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Housing in North Dorset – how to do it better

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With elections looming, North Dorset CPRE’s Rupert Hardy challenges unsustainable, unaffordable local housing strategies

An attractive vernacular estate at Old Dairy, Okeford Fitzpaine
Images: Rupert Hardy

Sadly, we and others were unable to stop the North Dorset Area Planning Committee from approving a Wyatt Homes development to build 490 (perhaps unnecessary) homes between Blandford and Pimperne last month. Mindful that both local and general elections are expected next year, it is probably a good time to set out some of North Dorset CPRE’s thoughts on new housing in the region for the benefit of developers, councillors, wannabe candidates for Dorset Council (DC), planners and local residents.

How much new housing?
News came through in September that North Dorset finally had more than a five-year housing supply, so planning decisions should now follow the development plan – which still means the old North Dorset Local Plan (NDLP). Previously, there was a tilted balance with a presumption in favour of sustainable development. Housing targets for Blandford and its surrounding villages have now been exceeded, thanks to a massive building programme in recent years, so it was a pity the planning committee did not consider this to be important. Curiously there is no planning committee member even representing Blandford.
Do remember that Dorset’s demographic is changing, with an increasingly ageing population, so housing demand is driven purely by incomers to the county. Targets have now been exceeded in a lot of North Dorset, but not all, and we have to allow for some more developments going forward. But they should follow the NDLP until DC gets its act together with its new Local Plan – which has made little progress so far. Working with experienced contractors like Ability Bathe Bathrooms is essential for ensuring that any new housing developments meet modern standards and enhance residents’ quality of life.

What type of housing?
It is right to criticise our national housebuilders, brands such as Persimmon and Taylor Wimpey, for creating estates with few redeeming features. Many of our historic North Dorset towns, such as Shaftesbury, are now surrounded by them. They are effectively deserts of poor quality anodyne “Noddy boxes”, created without an architect in sight.
More importantly, they usually offer the wrong type of housing.
Would-be Dorset homebuyers, already living in the county, are desperate for genuinely affordable housing of two to three bedrooms, not the four-bedroom executive homes mostly on offer. The local need is for starter homes and retirement flats – and of course social housing – but that is a scant commodity given the government’s refusal to fund them. Community Land Trusts should be encouraged, as they do provide genuinely affordable housing.

Vernacular or modern?
The national housebuilders fail here too, as they produce neither. Polls suggest that housing with vernacular features are popular. At least our local housebuilders, such as CG Fry who created a lot of Poundbury, do try to incorporate traditional features such as thatched roofs and flint and brick banding. Vernacular housing will blend into existing villages far more easily, and may well become indistinguishable in a few decades time. There are also many supporters of modern homes, of course.

Sustainability
We are committed to Net Zero and we have badgered DC to force developers to make their homes Net Zero compliant, but it has been slow progress. Rooftop solar is a no-brainer, as is better insulation, while heat pumps are obvious solutions in new housing, even if they are not a perfect answer for many older dwellings.
The new Wyatt Homes’ development outside Blandford should be Net Zero compliant, but it did take three iterations to get there.
Sustainability also covers transport – and this is difficult, given the inadequacy of good local public transport in rural Dorset, so proximity to transport hubs is crucial. We must try to stop building car-dependent estates. Do not be fooled by those developers’ glossy websites showing cyclists and walkers. Homeowners all too readily reach for their car keys to get anywhere!
It would also help if Dorset Highways had a realistic approach to assessing planning applications. They appear too ready to rubber stamp them, even if they are likely to cause severe traffic congestion as Wyatt Homes’s development in Blandford will surely do.

The dull uniformity of many local developments

Density
Not everyone will have heard of “gentle density” housing. Primarily it refers to three-to-seven storey housing, a common way to build to deliver housing in European towns. It is less normal here, although there are good examples in Dorset, such as Poundbury which was one of the first to pioneer mixed-use neighbourhoods, where the car is subservient to the pedestrian.
The low density, two to three storey “Brookside” developments that are all too common here are bad news for housing supply, commuting distances and carbon emissions. Good agricultural land should be protected if possible.
Elements of gentle density housing have found their way into the new Levelling Up and Regeneration Act, which requires local authorities to have design codes in place for developments. These codes don’t fix architectural styles, but set the parameters for the “building envelope” that will be acceptable.

Infrastructure
In North Dorset, town infrastructure is creaking at the seams with long queues for doctors and dentists’ surgeries. Please, no more houses without putting in more infrastructure at the same time.
It should not be an afterthought.

