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Nourishing longevity

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Nutritional therapist Karen Geary sheds light on optimising health with targeted nutrition for the older generation

As society undergoes a global demographic shift, more individuals are reaching advanced age, making it crucial to understand and address the unique nutritional needs of older adults. In the UK, an ‘older’ adult is generally defined as an individual aged 65 years or older. With advances in healthcare, technology and living conditions, life expectancy estimates have risen significantly over the past century, reaching 78.6 years for males and 82.6 years for females in 2020 to 2022.

Common issues in older adults
Older adults face various health challenges, including diminished muscle mass, decreased bone density and a higher susceptibility to chronic diseases such as heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and cognitive decline. Almost 95 per cent of individuals over 60 have at least one chronic condition, such as high blood pressure, arthritis, depression, high cholesterol, digestive disorders or kidney disease. Proper nutrition is crucial for preventing and managing these age-related issues.

Blue Zones and common factors
Blue Zones – regions known for having an unusually high number of centenarians – offer valuable insights into longevity. Places like Okinawa, Japan, and Sardinia in Italy share common lifestyle practices promoting health in older adults, including a plant-centric diet, moderate alcohol consumption (preferably red wine), limited animal product intake, regular physical activity, strong social connections and a sense of purpose.

The impact of diet on ageing
Diet plays a central role in the ageing process, influencing factors such as inflammation, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial function (the energy source for cellular processes).
As we age, our repair systems become less effective, and a nutrient-dense, balanced diet is ever more important. Key dietary considerations for older adults:

  1. Protein intake – adequate protein is essential for maintaining muscle mass. Sources include poultry, fish, beans and dairy products. Incorporating protein into every meal, including breakfast with options like eggs or Greek yogurt, is recommended.
  2. Omega-3 fatty acids – found in olive oil, fatty fish, walnuts and flaxseeds, omega-3 fatty acids have anti-inflammatory properties supporting cognitive health.
  3. Antioxidant-rich foods – fruits and vegetables rich in antioxidants combat oxidative stress and supply a broad spectrum of vitamins and minerals. Include a variety of colours, with a focus on purple plants high in polyphenols.
  4. Magnesium – found in dark chocolate, avocados, nuts, legumes, tofu, seeds and whole grains, magnesium is crucial for more than 300 bodily functions.
  5. Vitamin D – essential for bone, brain, and immune health, vitamin D is found in oily fish, egg yolks, red meat and liver. During winter, it’s suggested we all consider a vitamin D supplement (how to supplement vitamin D).
  6. CoQ10 – our levels naturally decrease with age, and statins may further lower production. Oily fish, liver, whole grains or supplementation can be supportive.
  7. Hydration – ageing diminishes the sense of thirst, making dehydration common. Staying well hydrated supports overall health.

You’re not just what you eat
Adequate sleep is crucial for healthy ageing – with five to seven hours as a minimum, but avoiding excessive sleep beyond nine hours.
Regular physical activity, even as little as 13 minutes a day, can extend life by three years. Try also to stay connected with friends and family – a sense of community is key.
Addressing the nutritional needs of older adults is critical for promoting health and longevity. As the global population ages, a proactive approach to nutrition in older adults becomes imperative, not just for extending life expectancy but also for enhancing the quality of life in later years.

Poole Harbour Festival 2024 isset to be the biggest yet!

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Get ready for the ultimate family live music experience this summer in Poole and Bournemouth, where thousands of music enthusiasts will gather for the area’s most anticipated weekend event.
With an early bird special offering savings of up to £30, eager fans are securing their spots well ahead of the festivities.
This year’s festival is boasting a line-up that includes the iconic Razorlight, the revitalised sounds of The Coral, and the 90s chart-toppers Reef. The line-up also features The South – former members of The Beautiful South– the 90s indie icons Toploader, the comeback of Southampton’s Artful Dodger, the energetic folk punk Ferocious Dog, and the crowd-pleasing Dr Meaker.
‘Last year’s festival was the best yet in terms of line up – we’re definitely putting Poole Harbour Festival on the map,’ says festival organiser Ben Dyas, who has been listening to the feedback on last summer’s event. ‘Last year we had so many last minute ticket buyers that we did have queues, but we’ve learned a lot from that and this year we’ll have more and bigger bars, many extra toilets, easier entry and more staff and security across the site, with better signage for things like water points and toilets.
‘It’s going to be a brilliant weekend!’

