Edition 186 - June 2020
EDITORIAL
I hope you are all keeping well. We are certainly living in strange and difficult times and as this Newsletter goes to print, there is little change in the lockdown situation. But the incredible weather we have had over the last eight weeks has been a blessing, allowing time to be spent in the gardens, both relaxing and working - gardens have never looked better!
The community spirit has, as always in this village, helped us to keep our chins up and here, in the Valley, we come out each week to clap and make a noise to thank the NHS, and on VE Day shared a celebratory tea from the distance of our gardens.
But most importantly, and speaking for everyone, we must give very grateful thanks to all those who have helped to lighten the situation: to our Shop, Staff and Committee, who have kept the village needs catered for, including having loo rolls when they disappeared off the supermarket shelves, and making up and delivering orders daily; The Globe for cooking and delivering ready-made tasty meals and to the Parish Council for collecting and delivering prescriptions; last, but not least, to the many individual helpers who have shopped, collected medicines and taken care of those in self-isolation. Thank you all!
And, of course, thank you to the contributors who have ensured that the Newsletter keeps going. Let's hope that by the time of the August issue [items for which will be welcome any time and by the 3rd July latest and which can be e-mailed to me [on judiew12@gmail.com] that we shall be in a position to socialise - we will meet again!
By the time you read this, things may have changed, but in the meantime, take care and keep safe and well.
Judie - Ed
1
ST.
PETER'S CHURCH
With Berrynarbor Church closed until further notice, there is not very
much to say for this issue of the Newsletter! Not even our intrepid Bellringers are
allowed to practice on Thursdays or ring on Sunday mornings!
We were hoping to receive the go ahead from the Diocese of Exeter for
the necessary repair work to be carried out on the roof, masonry and cast-iron
guttering, but as yet have not received the 'green' light. However, with builders' merchants closed and
other suppliers in lockdown, we have to patiently wait for things to return to
normal.
Apart from the few good people who
donate using the gift aid scheme, we - like other churches throughout the land -
do not receive any collection money and other donations due to the absence of
church services during the lockdown period. However, there are many charities nationwide
whose very existence rely on public donations year after year, not to mention
vital support of businesses and their workers throughout the land who, at the
end of the day, provide the life blood of this country's economy and
existence!
We pray for our wonderful NHS and the
huge difficulties that nursing staff face every day, and despite the tragic
loss of some colleagues due to this awful virus, hope that they remain safe and
well in the coming months ahead.
Our special prayers go to those in our
community who are unwell and recovering from treatment following their time in
hospital and those who are lonely and finding the lockdown difficult to manage,
and hope that things return to normal and that everyone maintains all the
social distancing and other measures recommended by the Government.
Our vicar, Rev. Peter Churcher, has
arranged Service Videos on Sunday mornings which can be viewed on the following
website: www.combetocombechurches.co.uk
They start at 10.30 a.m. with a chat
box for you to engage with!
Keep safe and well, God bless you all.
Stuart Neale
2
WEATHER OR NOT
In my last article I wrote 'On this note I wish you
all a good spring, if we can find a few more hours of sunshine I am sure it
would be appreciated!' I think you will agree with me that we have
done much better!
March
started off with a continuation of the cold, wet and windy weather we had
suffered going back well into 2019. On the
19th some kind soul found the tap and turned it off, they also switched the sun
on and fortunately this coincided with the covid-19 lockdown which gave us the
opportunity to get out into our gardens.
The
total rainfall from the 1st to the 19th inclusive was 107.4mm. The wettest day was the 15th with 17mm. The rest of the month was dry. The average rainfall for March is 86.13mm but
despite the dry second half the total was well up on the average. The maximum
temperature was 18.2˚C on the 24th [average 16.92˚C] and the lowest
was -1.9˚C on the 26th [average -1.01˚C]. The maximum wind speed was 42mph from the SSW
on the 10th [average 37.21mph]. The
wind chill factor lowest temperature was -3.6˚C
on the 26th [average -5.42˚C]. On
the 1st the barometric pressure was 989.3mbars and not surprisingly was mainly
low for the first half of the month and then remained higher for the end with
the highest reading on the 29th at 1041.3mbars. Total sunshine hours amounted to 106.23, two
thirds of this was after 19th March and the highest since 2012 when we enjoyed
110.88 hours [average 89.77].
All things bright and beautiful.
I think this photo sums up the April weather nicely.
The
good weather continued into April with the first rain arriving on the 5th, 6th
and 7th, total 2.4mm. The next rain
arrived on the17th and 18th [total 5.0mm], then it was dry until 28th when a
large amount, 22.4mm, fell and during the last two days there was a further
18.4mm. This was a good thing as my water butts were
empty. The total for the month was
48.2mm. The average is 68.34mm. The driest April I have recorded was 2011
when we had a mere 7mm. The total for
the year so far is 498.6mm. The maximum
temperature was well up at 25.6˚C on the10th [average 20.54˚C] and
the lowest was -0.5˚C on the 1st [average +0.68˚C]. The maximum wind
speed was 32.00mph from the North on the 13th [average 33.00 mph]. The wind chill factor lowest temperature was
-1.7˚C on the 1st [average -2.8˚C].
The barometer reached a high of
1029.4mbars on the 14th and fell to a low of 990.7mbars on the 30th. Total sunshine hours amounted to 158.42, the
highest since 2017 when we had 164.67 [average 138.40].
I
hope this nice pattern of weather continues as it certainly helps us with being
isolated at home. Please take care and
stay safe.
Simon
Please Note - I made an operator error
when writing the last report. The
average figures quoted were incorrect, here are the correct figures:
- January: Rainfall 143.55mm - Highest temperature 12.54˚C -
Lowest 2.27˚C - Highest wind gust 41.6mph - Wind chill 3.76˚C -
Sunshine 14.12 hours.
- February: Rainfall 119.0mm - Highest temperature 13.05˚C -
Lowest 2.03˚C - Highest wind gust 40.33mph - Wind chill 4.30˚C -
Sunshine 43.23 hours.
Please accept my apologies
for these errors.
3
IN MEMORIAM
JAMES [JIM] CONSTANTINE
6.12.1942 - 4.4.2020
Having suffered from prostate cancer
but able to lead a normal life until just recently, it was sad to learn that
Jim had died on the 4th April. His
funeral took place at the North Devon Crematorium on the 20th April.
Our thoughts are with Jean, Nick and
Sue, and all the family at this
time of sadness.
Together
with Alex Parke and Keith Walls, Jim was instrumental in the setting up of our
Village Shop and had been a stalwart on the Manor Hall Committee and a member
of our Parish Council. His quiet
presence is missed.
4
'TO
BE OR NOT TO BE!'
Along with
so many financial implications of this strange time, funds for the Newsletter,
YOUR newsletter, are CRITICAL. Even
with collecting box donations, mail subscriptions, including donations, and the
Parish Council's annual grant, with each COPY costing approximately £1.50,
there may not be sufficient funds to finance it beyond the August issue!
If it is
to continue into its 32nd year, and hopefully you, the readers, think it
should, the coffers need filling!
In that
case, what needs to be done?
Thank you
for donating via the collecting boxes and please continue to give generously -
every little counts!
Advertising
is one source of income. The policy for
this has been to keep it local and for it not to dominate, but could your
business advertise? If so, please ring
me on [01271] 883544 for further details and charges.
Are you
good at organising events? In the past
I have run fund-raising events - Country Collection week ends, Arts and Crafts
Activity Days, a Pamper Day - and it is amazing how much a jumble sale or quiz
evening can raise. Could you perhaps
think of organising an event once this situation is resolved? It might be the life-line that is needed!
If you
would like to help by making a donation, this can be done by:
- PayPal to Berrynarbor.news@gmail.com - send to friends & family
- Internet banking to Berrynarbor Newsletter, A/C 85446060, sort code 30-98-97
- Cheques payable to Berrynarbor Newsletter and sent to me at Chicane, Berrynarbor, EX34 9TB
- or at The Village Shop and Post Office
Any
financial help would be most welcome and very much appreciated. Thank you.
Judie
[Ed]
5
FROM THE PARISH COUNCIL . . .
Chairman: Adam Stanbury [8822522]
First of all, we hope you are all staying
safe and well during this difficult and uncertain time. The Parish
Council is trying to provide relevant information and links to useful pages on
its website www.berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk, so if you haven't already, have a look. There are also contact numbers if you
require any assistance with tasks such as shopping or collection of
prescriptions.
Play Areas - The Government's latest guidance is clear that parks
can open, however, playgrounds and equipment must remain closed. The Manor Hall Play Area and the equipment in
the Recreation Field remain closed and we would urge you to adhere to social
distancing and Government guidelines when using any facilities and when
undertaking your exercise. If you
do observe congregations of people or mass gatherings, we would urge you to
report these to the Police on the 101 non-emergency number or e-mail facility.
Public Toilets - For the time being the public toilets will
also remain closed whilst the risk in re-opening is assessed.
Parish Council Meetings - At the beginning of April, the legislation
was altered to allow Parish Councils to hold virtual meetings. The Parish Council is continuing with its
meeting schedule and holding
virtual meetings via Zoom. Agendas for the meetings are published on our
website and displayed on the notice boards in the village.
Play Equipment - The Parish Council
has agreed to proceed with the section 106 funding and installation of new
equipment for the Manor Hall Play Area and the Recreation Field. Unfortunately, the manufacturer is not
working at the moment but we hope this may change in the near future so we can
proceed with the project.
Councillors
- Sian Barten recently resigned as a Councillor and
the Parish Council would like to express its thanks to Sian for her service and
commitment to the Council. Following
the resignation, the
Parish Council has co-opted Jenny Beer to the Council, and would like to
welcome Jenny and to working with her again.
Mrs Victoria Woodhouse BA (Hons) - Parish
Clerk
Firstone, Yarnscombe, Barnstaple, EX31 3LW
07815
665215
cllerk@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
6
THE ULTIMATE TEST
I hope the test in the April issue kept
you pondering for a while during this strange time of lockdown. When it first appeared in 1990 as a
competition, it caused much amusement and a talking point within the
village. Some of the answers were
ingenious and no one got 7L and 5F. I
wonder if anyone has the answer this time?
