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Letters to the Editor January 2024

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When writing, please include your full name and address; we will not print this, but do require it.

As an Essex girl from a big town, the first time I saw a buzzard, gliding away from the top of a hill near Shaftesbury, I genuinely felt like I’d seen a golden eagle. That was 30 years ago, but I’ve never tired of watching them.
Some years ago, weirdly from almost the exact same spot, I saw my first ever red kite – a pair of them, in fact – and promptly fell in love.
I literally stopped in my tracks, mouth open.
The memory of that moment is so strong, triggered last week when I read Jane Adams wildlife column this month. I still remember the visceral thrill of seeing the unmistakeable forked tails, casually adjusting in the thermals, feathers flashing their rich golden red in the sunlight as they wheeled.
It’s almost the middle of January – probably too late to wish you a Happy New Year (though I do). As I write, the sun has finally come out, after so many long weeks of the worst kind of flat, grey, depressing weather. And so. much. rain!
It’s so easy in January to fall into a pit of gloom. Everything is darker, drearier … and colder.
But we mustn’t let it beat us.
We learned many years ago that we simply must make a plan for something fun, to have something to look forward to. And it is essential, this month more than any other, to pause and notice the small things that bring you a little joy in an otherwise dreary day. I have been paying attention this week – here are some of the things that have caused me a small glow of pleasure. I hope they do you, and I’d love you to share your own suggestions as well:
* The perfect strength, HOT-hot tea in the perfect mug
* Lunch consisting of ready salted McCoys crisps, between two slices of buttered bread – pressed down for the satisfying grrnnncchh, obviously.
* The piping tsurp of the gang of long tailed tits as they arrive for breakfast (and elevenses/brunch/lunch/tea/dinner/and pre-dark snack)
* Learning that the collective noun for long tailed tits is a volery
* Putting on my favourite jumper
* Finding a seven hour playlist of Disney songs on Spotify. This issue has come to you courtesy of Lion King, Moana, Tangled, Frozen, Tarzan …
* Watching a red kite from my bedroom window
* Finding my lost gloves in the pockets of the coat I haven’t worn for two years
* Ginger biscuits at the back of the cupboard (I make the same recipe every December, and I know it only uses half a packet. But I always buy two packets ‘just in case’, because at some point January always needs ginger biscuits at the back of the cupboard. I was right. Again.)

Laura x


Memories of snowy Iwerne Minster

A sprinkle of Dorset snow | POSTCARDS FROM A DORSET COLLECTION – BV Magazine December 2023


The snowy Iwerne Minster scene in Barry Cuff’s December postcards is of the house where I grew up in the 50s and 60s – my bedroom was over that very porch! (image above)
We had stables, a large garden and orchard – all of which now contain other new houses – and the house itself was turned into flats so there are numerous families where once there was just one. There were fields opposite where our ponies grazed and watercress beds to the right of the railings you can see, fed by the stream which passed under the road there – it’s hard to make out the bridge in the picture.
We moved there soon after I was born in 1949 when my parents acquired the house from Colonel Aston’s widow and it became Preston Farm House. The farm itself was on the opposite side of the road, reached from a lane further along the road, but it had no dwelling.
I loved it there and can still remember the names of our neighbours and friends in the village. We had hourly double-decker buses running between Bournemouth and Shaftesbury, a Co-op, a Post Office Shop, a butchers run by my grandfather, a bakery, a barbers shop, a garage, the Talbot pub (once run by my widowed great aunt!) and a village policeman who changed his name from PC Tit to PC Pitt to save his daughter embarrassment.
My father had a milk round and daily deliveries in Iwerne Minster were made by horse and milk float driven by an ex-carter who whistled popular tunes throughout the week and hymns on Sundays. The annual village fête was held in the classrooms and grounds of Clayesmore School where, as a youngster, I enjoyed many films and plays in their old theatre.
I wonder if the writer of the postcard was a servant in the house in 1908. In my time there were still back stairs, a row of service bells on the ground floor and numerous pantries which would have been used for food, china, silver, linen, scullery etc.
I moved back to Dorset in the 70s – we had a lovely postman called Sid Duffett who was probably related to the recipient of the postcard.
Carolyn Staunton (nee Hunt), by email


