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Night Sky April 2021 | What you can see this month

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This month it’s all about Venus as it returns to the evening skies in April, making it a planet
to keep an eye on for the rest of the year. Venus will slowly re-emerge into the evening
twilight as an ‘Evening Star’, just as it did for much of 2019 and 2020. Perhaps tricky to see
in the early part of April due to it’s positioning with the sun. But as the month moves on
things will improve as Venus’s brightness will help the planet stand out so that it can
confidently be seen against the evening twilight.

Venus – Shutterstock


Later in the month Venus has a close encounter with Mercury. On 25 April, Venus and
Mercury appear extreemly close (in astrological terms) just after the sun has set, and the
remain together in the Northwest horizon for about 45 minutes after sunset. Best to see
Venus after the sun has set using a pair of binoculars.

More planets to spot in April:

It shouldn’t be long before Mercury too pops out of the bright twilight sky. While Venus
takes a while to crawl away from the Sun, Mercury appears to move much faster and over
the following nights the Solar System’s innermost planet zips away from Venus, climbing
higher in the sky. It retains a pretty decent brightness too for the rest of the month. It’s a
great opportunity to try and spot Mercury if you’ve never seen it before.

Mars is now well past its best for its current viewing, with its brightness dropping over the
month and its apparent size dropping as well as it moves away. It’s also getting lower as
darkness falls. Its rapid apparent eastward motion will keep it visible for a while longer but
with such a small viewable disc size it’ will be tricky to get any serious detail from the planet
even with a telescope.


Jupiter is a morning planet, rising 70 minutes before the Sun at the month’s start, but this
month it doesn’t rise very high in the sky at all. Saturn is the last planet that you can
observe this month and again it is a morning object, making only the briefest of
appearances quite low before sunrise and then soon lost to the early morning light.

FRITH, Robert Montague

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Robert Montague Frith 16th June 1944 – 11th April 2021

It is with great sadness that the family of Robert Frith announce his sudden and untimely death. A wonderful family man and successful businessman, a man of great humour, integrity and loyalty, Robert had an enormous passion for life and lived life to the full until his last breath.

To see the full obituary please click here

Chooks in Lockdown

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After three and a half months of their own lockdown, poultry birds across the country on the 1st of April were allowed to finally leave their sheds, houses and coops. Their lockdown, known as a ‘housing order’, has many more draconian measures than what we experience. Birds across the United Kingdom have been shut up with no access to the outside; let alone a trip to the pub!
However stringent they were, the measures were in place to protect them from the ever-spreading Avian Influenza (AI), more commonly known as bird flu. Whereas COVID-19 shielding means keeping distance from your neighbours and the local shopkeeper, the bird flu super-spreaders are your every day, roaming wild bird.
You need to think of that beautiful duck tearing freely around the British countryside as an anti-masker flaunting lockdown laws, licking lampposts whilst heading to your local supermarket to study variations of kissing on numerous fruit and veg perishables. Unthinkable…. I’m sure!

Empty Chicken Range at Westleaze – image by Andrew Livingston

In the UK so far, it has been reported that over 250,000 birds have been culled due to contracting the disease and as a keeper of a large number of hens, we keep a close eye on how close to home reports of AI cases are coming up. For example, in November and December, there have been reported outbreaks in the Abbotsbury Swannery and Gillingham respectively.
With the unfeasible cost of insuring one shed of our birds against AI around £3500, we have to be doubly careful with our biosecurity when going on to our farm. Admittance into sheds is prohibited from any unnecessary visitors. For anyone that does enter the living space of the birds, known as the ‘specific bio-secure area’, has to ‘wear overalls, disinfect shoes and wash hands.
Most modern farms built today have a shower build by reception so visitors ‘must shower on and shower off’ site to ensure the tightest biosecurity. Imagine the queues outside your Tesco if you had have a quick full-body scrub before doing your shopping!
Thankfully, however, there are a few signs that lockdown measures won’t be necessary for the future. A recent study completed by Wageningen University, Netherlands, showed that the use of lasers around chicken houses and ranges sees a reduction in wild bird activity by 99.7%.
The lasers fire beams of light into the sky, which oncoming birds deem as an obstacle so they disperse from the area for protection. Admittedly, it is a drastic form of social distancing, but it is a possible method that would greatly deter possible infected birds and protect farmer’s livelihoods.
In a facsimile with our own pandemic, birds are being granted protection through the use of a syringe. In the Bergen aquarium in Norway, the penguins in the enclosure are having their second jabs against the disease. So expect to see a penguin in your local with their vaccine card soon, enjoying a cold one.

https://www.dw.com/en/norwegian-penguins-get-vaccinated-and-can-end-isolation/a-56777569


http://www.poultrynews.co.uk/news/lasers-used-to-deter-wild-birds-in-fight-against-avian-influenza.html


https://www.gov.uk/government/news/avian-influenza-bird-flu-national-prevention-zone-declared

By: Andrew Livingston

Voice of the Books | April 2021

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We are eagerly awaiting 12th April, when we can welcome customers back in to the shop to browse physical books and catch up on all your news. Can’t wait

What’s Left of Me is Yours by Stephanie Scott £8.99

In the meantime, this fascinating debut from Stephanie Scott is well worth a read and will be a book you want to press into other readers hands.


