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A binding narrative

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Peter Wiltshire learned the art of hand bookbinding from his father. Now, he’s restoring literary treasures in his own Dorset workshop

Bookbinder Peter Wiltshire in his workshop in Maiden Newton

Peter Wiltshire gently lifts the lid off an old biscuit tub. Emblazoned across the Family Circle logo in big bold letters is DO NOT DESTROY. Inside is a worn and tattered leather-bound family bible, dating back to 1600.
Peter is about to embark on the enormous challenge of painstakingly restoring and rebinding its hundreds of fragile, flaking pages and the disintegrating cover.
One of only a handful of professional bookbinders in Dorset, Peter continues this age-old craft of hand bookbinding while co-parenting his three children, all under 10 years old.
His workshop in Maiden Newton is crammed with pots of tools, delicate brushes and huge, handsome book presses alongside a collection of discarded book boards. This incredible archive illustrates binding styles from different eras – Peter uses them to help customers (and me) – understand the restoration process.
‘Book binding used to be a cottage industry. It wasn’t mechanised at all. Books were sewn together with their boards cut to fit,’ he explains. ‘These were laced on using cords which went through holes in the boards. There was just no way of speeding up the process. Once the boards were laced onto the book, the leather was cut to size and wrapped around the book in one go.
‘During the Industrial Revolution – and alongside growing national literacy – the Victorians invented case binding, where instead of being sewn, case covers were created separately, then attached to the book. That was the birth of mechanised book binding.’

Bookbinder Peter Wiltshire’s current challenge is restoring a 400-year-old family bible, that had been kept in an old biscuit tin.
All images: Courtenay Hitchcock
DO NOT DESTROY says the label – but the rusting biscuit tin is doing its own job of damaging the ancient book inside

Dad’s apprentice
Peter began practicing his skills as a teenager. His father, Tim, ran a prestigious bindery in Winchester, connected to
P & G Wells Bookshop, one of the oldest bookshop binderies in the country. ‘I’d sew books for Dad to get a bit of pocket money. I learnt a huge amount from just watching my father at work.’
However, a love of antiques and history was initially a greater attraction, and Peter began working for an auctioneer and antiques dealer. ‘It was only when an older friend of mine, with a slightly wiser head on his shoulders, asked me why I wasn’t training in bookbinding when I had such a unique opportunity within my own family. That was the catalyst, and I entered an apprenticeship under my dad.’
Peter went on to open his own bindery in Hampshire, connected to Petersfield Bookshop, before returning to work in partnership with his father until his dad’s retirement in 2021.
‘Dad was inspiring. The more I learnt about the craft, the more I realised his depth of knowledge and skill. I still pick his brains. I’m grateful there was no pressure from him to make me join his trade – this craft isn’t something you can do if your heart isn’t in it. It demands so much patience and precision.’

Peter at his workbench

I see what he means as I watch him expertly work. Using an incredibly sharp paring knife he gently lifts the inside of a book cover inscribed with the name Jane Dodgson – a relative of Lewis Carroll. ‘You can’t compromise a signature like this – they are literally irreplaceable,’ he says. ‘Often the book is too fragile to soak the pages off and you may damage the book board – so a knife is the only way to save them. It’s nerve wracking!

Individual heated stamps with engraved designs, used for gold tooling and embossing. They are mounted on long handles for control and precision

You really do only get one chance to do it right.’
The work demands complete concentration and though Peter enjoys listening to history podcasts, he often works in complete silence. ‘As you can imagine, with three young children, home life is noisy. It’s relaxing to work this way.’
And when he’s not on dad duty or working, books are his go-to for downtime, too. ‘It’s a busman’s holiday, but I love exploring auctions and second-hand bookshops for rarities!’
Hand bookbinding is a niche profession with no official apprenticeship schemes, but it’s a burgeoning hobby with many amateur bookbinding groups and guilds across the country. It’s a far cry from the bookbinders of the past who, along with leather tanners, used to have one of the lowest life expectancies in London. They were badly paid and often worked in poor light.
Popular interest in restoration has seen a surge in commissions in recent years, and family bibles, second-hand literary treasures and even flight logs from the World Wars sit on Peter’s workbench awaiting his safe hands for repair.
But first it’s the bible in the biscuit tin!