Four stages and 50 acts
The dance tent is set to pulsate with beats from the legendary Lisa Lashes, chart-toppers Ultrabeat, the inventive Jaguar Skills, and the renowned Seb Fontaine. Fans of tribute acts will be thrilled by performances celebrating the music of Queen, Madness, Ed Sheeran, Amy Winehouse, and, for the first time, Fleetwood Mac.
With an impressive line-up of 50 acts spread across four stages, the festival also proudly showcases top local talent from the BCP area, including the infectious Mother Ukers, the Americana sounds of Sixteen String Jack, the energetic Celtic punk of Blackwater County, and folk favourite Gaz Brookfield.

Not just about the music
The festival’s renowned family-friendly vibe includes free circus performances, kids’ entertainment, dinosaur shows, and activities throughout the weekend. Coupled with affordable ticket prices, the Poole Harbour Festival promises a perfect start to a summer by the sea.
‘It’s the party weekend that Poole is now famous for!’ says Ben. ‘And people can help make the event even better by taking advantage of the much cheaper launch offer tickets – this really helps us plan and book the facilities needed.’

  • Poole Harbour Festival is on 26th – 28th July. It opens at 5pm on Friday, 12 noon on Saturday and 11am on Sunday, closing at 11pm on Friday and Saturday and 7pm on Sunday. Tickets available now at pooleharbourfestival.com.

LEADAR TERRANCE

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Formerly of Blandford Forum

Passed away suddenly at home on the 15th February aged 89 years.

Funeral has already taken place at Gornal Wood Crematorium Dudley.

Donations if desired in memory of Terry to be sent to the British
Heart Foundation

TURNER IRIS

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Formerly of Dorchester Dorset

Passed away peacefully after a short illness on the 4th February
2024 surrounded by family at Leighton Nursing Home Perth
Australia. Aged 86

A much loved Mum, Grandma and Great Granma.
Will be greatly and sadly missed by all her family and her friends.

To Eternal rest

Sam Peters on rugby’s dangerous evolution and Rob Nolan’s stellar photography

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  • Sam Peters, former rugby correspondent at the Mail On Sunday and The Sunday Times and author of Concussed, talks to Terry about the gathering debate around concussion in the sport: ‘There was a seismic shift moving from the amateur rugby game in the mid-90s to the pro game in the mid 2000s. The game is completely different to how it looked 30 years ago, and evidence says clearly that the game has never been more dangerous at professional level.’
    Sam’s book Concussed: Sport’s Uncomfortable Truth has been shortlisted for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year. You can find it on Amazon here and the audiobook version is on Audible here
  • Richard Miles, the dark skies adviser to Dorset’s CPRE, looks at how the Blackmore Vale got its name, and the modern effects of light pollution on it’s previously dark – or black – nature.
  • Terry reads The BV’s article on Richard Wakeley, the young Sherborne father who also happens to be a fourth-generation funeral director. After leaving school, Richard worked for the charity Mercy in Action, in the charity’s homes for vulnerable children in the Philippines. ‘That experience was life-changing for me,’ he says. ‘I grew up so much in three years.’ Coming home meant a new direction was required, and a walk on the beach with his dad led him to join the family business: ‘It wasn’t like TV’s Succession! Dad wanted it to be a natural progression. This is more of a vocation than a job. You’ve got to want to do it.’
  • In a fascinating conversation, the BV’s night sky columnist Rob Nolan talks to Jenny about astrophotography, which he switched to during COVID when his landscape photography was curtailed by lockdowns. As well as telling us what to look for in the sky each month, Rob also shares one of his stunning images, which are enjoyed by BV readers. He talks about those amazing images of the far corners of our universe, and how he sets about capturing them.
    If you’d like to see Rob’s astrophotography (and we strongly suggest you do), you can find it on the website here https://bvmag.co.uk/DarkSkiesDorset

