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Saving Energy in Leisure

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RiversMeet is a community owned leisure centre in the heart of North Dorset, whose aim is to help meet the needs of Gillingham and the wider area.

To do this we need to ensure our business is sustainable both financially and environmentally to ensure the future of the site for future generations. Wasting energy and natural resources has both a financial
and environmental cost. We are now starting to realise the impact and drain on natural resources. Demand for natural resources and land for expansion is stripping the earth and increasing harmful pollutants in the atmosphere.

There is also huge impact on nature, with the destruction of habitats, illegal animal trade, and the general effects of pollution.As a business, every positive change we make, from turning off a light or implementing new energy saving technologies, helps reduce our energy consumption. As RiversMeet is a not-for-profit company, we can also invest money saved on energy back into new projects.

Working with a grant from Low Carbon Dorset, RiversMeet has implemented energy saving technologies that will save an estimated 195 tonnes of CO2 and £48,000 per year. Many of these changes can also be made in commercial and domestic environments – you can help improve the efficiency of your home/workplace too.

Our largest project is the patented air source heat pumps, supplied and installed by ESG. Heat Pumps work by using the ambient temperature in the air and compressing it to higher temperatures using a small amount of electricity. They heat the building and water around the building, but more importantly heating the air and water for the swimming pool, which costs approximately £96,000 per year and accounts for the majority of our energy expenditure.

ESG claim their heat pumps produce 82% less carbon than gas boiler heating. Other smaller changes we have made include changing many of our lights to LED fittings that use less than 50% of the previous electricity. Installing aerated showerheads from EcoCamel use less than 50% of the water that a typical showerhead uses.

From a business sense all of these changes mean cost-savings, and for Roversmeet more funds to re-invest into the business. There’s no solid reason why every single business wouldn’t be looking at their own energy consumption to see what financial savings can be made, and what environmental imapct can be reduced.

Low Carbon Dorset offer FREE technical support and grant funding for energy efficiency and renewable energy projects.Funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), Low Carbon Dorset helps businesses, community, and public sector organisations in Dorset

The Random 19 with world-famous novelist Tracy Chevalier.

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Tracy Chevalier FRSL is an author of 10 novels, perhaps best known for the international bestseller Girl with a Pearl Earring, a timeless modern classic that became an international bestseller with over five million copies soldaround the world.

Tracy Chevalier

Tracy is a Trustee of the Dorset Museum and the British Library, an Ambassador for the Woodland Trust, and a Patron of the Dorchester Literary Festival and the Lyme Regis Museum. Tracy and her husband divide their time between London and the Piddle Valley.

The Random 19

1. What’s your relationship with the Blackmore Vale (the area, not us!)?


We’ve had a cottage in the Piddle Valley since 2004. Since July 2020 we’ve lived here full time. It’s a better place to be in a pandemic.


2. What was the last song you sang out loud in your car?


American Pie by Don McLean; I was coming back from the supermarket in Sherborne.


3. Last movie you watched? Would you recommend it?


My Octopus Teacher, a documentary about a diver’s relationship with an octopus he sees every day. It’s very moving.


4. It’s Friday night – you have the house to yourself, and no work is allowed. What are you going to do?


A big G&T, tortilla chips and some trash telly!


5. If you were sent to an island for a year and could only bring three things, what would you bring (the island is already equipped with a magical power source, a phone and a laptop)?


A guitar – so that I can learn how to play.• A Good Pillow. Never unrestimate the power of a good pillow.• Moby Dick. Because it’s long, and I haven’t read it.

6. Who’s your celebrity crush?


Jodie Foster.


7. What would you like to tell 15yr old you?

You are going to be amazed’

8. What book did you read last year that stayed with you?


The Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Arnim, about four women who go on holiday together in Italy without
knowing one another, and find themselves. It was during lockdown and I was missing travel!


9. What’s your secret superpower?


I find four-leaf clovers easily.


