Clayesmore is a terrific place to work with a warm, supportive and happy atmosphere and is located in a beautiful part of the Dorset countryside between the towns of Shaftesbury and Blandford Forum.
We are seeking an enthusiastic, cheerful, well organised individual with a warm and welcoming nature. They will be a true team player who is energetic, enjoys engaging with people, is confident and friendly and can deliver exceptional customer service.
The successful candidate will have experience of working in a busy confidential environment, have excellent communication skills and strong IT skills. A flexible approach to work is essential, along with an ability to work with tact, discretion and diplomacy at all times.
The benefits include a non-contributory pension scheme, 30 days annual leave, free meal each day, free parking, school fee remission (if applicable) and on-site coffee shop.
Closing date is 8.00am on Wednesday, 6 December 2023. Applications will be reviewed as they are submitted and an appointment may be made before the closing date, therefore an early application is encouraged.
Clayesmore is committed to the safeguarding and promotion of children’s and young people’s welfare and expects all staff and volunteers to share in this commitment.
Local growers and producers are celebrating homegrown produce, promoting sustainability and fostering a sense of community
Marcus Fergusson from Feltham’s Farm had a successful market selling his cheese as well as Lovington’s sourdough loaves
“We’re walked past the garden place before and we’ve seen the signs for honey – but now we’ve actually met the people.” This visitor to the new Horsington Community Market was delighted to discover the food and other goods produced in her village. Horsington Village Hall had a quiet buzz as people perused the stalls – quiet, that is, until one gentleman burst into a rousing chorus of Food Glorious Food! In fact, although there were only a few stalls, the breadth of produce was impressive – and plastic was noticeable by its absence. Crates of organic chard, fresh artichokes and coriander. Bags of apples and pears – yours for a donation. Freshly baked cakes and breakfast muffins looked tempting and that Horsington Honey was rapidly snapped up by those in the know – and first-time buyers. Stallholder Jeanne Mortarotti couldn’t hide her enthusiasm: ‘We’re hoping that, by starting this market, people will not only come and buy but also think about they can bring to sell. Perhaps they have too many beans or eggs or something else. It’s all about community. We worked with the PTA at the school – parents have made some of the cakes, and the children produced the apple and pear juice.’ The bottles of cloudy apple and pear juice – made from fruit from the school playground – were proudly displayed, the juice-making a valuable skill, learned at the same time as lessons in minimising food waste. ‘We have free coffees to entice people in,’ Jeanne continues. ‘We’re hoping to create a positive spirit, with 20 per cent of the takings going straight to the school. The children loved making the juices, they will be so excited to see they have sold.’
The market included bread from nearby Lovington Bakery, fresh award-winning cheeses from Feltham’s Farm, plants for sale from Blooming Wild Nursery – and even whole snuggly sheep fleeces. There was olive oil tasting from Baglio San Felice (Jeanne and her husband have an olive grove in Sicily), and villagers had a chance to order from the 2023 harvest. Although not grown in Horsington it was an excellent example of how the community is using their creativity to develop the market. Naturally, there was a lot of interest in talking first hand to the producers to find out how the oil was produced. The market is the brain-child of the energetic and creative Penny Nagle of Feltham’s Farm: ‘Many farmers and producers live and work locally. I felt it was a great opportunity to bring people together. It’s also about strengthening food resilience. Everything here is excess produce – we’re actively reducing waste and of course it encourages us all to shop local. Also, as food producers, we’re constantly working – this is a lovely opportunity for us to meet and network as well!’ If the market is successful, the team hopes to hold further events on the first Saturday of each month at Horsington Village Hall. Although it’s a small market, everyone is enthusiastic to make it work and it could become something special for this rural community.
The Horsington Community Market & Kitchen is held in St Margaret’s Hall on the first Saturday of the month 9.30 to 11am. Proper coffee and home made cakes available!
Sherborne will once again light up with a free Festive Shopping Day, including entertainers, a street market and a parade to the lighting of the Christmas tree
Sherborne will once again light up for Christmas with a free-entry Festive Shopping Day on Sunday 3rd December 2023 from 10am until 4pm.
The day will include:
· Church services in The Abbey
· Festive shops and stalls
· Street entertainers
· Sherborne Town Band
· Other music and choirs.
· Santa’s Grotto
· Children’s competition
· Dorset’s Farmers Market
· Christmas tree festival
· Parade and lighting of the tree at 4pm
Organised by volunteers from Sherborne’s Chamber of Trade and Commerce, the event offers a great family day out.
