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From hedges to hay

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From kitchen classrooms to hedge health: farmer George Hosford dives into hedge surveying for new farming incentives, and the latest school visit

The young stock are out grazing cover crops. There’s lots of leaf and a good many roots, and they get a fresh hectare every day, so they don’t over-tread the ground

At the end of last year, a few members of our farm cluster group met at Hammoon to learn how to survey hedges. Led by hedge expert John Calder from Dorset Climate Action Network’s Great Big Dorset Hedge Project, we explored a few kilometres of hedges around Adam’s farm. They were in pretty good condition, mostly made up of a healthy mixture of species. There were plenty of trees and we even found hops, which are rare in Dorset. The prime purpose of our visit was to learn what we needed to do in order to take advantage of the hedgerow offer, part of the new Sustainable Farming Incentive standards (SFI). For this, we don’t even have to record the species, but as John pointed out, it can be informative. An old rule of thumb is that the number of tree and shrub species in a 100ft (30 metre) length of hedge can indicate its age, with one species for every 100 years. A single-species hedge is likely to be less than 100 years old while a 1,000 year old hedge is likely to contain ten to 12 species.
However, this formula must be used with caution.

The cows are indoors for winter, munching on hay made from the farm’s wild flower margins

For example, it’s anyone’s guess how this is supposed to work if we are surveying our own new hedges, planted last winter, where we were planting up to 10 species within 30m.
For the purposes of SFI, we simply have to assess each stretch of hedge around a field according to the Adams formula, which will help us to decide the most suitable management for the hedge in the future, whether trimming, laying, coppicing, gapping up etc.
There are bonuses available if you have a tree per 100m of hedge. These can be existing, newly planted, or a suitable hedge plant selected and marked to not be trimmed and allowed to grow up.
John and his team have been helping many farmers across Dorset to learn about this, and to get their hedges into SFI. John has put huge amounts of energy into the development of the SFI hedgerow standards, with numerous messages and presentations to DEFRA, RPA etc, and one enduring sadness is the absence of any incentive in SFI to actually plant new hedge. We very much hope this will materialise in the next chapter of releases. For more information see the Great Big Dorset Hedge project here.

Daisy the ewe is known for her patience with school visits – even after all the toast has been eaten

Banished empties
The cows are indoors for winter; the plumper ones are munching on hay made from our wild flower margins, the thinner ones are on the lovely, soft, sweet meadow hay – much more digestible with less roughage. Pregnancy diagnosis detected six empty out of 70, which is a bit higher than it should be. The three empties we have kept have been banished to the steep banks of the valley – no nice warm shed for them!
The young stock are in two groups grazing cover crops. There’s lots of leaf to eat and a good many roots this year – thanks to the damp autumn, daikon radish and turnips abound. They get a fresh hectare every day, so they don’t over-tread the ground, and leave plenty of green matter in place to grow on in the milder periods.

Reggie has done an outstanding job with his ewes

A new kitchen classroom
December saw the inaugural session in our new kitchen classroom. A group of willing participants from Durweston school arrived ready to try out the programme that our friendly teacher Penny had worked out. The plan was for the children, with careful guidance, to prepare and cook a simple vegetable soup, including fresh farm-squeezed rapeseed oil, field-grown potatoes and onions from the garden. They would also be shaping and baking rolls made with 50 per cent homegrown wheat flour, having first seen the wheat being ground into flour. And then, if successful, taste the result. Penny brought along dough she had prepared the day before, using some of our wildfarmed wheat flour, which the children made into a variety of shapes. The bread was very tasty, and considerably more popular than the soup (although I hasten to add that it too was very tasty)! In between the cookery, the children painted farm themed pictures and did a cutting and sticking exercise to help them realise which foods originate locally and which come from overseas.
Pictured above is Daisy the sheep on the same school visit. She excelled herself on the last school farm visit of the year – she has such patience and gentle endurance. Everyone wants to stroke her, and she stays on long after all the toast has been eaten. Hands-on experience is an important element of school visits, even in mid-winter. Some of the ewes are wonderful with the children (much more tolerant than with adults!).
On the left is Reggie, who was at work over Christmas. All the ewes had a red rump – we changed his raddle crayon, and none turned blue. Let’s keep it that way and have a nice compact lambing period in May.

