say a massive congratulations to Victoria Park primary school for their amazing performance of African dance, drumming and singing in the park on July 13. I heard the drums from my house and went to see what was going on. It’s great to see such talented children and teachers. My own children went to this school in the 1980s. It was a great school then and it certainly seems to be a great school now. Brilliant! Liz Goodsir, Windmill Hill
We’d like to join garden awards I NOTE with disappointment that Windmill Hill and Victoria Park have not been included
in this year’s Bedminster Good Garden awards. Having just walked through Southville I see that almost every house has received an award – even one with a concrete car port at the front, albeit with two hanging baskets. Perhaps the award should be renamed as Southville Good Gardens as the rest of us don’t get a look in. BS3 is a very large area, but we have been included in previous years. The judging seems to be haphazard and piecemeal as Hill Avenue has been covered as well as some of the roads leading off towards St John’s Lane. However, I noticed that Fraser Street doesn’t seem to be displaying certificates. Di Weston, Windmill Hill
World will not end with Brexit “BREXIT/the country is in chaos.” That battle-cry, have you noticed, emanates almost entirely from those who are largely responsible for any chaos, by their unremitting attempts to overturn the democratic vote to leave the EU. They have undermined the UK’s negotiating position, to the delight of EU bureaucrats, but not the 27 other countries with whom we should be negotiating. The Chequers document does not offer the outcome for which 17.5 million voted. It would leave the UK still subject to the EU Court, though a customs union was outvoted. Cameron’s £9.3m booklet, the EU, and all sides in the referendum, stated that Brexit meant leaving the single market and customs union. There is no hard or soft Brexit, only Brexit or no Brexit. Jacob Rees-Mogg and Dennis Skinner have both said that the UK should pay nothing to the EU. The EU will not accept the May proposals, will attempt to humiliate further, and will lose more if the UK walks away, given the EU trade surplus. UKIP believes the UK should negotiate from a position of strength, not present abjectness. The world will not end in March 2019 if the UK walks; meanwhile, UKIP membership is growing, to confront the selfseeking, self-interested, illiberal anti-democrats posing as patriots. Daniel Fear, Hartcliffe Chairman, Bristol UKIP
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WIN Tickets to a Bristol pirate tour
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on evidence about Blackbeard from Jamaica, and the discovery of his ship, the Queen Anne’s Revenge, it may change your view of pirates forever, says Sheila. Tours run on Wednesday and Saturday until September 12. • Blood and Butchery in Bedminster, a tour of the dark side of BS3, is back in September. HOW TO ENTER WE’VE got two pairs of tickets to Blood, Blackbeard and Buccaneers to give away to the Voice reader who can answer the question above. Email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk or post to Blackbeard Comp, SBV, 18 Lilymead Avenue, Bristol BS4 2BX, by August 14. showofstrength.org.uk
HO WAS Blackbeard? Was he the fearsome pirate of legend, ready to slice up anyone with his cutlass? Or was that fake news he spread to terrorise his enemies? You can find out more about the most famous real-life pirate, real name Edward Teach, who was born in Bristol in the 1680s. Blood, Blackbeard and Buccaneers is a walking tour devised by Sheila Hannon, founder of award-winning Bedminster theatre company Show of Strength. It starts at the Golden Guinea pub in Redcliffe and ends near the Centre. It lasts about two hours, visiting dockside pubs and landmarks on the way. Drawing
Just tell us: Where does the new pirate tour of Bristol begin?
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n HISTORY Mary spoke up for the feral children the rest of society wanted to ignore IT WON’T have escaped the attention of regular readers of these features that the subjects of our stories about historical figures connected with South Bristol have mostly been men. The reasons are obvious: the lack of a vote, or of any real economic or political power, meant that women found it much harder to make an impact on public life until the 20th century. But there have always been women who rose above their circumstances and ignored the barriers that were put in their way. Mary Carpenter was one: a reformer who changed the way that “child delinquents” were treated so radically that she won fame not only in the UK but across the world.
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ary Carpenter was born in Exeter in 1807, the daughter of a Unitarian minister, but spent most of her life in Bristol. She never married, though she did adopt a child late in life, and she dedicated most of her life to children who the rest of society seemed to want to ignore. Her entire life was spent fighting to persuade Victorian Britain that child delinquents were first and foremost children, and deserved to be treated as such – not thrown into jail. She was also a supporter of a thorough education for all girls – something else that many contemporaries thought unnecessary – and was courted by the early suffragette movement which was calling for women to be given the vote. Mary privately supported the idea, but would not say so, because in the mid-19th C the idea of women voting was so controversial that she thought it would damage public support for her reforms in education and prisons. There’s no better mark of her
A childhood in Bristol’s Victorian slums taught Mary Carpenter that desperate poverty was not a crime – and children who stole to survive should be helped, not imprisoned social standing than the invitation she received to meet Queen Victoria and Florence Nightingale – two of the most influential women in the world – at Windsor Castle in 1868. Mary was clearly someone who wanted to use her influence to maximum effect, in order to achieve as much reform as possible without upsetting those in power who could help her. It was only in the year of her death, 1877, that she finally backed the cause of votes for women, joining a public event run by the Bristol and West of England Society for Women’s Suffrage. She died in June 1877 and was buried at Arnos Vale cemetery. Her funeral cortege was half a mile long – and her reputation as a reformer persists to this day. What drove Mary Carpenter to ignore the modest ambitions of a churchman’s daughter and devote her life to the lawless children of the streets?