With stalls lining Cheap Street, Abbey Road, Half Moon Street and Digby Road, visitors can take the opportunity to browse more than 80 street market stalls of local makers, producers and traders, as well visiting the range of independent shops for which Sherborne is known. All of them will of course be offering some great ideas for Christmas gifts, treats and Christmas essentials, as well as countless places to enjoy something to eat or drink in the coffee shops, restaurants and pubs the town has to offer.
Cheap Street Church will have its traditional Christmas Tree display, with local groups and organisations each decorating a tree – it’s always worth popping in to see. And don’t forget to make a trip to see the award-winning Christmas display at Castle Gardens too (just five minutes drive from the town centre)
There will be free parking in the following car parks: Acreman Street, Coldharbour, Culverhayes (short stay and long stay), Culverhayes (commercial), Newland North, Old Market Yard and The Digby Hall.
Different voices on personal paths – Fanny Charles looks at the compatible art of collage artist Marzia Colonna and ceramic sculptor Fiamma Montagu
Mango Seller by Marzia Colonna
Marzia Colonna is an outstanding and multi-talented artist with an international reputation not only as a great sculptor but as one of this country’s finest collage artists. She has lived in Dorset for many years, latterly in Portesham and now in Lyme Regis, and exhibits regularly at Sladers Yard in West Bay and in the biennial Dorset Art Weeks. Most recently she has a joint show at Sladers Yard with her daughter, ceramic sculptor Fiamma Colonna Montagu.
The Lovers
Love at first sight Many years ago The Lovers, one of Marzia’s major bronzes, attracted widespread attention with its simplicity and its powerful but almost subliminal eroticism. It is the shape of two bodies, barely fleshed out, one single bronze, no heads, no arms, no legs, just a sinuous, arched male back and a matching female torso, leaning in, joined in a curve at the bottom, but not touching above. It is powerful and it moves you almost to tears. You want to stroke it and smooth it. Marzia’s sculptures have always had that effect – you need to touch them. A young couple came to Marzia’s studio during Dorset Art Week and fell in love with The Lovers – but when they heard the price, they knew they couldn’t afford it. Marzia was understandably surprised when, a couple of months later, the couple returned to buy the sculpture, if one of the limited edition was still available. It was. Marzia was curious as to how they could afford it, so shortly after their previous visit. She asked if they had won the lottery. They explained that they had sold the car. Living and working in London, they didn’t need it. They wanted The Lovers. Fast forward several years, and they returned to see her. They were now living in Switzerland, where the husband was a successful banker – and they had a car! They still owned and loved The Lovers.
Marzia Colonna with Japanese Maple. Image: Gay Pirrie-Weir
Sculpting with paper I was first aware of Marzia Colonna during the inaugural Dorset Art Week in 1992, when she telephoned to invite me to write about her exhibition in the magazine I edited. I was concerned it might be another derivative, commercial show from a pushy exhibitor. But sculptor Marzia, with her still pronounced accent and her beautiful house in Evershot, sounded a bit different. We went with interest one early afternoon in May, walked around the house and opened the door … Sometimes you go into an artist’s studio and you know you are going to have to be polite and make a hasty exit. Sometimes you fall in love. That’s what happened to us – beautiful, emotional sculptures in all phases of creation, little maquettes, large compelling bronzes, sketches, the general chaos of a working artist’s studio. They took our breath away, and that reaction has never changed.
St Aldhelm, a sculpture by Marzia in Sherborne Abbey
Starting young We have followed Marzia’s career and the development of her work over the decades – exhibitions at Sladers Yard and the Portland Gallery in Mayfair, photographs of commissions all over the world and art week visits to her various studios. And a gradual transition from sculpture to collage. Born in Pisa in 1951, Marzia showed her talent from early childhood. She was accepted at the age of 12 as a member of an experimental group of seven students at the city’s art school and went on to study sculpture at the prestigious Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence at the age of 17. She moved to England with her husband Robert Montagu and had her first solo exhibition in London in 1979. Since then she has exhibited regularly, locally and nationally.