Protected landscapes
We have some beautiful countryside in North Dorset, with a lot within AONBs (Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty) – which have recently been re-named as National Landscapes. These should be protected by planners and planning committees, not flouted.

Neighbourhood plans
Volunteers in dozens of villages have put in hundreds of hours to create Neighbourhood Plans for their communities, suggesting preferred building sites to allow for organic growth. Their policies should not be ignored by DC. The approval of the Wyatt Homes development was a particularly sad day for Pimperne, which had created a very good plan, following government guidelines, and it felt a sad day too for local democracy.
Have I said enough?

Just how much more can our British farmers take?

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As the Red Tractor scheme stirs debate, Love Local Trust Local steps up to restore confidence in local, traceable British produce, says founder Barbara Cossins

I write to you today with a deep sense of concern. The Red Tractor food chain assurance scheme is the subject of much discussion at the moment. It recently faced major backlash from the farming community when it announced the Greener Farms Commitment, planned for launch in April 2024. Red Tractor has now said it will not proceed with the implementation of any new standards or additional modules until an independent NFU review, focusing on Red Tractor governance, is completed.
The review was ordered after Red Tractor was accused of acting outside its remit when it announced its Greener Farms Commitment – which required farmers to demonstrate the environmental credentials of the food they produce in order to boost retailers’ environmental aims. It was developed with retailers, but with no proper consultation with farmers.
The NFU is part of the ownership body of Red Tractor, and concerns were expressed about the independence of the governance review, after it was announced that Red Tractor’s board was intending to lead it. This week, The NFU has appointed consultants Campbell Tickell to undertake the independent review. Red Tractor chair, Christine Tacon, says: ‘The views of our members are very important, and we are sorry that we have been slow to understand them fully. The discussion that has been provoked is essential and offers a great opportunity for the farming sectors and supply chains to work together.’

There is an alternative
In 2018, after Open Farm Sunday, I set up a not-for-profit self-funded food label, Love Local Trust Local, to stand up against the clear misuse of the Red Tractor labelling. Dorset’s very own produce label was created to help put consumer trust back into buying local, and to promote products with clear provenance and full traceability
Over the last few years, I have been horrified at the misuse of food labelling by certain large supermarkets, with fake farm brands and the Red Tractor logo displayed on food imported from countries with very different farming standards from ours. As a farmer’s wife, I work relentlessly to support and showcase local farmers and producers with a label that the consumer can trust.
By using the county flag, the label signifies where the produce is grown, reared, produced, brewed, or caught – thus putting the trust back into buying local while helping to educate consumers about where and how their food is grown. The logo has been designed to be easily recognisable and is adaptable to any county – or nationally.

The silent opinion
British farmers have no direct voice to consumers. Our government seemingly isn’t doing anything to help. We must work together and get behind the Love Local Trust Local label. There is no better time to get involved. Our farming industry is fragile, and there is an ongoing concern about where our food will come from in the future.
The time is right for shoppers to buy produce from our own land, farmers, and producers.
Let’s celebrate everything Britain has to offer – before it is too late.

LoveLocalTrustLocalAwards.co.uk

Handpicked brilliant gifts for your gardener!

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What CAN you buy for the gardener in your life? Don’t fret – local flower farmer Charlotte Tombs has the answer!

A Hori Hori knife is a Japanese digging, weeding, bulb planter and all round brilliant hand tool

It’s my best Christmas gift guide for the gardener in your life – or maybe just a list of things to add to your own wish list!
These are all my personal, tried-and-trusted, most useful items, and I have no hesitation in recommending them to anyone.
I’m often asked what my absolute favourite garden tool is and hands down, no hesitation or thought, it’s my Hori Hori knife!
A Hori Hori knife is a Japanese digging, weeding, bulb planter and all round brilliant hand tool. I love mine and often give one as a present. I even use it to clean out the chickens. I bought mine from Niwaki, a Dorset-based company near Shaftesbury (they do have a great website for online ordering).
My other favourite tool is my gold spade – a Valentine’s present from my husband (listen, it actually IS romantic. He knows me well). Never mind the fact that it’s gold, this brilliant little spade is small, super-sharp and incredibly lightweight. It makes digging tasks an absolute pleasure. Again it’s available from Niwaki and I can see they have added a shovel and a square spade to the gold range … those have promptly been added to my own Christmas list.

