Edition 184 - February 2020
EDITORIAL
In December I wrote how unpleasant the weather had been for weeks and there has hardly been any let up since! Brendan is currently blowing a gale and lashing down with rain, and oh, if only we could send some of this down under to the poor folk in Australia suffering horrendous bushfires.
Christmas has come and gone. I hope you enjoyed the festive season without problems although I believe a number of unfortunate souls have suffered from flu like coughs. I hope you are now on the mend and I wish you and all readers a happy, healthy and hopefully peaceful 2020.
There are events planned to cheer up the dull February days. Berry in Bloom are holding a Fun Quiz and Supper on the 7th, the Craft Group will be hosting their annual Knit In for the North Devon Hospice on the 24th; and the Manor Hall committee will be tossing pancakes during the afternoon of Shrove Tuesday, the 25th.
Although the mornings still remain rather dark the evenings are drawing out and snowdrops are blooming and bulbs popping up through the sodden soil. The first day of spring is officially the 19th March, followed by Mothering Sunday on the 22nd. Gifts for Mother's Day, as well as Valentine's Day, will be in our Shop, and pots of bulbs and flowers on Josh Richards' stall at Moules Farm.
But don't forget to put your clocks forward an hour on the night of the 28th/29th March.
An interesting batch of articles for this issue and my thanks to all contributors but especially the regulars and Paul. Enjoy!
I'll be looking for another batch for April and Easter and these will be welcome as soon as possible and by Wednesday, 14th March at the latest. Thank you.
Judie - Ed
1
MEMORIES
Post-Christmas Positivity
When Christmas is over and the decorations cast aside
Hold onto the memories; the joy that cannot be denied.
The time spent with family sitting altogether
Partying with friends certainly brought much pleasure.
Wreath-making, the Sterridge lights, carol singing too,
Our first Christmas in Berrynarbor, a happy time with you.
There's lots to be thankful for as the festive season reaches its end.
For health and happiness and each and every friend.
Goodbye Christmas with chocolate gifts and flowers
I'm ready to welcome spring with more Devonshire showers.
Living here, in Berrynarbor, a truly wonderful place
Has certainly brought an enormous smile to my face.
I'm told that very soon, snowdrops and daffodils will appear.
Reminding us that winter will finish and spring will soon be here.
I am sure the next season, in our village, will be a very special one
A wonderful setting to continue having fun.
Our happy memories will never change or Disappear
We can just add to them from year to year.
Pam
Illustration by: Paul Swailes
2
Thank you, everyone, for coming to
Christchurch today to help us celebrate Dad's life. He was a loving husband, father, grandfather,
brother, uncle, friend and farmer.
Born Albert Gordon Stanbury on the 5th
September 1943, he was the son of Bruce and Molly and older brother to Eileen. He started his life at Hempster Farm,
Berrynarbor. Dad, like Auntie Eileen, was born prematurely
- weighing just 3lbs and 4oz. Who would
have thought that he could have been so small? He certainly made up for it in later life! Having moved from Hempster via Muddiford and
Berrynarbor, the family moved to their brand-new farmstead at Stapleton in
1951.
Eileen remembers a very happy childhood
with Dad. He was the protective big
brother and playmate rolled into one. There
was plenty of mischief to be found in the house - decorating his mum's entire
bedroom with a powder puff, fine tuning the design of his sister's pram by
removing all the nuts and bolts until it collapsed, and investigating the inner
workings of Eileen's beautiful teddy bear who really growled - she never saw
the bear again after this!
The fun didn't stop there - Dad was
thrilled with a bag of nails he had received as a gift for Christmas and set to
making dens, carts and all manner of things. Dad loved driving - he decided to teach
Eileen, aged 5, to drive Bruce's old van - Eileen would steer and Gordon worked
the gears. They soon promoted
themselves to Bruce's lorry, taking it for a spin, unfortunately a hedge
happened to appear out of nowhere and got them into big trouble with their dad.
This fascination with machinery
continued and especially with Massey Ferguson tractors - even naming his dog
Fergie much later in life.
Dad followed his father everywhere -
hailing the start of a lifelong, all-consuming obsession with farming. From an early age he found comics boring and
preferred the Farmer's Weekly instead. He
read it from cover to cover every week - a pastime he continued throughout his
life. He loved the countryside and
specifically land. It really bothered
him when a new housing development was built on prime agricultural soil.
It may surprise you to learn that Molly
decided he should have some non-farming interests. She enrolled him into ballet lessons. He gained a Commended Pass in Primary Ballet
from the Royal Academy of Dance, aged 9. As a spin off to ballet dancing, Dad soon got
to know all the girls in the Parish!
Dad was extremely strong. This came in handy in his sport although not
without consequence. Once, he
accidentally and literally knocked out his opposite number on the rugby pitch
during a game. Furthermore, his school friend, Bill Hitchins, often reminds me
that he was once on the receiving end of Dad's cricket bat in a blow to the
head, also accidental! Dad was thankful
of his time at West Buckland, it allowed him to broaden his horizons, making
friends from all over the world.
It was due to a friendship between
Dad's Uncle Owen and the Wilkinson family that he met his wife Joy. As he
grew up, Dad spent much of his time on his Uncle Owen's large farm at
Fullabrook. This was where he learnt a
great deal of his farming knowledge. When
Mum moved to North Devon, her Uncle Harry would often take her, together with
Richard and Julia, to Fullabrook Farm to visit Owen. Mum and Dad's paths soon crossed, and Dad
instantly took a shine to Mum. He was
soon smitten by her good looks and intellect. After three months of courting, at the age of
25, Dad proposed. They were married on
this very spot on the 19th October 1968. A year later, I came along and our family was
complete.
Richard, Julia and I had a happy,
loving childhood at Stapleton. Dad gave out lots of cuddles and his prickly
beard would tickle us as he did so. When we were children, Dad spent many hours
working on the farm, and we would go out and help too. He often fell asleep on the chair in front of
the telly - the intoxicating smell of his socks, made worse as they roasted in
front of the fire!
Things were never easy financially, but
we never wanted for anything. We took
pleasure in the simplest of things - playing in the garden, messing around in
the hay bales, going to the beach and playing games in the house when it was
wet. We made dens, rode our bikes,
messed around in old cars and played cards and board games. Dad loved games, any games, but especially
card games.
We spent a lot of time visiting family
at various gatherings. Dad loved these
occasions. He laughed and told jokes
all day long, no doubt engaging in his next favourite pastime - eating! His
favourite treats were Fry's Chocolate Creams with Mars Bars and Bounty Bars
also on the list. Thunder and lightning [that's clotted cream and Lyle's Golden
Syrup on bread]
was the food of choice for breakfast and last thing before bed. Dad
also loved a roast, especially one cooked by Julia on a Sunday. Despite being a food lover - strangely - he
had no sense of smell or taste; a characteristic he shares with his sister.
Dad was always looking for the latest
innovations and technical advancements in farming. He invested in the latest housing and feeding
systems for his dairy unit in the 1970s.
I am sure many of you will
remember the tower silo - 80 feet tall and a landmark for guiding lost
motorists from all over North Devon. It's
legacy lives on, people still refer to Stapleton as the farm with the tower
silo - even though it was removed in the 1990s.
During the '70s and '80s, Mum and Dad
decided to invest in our education, with Julia studying at the Maris Convent
and Richard and I following in his footsteps to West Buckland, which again must
have been a struggle financially. As a
result, holidays were few and far between.
I
remember two, one on a canal barge and the other on the Norfolk Broads -
although Richard would argue that he only got one holiday! There was, of
course, the obligatory trips to all the agricultural shows.
In the '80s, Dad took a break from
milking cows and grew barley instead. The
farm buildings were used to store and sell feed and fertiliser for a local
merchant. Farmers would call in to
collect and Dad would load up their trucks and trailers and then spend hours
sharing stories and jokes with them. He
was in his element!
Throughout the '80s and '90s, Mum and
Dad moved house a few times; first to Wheel Farm after renovating an
old barn and then to a barn conversion at Deer Park in Combe Martin. In 2008, they decided to design and build
their own house at Stapleton. Dad loved
designing things, especially buildings, and together with Mum, spent hours
researching ideas and designs before creating their beautiful dream home.
