Michael Deek
Remembering Mike, a dear husband, father and grandfather, died March 19, 2021.
Always remembered. – Much Love, Margaret, Sheila, Petra, Neil and families
Michael Deek
Remembering Mike, a dear husband, father and grandfather, died March 19, 2021.
Always remembered. – Much Love, Margaret, Sheila, Petra, Neil and families
During this pandemic a light has shone very brightly – kind, community/neighbour focussed actions. Often, for the doer, a small thing; while for the beneficiary it can often be the thing that cheers their week and says to them, subliminally, ‘I mean something to someone’.
As well as shopping done, prescriptions collected, and catch up telephone calls made it has
manifested itself in organising birthday cards and virtual parties for recent Centenarians and a
myriad of other heart-warming actions. It’s just meant being a bit more aware of our fellow man
and the strength of community.
During lockdown this has never been more important, and I really do hope that that spirit of
caring and kindness can and will continue as we take the tentative steps back to more normal times.
If I may, I want to share one thing that happened to me recently.
I relay it because I think it makes my point above so well. A few weeks ago, on a wet morning, I was, along with others, volunteering to help with the logistics of the vaccine centre at The Exchange in Sturminster Newton.
A lady from Margaret Marsh was waiting for her neighbour who she had driven to the surgery (itself an act of kindness) for a blood test.
We fell, as you do, into conversation. I was so well swaddled against the elements, masked and hatted she had no idea to whom she was chatting.
She asked me if we were given refreshments to sustain us during our shift. I did the full ‘o woe is me act’ of which my wife and daughters are only too familiar.
“Well,” I said, “we do get the occasional cup of coffee served when they remember the troops out here at the front but that’s it. Not even a biscuit!”
(Pausing here for a moment, and in order to avoid a Legal Action, to say that Sharon the Exchange’s Acting Manager does look after us).
Her friend came out of the surgery, we bade our farewells, and off they drove. Twenty minutes later the lady returned in her car, drew up alongside me with a smile on her face and handed me a full carrier bag of tea, coffee and biscuits “for the volunteers and nurses etc to enjoy during a break”. Off she went
I don’t know the lady’s name; she was a stranger with whom I had chatted for a few minutes. We may never meet again. I must confess to being incredibly moved, as were the others on duty, by that tremendously generous and spontaneous act of kindness.
Of niceness.
Of care.
I doubt she will ever know (unless of course she is reading this publication and let’s be frank, who isn’t?) how much that single act meant to us. It was beyond the price of rubies and emeralds. It is Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Names Desire who says..
“I have always depended onthe kindness of strangers.”
If spontaneous and unselfish kindness is a legacy of Covid that creates few strangers in our communities and lives, then that will be a blessing to cherish.
While I can’t promise tea and biscuits, if you do need any help or advice then do please get in touch with me. My email address is: [email protected]
or you can write to me:
Simon Hoare MP,
The Stables,
Whitecliff Gardens,
Blandford Forum,
DT11 7BU
or call on 01258 452585.
by Simon Hoare MP
Just before sunrise on 5 March, low on the south eastern horizon, search the eastern pre-
dawn sky and you’ll find tiny Mercury (now at its maximum distance from the Sun) will be
just above gas giant Jupiter. This conjunction between the Solar System’s smallest and
largest planets will occur in the constellation of Capricornus, known as the Sea Goat. You
will probably need binoculars, but be very careful using them close to sunrise! Mercury
takes just 88 Earth-days to orbit the Sun, while Jupiter takes 11.87 Earth-years.