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t may be her family’s move from Exeter to Bristol in 1817, when Mary was 10, that set her on her career. The Carpenters settled in Lewins Mead – now
August 2018
’A CHILD DELINQUENT IS STILL A CHILD’
Mary Carpenter: Made her name speaking up for child “delinquents”, but also spoke out on prisons, poverty, reform in India and the US, and education – especially for the right of girls to a decent schooling part of the city centre office area, full of tower blocks and shops. In 1817 it couldn’t have been more different. Lewins Mead was a slum. One of many in the city, to be sure, but one of the worst. Here families lived four, five or more to a room, adults and children crammed in together. The name suggests the area had not long ago been a field, but by the 18th C it was a crowded maze of streets where new industries such as sugar refining and Fry’s chocolate works sprang up. Between them were narrow courts of housing, two or three storeys tall, each with two or three bedrooms, and probably with a family in each room. Many had no back yards and access to a shared privy which had no proper drainage. Sewer waste found its way into the harbour, not far away, adding to the smells of the new factories. Disease was rife and epidemics hit Bristol in waves: a single attack of cholera in 1849, for example, killed 2,000 people. When people fell sick they had no hospital to go to. Bristol’s first medical officer of health, David Davies, reported that he
frequently found typhus patients lying three to a bed at home; in one slum room he found seven people helpless on the floor. “The water drank in many houses was only undiluted sewage,” he wrote in 1865. The misery and poverty are almost impossible for us to imagine. Families were large precisely because living conditions were so poor that many children died from illness. In the early 19th C there were no schools for all these children. Indeed, they weren’t always viewed as children. Like everyone else, they were supposed to work if they were to survive, and the children of the poor often had back-breaking jobs. Factory work was common and the Factories Act of 1833 only restricted the work that could be done by children – it didn’t forbid it. Until 1842, it was legal for children under 10, and for women, to work underground in mines, and sometimes whole families toiled together in the South Bristol pits. But what about those who couldn’t find jobs? The children
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MARY CARPENTER, SOCIAL ACTIVIST
Idealised view: “Mrs Mary Carpenter and Her First Reformatory Girl, Annie Woolham”. Painted, at Red Lodge in Park Street on October 10, 1854, by George Edmund Butler PICTURE: © The Red Lodge Museum, Bristol Culture whose parents were out at work, or, worse, were unemployed? Even a working family could barely make ends meet. The result was a wave of criminality, much of it committed by children. Why not, when there seemed no other way to survive? Children hung around the streets in riotous gangs that became a notorious nuisance. The Bedminster youngsters were especially well-known for rowdy behaviour. Shops proudly displayed their wares outside and it was easier for children to snatch some food and run away unnoticed than it would be for an adult. The most common crime was this kind of petty theft, but when the young villains were caught, they were treated a villains rather than children. It was an age that chose to see wickedness as a quality that was inbred, and where even being homeless was a crime. So a child of seven who had stolen a loaf was a wicked little creature who had to be punished, rather than a victim of poverty and circumstance. This meant that when a child was caught after a crime, they would go to court, and quite likely to prison. A Victorian jail
would not only be a brutal experience but an ideal academy where the youngster could learn more and better ways of thieving and wrong doing.
A VICIOUS POPULATION
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his was the neighbourhood Mary Carpenter moved to at the age of 10. Her father, Lant Carpenter, ran the Lewin’s Mead Unitarian meeting house. The Unitarian movement had grown out of the 17th C Enlightenment, with values of reason, tolerance and a belief that God had planted the seeds of perfection in every human. It led naturally to the belief that all humans were created equal, and that there was no justification for keeping people as slaves. To the Carpenter family, it meant that the people of Lewin’s Mead, said to be an area “notorious for the general vicious character of its population”, had as much right to improve themselves as anyone else. Lant Carpenter ran a school in Lewins Mead where he taught his daughter as well as his three sons. When she was 20, Mary left for a job as a governess on the Isle of Wight. Two years later,
aged only 22, she became head teacher at her father’s school in Brandon Hill. Building on her experience as a governess for a well-off family, this was a boarding school for families who could afford to pay. However her ambitions were about to be broadened. The Unitarians were an international movement and the Carpenters welcomed many visitors from abroad, including Dr Joseph Tuckerman, a Unitarian minister from Boston, US. Her American contacts awakened her to the plight of slaves in the US. Another visitor, Ram Mohan Roy, was founder of an Indian movement which broke away from the strict caste system of Hinduism. He taught that all castes of people were to be treated equally – a revolutionary notion for a country where some people were born into castes that swept the streets, while others were priests or property owners. The story goes that Mary’s determination to make her own stand for social equality came when she was walking down a street near her home with Dr Tuckermann in 1833. They saw a small boy dressed in rags running down the street.
“The boy should be followed to his home and seen after,” said the doctor. Mary decided her genteel school was not enough. In 1835 she began a Working and Visiting Society which visited the poor in their homes and tried to understand what caused their plight, and help the children to get an education. But the children of the slums were not much interested in reading and writing: it would not help them find food or get a factory job. In 1840 Lant Carpenter died, and Mary took on more of his charity work around Lewins Mead. She still helped run the family school, but she was writing to Tuckerman in the US and learning about his “farm school” teaching practical skills to delinquent children. More visitors from the US fired up her increasing opposition to slavery, including a visit from Frederick Douglass, a former slave who had escaped captivity in the South in 1838. The northern states opposed slavery – but sometimes the courts there would return escaped slaves to their “owners” in the South.
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ary was becoming convinced that the only way to reform the lawless children of Britain’s cities was to provide them with free schools. But different branches of Christianity were competing for influence. An attempt in Parliament in 1843 to pass a bill setting up free schools failed, because nonconformists thought it gave too much power to the Church of England. The failure sparked Mary into action. Raising money from the middle-class supporters who backed her Visiting Society, in August 1846 she set up a Ragged Industrial School – a free school in Lewins Mead for “the instruction and moral improvement of those whose poverty, habits and mode of procuring subsistence have unfitted them for belonging to any other school”. A master, Mr Grant, was appointed, and he went on to the streets looking for pupils, telling them he would teach them to read and write for free. The first day, a Sunday, three boys turned up in the morning. The afternoon was better: 13 or Continued overleaf
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
n HISTORY Continued from page 37 14 attended. Mr Grant wrote in his diary: “That afternoon I shall never forget. Only 13 or 14 boys present; some swearing, some fighting, some crying. One boy struck another’s head through the window. “I tried to offer up a short prayer, but found it impossible; the boys, instead of kneeling, began to tumble over one another, and to sing Jim Crow.” Slowly, order was imposed, and soon 30 boys aged from six to 17 were attending regularly. As well as reading and writing, there was “religious improvement”, and practical skills taught by a tailor and a shoemaker. Girls were soon taught too, though it seems only boys were given a bath every day. Girls, perhaps, were thought more likely to bathe at home.