10. What shop can you not pass without going in?


Pretty much any jewellery shop…


11. Favourite quote? Movie, book or inspirational – we won’t judge.

‘Less is more’

12. Write the review for the last thing you cooked (no cheating – the actual last thing!).


I made pasta with capers, avocado, basil and lemon zest. It is a wonderful, quick, no-fail recipe by Anna Jones. My guests loved it. I urge you to look it up – my tip is ‘use more avocado’ (or simply click here. You’re welcome – Ed)


13. A penguin just walked in the door wearing a panama hat. Why is he here?


He is looking for Paddington Bear.


14. Your top three most-visited favourite websites (excluding social media!)?


• BBC News

• Wolf & Badger (clothing)

• National Gallery.


15. Chip Shop Chips or Homebaked Cake?


Cake every time.


16. Favourite crisp flavour?


Just salt. Flavours are disgusting (That’s the American coming out in me).


17. The best biscuit for dunking?

Dunking is disgusting, says the American.


18. What in life is frankly a mystery to you?


That atoms are so small and the universe is so big. The scale always amazes and frightens me.


19. You have the power to pass one law tomorrow, uncontested. What would you do?


Everyone has to read a book a month set in a country that isn’t theirs, about people who are nothing like them

Working in Dorset’s Highest Office

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It’s one of the most dangerous jobs in forestry but two of Dorset’s youngest tree surgeons wouldn’t swap their sky-high office for any other occupation.

Where machines can’t go, humans must. Close to overhead power lines, near roads and buildings, handling a chainsaw 60 feet up in the air and ensuring nearby public are safe is all in a day’s high-rise work for Jack Spencer, 24, from Ashmore and Jake Moore, 23 from Gillingham.

There are worse views from an office window – high in a beech tree on the edge of Ashmore

Just ten months ago these two young men launched Felltec Tree Services, near Shaftesbury, combining their love of forestry with expert tree-felling skills. Jack had previously worked for an environmental company managing river habitats throughout the county. 

Jake, a former Sparsholt College student, had six years in a forestry role on some of Dorset’s largest private country estates. 

As the impact of ash die-back took its toll on hundreds of trees across Dorset, Jake and Jack came to work together at Ashmore Estate, felling many trees that were dead or dying. 

Today, much of their work is still in the woodlands of this beautiful estate and they also offer their tree-felling services across the county to anyone with gardens big or small. Jack said: 

“We are so fortunate to work in some of the most beautiful settings in Dorset. There really is no better office than at the top of a tree. You get the privilege of a birds-eye view. Up high the whole landscape changes before your eyes. 

Sometimes I have to remind myself I’m working and not just up there enjoying the countryside.”

That office can even become a skyscraper, with their tallest tree to date a 90ft beech that needed a haircut. 

And what about when the wind blows? “That’s a challenge, especially if we’re dealing with WASP (Willow, Ash, Sycamore, Poplar) as these trees are brittle and can crack easily in wind and cold temperatures.” explained Jack. 

As well as a stoical head for heights, Jake always had a passion for the countryside, enthusiastically climbing trees as a young boy and also growing his own trees. “As early as pre-school, I would find saplings growing under trees and take them home and plant them up in pots. Eighteen years on, I’ve still got some of them in my garden in much larger pots now.”

Jack Spencer, left, wth Bryn at his feet, alongside Jake Moore  with Arlo and Archie

It’s clear as you chat to both men that they not only adore what they do but also have a deep respect for trees. 

Both declare their favourite tree to be the English oak “because you can do so much with the wood and it’s such a strong tree. It’s fantastic to look at and so good for the environment, providing a habitat for so many insects and birds.

 “Tree surgery is not just about taking trees down, it’s about protecting them too,” explained Jake. “A lot of the job is about removing deadwood, helping their longevity and planting new ones. It’s great to be working on planting new woodlands that wildlife and generations to come will be able to enjoy.”

Do they worry about just how dangerous their work is? 

“Our girlfriends do. They don’t like to watch us at work.” said Jack. But both men are confident in their teamwork. “We did an intensive climbing course and before you could touch a chainsaw, you first had to learn how to access the tree with a rope and how to rescue an injured climber,” he explained.

The men have also mastered the vital art of communicating through hand signals. Jake said: “We always carry out a briefing and risk assessment before we climb. But even with a firm plan in place things can change at a moment’s notice. 