Throughout his life, Dad was lucky
enough to travel the world, visiting some fabulous places. Trips included visiting members of the
extended Stanbury and Wilkinson families in Australia and Canada. He
loved spending time with his many friends and treated them as family, always
kind and thoughtful towards them. From
the creation of the 'Stuff 'n' Nonsense Society' with Gerald, Barbara, Robert
and Lorna, to trips away with Fred and Wendy - he greatly enjoyed the company
of you all.
Another mainstay for Dad was this
church - he attended most Sundays in the congregation and was also an Elder. He
enjoyed the friendship of the members of the Probus Group and of the Barnstaple
Male Voice Choir - attending regular rehearsals, performing, and even taking
part in a concert in Italy. He would be
so touched to know you are performing here today.
back
in the 80s to keep up with the times; he would often record over a program he
had already recorded and before he had even watched it!
I remember once, we were all eagerly
awaiting the return of Dad after a couple of months away on a farm study tour
to Western Australia. When he brought the photos home from the developers, he
soon realised he had left the lens cap on! The Australian countryside appeared to be
very dark! In recent times, passwords,
mobile phones, pin numbers and the internet all came with their own problems. He would regularly enlist Gerald or one of
the grandchildren to sort out any technological hitches - caused by the machine
of course!
Seat belts became a frustration in
later life for obvious reasons and certain items of clothing too. I remember Richard overhearing Dad struggling
to get his shirt on one evening. There
was lots of moaning and groaning with the words "dirty shirt" shouted out as
his shirt had obviously shrunk in the wash! Dad had to rely on Mum to check his
interesting dress sense as it was sometimes a joy to behold, with flashing bow ties
and long socks with sandals all part of the wardrobe at times.
Dad showed kindness to everyone he met. As a
child, he chose a pink umbrella to give to his sister over a prize for himself
at bingo and gave his entire collection of Dinky Toys to a very ill friend in
Berrynarbor. More recently, he offered his house to his dear friends, Robert
and Lorna, while they were in between house moves and just two months before we
lost him. It was during this two-month
stay that Dad became seriously ill and our family cannot thank them enough for
all the love and care they gave him. You
really were a Godsend.
Richard, Julia and I spent a lot of
time with Dad towards the end, and although he still had many things he wished
to achieve, he felt that he had had a wonderful life; with such happy times. Dad was rarely sad and so I am convinced that
he would want all of us to be jolly, tell jokes and party in his absence. The speed of Dad's illness was very difficult
for us all to bear but his eternal positivity carried us all through it. Indeed, the illness was a nuisance to him and
which he hoped would go away, allowing him to continue his enjoyment of life. Having looked after Mum when she became ill, it
was so fitting that Dad was afforded the same care by the wonderful carers at
Tyspane in the last week of his life. It was especially moving that Mum was able to
visit Dad and share a few very special moments together before his passing.
We should like to thank you all for
your support and lovely messages you have sent during this difficult time, you
have given us strength.
Dad loved his family. He loved his dear wife and he was proud of
the achievements of his children and grandchildren. Though Dad has left us, his values and
characteristics live on in his family, especially in his grandchildren. Daisy in her frustrations when things
don't
go according to plan; Emily in her love
for the outdoors, helping on the farm and taking ballet lessons; Lucy also in ballet, travelling and taking
pictures [with the lens cap off!]; Katrina
is always full of mischief and talented at sport; Courtney is good looking and has a very good
appetite and has also been known to ask for tools for Christmas, much like Dad
with his pound of nails; Alison works
hard and plays even harder whilst she travels around the Southern Hemisphere
and Hannah's interest in farming and readiness to get involved is testament to
Dad's passion for farming.
For
me, your passing has left me with a sense of emptiness. Last night I looked at photos and became very
emotional, thinking back on so many wonderful memories of times spent with you,
realising I will never again hear your kind words of encouragement. I'm sure you will be keeping an eye on me
from up there, frowning and groaning whenever I build a barn in the wrong place
or buy the wrong colour of tractor. But
I also knew that you loved and trusted me to continue the work you loved so
much. Dad, you have touched the hearts
of so many and you will be dearly missed - rest in peace.
Adam
3
ST. PETER'S CHURCH
We wish all in Berrynarbor a Happy and Healthy
New Year!
As mentioned in the last newsletter, Rev.
Bill Cole has now left the parish and we wish both Bill, and his wife Jenny, a
very happy retirement in their native Cumbria.
The Remembrance Sunday Service was led
by Rev. George Billington and was well attended. The Choir sang a beautiful rendition of
Fields of Poppies, set to the music entitled Fields of Gold and composed by
Sting. Congratulations to Karen Loftus
who sang the fourth verse beautifully! We must not forget to express our sincere
thanks to Ivan Clarke who played the Last Post and Reveille before and after
the two-minute silence. Wreaths were laid by Adam Stanbury on behalf of
Berrynarbor Parish Council, Sue Neale on behalf of St Peter's PCC and Fenella
Boxall on behalf of Berrynarbor Primary School.
Our Christmas Carol Service was well
attended and this year we welcomed Parracombe Choir to join forces with our
Choir to sing traditional carols and three special solo carols, during the
service which was led by Rev. Peter Churcher. There has always been a strong link with
Parracombe going back to 2009 when, following a recruitment drive here in
Berrynarbor, many Parracombe singers came over to sing with us at our Monday
night practices. For many years now, our Choir travels over to
Christ Church, Parracombe, to sing at their Christmas Carol Service in
December. Following both services, mulled
wine and mince pies were served for the congregations and choirs!
Christmas Eve Midnight Mass - actually
commencing at 9.30pm - was led by Rev. Peter and complemented by the singing of
seasonal carols, and on Christmas Day a short Family Service was held, again by
Rev. Peter, but the attendance was very
small, partly due to the fact that many villagers were visiting their
respective families over the Christmas period.
A special thank you from me to
Graham Lucas for deputising on Christmas Day!
A specialist builder has been chosen
for the repairs to the church roof and other areas, and the quotation has been
sent to the Diocese of Exeter [Church Buildings/Architects Dept] for their
approval. It is hoped that work can commence in the early
spring.
As mentioned previously, we are in
urgent need of a new Treasurer to take over from Margaret Sowerby, who will be
stepping down from this role.
If you would be willing to take on
this post, please contact our PCC Secretary, Alison Sharples, on [01271] 882782.
Our next PCC meeting will be held in late
January when a range of forthcoming events will be discussed in detail. Our
AGM will be held in late March - the date of which will be agreed at the PCC
meeting.
Please
note: there will be a Joint Service on
Sunday, 29th March, which will be held at St. Peter's, Combe Martin. This service commences at 9.30 a.m.
All Church Services commence at 11.00 a.m. and are as follows:
- 1st Sunday: Village Service
- 2nd Sunday: Holy Communion
- 3rd Sunday: Songs of Praise
- 4th Sunday: Holy Communion
Stuart
Neale
4
5
FINANCE
As usual,
F is for February and Finance and currently Newsletter funds could do with a
boost!
For a
while, it looked as if the December issue might be the last, but due to the
kind help of Berry in Bloom allowing the raffle at their Christmas Tea to be
run for the Newsletter, the generous donations for Christmas messages,
donations from the PCC. readers and the collecting boxes, there is a February
one!
The
annual subscriptions for those receiving their copies by post are now due. This will continue to be £6.00 to cover the
cost of stamps, stationery, etc., but not the Newsletter itself. If this applies to you, a letter is enclosed
with your copy. If there are readers
who would like to receive a newsletter this way, please do get in touch with
me.
Although
technically a 'freebie', your Newsletter incurs costs, particularly printing,
so your donations are not only welcome and appreciated, but necessary if it is
to continue into the new decade!
I must
thank our Shop, The Globe and Sawmills for having copies available, and Central
Convenience, Combe Martin, and their 'paper boys' who deliver copies with the
newspapers.
Instead
of 'use it, or lose it', it's a case of 'donate or negate'!
Judie - Editor
6
7
NEWS FROM THE
PRIMARY SCHOOL
What
a busy two months! The lead up to
Christmas is always frantic and brim full of exciting things.
Our highlights were the School Choir
singing at Exeter Cathedral, Alder Class cooking a full Christmas Dinner for
our annual Senior Dudes' Meal, the Walking Nativity - in the Manor Hall due to
the weather - the Lantern Competition, Christingle, the KS1 Christmas Play, the
whole school Christmas Dinner and an Assembly where our music students
performed on their chosen instruments!