THE DANGEROUS CLASSES
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ary was studying which methods worked best in other countries. She was gathering expertise, and in 1851 she published an essay: Reformatory Schools for the Children of the Perishing and Dangerous Classes and for Juvenile Offenders. To us, the title says a lot – she saw some youngsters as a “dangerous class” which threatened the rest of society. But that is to ignore her message, which was shocking at the time: that “child delinquents” were children first, and the best way to improve them was through love. Her essay tried to convince the public – and more importantly, decision-makers – that prison was not the remedy to lawless youth. “Of the 24 boys who were in prison during 1850, 12 have become decidedly more hardened and reckless since their imprisonment,” she wrote of the boys she had studied. She described one boy who was first jailed at the age of seven – the youngest age prison was permitted – after being caught begging. Prison only helped him to move on to different crimes, and his sixth jail term was awarded for stealing a coconut. After this he was sent to Mary’s Ragged Industrial School, but the school had no power to keep him in class, and he was soon back on the streets. At his ninth court case, Mary described how he bounded into the dock,
’A CHILD DELINQUENT IS STILL A CHILD’
The Red Lodge, where a plaque bears Mary Carpenter’s name “his prison life having made him bold and insolent.” The next year, in 1852, Mary was arguing her case for reform at a House of Commons select committee, insisting that harsh penalties would not work, and a child must be treated as a child. She tried to recast the image of a young “delinquent” as a pathetic being in need of help, writing: “…their tattered garments, their bare feet, their starved lok, their mean and degraded aspect … must touch even those who regard them only as young beings, susceptible as our own children of privation and suffering.” She treated her young charges as individuals, and tried to instil a family atmosphere for children whose own notion of family life had been horribly corrupted. She described one boy as “doomed almost from infancy to be a convict.” The boy’s father had, in some extreme of desperation or mental ill health, taken his two small boys from their bed, apparently telling them he was going to kill them. Mary claims the mother, far from arguing with her husband, told him to keep the boys’ shoes. The man took them to a canal and succeeded in “throwing the eldest in with violence, as if he were drowning a dog; all this may seem incredible to some, too revolting to human nature to be true.” Incredible or not, Mary’s testimony, and the humanity of her own methods, won her influence over new laws which were passed, starting with the Youthful Offenders Act of 1854, which gave some state funding to Ragged Schools such as her own.
More reforms followed with Industrial Schools Acts in 1857, 1861 and 1866. Meanwhile, Mary had opened the schools for which she is best remembered in Bristol: in 1852 a reformatory for children of both sexes in Kingswood, which soon became boys-only, and in 1854 Red Lodge Reformatory for girls in Park Row. This grand Tudor building had been built in the 16th C by royal courtier John Yonge as a mere annexe to his Great House, which stood where the Colston Hall is now. Backed by money from Lady Byron, widow of the scandalous Romantic poet, Mary set about restoring the lodge, which had become derelict. It was a grisly job – in her diary she recorded finding the remains of a human foot in an outhouse. Mary succeeded in making the lodge a homely place, a sharp contrast to the prison-like workhouses poor families were often sent to. She insisted on well-trained staff, a family atmosphere and an approach that tried to persuade the child to co-operate – they were not forced to work, and recreation and sport were encouraged. These things were not common in other schools of the day. Mary wrote of the Red Lodge girls: “The delinquency of these poor girls may in almost every instance be directly traced to parental neglect or mismanagement. Their low educational condition is usually a direct consequence of this and no amount of subsequent teaching can compensate for this early neglect. Every effort is however made to cultivate the intellectual
powers of the girls as a means of raising them from their degraded condition.” Yet her practices were not entirely to modern tastes: there are records that girls had their hair cut short as a punishment, or were locked in the basement. The ambition for the girls was that they should become house servants, and Bristol’s wealthy matrons were said to be keen on employing the Red Lodge’s well-trained girls. It was at least better than a life on the streets. Mary refused to make fixed rules about how long her “reform” of wayward young pupils should take. Nor did she prescribe the exact methods, saying: “Each case should be dealt with on its own merits, release dependent on the progress made, and decided by the school managers.” Neither did she insist on a rigid set of religious beliefs. Mary met opposition from Catholics in particular, and claimed that Roman Catholic priests in Bristol told Irish families that they should avoid the Ragged School. She told a Commons committee in 1861: “The children told us that the priests had in one case flogged a child for coming to our school, and had used very strong influence to prevent them from coming, and that I have myself been absolutely insulted in the street by Catholic children ... who feel erroneously that they were showing their zeal for their own religion by insulting Protestants.” She was not imagining this opposition: after her fame spread across Europe, the Pope condemned her books in 1864.