World Enough And Time Portal by Fiamma Colonna
She has work in many private collections, sculpture parks and galleries and her commissions include several important works in the West Country – the statue of St Aldhelm in Sherborne Abbey, marking the 1300th anniversary of the founding of the abbey, a Crucifix in Salisbury Cathedral and the stunning aerial sculpture, Kite-Flyer, above Parchment Street in Winchester. When she first moved to Dorset, sculpture was her main work, but she has always made collages and gradually she was drawn more and more to capture the subtle light and colours of the Dorset landscape and coastline in this complex layered art form. Marzia describes collage-making as ‘sculpting with paper and painting at the same time.’ She compares the intricate medium, with its delicate painted torn and cut strips and fragments, to weaving. She says: ‘I try to replicate what I have experienced, not just visually in form and colour, but also in the impact created in my mind, the sensations experienced.’ Whatever the subject – landscape or still life – her collages are infinitely subtle, a tonal mix of layers of colour and texture that evoke the soul of her subject, in a way that words cannot explain.
Fiamma Colonna with Totems – Guardians of the Earth 1 and 2 and on stool are Fiamma’s Meditation Totems – The Wild Creative Sea and Elements of the Earth
A field of red The current Sladers Yard exhibition, Many Moons, puts Marzia’s beautiful collages alongside the powerful ceramic portals and totems made by her daughter Fiamma. They are a rare combination – a parent and child who have both achieved international success as artists, without compromise, while retaining a deep and genuine respect for each other’s work. It’s not easy being the son or daughter of a famous artist – there is an expectation that the child will follow in the parent’s footsteps … but it won’t be as good. On the other hand, there is a sense of disappointment if you want to do your own thing. Marzia and Fiamma have managed that difficult balance with elegance and skill. Each has an outstanding talent in her field, each loves and respects the other’s work, and each has a distinctive visual “voice.” Both have carried out large-scale commissions and both have work in important collections in the USA and in Europe.
Blood-Swept Lands and Seas of Red, part of the First World War centenary art installation at the Tower of London, produced by Fiamma
Fiamma’s extraordinary talent was evident in her ceramics classes at Bryanston School, but she chose to go to Oxford University, where she read history and English literature. From 2000 to 2008 she worked as a film director and producer for the BBC, ITV and Channel 4, making series based on historical biographies as well as filming fly-on-the-wall observational documentaries. She played a major part in one of the biggest and most moving of the First World War centenary projects – Blood-Swept Lands and Seas of Red at the Tower of London. This vast “field” of red poppies was created by artists Paul Cummins and Tom Piper but they needed someone to produce the project, to make nearly 900,000 ceramic poppies. Each poppy represented a British military fatality during the war. She jokes that when she realised the scale of the undertaking – she herself had only one kiln! – her hair stood up on end. But with help from the various ceramic factories she contacted, the required 888,246 ceramic poppies were made and began to fill the Tower moat. Some of the factories had full order books running two or more years into the future, but Fiamma’s powers of persuasion are clearly as great as her artistic talent! When the installation period came to an end, Fiamma became the creator of the Poppy Tour – with support from the Arts Council, and the Duffield and Sainsbury Foundations, sculptural aspects of the field of poppies travelled to 16 sites around the UK, finishing at the Imperial War Museum.
Sunflowers by the sea, Marzia Colonna
A world more magical Describing her work, including her totems and portals, she says: ‘Sculptures transform outside areas, which otherwise can look dull and uninteresting, into dynamic stage settings. I want to create timeless entrances. Mainly, I want to make the viewer feel more engaged, make the world feel less literal and more magical. The right combination of colour, scale and shape transforms the garden, atrium, entrance or courtyard into a stage set in which the viewer can walk “as if in a dream”.’ Sladers Yard gallery owner Anna Powell describes Many Moons as ‘a celebration of the years, of finding their personal paths, putting forward voices and ideas that are different but intriguingly compatible, with the pleasure of seeing each other’s work develop and often live side by side.’ The exhibition continues until 11th November.
n what is set to be a deliciously depraved take on the holiday season, Twisted Christmas is a selection of eight original micro-plays – indcluding tales of how to buy the perfect gift for your unloved ones, the dark side of Christmas cracker jokes, and why you should never turn your back on a pantomime dame… Influenced by cult classics such as Inside No.9, The Twilight Zone and Roald Dahl’s Tales of the Unexpected, Twisted Christmas promises a darkly comic evening of macabre mini plays all with a festive flavour!
