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Wimborne Militia in Facebook furore

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A historical re-enactment society in Dorset made national news when its Facebook page was suspended over suspected far-right links.

The Wimborne Militia is an historical re-enactment group that brings to life the history of the Dorset Militia circa 1685. This community group is seen at many events throughout Wimborne Minster, sporting their bright red uniforms and firing their muskets.

Social media giants Facebook took down the militia’s page as well as suspending five of its group administrator’s personal accounts after an algorithm targeted them twice in a month.  With the rising civil unrest in America, it’s believed this small and extremely friendly group was mistaken for a US far-right militia.

It was only when regional news BBC South Today ran the story, which was also picked up by national news networks, Facebook withdrew the ban and reinstated the page and personal accounts of the Militia members.

A Wimborne Militia spokesperson wrote on the now fully-functioning Facebook page The Wimborne Militia | Facebook : “A huge heartfelt thank you to the team at BBC South Today who against all odds have managed to get our personal accounts reinstated.

“It may seem trivial to some, but the bigger picture is how these social media giants control our personal data with impunity. Had it not been for a media giant like the BBC championing our cause our voices would never be heard.”

Chris Brown, 64, who heads up Wimborne Militia said: “We’re not about open rebellion. We’re about peace and community understanding and a group of eccentrics that like to dress up in fancy clothes! “

Wimborne Militia are pleased to be back on social media and looking forward to hosting events such as spoon-whittling competitions – clearly dangerous to democracy!

By: Tracie Beardsley

Your Mental Health Matters according to Dorset Mind

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Not surprisingly, almost half of the UK’s population have felt anxious or worried recently, which increases to 64% in people with pre-existing mental health conditions. Loneliness and isolation of lockdown has largely contributed to this and local charity Dorset Mind believe that they have a range of support that can help people through this challenging time… But this requires extensive funding.

Through the pandemic, Dorset Mind has continued to support Dorset Residents who are vulnerable or at risk of developing mental health illness because of COVID-19. Delivery of their face-to-face support moved online or by phone – a move that saw referrals for support increase by more than 80%.

Dorset Mind’s Adult Services offer 1-2-1 and group support and interventions countywide. Support includes: active monitoring (CBT style coaching), counselling, mentoring, befriending, peer-based groups and alternative social prescriptions. These all aim to empower people to gain confidence and improve their wellbeing.

“…during the COVID-19 lockdown the online meetings have proved vital to my mental wellbeing as I live alone…” 

These services are available to everyone, but the charity also offers targeted support to minorities and communities at risk – who face considerable stigma – such as BAME and LGBT+, people who live with eating disorders, carers and young people. 

Young people need additional support to stop mental health conditions worsening during lockdowns. Early intervention is key. The charity works closely with schools countywide under their ‘Dorset Mind Your Head’ umbrella to help students, staff and parents. Support includes 1-2-1 counselling, a wellbeing check-in service and wellbeing support groups. 

“I’ve really missed being at school because I don’t get to see my friends… I’m anxious about going back but I have a really nice person from Dorset Mind I talk to every week about how I feel, and it helps me think that I’m going to be OK.”  

Dorset Mind’s workplace wellbeing training programmes supports employees and employers of local businesses – with content tailored for home working and the current climate. Their expert training team is due to launch Mental Health First Aid Training Courses at the beginning of March. This internationally recognised course perfectly compliments their repertoire of mental health training courses, including ‘Stress, Anxiety and Burnout’ and ‘Courageous Conversations.’

Dorset Mind is an affiliate of the Mind network, but remains independent and responsible for their funding. All donations made to them enable the charity to provide support for people in Dorset’s better mental health. 

– Make a donation to Dorset Mind’s vital work by textingDORSETMIND3’ to 70460 to donate £3.
– Alternatively, find out more about the charity or volunteer for them by visiting their website
dorsetmind.uk.  

Bombus Terrestris

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I used to think of February as a bit of an ‘empty’ month… the month between January and March, Winter and Spring, when nothing really happened. How wrong I was. February is in fact a month full of hope and promise. Life is stirring beneath and above the ground, buds are tentatively coming into leaf, Robins are pairing up and checking out nesting sites, and the evenings are becoming noticeably lighter. The sense of anticipation is almost tangible.

February also happens to be the month when enormous queen bumblebees begin to emerge from their long winter sleep. Although there are one or two species which have recently begun to raise broods over the winter, most of our 24 species of UK bumblebees have been hibernating, deep beneath the soil, since last Autumn.
  