Making your Valentine’s Day special

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Employ My Ability offers vocational training for students with learning disabilities and special educational needs and disabilities. One of their students, Maddie Walters, spent her work experience with us, and now writes a regular column – Ed

It’s February, which means Valentine’s Day is nearly here! Since Valentine’s Day is all about loving and giving and sharing love, in this month’s article I thought I would share with you some homemade decor and gift ideas to for your Valentine on the 14th.
If you are having a Valentine’s Day party a heart garland is an easy Valentine’s Day decoration to make. This simple pipe-cleaner garland is so sweet and not hard at all to make.
One of the easiest ideas you can make is a simple hanging heart decoration – hang it anywhere!

Easy treats
Want a romantic sweet treat that is simple to make? Chocolate-dipped strawberries are perfect: easy to make, pretty to look at and oh so yummy to eat!

Hanging Heart Craft
Pink String
Pink or patterned paper in Valentine colours, cut into heart shapes of various sizes
Pink gems optional
This craft is really easy because all you have to do is cut five or six hearts from some love-themed paper and punch a hole in the top and the bottom of each heart. Thread the hearts through with pink or red string, hang it up and feel the love!

Galentines
Why not spend Valentine’s Day with your best friends? Watching rom com movies or curling on the sofa eating chocolates is always great, but you can celebrate the BFF love and make simple bracelets! It’s really easy and fun to share the making and the giving both. Bracelets can be customised in so many different ways and styles – not just for Valentine’s Day but any occasion.

If craft is not your forte, then maybe look for something special to buy instead. These sweet little charms could be perfect for loved ones and best friends (whispers my personal favourite is the ‘little bit of love’ charm) so you can share the love all year round.
I hope you enjoy your Valentines Day, however you choose to celebrate it! Maddie.

Sponsored by Wessex Internet

Unseen, unsung, unjust: carers need more help

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should be something to rejoice about , but while caring is love, it also needs effort – veering towards work – and it is mostly unpaid. Many people in North Dorset, as everywhere in the UK, provide unpaid care. At the 2021 census there were approximately 5,500 people providing unpaid care in North Dorset. That’s roughly one in 14 of us. Around 2,400 of us in North Dorset were caring for others, unpaid, for more than 50 hours per week. Consider then the additional numbers of people who are also contending with caring, unpaid, for people with diseases like dementia. A fellow constituent got in touch just last week to share their pain and frustration at the lack of support available to help care for his wife’s increasing needs. Liberal Democrats support increasing the Carer’s Allowance and making respite breaks a statutory right for unpaid carers to ensure they receive the support they need. But this is only part of the answer to a bigger challenge.
For years, unpaid care has been one part of the wider failure to come up with a solution for social care. The Dilnot Report concluded in 2011 that the adult social care system was not fit for purpose and required more funding, and if media plaudits are the metric of success then it did a great job. But that report ran into the sand as the coalition government gave way to the current government in 2015. The sorry observation is that all politicians have an idea about what could be done to solve the problem. It’s just that none can work out how to get re-elected when they’ve done it – just ask Teresa May.
Local councils that pay for social care are starved of cash, which is taking social care backwards. So, the longer we wait, the worse it will get and the unjust situation we have now will become a broader and much more serious economic problem. Our population is ageing, with proportionately fewer workers over time paying tax to support the current care system. So families will inevitably pick up the burden by increasing unpaid care. This will naturally take more people out of the workforce, further reducing the tax being paid, in a predictable vicious circle. It has to be said that this caring burden also falls unequally on women.
Our government has promised everything and achieved nothing for care and carers in England. They say this is a priority, but there is no will and no plan. England is 20 years behind others in the UK. Scotland has a working system that provides means-tested free personal care for over-65s who need it. This law was proposed by Scottish Liberal Democrats and passed in July 2002. In Scotland you don’t have to sell your house before you can have care. Deferred Payment Agreements avoid that prospect. Liberal Democrats prefer the Scottish solution for England too, and it is in our manifesto.
Germany and the Netherlands began solving this problem more than a generation ago, through compulsory social care insurance for all adults. Other solutions are available and while we should learn from others, let’s actually decide and act.
Today, people are enslaved by the way we fail to deal with social care in England – and it could happen to any of us. Liberal Democrats do have the will and we do have a plan to restore people’s freedom and confidence, to enable people to decide and afford what they need, rather than soldier on unseen, unsung and unvalued.
Gary Jackson
North Dorset Liberal Democrats