Fri 1st December at Wimborne Allendale Centre
Saturday 2nd December Halstock Village Hall
Sunday 3rd December Stalbridge Hall Tickets (£12/£5) and details on artsreach.co.uk
Expert Karen Geary has your winter immunity essentials: how sleep, gut health, stress reduction and movement are bugging you
The kids are back at school, and the weather has started to chill off – all signs that winter bugs are back. Keeping our immune system strong enough to fend off those bugs is a complex interplay of genetics, age, prior exposure and stress levels. However, there are some things we can all do to bolster our defences and make it through the winter season.
Focus on gut health We know that 70 per cent of our immune system lives in the gut; the bacteria residing there is called our gut microbiome and it plays a massive role in our immune response. The broader the range of bacteria, the better that response. This is what we should all do: Eat prebiotic foods (these contain compounds that promote the growth of beneficial bacteria). Bananas, broccoli, cauliflower, leeks, onions, garlic, artichokes and oats are all good choices. Also eat probiotic foods (these contain live organisms that may improve the gut microbiome). They can be found in fermented foods such as kefir, yogurt, sauerkraut, kimchi, miso, and kombucha. Incorporate a diverse range of plants into your diet. Up to 30 different plants a week is ideal – but don’t panic, this includes herbs and spices, not just fruits and vegetables! Do what you can. Eat a balanced diet that includes a variety of fruits, vegetables, lean proteins and whole grains. A diverse and balanced diet can provide essential nutrients for a robust immune system. Reduce sugar and alcohol intake. Both weaken your immune system by depleting your anti-viral defences. If you’re someone who frequently catches a cold after drinking too much, that’s likely why! Stay hydrated. Simply drink plenty of water – dehydration can weaken our body’s defence mechanisms. Take vitamin D until next spring, as it is essential for optimal immune system function. Ideally, get tested before taking a supplement, but even the NHS recommends taking a vitamin D supplement during the winter months. A daily dosage of 1,000 to 2,000iu’s is generally enough to maintain levels for most people. You can find more information about vitamin D here, as well as details on how to get tested. Vitamin C, zinc and vitamin B12 also support the immune system. While these can be taken in supplements, if your diet is poor, no amount of supplementation will help.
Sleep Poor sleep habits can wreak havoc on our immune system. If you’re not consistently getting between 7 and 9 hours of sleep, you need to work on improving your sleep routine! Sleep habits are highly personal, and it’s a matter of trial and error to find the right routine (find some tips for better sleep in Karen’s Three Surprising Ways To Sleep Better, Apr 22)
Reducing stress If you’re one of those people who always comes down with a cold while on holiday, it’s a clear sign that you need to find ways to reduce stress. Easier said than done in today’s world, but taking 15 minutes a day just for yourself and doing something you love can make a significant difference. It could be enjoying a coffee with a friend, practising yoga, meditating, singing in the shower or simply pottering in the garden. If you are unlucky enough to become unwell, ensure you take enough time to recuperate fully. Rest and recovery is vital. Movement This doesn’t necessarily mean going to the gym three times a week or training for a half-marathon! Just a short walk each day can be massively helpful. Even better is ‘NEAT’ (non-exercise activity thermogenesis), which describes how we burn calories when we are NOT exercising – just from breathing, sleeping, eating and cleaning. Here are some ways to incorporate NEAT into your daily routine: Avoid sitting for more than an hour at a time. Get up and do something active, even if it means walking to the next room, going up the stairs or stepping outside for a few minutes of fresh air. In long meetings, consider standing at the back of the room to stretch the legs. For Zoom meetings, turn off your video and do a few sit-ups, jumping jacks or press-ups. They won’t miss you for a minute if there are others on the call. Track your steps. Download a steps app if you don’t have a tracker – you don’t need to reach 10,000 steps a day; just focus on improving from your current starting point and work up to 6,000. There is no silver bullet for keeping our immune system in prime condition, but with small changes to your eating habits, sleep routine, stress management and movement, every little bit helps. Everyone’s immune system is unique, and what works best for one person may not work for another. Tailor your approach to your specific needs and always consult a healthcare professional before you make changes if you have any underlying concerns about your health.
MP Chris Loder welcomes £78 billion support for households and Net Zero adjustments to ease rural transition worries
You may recall that this time last year, the government implemented the Energy Price Guarantee – a cap of £2,500 for the average household on dual-fuel tariffs, to tackle rising bills. A raft of measures was also introduced for businesses and off-grid households, including the Alternative Fuels Payment Scheme and the Energy Bills Support Scheme. Taken together, this package of measures provided – and continues to provide – an unprecedented level of financial support, worth more than £78 billion across 2022-23 and ‘23-24. This winter, we can cautiously expect a return to some degree of normality with our energy bills, as wholesale energy prices have dropped to their lowest level since October 2021. Nonetheless, for those households and businesses struggling to pay their energy bills, support is still available, and I’d be very happy to help should you need any advice or assistance.