Could Stur actually sparkle?
I am writing to express my disappointment regarding the recent Christmas lighting in Sturminster Newton. The town, with its charming slogan ‘Make Stur Sparkle,’ had promised a festive display that would brighten the winter days. Unfortunately, the decision to once again use battery-operated lights on the street Christmas trees made it fall far short of that promise.
The lights came on too late – they weren’t on at school run times – and even when they were on they were so dim you had to strain to see them as you walked or drove through town.
And then the batteries would run out.
The contrast was stark when compared to the town’s main Christmas tree, which was beautifully lit and demonstrated what the rest of the town could achieve. A few independently-minded shops clearly took the initiative to put up their own lights, which looked wonderful, but further highlighted the inadequacy of the rest.
Instead of making Stur Sparkle, the trees instead rather dampened the holiday spirit. As a resident and a lover of Christmas, I urge the town council to reconsider its approach to next year’s trees. It cannot be beyond the whit of the Council – every other town and village seems to manage?
A mains-powered and correctly timer-controlled arrangement, could, in fact, make Stur sparkle …
Name and address supplied


¡Olé!
A bloke from Bourton who loves Barcelona (but supports Real); a wag from Wincanton who worked there; a copper closely connected to the Canaries; a raconteur revelling in it (though more comfortable in Italian); a systems analyst systematically learning it; two teens, friends of course, and many more. All were focused on communicating with the world … talking in a tongue not their own.
‘Which, what, where?’ – you may well ask.
Spain, a Fiesta de Navidad and Spanish are the answers, as the local Spanish conversation group met at the Exchange in Sturminster Newton to celebrate Christmas. What fun! What an effort made to bring tapas and pinchos to share! What excellent company! ¡Olé! ¡Oh yes!
Everyone is welcome to the group – from fluent linguist to the fervent Duolingo beginner. The best point of contact to find out more is Ros Eveleigh on 07818 038 031.
Ros Eveleigh, Blandford


December was a delight!
I just had to write and say thank you and WELL DONE for the December issue. The article on the clean boot hunt was eye-opening. I’ll admit, I saw the images first and – stunning though they were – I was ENRAGED. How dare you?
I read on, ready to be further inflamed, and instead was met with humour, pragmatic sense, and a way to thoroughly enjoy the sight of a pack of hounds and riders in mustard coats again.
I didn’t know Frederick Treves’ relationship to Dorset, the CPRE’s column (always interesting) was an excellent essay on a common sense approach to housing and planning, and the local history is always a delight (though I do miss Roger Guttridge). I found some great presents for a couple of tricky-to-buy-fors, the photography was as wonderful as it always is, the quiz was fun, and please tell Heather Brown her Boxing Day Leftovers sandwich was as delicious as promised.
Where else can you find a magazine of such quality, entirely for free? We’re blessed to have you.
Marion Stone, Wimborne.
(Thank you Marion. And we miss Roger very much too – Ed)


Then & Now mistake
I’m writing to let you know that you have an error in Barry Cuff’s Then & Now this month. I believe the building shown on the postcard is, in fact, the New Ox Inn – just a few doors down from the Old Ox, but definitely a different building!
Stuart Taylor, Blandford
(You’re completely correct Stuart – you’re not the only one to write and tell me, and we caused quite a flurry of conversation on Facebook. Hands up, that one’s on me! – Ed)

The Great Wall

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Cosmic wonders from the Dorset skies as astrophotographer Rob Nolan captures the Cygnus Wall from 2,000 light years away

NGC 7000 Foraxx

Happy New Year to all The BV readers! So here we are, 2024 – and I think every UK-based amateur astronomer had only one wish for Christmas – more clear skies!
The theme for the end of 2023 was, quite simply, atrocious weather! As I write, I’m really hoping we get to a decent cold snap quickly so we can finally get some clear crisp nights. I for one am far behind in my target list!
So, starting off our 2024 skywatch, we have an image I acquired back in late November, when we did actually have an entirely clear still night.
Long-standing readers may recall NGC7000 (The North America Nebula) from the middle of 2022. However, this image is a closer field of view, revealing fine details within the impressive ‘Cygnus Wall’ region of the Nebula. This is the portion of the nebula that oddly resembles Mexico and Central America! The ridge is approximately 20 light years long, and is a huge star-forming region.
To put things into perspective, when we talk about the distances of these deep sky objects and how far they are from Earth. Let’s just remind ourselves that a single light year is six trillion miles – that’s a six with 12 zeros behind it: 6,000,000,000,000 miles.
The North American Nebula is approximately 2,000 light years from Earth, just to really blow your minds this early in the year!
The North America Nebula in its entirety covers a region more than ten times the area of the full moon, but its surface brightness is low, so normally it cannot be seen with the naked eye. It took only three hours of data to create this false colour Narrowband image, which was captured using a dedicated mono astrophotography camera and a 1000mm Maksutov Newtonian reflector telescope, from our very own skies over Dorset.