Burgon and Ball’s FloraBrite range may not be pretty, but losing your tools in the foliage will be a thing of the past

Don’t cut corners
Essential garden snips are next on my list – and Burgon and Ball sell a FloraBrite range – terrific snips with fluorescent coloured handles. No, of course they’re not a thing of beauty, but when you put them down you can find them again! Why do they insist on making them with green handles that just camouflage in?
Also by Burgon is a seedling widger – a long, scooped metal tool which is great for potting on seedlings. Yes, I know a butter knife does the same thing but the family is never terribly happy about the knives being used in the garden, for some reason.
Another perennially perfect gardener’s gift is a good penknife. Opinel knives are my favourite brand, and you could always get the blade or handle engraved so that it becomes a really lovely personal gift.

Carhartt dungarees – ‘absolute game changers’

The other things
Next on my list are my Carhartt overalls, or dungarees as we Brits call them. These are an absolute game changer; they keep the small of your back warm (apologies, I’m in danger of sounding like my grandmother), plus they have loads of pockets, so you get to do the great pat-yourself-down pocket dance!
(ETA – top insider tip. If you have a handy friend or relative in the US, have them buy for you there and bring/ship them to you. Even with shipping, Carhartt are a LOT cheaper in America! – Ed)
Garden twine is another must-have that is always gratefully received by any gardener. Nutscene make great quality, ethical twine and it’s pretty too; they have some lovely sets which make a basically dull object into a great gift.

A Bucket Barrow is on Charlotte’s wish list

If your gardener sows a lot of seeds and space is tight for germination then a Ladbrooke’s soil blocker is a really useful gadget – you can get 40 seeds to one takeaway plastic tub, plus the lid makes a mini greenhouse.
A slightly less garden-y option, but wireless headphones have been an absolute lifesaver for me, enabling one to listen to audiobooks (cough or a favourite podcast such as The BV one) as I potter endlessly (*BV HQ can highly recommend these Sony ones).

Nutscene’s twine isn’t only the best or the most ethical, it might also be the prettiest as a gift

A decent pair of gardening gloves is essential, of course, and I swear by Showa Floreo 370; they are washable, you can still feel and pick things up with them and they are surprisingly hard wearing.
Lastly, I don’t have one (yet!) but I do really want a bucket barrow (bucketbarrow.co.uk). It’s a frankly brilliant wheelbarrow with four integrated buckets – absolutely perfect for me on my rather awkward site.
Now with that lot you should be able to tackle anything! Here’s to dreaming of next year’s triumphs – the rule is that we can forget about the disasters this year. I’ve learned over the years that its only ever you who actually remembers them.

Ringing the bell

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Hazelbury Bryan primary school’s call to ‘make a noise’ against bullying was answered by a cathedral bellringer’s visit

Tim Joiner (left) setting the bells with Robert Newton and Jane Pridmore

Tim Joiner is a previous Lord Mayor of Westminster and a bell ringer at Brecon Cathedral. When Hazelbury Bryan primary school settled on ‘make a noise’ as the theme for the school’s anti-bullying week, parent-governor Romana Phillips knew just who to call – she couldn’t think of anything more appropriate for ‘making a noise’ than bellringing.
Tim was happy to travel from Brecon, and he also contacted the Dorset County Association of Church Bellringers to see if they might put on something special just for the school.
St Mary and St James church doesn’t have its own band (the collective noun for group of bellringers), so a group of Dorset bellringers from different churches volunteered to join Tim to perform a quarter peal.
‘That’s ringing 1,250 times around the bells,’ explains Tim. ‘It takes 45 minutes to ring a quarter peal – every time we go round, it has to be a different permutation or combination, a different order of the bells. And you have to memorise it.’

Robert Newton (far left) and Tim Joiner give some of the pupils a quick lesson in bell ringing
All images: Laura Hitchcock


Tim holds up a small book with pages filled with rows of numbers – looking remarkably similar to the old logarithm books readers of a certain age will remember from school.
‘Methods for various numbers of bells are laid out across the columns of numbers. That’s bell ringing music. But you’re not allowed to use it, you have to learn it – you’re not allowed to use it during the ringing at all.
‘You end up with something called rope-sight, where you can see where all the bells are. And you instinctively know “I need to be second place …. third place … fourth …” and you don’t even worry about what the other bells are doing. You just need to know which one you’re going to follow. And you do that by listening, and by looking … and to an extent by how quickly your arms are going up and down!’

The quarter peal under way in St Mary and St James church

The band’s all here
Tim was joined in Hazelbury by Robert Newton from Hilton, John Close from Winterborne Whitchurch, Angie Jasper from Hampreston, and Jane and Nigel Pridmore. Nigel rings at Puddletown and Jane is the Dorset County Association Training Officer: ‘So I ring everywhere!’
All of the ringers gave up their afternoon to ring the quarter peal – John and Robert came direct from a morning spent ringing near Bridport.