Concerts in the West at Shaftesbury

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The Gildas Quartet are Tom Aldren, violin,
Gemma Sharples, violin, Christine Anderson, viola, and Anna Menzies, cello

A music organisation which has been bringing rising stars of the chamber and baroque music scene to Dorset, Somerset and Devon for 18 years, makes its debut at Shaftesbury this year, with two concerts organised in conjunction with Shaftesbury Arts Centre. The first Concerts in the West event in north Dorset will be on Sunday 21st April, at 3pm, and will feature the Gildas Quartet, playing at St Peter’s Church.
Catherine Maddocks, then director of the London Handel Festival, recalls that she had recently moved to Ilminster in 2006 and was asked if she would like to organise a concert in the town, as there was no classical music being performed locally at the time. ‘As I was very new to the town it seemed like a good way to meet people and so it proved,’ she says. ‘One concert quickly became four in the first year with Lyme Regis joining in.’
The pattern was set, with additional venues being added, and young professional musicians being invited to perform at a series of three or four concerts, regularly including Bridport Arts Centre, Ilminster Arts Centre and the Dance Centre at Crewkerne. Other occasional venues include Pendomer church near Yeovil and, Upwey church. There are nine series each year, spread over a weekend, beginning with a coffee time concert at Bridport, at Ilminster and Crewkerne on Friday and Saturday evenings, and often a fourth on Sunday afternoon.
Mrs Maddocks, who retired from her London role in 2016, was determined to have a very high standard of performance in the West Country. She says: ‘The musicians, all of whom are trained to at least postgraduate level, find the tours quite useful in embedding repertoire and working towards recordings or a big concert in London or elsewhere.’
The Gildas Quartet are Tom Aldren, violin, Gemma Sharples, violin, Christine Anderson, viola, and Anna Menzies, cello. Their Shaftesbury programme will be:Montgomery’s Break Away, Haydnn’s String Quartet No 5, Op 76 Friedhofsquartett, Puccini’s Crisantemi for String Quartet and Debussy’s string Quartet in G minor, Op 10.
The second Shaftesbury concert in the 2024 Concerts in the West programme will be with the Lumas Winds on 21st July.
21st April, 3pm to 5pm
Tickets £18
shaftesburyartscentre.org.uk

The Mousetrap is coming to Poole

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Todd Carty in The Mousetrap Image: @MattCrockett_

Celebrate 70 years of suspense with The Mousetrap; the longest running play in the world is still captivating audiences on its tour across the UK and Ireland. It arrives at Lighthouse Poole for one week from 29th April to 4th May.
The genuinely iconic murder mystery stars Todd Carty (EastEnders, Grange Hill, Dancing on Ice) as Major Metcalf and Gwyneth Strong (known best as Cassandra Trotter in Only Fools and Horses) as Mrs Boyle. They will be joined by Neerja Naik as Mollie Ralston; Barnaby Jago as Giles Ralston; Shaun McCourt as Christopher Wren; Amy Spinks as Miss Casewell; Steven Elliot as Mr Paravicini and Michael Ayiotis as Detective Sgt Trotter.


Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap debuted at Theatre Royal Nottingham in 1952 and toured the UK before opening in the West End – where it continues its record-breaking run at the St Martin’s Theatre. Now it’s back on the road, and it’s 70th anniversary tour, having also opened in Nottingham, is marking its milestone anniversary by visiting more than 70 theatres, including all cities to which it originally played 70 years ago.
In this classic whodunnit, seven strangers stranded at Monkswell Manor by a snowstorm face a chilling reality as a detective reveals there’s a murderer among them. As the suspense builds, each character’s dark past unfolds, leaving audiences guessing who the real culprit is.
Don’t miss this classic piece of mystery, directed by Ian Talbot OBE and Denise Silvey, and produced by Adam Spiegel.