The night sky, January 2024 – Rob’s guide for your stargazing this month:

celestial events, from meteor showers and comets to rocket launches. As we make another full revolution around our sun, 2024 will be an exciting year for astronomy!
Kicking off the year is a chance to see the return of an icy interloper that returns to our inner solar system every 6.2 years. Comet 62P/Tsuchinshan is a huge icy rock, more than 6 miles wide, and it will come within 47 million miles of Earth at its closest approach on 30th January. It will transit in front of the constellation Leo – you’ll need a dark sky to see it, and good night sky navigation skills or a computerized setup to find the comet in the night sky! There are several other comets that could be visible during February and March, so it’s a really exciting time for comet hunters! Come September we may get the chance to see another comet with the naked eye.
Turning our attention back to this month, we kicked off the year with the Quadrantid meteor shower on the 3rd and 4th – don’t worry, I missed it too!
On the 14th, look towards the Moon and you’ll spot Saturn close by shining brightly.
On the 18th, the brilliant star near the Moon will be our other gas giant neighbor, Jupiter.
On the 30th, grab those binoculars and try to find Comet 62P/Tsuchinshan in the Leo constellation.
There are some brilliant shining stars in the night sky at the moment, so why not take a tour of them? Find Orion in the night sky and you’ll see Betelgeuse and Rigel, accompanied by Sirius and Canis Major. Forming a giant arc above are Procyon, Castor and Pollux and Capella. You’ll also spot the unmistakable red giant Aldebaran. As the winter nights set in, the stars and constellations will become much easier to identify – but you’ll have to brave the cold to do so!

In other news
Fast forward to November and the Artemis 2 is NASA’s next step in the ambitious Artemis programme, which aims to put humans back on the Moon by 2025, to build a space station in lunar orbit and to lay the groundwork for sending humans to Mars. This crewed mission will fly beyond the Moon and complete a lunar flyby. A hugely exciting time for anyone born after the 1960s, with a taste of the adventure experienced during the Apollo programme – I can’t wait!
Until next time, clear skies.

Find Rob on Facebook as RPN Photography here

January’s BV Magazine – read it here 🙂

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Welcome to the 41st issue of The BV magazine – and the first of 2024! Come on in, it’s nice and warm in here.

(maybe go and make yourself a mug of tea or coffee first. And grab a couple of biscuits while you’re there.)

Inside this issue:

  • A forestry plan on farmland near Stourhead is proving contentious with the local community – Fanny Charles heard from both sides as she takes a deep dive into the issue | Page 4
  • Great women artists in Dorset. A major new exhibition at Dorset Museum explores the life and work of the world-famous sculptor who lived on Bulbarrow for nearly 20 years, and a new touring exhibition of the early work of an international feminist icon comes to Poole Lighthouse | Page 72
  • Steve Keenan met Christopher Somerville to talk about his 35-year journey chronicling Britain’s footpaths for The Times and The Telegraph | Page 12
  • Not bootiful at all. Andrew Livingston is still furious about a recent Channel 4 documentary exposing the concerning food safety and standards at a Bernard Matthews’ factory. And even more furious we’re not all talking about it | Page 91
  • Robert Cowley, MBE – magistrate, volunteer, actor, passionate campaigner … and plumber – selects his Dorset Island Discs | Page 34

The BV – every month we’re jam-packed with Dorset goodness. News, opinion, people, farming, wildlife … and frankly stunning photography. And it’s FREE. Why wouldn’t you want a flick through?

(if you’re staying snugged up against the cold and have some time to fill, you can see all the back issues here. Or if you really should be getting on, why not have a listen to the podcast while you do that thing you should be doing?)

Christoper Somerville’s Cerne Giant walk | 6.5 miles

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This route, first published in The Times, was reproduced in the BV Magazine by kind permission of Christopher as guest editor of our monthly Dorset walk.