TO EUROPE – AND THE US
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n interest in prisons sprang naturally from Mary’s work on reforming the young offender, and she published a book called Our Convicts in 1864. She spoke to the National Association of Social Science, and at the International Penal and Prison Congress in London in 1872. In the same year, she was invited by Princess Alice of Hesse to help organise a Congress of Women Workers in Darmstadt, Germany. It was not sexual equality by our standards: the meeting resolved to work towards a “better preparation for domestic life”. But, at Mary’s
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August 2018
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n HISTORY suggestion, it led to an International Union for the Industrial Education of Women. She studied the liberal prison system of Louis Guillaume in Switzerland, and in 1873 went to America, where she visited prisons, met slavery abolitionists and criticised the “ dreadful state” of prisons in New York. Mary had wanted to visit India since meeting Raja Ram Mohan Roy in Bristol in 1833. Roy was, and still is, revered in India. He died of meningitis while he was in Bristol. He is buried in one of the most elaborate tombs in Arnos Vale. In 1866 Mary achieved her ambition of visiting India – but it was no holiday; she was determined to shake up the system there as much as she had in England. Helped by Roy’s Hindu followers and the American Unitarian mission in Calcutta, she investigated how to improve the education of girls in India. She found that few girls received any schooling after the age of 12. An education like her own – at her father’s school, she had been taught mathematics, the classics and sciences to the same level as her brothers – was beyond almost any Indian girl. The governor of Bombay allowed her to inspect schools, prisons and hospitals. However, Mary resisted giving her name to a state-funded school system, fearing it might have different priorities from hers. Instead she supported the efforts of Indian reformers in schools, prisons and hospitals. She saw it as crucial that more Indian women became teachers, nurses and prison workers – but for that to happen, Indian girls needed better schooling. At first she helped send teachers from Britain. Her schools were poorly attended at first, but eventually they became popular. Mary’s efforts also influenced the start of university education for women in India. Mary returned to India three times. In 1868 she set up a Normal School to train teachers, and in 1870 she set up the National India Association to provide a focus for those who wanted social reform.
WHAT KIND OF MOTHER?
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here are several elements in Mary Carpenter’s story that will seem out of place to modern eyes. She was a
Raj Mohan Roy: Mary met the great Indian reformer shortly before he died in Bristol in 1833, inspiring her to visit India, where she set up her own girls’ schools tremendously progressive figure for the time, yet she persisted in describing the children in her reform schools as different – not just difficult, but as potentially dangerous to the rest of society. Words like “delinquent” are rarely used today, but Mary was reflecting what was widely believed at the time – that a child was more or less condemned by their early circumstances to a lowly position in life. Her message seemed to be that street children were not doomed to a life of crime and vagrancy, but they could not expect anything more but a menial living even if they did reform themselves. “Poor but honest” was their highest aim. Yet she resisted dictating how these wayward souls were to be treated. She created a fairly strict and religious environment, to be sure, but she also emphasised the importance of love and a family atmosphere as the best
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MARY CARPENTER, SOCIAL ACTIVIST correctives. One wonders what her own daughter thought of her. Mary was 51 (and unmarried) when she adopted her daughter Rosanna, five, in 1858. Mary wrote: “Just think of me with a little girl of my own, about five years old! Ready made to hand and nicely trained, without the trouble of marrying, etc, a darling little thing, an orphan. I feel already a mere de famille, happy in buying little hats and socks and a little bed to stand in my own room, out of my own money. It is a wonderful feeling.” It sounds as if Mary saw her child, a little selfishly, as an addition to her happiness. She later wrote, “God put it into my mind that I ought to be a mother to the little thing.” Rosanna’s mother had been widowed and placed her daughter in the hands of a religious family whom she paid to look after her. However, when the mother disappeared and payments stopped, Rosanna’s fosterers passed her on to the Red Lodge. Two years later the mother reappeared, and demanded her daughter back, claiming she had been stolen from her. Funds were raised to enable her to come to Bristol, where she confronted Mary. She then had a change of heart, apparently convinced that Mary was caring for Rosanna better than she could, and she disappeared from Rosanna’s life. Rosanna was educated at a boarding school and later became Mary’s housekeeper. It was she who went to her mother’s bedroom in Red Lodge in June 1877 to find that Mary had died peacefully in the night. Mary left Rosanna an annuity, a third of
her glass and china, and all her books and pictures which were not promised to someone else. It’s hardly the legacy which an only child would expect: to the end, it seems, Mary Carpenter saw her young charges as in a different class from her own. But perhaps we should not judge one age by the standards of our own. Our social attitudes, after all, will be criticised by later generations. Mary has an important legacy which cannot be wiped out. Not only did she put her considerable influence behind all kinds of improvements to public health, prisons, hospitals, the justice system and education – especially for girls. She also insisted that a child “delinquent” was first and foremost a child, and deserved to be treated as such. That’s a lesson that some would say we have not yet fully absorbed. Sources • Women and Welfare: Ten Victorian Women in Public Social Service Julia Parker 1989 • Conceptualizing Cruelty to Children in Nineteenth-Century England Monica Flegel, 2016 • Women on Their Own: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Being Single edited by Rudolph M Bell, Virginia Yans • Mothers: Mary Carpenter thirdsector.co.uk • Bristol Ragged/Day Industrial School Peter Higginbotham childrenshomes.org.uk • Public Health in Victorian Bristol: the work of David Davies, Medical Officer of Health Peter Malpass and Michael Whitfield, Avon Local History & Archeology society
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2011 to make “new plays that dissect the 21st century experience”. This show, their 13th, has a cast of six, plus Tom Crosley-Thorne providing a live soundtrack of echoing guitar, harmonica and perfect atmospheric whistling. We start in a lecture about film-making, then cut to live action snippets as we uncover the past of Mae, our protagonist (Helena Middleton). She’s on a mission to find the truth of a tragedy that happened when she was a child. On the way she picks up a sidekick, Anne, played by Jesse Meadows, who’s spent too long on her own characters including Nia and the troublesome African trucks, Ace the show-off race car from Australia, a few helpful cranes in Brazil along with old trusty favourites Annie and Clarabel. The three youngsters I went with had mixed responses. Benaiah, 3, said: “I liked the trains and the car. He was fast but mean.” Seven-year old Lilly said: “I liked the fact that the trains were singing, Thomas made new friends
REVIEWS
and is a hard nut to crack. Anne is the underdog we all fall for, and in the end, of course, she’s the hero. Walter, Liz and Frank (Jesse Jones, Kerry Lovell and Tom England) are the family who run the pub, each seething with historic resentments, who close
ranks when the outsiders arrive. What matters just as much as the setup is the delivery of the whole thing. Described as a spaghetti western with pasties, this is slick, clever and funny, in full technicolour. An actor seamlessly places a chair just as another sits on it; props appear in the hand at just the right time; moments are created with just a few words. The epic finale features a huge gun fight – the cast flinging themselves around in ever-more exaggerated death throes – an exhausting, hilarious sequence, timed to perfection. Beccy Golding
and that they were all from different countries. But why couldn’t the girl have been the fast race car who was really cool?” Ten-year-old James said: “I thought it was really good. I liked the fact that Thomas dreamt big, he didn’t just want to stay at home and pull trucks forever. I love that the film showed us that even when Thomas made mistakes, he tried to go back and fix them.” My parental response is that it
was nice enough. It didn’t have unexpected tame swear words in it, which makes a change from most children’s films these days, and the negative characters got their comeuppance. I agree with my seven-year-old in that the female character could have been the fast race car just for a change. It had some nice songs which were sweet and catchy and I saw a few younger audience members dancing along! Ruth Drury
South Western: A film-style epic
Will Writing & Estate Planning
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HAVE YOU GOT A PROBLEM WASP NEST?