A bookbinder’s world – beautiful antique presses, weary books awaiting renewal, and a gallery of useful or notable covers
Patience and precision – Dorset bookbinder Peter Wiltshire expertly cuts into a leather book cover

Peter’s dinner party A-list guest?

I’d resurrect Roger Payne, a much celebrated and maligned 18th century bookbinder – as close to being rock-and-roll as you get in bookbinding! He was a wonderful bookbinder but an alcoholic who died penniless. Payne was the first English bookbinder to come up with a new style of bookbinding, and the notion that a book cover should reflect the contents of the book.
He wrote poems about beer on customer invoices!

petewiltshire.co.uk

The Donald in Wonderland

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Gary Jackson North Dorset Liberal Democrats

Events were moving very fast the first weekend of March as the diplomatic bromance between PM Starmer and President Trump turned into the undiplomatic, made-for-TV mugging of President Zelenskyy in the Oval Office.
What has happened to the land of the free? We can only speculate about the motives and strategy of the so-called leader of the free world. In my view there is rarely strategy to Trump. He seeks only TV ratings, cutting real estate deals over the heads of affected people and, above all, avoiding blame.
Avoiding blame seems to be a significant motivator as Trump works in his unethical way to ensuring he can blame Zelenskyy and the Europeans for any failure to secure peace in Ukraine. Trump made hay with Biden’s disastrous exit from Afghanistan, and he will want to set up scapegoats for anything that looks remotely like failure.
The public mauling of Zelenskyy at the White House needs to be seen in the same way that, for all the tactile patting and public grooming by Starmer and Macron of Trump the gorilla, the two European chimps still left their respective tea parties with no guarantees of US support from the Donald – but at least Europe and allies are working on a plan.
Never mind the tea party: we need to smell the coffee! Like far too many professional soldiers in recent years, I started to believe fashionable military talk of hybrid warfare, sub-threshold effects, cyber and influence operations that would all make so-called sunset capabilities irrelevant.
But there was always the nagging question of “does clever tech really beat artillery?”
I well recall the visiting US Marine Corps general who asked my staff college cohort to remember that “a virtual presence is an actual absence”.
We need to rebuild our forces quickly, with lots of good – not gold-plated – equipment and stocks. We need to do it with allies, to get best value for money and cut duplication. We need to recruit talent and retain experience. And we need to be prepared to make savings and pay more to achieve these things, even if the full first cut did not need to choke off international aid. Previous generations spent eight per cent of GDP on re-arming in the years before 1939: and that was too little to deter our enemy.
We are beyond the looking glass in the politics of Donald in Wonderland, where everything has been turned on its head. Europe’s enemy is Russia, but if Trump’s statements and actions make us feel that he thinks Europe is his enemy, are we wrong to believe that Trump sees Putin as his like-minded friend? It’s time for Europe to be strong against both the bullies in front of us, and behind.
Gary Jackson
North Dorset Liberal Democrats

Bring on the spring!

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After the runaway success of its debut, the Dorset Spring Show is back – bigger, better and in a brand-new location. The second edition will take place on Saturday 3rd and Sunday 4th May 2025 at Birch Lane Showground, near Puddletown. Following a phenomenal first year, which saw more than 10,000 visitors, the show returns with a larger venue, stunning countryside views, a later date, and exciting new attractions, making it the ultimate spring celebration in Dorset.
The Spring Arena, sponsored by Handelsbanken, will once again host a variety of impressive displays, from the popular high-speed action of Shetland Pony Racing to the traditional craft of Heavy Horse Logging, where skilled foresters showcase how these horses worked the land before modern machinery.
Beyond the arena, visitors can meet spring’s newest arrivals – no one can resist the lambs, piglets, chicks and calves.
The show will also feature adrenaline-fuelled BMX displays, live cookery and floral demonstrations, the un-missable Sheep Show, and jaw-dropping feats from the Dorset Axemen.
And for those who love a bit of nostalgia, there’s even the chance to hop on board a steam engine trailer ride and take in the sights. Event Organiser James Cox said: ‘This May bank holiday, we welcome in the new season with the year’s first big get-together for Dorset. We open the farm gates with a larger venue and an even bigger offering to provide a fantastic family day out.
‘The enthusiasm for the Spring Show has been incredible – we’ve already sold out the exhibitor spaces in our Shopping Pavilion and Food Hall: it’s going to be a great place to buy local.’