“When you work together closely and your lives depend on each other, it’s amazing how quickly unspoken communication develops –  important when one of you is on the ground and one swinging 60 feet up in the air above!”

Check out Felltec Tree Services on Instagram felltectreeservices

For tree surgery quotes contact Jack Spencer 07758262673 or Jake Moore 07592375431

Tree Facts you’ll love:

  • The UK has the largest concentration of ancient trees in Northern Europe
  • The oldest tree in the UK – possibly Europe – is believed to be the Fortingall Yew near Aberfeldy in Scotland, thought to be 5,000 years old
  • Wyndham’s Oak, near Silton, is up to 1,000 years old, and is the oldest tree in Dorset.
  • A sweet chestnut in the grounds of Canford School near Wimborne is thought to be the widest, with a girth of almost 15m
  • You can see a map of Dorset’s Monumental trees here.

By: Tracie Beardsley

Bar Staff Required | Plumber Manor Sturminster Newton

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Plumber Manor Sturminster Newton

Bar Staff Required

Minimum 3 shifts per week (inc weekends). Some experience helpful, driver essential. (Please send your CV)

[email protected]

RUTTER, Jan

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Jan Rutter – Memorial

Jan passed in February 2021

A memorial will be held on Saturday, 14th August at 2.30pm at the Quaker Meeting House, Abbey Walk, Shaftesbury.

All are welcome.

Please contact – [email protected] if you hope to attend.

Fingerposts: Dorset Icons

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Dorset’s fingerposts are an iconic sight; the old road signs featuring a white or occasionally red metal roundel, with arms, known as fingers, pointing in the direction of travel.

They are a common feature of the Dorset countryside, a legacy of the early road system. In 1773 the General Turnpike Act made it mandatory for trustees to put up signs informing the traveller of the distance to the closest town.

The Minchington Farm Fingerpost at Farnham, much in need of repair – Rupert Hardy

In the 20th century the responsibility for fingerposts was given to individual local authorities; the Ministry of Transport recommended a design but it was left up to individual councils to make the final decision, which meant that there was a wide variety of local styles. The Ministry for Transport specifically asked the County Councils in Dorset and the West Riding of Yorkshire to experiment with the inclusion of a grid reference and this style of fingerpost roundel remains unique to these two council areas. 

Dorset Council created its own distinctive finger post design; constructed with a central metal post, with a number of white wooden pointers or fingers, originally with curved ends but more recent ones may have pointed fingers. 

The destination on the sign is in black, individual, upper case metal lettering, together with the mileage. 

On the top is the white metal roundel (just like the London Underground sign), on which the name of the junction is displayed on the horizontal bar.  The six figure grid reference is on the bottom half of the roundel, ‘Dorset’ is painted in black, on the top half.

Some of the posts have interesting spellings as well – Sixpenny Handley often shows a frugal use of letters pre-decimalisation with ‘6D Handley’. Fingerposts near Child Okeford still retain the ‘e’ on Child, which has since been lost. 

The Minchington Farm Fingerpost at Farnham, following its repair thanks to the CPRE grant scheme. Rupert Hardy

Dorset is also famous for its four red fingerposts – though they are a source of some debate. Were they the locations of gibbets? 

The Red Post fingerpost on the A31 was more likely painted red to help prison guards find the local lock-up at the nearby Botany Bay Farm, when accompanying prisoners marching from the Dorchester assizes to the ships at Portsmouth which would convey them to Australia.

Of the 1300 or so fingerposts thought to exist in the 1950s, less than half survive today. Many were lost in WWII; removed in 1940 to deny guidance to an invading army, and never replaced. 

Some of the originals have been repaired using non-traditional materials or lettering, and others are in need of attention. 

Now the Local Authority no longer has a remit to repair them, both the Dorset Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and Dorset CPRE are keen to support local ‘Fingerpost Champions’ to save these signs from extinction and restore them back to their former glory.

Hundreds of signs are now being renewed by community groups, and individuals.

Roger Bond (Normtec) co-ordinates the Dorset AONB Fingerpost restoration project, working from his home workshop. Normtec are restoring existing lettering and numbers to their former glory whilst Coles Casings provide new stock ready for painting. 