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n Thomas and Friends: Big World, Big Adventures – The Movie N THIS new film based on the popular children’s books we all know and love, Thomas follows a his dream of beng the first railway engine to travel all the way around the globe. We meet several new
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southbristolvoice
n WHAT’S ON
n South Western Tobacco Factory theatre E’RE talking Western as in cowboys here – putting the Wild into the West of England. South Western starts in Bristol and ends with a showdown in a pub in Cornwall. The Wardrobe Ensemble are a Bristol theatre company, set up in
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August 2018
Witty look at how Bill kept top of the plots
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ways people used to die. Note: not for the faint hearted, or children. 7.30-9pm, £10. Also on other dates in August, along with another macabre tour, Murder, Mayhem & Mystery. arnosvale.org.uk n Battlemoose Thunderbolt, Bath Road, Totterdown. Charity gig in aid of Paul’s Place, a centre for disabled adults in Coalpit Heath. Battlemoose are a Bristol rock and pop cover band who promise “mighty floorbangers”. Advance tickets £2.50 or £4 on the door; 7.30-11.45pm. thethunderbolt.net Saturday August 4 n Strummerjam Fiddlers Club,
Willway Street, Bedminster. A night of music in memory of the late Clash frontman Joe Strummer. Headlined by festival favourites Mankala with support from Bristol Samba, Itinerants, and Bristol’s leading Brazilian dance campany, the Sambazinhas. Profits to the Joe Strummer Foundation and Musicians Against Homelessness. 8pm, £11/£8.80. fiddlers.co.uk Friday August 10 n Cider & Sausage Fest Zion, Bishopsworth Road. Enjoy tasty bangers (veggie options available) and sample different ciders. Music from Stompin’
Bold humour: Lucy Porter and Carey Marx try out Fringe shows
humour delivered from a slightly puzzled perspective, with a sideways smile to show us he knows exactly what he’s doing. Content I can mention includes riffing on the theme of selfidentification, online dating as a newly single 52-year-old, bat spotting in Australia, and how to be as confident as Trump. The Hen & Chicken Studio has seen some improvements. The new Studio Bar occupies the old green room – a much more sensible place to order your drinks. There’s also a new LED lighting rig (no heat), new sound system, and a new hardwood floor. Further changes are planned. Beccy Golding
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workshop teaches clowning techniques and how to play together. Show 11.30am, family workshop 1pm. Tickets £2.50. creativeworkspacebristol.co.uk n Fun Quiz St Paul’s Church, Coronation Road, Southville. Starts at 7.30pm. Open to teams of four, £5 per person including light supper. n Morbid Curiosity Tour Arnos Vale Cemetery. Have you ever walked around a cemetery or graveyard and thought “I wonder how they died?” This tour is your chance to find out. From a fatal stabbing, to diseases of the past such as cholera and smallpox, open your mind to the
Making the menopause a laughing matter n Lucy Porter and Carey Marx Comedy Box at the Hen & Chicken Studio N JULY the Comedy Box runs these double-header Edinburgh fringe festival preview shows. You get to see seasoned performers trying out their nearly-ready acts. Lucy Porter often appears on telly or Radio 4. She’s bright and breezy, relaxed and open as she
when it’s off duty) had a circle of chairs surrounding a hay cart. Patrons cooled off with Ye Olde Choc Ices, and the action began. This brand new comedy has been written specially for the Bristol Shakespeare Festival. It’s inspired by the book of the same name by James Shapiro, focusing on the amazingly productive year
of 1599, in which Shakespeare wrote four of his most famous plays: Henry V, Julius Caesar, As You Like It and Hamlet. The cast of three are Will, Phil and Bill. Will Kemp, one of Shakespeare’s own players, is played by Chris Yapp, who looks dandy in hose, and quick changes in and out of full Elizabeth I ruff and gown. Diarist and theatrical impresario Philip Henslowe is played by Kirsty Cox and Bill Shakespeare himself by Alison Campbell – the whole cast is witty and engaging and flits between modern references, plot-driven dialogue and a selection of the most famous Shakespearean soliloquies with aplomb. The end of the show sees them build a replica of the Globe Theatre before our very eyes, regaled with fairy lights. It’s a magical end to a hot, sticky, educational and thoroughly entertaining evening. Beccy Golding
n 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare Stackville Playhouse T WAS that sweatily hot Saturday, the day England beat Sweden in the World Cup quarter finals, and anyone who could had found a spot with a nice cool breeze. Pity, then, the actors dressed in full doublet and hose, velvet cloaks and ruffs. The audience were hot and fidgety, the cast soldiered on through the stifling heat – no mean feat in itself, regardless of the fact that they played with energy, enthusiasm and humour. The Stackpool Playhouse (which I strongly suspect is the St Thomas Mar Thoma church hall
describes her two problems – one’s a health issue, one’s more philosophical. Health-wise, it’s the menopause – another high-profile woman sharing her experience of an issue which is getting more and more talked about. Hats off to her – it’s not your standard stand-up subject matter but she makes it accessible and funny. The philosophical problem is about