One of our pupils spent four months travelling
the world and we enjoyed keeping up with his journey and learning more about
the countries he visited.
Now most of the glitter has been swept
away we can focus on the events of 2020.
We have an exciting year coming up and look forward to telling you all
about what we've been up to.
Berrynarbor School Pupil Leaders
from the KS1 Christmas Nativity Play
8
WEATHER OR NOT
November and
December
The
very wet weather which started in August continued until the 27th of December
then someone turned the tap off for the last four days of the decade!
November
saw no change in the wet spell with a total 169.1mm falling over 27 days with
the wettest day on the 7th at 22.4mm.
[The wettest November since my records started in 1992 was in 2000
showing 311mm, this is the second wettest month I have ever recorded, the year
2000 was an exceptional year with a total rainfall of 2005mm.] Temperatures
were about average with the highest on the 1st at 15.2°C and the lowest on the
9th at 0.2°C. The maximum wind speed
was 37mph on the 2nd from the S.S.W., which is about normal, the lowest wind
chill factor was -0.7°C on the 18th. The
barometer was low for most of the month, the deepest depression on the 2nd at
971.0mbars and a high of 1019.6mbars on the 30th. Sunshine hours totalled a measly 16.92,
although I see in 2008, we only had 6.51hrs.
Nothing changed for most of December with a total rain fall
of 174.6mm, the 26tth being the wettest day with 22.6mm in the
gauge. We had a total of 7 days with no
rainfall. Over the years, December
seems to vary on rainfall with my highest in 1999 at 378mm and driest 2010 at
32mm. The total rainfall for 2019 was 1259mm. the wettest since 2015 when we
had 1412mm. Temperatures ranged from a
high of 12.9°C on the 10th to -1.2°C on the 2nd. The top wind speed on the
8th was 47mph from the S.S.W. which is quite high
for us in the valley. This arrived with the first named storm of the winter
called Atiyah. The lowest wind chill
factor was on the1st at -1.3°C. The
barometer ranged from a high on the 2nd at 1033.6mbars. to a low of
975.7mbars. on the 12th. This is one of
the lowest readings I have seen for us.
Sunshine was in short supply at 15.99hrs. surprisingly not the worst as
we only had 2.94hrs. in 2018 which was the lowest of any month since the
records started.
I
have been asked how much rain has fallen since the wet spell started. I would say it started on August the 6th and
continued to the 27th December. Over this
period, we had a total of 818.2mm.
I
have looked back into my records for the last decade to find some of the top
figures.
Wettest Year
Highest Temperature
Lowest Temperature
Maximum Wind Gust
Max Month's Sunshine
2012
2017
2012
2014
2014
1587 mm
31.6 Deg C
-5.8 Deg C
56 mph
210.93 hrs July
Illustrated by: Peter Rothwell
I
hope you all enjoyed your Christmas and New Year despite the dull, damp
weather. At least Christmas Day was good
and it was dry for the carols in the square on Christmas Eve, which helped to
draw a very good crowd. Many thanks to
all the organisers for the evening.
Simon
10
11
12
NEWS FROM THE COMMUNITY SHOP & POST OFFICE
Busy time of year
At last the mornings are beginning to
lengthen as the long, wet winter wearily nods towards the first signs of
spring. Over the next few weeks
there's a lot going on calendar wise and the village shop is there to help with
all your needs.
Valentine's
Day is the first to arrive on the 14th February
and we have an extensive range of chocolate, cards, pink fizz, local ciders,
craft beers and spirits for you to show the special one in your life how much
you care. And, of course, you should
get your wife/husband/partner something too!
Are they a red wine enthusiast or perhaps they prefer a crisp
white? Whichever it is, you will find
our special wine offers throughout February a real temptation at bargain prices. Look out for the posters and keep an eye on
the shop's Facebook page for these super deals.
Don't be a lemon and forget Pancake
Day on the 25th February or Shrove Tuesday as it's officially called
- the day we are supposed to use all the good things in the larder so that it's
easier to give them up for Lent. If
you'd rather not give them up, of course, our shop will always have a plentiful
supply!
Mother's
Day falls on the 22nd March this year and we're
sure that among our Berrybay handicraft section you'll find the perfect gift. These are made locally and are a testament to
the amazingly talented people we have within our wonderful village.
We also still have gift sets comprising
the very popular Berrynarbor village logo mugs - the perfect partner for Devon
fudge, or chocolates or tea bags, or . . .
Raffle winner
The winner of the shop's fabulous
Christmas hamper was Ms Wade from Birdswell. Congratulations go to her and to shop
stalwart, Fenella Boxall, who won the second prize - a collection of local
ciders.
Plant Sale
There's no
time like the present for taking cuttings or re-potting those rooted plants so
that they are in tip-top condition for this year's Great Berrynarbor Plant Sale
which will be held on Sunday, 17th May in the Manor Hall. A date for your diary! Donated plants can be delivered from 11.00
a.m. on the day or to the shop beforehand. Doors to the Sale itself will open at 2.00
p.m.
If
you would be willing to help out on the day, please let the Shop Manager know.
13
FROM THE PARISH COUNCIL
Berrynarbor Parish Council
Chairman - Adam Stanbury [882252]
Gemma Bacon [883341]
gemmabacon@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
Adrian Coppin [882647]
adriancoppin@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
Bernadette Joyce
bernadettejoyce@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
Lesley Lowe
lesleylowe@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
Vice-Chairman - Sian Barten [882222]
sianbarten@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
Martin Johns
martinjohns@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
Jody Latham
jodylatham@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
Nic Wright
nickwright@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
Parish Clerk - Victoria Woodhouse [07815 665215] - clerk@berrynarborparishcouncil.org.uk
County Councillor - Andrea Davis [883865]
District Councillor - Joe Tucker Frederick.tucker@northdevon.gov.uk [328890]
Snow Warden - Clive Richards [883406]
The
Parish Council would like to welcome Councillor Bernadette Joyce to the Council
having recently been elected through a non-contested election and welcome back
Mrs Victoria Woodhouse as the Parish Clerk following Maternity Leave.
Dog
Area
The Parish
Council would like to thank Cllr. Tucker for providing grant funding through
his North Devon Council Community Cllr. Grant for the purchase of a dog bag
dispenser in the Dog Area. The
dispenser has been ordered and we must extend further thanks to Cllr. Wright
who has agreed to install the dispenser in the near future.
Water
Fountain
The Parish
Council hopes to restore the Water Fountain in the centre of the village. It is fed by mains water and will hopefully
just require a new tap to bring it back to life as a drinking fountain
Lynton
Cross
At its
January meeting, the Parish Council received updated proposals for the Lynton
Cross scheme. The latest consultation plan is a 4-arm roundabout, which
is proposed not to be street lit due to the environmental sensitivity of the location.
The Parish Council believe this is an improved scheme and has agreed to support
it in principle. The scheme also includes some minor improvements at Hore
Down Gate and reviewing the white lining layout on the A3123.
Vicki Woodhouse -
Parish Clerk [Tel: 07815 665215]
14
Coming soon...
Are there people in the parish unable to buy or rent a home? Have people had to move away to find an affordable home?
Berrynarbor Parish Council wishes to establish the extent of housing need in the Parish and the support for a small affordable housing development. Therefore, we shall be carrying out a housing need survey in partnership with Devon Communities Together [DCT], an independent charity, part of the Devon Rural Housing Partnership, who will produce an independent report.
In February we will be posting/hand delivering a survey form to every home in the parish.
It is really important that as many households as possible complete and return the form so that the Parish Council can be given as comprehensive picture as possible of housing need. The figures obtained will help them to plan for the future and ensure that, if a need is identified, the correct number and size of homes are built in the parish for local people.
The survey is being administered by the Rural Housing Enabler at Devon Communities Together. They will process the information and all personal details will remain confidential. No individual will be able to be identified from the survey report.
If you know someone who has moved because they cannot afford accommodation, then they can also complete the form. Extra forms can be obtained from Janice Alexander at Devon Communities Together on 01392 248919 Ext 7122 or email janice@devoncommunities.org.uk. Anyone needing any help with the form should also contact Janice for assistance.