Local produce and craftsmanship
The Shopping Pavilion and 50-metre-long Food Hall are both must-visit’s for those looking to discover and buy from local businesses. Whether it’s fresh produce, handmade crafts or something unique for your home, there will be plenty to browse and take home. Another unmissable on the day is the Competitions Marquee – playing host to more than 90 contests across cookery, photography, flowers, vegetables and crafts, it’s a brillaint way for locals to get involved and to showcase their own talents. The marquee will be situated in the heart of the Gardeners’ Village: all the excuse you needed to pick up some new plants (it would be a bit rude not to), some pots or a new garden gnome.

Tickets on sale now
Discounted tickets are available until 26th April, with entry from just £2 per child and £14 per adult, plus family bundle options.
For more details and to book tickets, visit dorsetspringshow.co.uk.

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Wessex Water court case should worry us all

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Ken Huggins North Dorset Green Party

Question: if you pay someone to do a job and they don’t complete it, should you be able to refuse to pay the whole bill? If you think ‘Yes, of course!’ then you might be interested in the recent small claims court action by Wessex Water against Caroline Dennett, one of Dorset’s hardest working and most inspiring environmental campaigners. Caroline has been refusing to pay the sewage treatment element of her water bill, on the basis that Wessex Water has obviously failed to adequately provide that service.
Unusually for a small claims court hearing, Wessex Water chose to have a Barrister present their case. The judge was complimentary about Caroline’s presentation of her own defence, and she was sympathetic to Caroline’s arguments. She also refused to award costs against her, but ultimately had to conclude that she had no option in law other than to uphold Wessex Water’s claim for payment of the withheld money.
So we consumers have no redress when our water company fails to adequately provide the service we pay them for. And because they have a monopoly, there are no alternative suppliers we can turn to. Unless and until the industry is properly regulated, the UK’s water privatisation rip-off will continue. More than 70 per cent of UK water company shareholders are now foreign interests. Wessex Water itself is 100 per cent owned by a Malaysian infrastructure conglomerate. The ten privatised water companies established in 1989 were effectively debt free – they now have debts of more than £60bn, while over £80bn has been paid out to shareholders. And all the while, sewage has increasingly fouled our precious watercourses and beaches. If more of its customers temporarily withheld payment for the waste treatment part of their water bills, the pressure might encourage Wessex Water to fulfil its contract with us. What do you think ?
Some farming methods also cause gross pollution of our waterways, for example factory farmed chickens. But here, fortunately, we consumers do have a choice. Cheap chicken doesn’t pay for the huge damage it does to our environment – damage that one way or another we all pay for. So we can choose not to eat it, can we not?
Ken Huggins
North Dorset Green Party

Gillingham student delivers powerful Articulation speech

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Tucked into the rolling chalk and flint-filled fields near Salisbury is an iconic art institution. NewArtCentre was once known simply as Roche Court – Roche Court Sculpture Park is a commercial gallery set in the rolling Wiltshire countryside. Early in February, three Gillingham School students and one teacher wound their way there, travelling through frosted valleys, sparkling in the winter sun, to Roche Court – which, since 1958, has championed young and emerging artists and is now a gallery full of art and exciting sculpture, placed carefully into the Wiltshire parkland.
The Articulation Prize was founded in 2006 by Roche Court’s Educational Trust and later became part of the National Gallery’s education programme. This prestigious public speaking competition invites 16 to 19-year-olds to deliver a ten-minute presentation on a work of art, architecture, or an artefact. For students at Gillingham Sixth Form, it offers a unique opportunity to engage with art, articulate its significance, build confidence, and explore issues that matter to them.