By the 9th of March, the Moon will reach its full moon phase – look towards the south-east
in the early evening to see it. This month’s full moon will be a supermoon – in fact one
of several supermoons this year. Because the Moon’s orbit isn’t a perfect circle, its distance
from the Earth changes as it orbits the Earth. If the Moon comes within 90% of its closest
approach to the Earth and it coincides with a full moon (or a new moon) it is called a
supermoon.
Due to its closer proximity the moon can appear 14% larger and 30% brighter compared to
when it’s at its most distant. The April full moon will present the closest supermoon of this
year, and because there are no official definitions about what constitutes a supermoon,
some are counting the February and May full moons as supermoons too.
After dark on 19 March in the southwestern night sky, having drawn away from the
Pleiades, Mars will be visited by a 32%-lit crescent Moon.
Around midnight, from February all the way through to May, high in the southern night sky
you will be able to view the ‘Beehive Cluster’ which is an open star cluster about 520
lightyears distant in the constellation of Cancer, the Crab. It is one of the best-looking open
clusters of stars and one of the nearest to the Solar System. Also known as the Praesepe,
it appears as around 60 stars in a pair of binoculars, though a dozen or so really stand out.
The March equinox occurs on 20 March. It marks the first day of spring (vernal equinox) in
the Northern Hemisphere and the first day of fall or autumn (autumnal equinox) in
theSouthern Hemisphere. At the equinox, the Sun will shine directly on the equator and
there will be nearly equal amounts or hours of daylight and night throughout the world on
this day.
I’m not going to get into the debate of jam then cream or cream then jam, but however you layer them, nothing quite beats a scone fresh from the oven, closely followed by some homemade cakes.
If you are looking for something to make for your Mum this Mother’s Day, or for a loved one for their birthday, then here are some recipes for you to try, both for some scones and for two flavour versions of a sponge cake recipe that looks decadent but is actually super easy to make.
If you are looking for some local ingredients to add to your Cream Tea, then we are spoilt for choice for local tea Dorset… but I recommend checking out Its Tea in Poole if you are looking for something hand blended. They have a huge range of teas, from the standard English Breakfast to the more unusual.
You can find Dorset clotted cream in many farm shops but if you are looking for something a little different, Dorset Dairy Co sell their Cultured Cream which is a slightly tangier version. From Dorset with Love have a wide range of their handmade curds as well as delicious jams.

Ingredients
8oz self raising flour
2oz butter (soft)
2oz caster sugar
milk
egg to glaze
fresh raspberries or blueberries.
Method
Line 2 x baking sheets with greaseproof paper and preheat the oven to 180 fan/gas 6.
Add the flour and sugar to a large bowl. With your hands, add in the butter and rub it into the flour and sugar mixture. This involves rubbing your fingers together amongst the butter and flour mixture until the butter is worked in and the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs.
Stir in the fresh fruit (you can leave this stage out if you would prefer plain scones).
Then pour in the milk a little at a time. Stir the mixture together with your hands and continue to add the milk until the mixture forms a soft dough (you don’t need to knead the dough).
Tip out onto a floured surface. Gently press out the mixture so that it is about 1inch thick. Using a cutter (or your can just use a knife), cut out the scones and place on the lined trays. You can gently reform the dough and repeat the cutting until all the dough is used up. It should give you 6 – 10 small scones (depending on how big your cutter is).
Beat the egg in a small bowl with a fork and then brush the beaten egg onto the top of the scones. Bake in the oven for 15 minutes or until golden brown on top.
You can leave them to cool, but they do taste fantastic straight from the oven.

Ingredients:
For the sponge mixture
Spread a thin layer of your jam (if vanilla cakes) or lemon curd (if lemon cakes) and a thin layer of the icing between the layers and stack the cakes together. Dust the top with a little extra icing sugar.

For the lemon cakes – you can brush a little lemon juice over the sponges before stacking for some extra zing.
If you want to go that bit extra, rather than making buttercream icing, you can make Italian meringue and use that for a more lemon meringue style cake. To make Italian Meringue, heat together 1 cup of caster sugar with 1/3 cup water until it reaches 240degrees fahrenheit on a thermometer. Beat together 2 egg whites until stiff and whilst the mixer is still running, slowly pour in the hot syrup mixture until it is all combined. Keep the mixer running until the bowl of the mixer is cold. You can then pipe this onto the cakes with the lemon curd.
For the Vanilla cakes – you can use whipped fresh cream instead of icing and add some fresh fruit to the top of the cake. This won’t keep as well but if you make just before your are ready to eat, they will be delicious!
By: Heather Brown
Base: North Dorset
Post: Community Staff Nurse
Salary: £24,907 to £30,615 p.a.
Are you a qualified or newly qualified Nurse looking to work in a District Nursing team? Look no further…….
Dorset HealthCare is all about progress and innovation and ensuring we achieve the best possible patient care and health and wellbeing outcomes for all our communities.
We are looking for individuals with excellent communication skills, who pride themselves in the quality of care they provide to patients to work within our District Nursing teams. Currently we have vacancies in
Full or part time positions available depending on what you are looking for.
The successful applicants will participate in the delivery of skilled autonomous nursing care to patients within their own home, and will gain an understanding of primary care including the management of long term conditions. You will have an opportunity to broaden your range of skills and knowledge in managing the nursing care or people in their own home or within local clinics.
If you are interested in discussing opportunities in Sturminster Newton or Blandford please contact Vicky Whittingham for an informal conversation on [email protected]
If you are interested in discussing opportunities in Sherborne please contact Caryl Hill for an informal conversation on [email protected]