If you believe you are in need of affordable housing, you should register with Devon Home Choice at www.devonhomechoice.com.
15
NEWS FROM BERRYNARBOR PRE-SCHOOL
a first taste of education
Last term the children learnt about
themselves, made new friends and began to recognise Pre-school rules and
routines. Our topics covered autumn,
farming and harvest time, followed by keeping safe around fireworks and
celebrating Christmas.
The children showed enjoyment singing
new songs and put on a short nativity play followed by some cheery Christmas
songs. They all did so well, singing
beautifully and for some this was their very first performance. Well done to all for such a brilliant
performance! A thank you also goes to the Primary School
children who gave us a taste of their Christmas Show.
The children made Christmas crafts that
they could share with their family. We
raised £280.00 from the sale of these crafts along with tea, coffee and cake. Thank you to our families, committee and the
community for their kind support.
We celebrated the end of term with a
Christmas party. Lots of fun, games,
dancing and a surprise visit from Father Christmas!
Our
topic of Learning
This
term the children will be focusing on Maths - counting, sorting, recognising
numbers and shapes. We shall also
incorporate some elements from 'Understanding the World' into our topic. Using
the children's interest from the film Frozen, we'll explore winter, ice, fire,
volcanos and the different climates we have. We'll introduce new stories, games and find
information about our planet as well as make some great displays to support our
learning.
School
Visits
We
have again been invited to Berrynarbor Primary school for regular short visits this term. This is an opportunity for the children,
especially those who are due to start school in September, to visit the school,
meet the teachers and the Reception Class children while still under our care
and supervision.
We
have organised another clothes collection through Bags2School to take place on Tuesday
10th March 2020. They will take any
unwanted clothes, bags, paired shoes, belts, soft toys, bedding and towels.
Unfortunately, they will not take any uniforms.
Our Pre-school is very well attended presently with limited
session availability but if you would like to visit us or book a place for your
child/children in the future, please contact us on 07932
851052 or e-mail preschoolberrynarbor@gmail.com for more information.
Our opening times are 8.30 a.m. to 4.00
p.m. Monday to Friday. We are flexible
and have a range of session times to meet your needs. These are shown in the Manor Hall Diary at
the end of this Newsletter.
We are Ofsted registered and in receipt of the 2-year
funding scheme and Early Years Entitlement for 15 hours and 30 hours for those
who qualify. We provide care and education
for young children between ages of 2 and 5.
From the Staff at Pre-school
Sue, Karen, Lynne and Emma
16
CAMPS INTERNATIONAL
Costa Rica
Hi!
My name is Josh Richards and I am a
student at Ilfracombe Academy. I am
participating in an expedition to Costa Rica in 2021. This will be a 4-week
expedition and will include community development work, environmental projects
and wildlife conservation. It will also include scuba diving.
The
core objectives of this expedition are to undertake projects in order to:
- Raise the educational and living
standards of developing communities within a rural district of Costa Rica
- Assist with ongoing wildlife conservation
programmes to preserve biodiversity and protect vulnerable habitats.
This expedition is extremely important
to me because I feel that I shall acquire and develop many important skills
such as teamwork, leadership, communication and problem solving. I am
looking forward to helping people and challenging myself to new experiences and
experiencing different cultures. I should
be extremely grateful for any and all contributions you can make towards my
fundraising.
I am running a plant stall at Moules
Farm where I have hyacinths and mixed bulb pots for sale. There will be various other plants for sale
throughout the year.
I shall also be holding events
throughout the year, please keep an eye out for posters. I am
also available for any odd jobs. If
interested, please contact me on 01271 883201.
Thanking you in anticipation.
Yours sincerely,
Josh
17
MANOR HALL MATTERS
November and December were a very busy
couple of months for the hall with lots of bookings including coffee mornings,
children's parties, family parties, school and pre-school Christmas activities
and of course a general election!
The hall hosted a fundraiser Wreath
Making afternoon on the 30th November with 17 jolly ladies producing some very
lovely wreaths to adorn their front doors.
A big thank you to Denny who kindly gave up her time to collect all the
greenery and expertly demonstrate how to make the perfect wreath, and who also
generously donated the beautiful wreath that splendidly resided on the hall
front door over the Christmas period.
Thank you too to John and Fenella who kindly supplied all the foliage
for the afternoon.
Thank
you to all who attended our Christmas coffee morning on the 14th December -
thankfully the weather was much better than last year, so it was lovely to
welcome a nice number of people to our fabulously festive looking hall.
2020 is going to be another exciting
year for our hall. Already our first
project of a new shed is nearly completed which will enable us to regain space
in the Bassett Room so the blue chairs can go back in. New guttering and fascia boards along with
the replacement of the large kitchen end windows are planned for late
winter/early spring.
To help pay for this, we have a busy
year of fundraising planned which includes - among other things - another
Summer Fete and an Autumn Dinner Dance along with a Beaford Arts production of
Romeo and Juliet [2020 version] and our own Christmas Fayre, but our first will
be a Pancake Afternoon in the Manor Hall on Shrove Tuesday,
25th
February. Look out for more details on
posters in early February. So, along
with all the other bookings in the hall we have a lot to look forward to.
We wish you all a very happy 2020 and
thank you for your continued support.
Julia [Chairman & Bookings]
and the Trustees
18
WEST COUNTRY WALK - 178
Black Swans and Trains
It can
only be Dawlish where the railway line runs between the town and the sea; trains rattling
and roaring by at frequent intervals and the beach can only be reached by
passing under or over the line.
In early
November I found the sea front underpass was barricaded shut as repair work was
still in progress. In recent years, the
railway line at Dawlish has suffered considerable storm and sea damage with
dramatic news footage drawing national attention to the small resort.
So I continued along to Coryton's Cove, crossing the
footbridge and down the steps to the little cove while a good train thundered
past and disappeared into Coryton tunnel, both the tunnel and the cove named
after Jane Coryton, a local landowner. I had
hoped to find turnstones among the shingle but there were just five cormorants
gathered together on a little rocky island, one with a white front.
I gazed
up at the high, red sandstone cliffs and felt tempted to explore the coast path
winding there, but I had come to Dawlish on the Ilfracombe Community mini-bus
so could not risk venturing too far and then missing the bus home. I had
looked forward to seeing the black swans, the natives of Australia, which have
become a proud symbol of the town.
A
special feature of Dawlish is the linear park which runs through the middle of
the town, perpendicular to the sea and either side of the Dawlish Water. And here
in the middle of Dawlish Water was a black swan on her nest delicately
rearranging bits of straw. A glamorous
creature with a crimson bill and frilly white plumage revealed
below like snowy underwear.
Further on, five cygnets were being
ferried by their attentive parents, along the length of the 'lawn' as the
grassy areas of the park are known locally. The cob walked ahead, stopping at
intervals to allow the cygnets to catch up, the pen at the rear. Eventually they settled on the grass under a
tree, like a family picnic party; the protective parents keeping the
young ones safely between them. The gardens also contain a collection
of wild fowl including mandarin and Caroline ducks, pintails, pochards and
whistling tree ducks.
Leaving the park, I continued along the
streamside path, with views of back yards and gardens until I reached the
parish church. Then, retracing my steps to the seaside
and more trains. A pleasant day's
walking on Devon's south coast with dry, reasonably mild weather. Lucky timing, because the very next day we
had hail and thunder!
Illustrations by: Paul Swailes
Sue H
19
THE PARTS OF SPEECH
POEM
Every name is called a NOUN
As field and fountain, street and town.
In place of noun the PRONOUN stands,
As he and she can clap their hands.
The ADJECTIVE describes a thing,
As magic wand or bridal ring.
The VERB means action, something done,
As read and write and jump and run.
How things are done the ADVERBS tell,
As quickly, slowly, badly, well.
The PREPOSITION shows relation,
As in the street or at the station.
CONJUNCTIONS join, in many ways,
Sentences, words, or phrase and phrase.
The INTERJECTION cries out, "HARK!
I need an exclamation mark!"
Illustated by: Nigel Mason
20
MOVERS AND SHAKERS - NO. 85
JIM HARROW
[1911[?] - 1976]
Sir Jack Cohen's first employee
Sir Jack Cohen
[1898-1979], Knighted 1969
To some folk in the area, Tesco might
be a dirty word, but on my visits there, I often find a number of residents
stocking up their trolleys with items not available in our superb community
shop, so I am daring to write about the company's modest beginnings, 100 years
ago last year.