The Cerne giant looked particularly rampant this morning, the low sun of early spring lighting up every detail of his splendid physique. No-one knows when this phallic wild man, brandishing a fearsome club and very clearly ‘pleased to see you,’ was cut into the chalk hillside above Cerne Abbas.

Unadorned, he emanates the wildness, dignity and menace that his creators must have intended.

Plenty of fun has been had with the Cerne Giant over the centuries. Childless couples would couple on his mighty member to quicken their seed. Advertising agencies have clad him in jeans and a condom; he has been paired with a giant Homer Simpson wielding a doughnut, and has sprouted an outsize grass handlebar moustache during Movember.

Unadorned, though, he emanates the wildness, dignity and menace that his creators must have intended.

‘we were blown by an icy east wind along banks already thick with primroses’

We set out west from Cerne Abbas, blown by an icy east wind along banks already thick with primroses. Bees were bumbling there, and we spotted a great black oil beetle in jointed armour labouring up through the grasses. The wind whistled in the leafless hawthorn hedges and trembled the green spear-blade leaves of wild garlic up in Weam Coppice.

An armoured black oil beetle – see The BV’s wildlife columnist Jane Adam’s fascinating article on oil beetles in the UK here

At the ridge we passed the medieval earth-and-flint bank of Park Pale, constructed to keep the hunted deer in Cerne Park. Beyond ran the Wessex Ridgeway, an ancient track, broad and green, hurdling the downs. We followed it north past holly and elder hissing with wind, looking west to where hedges and field shapes undulated together across the chalk valleys under a clear-cut skyline.

From Redpost Hill we cut east across big open fields jingling with flints, under the first lark song of the year sounding sweet and silvery in the upper air. A view opened ahead over the valley of the River Cerne, with the thatched cottages and old gabled manor at Up Cerne far below. South over the distant, unseen sea a long cloud bar formed, streaming slowly to the west.

Banks littered with primroses with a view to the Cerne Giant

In the hedge-banks along the lane to Cerne Abbas, violets made splashes of contrasting colour to the predominant yellow of celandines, primroses, dandelions and daffodils. Back at the village we climbed Giant Hill, circling round the great chalk man before returning by way of Cerne Abbey – abbot’s hall, tithe barn, guest house, and a tall porch hidden in a thicket, with an oriel window exquisitely carved.

Cerne Abbey’s equisite oriel window

Part of The BV Magazine’s monthly ‘Take a Hike’ series of Dorset walks – see them here https://bit.ly/BVDorsetWalksArchive 

All images © Christopher Somerville – https://www.christophersomerville.co.uk/

Joint Schools’ Musical Showcase | Sherborne School

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Wednesday 24th January, 7.30pm Gransden Hall, Sherborne Girls

First-class ensembles from Sherborne Boys, Sherborne Girls and The Gryphon School perform in a superb showcase concert.
Including performances from the Sherborne Schools’ Symphony Orchestra, the Sherborne Girls Madrigal Society, the Joint Schools’ Choir and the Sherborne School Swing Band!

FREE ADMISSION, BUT BOOKING ESSENTIAL

Scan the QR code in the advert or email: [email protected]

Pepper, panto and pursuing human quarry | BV Podcast

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In this episode, we hear from the New Zealander in Dorchester who has top chefs clamouring for his Cambodian spice import, possibly the most experienced panto dame-in-waiting (is there an award for ‘services to panto’?), and how a lifelong kennelman started hunting humans.
Just click play below to listen!

  • From Phnom Penh to Poundbury: in a fascinating interview, New Zealander George Norbert-Munns tells Terry how he came to bring the delicate gourmet flair of Kampot pepper to the UK’s foodie scene, taking a ‘risk’ on one small shipment – which he sold in his very first weekend!
  • Gay Pirrie-Weir has been reviewing pantomime for longer than she cares to remember; she’s seen more than 500 productions, she thinks. She chats to Jenny about the history, the tradition, the very best dames – and her first love.
  • Hunting humans for fun – having become disillusioned with fox hunting, Lifelong hunt kennelman Jeremy Whaley started the South Downs Bloodhounds in 2004: 
    ‘The point is, the hunting of most wild animals with hounds is illegal. It doesn’t matter if it was bad law – it is what it is, it is not going to change and, if we want hound sports to survive, we need to not only move on and hunt within the law, but do so in a way that seeks to impress and educate the average, tolerant, man, woman or any other of the myriad genders that currently exist on the Clapham omnibus.’
    Terry reads Jeremy’s interview with The BV – if you missed it, we strongly suggest you click through to see the wonderful photography of the hunt and hounds by Sharon T Photography here: https://bvmag.co.uk/huntinghumans 
  • The North Dorset MP gets an upgrade to the front benches – Simon Hoare is the new Minister for Local Government: officially the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State in the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. Terry reads his exclusive interview with the BV, in which he told editor Laura Hitchcock just what happens when you unexpectedly get that phone call.