7 loaves and 5 fishes was the majority answer,
but there were 5 loaves and 2 fish in the feeding of the 5,000. It may be that the compiler didn't get it
right!
- 26 letters of the alphabet.
- 7 wonders of the world.
- 1001 Arabian Nights.
- 12 signs of the zodiac.
- 54 cars in a deck.
- 9 planets in the solar system.
- 88 piano keys.
- 13 stripes on the American flag.
- 32 degrees Fahrenheit at which water freezes.
- 18 holes on a golf course
- 90 degrees in a right angle.
- 200 pounds for passing go in Monopoly.
- 7 wonders of the world.
- 7 sides on a 50 pence pie
- 4 quarts in a gallon
- 3 blind mice [see how they run]
- 24 hours in a day
- 1 horn on a unicorn
- 7 digits in a post code
- 57 Heinz varieties
- 11 players in a football team
- 1 prancing horse on a Ferrari
- 29 days in February in a leap year
- 64 squares on a chess board
- 40 days and nights of the great flood
- 4 quarts in a gallon
- 76 trombones in the big parade
- 147 is maximum break in snooker
- 125 trains go inter city
- 3 treble top is one hundred 'n' eighty
- 21 points in a table tennis match
- 65 the age to retire [but not any longer!]
- ????
- 12 days of Christmas
- 15 men on a dead man's chest
- 0 [no] tail on a Manx cat
- 999 is police, fire, ambulance.
- 147 is maximum break in snooker
7
PLEASE NOTE!
8
NEWS FROM BERRYNARBOR SHOP & POST OFFICE
There's a very old saying - keep your
shop and your shop will keep you. This
has never been truer than it is today.
The shop has proved to be a lifeline to the vulnerable of the village,
to those who are self-isolating and to regular and new customers alike.
Because of the lockdown restrictions
and the need for self-distancing, the shop has had to find new ways of
operating. Of course, the health and
well-being of our wonderful staff comes first; for without them there is no
shop. It is hard to describe how grateful the committee and the village are to
Karen, Annie and Susan for their hard work, dedication and enterprise as they
provide this critical service to our community during what continues to be a
stressful and worrying time.
Never before has our village shop had
to make so many changes to how it does things.
But we are delighted to say that our customers have come with us on the
journey and accepted what we have had to do with understanding and so much
goodwill.
After the initial shock of the lockdown
and the consequences of the madness of panic buying at supermarkets, which our
shop quickly and effectively resisted, a new routine has been established and
our shelves remain very well stocked.
Our focus has always been on our customers and those who we know rely on
us. New customers have been warmly
welcomed and no-one has been turned away.
Just to remind everyone, the Shop and
Post Office are open in the mornings Monday to Saturday but closed on
Sundays. You can phone through orders
on 01271 883215. These will be made up as soon as possible in the afternoon. If
you are self-isolating then one of our team of volunteers will arrange to
deliver your order to you. If not, you will receive a call to say when you can
collect it. To date, the shop has made
up over 300 customer orders!
We sincerely hope that once normality [whatever that
may be!] is resumed and rules relaxed, that all those who have used the shop
during these difficult times, will remember us and continue to visit as members of our faithful band
of customers. We will always go the extra mile so you don't have to.
And that's not all - new, new, new!
We don't
rest on our laurels! We have introduced
two new local ranges into our freezer cabinets. Exmoor Kitchen Heat and Eat ready meals are
high quality, home-cooked meals using fresh Devon and Exmoor produce. We are also now stocking the very popular
and delicious Jon Thorner's pies - also made in the
West Country. Try
them - you won't be disappointed!
9
BERRY IN BLOOM.
What a difference two months can bring! All the plans Berry in Bloom had made for
this coming year have changed because of the corona virus and lockdown.
The main change is that all competitions this year have been
cancelled. There will be no open gardens
this year and therefore no summer fund raising. However, the plants for the tubs and containers
around the village were ordered from Grow@Jigsaw
in January and up until the beginning of May the team at Jigsaw were certain
that they would be able to deliver the plants.
Sadly, they then realised the delivery would be impossible because of
social distancing. Berry in Bloom are
sad for them as they had invested lots of money and effort and will end up
seriously out of pocket. However, we
have managed to get a last-minute replacement order delivered from St. John's
Barnstaple and have been able to empty and plant the tubs, either by single
persons or in lockdown couples. The
hanging baskets are due for delivery at the end of May. We hope that all of you in our lovely village
will feel heartened and have your spirits lifted in a small way.
Let us
all hope that by the Autumn we shall be able to socialise
again, something we are all sorely missing.
The planting of the wild flowers in the small dog walking
field has been put on hold as when the plug plants arrived, we were in the
middle of five weeks with no rain and the plugs were tiny. We have
potted them up and are growing them on until they are big enough to withstand
the weather. Likewise, the sowing of
the seed that would have not germinated in the dry and would have become
fancy birdseed. This is definitely a
work in progress.
Wendy Applegate
10
If you are at home looking for an easy recipe to make
especially with the children why not try these.
Lemon
and Raisin Bars
For the
Base
- 85g/3oz self-raising flour
- 85g/3oz porridge oats
- 50g/2oz light muscovado sugar
- 85g/3oz butter
For the
Icing
- 50g/2oz icing sugar
- finely grated zest 1 small lemon plus 2-3 tsp fresh lemon juice
For the
Topping
- 25g/1oz butter
- 3 free range eggs
- 175g/60z light muscovado sugar
- 140g/5oz raisins
- 85g/3oz desiccated coconut
- grated zest 1 lemon, plus 2 tbsp juice
Heat the oven to 180C/fan 160C/gas 4. Put the flour, oats and sugar in a bowl and
rub in the butter. Tip into a shallow 26
x 18cm tin, press down with your fingers until smooth. Bake for 10-15 minutes until pale golden.
Meanwhile, make the topping.
Melt the butter and leave to cool.
Beat the eggs in a bowl and stir in the remaining topping
ingredients. Pour over the base, then
bake for 20-25 minutes, until the top is set and golden. Mark into 12, then leave to cool before
cutting.
Put the icing sugar in a small bowl with the lemon
zest. Stir in enough lemon juice to make
a smooth icing. Drizzle diagonally over
the squares.
I'm
sure the children will love making these, and eating them too!
Wendy Applegate
11
WHAT IS IT?
What's the name of the day?
Is it April, is it May?
I know it's Thursday when we clap
To our carers, I doff my cap.
All front-line people show their brilliance,
We must support them with our resilience.
Three more weeks at least we'll spend
Doing jobs, make do or mend.
At least the house is clean and tidy,
But is it Sunday, Monday or Friday?
At least the sun's been out to cheer us,
Taking our thoughts away from the virus
Linda B
12
BERRYNARBOR WINE CIRCLE
Whine no
more; we're alive to tell a tale!
Who would have thought, on January 1st 2020, that sharing a
bottle, if you're wearing gloves, with people other than your household
members, had to be at 2 metres, currently?
Lock down, PPE and social distancing are now part of our weird and very
quiet present. I'm sure we all hope
that a more familiar life will resume during the summer, but when we are
through all of this, will this year's normality look like 2019's? The Wine Circle hopes to resume chatting,
sharing and tasting from Wednesday, 21st October. Drinking through a mask will prove
interesting!
Meanwhile,
gardening, Glorious Devon and household maintenance occupy our time! Talking of gardens, Geoff and I have tackled
jobs that we've been meaning to do for a while. I'm sure we're not alone! One of them is painting on a large slate
slab in the garden. No, I'm not going
gaga . . . yet! Years ago, I noticed
one of the large slates, in our raspberry bed, had some obvious letters on
it. When I threw some water over it, I
could see a date. Kneeling beside it,
I saw a picture, scratched into this etched slate, too.
Most people, I should have thought, would see 1916 and think
of the four dreadful years that formed WWI.
I know I did. Was this when a
male household member left Berrynarbor to serve for the rest of this war? Knowing popular first names and surnames
for this area and era, I wondered if the 'EL' stood for maybe an Edwin Lethaby, Edward Lancey, Elijah
Ley, Eric . . . Ernest . . ? I decided I had to investigate.
As I've been doing family research for a few years, I used
my online access and trawled through the 1911 Census records for Berrynarbor possibles. After a fairly easy search, I found an Ernest Thomas Leworthy. He was only 7 when this Census was taken. His parents, Thomas and Catherine wouldn't
have allowed Ernest, at 12, to try and join up on 'Jul 19th 1916',
so was this just a schoolboy, at home, perhaps for the summer holidays, who
scratched his initials, the date, a ship and anchor on to a slate slab, while
playing in this garden? Had I found
the right EL?
His sister, Florence, was 5; both Leworthy
children were at the village school.
Their 'Street' was 'The Village'.
Our address here is The Village.
Had the slate slab been in situ for at least a century, as a permanent
part of what is now our garden?
Thomas, their father, was described as '40' and a 'Gardens Labourer on Estate'.
As he is a possible, I looked at what
else I could discover about this little boy.
Accessible records, to me, showed that he became a Butler and
Valet. With his French-born wife, Anna,
he had worked in Mayfair, London, before they travelled aboard the Berengaria
as Alien Passengers for the United States, arriving in New York, on the 22nd
August 1930. He had been on a
ship!
World War II records gave his Residence
place as East St, Colonia, Middlesex, New Jersey. He had signed up for service on the 15th
February 1942, at the age of 37 and had been employed by the Rice Baking
Company of Linden, New Jersey. Susanna Leworthy was still his Next of Kin. Their offspring, and maybe grandchildren,
could still be alive to tell this tale and more . . .
Judith Adam - Promotional Co-ordinator & Secretary
13
BERRYNARBOR MANOR HALL TRUST
It goes without saying that of course
the hall has been closed since lockdown and sadly will continue to be so for
the foreseeable future.