Can’t Help Myself
In January, Gillingham held its internal heats, with seven students – who have been developing their public speaking skills through the Sixth Form’s innovative enrichment programme – delivering presentations on a diverse range of art. Topics ranged from the Nye Bevan Memorial Stones in Wales to Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s Wrapped Reichstag installation. There were stand-out speeches by Beth R, who explored gender and society through the knitted installation Non-Binary Code by Ben Cuavas, and Adam C, who tied art with history and politics in a moving speech about the sculptures at Soviet Memorial Treptow in Berlin, making listeners think about the way society remembers war and sacrifice, providing a poignant reminder of current events in Ukraine.
Travelling to Roche Court in February, however, was Gillingham School’s winner, Katie B, whose heartfelt, personal response to the installation Can’t Help Myself by Chinese artists Sun Yuang and Peng Yu had moved some of the judges to tears. Can’t Help Myself became a viral hit across social media: a giant robotic arm, more commonly seen in a car manufacturing line, installed inside a large perspex room or box: it writhes and dances as it tries to mop up its leaking hydraulic fluid, coloured red and with the viscosity of blood. Katie used this artwork to boldly tackle topics of authoritarianism and migration, exploitative labour practices and mental health and isolation.
Teacher Lydia Richards aid: ‘As Katie stood in the gallery space at Roche Court, it was wonderful to see a young person feel their own power and speak so passionately and persuasively.
‘She was commended by the adjudicator for her stirring words and “clear passion for social justice” which was met by a spontaneous round of applause by the audience, clearly moved by her performance.
‘As a teacher, it is moments like these which really count. The moments when you see the true purpose of education – not just grades and academic achievement, but helping young people find their voices, so they are ready to be the artist of their own lives, to go out and sculpt and shape the world … perhaps into something better.’

NewArtCentre is open 7 days a week and is free to visit, but they ask you to book ahead if possible: sculpture.uk.com
Gillingham Sixth Form is still accepting applications for this September gillingham-dorset.co.uk or contact the school office to arrange for a visit 01747 822 222.

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Tea loaf

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Images: Heather Brown

This simple and not-too-sweet loaf bake requires no fancy equipment – just a little time to steep the dried fruit before a nice slow bake. It’s the perfect way to use up dried fruit that’s still in the cupboard after Christmas, and it’s delicious with some salty butter (try Meggy Moo’s award winning butter, churned from the milk from their herd in Shroton) and maybe a little jam (for a delicious local one try From Dorset With Love, or you could make your own using my recipe from last September’s BV. I’ve also been told it goes really well with some strong cheddar or a little blue cheese.

Ingredients

  • 350g dried fruit (your choice of sultanas, currants, raisins etc)
  • 300ml boiling water
  • 3 tea bags (English breakfast or Earl Grey work well)
  • 200g soft brown sugar
  • ½ tsp ground cinnamon
  • 275g self-raising flour
  • Zest from 1 lemon
  • 1 egg
  • Some demerara sugar to sprinkle on top
Images: Heather Brown

Method

  1. Steep the tea bags in the boiling water for at least 10 minutes, then discard the tea bags.
  2. Pour the tea into a big bowl and mix in the soft brown sugar, cinnamon and the dried fruit. Stir well so the sugar dissolves and the fruit is covered. Leave for at least two hours (or overnight) for the fruit to soak up all those lovely flavours.
  3. Pre-heat the oven to 130º fan (gas 3). Line a 2lb loaf tin (10cm x 21cm, 7cm deep) with baking parchment or a loaf tin liner.
  4. Into the fruit and sugar mixture, mix the flour, lemon zest and the egg and stir until completely combined. Pour this mixture into the loaf tin and sprinkle the demerara sugar over the top.
  5. Bake in the oven for 1 hour 15 minutes to 1 hour 30 minutes, until the skewer inserted into the centre of the cake comes out clean. Cool in the tin for 15 minutes and then turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely (I have to admit to never waiting long enough before impatiently cutting a slice and smothering the still-warm cake with butter …)