Wanted – one honest politician

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They say there’s no such thing as an honest politician, but that’s an over-simplification. Some politicians are genuinely driven to do their absolute best for all their constituents, particularly the less fortunate ones, and often do so at great personal cost to their private lives. Unfortunately there are others all too willing to accept donations or favours from corporate businesses, and in return they lobby government on behalf of those businesses.
The gambling industry, for example, uses this tactic to influence politicians, as do the fossil fuel companies.
Polls show that the majority of UK citizens now accept the need for urgent environmental action. The fossil fuel industry has therefore changed tack, and now promotes Climate Delay with the message: ‘Yes, of course the climate is changing, but it’s fine. We still have time, so we can all relax and carry on burning fossil fuels for a while yet’.
It’s what we all want to hear, that things aren’t as bad as they seem and that we don’t have to change our lifestyles too much.
Seductive. And destructive.
Try telling the people whose homes and businesses have already been flooded twice this winter that we don’t have to take urgent action.

Don’t tell us
Moving on to New Year resolutions, here’s one I wish all politicians would adopt – Tell the Truth.
Don’t tell us you’re committed to protecting the environment, and then abandon it as ‘green crap’. Don’t tell us you’ve an ‘oven-ready’ Brexit deal, when you haven’t. Don’t tell us you’re building 40 new hospitals, when you aren’t. Don’t tell us that Rwanda is safe to send asylum seekers to, while granting asylum to Rwandans fleeing persecution from their own government. Don’t tell us you’re on track to reach net zero by 2050, when your Climate Change Committee states that you are not. Don’t tell us more drilling in the North Sea will ensure the UK’s energy supply, when most of the oil and gas will be sold on the global market. Don’t tell us the drop in inflation is thanks to your policies, when the real cause is a global drop in prices.
Now, more than ever, we need honest politicians.
Ken Huggins
North Dorset Green Party

Combat the winter blues

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From SAD lamps to simple self-care, Dorset Mind ambassador Lucy Lewis shares some tips for thriving during winter’s gloom

As the days get colder and darker, it is common to notice similar changes in our own mood and wellbeing – the decrease in daylight hours and the arrival of gloomier weather can have a significant impact on our mental health. It’s a phenomenon commonly referred to as the ‘winter blues’ or even Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) in more significant cases. But there are some strategies that may help you to manage your mental health during the winter months when the weather becomes melancholy.

Make the most of the daylight
One of the primary reasons for winter blues is the reduced exposure to natural daylight. Lack of sunlight can disrupt our circadian rhythm and decrease the production of serotonin, a neurotransmitter that plays a crucial role in mood regulation. This can in turn lead to sleep issues, reduced energy and low mood. To combat this:
Open your curtains and blinds during the day to let in as much natural light as possible and try to sit near a window when you can
Maybe invest in a light therapy box, or ‘SAD lamp’, which mimics natural sunlight and can help improve your mood and energy levels
Spend time outdoors, even on cold and overcast days. Just a short walk during daylight hours can make a significant difference.

Maintain a consistent routine
The winter months can disrupt our daily routines – it feels easier to stay in bed longer, skip exercise and avoid social activities. However, maintaining a consistent routine can be a powerful tool to manage your mental health. To combat this:
Set a regular sleep schedule to ensure you’re getting enough rest.
Incorporate physical activity into your routine, even if it just means doing some indoor exercises
Make plans with friends or family to stay socially engaged, even if it’s just for a video chat.

Practise self-care
Self-care is essential all year round, but it becomes even more crucial during the winter when our mental health may be challenged.
Incorporate it into your daily routine:
Engage in activities that bring you joy – perhaps reading, painting or playing music.
Practise relaxation techniques like deep breathing, meditation or yoga.
Ensure you’re getting enough rest to recharge your mind and body.
Remember that self-care is not a waste of time; it is productive and important and can help you maintain both your physical and mental health.

Stay mindful of your diet
Comfort food becomes far more appealing during the winter months, but a poor diet can negatively affect your mental health. Opt for a balanced diet:

  • Include plenty of fruits, vegetables and whole grains in your meals.
  • Limit your consumption of caffeine and alcohol – they can exacerbate mood swings.
  • Stay hydrated by drinking enough water throughout the day.
  • Consider vitamin D supplements if you are not getting enough daylight (discuss with appropriate medical professional first).

Seek professional help
If you find that your winter blues are becoming overwhelming and affecting your daily life, don’t hesitate to seek professional help. Talk to your GP if your feel that your daily functioning is being affected by your low mood.