The founder, Jack Cohen, born in
1898, was the son of Polish immigrants. His
father, Avroam Kohen was a tailor. After
Jack left school aged 14, he began working as an apprentice tailor to his
father. In 1917 he joined the Royal
Flying Corps, using his tailoring skills to make canvas balloons. [The
RFC ran for 6 years and initially consisted of 1 observation balloon squadron
and 4 aeroplane squadrons, so there was plenty of work.] He served in France, Egypt and Palestine during
the First World War. Having survived a
mine disaster on a troopship [thanks to a nurse who helped him stay afloat in
the water - 209 crew and soldiers lost their lives], he contracted malaria and
returned to England. He was de-mobbed in 1919.
Spudgun67, CC BY-SA 4.0
via Wikimedia Commons
Cohen didn't fancy returning to
tailoring after the war, and instead bought up surplus NAAFI stock with his £30
de-mob money. He then sold it on a
market stall in Hackney in London's East End.
On his first trading day he made
a profit of £1 from sales of £4. Each market day, traders gathered and given a
signal would race to their favourite pitch. Cohen wasn't a fast runner, but
learnt to throw his cap at the spot and claim it. Rapidly, he became the owner of several stalls
which were run initially by members of his family.
In 1924, Jim Harrow, a lad of 14, was
selling second-hand clothes with his mother in Croydon market. In the words of his son, Colin, "He was so
good at grabbing the best space in the market to set up his pitch that he was
noticed by Jack Cohen, who asked him to nab a pitch on his behalf." Jim
did just that, and before long Cohen offered him the chance to run his stall
selling non-labelled tins of fruit and vegetables.
In that year, Jack married Sarah [Cissie] Fox, the daughter
of an immigrant
Russian-Jewish tailor, who was very supportive of his business interests in
that money they were given for their marriage was invested in a wholesale
enterprise. He then needed a brand name
which came from the initials of a tea supplier, T. E. Stockwell and the first
two letters of his own name, thus TESCO emerged. By 1929, Cohen had opened up a flagship
Tesco store in Burnt Oak, North London. Eighty nine
years and over 3,000 stores later, Tesco launched a cut-price range of 10
experimental stores throughout the country, named after its founder, Jack's. This was to try to reclaim sales lost to Lidl
and Aldi. Several of them were converts from existing stores and some
built in Tesco car parks. It hasn't
been entirely successful and at least one was re-converted to a standard Tesco
store in September last year.
But I digress from Jim Harrow! As the company grew, and Jim could drive, he
was offered the job of transport and warehouse manager.
Here he met the office girl, Peggy, who became his wife. There was a strong bond between him and
Cohen, in spite of one time, during a row between them, Cohen hitting Harrow
with a broom!
Still, Harrow was a loyal employee,
working with Jack for most of his life, and only ever buying his groceries from
Tesco. Jim's two sons followed in
father's footsteps and their sister was named after Cohen's daughter, Lady
Shirley Porter. In return, Jack Cohen
looked after Jim and his wife. Jim
became the Manager of the Enfield store, which caused the family to move. Because of his generous salary, he was able
to buy a house for £3,000 and was given a company car.
Jim Harrow died of cancer in 1976, but his ability to run
fast as a youth and his loyalty to Jack Cohen over many years must have made
his employer very satisfied with his very first employee.
As a footnote, Jim's son Colin, now 76, is an artist and
sells his paintings in Tiverton Pannier Market. In his words, "In some ways it's as if I've
turned a full family circle. Every time
I set up my stall I can't help wondering if my father's looking down and
smiling at the coincidence".
PP of DC
Tesco Supertstore, Two Potts, Ilfracombe - 2024
Photograph by: Judie Weedon
21
BERRYNARBOR WINE CIRCLE
Bray Valley Wines
is just a few miles from here, on the Pathfields Business Park at South Molton,
but its founder-owner knows his stuff; it's worth a
visit. Charlie Cotton began sipping
wine at 18, as part of his training, in Burgundy. He's
explored vineyards on a mobylette, similar to the one below and worked on a
bottling line. What a great way to see
vines then wines!
Mobylette Ancienne
A1AA1A, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
This French motorized bicycle enabled him to discover and
learn about the regional patchwork of vineyards around him. During his student years he trained in Bordeaux,
Portugal and Germany. These were the
important regions in the wine world before wines arrived from down under and
the Americas. Training continued back home, at a London
merchants, followed by setting up a UK office on behalf of a Dutch multinational,
based in Bordeaux, who owned a group of French fine wine companies. Having moved to Devon, to raise a family, he
thought 'I had better put my money where my mouth is' and began to fill a
warehouse, in about 2003. The rest, as
they say, is history.
Charlie has a careful selection of mainly everyday drinking
wines, having done some local tastings to gauge what might work. This is the basis of BVW's tight range and 'all
our wines have to sing to us.' If you
want a good port, for yourself or a present, you'll find that too.
You might think private wine warehouse means expensive. You'd
be wrong! We started with a white Portuguese Quinta
Vista Lisboa, suitable for vegans and vegetarians, at £6.99. We
did finish with a red 2016 Gigondas at £21.49, but the other four wines
were at prices in between. They included a delicious Cremant de Loire
Rosé, at £12.99, superb with anything, or nothing! Who needs Champagne?
Tell Charlie what you're looking for and he'll find it for
you. Helpful and knowledgeable service
is free, but that's worth its weight in gold ... or good wine!
Most of our members wanted to support The
Globe, 'use it or lose it', for our Christmas Gathering, so 41 of
us arrived on the evening of 4th
December. This was earlier in the month
than our usual celebratory tastings, but we felt it was a good idea to avoid a
skittles match! It was a merry event and an easy one for all
of our lady members, who usually step up to the mark, or plate, and provide
excellent festive fare. On this
occasion
we just sat and ate what was put in front of us, from a previously-chosen menu.
We were all able to sip our way through the
evening, drinking our own selections and nobody had to provide a presentation -
it was good company, food and drink!
When you drink a wine, you don't, necessarily, think about
what is in it, or, perhaps whether it tastes like the grapes that were picked
to produce it. David Rowe, retired Plymouth University
lecturer and retired PETROC Recreational Wine Lecturer did just that at our
first 2020 meeting in January.
His six wines: two
whites, a rosé, two reds and a dessert wine were all bought from The Wine
Society to illustrate six different aspects of wine tasting and selection. Consumption and evaluation are through
looking, smelling, tasting and thinking.
Chateau Vartely, Viorica from the Republic of Moldova was
first and chosen to introduce us to an unfamiliar area, an inexpensive wine,
£6.95, and with a subtle flavour. It was
all three to all. The grape, Viorica, is
rare: less than 20 hectares in the
world.
Wine two, Bollenberg Cuvee Prestige Theo Cattin et Fils, was
double the price, £13.95, a Gewurztraminer, from Alsace, France. On the nose, it reminded me of Turkish
Delight and was described as a food-friendly wine. It was a deliberate contrast to the
first and definitely wasn't subtle.
Our rosé was pale for this wine type; however, it was
interesting because it was Corsican, another unfamiliar wine territory. Vin de
Corse Calvi, was £13.50 and 90% Nielluccio, or Sangiovese of Chianti fame. David's other point for inclusion was its
'esters'. These are the aromatic, fruity compounds,
formed during fermentation and ageing:
the strawberries, green apples or roses that we can smell and maybe
taste in wine.
Wine made the old way, without commercial yeasts was next. Its perfume affected me! Old
tobacco smoke, coffee and burned wood created negative thoughts. The French Gamay, selected to illustrate an
aspect of traditional Beaujolais was £11.95.
The Terres Dorées, L'Ancien
Beaujolais is atypical of this wine variety.
Italian terroir and winemaking skills produced the fifth
tasting aspect. This £16.00 red was
Alovini, Aglianico del Vulture. It's
currently on offer at £13.50, a remarkable price because other examples of this
well-made wine ... sell at £26 to £30 a bottle.
Most of us approved of David's choice!