You can read the full December 23 issue of the BV magazine here – jam-packed with incredible Dorset folks doing magnificent things. There’s also farming, equestrian, wildlife, food & drink… and if you like glorious photography you’ll be a fan. Did we mention it’s FREE?

Right tree, right place, right reason … wrong tree, wrong place, wrong reason?

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A forestry plan on farmland near Stourhead is proving contentious with the local community – Fanny Charles heard from both sides

A view across part of the site, with a “forest” of tubes showing where Whitesheet Primary School children have planted hundreds of trees. The majority of conifer saplings are not sheathed – the protection is primarily for broadleaf trees. All images Fanny Charles

It sounds like a riddle or an eco-puzzle – and in some ways that’s what it is. But the right tree/wrong tree question is proving very contentious at Stourton, where Nick Hoare, owner of the Stourhead (Western) Estate, is planting new woodland on Bonham Plain.
The proposal is to plant 190,000 trees – both conifer and broadleaf, but the majority will be conifer, as softwood timber is what the country needs, says Nick Hoare. ‘We will start to thin in 15 to 20 years time. The woodland will be managed by Continuous Cover Forestry. It will never be clear-felled, but continually thinned and allowed to regenerate naturally. Once in full production (in 60 years), Bonham Plain Wood will grow up to 1,000 tonnes of timber a year.’
The project has been strongly criticised by the Cranborne Chase and West Wiltshire Downs National Landscape (formerly the Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, aka AONB) as well as local residents, including Francesca Kippen and her husband Erik Ruane, who live in the historic Bonham Manor, adjoining the site.
But it is supported and funded by the Forestry Commission, and conservation organisations such as the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and the National Trust, which owns the Stourhead Estate, with its Palladian mansion and world-famous gardens, have not objected. Wiltshire Climate Alliance is among organisations actively supporting the scheme.
The petition
The Bonham Action Group has drawn up a Save Bonham Farmland petition, which to date has more than 530 signatures. Chaired by Councillor Bridget Wayman of West Knoyle, Wiltshire Council’s representative on the Cranborne Chase NL’s board. The petition, addressed to Steve Barclay, the current Secretary of State for the Environment, reads (in part):
‘Halt plans to smother 200 acres of thriving productive farm land with imported conifer trees for private lumbering, on the edge of Stourhead. The Forestry Commission has ignored objections, not complied with its own consent rules, and ridden roughshod over any opposition from statutory bodies such as the Cranborne Chase Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
The Forestry Commission needs to be accountable for:

  • Destroying prime food producing land
  • Scarring the AONB landscape
  • Breaking their own rules
  • Failing to conduct an Environmental Impact Assessment
  • Failing to conduct a Landscape Visual Impact Assessment
  • Falsely claiming the land to be “unfavourable”
  • Awarding nearly £1m in taxpayer funded grant-aid on false premise
A map showing the Bonham Plan planting scheme. This is one of the posters on view beside the old runway

‘Instead of benefitting the environment, this forest will benefit a timber company. There is a place and a way to grow trees that do benefit the environment. For example, The Great Wood, Wiltshire, is replacing monoculture, coniferous trees with mixed, native, broadleaves for a biodiverse woodland that optimises carbon capture.
‘We must protect our prime farmland for continued food growth. Bonham farmland is classified as grade 2, Best and Most Versatile land, where the tenant farmer was producing 10t of grain per hectare.
‘We must protect the distinct feature of the open, greensand terrace, sweeping westward from White Sheet Hill, to be conserved for its unique landscape across plains of rich, food producing fields as far as the eye can see.
‘We need to protect against the Forestry Commission marking their own homework, as judge and jury, to meet political tree targets at any cost. The consent process needs to be policed to ensure the Forestry Commission adhere to their own slogan to plant “The Right tree, Right Place, Right Reason.”
‘We call on the government to:

  • Prioritise prime farmland for food production – no exceptions
  • Conserve the South West’s Cranborne Chase AONB
  • Make the Forestry Commission accountable for their dereliction of statutory duties.’
One of the disused runways on the old Zeals airfield, with the line of posters explaining the forestry scheme to the right of the track.