The good news is that we have managed
to secure a grant to help ensure that we can keep paying our bills such as insurance
and utility standing orders.
Prior to corona virus, we had already
received a grant from our Parish Council to fund the replacement of the front
facia boards and guttering. Now with
the slight adjustment to lockdown, the scaffolding will be going up and the
works able to start. The grant will
also fund the replacement of the playground-end windows, which will hopefully
go ahead in early July, subject to continued government guidelines.
We very much hope that you are all
keeping well and that we can welcome you back into our dear hall as soon as it
is safely possible.
Julia - Chairman
& Bookings - and the Trustees
14
THE GANDERS
Whilst this is a
story of sorts, it was written as a personal letter to a friend in London who
was concerned 'bout how us country folks is doin'.
I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host, of golden daffodils;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
William Wordsworth was
born 250 years ago on April 7th. To
commemorate the Romantic Poets of that era, the Royal Mail have issued a new
set of stamps which, obviously, have just dropped into my postbox. I love
special postage stamps and I love poetry.
And in these quiet and
peaceful days of isolation, with daffodils, primroses, bluebells and
flowering wild garlic all over our garden and fields, and with only the
birdsong and, now, the soft bleating of the new-born lambs in the field
breaking the silence, I sit on our old Victorian bench by the garden shed and
reflect lots on the wonders of nature. As
I sat there yesterday in the hot sun soaking up a free dose of vitamin D -
on grey days I take the pills the doctor prescribed - I thought how easy it
would have become, had I lived back in those days, to be lulled by these rural
countryside wonders to write poetry of my own. There was not much else to do back then for
gentlemen of means with a penchant for the pen. Fewer people to disturb you as you walk the
lanes and fields. Less willing women to join you for a roll in
the hay. No television or radio. No internet
to pull and lock our eyes onto computer screens to read modern day tales of
constant doom and gloom. More time to
simply sit and ponder on the joys of a sedate and trouble-free life as a
privileged gentleman with time on his hands. And, now that we're in lockdown and also have
far too much time on our hands, I too reflect on the strange kind of life we
are having to lead and have written my own little stanza.
I've been religiously protecting our virus-stricken nation,
By sitting here all day in total kitchen isolation.
With naught much else to do but serious meditation,
I've now worked up a major bout of terrible frustration.
It's possible I'm suffering from excess Covid titillation.
One of the stamps amongst the Romantic
Poets set of 10 is a line from a poem by John Clare, the son of a farm labourer, often known as the peasant poet.
"For everything I felt a love
The weeds below the birds above"
It comes from his poem 'The Progress of Rhyme', but I like his specific poems about birds the most.
As nature's poesy and pastoral spells-
They are the yellowhammer's and she dwells
Most poet-like where brooks and flowery weeds
As sweet as Castaly to fancy seems
And that old molehill like as Parnass' hill
On which her partner haply sits and dreams
O'er all her joys of song-so leave it still
A happy home of sunshine, flowers and streams.
I have been listening and
studying the birdsongs on an audio CD that came with a great and comprehensive
book published by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and kindly
given to me when we first moved here by Chris and Phyllis Walden of Cherry Tree
Cottage.
There were 99 different bird
songs on the CD, but I only study those of the birds I know live in our garden. Then I sit by the shed and listen to the
real song birds. But it's so incredibly
difficult because they all sing at the same time whilst there is a
disturbing background noise of wood pigeons, crows, magpies and pheasants. The added difficulty is that there are only
very subtle differences between the calls of the dunnocks, blue tits, coal
tits, chaffinches, goldfinches, green finches and nuthatches. However, I have managed to pin down the sounds of the robin, the wagtail and the blackbird. It is going to take a long time before I can
recognise enough to be comfortable with my avian
skills. But, as they say, time is on my
side. What else is there to do in these extraordinary lazy days?
Yet in the sweetest places cometh ill,
A noisome weed that burthens every soil;
For snakes are known with chill and deadly coil
To watch such nests and seize the helpless young,
And like as though the plague became a guest,
Leaving a houseless home, a ruined nest-
And mournful hath the little warblers sung
When such like woes hath rent its little breast.
We've been busy trying to
chase the Canadian geese away from the garden. We had to work team-handed to try and corner
them and shout whilst waving big sticks until they flew away. Margaret tried to
do it alone one morning but fell and grazed her knee. So, we have given up trying to chase the
geese away. After Margaret's little
accident, she wasn't up for another run around the lake. So, they have been allowed to drop more tons
of toxic turds around the bank and they have been nesting!
Mother Goose decided to
build a big nest on the island using the wood chip we have put there to form a
pathway across the water, and twigs that lie around on the grass after the
storms. We watched her work and multiply through our
binoculars. She first laid one egg and
then she covered it up with twigs and chippings. This to hide it from the
marauding crows and magpies that now fly around the nest waiting to feast on
her offspring. Some days the heron also has a go. Mother Goose waited a day or two before she
sat again to lay another egg. Geese
normally produce 5 in total. And they
are huge! About 5 times the size of
chicken eggs.
We were undecided what our
plan should be. Whether to naff the
eggs and make a giant Spanish omelette, or let the
eggs hatch and watch the sweet little goslings learn how to swim on the lake. That might be fun for a while, but if the
family decide to stay, we'd have 7 constant poopers to contend with.
I went down there before
lunch one day to try and take a photograph of the nest and eggs. I took my walking stick to move the twigs and
uncover the nest. But as I arrived, Mr. and Mrs. Canadian Goose
jumped in the water from the far side of the lake and came at me
aggressively squawking loudly. So I retreated back into the kitchen. I went back again in the late afternoon
carefully sneaking up on the nest and managed to get a picture of the eggs,
which Mother Goose had not completely covered up with the small twigs and
wood chippings, before they rushed at me with their fearsome red beaks.
We are curious now about
what is going to happen when the ducklings also hatch, there are usually 8
of those, and the ducks, geese and goslings all swim around the lake together.
Mike Mills
PS - Two goslings have arrived!
Mother
Goose abandoned the nest and left us with 4 big, cold eggs, two of which were
in the kitchen warming up last night. If 2 more yellow devils had hatched and
started running around messing on the slate floor this morning, I should
have been in much trouble with Mrs. M!
15
A HISTORY OF BERRYNARBOR SCHOOL - 3
The 1930's and WWII
My previous two articles introduced the
log books kept by the head teachers of Berrynarbor School [February 2019] and
looked at the origins of the present school and its predecessors [April
2019]. Having recently finished
transcribing the second log book, which covers the period from 1931 to 1963, I
thought it would be interesting to write about it. This article concentrates on the 1930's and
1940's when the Head Mistress was Miss Lillian Veale [from 1921-1950] and the
Supplementary Teacher, Miss
Muriel Richards [from 1931 - c.1970]. The
continuity and stability provided by these two long-serving teachers carried
the school through a period of great social change.
In April 1931 there were 51 children on
the school register whereas at the turn of the century there had been about a
hundred. There were a variety of reasons for this decline including: smaller
families, wider availability of secondary education, movement to towns and the
effect of the loss of a generation of young men during WWI. There were probably just two classes, with
the older children being taught by Miss Veale and the younger ones by Miss
Richards. Both Ron Toms - at the school
in the 1920's - and Maurice Draper - at the school in the 1930's and 1940's -
remember Miss Veale as strict. She gave
Maurice the cane on his hand twice, probably for talking, but he also recalls
that he liked her. Until March 1935
there was also a Monitress at the school, a young
woman who usually helped with the younger children and had often attended the
school herself.
Miss Veale lived next door to the
school at the house now called Little Gables.
In the late afternoon of 5th May 1937, her house and adjoining Bessemer
Thatch caught fire. Bessemer Thatch was
the summer residence of Canon Jolly, who was not there at the time. The fire is reported in the North Devon
Journal where it suggests that a chimney spark ignited the thatched roof. The
furniture from both houses was rescued and fire brigades from Ilfracombe and
Barnstaple worked into the night throwing off the burning thatch. Maurice Draper, then 8 years old, recalls
that he was allowed to stay up and watch the fire fighting and that a large
crowd gathered. A photograph taken
after the fire shows that the roofs and most of the timberwork were destroyed,
the walls still stood but the houses had to be rebuilt and it must have been a
while before they were habitable. In
the logbook Miss Veale says simply: "The
school was closed on Thursday and Friday by order of the Managers, my house
having been completely gutted by fire on Wednesday evening May 5th." She comes across as a stoical and
businesslike lady, the fire must have caused huge disruption to her personal
life but she was back in school on Monday morning. By 1939 she was living at
Little Gables again - I wonder if any readers know where she stayed while her
house was being restored?
The first reference to the Second World
War appears on 11th September 1939 when the school "Admitted four children from an evacuated
district." The war years were to see many evacuees come to the
school, the first to arrive were 'unofficial' - children and families who had
escaped the towns and come to stay with relatives, friends, or in private
accommodation. Later 'official'
evacuees began to arrive, usually in small numbers, but on
20th February 1941 twenty-six children plus teacher and helper arrived from
Bristol. It was at this time that the
Luftwaffe was bombing British ports including Plymouth, Bristol and Swansea. At the beginning of 1941 there were 88
children on the school register, already considerably more than there had been
before the war, but by April this had risen to 104. How long did the Bristol class stay in
Berrynarbor? This entry on 23rd April
1942 suggests it was for well over a year: "Mr. Ede of Bristol in charge of the Evacuation Group visited the
school."
Miss Veale and Miss Richards had help
from a county supply teacher from late 1940 until the end of July 1942, but
resources must have been stretched and both the running of the school and the
children's education disrupted. The log book, however, gives the impression that school
life continued very much as normal and apart from the coming and goings of the
evacuees the war is rarely mentioned.
The war did give the teachers additional responsibilities and they took
it in turns to be on duty during the school holidays, perhaps to assist with
the co-ordination of evacuees. Growing
food for the war effort sometimes required extra help and in
the summer and autumn of 1943, school was closed for days at a time to
allow children to help with the hay and fruit harvesting. Such a thing would never have happened in
peacetime and indeed the Victorian and early 20th century logs frequently
complain of children being kept away from school to help on the farms. Maurice Draper recalls disruption to his
education during the war, partly because of the comings and goings of the
evacuees, but also because he was always one of the first to help with planting
potatoes rather than be in school.