Support for you:

  • Visit dorsetmind.uk for local mental health support and ways to keep mentally healthy
  • Call Samaritans on 116 123 for free 24/7 emotional support
  • Call Dorset’s mental health helpline Connection for support on NHS 111
  • Call 999 if someone is in immediate danger

When funerals are the family business

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Tracie Beardsley meets a fourth-generation funeral director and discovers what it’s like to have a job that can be a conversation starter – or fast finisher!

Formal attire isn’t always wanted – Richard has been requested to dress down in shorts and a t-shirt – All images: Courtenay Hitchcock

In 1897, in the small village of Broadwindsor, carpenters and gatemakers Arthur and Ernie Wakely turned their skills to making coffins.
Arthur’s son Jack helped his father and uncle in the family business and, with an entrepreneurial eye, he purchased a small funeral business in Bridport. Fast forward more than 120 years and that funeral business has burgeoned into 14 offices covering an area from Sidmouth to Wincanton.
Jack’s grandson, Richard Wakely, is the fourth-generation funeral director to join A. J. Wakely & Sons. Richard says: ‘It wasn’t my plan to come into the family business. My dad, Clive, a director in the firm, never pushed me or my three sisters. It wasn’t like TV’s Succession! Dad wanted it to be a natural progression. This is more of a vocation than an actual job. You’ve got to want to do it.’

Richard Wakely, the fourth generation funeral director. Image: Courtenay Hitchcock


After leaving school, Richard worked in the Philippines for the charity Mercy in Action. ‘That experience was life-changing for me,’ he says. ‘I grew up so much in three years.’
Working in the charity’s homes for vulnerable children in the Philippines, Richard ran a summer programme for street kids and a drop-in centre for orphans. ‘We’d feed them and give them a basic education.’
A keen sportsman, Richard spent time going into the community and playing basketball with the kids. This success led him to run an after-school programme as a full-time job. ‘A lot of the kids had no electricity in the evening and were doing their homework by candlelight. Opening the day centre at night gave them a safe space to study.’

Richard Wakely outside the Sherborne office
All images: Courtenay Hitchcock

We’ll find a way
Returning home, a casual chat while walking along the beach with his dad led to him joining the family business aged 21. Richard began learning the ropes as a general employee. He worked on the fixtures and fittings of coffins, having inherited his great grandfathers’ craft skills, and he shadowed experienced funeral director Matthew Paterson.
Richard juggled working with studying for his funeral director’s diploma. ‘Incredibly, you don’t legally need any qualifications to be a funeral director. It’s scary to think anyone can set up – without the right facilities, knowledge, or empathy that this work requires. Hopefully regulations will be coming in soon.’
After nine years, Richard now runs two of the Wakely offices. ‘Our motto is: “we will say yes and then work out how to do it”!
If a family wants it done and it’s legal, we’ll find a way.’
This includes unusual requests – Richard researched if a lady could keep her husband’s skeleton hanging in her office (she couldn’t).
He’s also been asked to dress down in shorts and a t-shirt rather than the usual funeral attire of tailcoated suit.
‘The taboo of talking about death has changed. People are keener to organise their own funeral and take the burden off loved ones. People want a personal touch. We now have a Land Rover Defender converted into a hearse for funerals on private land. Sometimes it’s just in a field with hay bales for the mourners.’
What is the reaction when Richard says what he does for a living? ‘I always say it’s either a conversation starter or finisher. Some people are surprised and hesitant, not wanting to know more. Others ask questions – lots of them!’

‘We will say yes and then work out how to do it – if a family wants it done and it’s legal, we’ll find a way.’
A. J. Wakely & Sons’ Landy hearse

Tough days
Richard’s faith helps him handle the emotions of dealing with death every day. ‘Praying through things really helps. My wife Emily is also a fantastic support. And as soon as I walk through the door, I’m bowled over by two young children and a baby. Work goes to one side for family time and that helps a lot.’
Organising a funeral for a baby or child is the toughest part of his job. ‘You feel for the parents.
‘Also, I’m always struck by non-attended funerals, where the deceased has outlived all friends and relations so there are no mourners. You become the congregation, and when you hear about their incredible lives, it’s very moving. I remember one chap who had been a spy gathering intel during the Second World War. We’re coming to the end of that generation. Such heroic stories will be buried forever – I’m very privileged to hear some of them.’

David, Simon, Clive and Jack Wakely at the opening of the Sherborne office in 1999

Quick fire questions:

Top dinner party guests?
My rugby heroes, Jonny Wilkinson and Dan Carter. Jesus would be cool … and my great grandfather, so I could thank him for starting the business!