The Portuguese love their sweet egg-based desserts, Pastel
de Nata, is a national dish and D-E-L-I-C-I-O-U-S! Like a custard tart, but infinitely
better! David didn't supply these, but the Adega De
Pegoes, Moscatel de Setubal, £9.95, was sampled with 70% dark chocolate. It
matched this too. Chosen because it was well made, matured in
oak and a take on the traditional sweet and fortified Muscat.
Our February meeting on the 19th will be the ever-popular
Call My Wine Bluff, and this will be followed in March, on the 18th, with
speaker Toby McKinnel from the 10-acre Vineyard at Winkleigh.
Judith
Adam
Promotional Co-ordinator & Secretary
22
RURAL
REFLECTIONS - 92
In my last article I made reference to some of the wildlife
and plant life affected by the heatwave of 2018. There were both winners and losers, with
Rosebay Willowherb one of the beneficiaries as it was able to take advantage of
areas where the intense heat had either stunted the growth of other plants well
before they had the opportunity to become established or where fires had
destroyed plant life altogether.
That autumn, the plant's annual airborne dispersal of
millions of seeds subsequently colonised these areas so that last year's late
summer months saw prolific displays of the tall, pretty pink flower
spikes.
Yet as I travelled around Somerset's countryside in 2019, it
was not just fireweed, as it is also known, that I spotted in abundance. For in early spring I witnessed a profusion
of daffodils - both wild as well as cultivated, which is surprising when one
considers that the county is not known for being a stronghold of the wild
variety.
Its
Latin name, Narcusus pseudonarcusus, is after the boy in Greek mythology who
was condemned by the gods to fall in love with his own reflection. It was a plant that grew copiously in
England for hundreds of years - so much so, that in the late sixteenth century
the Jesuit priest, John Gerard, regarded it as being, "So well known to
all, it needeth no description."
However, following a rapid decline in the plant, the same could not be
said by the mid-nineteenth century where the countryside, especially across
much of central and eastern England, had been subject to agricultural
intensification and field drainage.
Demand, too, for larger cultivated varieties - native daffodils are
relatively small - also led to its demise in many areas. Now, the true wild daffodil is restricted to
particular stretches of our mainland although they can also be found in smaller
numbers in ancient oak woodlands and churchyards.
One region in which it still manages to abound is along the
border of Gloucestershire and Herefordshire.
This was christened the Golden Triangle in the 1930's, at a time when
the plant was playing an important role in the region's local economy with
flowers being picked and sent to markets in South Wales and northern industrial
towns. This was also an era when the
Great Western Railway laid on Daffodil Special Excursions from London. In time, a 10-mile-long Daffodil Way began
being constructed between the villages of Dymock, Kempley and Four Oaks,
eventually opening in 1988. Today,
daffodil teas are still held in the region's local parish halls.
Another bastion is in the Lake District. It was here that on the 15th April 1802,
Dorothy Wordsworth wrote in her journal, "I never saw daffodils so
beautiful. They grew among the mossy
stones about them; some rested their heads upon these stones as on a pillow for
weariness; and the rest tossed and reached and danced and seemed as if they
verily laughed with the wind that blew upon them over the lake." Her encounter would go on to inspire her
brother, William, to write his most famous work, "I wandered lonely as a
cloud." These days the descendants
of those daffodils are conserved at Growbarrow Park by the National Trust as a
'historic feature of Ullswater'.
The daffodil is, of course, the national flower of Wales,
the original specimens thought to be the wild Lent Lily. It goes without saying that the flower is
always worn with pride by welsh people on the 1st March, St David's Day. A plant that flourishes today in the Black
Mountains, it was at the end of the eighteenth century that a welsh botanist
discovered wild daffodils growing in proliferation in fields and pastures
between Tenby and the Presel Hills in Pembrokeshire. Soon to assume a local name, the Tenby
Daffodil became so highly fashionable that within a century it was virtually
driven to extinction. Now, thankfully,
the area is again awash with Tenby Daffodils.
It is interesting to note that in his Florica Britannia [1996], Richard
Mabey suggests that the origin of the Tenby Daffodil is 'most likely a hardy
hybrid between the Lent Lily and an unknown cultivar', but adds, '. . . in
remote corners of the Presel Hills there are still a few defiant clumps . . .
whose identity cannot be so tidily explained away.'
The plant also continues to thrive in South Devon and the
Sussex Weald. So, amongst all the
cultivated varieties that will be in flower over the next few months, keep a
look out too for the smaller, native daffodil.
It is an amazing plant, records showing that it can vary in flowering by
up to two months depending upon spring temperatures. But I shall fittingly leave the last words
of this article to the first four lines of Wordsworth's famous poem:
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.
Steve McCarthy
Illustrated by: Paul Swailes
23
BERRY IN BLOOM & BEST KEPT VILLAGE
January and February are not a
very busy time for the bloomers to be out and about planting and weeding but it
is a busy time planning for the coming year.
Our plant order has been sent to
Grow Jigsaw and no doubt the wonderful team there will soon be sowing and
potting up in their greenhouses. We are moving forward with our plans for introducing
more wild flowers to the dog walking area and litter picks will recommence in
February.
Our next fund-raising event is our annual Quiz and Supper
evening on February 7th with Phil as our quiz master and our famous cottage pie
supper. Tickets available from the shop at £10.00. The manor hall doors open at 6.45 p.m. with
the quiz starting at 7.15 p.m. and the supper about 8.00 p.m. There will be a vegetarian option. So, get
your team together [up to 8] and come and join in the fun.
The AGM will be held on Wednesday, 12th February, at 7
o'clock in The Globe. Everyone in invited.
The
Berry in Bloom team is friendly and always welcomes newcomers so if you fancy
helping us in any way you are welcome to come and join in. Phone Wendy on 07436811657
Wendy Applegate
24
Chewy
Cranberry and Apricot Bites
Trying to eat a bit healthier but still craving something
sweet, why not try these fruity bites? Makes
24 at 89 calories per square!
- 25g flaked almonds
- 40g no soak dried apricots
- 40g sultanas
- 40g dried cranberries
- 40g desiccated coconut
- 75g unsweetened puffed rice cereal
- 150ml maple syrup
- 400ml cloudy apple juice
- 125g porridge oats
Preheat the oven to 190C/Fan 170C gas mark 5. Line a 20 x 30cm brownie tin with baking
parchment. Scatter the almonds in to a baking tin and
toast in the oven for 6-7 minutes until lightly golden. Then tip in to a large mixing bowl. Add
the cut-up apricots, cranberries, coconut, sultanas and rice cereal.
In a large saucepan warm the apple juice and maple syrup on
a low heat stirring once or twice.
Add the oats and bring to a simmer, stirring. Cook for 3-4 minutes until the oats become
thick and like porridge. Be careful as the mixture does become very
sticky.
Remove the saucepan from the heat and stir in all the rest
of the ingredients until thoroughly mixed.
Spoon the mix in to the prepared tin and press and flatten the top. Bake
for 40-45 minutes until golden and crisp on top. Take
out of the oven and press the surface again as this will make it easier to cut
up. Leave in the tin for 30 minutes and
then cut in to 24 pieces with a sharp knife.
Remove the lining paper and store in a tin for up to 5 days.
Quite
healthy but only one allowed per day!
Wendy Applegate
25
MILK IN BOTTLES
Come on Berrynarbor, let's campaign to
have our milk in glass bottles!
I have recently moved from a part of
the country where I had milk delivered to my doorstep. Quite probably many of you reading this can
remember receiving your daily 'pints' in glass bottles; and then things changed and it was
considered modern and forward-looking to have plastic containers instead. How do you feel about that now?
The St. James' Dairy in Ilfracombe now
proudly sell their milk in glass bottles and pronounce themselves 'plastic
free'.
It would be so encouraging if some of
you share my concerns and could think of ways in which our village could
arrange to get access to milk in glass bottles a bit nearer home.
Jane Brandon
The Milking Parlour, Barton Lane
26
BERRYNARBOR HORTICULTURAL & CRAFT SHOW
NEEDS YOU!
Due
to my taking over the running of the Shop, I shall be unable to organise the Show
this year and a new Committee is needed so that this long-standing great
village event can carry on.
Please, if you have the
time to help, do put your name forward.
The following is a brief breakdown of what has been done in the past to
run this event.
Before the event:
- Arrange a date and book the Manor Hall.