A gripping debut set in modern- day Tokyo and inspired by a true crime, What’s Left of Me Is Yours follows a young woman’s search for the truth about her mother’s life and her murder.
In Japan, a covert industry has grown up around the wakaresaseya (literally “breaker- upper”) a person hired by one spouse to seduce the other, in order to gain the advantage in divorce proceedings. When Sato hires Kaitaro, a wakaresaseya agent, to have an affair with his wife, Rina, he assumes it will be an easy case. But Sato has never truly understood Rina or her desires, and Kaitaro’s job is to do exactly that until he does it too well.
While Rina remains ignorant of the circumstances that brought them together, she and Kaitaro fall in a desperate, singular love, setting in motion a series of violent acts that will forever haunt her daughter Sumiko’s life.
Told from alternating points of view and across the breathtaking landscapes of Japan, What’s Left of Me Is Yours explores the thorny psychological and moral grounds of the actions we take in the name of love, asking where we draw the line between passion and possession.
Beautifully written, atmospheric, and immersive, Stephanie Scott’s What’s Left of Me Is Yours tells a propulsive story about heartbreak and loss and the greatest mystery of all, family.

A stunning debut: tragically beautiful, sensuous and haunting. Wow, just wow. Wayne

A Vet’s Voice | The Easter Bunny & the chocolate Easter Egg.

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With Easter approaching, it might seem like a great time to buy an ‘Easter Bunny’. While rabbits make lovely pets it is always important to do your research before getting a new animal to care for.

beautiful, blooming, blossomBrown RabbitYour main considerations when deciding whether to take on a pet rabbit should be whether you can provide enough space and suitable housing, the right kind of company (rabbits are very social animals and should be kept in pairs/small groups), the correct diet and suitable healthcare. It is always an exciting time to get a new pet but it is important that you can commit to being able to care for them lifelong; the current estimate from the PDSA on the cost of owning a rabbit ranges from £6,500 up to as much as £30,000 for their lifetime and they can live up to 10 years. Choosing the right bunny for you should be well thought through and ideally we would always recommend rehoming from a reputable rescue centre, such as Margaret Green Animal Rescue based in Church Knowle in Dorset. If you are thinking about getting a rabbit check out the PDSA website for more information on caring for them and recommended suitable housing.

Shutterstock

During Easter time the amount of chocolate in your home will most likely be on the rise. This is great for you, however not so great for your dogs!

Chocolate contains an ingredient called theobromine; this is hard for dogs to digest allowing it to build up to toxic levels in their system very quickly.

Different chocolate has different levels of theobromine. Cocoa, cooking chocolate and dark chocolate have the highest levels of theobromine where as white and milk chocolate have the lowest. This is why it is very important to know what type of chocolate your pet has eaten so the vet can assess the toxicity correctly.

The amount that is fatal to your pet depends on its size. For example a St Bernard could eat more chocolate than a Chihuahua before it would become ill whereas the Chihuahua wouldn’t need much at all to make it poorly.

In large doses chocolate can be fatal to dogs. It can cause seizures, irregular heartbeat, internal bleeding and heart attacks.

To try and reduce the risk of your pet getting hold of any chocolate try and keep any chocolate out of reach of your dog, securely stored away from them and sealed.

If your pet has ingested chocolate we advise you call your vet immediately. The usual protocol is to induce vomiting within two hours of the consumption to ensure there is no chocolate left in the dogs system.

By: Damory Vets

Major initiatives announced to help promote local businesses

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Marketing West, the West Dorset events and marketing company, has announced a major initiative to help get business moving again.

It is holding the first of a series of business bounceback seminars starting on Friday, May 7.

Marketing West

The seminar will be free to view through live streaming to reach the maximum audience.

It has lined up high-profile speakers, each briefed to help businesses expand after the recent lockdown.

They include:

  • TV business news journalist, Declan Curry
  • Tej Parikh, Chief Economist at the Institute of Directors
  • Chris Loder, West Dorset MP
  • Nick Gregory of the Dorset Growth Hub
  • Susannah Brade-Waring, business adviser and coach
  • Sarah Ali Choudhury, entrepreneur and Small Business Britain champion

Anyone wishing to receive the login details for the seminar can register here.