By 1943 the school numbers had fallen to just below 50,
about the same as before the war. Some
of the evacuees would have gone home by this time but the numbers in the school
continued to decline and by September 1946 there were just 31 children on the
register, probably the lowest number on record. In the later years of the war the school
collected some impressive contributions towards national funding
campaigns.
During Wings for Victory Week in May
1943 the school collected £2060.11s for the RAF and in April 1944 it collected
£1300 for the Salute the Soldier campaign. When Victory was declared on 8th May
1945, the school had a two day holiday to celebrate.
I should like to thank Maurice Draper
for sharing his memories and showing me the photograph of Bessemer Thatch after
the fire. If you would like to read more about his life, he has published a
book entitled The Life and Times of
Maurice Draper a Berrynarbor Man [2014]. If you have memories or photographs of the
school you would be happy to share, please get in touch, I can be contacted by
email: tanyawalls@yahoo.co.uk or via my parents Margaret and
Keith Walls of Higher Rows Farm.
From left to right: Miss Veale, Miss Richards and Miss Wainwright, who was Monitress at the school from 1932-1933.
[Photograph courtesy of Lorna Bowden]
Tanya
16
WHAT ON EARTH IS
GOING ON?
What on Earth is going on? We are all living through the biggest event ever.
Where is it all leading?
I believe the U.N. is a world
government developing alongside national governments. Obama said that if Syria used chemical
weapons on its population, he would go in with fighter jets. He
asked permission from the U.N. they said "No". Who was ruling him?
It has been decided that cash can
transmit diseases, so that will soon be faded out. Rather than rely on credit/debit cards, which
can be lost or stolen, it would make good sense for us all to have a chip
implanted in our right hand, or in our forehead. This is already available in Sweden and will
soon be rolled out worldwide.
It is very interesting to me that this
was predicted a long time ago. Talking
about a future dictator it says, "He required everyone, great and small,
rich or poor, slave or free, to be given a mark on the right hand or the
forehead. And no one could buy or sell anything without
that mark.'' This is of course from
Revelation 13 16-17 in the Bible.
When they come up with a vaccine for
the Covid 19 virus, we will be required to have it or
we will not be allowed to travel. Bill
Gates has already bought the major share in the company that will produce it. He likes big profits yet he never allowed any
of his children to be vaccinated!
There is a lot going on behind the
scenes that most people are unaware of. If anyone would like to discuss this further
please contact me - graham.lucas3.gl@gmail.com.
Graham
17
NEWS FROM
BERRYNARBOR PRE-SCHOOL
a
first taste of education
The
children began the second half of the spring term learning more Maths
concepts. This was supported with shop
role play, with the children choosing to make a shoe shop; measuring feet,
sorting shoes into pairs and using money to buy and sell. Lots of learning through play and problem
solving was had. Stories were read
including some of our favourites, such as Going on a
Bear Hunt, The Gruffalo, The Three Bears and interactive books from the
computer such as Froggie Gets Dressed.
Outside
we had shape target practice with tally charts, hook a duck, hop scotch
counting games and hide and seek. We
celebrated Sports Relief with an obstacle adventure course, where the children
had to run, hop, balance, kick, throw, climb up, slide down and crawl under a
range of different items. They did so
well and were presented with a certificate for their efforts. Well done to all!
We
celebrated Mothering Sunday making cards and thanks to the Berry in Bloom team
who kindly donated plants and compost, the children were able to plant up
flowers for their mothers or someone special to them. Easter was brought forward slightly with
the government asking us to close early due to the Covid
19 pandemic. The children made Easter treats and more fun games were had. We started
to talk about spring and the changes in our seasons.
We held a party on the last day of
term to celebrate our learning and to wish one of our children a very happy 4th
birthday as unfortunately his party had to be cancelled due to the present
circumstances.
So, we now find
ourselves in lockdown. At present Pre-school is closed and all our Pre-school families are well and
complying with the lockdown rules.
Parents and carers have become the teachers; finding activities and
different things to learn, using social media with learning links and finding
new ways to communicate with each other.
It has been lovely to see all the activities our children have been able
to do at home; cooking, drawing, writing, counting, short nature walks, bike
rides, planting seeds, P.E. with Joe Wicks, pebble painting and reading books
to name a few.
We
wish everyone well and to continue to keep safe. We hope we are able to see everyone soon.
From the staff at Pre-school -
Sue, Karen, Lynne and Emma
18
Widow
Viv Niven was enjoying herself doing a bit of weeding in her back garden. When she finished, she went indoors to wash
her hands. Alas, she found that her
wedding ring had come off, where could it be?
She
immediately went back to the bed she had been weeding to see if it was there,
but there was no sign.
Bob, her
son, was due home soon and perhaps he would have better luck. However, no matter how hard he looked, he
could not find the ring. After a lot of
searching everywhere with no luck, it looked as though ring was lost for ever.
By
chance, Viv was concerned about the height of a poplar tree which had branches
too close to her upstairs windows. "Something
will have to be done about that," she said to herself.
The
following week-end she said to Bob, "Do you think you could do something about
that tree, it's getting too big. I
think it should come down."
By
chance, Bob had a chain saw and was soon at work. The tree luckily fell on their lawn, so
nothing was damaged.
"Look,"
said Bob to his mother, "There's a bird's nest in it. I wonder if there are any eggs?"
To his
surprise there were no eggs but lo and behold, there was his mother's ring.
"It must
have been a magpie or jackdaw that picked it up and dropped it in the
nest. All's well that ends well," he
thought as he cut up the smaller branches.
Tony Beauclerk -
Stowmarket
Illustrated by: Paul Swailes
19
BERRYNARBOR IN
LOCKDOWN
The
last few weeks have challenged, communities far and wide
Causing folk to come together, put differences aside.
Our own community has been no different from all of the rest.
This COVID-19 pandemic has put us to the test.
How has Berrynarbor managed throughout these troubled times?
Let me try and sum it up by reporting it in rhyme.
Once we'd overcome the need to query who was staying where?
Concentrated on love and kindness; showing that we care.
Neighbours helping neighbours; collecting prescriptions too.
Baking cakes, showing kindness, doing whatever we needed to do.
Our pub jumped into action, providing a new service straight away.
Meals on wheels delivered to our door; roasts on each Sunday.
Our local shop has been amazing, delivering groceries to our door.
A beacon in the community, standing at the core.
A team of special people have kept things going throughout.
Their hard work and resilience was never in any doubt.
Whilst Tesco's shelves were empty, our shop had all we need.
From loo paper and flour, to fresh veg and meat to feed.
On Thursday nights we'd come together, cheering, banging pans.
Celebrating front line workers; the NHS's biggest fans.
All across the village we'd stand and make a noise.
Families on the door step; husbands and wives, girls and boys.
People standing together shouting really loud.
Showing our appreciation and making the workers feel quite proud.
Our little village has certainly shown it has a great big heart.
A community coming together, with residents playing their part.
Hopefully we will come through this: our efforts not in vain.
Survivors moving forward, but will life ever be quite the same?
When this is all over let's not forget the joy of walking the extra mile
Or the friendly greetings we offer with each and every smile.
Let's continue to buy local; appreciate our shop and pub
Visit the church and community hall; enjoy the village hub.
Try not to become too busy, rushing about in labour.
Enjoy time together. Continue to love
your neighbour.
Let's have fun together again, meeting face-to face
and realise, Berrynarbor,
our village, is a truly special place.
Pam Robinson
20
THOUGHTS OF AN ARTIST IN LOCKDOWN
On 23rd
March, a beautiful spring day, the lockdown began. To try and make sense of it all I decided to
write a little every few days until such times as normality returns to our
lives.
It all
began on a day when the skies were clear and it just seemed so surreal that
somewhere out there was the virus.
Chris and I were both well and doing all we could to stay that way. We know just how lucky we are: we don't have to go out to work, we have
somewhere nice to be in, we have hobbies we love and can continue. Above all. we have the love and support of
our families. We have never seen so much
of our children and grandchildren.
Modern technology certainly has come into its own in that respect.
I have
taken to following some advice from Stephen Fry. He said with regards to our mental
wellbeing, there are things we can all do to stay healthy and resilient. Firstly, don't worry about things you can't
control. Secondly, don't listen to too much news and
social media. Thirdly, understand that
when scientists speak, they generally begin by saying "we think" or "it seems
that" and other such non-assertive openings.
Take heart from this that no one knows for certain what will happen, so
be positive and believe the bottle is half full. His final piece of advice I have taken on
board in a daily practical way. He said
allow time to take on a different dimension - slow down, rejoice in the little
things. This I do, making time to
message, to read, to talk, to paint and to cook so slowly. My studio has never been clearer nor my sock
drawer tidier.
We have
both made lists of things we want to do over the next few weeks. Much of it is concerns the house. Sorting out, tidying and decorating figure
highly but also there are more personal things. In my case painting and organising my stamp
collection. We are trying to put
structure into our lives so we don't wake up each day and think what shall I do
today? So, although not set in stone,
we do have a plan. We try to divide
our time between the chores and the things we personally want to do.
There is
no doubt about it, I am missing being able to go to the gym. I had really got back into it after
Christmas and felt I was making progress.
My aim is always to cover more than twenty km a week in 5km chunks. I was pleased my 5km times were coming down
and the thought of doing a 10km race again was not out of the question. Then the virus hit. I stopped going to the gym before it closed
as I felt it was a risky environment.
I should have gone out and bought an exercise bike there and then which
would have made daily exercise easy. I
didn't and hindsight is a wonderful thing.
You would struggle to get one now.
I
saw on television a story about a man who had run the London Marathon in his
back garden by doing 835 laps. That got
me thinking. Our house has got 54 steps
from the bottom to top floor. Each step
is 15cm high so that is a height gain of 8.1m.