Frustrating times for Rawston Farm

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Red tape, red tractor, and no red cards … James Cossins has had a winter of TB testing, audit headaches, and a well-earned break at AFC Bournemouth

Ploughing in the 1960s at Rawston Farm

The sun is finally shining and with spring just around the corner we can hopefully look forward to some better weather – and better fortune for us at Rawston Farm.
The dreaded TB testing cycle came round once again in early February: as the majority of the 700 cattle were inside the testing was easier, but did still take up almost four days. The result was not so pleasing though with one beef animal being a reactor and four milking cows becoming inconclusive, despite the fact that 60 days earlier they had passed the dreaded gamma test. So once again we had to send cattle off to the abattoir for TB reasons. The results all came back negative, and now we have to wait until we test again in 60 days time – much to everyone’s frustration.
Having talked about our TB nightmare here in The BV and on the podcast (if you missed it you can listen to James in the January podcast here, he starts at 28:35 – Ed), I have had a number of farmers contact me who are in the same position: the odd reactor being found but no direct evidence of the disease. All we know is that the animal may have been exposed to the disease in one form or another.
I am currently expecting a visit from a government official to hopefully give us some constructive advice as to the way forward.

Red Tractor
We have had our annual Red Tractor audits for milk, beef and crops. A lot of paperwork has to be updated and assembled for these visits, which normally last four or five hours each. Fortunately the assessors are always from a farming background and have a good understanding how a farm works. At the end of the audits we did have a few non-compliances – mainly on updating records, which we have now rectified. Red Tractor is currently under review, with many food producers calling for updates, feeling it has lost sight of its original purpose.
I personally believe there should be better labelling on foods, showing that certain standards have been met and that the food was produced and processed in Great Britain. I also believe that many consumers still do not understand what the Red Tractor logo stands for.
Other food labels have appeared over the years, many claiming to represent higher standards then Red Tractor – and therefore commanding a premium price. Labelling will become ever more important as we face a growing influx of imported foods, often coming with little or no information on their origins or production standards.

Ploughing has moved on in the last 65 years, and in 2025 it’s slightly more high tech

Tax rumbles on
The farming industry’s frustration with the Government over the inheritance tax issue certainly isn’t going away. A recent delegation from the farming industry went to meet the Treasury with some counter proposals – which would have raised at least the same amount of taxes – involving taxing the land when it is sold, instead of when it is inherited. The proposal was not even listened to, much to farmers’ frustration.
Last month I spent a day with a number of fellow farmers in Bournemouth Square, meeting the public. We spoke to several hundred people, and all had a positive response to our concerns about the family farm tax. We talked about how food supplies could be disrupted if farms had to be sold off to pay taxes, and we discussed the very real possibility that the land would then be bought by investors or companies who wanted to offset their carbon, such as airline companies.
I’m a fifth generation farmer, and we have a sixth and seventh generation keen to continue. As a family, we’re seeking advice on how to reduce our tax burden to keep the farm viable for the future. It seems strange – almost ridiculous – that ‘working the tax system’ is the government’s own recommendation for lowering the amount of tax we’ll pay!

In other news
The weather will hopefully bring a busy month for all farmers and growers – we have so many jobs to carry out in dry weather such as sowing crops, spreading fertiliser, preparing grass fields for cutting or grazing and hopefully turning out some cattle to grass!
On a very positive note my son Henry and I have watched some really entertaining football matches at AFC Bournemouth recently – especially the most recent FA Cup game which lasted nearly three hours, with extra time, penalties and a lengthy VAR to sit through.
Let’s hope their successful run continues!