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n WHAT’S ON
n WHAT’S ON Wednesday August 1 n Wood Water Fire Windmill Hill City Farm, Philip Street, Bedminster. Outdoor nature play on Wednesdays, 10am to 3pm, until August 22. Make the most of the great outdoors with the farm’s play team. For ages 3 and above. Cost: £2 per child (concessionary places available). No booking needed. windmillhillcityfarm.org.uk Thursday August 2 n The Curious Cube Zion, Bishopsworth Road. Come and see a strange mirrored cube structure which comes to life with the questions that people ask. It’s Zion’s turn to host The Curious Cube, on tour from We The Curious, the new name for the @Bristol science centre. It aims to gather 10,000 questions to make a new exhibition created from the curiosity of the city. Special Kidcraft session in the morning. Everyone welcome, 10.30am-3pm. Part of Science Week at Zion, supported by Bristol Community Energy Fund. zionbristol.co.uk n Wild Outdoors Club Windmill Hill City Farm, Philip Street, Bedminster. From 10am- 12 noon every Thursday until August 23. Crafts, cooking, nature activities and outdoor games for 6-9 year-olds. Cost: £10 per child (concessionary places available). windmillhillcityfarm.org.uk Friday August 3 n Friendly Ever After Creative Workspace, Queens Road, Withywood Brazilian artists Nos Three present a funny and interactive show about friendship and all its beautiful discoveries. After the show, a family
August 2018
The Bard and his burdens in 1599
legacy, death and aging – with short ear canals, how many pairs of jeans you need before you die, glass clown ornaments, her experience as a woman in comedy, rage and virtue signalling all covered in her casual way as if it’s all just popped into her head. I wasn’t so familiar with Carey Marx but quickly came to enjoy his boyish sense of fun and mannish sense of bawdiness. Much more obviously still working out his material and checking his bundle of notes, there was much in his set that I can’t mention – adult
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Dave, performing bluegrass, blues, country, folk, rock ’n’ roll and more. Bar open 5-10pm. Over 18s only. Free entry. tinyurl.com/zionciderfest Tuesday August 7-Thursday 9 n Jump Into … Photography Knowle West Media Centre, Leinster Avenue. Free holiday fun at KWMC for ages 14-19, from 10am-3pm each day. Try your hand at studio, fashion and street photography and photo journalism. Exhibition at the end of the week. All kit provided but please bring lunch. Email dot@ kwmc.org.uk or call Dot on 0117 903 0444. kwmc.org.uk/events Wednesday August 8 n Marky Jay’s Monkey Magic Zion, Bishopsworth Road. With his monkey assistant, Professor Steve Chimpington, Marky Jay tries to amaze every child in the room with magic tricks and juggling, which never seems to go to plan. For ages 3+, cafe open from 9am. 10.30-11.30am, £3.83. zionbristol.co.uk See your event highlighted like this from just £5 per month. To find out more email Ruth Drury at sales@southbristolvoice.co.uk Sunday August 12 n Mantic Muddlers Tobacco Factory bar, North Street. “The Mantic Muddlers combine a rich influence of sonic stylings and serve up their stories on a foundation of infectious grooves and raucous melodies… For lack of a legitimate genre, you’ll be hearing roots, rattle & roll!” Free, 8-10pm. tobaccofactory.com/whats-on Monday August 13
Timeless tale of powerplay and tragic conflict n Welcome to Thebes Tobacco Factory
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ELCOME to Thebes is a massive play – set in a war-soaked near-future, reminiscent of ancient Greece. We witness war and madness, politics, manipulation and family tragedy, overseen by a distorted soothsaying crone. At times it’s lights-on, shouting, brutal outrage, while at
n Baby Comedy Depot Zion, Bishopsworth Road. Stand-up comedy for adults with little ones in tow. Headliner Suzy Carr has supported Russell Kane and reached the final of Jimmy Carr’s Comedy Idol. Adult lunches on sale (don’t bring your own) but you can feed babies, and no one will complain if anyone starts crying – as long as they’re not an adult. 1-2.30pm, £7. zionbristol.co.uk Tuesday August 14 n Board Games Tobacco Factory bar, North Street. A massive selection of board games, with beers, food, and board-gaming fun. Games such as Magic Maze, Sheriff of Nottingham and Pandemic. Entry £3.50, 6-10pm. If you fancy a particular game, leave a message on Facebook. facebook.com/tobaccofactory Wednesday August 15 Sons of Bill The Tunnels, Temple Meads. Three brothers whose father is, unsurprisingly, called Bill, make “complexly layered, emotionally intimate and sonically expansive” music. “Unknown to most, their fans adore them.” £13, 7.30pm. thetunnelsbristol.co.uk Friday August 17 n Comedy Depot Zion, Bishopsworth Road. The August headliner is homegrown South Westerner Tom Glover, who’s been on the comedy circuit since 2010, winning over any crowd with his tales of life on the outside and his observations on the minutiae of the everyday. He also does funny accents and pulls silly faces. 7.30pm, £6. zionbristol.co.uk/events Sunday August 19 others, spotlit moments bring atmosphere and intimacy. The production is a showpiece for this year’s graduating students of Bristol Old Vic Theatre School – all the actors and many of the technical and creative team, with the exception of director Lucy Pitman-Wallace, who trained at BOVTS in 1993. Back-of-house, costume designer Daniel Scott and supervisor Rian Stockton deserve mentions – I enjoyed the hooded robes of the women of Thebes and the linen uniform of Prince Tydeus. For the actors, I found it hard to pull my eyes away from James Schofield as the damaged child soldier, and Bonnie Baddoo as