There are four red fingerposts left in Dorset, on the A31 at Anderson, Hewood, Poyntington and Benville – Rupert Hardy

If cost is an issue then Dorset AONB are delighted to offer the services of the Dorchester and Blandford Mens’ Sheds, and at HMP Guys Marsh and Youth Offenders Institute on Portland. 

Dorset CPRE offer a small grants scheme for people wanting to restore fingerposts using the correct materials as set out by the Dorset AONB. 

Match funding is not required, and there is no application form; the CPRE simply ask that requests come from a Parish Council representative (or similar), with a summary of the fingerposts that need repairing, their location(s) and details of who the cheque needs to be made payable to, or bank accounts details for online payments. 

Dorset CPRE are covering all of Dorset, and are prepared to award up to £200 per post. 

We have now spent or allocated £15,000 on grants for 119 fingerposts with many in North Dorset. 

These include Melbury Abbas, East Stour, Farnham and Motcombe to name a few. 

To find out more contact Linda Williams on [email protected] or 0333 577 0360. 

It is so important that we preserve these Dorset icons!

Rupert Hardy, Chairman, 

North Dorset CPRE

The Lady From the Wild Frontier

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In the 80s Harriet Sandys was commissioned by Pinewood Studios to source Afghan costumes for the James Bond film ‘The Living Daylights’.

In the spring of 1989 while visiting Pakistan’s northwest frontier, Harriet discovered several families of traditional silk weavers living in a refugee camp. Harriet obtained funding from the Swedish Government to buy the weavers handlooms, dyes and silk yarn, and the men began to weave silk shawls which were sold through Save The Children.

harriet sandys


In the 90s, Harriet was asked by UNESCO to organise and run a training programme in ikat silk weaving and natural dyes in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-I-Sharif.

Harriet now works from a beautifully restored 17th century cider barn selling oriental products which she imports directly. And her past is as colourful as the goods she displays.

As a young woman Harriet Sandys faced danger daily.  She could not have worked in a more forbidding part of the world. 

This petite woman operated on the North West Frontier – near the Khyber Pass which separates Afghanistan and Pakistan – when the Afghanistans were resisting the Soviet Union invasion which surprised the world on Boxing Day 1979. 

Aged 18, she worked with Afghan refugees fleeing the brutality of the Soviets and the endless bombing in the war zone. 

‘It was tense,’ she admits with charming understatement. ‘But the Afghans are wonderfully hospitable and I was under the protection of the warlords, who were funded by the West. They knew I was there to help their people and they showed their appreciation.‘

One of the warlords was a certain Osama Bin Laden who then was not radicalised.  

Harriet now runs a successful business from a beautifully restored 17th century cider barn in West Compton near Shepton Mallet, importing high quality fabrics, clothing and carpets from the Middle and Far East using contacts gained during her humanitarian work in the 1980s. 

Sandys Oriental Carpets is now back in business after 18 months closure due to lockdown. 

‘It’s more difficult to import goods, but everything we sell benefits good people in that part of the world, particularly women and girls, who produce incredibly well-made products using silk, Indian cotton and their astonishingly high quality wool. Because I buy direct, I can offer high quality produce at affordable prices.

‘We read a lot of bad things about the area,’ says Harriet, ‘but the real people are lovely, kind and welcoming. It was only when fighters came in from north Africa and Saudi that the radicalisation started.’ 

After visiting Afghanistan’s capital Kabul many times, Soviet forces closed the airport so she resorted to flying direct to Islamabad, the Pakistan capital where she met the Aga Khan, the revered Islamic spiritual leader. 

‘He wanted to see the silk weaving workshops we were introducing, under the aegis of UNESCO, to encourage Afghans to return to their own country when the Soviets pulled out in 1989.’

Harriet learned the local language, Dari, to encourage females to start their own businesses and gain a degree of confidence and financial independence.  She also worked with Save The Children. 

The locals couldn’t pronounce her name so she became popularly known as Arriot Jan (Jan meaning ‘dear’ or ‘lovely’).

Harriet left school at 16 with no qualifications. ‘I knew I didn’t want to work 9-5 as a secretary.’