I decided to do 50 reps of that which I reckoned would be about 5km and
not an insignificant amount of climbing.
So, I put on my trainers, turned up my go faster music and off I went
much to Chris's astonishment. Fifty-five
minutes later I had done it. What a great workout.
Being the sort of person who relishes a challenge, I decided to try to
climb the equivalent of the height of Mount Everest in less than ten days. Well to be exact, I mean to climb the
equivalent of going from Base Camp at 5270m to the summit at 8850m that is a
height gain of 3580m. It means a total
of 447 assents of the stairs or 45 per day.
I am pleased to say I finished the challenge with a flourish. On the last day I climbed the stairs 110
times, one set of 70 and one of 40. In
total I took seven days to reach the summit.
I climbed the stairs 450 times taking 62,100 steps gaining 3600m in
height. This meant covering a distance
of 31.5 miles. I think for the sake of
the carpet I will not be undertaking any further climbs in the near future.
Our food
supplies are holding out. We have eaten
really well since this started. One
highlight of the week has been the Gusto box with four meals in it which we get
every Monday. It is fairly idiot proof
and introduces us to new things which we would not have tried. It is also great for portion control but then
you can't have everything! We have not
panic shopped but with the boxes and what we have in the freezers and cupboards
we are fine for a good few weeks yet.
Chris
has been making bunting today to put in the FortyThree
shop window. It is to say thank you to
all the key workers. It is difficult to
know what we can do to help in a practical way at the moment but I think we
both feel we need to do something. We
have both volunteered but still feel acutely aware of just how lucky we
are.
Today,
being Monday, it is another Gusto day.
Our latest box has arrived and we have four new meals to look forward
to. We take it in turns to be in charge
of food for the day. I am head chef
today so I shall lock myself in the kitchen with a glass of Merlot and see
which of the four recipes looks the easiest to make whilst looking the most
impressive!
I had a
great run around an empty Ilfracombe: At
just before 8.00 in the morning the streets were quiet and the sun was low in
the sky glinting on the mirror flat water of the harbour. With pumping music in my ears and the
stunning view as I came round Windy Corner, it was a spiritually uplifting
moment. It is hard to take in that we
are living in these unprecedented and uncertain times.
I was
really taken by the communal clapping this week in recognition of the NHS and
other front-line workers. In these days
of social isolation, it feels especially good and even necessary to be part of
something bigger. Starting with someone
on the Terrace banging a saucepan and growing as more and more people came out,
the noise got louder. As the clock on
the church struck eight a ripple of applause went round our end of town and you
could visualise it being the same all over our country. I hope once normality returns to our lives,
we'll remember this feeling of gratitude to others. The last few weeks have certainly made it
evident that we all depend upon, always have done and always will do, each
other and key workers. It would be
great if our appreciation continued and manifested itself in a more equal,
caring and sharing society. I am
pleased to see that enthusiasm has not declined, which is vital as we are
engaged in a long-term campaign to defeat the virus. I think the announcement that the lockdown
will continue for at least another three weeks was both right and inevitable.
With the daily death toll still so high I can't see what else could be
seen as tenable. I think it is becoming
increasingly clear that normal life is a long way off yet for everybody and
especially those who are at greater risk.
For anyone who falls into the at-risk category either due to age or
underlying health issues I suspect it will only be the roll out of a vaccine
which will end social isolation whether that is compulsory or voluntarily
imposed.
I was
impressed with the statement made by Boris after being discharged from
hospital. He spoke with the dignity and
gravitas of one who had had a near death experience. We can only hope the epiphany translates
into policies in the months ahead.
I spoke
to my sister yesterday. She is well
although having to be very careful. She
is a Dominican nun and lives in a small community in Cambridge with six other
nuns from various ethnic and cultural backgrounds. Since one is in her late seventies and
others have underlying health conditions, none of them can really go out for
fear of bringing the virus into their house.
She works as a Chaplain at the University dealing with the Catholic
students' pastoral needs. She has been
forced to do all her work on line which at this difficult time she finds
limiting. Nevertheless, she is in good
spirits but I think has quite a lot to cope with as some of the other nuns are
finding things very difficult to deal with.
Chris is part of a group of people in the town making face masks. They are all following the same strict
pattern and guidance so that the masks will meet the required standards. Whereas others are using white sheeting
donated by local hotels, Chris is using some rather fetching fabric with
patterns of beach huts and cupcakes! It
just goes to show that once a quilter always a quilter! The first batch of 80 have now been sent to a
local nursing home and they will be supplying more social care facilities and
local taxi drivers in the next few days.
Our
eldest granddaughter continues to be home educated and since her school has
given nursery rhymes as the theme for the term, I have produced illustrations
for her to colour in. Her mother has
uploaded them to the Fremington School website for others to use. I am really pleased and hope others will find
them useful.
When we
first retired from teaching, some five and a half years ago, it was obviously
to a very different way of life. we had been fully engulfed in the world of
work. We were, however, still young
and active. We did not fall into the
pipe and slippers bracket and in that sense, retirement was not so much an end
but a beginning. We substituted teaching
with other activities which filled our days.
Like many others we soon found it difficult to understand how we had
ever had the time to go to work. For me
it was painting and physical exercise, for Chris it was quilting, and for both
of us it was our travels in the van and seeing grandchildren. Our lives were full and to a certain extent
our hobbies became like jobs. Lockdown
has been different. We now have slowed
down. We get up a bit later, drink
coffee at eleven in the morning, watch Bargain Hunt over lunch and try to make
tasks that once we would have rushed, last until tea time. Is this enforced style of retirement one step
closer to the pipe and slippers and will it be reversible once we are released
from lockdown? I have always believed that being active is a vital part of staying healthy,
both physically and mentally and therefore I can see that the lockdown may well
be a significant factor in reducing life expectancy.
We had
to take the campervan over to Braunton for its MOT this week. It was the first time we had been out of
Ilfracombe in six weeks! It seemed
strange driving along in the van and we were certainly very self-conscious of
being out on the roads in what many would see as a recreational vehicle. That said it was as though the last six
weeks had not happened and that we were just doing a normal and mundane thing.
We have
been trying to get out for walks whenever we can. We see a few people and everyone seems intent
on keeping their distance so there is much crossing of roads to avoid each
other.
Our
latest walk took us over Hillsborough and down towards Hele. The weather was great, as it has been for
quite a while, and it was just a joy walking amongst a plethora of wild
flowers. All the way round we could
hear bird song, much of which was that of the blackbird and the robin. It was a lovely walk made even nicer by
what is becoming the new normal, as politicians are calling our current
situation. This is a truly hopeful time
of year and you can't help looking forward to the summer. I have been so taken by the colours that I
have painted three new pictures based on our walks. It has been a while since I wanted to paint
but once I got started, I really enjoyed it.
So days come and days go.
This will pass and we try our best to remain positive. All any of us can do is try to stay safe
and think of others as well as ourselves.
Paul Swailes
[Our Artist in
Residence]
21
22
VICAR'S VIEWS
Dear Friends,
I
hope that you are keeping well at this time, and know the blessings of God through
all your circumstances. Hopefully by
now you know what is happening at St. Peter's Berrynarbor and the other linked
churches. Unless things have change
drastically since writing this, we are still unable to meet in person, and so I
wanted to share what we are doing as a benefice to keep us all connected, and
to help everyone in their walk with Jesus.
The best place to go for up-to-date information, or for links to online
services and Zoom links for meetings, is our benefice website which is where I
place most information:
www.combetocombechurches.co.uk
If this isn't an option for you then you can
always ring one of the me and I will happily talk you through what is going on.
It
is extremely important that although we are socially distant, that we are also
distant socialising. i.e. We must stay physically apart for the health of
ourselves and our communities, but also that we stay connected with each other
so that no-one is truly isolated.
Thank
you for everyone that is making an effort of keep in contact with others via
phone calls, post cards and other means. We got off to a good start but let's
keep this going. [One word of warning
though: please don't put things through people's doors by hand as this is an
infection risk since Covid19 can live on paper for up to 24 hrs.] If you are feeling isolated please reach out
to someone in the church - you never know; they may love a call too!
Until
we are able to meet again, we shall be continuing to:
- put
Service Videos on Sunday mornings on our website [see above]. They premiere at
10:30 a.m. with a
- chat box for you to engage with, but you can
watch at any time.
- have
Virtual Coffee Mornings via Zoom on Mondays, from 10.00 to 11.00 a.m.[details online]
- have Virtual Home Group via zoom on Wednesdays, 7.30 - 9.00 p.m. [details online].
We have also introduced a new service, since our last letter:
- Telephone Compline. Sunday, 7.25 for a 7.30
p.m. start, for about 15 minutes.
Simply call 0333 011 0616 on any phone.
You'll then enter the access code: 998
3503, and say your name [if you want to] followed by #. [Local rate call charges may apply] Everyone is
welcome to join, but if you'd like to join in the responses in this service,
you will need the service sheet. You
can find this on our website, or by contacting me.
It
might be that you are reading this as someone who doesn't go to a church, or
perhaps hasn't been for a while. This is
a great opportunity to see what we do, and perhaps try joining in, as you can
do so anonymously from the comfort of your own home. Of
course, if you want to make yourself known we'd love to greet you as well -
it's up to you.
I'd
also like to take this opportunity to thank those who are going above and
beyond to ensure our community is cared for.
I'd particularly like to name and
fame 3 groups: 1. The school staff, who have continued their care, to educate
and love the children despite the difficulties
2. The Village Shop and all who
volunteer there, ensuring that no-one goes without, and 3. Ye Olde Globe Inn, who despite their own
difficulties at this time, have served their community valiantly. Although you may not put it this way, I should
like to thank you for living out some of the values of God's Kingdom in our
little community.
I
for one look forward to being back in the village and being with you all as
soon as it is safe and possible.
Yours in Christ,
Rev. Peter
revchurcher@gmail.com / 07803253286
23
RURAL
REFLECTIONS - 94
Our primitive ancestors had little time to relax and
appreciate their rural surroundings.