With bumblebees, it is only the brand new (mated) queens, produced towards the end of the colony’s lifecycle, that hibernate beneath the ground and survive the winter. Apart from those occasional winter active colonies I mentioned in the last paragraph, last year’s males, the colony’s founding queen, and all her female workers will have died out long before winter set in. So, if you happen upon an ENORMOUS bumblebee at this time of year, she will be one of last year’s new queens just emerged from hibernation – most likely a Buff-tailed bumblebee (Bombus terrestris), which are one of the first species to appear in the spring.

Our newly emerged queen urgently needs to forage for nectar to build up her strength after her long winter sleep… and for pollen, to develop her ovaries.  Hopefully she will have chosen a hibernation site close to a plentiful supply of winter flowering plants such as winter-flowering heathers, honeysuckle and clematis, gorse, crocus, dead-nettles or pussy willow. However, if the sun has tricked her into emerging too early, and there is nothing for her to feed upon, she will starve. This is why these and other early flowering plants are literally life savers for our early rising pollinators. Other early spring favourites include hellebores, snowdrops, green alkanet and lungwort.

The ground is still too cold and hard to plant out right now, but if you are able to visit a garden centre to purchase any of the above plants, please do! They will be just as attractive to our hungry spring pollinators in their pots, whilst you wait for the soil to heat up to plant them out.

by Brigit Strawbridge
http://beestrawbridge.blogspot.com
Twitter: @B_Strawbridge

Batcombe & Chetnole great views | 11.1 miles

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Every month in the The BV we publish a walk in the beautiful Dorset countryside under the heading ‘Take a hike’. Not always in the heart of the Blackmore Vale perhaps, but always within reach for a day’s walk.

What is unique about these walks is the fact that we have created and then walked them all ourselves! We always aim to create interesting, unpopulated routes with as little road use as possible and of course as many beautiful views as we can squeeze in.

You can always see the routes we take and follow them yourself via the Outdoor Active App – see all our routes here. – Click on contents tab.

We usually aim for between 10 – 15 miles, although due to many requests and to keep everyone happy we have now added some shorter routes between 5 – 10 miles in length.

Above all, we hope you enjoy reading about the walks that we do and enjoying the pictures of course, but if you are taking them on yourself, we would love to receive your feedback on how you found the individual route and any suggestions you might have. Oh and of course we would love to receive your pictures to share as well!

Batcombe & Chetnole great views

Good grief last month’s hike was popular – hundreds of you clicked to explore it. Sadly we’re still restricted by Courtenay’s knee (*bored of it now, frankly – Ed), so we’ve dipped into a favourite from last year. It’s 11 miles as we walked it – we know the shorter ones are more widely accessible, but this one has an obvious path to take from Chetnole back across via Calfhay Farm which would chop the distance for you (and allow you to walk along ‘wriggle river’ which can only be a bonus. Clearly we all need to think about what ‘local’ is during lockdown – this walk may need to wait until we’re all moving around more freely again. But do please bookmark it and go try it.

Link to the full route (free to download) on the outdoor Active here: We use the (we think great value) premium paid for subscription (under £2 per month) to gain access to all the full OS maps, however the free version of the app is still excellent.

Batcombe & Chetnole Circular Walk Map

Even on a dull day this was a pretty walk with only one stiff climb. Lots of wide views from the hills, and empty farmland. Watch out for a few boggy spots, especially where joining the Hardy Way. There’s a pretty bridge over the railway to look out for, too, and the finishing stroll down the tree avenue of a drover’s track is wonderful. The paths aren’t always well signed, so keep an eye on the Viewranger GPS tracking – download the full map before you leave, signal is very patchy!

Batcombe & Chetnole Walk

Crossing one of the many streams on route this one between Chetnole and Three Gates.

The stunning tree lined drovers track towards the end of the walk heading into Hermitage.

Wonderful view as you leave Batcombe and are about to head stifly downhill.

Batcombe & Chetnole Walk

The old railway bridge as you leave Melbury Bubb is far prettier than it has any right to be.

Batcombe & Chetnole Walk

Crossing the Wriggle river on the outskirts of Chetnole.

SMART, Phyllis Caroline Rose

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Phyllis Caroline Rose Smart

Formally of The Yews Mere

Passed away peacefully on 26th January 2021 at Watersmead Care Home in Westbury Wiltshire Aged 96

Much loved Mother, Grandmother, Great Grandmother

Private Service to be held at the West Wiltshire Crematorium. Donations if desired to The British Heart foundation Via L C Hill & Son Funeral Directors website Tribute Page

FREE this month – send your Valentine a message!