Despite the job description on my contract with Westleaze Farm stating ‘Assistant Avian Production Manager’, working on a family-run farm means that you have to be prepared for anything any day. Which, in my opinion, is one of the numerous positives of dedicating your working days to the outdoors and animals.
Most mornings are spent tending to the farm’s main source of income, our free range layer hens, that at the moment are producing over 7000 eggs a day. Come the afternoon, however, continual lists of seasonal jobs rotate to fill up the remaining duration of the week. Time flies when you jump between TB testing our herd of Aberdeen Angus cattle, rearing calves, delivering eggs or tending to the fences and hedges around our farm on the top of the picturesque Beaminster Downs.

It is for this reason that when speaking to a farmer, if you catch them as the sun begins to set, they are most likely to exclaim in their Dorset accent the immortal words of ‘there really ain’t enough hours in the day!’
This March, for us, there really won’t be enough hours in the day, as on our poultry unit that we rent on the outskirts of Weymouth we have period known in the industry as ‘turnaround’. In the space of four weeks, we will bid farewell to our current birds and clean and sanitise every inch of the shed that houses them, ready for a new flock of 8000 birds that will hopefully produce around two and a half million eggs over the coming year.
The weapon required to lay that quantity of egg is the Lohmann Brown Classic. The bird, which is a crossbreed of the Rhode Island Red and White Rocks, is a finally-tuned athlete and for them to perform at their peak, the conditions of their environment need to be perfect.
E. coli, Salmonellosis, Blackhead, Newcastle Disease, Coccidiosis and Avian Influenza (AI) is just a selection of possible health issues for our feathered-friends, if we do not ensure that their new home is bio secure. The latter, AI, has been prevalent in the UK for the last few months and has required for all poultry to be kept indoors to protect them for mixing with wild birds who could be carrying the disease.
To ensure the health and welfare of the birds are satisfactory, my month of March will be spent attached to the end of a pressure washer as the ceiling to the floor and the walls to the nest boxes are all cleaned and sterilised. I am hoping for an upturn in temperature as past winter turnarounds have been havoc with the additional stress of frozen water and even deeper frozen fingers.

All the time and dedication will be worth it on the 22nd of the month as the new pullets will begin to populate their pristine shed. Like a child on their first-ever day of school, they will be apprehensive at first, but will soon range and explore their environments. Like the proud father of 8000 squawking girls… I wait in anticipation to find that very first egg.
https://www.facebook.com/WestleazeFarm/
https://www.lohmanngb.co.uk/products/lohmann-brown-classic/
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/avian-influenza-bird-flu
By: Andrew Livingston
Care and Support Worker –Sherborne and surrounding areas
Full time or part time (Mornings, evenings and weekends available)
Salary: £9 to £10 per hour, plus mileage and travel time. £300 welcome bonus.
Contact our Recruitment Officer for enquiries at [email protected] or 07918765840

Care and Support Worker – Wimborne and surrounding areas
Full time or part time (Mornings, evenings and weekends available)
Salary: £9 to £10 per hour, plus mileage and travel time. £300 welcome bonus.
Contact our Recruitment Officer for enquiries at [email protected] or 07918765840

An exciting opportunity has arisen for two exceptional and experienced beauty therapists to work in the Spa at the Eastbury Hotel in Sherborne.
We are looking for a Full Time Head Therapist for 45 hours per week plus a Part Time Spa Therapist working 30 hours a week. Our Spa works with Caudalie products, previous experience preferable but full training will be provided. Must be willing to be fully flexible and work weekends, Christmas, bank holidays etc.
Required:
Qualified NVQ level 3 Beauty Therapy/complementary therapy or equivalent. At least 2 years spa experience.
Start Date: April for full training.
The Hotel will reopen with the Spa on the 17th May 2021
Competitive rates of pay: Head Therapist £22Kpa
Part Time Therapist £9ph
Dependant on experience, plus commission and excellent staff benefits.
Please contact Gemma Wells on 01935 813131 or email your CV to [email protected]