Following a sheltered childhood in the Lake District, her parents hoped that after ‘doing the Season’, she would meet and marry a suitable young man. Instead, she learned how to restore oriental carpets, and travelled alone to Pakistan. 

‘When I first came back to London from my initial travels I knew my life had changed. I fell in love with the North West Frontier.’

Dressing in the local garb with head coverings, Harriet would tour the bazaars and became a welcome figure with locals and merchants. 

‘I was treated as one of the boys,’ she said, ‘we’d sit, talk and drink tea. They were wonderfully hospitable.’

Her memoir ‘Beyond That Last Blue Mountain: my Silk Road,’ was published by Medina in 2018. 

Apart from her business, Harriet loves cooking and is inspired by recipes from Helen Saberi’s ‘Noshe Djan’ (noshe meaning ‘to eat’ – it is believed that British troops brought the word back to England and we now have the slang ‘nosh’ meaning food or to eat.)

‘Afghan food is tremendously healthy and tasty,’ she says, ‘they use aubergines, nan, rice, lamb, nuts and yoghurt.’ 

Among the oriental rugs, runners and tribal kilims from Turkey, Afghanistan and Iran at Harriet Sandys barn there are carved wood chests and tables from the mountain villages of Swat in northern Pakistan and a splendid assortment of hand-woven silk and wool scarves, block-printed tablecloths, quilted bedspreads, cushions and throws from India. 

On sale too are fabulous velvet knee-length coats from Morocco (great for parties) Indian cotton kaftans; cotton dressing gowns and nightwear; table lamps and gold and silver semi-precious stone earrings made by craftsmen living in the desert villages of Rajasthan.

If you want to give a loved one a unique and attractive gift, visit Sandys Oriental Carpets

By: Andy Palmer

Verging on the Wild Side

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Wildflower verges are a hot topic this summer. 

It’s clear that more needs to be done to protect bees and other wildlife. Wildflowers are a step towards improving habitats and there are some stunning examples of meadow-like verges in North Dorset. But are they to everyone’s taste and how does it work with road safety?

Wildflowers provide a habitat for insects including bees. Caressence Roden, project lead for ‘Stalbridge Goes Wild’, is passionate about wildflowers and summarises the rationale perfectly.

Stalbridge’s Wildflower Verges are a real community effort.
Image: Caressence Roden

“Without bees we will be dead.”

Stalbridge Goes Wild has been operating for two years, with a significant time taken up by the planning process to get permission and insurance. Caressence explained: “It took up to nine months to get all the paperwork done. The clerk at Stalbridge Town Council was fantastic as she knew exactly what to do with the process.” Caressence also had a lot of praise for Graham Stanley at Dorset Council with his expertise and advice on how to plant wildflowers appropriately.

If anyone thinks that planting wildflowers is simply a matter of seed scattering, they are in for a surprise. In Stalbridge a lot of the turf was removed before seeding to get rid of grass and that was back breaking work.

Luckily, there are a few younger volunteers able to lend a hand and builders provided some of the soil needed. The results this year gave pleasure to a lot of people as they saw the areas transformed into a glorious meadow of colour. 

Other villages taking an approach to wildflower planting include Hazelbury Bryan, Shillingstone and Okeford Fitzpaine.

But what happens when things do not go exactly to plan? Private contractors in Hazelbury Bryan recently cut a verge, killing hedgehogs. Jeanette Hampstead from Hazelbury Bryan Hedgehog Rescue regularly releases hogs in the area and was deeply saddened by the news. 

She advised: “Hedgehogs love long grass. They don’t mind being under hedges but love the long grass. If strimming, always check the area first, cutting a little off the top and then moving lower. It takes longer but is safer for hedgehogs.”

Caressence discovered one of the Stalbridge wildflower verges had been cut when she saw it on social media. 

“Another area contained large rape plants which a resident asked the council to cut as they had a problem seeing to turn safely in the car. 

Overgrown verges in our smaller lanes have become a common sight in north Dorset this summer.
Image: Courtenay Hitchcock

Unfortunately our verge was also cut in the process, even though we had signage in place. If only we had known, we would have cut the plants down ourselves to save the verge.”