Cllr Wayman says the whole process was conducted with disregard for local opinions and the impact on the community. The Bonham Action Group wants the Forestry Commission to review its approval and to conduct an Environmental Impact Assessment, analysing the implications for the environment to provide the basis for an acceptable scheme to be put forward.
In direct contrast to their slogan of Right Tree, Right Place, Cllr Wayman says, ‘the Forestry Commission’s behaviour brings us the opposite. This is the wrong tree, wrong place and there has been a failure of process throughout. The Forestry Commission must press the pause button, conduct a proper environmental assessment and consult with the local community so that a suitably considered scheme, which benefits both the environment (in an area which is deemed ‘sensitive’ under EIA regulations) and the community, can be put forward.’
Group members have also questioned a Forestry Commission (government) grant which they claim is around £900,000 for the scheme. Nick Hoare says this figure is wrong. The grant, he says, is £600,000 ‘and it’s for the whole thing, over 15 years, including maintenance.’

Nick Hoare in an old area of the Stourhead (Western) Estate woods

Why no EIA?
The lack of an Environmental Impact Assessment, the loss of productive farmland and the damage to an area defined as Greensand Terrace are the key concerns of Cranborne Chase NL, voiced by both the National Landscape’s principal landscape and planning officer Richard Burden and Wiltshire Council representative Bridget Wayman.
Richard Burden says: ‘Back in 2019, I advised the Forestry Commission that at least a Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment would be needed, and the (then) AONB sustained an objection right through to the Forestry Commissioners considering the proposal (and grant aid).’
The NL’s statement warns: ‘The planting will permanently change its character and views to and from the area for decades to come. Neither an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) nor a Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment (LVIA) were carried out, as both were deemed unnecessary by the Forestry Commission; contrary to the Forestry Commission’s own UK Forestry Standard.’
The NL says that this is also in direct breach of the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000. It points out that Bonham Plain is Grade 2 agricultural land (described as the best and most versatile land) – not Grade 3 as was originally suggested and subsequently corrected.
The National Landscape statement continues: ‘Trees are a vital part of some of the Cranborne Chase landscape, contributing to its character and an essential part of its biodiversity. However, the wrong trees in the wrong place can have a lasting and damaging impact on the character of this nationally significant landscape and the public’s appreciation and enjoyment of it.’

One of the posters placed on the old Zeals airfield

The Forestry Commission view
A spokesperson for the Forestry Commission sent the BV Magazine the following statement:
‘Wiltshire is benefiting from a significant increase in new woodland and trees, which will help bring the local community together and increase access to nature to improve wellbeing, increase local biodiversity and help meet “national net zero by 2050” ambitions.’
As background information, the spokesman continued: ‘The Forestry Commission does not comment on individual applications for woodland creation. When assessing a woodland creation project, the Forestry Commission is committed to following forestry Environmental Impact Assessment regulations to determine whether a proposal would have a significant effect on the environment.’
In a 2020 blog on the gov.uk website, Mark Broadmeadow, climate change adviser at the Forestry Commission, sets out the framework of the UK Forestry Standard (UKFS), which the Commission is responsible for implementing in England. The government has made a commitment to plant up to 30,000 hectares of trees per year, across the UK, by 2025.
Under the heading, ‘Right tree, right place, right reason’, the blog gives what is described as a ‘brief insight’ into sustainable forestry, concluding that the UKFS ‘will ensure that the standards for the planning, design and sustainable management of forests and woodlands in the UK use an approach based on internationally recognised science and best practice, with the right tree, planted in the right place and for the right reasons.’