Book by your bedside?
Imagine Heaven by John Burke

The balance of national well-being

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Addressing the complex tapestry of security, Simon Hoare MP discusses defence, environmental threats, and energy independence as key areas

Simon Hoare MP
Simon Hoare MP

While there are always many issues that generate heated debate among friends and family (and sometimes between Member of Parliament and constituent … [although rarely in North Dorset, naturally!]) I believe that one thing that unites most people is the issue of security. Like many words, security manifests itself in many ways. It is a good catch-all word and there are various issues of security that I think will be important both this year and in the future.

At home
The first duty of government is the security of the country – it is a long established rule. There is little point in having good public services etc if one cannot defend them.
We live in an increasingly insecure world – the Middle East and Ukraine underscore that, along with a myriad of international rows, wars and skirmishes. Our policies on defence are important to provide both that security umbrella at home and also the opportunity to act overseas, alone or in concert with others, to defend our interests, values – and mankind.

The environment
Increasingly, environmental security is pivotal. Clean air and clean water are the obvious ones, but the insecurity occasioned by climate change is now as much a security issue as it is an environmental issue. The potential for our fellow humans to be forced to flee uninhabitable portions of the planet creates, in great part, the problems and tensions caused across Europe by people fleeing their homelands.
As above, global insecurity and the displacement of people as a result of warfare and territorial struggle add to this problem.

Our food
Disruption to international trade in the Red Sea illustrates once again the importance of food security. Of course there is a place for rewilding and similar projects, but these should be focussed on land which is unusable for food production. A nation which cannot feed itself is indeed too vulnerable. So we must focus on sustainable, environmentally-neutral farming and food production. We cannot afford not to do so.

Our energy
Russia’s unwarranted invasion of Ukraine highlighted our high risk and fragile reliance on foreign energy sources. We cannot afford, financially or morally, to be in a position where we rely upon overseas fuels, even when they have to be sourced from an enemy and where the purchase of the oil or gas adds to the aggressor’s war chest. That is why I have consistently supported the drive towards carbon neutral, UK-generated energy, as well as accepting the realism that, as industry and domestic life transition to Net Zero, oil and gas will continue to be required. Given that fact, I would prefer it to be from low-transport miles UK sources which also protects UK jobs. For some it is an uncomfortable balancing act. Not for me.
Pragmatic realism has always been my hallmark.

Our economy
Economic security at home, for all of us, is the most immediate pressure. The falling rate of inflation and the easing of interest rates help us all to feel a little more secure. The reduction in National Insurance contributions (hitting pay packets even as I type) is a help, as is the promise of tax reductions in the Budget. These changes, if any, will not be delivered as a result of ideological purity but with the understanding that household financial security is important and only where reductions can be afforded sustainably.
Our country, and the entire world, has come through incredibly choppy waters. I believe we will not only have weathered those storms but come out stronger and more resilient as a result. We will keep the elements of security to the forefront of all policies. I owe that to you and I will play my part in delivering on that agenda for all in North Dorset.

All you can eat, build-your-own kids pancake party!

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Thyme after Time Cafe in Stalbridge has announced a new Pancake Day Event – kids can come and enjoy unlimited pancakes form the Build Your Own Pancake buffet!
The cafe will be going flip-pancake-tastic for one day only, making their delicious pancakes using Silverthorne Farm free range eggs and the whole milk from just down the road at Woodbridge Farm.
Choose from a delicious selection of pancake toppings – lemon, sugar, nutella, ice cream, marshmallows, banana, chocolate buttons, sauces, syrups, cream and more! It’s an unlimited return buffet – the only rule is that you must have finished what was on your plate before you return (because no one likes food waste!). The price includes unlimited drinks, too: choose from delicious hot chocolate, cold milk, squash or water.
And there will also be a pancake day-themed colouring table to keep busy between pancakes!
The Pancake Party for children (and their adults) is on Tuesday 13th Feb, 9 to11.45am, cost is £6 per child or £10 for two kids (there will also be an Adult pancake day menu available!)
Booking is advisable as there are limited spaces available – simply call 01963 362202 Monday to Saturday between 7.30am to 2pm

Wherefore the ‘black’ in Blackmore Vale?