BBC Radio 4 ‘Any Questions?’To Come to Swanage

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The Mowlem are pleased to announce that they will be hosting a recording of BBC Radio 4 Any Questions? On Friday 8th March at 6:30pm. Tickets are free, but must be booked, with a maximum of four per person.
The show is broadcast live on Radio 4 on most Friday evenings of the year following the 8pm news. The programme is repeated on Saturday lunchtimes at 1.10pm, and is followed at 2pm by the Any Answers? phone-in which gives listeners a chance to join in the debate by calling or emailing the Saturday host Anita Anand.
Any Questions? was first broadcast on Friday 12th October 1948; for the first eighteen months it was a West of England Home Service programme, run from Bristol. It moved to London in April 1950, but after 61 years in the capital, it returned to the production offices in Bristol in 2011.
Over the years, many figures of note have appeared as panellists, including most past and present leaders of the political parties. Every Prime Minister since Harold Wilson has appeared on Any Questions at some point in their political career! Panels also feature many distinguished figures from the worlds of the Arts, Science, Business, Law and other areas of public life.
Currently, around 1.59 million people listen to the programme each week, the majority of them hearing the Saturday lunchtime repeat.
Tickets via the Box Office and themowlem.com.

Winter gallery round-up

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From two of the biggest names in the visual arts to tiny arts centres, there is plenty of colour and excitement in local galleries over the next few months

A vessel by Adam Buick, in a dramatic setting – see his work at Messums West in Tisbury

Hauser & Wirth
At Durslade Farm, Bruton, is the Somerset location of one of the world’s biggest gallery groups, with galleries in New York, Los Angeles, Zurich, St Moritz, Gstaad, London, France, Spain, Monaco and Hong Kong. A family business with a global outlook, Hauser & Wirth was founded in 1992 in Zurich by Iwan Wirth, Manuela Wirth and Ursula Hauser. The firm represents more than 90 artists and estates.
As well as the gallery, showing world class exhibitions, there is a famous garden designed by Piet Oudolf, restaurant, farm shop and programme of events, talks and more.
The late winter and early spring programme begins with Present Tense, on until 28th April, spotlighting the next generation of artists living and working in the UK, from emerging to mid-career. Celebrating the breadth of creative talent and socially-engaged practices, the exhibition features work by 23 contemporary artists who are testing the boundaries of their mediums to address and confront notions of identity, consciousness, humanity and representation. Through their individual lens, each artist is responding to the cultural climate of the UK right now, depicting a range of lived experiences that coexist and connect within the rich fabric of the same location.

Let The Land Speak, by Ania Hobson, can be seen in Present Tense at Hauser & Wirth

Messums West
The rural wing of top London gallery Messums is hosted by the Tisbury tithe barn – one of the great architectural wonders of the south west and the country’s largest thatched building. The regular programme includes outstanding contemporary dance, exhibitions, workshops and talks.
Look out for the Messums Ceramics season, featuring Of The Earth – a group exhibition with thoughts and actions around making in clay. It runs from 2nd March to 29th April, and features artists Claudia Barreira, Charly Blackburn, Adam Buick (pictured opposite), Halima Cassell, William Cobbing, Bouke De Vries, Sara Howard and Nina Salsotto Cassina. Of The Earth reflects Messums’ special interest in active environmentalism. It explores the connections of raw clay and fired ceramic with the earth, the body and time, while considering what making means in relation to the environment. The raw material of clay is abundant and richly varied across the globe.

Some of the old stone buildings at Guggleton Farm Arts

Archaeology has revealed clay being formed into figurines, vessels and architecture as far back as 30,000 years ago. It has and continues to play a crucial role within the ceremonies and routines of our birth, life and death cycles – but the ceramic medium enacts a heavy toll on the earth, artistically and industrially, from mining clay and glaze elements to energy-consuming kiln firings.
Running over the same period, Contem’plate presents a historical narrative around the development of the plate from decorated functional objects to canvases for contemplation. There will also be a Ceramics Symposium on Saturday 6th April, bringing together artists and experts in ceramics to discuss their artistic practice and to talk about the ecological and environmental aspects of ceramics practices.