Playing a dangerous game

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As Trump unsettles NATO and offends allies, Simon Hoare MP looks at the strained special relationship and why the West must remain united against Putin

Simon Hoare MP

Many people will have had a hope that the second Trump administration might have been different from his first. That a greater sense of calmness and ‘grown up’ politics would be to the fore … Any vestige of that hope was shattered in the Oval Office and the disgraceful treatment of the Ukrainian President.
If that is how this Administration treats its allies, then God help us all.
Of course, this came hot on the heels of the vice president’s sermon on free speech and democratic liberty delivered at the Munich Security Conference. An arrogant speech? Undoubtedly. Ill-advised? 100 per cent! Cowardly? Without a shadow of doubt.
I say cowardly because I do not think he would have the spine to make the same speech in Beijing, Tehran, Moscow or Pyongyang. There is a lot of conspiracy theory speculation circulating currently concerning Trump’s status with the Russian authorities. I am not a conspiracy theorist.
What I do know, however, is that with the President’s tactic of let’s-unsettle-NATO-and-offend-our-neighbours-and-allies, the only person who benefits, in geopolitical terms, is Dictator Putin. Russia always benefits when the West is divided and uncertain.
We are certainly that at the moment.

It’s not me, it’s you
We will all be familiar with the idea of the Special Relationship between the UK and US. It has been strong and enduring. It can be, as it has been, special without there being continued agreement on every subject (for example the Suez, Grenada and – initially – the Falklands). It does, however, need to be based on an enduring trust: and that I believe is now eroded significantly.
Many of us recognise that classic relationship conversation—“we want different things,” “we’ve changed,” “we’re not who we were X years ago.” Let’s hope it’s not the case, but the UK and US may be heading for a similar heart-to-heart. Just because it’s lasted doesn’t mean it’s built to last forever.
Many North Dorset homes and hearts were opened to Ukrainians following Putin’s unprovoked and unwarranted invasion. I well remember seeing the tsunami of generosity at Sturminster’s Exchange as I helped pack donations of clothes, food and bedding. It was deeply heartwarming.
It remains as clear today as it did those three long years ago: to end the fighting is easy – Russia has only to withdraw her troops and respect the sovereign boundaries of Ukraine. Contrary to the Trump ‘philosophy’, the moves cannot only come from Ukraine, and I cheered when President Zelensky stood firm against the White House Bully Boys.
The House of Commons has responded magnificently (with the exception of the Trump/Putin hero-worshipping Reform): a laser-like focus on stronger defence policies, increased defence spending, total support for the Ukrainian people and vocal opposition to the Russian regime.
Our Prime Minister (with whom I have many policy disagreements) has led the international response, carrying on that role which his predecessors had. As we move forward he will have both my support and that of my Party in pursuit of the core principles we all share.
Failure to do so would play into Putin’s hands and humanity would be the loser.

Simon will be holding an advice surgery in Gillingham on Friday, 14th March at 3pm. For more information and to make an appointment, please call 01258 452585 or email simon.hoare.mp@parliament.uk.

Wessex Group raises £5,000 for Marie Curie

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Wessex Group has donated £5,000 to Marie Curie, the UK’s leading end-of-life charity, following a year of dedicated fundraising efforts. Each year, employees of the Shaftesbury-based company select a charity to support, committing 12 months to raising funds through a variety of initiatives – including challenges, bake sales and the company’s annual Christmas raffle.
The donation was presented to a Marie Curie representative, marking another successful year of fundraising for Wessex Group, which has a long-standing commitment to supporting both local and national charities. Tracey Martin at Wessex Group said: ‘We are delighted to support Marie Curie and contribute to the incredible work they do. Our teams have come together to raise funds in a variety of ways, and it has been inspiring to see the generosity and enthusiasm from our staff.’
Over the years, Wessex Group has supported numerous charities, including local organisations such as The Brave and Determined Company, who provide access to essential counselling services, and BooBs, Shaftesbury’s breast cancer awareness charity. Kara Frampton at Marie Curie expressed gratitude for the donation, saying: ‘We are incredibly grateful for Wessex Group’s support. These funds will help us continue to provide essential care and support to those who need it most.’
Marie Curie provides vital end-of-life care, offering nursing services, hospice care, bereavement support, and information services to people living with terminal illness and their families.
Wessex Group, based in Shaftesbury, has been providing expert trade services for over 60 years, offering fire and security, electrical, building, and maintenance services across the South of England.

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