The view towards Whitesheet Hill – objectors are concerned about the loss of this greensand terrace area and the impact the tree-planting will have on views towards the downs

An estate commitment
When Nick Hoare, who is also a member of Stourton with Gasper Parish Council, took over the running of the Stourhead (Western) Estate in 2001, he says that maintaining and strengthening biodiversity was a key objective. Creating woodlands and growing timber had been an important feature of the Hoare family’s running of the Stourhead estate since the family bought it in 1717: ‘I am carrying on that process,’ he says.
A former jet engine designer for Rolls Royce, Nick is related to the family which originally created the Stourhead landscape gardens in the 18th century. He is also distantly related to the part of the family which runs the private bank C Hoare & Co, founded in 1672 by Sir Richard Hoare. Sir Henry Hugh Arthur Hoare and his wife Alda, whose only son died in the First World War, gave 3,000 acres of Stourhead Estate – comprising Stourhead House and Garden and four working farms – to the National Trust in 1946. Nick’s side of the family retained what is known as the Stourhead (Western) Estate.
With his wife, Sara, Nick opened Stourhead Farm Shop in 2005, in partnership with Steve and Louise Harris. In 2015-16 they built four affordable homes for rent in Gasper. Cottages on the estate are only let to full-time local residents (no weekenders). Nick and Sara encourage walkers to enjoy the woods, and clubs and schools use the woods for activities including cycling, running and orienteering. Children from Whitesheet Primary School, along with many local volunteers, have been planting tiny saplings as part of the Bonham Plain project.

A “baby” coastal redwood – one day this tiny sapling could be anything up to 130 metres (nearly 430 feet) high

The plans for the new forest were set out in posters with photographs and statistics beside one of the runways on the wartime Zeals airfield, where they would be seen by the many walkers. (See photographs of some of the posters). The claimed environmental benefits include the woodland absorbing at least 28,000 tonnes of CO2 over the next 30 years. However, says Nick, ‘this may sound a lot, but at our current rate this is the amount of CO2 that just 200 people will emit over that 30 years.’
While tree planting does help, it is only a small part of solving the climate crisis then: ‘Elsewhere on the estate we have improved house insulation, installed air and ground source heating, increased biomass heating and added solar PV panels to houses and farm buildings.’ The forestry scheme is also described on the estate’s website, stourhead.com

The ‘contraption’ – this curious-looking machine plants the tiny saplings. In an earlier life it planted strawberries on the fens in Cambridgeshire.

Biodiversity answers
While I was investigating the plans for Bonham Plain forest and sounding out local opinion, one word kept coming up – biodiversity. People who regularly walk in the woods at Gasper, Penselwood, around Alfred’s Tower and along Pen Ridge overlooking Somerset towards Glastonbury Tor, value the wide range of wildlife, plants and trees, and the sounds of a peaceful woodland that is only occasionally interrupted by the roaring buzz of a chainsaw.
One ecology-minded local asked specifically about boxes for owls, bats and dormice, whether there would be public footpaths through the new woodland, and whether the existing wildlife-rich scrub (for example, along the old runways) would be retained.
The answers were that the scrubby, straggling, overgrown hedges will remain, and that there are already wildlife boxes as well as raptor posts (where the presence of goshawks has been identified). Existing paths will remain, there will be new paths in the new woods, and a circular route will be created, connecting the Temple of Apollo in Stourhead gardens to the bluebell woods.
The diversity of wildlife in the forests may come as a surprise, even to those who regularly walk on the many paths: it includes 13 of the resident UK bat species, goshawks and other raptors, 128 plant species, 248 moths and 26 birds. The rare birds recorded include the Marsh Tit, as well as the goshawks (Some of these figures come from a 2022 survey by Butterfly Conservation).
Countering objectors’ claims that the new woodland will be a monoculture, Nick explains that there will be 13 species of broadleaf – beech, sycamore, birch and alder (‘this is not oak country,’ he says), as well as shrubs and bushy trees such as crab apple. There will be 14 species of conifer, including Douglas fir, spruce, Western cedar – and some coastal redwoods, famous as the giants of the American Pacific forests. (See photo of a recently planted ‘baby redwood’.)
It will take many years for Bonham Plain to reach the level of diversity of the older woodlands, but in the early years it will be a good habitat for voles, hence a great hunting ground for hawks and owls, says Nick. Meanwhile, on a wetland area of the estate, there are signs of beavers at work, evidence of the way these beneficial mammals are gradually colonising rural waterways.