n Gavin Strange, Aardman Animations Arnos Vale cemetery. Talk for teens and adults (not children) by the creator of the Gromit Unleashed 2 Day of the Dead sculpture at Arnos Vale. Gavin, senior designer and director at Aardman Animations, will talk about creating his Gromit design and his involvement in the previous two award-winning trails in aid of The Grand Appeal, the Bristol Children’s Hospital Charity. Tickets £3, 2-3.30pm. arnosvale.org.uk n Death Café Arnos Vale cemetery, Spielman Centre. All welcome to chat about death in a relaxed, social café environment. The objective: “to increase awareness of the reality of death, so we can enjoy feeling more fully alive”. Free, 2-4pm. arnosvale.org.uk Wednesday August 22 n Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires The Tunnels, Temple Meads. Members of the hardrocking, tell-it-like-it-is school of Southern rock, Lee Bains III and the Glory Fires are billed as “not for the faint-hearted or sensitive of hearing, but an unmissable event for lovers of passionate and honest rock and roll”. 7.30pm, £12. thetunnelsbristol.co.uk Saturday August 25 n Band Of Holy Joy + Micko & The Mellotronics + Bush & Fey The Thunderbolt, Bath Road, Totterdown. Post-punk but hard to categorise, Band of Holy Joy have just released a new album, Funambulist We Love You. Support from Micko & the Mellotronics, a four piece art-rock band featuring Jon Klein
(ex-Siouxsie & the Banshees), and South Bristol favourites, inventive songsters Bush & Fey. 7.30pm, £10.00 on the door. thethunderbolt.net Sunday August 26 n Athea Tobacco Factory bar, North Street. Paul Bradley, ex of Organelles, Bradley Bros and Three Cane Whale, presents a new duo with drummer/ percussionist Emma Holbrook. “This is improvised music of beauty, invention and virtuosity.” Free, 8-10pm. tobaccofactory.com/whats-on Tuesday August 28-Saturday September 1 n Summer School: Theatre Challenge Tobacco Factory theatre, North Street. Two groups aged 8-12 and 13-19 spend five days creating their own piece of drama with the help of professional theatre makers. Rehearsals will involve acting, movement, trust and teambuilding, and script work, from 9.30am-4pm each day. The week culminates in a show on Saturday at 5pm – tickets £3. Cost for the week £180 (help available – email bryony@ tobaccofactorytheatres.com). tobaccofactorytheatres.com Friday August 31 n Quiz and Supper Night Windmill Hill Community Association, Vivian Street. Held on the last Friday of every month, 8.30pm-late. Bar open. whca.org.uk Sunday September 2 n Bristol Aquarists Society Annual Show Hengrove Community Centre, Fortfield Road, Hengrove Bristol BS14 9NX. See “the best goldfish in the Continued overleaf Age-old themes of brutality and power are evoked by young cast
Antigone – both mesmerizingly watchable, and Marco Young as Prince Tydeus was oozing with powerful potential – I feel sure we’ll see him again. For the rest of the
cast, the women carried it – the team of Thebes stateswomen were all strong and committed: I especially warmed to Hannah Livingstone as Aglaea, likeable, human and direct, while Emma Prendergast as Euridice could play the role of smiling politician in real life. It’s an intense production – in moments of chaos I found some lines were lost, but this is theatre in the round depicting the theatre of war – timeless themes of power and poverty – what a place to start a career! Beccy Golding
Got a story or any other inquiry? Call Paul on 07811 766072 or email paul@southbristolvoice.co.uk
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August 2018
It's going so perfectly badly, you’ll have a riot n The Play That Goes Wrong Bristol Hippodrome T’S GOING wrong even before we take our seats – a man is running through the foyer shouting “Has anyone seen my dog?” Turns out he’s Trevor, the lights and sound guy (played by Gabriel Paul). He sits playing on his phone, when he’s not on stage trying to fix disasters. The play is an Agatha Christie-style mystery – Murder at Haversham Manor, performed by the Cornley Polytechnic drama
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Continued from page 43 country” as the Bristol Aquarists hold their annual open show. Auction of members’ surplus stock 12.30pm. Show open at 2.30pm; admission free. bristol-aquarists.org.uk Wednesday September 5 n Charity quiz night In aid of Dogs for Good, at Grounded café, Bedminster Parade. Dogs welcome! 7pm, £2 to enter, prizes and raffle, with all proceeds to Dogs for Good. Contact Rosie Blanning on 0117 203 3213 for more information. dogsforgood.org Saturday September 8 n Quiz and tea afternoon Ashton Vale Youth Club, Silbury Road. Ashton Vale Silver Social Club is holding a quiz with afternoon tea included. Tickets £5, 2pm. Proceeds to Ashton
Vale youth club. Donations of raffle prizes welcome. Details on 07920 441176 – please leave a message.