It appears that communication is vital when maintaining wildflower verges. Many local residents have taken to social media, but equally as many are dismayed by the current ‘messy verges of knee high grass’ as the wildlife enthusiasts are thrilled to see them. 

The UK has lost 97% of its wildflower meadows since the 1930s. The success of the Weymouth Relief Road project here in Dorset, has lead to a new report outlining the potential present in our roadside verges. On the Weymouth relief road,   native wildflowers have thrived on the managed chalk verges, and the area is now home to half of the butterfly species in the UK.

Previous research has shown that reducing mowing to just once or twice a year provides more flowers for pollinators, allows plants to set seed and creates better habitats for other animals.

Dorset Council has over 4,970 miles of rural verges. It is one of the most undervalued habitats in the county and historically required a lot of resources to manage. Following trials by the council to reduce this cost and increase the biodiversity, the council now only cuts rural roads on  a reduced schedule – just two cuts a year for A and B roads, and once a year for C roads. They also collect the grass clippings to create a better environment for wildflowers to establish and thrive. This reduction in verge cutting allows wildflowers the time to complete their life cycles which benefits bees and other pollinators. 

Dr Trevor Dines, botanical specialist at Plantlife, said: “Our research estimates that if all of the road verges in the UK were managed for nature, there would be a spectacular 418,88 bn more flowers, or 6,300 per person in the UK. This surge in pollen and nectar would have a genuinely transformative effect on the prospects of wildlife.”

haftesbury Town Council have created popular wildflower verges around the town. This image taken on the approach road from Cann Common
Image: Courtenay Hitchcock

For anyone considering  a wildflower project, Caressence has some tips learned from the Stalbridge experience. 

“Firstly, you have to be excited to get people excited. Get the neighbours to support it as the community has to be in favour. And use the expertise of the town and parish councils so you are supported on the process and regulations. You also need to start small as you can’t do everything at once.”

It’s the small things that will make the big differences to bees and other wildlife. If we can all be aware of the importance of wildflower projects and support the protection of wildlife, our carbon footprint will take a further step to reducing its imprint.

By: Rachael Rowe

Dorset Florist Provides English Flowers For Dorset Royal Visit

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Dorset Flowers

We’re very excited to have Charlotte Tombs, an experienced Dorset flower farmer at Northcombe Flowers in Sturminster Marshall, sharing her growing year and seasonal thoughts with us.

So much excitement on the flower farm this week – Sweetpea Florist in Blandford placed an order with us hinting that there was a Very Important Person coming to Blandford. Her lips were sealed as to the recipient’s identity; she did however hint that she had designed and supplied flowers for this particular Royal before…


As you can imagine the weather forecast was checked then doubled checked – the conditions
have to be right to pick flowers (like many other premium crops). First thing in the morning or at dusk once the sun is off them is preferable, and wind and rain are not good; which often make it a challenge in a British summer! Flowers need to be hydrated and kept cool after picking, overnight is good as we strive for optimum ‘vase life’, the flower grower’s holy grail.For this particular special order, flowers were selected for scent, colour and ‘Britishness’:
cornflowers, poppies, lavender and of course roses among the varieties used.

They were delivered to Sweetpea for Laura to work her magic. Sadly Blandford Camp reported that no one managed to get a photograph of HRH Princess Anne with the flowers!


I belong to a great organisation called ‘Flowers from the Farm’ which is an award winning membership association, supporting professional flower growers all over the country. With over a 1000 members we are gaining a strong voice in championing British flowers and enlightening the public who are increasingly aware of their food air miles but not flower air miles.


The Flowers from the Farm growers are passionate about the flowers they grow, many varieties of which are scented. Did you know that some imported flowers have had the scent bred out of them, focussing solely on appearance? Many of the flowers grown by the Flowers from the Farm growers bring back memories of childhood, lost scents, evocative and full of nostalgia. It amazes me that the scent of the much loved sweetpea can transport you back decades.It is possible to send flowers through the Flowers from the Farm website, they have a brilliant search feature; type in a postcode and details of the growers in that locality appear.

By: Charlotte Tombs