Had mindfulness been around back then it would not have had many
followers, the concept of living in the present moment being low on their list
of priorities. For they had more
pressing matters to deal with, including where they would source their next
meal or firewood and whether predators or enemy tribes were lurking on the horizon. It was also vital that they stored in their
primeval memory banks, previous hunts, especially unsuccessful attempts so as
not to re-enact them, as well as reflecting on fruitful outcomes in order to
plan future successful quests. Much as
this was to our ancestors' benefit, our unique DNA system has unfortunately
ensured that our brains, now three times in size, have inherited that same mode
of thinking - in a modern world where we no longer require it to do so. As a result, we have a tendency to replay
past negative experiences, each recollection making the event seem a little
worse than it actually was. Likewise,
our brains are also programmed to think ahead, often simulating adverse
situations that may never happen. Put
simply, negative thinking sticks to our hippocampus [the memory part of our
brain] like Velcro, which is why it takes ten positive thoughts to outweigh
each negative!
It is for this reason I feel it is so important that in the
current climate we restrict the amount of negative news that we watch, hear and
read regarding COVID19. Instead we must
absorb the positive media reports, for example how people are pulling together
and stepping up to support those in need.
With this in mind I am, by coincidence, compiling this article on the
100th birthday of Captain [now Honorary Colonel] Tom Moore. Having originally set out with the intention
of raising £1,000 for NHS frontline staff battling the Coronavirus by walking
100 laps of his garden, he had by the evening of his birthday raised nearly £32
million. What an inspiration to us
all! Along the way he also co-released
a charity single, You'll Never Walk Alone with Michael Ball that went straight
to the top of the charts; an achievement which at the age of 99 made him the oldest
male vocalist to have a number one hit since Tom Jones did a remake of Islands
in the Stream for Comic Relief in 2009 at the comparatively youthful age of
69. Before him, the record holder had
been 66-year-old Louis Armstrong with his hit What a Wonderful World, which
topped the charts in 1968.
The following year saw the release of the James Bond film On
Her Majesty's Secret Service. This had
We Have All the Time in the World as its featured song, the line taken from
Bond's final words spoken after the death of his wife. Although too ill to play his trumpet,
composer John Barry particularly wanted Armstrong as the vocalist feeling that
his voice could deliver the title line with irony.
The titles of both of Armstrong's songs seem to resonate, somewhat
with irony, with our current situation; for when one comes to consider our four
seasons, spring is arguably the one that, from a rural perspective, proves
beyond doubt that we do indeed live in a wonderful world. No other time of year sees as many comings
and goings as late winter merges into spring and then fulfils its potential
before blending into early summer.
There is the blackthorn, hawthorn and cherry blossoms; the snowdrops,
the daffodils, the primroses, the buttercups, the bluebells and the cow
parsley. Unfortunately, restricted as
we have all been to either remain housebound or at best be restricted to one
outing per day within a reasonable distance of our homes, we have been unable
to fully appreciate spring's transformation.
Whether you have been confined to your home on government
advice, furloughed from work or are an essential worker restricted to your
outdoor activities, one thing is certain: we currently seem to have all the
time in the world. Filling that time
productively for such a long period has, quite understandably, proved quite a
challenge for some people. Personally,
I decided that the best way to tackle the issue was to bring the countryside to
me by sitting in my back garden and living in the present moment through
observing the natural events taking place around me; and in so doing found
that, unlike our primitive ancestors, I no longer dwelt on the negative news
bulletins or concerned myself with possible outcomes.
With the sky now devoid of airliners' vapour
trails, it was the surrounding birdlife to which I found myself being
drawn. Ever present was a male
blackbird perched on the roofs of either our bungalow or our neighbours', or on
the telegraph pole, on our garage roof or in our mahonia tree. From dawn until dusk he sung his lyrical
tune which had that characteristic gap before singing a collection of new
notes. A female blackbird had been
previously present, her current absence a sign she was now perhaps sitting upon
eggs. It had been lovely watching them
have their morning dip - never together, it must be emphasised,
the male always perching on the edge of the birdbath to allow his mate to
splash and preen herself without interruption.
On the day of writing she reappeared, her clutch having possibly
successfully fledged. Before lockdown we had also watched a pair of doves
successfully build a nest in the mahonia, defying storm force winds which
interweaved the branches but failed to upset the nest. It was fascinating observing the pair's
meticulousness for choosing the correct length and girth of stick on the ground
for the next addition to the nest. In
time, two chicks hatched which we had the pleasure of watching grow until they
could barely fit in the nest. Then
early one morning they fledged.
Their hatching as chicks encouraged crows from nearby
conifers to our garden, no doubt considering them a possible food source for
themselves. We also used to see them
before our neighbour had his leylandii trees felled -
pre-nesting season I must add. For this was where a pair of wood pigeons
would annually raise offspring, attacks from crows and magpies having been
successfully overcome. Unfortunately,
the male and female had mated ahead of felling and for two weeks perched on our
fence waiting for the trees to miraculously reappear. Eventually the female vacated the scene, the
male continuing to arrive daily to either eat seed on the lawn, having first
landed on the feeder and forcibly swung on it to cause seeds to fall out, or to
take a late morning splash which subsequently required a complete replenishment
of water in the bird bath.
One morning as I stepped outside to take my seat, I was
frozen to the spot by surprise. What
occurred took place in an instant. From
nowhere, so it seemed, a sparrowhawk soared low
across our neighbours' gardens before sweeping
diagonally up and away and out of sight.
At the very same time, the wood pigeon, previously perched at ease upon
our garage roof, fluttered fast into the air across to the safe protection of
the high conifers. Presumably a female sparrowhawk, the male leaves her to take out larger prey, I
can only guess that my sudden appearance on the scene distracted her from her
attack. It is the first time I have
witnessed an attempt on such a species since living here, for they usually prey
upon our nearby neighbour's racing pigeons when they
are let out once a day to display their acrobatic flying formations. Periodically a solitary pigeon may veer off
course and it is then, with dynamic speed, that the sparrowhawk
appears overhead and takes the pigeon out.
One other nest builder has been a female blue tit. Having initially spent time checking out the
nest box attached to our garage, both the male and female disappeared, only to
return a fortnight later. Soon the
female began the construction of her nest whilst the male kept a watchful eye
on possible contenders; and a good job he did, a great tit soon wading in and
attempting to gazump the homemakers. A fierce battle took place within the
mahonia tree, the male blue tit claiming victory. Meanwhile the female continued her creation
using both moss and dog fur, the latter having been attached to the pole of the
birdfeeder after our three Labradors had been brushed! Before long just the male was observed,
making vigilant visits the to the box throughout the day to feed his
partner. Come the last day of April
chicks could be heard calling each time a parent entered the nest box with
food.
Other visitors to the garden have included a lone dunnock
eating seeds surrounding the cotoneaster at the bottom of the feeders and a
pair of gold finches either enjoying the Nyjer seeds or taking a drink at the
birdbath. Their markings deserve
appreciation; that distinctive red face, white patch behind the eye and their
black crown and nape, along with their distinguishing yellow wing patches, that
black tail and long pointed bill. Unusual sightings have included a solitary
buzzard circling on the thermals overhead, a rook perusing the lawn and a house
sparrow that paid a single visit to the feeders.
I should like to round off my article by returning to
Captain Tom Moore. On his 100th birthday
he received a card from the Queen with a personalised
message; and deservedly so. He also
received a special message from fellow centenarian Dame Vera Lynn who said,
"Like the rest of the country, I was so inspired by his achievement over
the past few weeks." All three
share a common empathy; for they are old enough to remember only too well the
last time our world experienced such a global cataclysm: World War Two. It seemed, therefore, only fitting and,
moreover, reassuring when Her Majesty concluded her recent address to the
Commonwealth regarding the Coronavirus with the words that are supremely
associated with Dame Vera: "We will
be with our friends again. We will be
with our families again. We will meet
again." And, if I may take the
liberty to add, we will someday soon be able to reconnect with our beautiful
countryside once again.
Stephen
McCarthy
24
THANK YOU
Mike and Jo Lane would like to thank
the many people who have helped them in these difficult times. The Parish Council have set up a great
scheme for collecting and delivering prescriptions for older villagers - they
deserve a great deal of credit.
25
A LOCAL WALK - 180
A Cliff Hanger: Now It Can be Told
Many
years ago - in the mid 1980's - a summer Sunday afternoon when we decided to go
for a leisurely stroll along the shore below Lester Point.
An uneventful afternoon. The only perceived hazard, the possibility
of slipping on a bit of bladderwrack or getting our
feet wet in a rock pool. All was calm and still; the air
pleasantly warm, not too hot, when suddenly we witnessed a man hurtling through
the air from the high cliff above. It was one of those situations when
time appears to slow up unnaturally.
His landing on the hard rocks below was inevitable and, in the meantime,
we were completely helpless to do anything to prevent it.
We just stood and waited with a sense
of dread. Eventually, the large man
came to rest on the rocky platform at the base of the cliff. There was some moaning but he was conscious
and not in obvious pain. We suggested
he stay put in case anything was broken.
One of us would go to seek help.
A young woman appeared. She said she was a doctor and had seen him
earlier on the coast path. She told him
he must not attempt to move in case any injuries were made worse. She continued on her way and my
companion left to alert the emergency service.
The fallen man was very red faced and
sweating profusely. He was irritable
because his sunglasses and camera were missing. I searched around and finally retrieved
both but the fallen man was exasperated because a bit of the camera was
missing. I was sent off again to find
the small component.
But I failed and meanwhile the tide was
fast coming in and if we didn't move away, we should become cut off.
I propped him up as we made our way
awkwardly to the sea front where, as we arrived, a helicopter was about to land
and a little crowd of holiday makers had gathered to watch the spectacle. A wag pointed up to the helicopter and
then the fallen man asking, "Is this for you?!" A tearful, anxious woman pressed
forward greeting him with relief. He
seemed reluctant to acknowledge her. We
discreetly left.
But a mystery remained. Did he fall or did he jump . . . was he
pushed? We'll never know.