- Decide on the Classes and Subjects [some do not change and choosing a theme helps]
- Write letters to proposed judges, asking for their assistance
- Produce and print the Schedule for them to be available in the Shop
- Put out posters advertising the event
- Get raffle prizes
- A week before the event, collect in Entries and complete entry cards
The Event
- On the Friday [the day before the Show], late afternoon, evening set up hall and receive entries
- Saturday, Show Day, in the morning receive remainder of entries, and set up for judging. Judging takes place
- After judging, fill in and complete award cards and prepare to open Show
- 2.00 p.m. Show opens for public viewing
The Committee will work together and I shall
be happy to advise and help as well.
There is enough money in
the account to run the Show, so no fundraising should be necessary.
Karen
27
'A dog's village life'
Well
it seems I have made a bit of a name for myself since my family's arrival in
the village, as the overly friendly, boisterous, 'more badly behaved than Stringer',
new pup on the block. Let it be known
Stringer is actually my hero. I love
him to bits and I truly aspire to be like him one day . . . or maybe Ralph,
big, slightly standoffish, but grand. Hmmm, I have a lot to learn if I am to be
like him.
You see my first problem is that I love
everyone and everything. All I want to
do is to jump up and have a fuss and a bit of a sniff. I mean no harm but am told by the Mrs. and
the Mr. that jumping is not acceptable. I try to remember that, but when I see someone
who looks nice, I just sort of forget.
However, I have undergone some crucial
changes recently. Paul, the builder, recommended
them the first time we met. [What a
cheek!] Then Julia told the Mrs. it might stop me from cocking my leg. [What was that all about?] So here I am in 2020, minus some very
important bits, trying to learn to be calm.
It's not easy; it may take a while. Since they did the deadly deed, I have
destroyed my bed, dug a big hole in the garden and demolished the Mrs.'s owl
collection, ornamental not real! Most importantly, and really not surprisingly,
I have taken to pinching everyone else's balls when I am taken to the beach! Well really, what do they expect? Like I said, this calming down process could
take a while!
Anyway, I have decided I will use my
notoriety and write this blog. If you
like it, I could become a regular feature.
I have all sorts of stories I
could tell you about life in Berrynarbor from a canine's perspective. However,
for this edition, what I really wanted to say was thank you. Thank you to those
lovely men who have made the path in the doggy play area. The Mrs. has no
excuse not to take me in to play again. It was funny watching her slipping in the mud
but not funny when she stopped going altogether. So,
gentlemen, I raise my paw to you. Thank
you very, very much.
Right, I will be off now. Enjoy the real news and I promise I will try
to be good!
28
TELEVISION
Television
goes back quite a long way. I can
remember early demonstrations just before world War II, although it was stopped
in wartime.
It was
such a novelty that people who wished to view were advised to set up as
follows: Children should sit
cross-legged in a row at the front. Next
should be a row of dining chairs and lastly people standing at the back
It was, of course,
in black and white and on a 9-inch screen.
The picture was made up of 405 lines and not very bright. Later, colour came in and now much larger
screens.
My
illustration shows how I projected my own TV for a bigger picture.
A TV
engineer put switches on the TV which inverted and mirror-imaged the
picture. This was all put right when it
reached the screen. You had to sit in a
darkened room.
In the
early days, television require an 'H' aerial and those people who could not
afford a television put one up just to boast - keeping up with the Jones's I
think you would call it!
Nowadays,
we have huge screens, flat screens and not forgetting 625 lines. What comes next, I wonder?
I've
just turned the television on, so I'm off for a sleep!
Illustrated by: Paul Swailes
Tony Beauclerk -
Stowmarket
29
FROM THE NORTH DEVON
JOURNAL HERALD
It
seemed a fitting coincidence that having said a sad farewell to Peter in the
October issue, the Ilfracombe History Forum posted the following extract from a
February 1961 Journal Herald.
YOUNG RESCUER WINS MEDAL
GALLANTRY AWARD FOR SAVING SHEEP
The 14-year-old Sea Cadet who volunteered
to be lowered own a 400-foot cliff at Ilfracombe in February, has won an award for gallantry.
The cadet. Peter Rothwell, went down the
cliff and through a waterfall to rescue a sheep.
A 52-year-old local coastguard, Station
Officer Charles Brayley, who went down the cliff with him, has gained a similar
award.
Both will now hold the R.S.P.C.A. bronze
medal for gallantry. And for the part
that Peter and other Sea Cadets played in the rescue a certificate of merit is
being presented to Ilfracombe Sea Cadet Corps.
The rescue took place on February 5, when
Peter, who lives at the Tranmere Hotel, Ilfracombe, made the descent after two
unsuccessful attempts to save the animal, an ewe in lamb.
Both the owner of the ewe, Mr. D. Chugg
and P.C. E. Pester failed in their efforts to reach the ledge on which the
animal was trapped 320 feet below the cliff top. Station Office Brayley
decided that only a lightly-built person would succeed, and when he asked for a
volunteer, Peter, a Barnstaple Grammar School pupil, stepped forward. Guided by Mr. Brayley and strapped to
ropes, he began the long journey and finally reached the ewe, which by this
time had slid into the sea. Peter and the animal were then hauled
to safety by a number of helpers, who included three of his Sea Cadet colleagues.
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CHILDHOOD LITERATURE
Readers of the Newsletter in April 2009 might remember
this illustration by Debbie Cooke of the Robert Louis Stevenson poem Bed in
Summer from A Child's Garden of Verses
In winter I get up at night
And dress by yellow candle-light.
In summer, quite the other way,
I have to go to bed by day.
Robert Louis Stevenson is
probably better known for his books Treasure Island and Kidnapped.
Robert
Louis Balfour Stevenson was born in Edinburgh on the 13th November 1840, the
only son of Thomas Stevenson and his wife Margaret Balfour. Both his father and grandfather were
successful engineers, building many of the lighthouses around the Scottish
coast.
A sickly
child, his poor health made normal schooling difficult although he attended
Edinburgh Academy and at 17 went to Edinburgh University, where he was expected
to study engineering to follow the family profession, but he did not want to
become an engineer and eventually compromised with his father's agreement, to
study law.
From an
early age, Stevenson had shown a desire and aptitude to write and, in his
teens, to learn the writer's craft, he imitated a great variety of models in
prose and verse.
Robert Louis Stevenson
by James Notman
albumen cabinet card, 1890-1894
Given by Gabrielle Enthoven, 1925
NPG x39714
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Licenced under CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
In 1873,
visiting a cousin in Suffolk, he met Sidney Colvin, an English curator and
literary and art critic, who became a lifelong friend, and Fanny Sitwell, an
older woman of talent and charm, with whom be became infatuated. Fanny and Sidney later married. Later in the same year, Stevenson suffered
severe respiratory illness and was sent to the French Riviera, where Colvin
joined him.
Fanny Osbourne
Nellie Van de Grift Sanchez
Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
In July 1875, he was called to the
Scottish bar but never practised. The
following year, he met Fanny Osbourne,
an American, separated from her husband, and the two fell in love. His highly religious parents were horrified
at their son's involvement with a married woman, although they altered their
feeling when she returned to California in 1878. However, when Stevenson decided to join her
in August 1879, the bitterness returned even stronger.
After an
arduous journey in which Stevenson came near to death, he arrived in California
ill and penniless. He and Fanny, who
was then divorced, married in San Francisco in May 1880. At that time, his father relented and gave
his financial support, allowing the couple to return to Scotland, together with
Fanny's son, Lloyd. They were met at
Liverpool by his parents who were happy to see their son return home. Fanny was slowly able to patch up the
differences that had arisen over Stevenson's choice of career.
Over the
next seven years, to find a suitable climate to help Stevensons's
health - he was suffering from tuberculosis - they moved around a lot but
finally settled in Bournemouth, naming the house Skerryvore,
after the tallest lighthouse in Scotland, designed by his uncle.
Throughout
the years at Skerryvore, Stevenson was very ill, often being unable to leave
the house and when his father died in 1887, he was so ill that he was unable to
attend the funeral. His doctor advised
him to move to somewhere warmer, and with Fanny, Lloyd and his mother, they
sailed to America and returned to San Francisco.