What is continuous cover?
The Stourhead (Western) Estate woodland is managed by David Pengelly of Canopy Land Use, experts in continuous cover management. As described by the Continuous Cover Forestry Group, this system ‘is an approach to forest management which aims to develop structurally, visually and biologically diverse forests, in which sustainable production of good quality timber is achieved along with the provision of a wide range of ecosystem services.’
There is no large-scale felling – the kind of clear-felling that scars some hillsides in the Scottish Highlands. Instead, trees are replaced in small groups as needed, with the aim over the years that natural regeneration fills in the gaps and boosts the biodiversity of the forest, while continuing to provide good-sized commercial timber.
The UK currently imports 70 per cent of the timber the country needs. Continuous cover woodland helps to address this imbalance, as well as providing environmental benefits. ‘It provides larger logs, which are needed for furniture and building, with knock-on benefits for carbon capture,’ says Nick. ‘It creates a much more complicated habitat which benefits wildlife, and the further you go with continuous cover the better it is for wildlife.’
Walkers in the Stourhead/Gasper woods may spot the occasional larger area of felling – these are usually where larch trees, infected by the Ramorum disease (which also affects sweet chestnuts), have been cut down.

Friday Lunchtime Recitals | Sherborne School

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1.45pm Cheap Street Church (unless otherwise stated) – see below…

FREE ADMISSION – ALL WELCOME

Here’s How You Can Stay Active As You Get Older

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As we age, staying physically active becomes increasingly important for maintaining overall health, mobility, and independence. Engaging in regular physical activity can improve strength, flexibility, and balance, reducing the risk of falls and injuries while enhancing overall well-being. In this article, we’ll explore various strategies and resources to help you stay active as you get older, promoting a healthy and fulfilling lifestyle well into your golden years.

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Embrace A Variety Of Activities

One of the keys to staying active as you age is to embrace a variety of physical activities that cater to your interests, preferences, and abilities. Rather than sticking to a single exercise routine, explore different activities that challenge your body in various ways. Consider activities such as walking, swimming, cycling, dancing, yoga, tai chi, or gardening, each offering unique benefits for physical and mental health. Mixing up your activities not only keeps things interesting but also ensures that you’re engaging different muscle groups and promoting overall fitness.

Incorporate Strength Training

Strength training is essential for maintaining muscle mass, bone density, and overall strength as you age. Incorporating regular strength training exercises into your routine can help prevent age-related muscle loss and reduce the risk of osteoporosis and fractures. Focus on exercises that target major muscle groups, such as squats, lunges, push-ups, and weightlifting with light dumbbells or resistance bands. Start with light weights and gradually increase resistance as you build strength and confidence. Consult with a fitness professional or personal trainer to develop a safe and effective strength training program tailored to your needs.

Wheelchair Accessible Vehicle Hire Can Make A Massive Difference

For individuals with mobility challenges or disabilities, accessing transportation can be a barrier to staying active and engaged in the community. However, wheelchair-accessible vehicle (WAV) hire can make a massive difference by providing accessible and convenient transportation options. Hiring a WAV allows individuals with mobility needs to travel comfortably and independently, whether for medical appointments, social outings, or recreational activities. With features such as wheelchair ramps, lowered floors, and spacious interiors, WAVs provide a safe and comfortable means of transportation, enabling individuals to stay active and maintain their independence.

Prioritise Balance And Flexibility

Maintaining balance and flexibility is crucial for preventing falls and maintaining mobility as you age. Incorporate exercises that focus on improving balance, such as standing on one leg, heel-to-toe walking, or practising yoga poses that challenge your balance. Additionally, include stretching exercises to improve flexibility and range of motion, targeting major muscle groups and joints. Regular stretching can help reduce stiffness, improve posture, and alleviate aches and pains associated with ageing. Consider attending a yoga or Pilates class specifically designed for older adults to improve balance and flexibility in a supportive environment.

Stay Active In Daily Life

Staying active doesn’t necessarily mean dedicating hours to structured exercise routines. Look for opportunities to incorporate physical activity into your daily life, whether it’s taking the stairs instead of the lift, walking or cycling for errands instead of driving, or doing household chores that involve movement and exertion. Even small bursts of activity throughout the day can add up and contribute to your overall fitness and well-being. Find ways to make physical activity a natural and enjoyable part of your daily routine, incorporating movement into your lifestyle wherever possible.