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Delving into Blackmore Vale’s past, Richard Miles reflects on its changing landscapes, from Thomas Hardy’s era to the impact of modern lighting

The view from the ridge above Minterne Park – Thomas Hardy’s chauffeur drove Hardy to this spot so that he could delight in the view of his ‘Vale of the little dairies’
Image: Richard Miles

If you search the origin of the name ‘Blackmore’ or ‘Blackmoor’ in Google, you will be told that it is derived from the Old English (OE) word “bloec” meaning “black, dark”, and “mor”, meaning “hill”. But beware of Google as it often oversimplifies things. The word ‘mor’ in Anglo-Saxon times also referred to a ‘morass’ or ‘swamp’ and could mean an area of raised ground liable to hold water: one that would be difficult to grow arable crops on, for instance. As to the ‘black’ part of the name, this was written as ‘blæc’ or ‘blÆc’ and could mean ‘ink’, the colour black, or dark. A variant of this is the OE feminine noun ‘blæcce’ meaning black matter.
My feeling is that anyone viewing Blackmore Vale from one of the surrounding hills, such as from the Dorset Downs to the south more than a thousand years ago, would have seen predominantly forest, which, during most of the year (apart from high summer), would endow it with a more-or-less dark, shadowed appearance.

The Hardy Way
Some 15 years ago while walking along the elevated ridge above Minterne Park in the direction of Dogbury Hill in search of a picnic place, I noticed that at one particular place you can see clearly both sides of the ridge: to the left (south-west) the upper reaches of the Cerne Valley near Minterne Magna, whereas over to the right a splendid panorama unfolded of the Blackmore Vale. So, drawn by the view, we turned right through the gate and walked a little way down the slope (OS map reference
ST 6684 0456) encountering two ladies who had just finished picnicking at that very place. In conversation, we discovered that one of them was a granddaughter of Thomas Hardy’s chauffeur. She said that during the 1920s he occasionally drove Hardy along the track to that same spot so that he could delight in the wondrous view of his ‘Vale of the little dairies.’
The track above this spot has recently been named the ‘Hardy Way’.
A century has now passed since Hardy surveyed the scene that he wrote about in Tess of the D’Urbevilles. What would Hardy make of the Vale nowadays? I would like to think that its name is still very appropriate, but I fear that nothing remains the same and the little smallholdings have largely disappeared, as has much of the woodland, transformed by larger scale farming methods over the intervening years.
Another change has been the march of technology – and in my role as dark skies adviser to Dorset CPRE, I have seen a widespread increase in lighting across the Vale. Don’t get me wrong, I am not against lighting per se. But we need the right type of lighting, in the right places, pointing the right way and switched on at the right times.
Dorset does have a good deal of ‘full cutoff’ street lighting (designed to direct the light downward and outward, rather than upwards towards the sky), and those bright sodium lights – some of which used to illuminate the dual carriageway between Sherborne and Yeovil – have thankfully now been replaced. But the countryside is also threatened by ever more development, as well as the introduction of more and higher-intensity LED lighting and the like.

Modern car headlights
One little-known fact about modern lighting is the trend towards ‘white’ light. No doubt you will have noticed those particularly dazzling headlights in new cars. The manufacturers claim they provide improvements in safety for the driver and add a stylishness to the look of the vehicle.
However, has anyone considered the problems they create for other road users and wildlife? To make the light appear white requires adding blue light to the spectrum they emit, but unfortunately ‘blue light’ is invariably ‘bad light’! One reason is that scattered light causes glare, and the amount that is scattered is much greater at the blue end of the spectrum. Technically speaking, scattering increases as the fourth power of the frequency, so the bluest light we see scatters about 16 times worse than red light of half the frequency. High-intensity discharge (HID) headlights are the worst offenders as they are both four times brighter than the standard yellow halogen light but they also have this nasty blue tint.
As well as wet weather and wet windscreens enhancing their glare, as we get older our vision also suffers from scattering of light inside the eye – blue light especially. Yellow-tinted driving spectacles work well, I’m told.
Although white headlights were first permitted as early as 1993, I was astounded to discover that in 2019, the EU mandated the use of ONLY white lights in main and dipped-beam headlights in new vehicles – and that these headlights emit a higher proportion of blue light than is present in daylight. One small relief – since Brexit, the UK has not had to adopt this rather draconian change and yellow headlights are still permitted here!
But what about the effect of unnatural levels of blue light on our wildlife and human health? That is a whole new story that has yet to be fully understood. My concern is that the march of technology will lead to the ever-increasing use of HID and LED lighting, to our own detriment, and that with increased light pollution (especially by blue light) across this part of Dorset, we will lose even more of the ‘black’ of Blackmore Vale!