Empire of Light by Finn Campbell, in Dreamscapes at Sladers Yard, West Bay.

Shaftesbury Arts Centre
The gallery at the arts centre in the old covered market in Bell Street has a programme of regularly changing exhibitions, often with leading local artists and makers. Look out for the Spring Open (formerly Snowdrops in Art), from 7th to 24th February. From 6th to 19th March, photographer Justin Orwin has a joint exhibition with Mary Tambini, who shows the development of her art, from large paintings of swimmers from 25 years ago to prints, collages and 3D work. She has taught art and ceramics for many years.

Robin Rae’s Portland Bill Lighthouse in Dreamscapes at Sladers Yard, West Bay

The Gugg
Guggleton Gallery, now known as Guggleton Farm Arts (and affectionately as The Gugg), at Stalbridge, is a combination of gallery and workshops, in old farm buildings. There is a regularly changing programme of exhibitions as well as talks and workshops. Currently having a winter break, The Gugg has live music and a host of activities, including classes and workshops on everything from bonsai and bag-making to wet felting and wreath making. There are also Coffee Companions mornings, Knit and Natter sessions and a Men’s Shed club.

Barry Flanagan’s Large Left-Handed Drummer at the NewArtCentre at Roche Court Sculpture Park

Sladers Yard
Housed in a Georgian rope warehouse in West Bay, Sladers Yard is the base of the acclaimed furniture designer-maker Petter Southall, and shows work by many of the region’s leading artists, as well as major retrospectives. Gallery regulars include the sculptor and collagist Marzia Colonna, colourist Philip Sutton, ceramicists Adela Powell, Akiko Hirai and Yo Thom, and husband and wife painters Alex Lowry and Vanessa Gardiner.
The current show, running to 16th March, is Dreamscapes, an exhibition of surreal, strange, humorous and beautiful paintings by Finn Campbell-Notman (Sky Arts Landscape Artist of the Year 2023 – see image on page 69), Alfred Stockham, who spent seven years in the Royal Navy before becoming a full-time artist, and the late and much-missed Robin Rae, whose later landscapes have been compared with Edward Hopper’s paintings. There are also wood carvings by David West and Petter Southall’s furniture.

The Art Stable will be showing In The Beginning – early Brian Rice work from the 1950s

The Art Stable
Run by Kelly Ross in a former farm building at Gold Hill Organic Farm, Child Okeford, The Art Stable has an astonishing view of Hambledon Hill, and it’s no surprise that the huge chalk hill topped with an Iron Age fort, often features in work by gallery artists, such as Liz Somerville. Specialising in contemporary and 20th century British paintings, prints, and ceramics, The Art Stable has eight exhibitions a year of both established and emerging artists.
There are two spaces – one showing solo exhibitions and the other an ever-changing selection of pieces by gallery artists. The spring programme includes In The Beginning, early works from the 1950s by Brian Rice, from 10th February, to 9th March.

Don’t forget …
A little further afield, but always worth a visit (although it’s perhaps best enjoyed when the weather is a bit warmer and less stormy), the NewArtCentre at Roche Court Sculpture Park, near Winterslow just the other side of Salisbury, is one of the country’s top contemporary art venues. It has regular exhibitions, but the real attraction here is the astonishing collection of artwork in the grounds – Roche Court is one of the pioneers of British sculpture parks.
At any given time you may find works by Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Richard Long, Antony Gormley, Anthony Caro, Barry Flanagan … and more.
… and don’t forget the wonderful Elisabeth Frink exhibition at the Dorset Museum, which continues to April, and Georgia O’Keeffe drawings at Poole’s Lighthouse arts centre until 24th February.