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Valentine’s Day is coming! And our February issue is going to be all about the love (because frankly we think we all need a big virtual tight squeezy hug right now, in the absence of the real ones).

So: we want to do a proper old-fashioned local paper Valentines message board. It’ll be fun! Totally free – just fill in your words and we’ll print them for your secret love to find.

Want M to know you think she’s wonderful every single day? Yes, do it!
Want to tell Shnookums you love his toes? Go for it!
Want to tell EF that with or without avocado you love his grumpy face more each day? Come on in!

Let’s feel the love for a change, and spread some smiles across the Vale for Valentines day.

Deadline is midnight Tuesday, so be quick – click here to fill in your message. Go go go:

*form now closed*
Happy to say we had very close to 100 messages submitted!
They’ll be published in the February issue, out on the 5th.

No Time for Complacency | Simon Hoare

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In the words of the Aretha Franklin song “Here We Go Again”.

Covid seems like one of those film villains that despite shoot- ing, stabbing, suffocating and
drowning, remains alive to cause mayhem.
We can, however, take heart that vaccines are now being licensed and rolled out across the country
to beat this villain. This is the first real fight back that we have been able to make against this
serial killer virus.
While the decision of who is in the front of the queue for the vaccines is ultimately a decision
for the national medical committees I do hope that they will listen to the very strong call being
made for teachers, school staff, police and emergency services to be vaccinated speedily. Those
who put themselves ‘on the front line’ deserve the comfort and reassurance that the vaccine represents. I would also add de- livery drivers, shop workers and posties.

I know from my inbox that people are getting bored and fed up.

Post Christmas blues, poor weather and the bills of Christmas (that ultimately wasn’t a Christmas) coupled to a third Lockdown do not make for the ingredients of a delicious cocktail. I want to share with you my biggest fear for Dorset:

Complacency.

Throughout the Covid turmoil of 2020 Dorset as a whole fared well. The South West had the lowest R rate in the country and Dorset was among the lowest of the low. Our communities rallied to provide support. Our local NHS services stayed standing. Communities adhered religiously to the rules.

2021 has changed the local picture. The South West’s R rate (at the time of writing) is the highest in the Country. Infection rates across the County are on an upward trend. Our local NHS is nearing capacity. Ambulance crews are at full tilt. As a result of delays in hospital admissions there is a shortage of small tanks of oxygen. The valiant men and women who provide our healthcare are not themselves
immune to catching the virus and I shudder to think of the scenario where too great a number of NHS
staff have themselves become covid patients. Bed capacity has had to be significantly reduced in order to accommodate social distancing. 1-2-1 intensive care is now being delivered at 1-2-3.

So, Lockdown 3 is real because it is needed. The rules are the rules and laws. They are not guidance. They are not a pick and mix a la carte. They are not for others to follow but that you have a special exemption. They are for all of us to follow. Not because the State has delusions of power madness or
because we take a perverse thrill in stifling liberty: it is simply because none of us went into public life to see constituents avoidably fall ill and possibly die. Of course Lockdown is a damned nuisance. But it is a
necessary and vital damned nuisance. Our local Police have my full support in being as robust as necessary to enforce the law.

I shall share with you with this thought sent to me from a con- stituent. You have to imagine a new headstone in a graveyard. The inscription reads: “Here lies xxxxx aged 49. He need not have died but he thought he was immune and exempt from the Law. He refused to wear a mask. He went out unnecessarily. He had friends and family to visit (some of them are in hospital or awaiting burial). He leaves a wife and two children. Arrogant and selfish to the end”. I do not want that to be the epitaph of any resident of North Dorset. I implore you to follow the Rules and do what is right.

I started with Aretha Franklin, let me close with the metaphysical poet John Donne:
“No man is an island, Entire of itself, Every man is a piece of the continent, A part of the main……… Any man’s death diminishes me, Because I am involved in mankind, And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee.”

Let’s follow the Rules to the letter: the bell won’t be tolling for thee.

by Simon Hoare MP

HATCHER, Simon John

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Simon John Hatcher


Passed away at home on 15th January 2021 aged 57.

Much loved son, dad, grandad and friend.

Taken from us too soon but always in our hearts.

BOOLEY, Sheila

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Mrs.Sheila Booley

Passed away in Salisbury Hospital on 13th January 2021 at the age of 92.

She will be greatly missed by all who knew her, especially her son and daughter, grandchildren and great grandchildren.

The funeral was held at Yeovil crematorium and was attended by immediate family only.

A webcast was recorded. Many thanks to all involved in the funeral preparations.