Let’s talk the cons Aside from the immediate situation, there are also questions about our long-term energy usage. How resilient is our energy supply? What can be done to minimise the environmental impacts of energy production? How can we reach Net Zero by 2050 without burdening households and businesses in rural areas? The Prime Minister recently announced a new approach to delivering our Net Zero commitment, especially where it would have an unfair impact on rural people. Under the previous approach, new or replacement oil and gas boilers would have been banned from 2026 – a policy with which more than two-thirds of constituents who completed my Rural Energy Survey disagree. The reality is, the previous approach disproportionately affected rural families, businesses and those with low incomes. In my view, this was unjustifiable – especially during a cost-of-living crisis. Moreover, the preferred alternative – heat pumps – come with an average price tag of £10,000, a sum far beyond many household budgets. The wider debate has rarely included an understanding of the consequences. The language of Net Zero has always featured the pros, but very rarely the cons – that is why the Prime Minister has balanced and adjusted some of the immediate initiatives, while maintaining our commitment to Net Zero. I have been clear that the consequences for rural Britain were not adequately understood or balanced, which led to my scepticism with the former policy. In rural West Dorset, 51 per cent of households aren’t on the mains gas grid. Even with a government grant, it would simply not be practicable for these households and businesses to pay for an expensive new heating system. Under the new approach, off-grid households and businesses will only need to install a heat pump if they are intending to replace their current boiler after 2035 – nine years later than originally intended. In addition, one-fifth of all households will be exempt where it isn’t practical or affordable to do so. This is positive for those properties and premises in Sherborne and the wider Blackmore Vale, many of which are centuries old and do not have the right conditions for the installation of a new heat pump. For households and businesses that are able to and want to transition to a heat pump today, grants worth £7,500 – or 50 per cent of the cost of a heat pump – are available under the Boiler Upgrade Scheme. We must not lose sight that, per capita, carbon levels in the UK are at their lowest since the 1850s. The UK has also over-delivered on its targets, with the fastest reduction in emissions in the G7. We’ve had the fastest reduction in greenhouse gas emissions – down by nearly 50 per cent compared to 1990, while China has increased its emissions by 300 per cent. Taken together, this enables a more pragmatic and realistic route to be implemented in due course by 2050.
I’d be interested to know your views on this, and you can contact me on: [email protected]
Dorset Wildlife Trust is pleased to announce that two more beaver kits were born at the Dorset Beaver Project site this year. Two adult beavers were released into an enclosed area in 2021 – and since then, they have been hard at work creating their leaky dams across the site. In 2022 they expanded their family with three kits – the first to be born in Dorset for more than 400 years. Beavers are social animals that live in small family groups, typically consisting of a dominant breeding pair and two generations of young. So DWT knew there was the potential to see another litter of kits born this spring. We were thrilled to discover a second generation of beaver kits, with two kits recorded so far in 2023. This brings the resident family total to seven beavers (two adults and five kits). The birth of these new kits is an extremely positive sign, telling us the beavers are happy and thriving in their Dorset home. It took some time to confirm the total number of kits, as they spend their first month within the safety of the lodge – an underground chamber and burrow system – before beginning to emerge between dusk and dawn in early summer to explore the wetland surroundings with the rest of their family. Beaver kits are born with the ability to swim but they stay close to their parents as they are vulnerable to predators when young. For the first few weeks, kits feed on their mother’s breast milk, but within six weeks they begin eating leaves, aquatic plants and tree bark – of which there is plenty in their enclosure! Beavers are strict herbivores and never eat fish – a common misconception. The four-hectare enclosed site in west Dorset currently provides ample space for the family of seven, but the trust is working closely with expert beaver ecologists to plan the next steps of the project as the beaver family evolves, to ensure these influential mammals continue to thrive in the magnificent wetland they have created. We are extremely excited to monitor the progress of the beaver family – and we look forward to sharing updates on the adorable kits as they mature! Beavers are known as nature’s engineers and their activities – including wetland creation by building dams and creating new channels – have the potential to increase biodiversity, filter out pollution and slow water flow during storm events. To find out more, and perhaps ‘adopt a beaver’ for yourself or as a gift, visit dorsetwildlifetrust.org.uk.