In June
1888, Stevenson charted a yacht and set sail, and for nearly three years
travelled the eastern and central Pacific, the sea air and warm climate briefly
restoring his health. He decided to
remain in the Pacific and in 1890 bought a plot of land in Upolu, an island in
Samoa.
Here,
after much work and two aborted attempts to return to Scotland, he established
himself on his estate in the village of Vailima. He decided to take the native name of
Tusitala, Samoan for Teller of Tales.
He spent
the final years of his life living in Samoa, writing several works of fiction.
He died
suddenly on the 3rd December 1894 and was buried at the top of Mount Vaea above
his home on Samoa. Part of his own
short poem, Requiem, was written on his tomb:
Under the wide and starry sky
Dig the grave and let me lie . . .
Glad did I live and gladly die,
And I laid me down with a will.
This be the verse you 'grave for me:
Here he lies where he long'd to be;
Home is the sailor, home from the sea,
And the hunter home from the hill.'
Judie Weedon
31
VICAR'S VIEWS FEBRUARY 2020
February brings lots of choices! For many, January meant a diet following the
excesses of Christmas, or Dry January to give your liver a rest, or Veganuary
in an attempt to atone for the farmyard you consumed in December. So now we are February, I wonder what choices
you will make now? Will you continue
your reform, relax to something more balanced, or return to your old habits?
February also brings with it another
day of excess: Shrove Tuesday, or, as it
is better known, Pancake day. It is the
day before Ash Wednesday, the first day in Lent [which makes it Tuesday 25th
February this year]. It is an old
tradition of using up all your rich foods, such as sugar, eggs, butter and
syrup so you aren't tempted to indulge during lent. And
also, I know there is an argument every year but the correct answer is 'Lemon
and Sugar'. Nowadays lent has become a
largely passed-over season, or at best the time when people give up chocolate
to raise money for charity, or give up social media in an attempt to get
control over it before it controls you. However, lent is so much more important than
that.
Lent is the season where we prepare
ourselves for Easter. The word 'Lent'
comes from the old word for spring. Much
like the season, lent is meant to help life 'spring' forth from us. Easter is a time where we celebrate the
defeat of death by our Lord Jesus, and where we see true, full life burst from
the empty tomb. The wonderful joy is
that Jesus offers us that life too. So
lent is not about self-flagellation [google if you must] but about preparing
ourselves to have the new-life planted in us, as a farmer prepares the ground
for the seed. The giving up of foods or
screens is not to beat ourselves up, but rather to help us see that what Jesus
has for us is far richer and far sweeter than any pancake or a million 'like's
on Facebook could ever be.
Jesus said,
'I have come that they may
have life in all its abundance'
[John 10:10]
Why not take a fresh look at Jesus this
year? There are plenty of services at
St. Peter's over lent, Easter and throughout the year that you'd be warmly
welcomed to. Can't wait? Then this website is a good place to start
your journey: twowaystolive.com
As always, feel free to be in contact.
May God bless you richly this
2020.
Rev.
Peter Churcher
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KNIT & NATTER FOR THE NORTH DEVON HOSPICE
The
Craft Group will be holding their annual Knit and Natter afternoon to raise
funds for the North Devon Hospice on Monday, 24th February.
We shall
be holding Open House in the Manor Hall on that day from 1.45 p.m. onwards. Knitters can knit strips which the Hospice
turn into blankets and for this you will need an odd ball of wool and size 8
needles. But if you would like to come
for a coffee or tea and a cake, please do join us. All we ask is that you give a minimum
donation of £5.00 to the Hospice, take part in the raffle, enjoy coffee or tea
and cake in the company of others wishing to support this very worthwhile
cause.
We hope to
see YOU there!
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The
Craft Group, affectionately known as Stitch and Bitch [but we can assure you
there is no bitching even if we do put the world to right!], meets every Monday
afternoon in the Manor Hall from 1.45 p.m. and
everyone is welcome. Just come
along and bring whatever craft you are currently working on - needlework,
knitting, embroidery, beading, painting, etc. - chat amongst friends and enjoy
tea or coffee and biscuits - and all for just £2 a session!
The Art
section of the Craft Group meets on the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays in the month,
again at the Manor Hall but in the morning, from 9.30 a.m. On the 3rd Tuesday, Christine Grafton comes
to support the group, either with a technique lesson or to help with individual
work.
New artists,
beginners and those with little or lots of experience are most welcome. Come along to find out more.
34
CROSSWORD ANSWERS
ACROSS
1. Fireworks, 6. His, 8. Scallop, 9. Noddy 10. Emit, 11. Airedale, 13. Tattoo, 14. Scaled, 17. Accepted, 18. Acid, 20. Molar, 21. Mollusc, 22. Toy 23.DOWN
1. Fastest, 2. Realistically, 3. Will, 4. Repair, 5. Sentence, 6. Hydraulic pump, 7. Style, 12. Compared, 15. Deduced, 16. Hermes, 17. Admit, 19. Flee.35
AT-A-GLANCE DIARY
FEBRUARY | |
7th | Ilfracombe Academy: Non-Pupil Day Berry in Bloom: Fun Quiz & Supper, Manor Hall, 6.45 p.m. |
---|---|
11th | Mobile Library in Village from 11.40 a.m. Parish Council Meeting, Manor Hall, 7.00 p.m. |
12th | Berry in Bloom: AGM, The Globe, 7.00 p.m. |
14th | St. Valentine's Day |
17th | to 21st, Ilfracombe Academy & Primary School: Half Term |
19th | Wine Circle, Manor Hall, 8.00 p.m. Call My Wine Bluff |
24th | Knit & Natter for ND Hospice, Manor Hall from 1.45 p.m. |
25th | Shrove Tuesday Manor Hall, Pancake Afternoon |
MARCH | |
10th | Mobile Library in Village from 11.40 a.m. Parish Council Meeting, Manor Hall, 7.00 p.m. |
12th | Berrynarbor Pre-school: Bags2School Collection Day |
17th | Boat Cafe, Storm in a Teacup sets sail |
18th | Wine Circle, Manor Hall, 8.00 p.m. Toby McKinnel, 10-Acre Vineyard, Winkleigh |
22nd | Mothering Sunday |
29th | British Summer Time begins 1.00 a.m. St. Peter's: Joint Service at Combe Martin, 9.30 a.m. |
30th | to 9th April inc. Ilfracombe Academy and Primary School: Easter Holiday |
Manor Hall Diary | |
Mondays | Upholstery, 9.00 to 1.00 p.m.Craft Group, 1.45 p.m. Badminton, 7.30 p.m. |
---|---|
Tuesdays | N.D. Spinners [2nd & 4th] 1st and 3rd: Craft Art Group, 9.30 a.m. |
Wednesdays | Pilates Body Workout, 9.00 a.m. Primary School p.m. |
Thursdays | Watercolour Painting 10.00 a.m. [10 week
terms] Pilates, 7.00 to 8.00 p.m. |
Fridays | Primary School p.m. |
Penn Curzon Room | Pre-School: Daily - Term time only Morning Session: 8.30/9.00 - 12.00 p.m. Afternoon Session: 12.00 to 3.00/3.30/4.00 p.m. All Day: 8.30/9.00 a.m. to 3.00/3.30/4.00 p.m. |
Mobile Library | |
Village Shop: 11.40-12.10 p.m. Sterridge Valley: 12.25-12.55 p.m. |
School, Pre-School and Toddler Group - Term Time only
36
OLD BERRYNARBOR - VIEW NO. 183
Berrynarbor School and Silver Street
This
very early postcard, c1904-08, shows Berrynarbor National School, which opened
in 1847, the church steps, Bessemer Thatch, with its then thatched roof, as
well as a very dilapidated three storey building on the right.
The
first noticeable item is the bell above the school in its own tower. I have never been able to find out when the
bell disappeared or where it ended up! Also note the small railings and hedge in
front of the school where the lady and young girl are standing. Just beyond the school building is the
entrance to the local Smithy.
Around this period of time the dilapidated
building on the right was known as No.62, Silver Street and was where Mrs. C.
Huxtable had lived. Subsequently much of this building was
demolished. Also
note that at this time the road itself was just scraped stone, no tarmacadam in
those days. The
other item to note is the very large tree in the centre of the picture.
Tom Bartlett
Tower
Cottage, February 2020
e-mail: tomandinge40@gmail.com
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