Regular events To advertise your event here from just £5 per month, contact Ruth at sales@southbristolvoice.co.uk n BS3 Repair Cafe Repairs for a donation, plus cream teas and home-made cakes. 1.30-4.30pm, last Saturday of every month, United Reformed Church Hall, West Street, Bedminster. Facebook: BS3 Repair Cafe n APPilates Pilates classes in South Bristol. Qualified teacher Anna Pearson holds classes Tuesday evenings at Holy Cross primary school, Dean Lane. Intermediate
southbristolvoice
n THE CITY PAGE
n WHAT’S ON society. Some of the cast gurn and play up to the audience, some take it terribly seriously, one mispronounces the words scrawled onto his sweaty palm. Behind-the-scenes leaks out in all manner of ways. Sandra Wilkinson (played by Elena Valentine) and stage manager Annie Twilloil (Catherine Dryden) fight over the female lead role of Florence Colleymore, sometimes speaking the words in unison, when one or the other of them isn’t out cold. Confused? It doesn’t matter! In this cornucopia of corny gags and clowning, the laughs come every few seconds. Steve Rostance, playing Jonathan Harris playing Charles Haversham, is very funny as the corpse – flinching when others walk on his hand, surreptitiously sneaking off stage when his stretcher collapses,
August 2018
Mistimed to a tee: The cast are in disarray right from the start
endlessly getting caught in the wrong place at the wrong time, or speaking the key line at just the
wrong moment. Other stand out set-pieces include when the cast somehow get stuck in a loop of dialogue, until finally one of them remembers the next line; an actor knocked out by a door slammed in her face is pulled through the window in a most undignified manner, and is shut inside a grandfather clock; and the study suddenly collapses, leaving two actors dangling from the furniture. The final moments, when the whole set collapses around the cast, is a wonderful homage to the slapstick of Buster Keaton. Creators Mischief Theatre Company return in February with The Comedy About A Robbery. I’ll be there. Beccy Golding
Level 6-7pm, 7.15-8.15pm, Beginners 8.20-9.20pm. Starting soon: mixed ability group, Thursday at Work Out Bristol, Brewery Court, North Street, Ashton, 11.30am-12.25pm. Private sessions available. Booking essential. From £7.50. Email: annapearson@ hotmail.com 07980 937726. n A unique form of dance exercise using Margaret Morris Movement and inspiring music from around the world. Dance Studio @ Workout, Baynton Road, Ashton, BS3 2EB. Mondays 11.15am-12.15pm, £4 drop in. Contact Tricia Mason, qualified dance teacher, on 07896 346486. n Danceblast “Bristol’s most exciting dance school.” Every Saturday and Sunday at St Francis Church Hall, North Street, Southville. Saturday: juniors, 3-4 years 10-11am, 5-6 years 11am-12 noon, 7-9 years 12 noon-1.30pm, 10-11 years 1.303pm, 12-13 years 2.15-4.15pm. Sunday: seniors 14-18 years 1.30-4.30pm, Tobacco Factory studio. Call Anne on 07984 069485. danceblast.co.uk n JollyTots Music & Singing Workshops. Fun drop-in music class for 0-5 years and their grown-ups. No booking, just turn up! Tuesdays 10am (term time) in the Padfield Centre, Victoria Park Baptist church, Sylvia Avenue. £3.50 (siblings under 1 are free). jollytots.org.uk
BS3 Community Events For the young and older members of our community and everyone in between n Holiday Club runs throughout the school summer holidays (July 24-August 31) and is taking bookings for its fun-filled, Aardman-themed schedule. Activities include: Creating Morph figures, cooking Gromit pizza, building a Wallace rocket, making a Shaun kite, plus a fishing trip to Manor Woods, a mammal detective trip to the Avon Gorge, a boat trip round the harbour…and much more! Open to all children from ages 4-11. Email family.services@ bs3community.org.uk. We are hosting some great events during the summer too: n Learn to crochet, a two-day course at the Southville Centre with Vicky of BrisWool & Paper Village. First day August 16, second day August 23. Vicky is a crochet fanatic and has been teaching for over 30 years. This course is for you if you are starting from scratch or if you want a refresher. £30 for two sessions, both days run 11am1pm. For more info email Vicky on vic.harrison@blueyonder.co.uk n Social tea dance on August 23, from 3-5pm at the Southville Centre. Tickets available from the Southville Centre reception. Live band, tea & cake included. £5 in advance, £6 on the door. • bs3community.org.uk/newsevents
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BRISTOL CITY ROUND-UP
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The rollout of Universal Credit will hit South Bristol very hard
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VER since the announcement of the move to Universal Credit, I’ve received calls from constituents worried about what this might mean for them. Along with Labour colleagues, I’ve raised concerns about the new system, which combines housing benefit, jobseekers’ allowance, tax credits and disability benefits for working-age people into a single monthly credit payment. We were especially critical of the delay between submitting an application and receiving payment, knowing that many people in Bristol South do not have the means to tide themselves over for a month or two. A recent report from the independent National Audit Office (NAO) stated that Universal Credit was not currently providing the “value for money” that the Government
insists it does, and neither did it look likely to provide value for money in the future. However, the NAO conceded that now that the roll-out was in progress there was no practical alternative but to continue with it. The full roll-out of Universal Credit is
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now under way here in Bristol South, with all new benefit claimants having to apply for the new single payment, as well as those people who have a change in their circumstances, such as a giving birth to a baby, reducing their hours at work, or a house move. Many vulnerable people will now be forced to claim the new benefit and risk going up to six weeks without any income. This will hit Bristol South hard. We know that our area of the city has some of the highest levels of poverty in Bristol, along with serious health inequality: around one in 10 working-aged adults are unable to work due to ill-health. There are almost 6,000 people in Bristol South claiming Employment Support Allowance (ESA) because they have a disability or health problem which means they cannot work – that’s over 1,000 more than in any other Bristol constituency. The NAO report revealed that more people were falling into rent arrears or having to use food banks in areas where Universal Credit was being introduced. I’ve been contacted by several constituents in difficult positions and recently raised the issue in Parliament. I will keep pressing the Government on this important issue and will always try to help constituents having difficulties with Universal Credit.
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INVITATION
CJ Hole Southville invite you to accept our offer of a free sales or lettings valuation. To arrange an appointment, please telephone the office or call in personally. If you have instructed another agent on a sole agency and/or sole selling rights basis, the terms of those instructions must be considered to avoid a possible liability to pay two commissions.
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