Sue H
26
27
A DANGEROUS DAYLIGHT
ROBBERY
He
was told that there would only be one man, probably a retired policeman,
guarding the outside of the building. They also told him that the security guard
would not be armed.
But
after he had parked the car and walked confidently towards the entrance, he saw
six men. And none of them were
old. In fact, they all looked like
Dolph Lundgren in Rocky IV - over 6-foot-tall, broad
shoulders, and with tight white shirts stretched over toned muscle, and on
each man's face a killer smirk as they stood upright, rock still with their legs apart and big hands
clasped low in front. One of them most
definitely had a gun in a fat leather holster strapped around his waist. Fierce, heavy-set men dressed in their clean
blue uniforms, so obviously fit and powerful.
Their
fearsome appearance was, in itself, enough to make ordinary, sensible men
think twice about trying to enter the store to steal any of the precious
goods inside.
But
he wasn't about to turn and walk away. He had a job to do. He had no choice.
The two
guards with strangely flat heads and cold-as-ice eyes, stopped scanning left
and right for possible intruders and locked onto him as he moved towards
them across the car park. He knew
then that this would be more difficult than he first thought. But orders were
orders.
Illustration by: Paul Swailes
He
fell in behind a smart middle-aged woman in an expensive pink cashmere
coat and yellow silk scarf wrapped around her mouth and neck. He walked slowly just a couple of yards
away from her, but in perfect step, as they approached the wide
automatic glass doors. He hoped
the guards would think they were an innocent couple arriving for
legitimate business, and let them both pass through together without
questions.
It
nearly worked. But as the heavy
doors noisily scraped open, a strong arm shot out and blocked him
from following the woman inside. He
turned to look at the officer, as surprised and offended as he possibly
could, but stared into a face with callous and determined aggression.
"Do
you have a permit to be here?"
"Of
course," he replied reaching into his pocket and handing the guard his
carefully-forged papers.
The
guard studied the documents longer than normally necessary for the
hoped-for immediate approval, and then looked up and said, "Wait
here!"
He
stood waiting and watching the woman inside standing next to the very prize he
had risked everything to come here for. She turned her head to
stare at him with an anxious expression.
She knew that he knew they were after the same thing.
No-one
else was looking, so she grabbed the goods and ran back out towards the far
side of the car park where her partner in crime was sitting in a white
van, side door open and engine running.
The
six security guards were still grouped at the corner of the building discussing
his fake permit. Suddenly one of them
noticed the woman running with the stolen goods towards the white van and
shouted, "Stop!" She didn't stop. She was only 20 yards away from
success. The guards ran after her.
He
knew this was his chance. Quick as
a flash he was in the store, taking the remaining goods from the shelf, and
then back out and heading in the opposite direction to the white van and
active guards to his own car. Safe in
the car and with the goods on the back seat, he drove calmly out of the
carpark.
In
his rear-view mirror, he saw a taser being drawn and fired at the unfortunate
woman. He'd been lucky. He smiled to himself at the fortunate turn
of events.
Back
home his wife and daughter greeted him with loving open arms and screams of delight. He had managed to bring them the two packs
of 24-ultra soft 3-ply rolls they needed.
Enough to last another month in forced isolation.
Mike Miles
28
BAILEY'S
BLOG
I have thought long and hard about my blog this month. [That's not always a good thing!] But I am
aware that you, villagers will be looking for entertainment after being stuck
indoors for so long. That is the issue
though; do we talk about the unmentionable or don't we? "Lock down", "Social Isolation", call it
what you will, it's given me a great chance to observe you humans and I have
come to the conclusion you are not as different from us canines as you may like
to think. In fact, on so many levels you
are the same.
Take the fact that I could sit for hours watching the world
go by. The last few weeks the Mr. and
Mrs. have been doing the same; sitting looking longingly out of the
window. They have even made a seating
area at the top of the garden, [that's my territory!] and sit there surveying
the Sterridge Valley. Then there's the
excitement of passers-by. When the Mrs.
spots someone walking past, she is out there like a shot. Whilst she can't quite jump up as excitedly
as me and she hasn't quite mastered the bottom wiggle and the tail wag, she is
undoubtedly as excited as ever I am, at seeing people. Then there's this Thursday night thing. Lots of clapping hands, banging pans and
cheering. The Mrs. loves it. She runs
from the front door to the top of the garden, getting very, very excited. Why is it though when I make lots of noise
barking and get excited, racing around the garden I get into trouble?
It's
evident that you humans also appreciate the benefits of walks. I have never seen so many people walking
past the house before. My walks have
definitely got longer and we have been exploring some amazing parts of this
beautiful village. I think both the Mr.
and Mrs. have realised that whilst the dog exercise area has its merits, there
is nothing quite as exhilarating as a good walk along the coast path, sniffing
the wild garlic plants and letting one's hair blow in the wind. Funnily enough they haven't hosed each other
down on their return to the house yet.
You already know my thoughts on the merits of that, maybe they have
realised it's really not pleasant or necessary!
Nevertheless, like me, they always come back thirsty,
gasping for a drink and a treat of course.
That's the other thing, since this lock down thingy they have been
devouring treats throughout the day.
The Mrs. clearly thinks about food as much as me. Each time she opens the cupboard she sniffs
out a treat. I have to say I am liking
this new trait as she clearly feels guilty and so I usually get something too!
Talking about this guilt thing reminds me of something else. The other night they had 'date night'; not
normally something I experience.
Usually when date night is mentioned it's an evening when I am put to
bed early and they go out for a night out to the cinema, pub or
restaurant. They come back very happy
but feeling guilty for leaving me so I get lots of fuss for staying in my
room. This date night though was very
different. No fuss for me whatsoever
and of course they didn't leave the house.
Instead the lounge lights were dimmed and candles lit, [a fire hazard in
my opinion. It's far too easy to singe one's tail accidently.] The Mrs. cooked steak, [a favourite of mine
given half a chance] and the Mr. opened what he called 'a particularly good
wine'. Soft music was put on in the
background; romantic stuff not like my favourite Who let the dogs out? That's got great lyrics. They clearly enjoyed the meal, as lots of
appreciative noises were made and the plates were practically licked clean,
well maybe not as well as I could clean them.
Admittedly they didn't clean their plates as quickly as I clean my bowl
either. Then, and here's the thing, they
snuggled up on the settee and I am sure the Mr. was hoping to have his tummy
tickled. See, no different from me at
all!
A final thought, they say dogs look
like their owners or is it the owners look like their dogs? Anyway, have you seen the Mrs. since she's
not visited the hairdressers? I rest
my case!
29
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Proprietors Jenny and David Williams 31a Portland Street, Ilfracombe,
EX34 9NL 01271 866332 24 hour Independent Family Funeral
Service support@adwilliams.co.uk
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30
CHILDHOOD LITERATURE
"We drove to Berrynarbor in the morning
of 5th, and we first passed the picturesque village of Hele with its pretty harbour; here papa
stopped to take a photography. We
walked up the hill and had a good view.
We passed Samsons Caves and reached Watermouth Castle. It was the residence of Mr. Bassett, who had
a large estate here. He was rather queer, they say he did not live at the Castle but at a
little house further on. His horse ran
away with him and broke his neck at the corner of a field further on.
"We returned inland, the road returning
beside a beautiful little trout stream.
this little valley is the prettiest place about here. Berrynarbor Church stands well on the top of
a hill. It is a quaint straggling old
village consisting chiefly of one steep street.
Beatrix Potter
Upload by
Adrian Michael
Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
"We stopped at the shop of the
churchwarden, who was the leading draper.
He was a tall thin man with a red nose.
We went up five or six steps through an old gateway into the churchyard,
in which stood some fine elms and a very old yew tree. The warden said it was eight hundred, it was
still full of vigour. In a railed space
were the graves of the Bassett family.
There were some beautiful lilies on the late Mr. Bassett's.
"The church is rather a large one with a
very fine old tower. Inside were two
fine old monuments to the Berry family, from which the place took its
name. The first dated 1642-6
represented the Lord and Lady kneeling dressed in ruffs, with the sons beneath
him and a daughter beneath her. The
second was larger, and represented a lady of the same house kneeling, in
ruff. The inscription was made on bad
stone and had flaked away.
"There was an old chapel with a Norman
arch. An old house, perhaps once the
vicarage, was said to be built at the time of Edward IV. Some carved stones in the wall bore the arms
of the Plantagenets, but they were taken to the Castle by Mr. Bassett.
"The village children came out of school
while papa was photographing the churchyard.
They came in at the front gate - the warden turned them out, whereupon
they immediately came in at the side one, but were again expelled. Mr. Poole was exceedingly angry."
So wrote Beatrix Potter in her diary of
1882.
Helen Beatrix Potter was born on the
14th March 1872 at 2 Bolton Gardens, West Brompton, London, her home until she
married in 1913.
Peter Rabbit - from project Gutenberg
Beatrix Potter, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Born into an upper-middle-class family
of the day, Beatrix was educated by three able governesses, the last Annie
Moore [nee Carter], just three years her senior, who also acted as a lady's
companion. They remained friends
throughout their lives and Annie's eight children, especially the eldest, Noel,
were the recipients of many of Beatrix's picture letters and it was Annie's
suggestion that these letters could make good books for children.
Beatrix and her younger brother,
Bertram, had few friends but numerous pets, which they both observed closely
and drew endlessly, including mice, rabbits and a hedgehog.
The family spent long summer holidays,
many in Scotland, but in 1882, whilst staying in the Lake District, she met who
was to be a lifetime friend, Hardwicke Rawnsley,
Vicar of Wray, later the founding secretary of the National Trust, whose
interest in country life and the countryside inspired the same in Beatrix. She was also interested in natural science
and botany and by the 1890's mycology became a passion, drawn to fungi because
of their colours and evanescence, delighting in painting them but also
resulting in her extensive and important research of them. Later, she gave her mycological and
scientific drawings to the Armitt Museum and Library
in Ambleside, where mycologist still refer to them to identify species. In 1967, the mycologist W.P.K. Findlay
included many of her detailed and accurate drawings in his book Wayside and
Woodland Fungi, fulfilling her wish to one day have her fungus drawings in
print.