Nigel Reeve Marketing West

Nigel Reeve, of Marketing West, said: “The idea of the bounceback seminar is to help and focus on getting business moving again.

“The first bounceback online seminar will have advice for businesses, designed to motivate and help.”

By: Andrew Diprose Dorset Biz News

Voice of the Farmer | April 2021

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The Farming View

The month of March has been very productive at Rawston, with most  of the spring planting completed. Spring beans have been sown providing home grown protein for our cattle and hopefully some to sell. Also spring barley has been sown using varieties suitable for beer making. Let’s there will be good demand the summer when we can go to the Pub again ! March is also a busy monthfor us spreading our organic manure produced from cows and calves during the winter months. The manure is mianly straw based and is spread on the land and incorporated into the soil before sowing , providing nutrients for the crop and maintaining soil organic matter .

We have also started grazing our dairy cows who seem to be enjoying the freedom of grazing grass again. Hopefully as we move into april more cattle will be  able to go out into the fields again saving a considerable amount of feed, straw and time in looking after them inside. With the large numbers of walkers currently enjoying the countryside at the moment let’s hope that we can all work together using the countryside code to prevent any issuses involving livestock. We have an Aberdeen Angus bull on the farm so I must make sure he is in an appropriate field with other cattle to minimise any risk to the public.

Fred Fudge Rawston’s herdsman in the 1950’s with a twin of friesian calves.

Within the farming community there has been much debate regarding the Red Tractor consultation. Hopefully most consumers understand what the Red Tractor Logo stands for on food produce for sale .This produce  would have had to meet certain standards on animal welfare, the growing and storing of the food products in order to be Red Tractor Assured. In order to become assured an assessor will inspect the farm and any associated records on an annual basis. There is currently an consultation to review the standards which many growers feel are adequate as any increase in standards will increase the cost to the producer without necessarily getting an increased return. Perhaps more emphasis should be put on increasing the awareness amongst consumers as to what the Red Tractor stands for. Hopefully consumers will understand the importance of buying Red Tractor Assured food as it would have been produced to a high standard and produced in this country. Currently many food poructs that are imported are not produced to the same standard. Here at Rawston Farm we are promoting the Love Local Trust Local logo to highlight that food with this logo has been produced locally to a high standard and is fully traceable.

Interestingly looking at my families 1921 diary there is no mention of food assursance !  Looking in the diary I see one hundred years ago one of the highlights of april was a fancy dress ball in in Blandford Corn Exchange . Let’s hope that when the current  lockdown is over we can look forward to similar events.

By: James Cossins

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Caring for Monkey World’s Primates Through Covid-19

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Although the gates to Monkey World have been closed for the majority of this past year, the centre has still been bustling with activity! 

The animals have given us routine and we have directed all our energies into keeping them fit, well and stimulated in their rehabilitated family groups. 

A-mei making a nest out of the park’s bamboo – ©MonkeyWorld

All 260 rescued primates enjoyed natural enrichment, as the gardening team cleared bamboo from the public areas of the park. A-mei, one of our female orangutans, enjoyed making a nest out of it, while Bart’s chimps chewed on this rarely had snack! 

The chimps enjoyed Christmas stockings; football socks stuffed with walnuts, oranges and other treats, which provided hours of fun, as the chimps had to balance up high and un-tie the socks from the hoses.

Rescues have also been ongoing, but this year, limited to monkeys trapped in the legal UK pet trade. Through lockdown, humans have realised how hard it is for social beings to be taken from their families, restricted access to the outside and had their natural behaviours curbed – and yet we still find monkeys being bought as pets and kept alone, in small birdcages in living rooms right here in Britain. 

Thankfully the team have also been busy working with the government on banning the keeping of primates as pets in England – so we’re hopeful this is coming to an end.

Bart enjoying some rarely-had bamboo snack – image ©MonkeyWorld

Now spring is upon us and we are looking forward to welcoming in a fresh start – and now real visitors too! To ensure that visitors, staff and primates are safe, we’ve installed many hand sanitiser stations, limited entry numbers and introduced a pre-booking system online. All visitors aged 3+ will be required to wear a face mask, covering or visor. These steps are necessary to protect our vulnerable rescued and endangered primates, who our dedicated staff have worked so hard to protect over the past year and keep healthy and happy!

The park is now open for visitors; Prebooking is essential of course – https://monkeyworld.org/book-tickets/ – and Monkey World ask that everyone in your party has downloaded the NHS Covid-19 app prior to arriving at the park.
They’re also always grateful to anyone arriving with old blankets, towels & fresh fruit and veg! If you’d like to support the work they’re doing but can’t make it to the park for a visit, then maybe stop by their Amazon wishlist – both the orangutan team and small monkey team have requests on there currently!
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/registry/wishlist/1FPR1E46E31BS