Saturday 4th November FREE PARKING ALL DAY Car & Bike Enthusiasts Station Rd 9am – 12noon Meet the Trader at 1855 Sturminster Newton 10am – 12noon
Thursday 9th November Handmade for Christmas at The Workhouse Chapel daily until 24th December 9.30am – 4.30pm
Saturday 18th November Lantern Making Workshop at The Exchange
Friday 24th November Late Night Shopping Event – Various locations 5pm to 8pm 1855 Sturminster Newton One Year Celebration 5pm – 8pm Christmas Tree Festival at St. Mary’s Church 6pm – 8pm
Saturday 25th November Christmas tree light switch on FREE PARKING ALL DAY Anonymous Travelling Market at Market Place and Station Road 9am to 4pm Christmas Market at The Exchange 10am – 2pm Christmas Tree Festival at St. Mary’s Church 10am – 8pm Father Christmas at 1855 Sturminster Newton 11am – 3.30pm Bulgarian Dancing TBC 2pm SNHS Choir in the Market Place 4.15pm Father Christmas in the Railway Garden 4.30pm Lantern Parade from The Exchange 4.50pm Christmas Tree Light Switch On at 5pm Lantern Parade to the Church at 5.10pm Ninebarrow at The Exchange 7.30pm
Sunday 26th November Christmas Tree Festival at St. Mary’s Church 10am – 4pm
Wednesday 29th November S N & H Cricket Club Christmas Bingo at The Exchange. Doors open at 6pm
Thursday 30th November Living Spit – A Christmas Carol at The Exchange 7.30pm
Saturday 2nd December Small Business Saturday FREE PARKING ALL DAY
Car & Bike Enthusiasts Station Rd 9am – 12noon Meet the Trader at 1855 Sturminster Newton 10am – 12noon Christmas Market at The Exchange 10am – 2pm Father Christmas at 1855 Sturminster Newton 11am – 3pm Story time with Father Christmas at 1855 Sturminster Newton at 3pm Los Pacaminos at The Exchange at 8pm
Sunday 3rd December Advent Service at St. Mary’s Church 11am Wednesday 6th December Carols at Sturminster Mill at 6.30pm
Thursday 7th December Vale Pantry Bingo at the Exchange 6.30pm Friday 8th December SNADS Christmas Quiz at The Exchange 7pm start
Saturday 9th December FREE PARKING ALL DAY Car & Bike Enthusiasts Station Rd 9am – 12noon Food Tasting at 1855 Sturminster Newton 10am – 12noon Christmas Market at The Exchange 10am – 2pm Vale Pantry Christmas Bazaar at The Exchange 10am – 2pm Christmas Crafts at Sturminster Newton Library 10am – 12noon Father Christmas at 1855 Sturminster Newton 11am – 3pm Story time with Father Christmas at 1855 Sturminster Newton at 3pm Choral Society Concert at St Mary’s Church 7.30pm
Sunday 10th December Santa Stride at Trailway Entrance from 10am
Monday 11th December William Barnes School Choir at St. Mary’s Church 2pm
Friday 15th December Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra – Christmas Crackers at The Exchange at 7.30pm
Saturday 16th December FREE PARKING ALL DAY Christmas Market at The Exchange 10am – 2pm Christmas Code Club at Sturminster Newton Library 10am – 11am Sturminster Newton Orchestra Concert at The Exchange at 10.45am Father Christmas at 1855 Sturminster Newton 11am at 3pm Story time with Father Christmas at 1855 Sturminster Newton at 3pm Bare Jams at The Exchange Doors open at 7.30pm
Sunday 17th December Carol Service at St Mary’s Church at 4pm
Wednesday 20th December Christmas Memories at The Exchange at 2pm
Thursday 21st December Carols by Candlelight at Sturminster Christian Fellowship 7pm – followed by mince pies. FREE and open to all
Saturday 23rd December FREE PARKING ALL DAY Christmas Market at The Exchange 10am – 2pm One Night of SKA at The Exchange 7.30pm
Sunday 24th December Crib Service at St. Mary’s Church Morning Service at Sturminster Christian Fellowship 10.30am
Monday 25th December A Christmas Morning Service at Sturminster Christian Fellowship 10.30am
Monday 1st January Vintage Car Rally Cars meet from 9am, rally starts at 11am