In her teenage years, Beatrix regularly
visited the London art galleries, enjoying, as a critic, the exhibitions at the
Royal Academy. Sir John Everett Millais,
a friend of her father, recognised her talent of observation and although she
was aware of art and artistic trends, her drawing and prose style were uniquely
her own.
Beatrix Potter
by Charles G.Y. King
vintage snapshot print, May 1913
Purchased, 2013
NPG P1825
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Licenced under CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
In 1893 whilst on holiday, she ran out
of things to tell Noel in a letter, so she told him a story about 'four little
rabbits whose names were Flopsy, Mopsy,
Cottontail and Peter. It became one of
the most famous letters ever written and the start of her career as a
writer-artist-storyteller. She reused
the tale of the four rabbits in 1900, but unable to find a publisher, printed
it for family and friends at her own expense.
Rawnsley, having faith in the tale, took it to
the London publishing firms. Rejected
previously by Frederick Warne & Co., they reconsidered and accepted the 'bunny
book' as they called it. On 2nd October
1902, the Tale of Peter Rabbit, with coloured illustrations, was published and
was an immediate success. Other tales
quickly followed.
A canny business woman, in 1902 she made and
patented a Peter Rabbit doll, followed by painting books, board games,
wall-paper, figurines, baby blankets and china tea sets.
All were
licensed by Frederick Warne & Co., earning her an independent income and
vast profits for her publisher.
In 1905, she and Norman Warne became
unofficially engaged. Her parents
didn't approve, as Warne was 'in trade', but the engagement only lasted a
month, Warne dying of pernicious anaemia at the age of 37. That same year, Beatrix was able, with some
of her income, to buy Hill Top Farm in Near Sawrey,
near Windermere - she had always wanted to own the farm and live in 'that
charming village'.
Here she learnt the techniques of fell
farming, continuing to write and illustrate her books, she became a
prize-winning breeder of Hardwick sheep.
To protect her land and development and to purchase nearby Castle Farm,
Beatrix sought advice from W.H. Heelis & Son,
with William Heelis acting on her behalf.
By the summer of 1912, Heelis had proposed marriage and Beatrix accepted and they
were married on the 15th October 1913 at St. Mary Abbots in Kensington, then
living at Castle Cottage, the renovated farmhouse on Castle Farm.
At last her own woman, Beatrix settled
to the partnerships that shaped the rest of her life - her country solicitor
husband and his large family, her farms, the Sawrey
community, the rounds of country life and her illustrated stories. She and William had a happy marriage of
thirty years, continuing their farming and preservation efforts throughout the
hard days of two World Wars.
Beatrix died from pneumonia and heart
disease on the 22nd December, 1943 at Castle Cottage. She left nearly all her property to the
National Trust, including over 4,000 acres of land, sixteen farms, cottages and
herds of cattle and Herdwick sheep, the largest gift at that time to the
Trust. The central office of the Trust
in Swindon was named Heelis in 2005 in her
memory.
William Heelis
continued his stewardship of their properties and of her literary and artistic
works for the twenty months he survived her.
When he died in August 1945, he left the remainder also to the National
Trust, who in 1946 opened Hill Top Farm to the public, where her artwork was
displayed until 1985 when it was moved to William Heelis's
former law offices in Hawkshead, also owned by the Trust as the Beatrix Potter
Gallery.
The Tale of Peter Rabbit is owned by
Frederick Warne & Co., The Tailor of Gloucester by the Tate Gallery and The
Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies by the British Museum.
Her books
continue to sell and be read throughout the world in many languages with her
stories being retold in songs, films, ballet and animations and her life
depicted in a feature film and television film.
Judie Weedon
31
MOVERS AND SHAKERS - NO. 87
PETER and CAROL DUNCAN
Partners, Stapleton Yogurts and Ice Cream
Many years ago, I had a yogurt-making machine. It consisted of a smallish round insulated
pot with lid. The yogurt tasted all
right but was a bit fiddly to make and always had a rim of clear liquid on top. Nowadays, thanks to Peter and Carol Duncan,
we enjoy delicious yogurt on our breakfast muesli every day. Usually it's the low-fat version, but
sometimes the Greek one takes over, and occasionally we enjoy one of the many
delicious varieties of fruit yogurts.
Peter in the Dairy
The Duncan's making of yogurts goes back to 1975, although
Peter's interest in processing milk was when he was just seven years old. He comes from a dairy farming family
originating in the Midlands and in the 1950's he remembers that porridge
started the family's day, topped with a good dollop of cream. This cream was made by his mother in the
method of that time: leaving a bowl of milk in the larder overnight for the
cream to rise to the top. His father
happened to mention that there was a machine called a cream separator that
extracted cream instantly. What an
inspiration for a young boy. You didn't
have to wait 12 hours for your porridge cream! Still, he was 25 before he got his first
cream separator and by then he had progressed to learning about fermenting milk
into other products. That was the start
of Stapleton Yogurts.
Peter was born in Stafford on 25th March 1950. His parents, Keith and Margaret Duncan, were
dairy farmers in Staffordshire. In 1966,
they left their farm and sought pastures new in North Devon, bringing with them
their 100 Jersey cows. Here, they
figured, was a wet and warm climate which would produce quality grass for their
animals and in turn produce even better milk.
Carol was also born in
1950 on 1st February, but in Ilfracombe.
Her parents, Frank and Doris Lewis, used
to own a hotel in the town. The family
history, tracing back to the Armada [if not before!], shows needy visitors to
Ilfracombe being offered Devon's best food and drink from various inns and
hotels. The Lewis's also grew fruit,
vegetables and flowers, including providing ocean going liners such as the
Queen Mary with carnations. As a small child, Carol remembers walking
through the greenhouse with her father who remarked that "something" was eating
all the peas but leaving the pods on the plants. That "something" was Carol!
The Duncan's have now been married for 46 years. They have two daughters: Beth who joined them
in their business in 2013, and Lucy who keeps up family tradition by offering 'Devon's
Best Food' at the Cream Tea Cafe in Church Walk, Barnstaple, which she runs
with her husband.
Coming back to Beth, it was thanks to her initiative that
when two of their major outlets, pubs and restaurants, were closed due to the
ongoing pandemic, she reasoned that some of their lost trade could be offset by
offering home deliveries. She quickly set
up a system on their website giving clear instructions for ordering Doorstep
Deliveries of Yogurt, Ice Cream and Milk for Devonians, or Mix 'n Match Yogurt
Boxes for most of the UK. You can also
order yogurt by post
Both Peter's and Carol's upbringings taught them a respect
for food. They started their business
using the best products and a determination that only good basic or natural
ingredients would be used in their fruit compotes and purees. These are still made by hand in the dairy
kitchen, using raw materials whenever possible. For instance, if they are
making gooseberry yogurt, the gooseberries used will have been harvested and
immediately frozen to retain the flavour. They are then poached lightly with raw sugar
and no extra flavourings or colourings
are added. No wonder they all taste so good! It
makes them very different from many other producers, who buy their fruit
already processed.
All
Stapleton products are approved by the Vegetarian Society and are also kosher
approved.
When they started in 1975, they wanted to use milk from the
family's Jersey herd and were determined to use authentic production methods. They no longer keep cows, but their lush Devon
Jersey milk comes from local farms that maintain the highest level of animal
welfare. At Stapleton, only Jersey milk
is used because they feel that with its high levels of protein and calcium it
makes the finest products. There are
just 12 employees and only small batches of yogurts and ice cream are made at a
time which avoids the need for artificial stabilisers.
Ice cream was added to the range in 2000, but only sold to
Sainsbury's for their Taste the Difference range. This lasted until recently after 20 years
production. In 2018 ice cream was made under the Stapleton
name and is now well established.
Stapleton products are sold through some supermarkets and to
small shops such as our own one in Berrynarbor. They are also available in many farm shops
including Orchard Farm shops at both St Johns Garden
Centre sites. Or you can have it delivered by contacting the company on www.stapletonfarm.co.uk
.
Even with their busy lifestyle, Peter and Carol find time to
help others. For many years they have
been involved with Clic Sargent, the charity helping
children and their parents with cancer. They give talks to community groups
such as the WI and any contributions made are donated to the charity.
For a company with such high standards of ingredients and
methods, Peter and Carol deserve their success, and with Beth, who has been
learning about the business since she was tiny, devoting her energies for the
challenges ahead, it looks in safe hands. We wish them continuing success.
PP of DC
32
33
OLD BERRYNARBOR - NO. 185
Thistledew,
Birdswell Laane
For this
issue I have chosen two views, taken about 1950, of Thistledew,
Birdswell Lane. The first
view shows the entrance off the lane, and the second shows the house from the
south, with Mrs. Dorothy Hubbard in the
foreground with her arms full of flowers she has just picked.
 
;
 
;
My thanks to the present owners, David
and Madeline Hubbard [who in fact are no relation to the previous Hubbard's],
for the following information.
In 1925, William and Roseline Bray sold
the plot of land to a Miss Doris Rowe, who only used the land as a market
garden. The house was built some time later.
In June 1957, the then owner, Mrs.
Robins, sold Thistledew to Mr. F.J. and Mrs. Dorothy
Hubbard, and his mother Mrs. Violet Hubbard.
Dorothy Hubbard LRAM [Licentiate of the Royal Academy of Music], was an
accomplished pianist who taught music and the piano to many of the local
children.
In July 1985, Mr. C. Denton-Powell and
Mrs. M.A. Bannister bought Thistledew, marrying in
1990. They sold the home for £100,000
in 1994 to Mr. R.E. and Mrs. E.C. Lloyd, who, just two years later, in 1996,
sold the property and land to Mr. and Mrs. William and Sylvia Baker. On Valentine's Day in February 2002, Thistledew became home to its current owners.
This view, taken at the same time, is
from the back and the sea can still be seen from the property today.
Tom Bartlett
Tower
Cottage, May 2020
e mail: tomandinge40@gmail.com