The children were excited to pull the Sally (the colourful padded rope end) and ring a bell

‘On the first day, I talked to the children on school about size and pitch of bells, and showed them how chord changes work, so they got a basic idea,’ explains Tim. ‘It’s actually quite difficult, but they did it! Then on the second day, we played some simple tunes with the handbells. It was a lot of fun, and they did so well.’
Lucy Odhams, Kestrels class teacher, was in charge of the anti-bullying work in school. ‘Making a noise doesn’t mean a physical noise,’ she explains. ‘The children know it means they shouldn’t ignore bullying, and we’ve represented that through the bell ringing. All the children have been ringing bells themselves, and then we were really lucky to have the opportunity to make a really BIG noise in the bell tower.
‘It’s been a great activity, and really kept them focused on making that noise, being able to tell someone if they ever saw bullying happen.’

Tim Joiner with some of the Hazelbury Bryan Primary School pupils in the bell tower

‘We talked a lot about how people might not always be poorly on the outside,‘ continues headteacher Mrs Waring. ‘We’ve got to consider people’s hearts and minds on the inside, too.
‘It’s also been lovely to see that some of our challenging children, those with special educational needs, have absolutely shone this week,. They’ve thoroughly enjoyed the bellringing. It’s been wonderful.’

North Dorset MP gets an upgrade to the front benches

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Simon Hoare is the new Minister for Local Government: officially the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State in the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities

‘I’d not long arrived at my flat in London, and was just warming up some soup when the phone rang,’ he says. ‘I saw it was the Chief Whip, and obviously my first thought was “what have I done now?”
‘But he simply said “The PM would like to know if you want to join the front benches.” Obviously the correct second thought is then “Doing what?!”
‘He then offered me the position of Minister for Local Government, and I had a quick yes-or-no decision to make. Obviously I said yes – but then had to ask “so what happens now?” It’s a massive honour – of course it is – but it’s also new to me. I had no clue what the protocol is. No one prepares you for it!
‘I had two calls in fairly rapid succession – the first was from the Propriety and Ethics team who asked all manner of interesting questions about whether I had been a terrorist, or had ever been convicted of money laundering and the like. Having passed that one with flying colours – I’ve had a rather dull existence, apparently – I was called by the Permanent Secretary to confirm the appointment, and to let me know my Private Secretary would be waiting for me at the Houses of Parliament at 9.15 the following morning.
‘And sure enough, there he was, waiting in the foyer with my badge. He took me to my office which already had my name on the door, the computer was already set up for me, as was a diary already full of appointments. People talk about hitting the ground running, but I’m not sure I’d really done it at such speed before!
‘In theory I know that as soon as the King approves the appointment, you’re it, effectively. But when it actually happens, the sheer speed of it is astonishing. It wasn’t until two hours after the first phone call that I realised I probably ought to call my wife!
‘The whole thing takes some getting used to. I was in a meeting this week and was presented with three possible options for a course of action. I suggested that one was the right way to go, and a few notes were taken. I then asked how we might progress that, who it needed to be passed through or get approval from, and I was met with a slightly surprised face. Turns out my decision had just allocated £190m. That’s how it works.
‘I do have to say a word about the efficiency of the civil servants, who have met me with overwhelming warmth, help and kindness at every step. And I have been touched by the number of colleagues from right across the House who have congratulated me – it’s such an encouragement when even the opposition say ‘it’s about time’ instead of ‘why on earth?’… I must be doing something right!’
Simon started his political career as a parish councillor, before becoming an elected local councillor for 12 years. He’s confident that with his experience of working in local government he has an excellent understanding of his brief.
‘It’s hugely, hugely exciting, and I’m keen for the challenge – I think we all as human beings enjoy being stretched. To be honest I still get a thrill just parking my buttocks on the back benches. Now I’ve a front row seat. And I have to admit, the House looks completely different from down there. Instead of looking down on it from up at the back, I’m inside it. It’s much smaller and far more intimate.’

North Dorset first
‘But I cannot forget that I am only here to do this job because I was first elected by the people of North Dorset and my first duty of care always has been and always will be to them.
In France, a civil servant is placed into a constituency when an MP is promoted, to look after matters previously in his care. But we don’t do that in England, and rightly so. I think it is so important to stay anchored and connected with your base, it’s enormously important in everything we do.’
But what exactly is the Minister for Local Government actually responsible for? What will the new job entail?
‘It’s a vast remit – I’m now responsible to Parliament for local funding, special educational needs – in partnership with the DoE of course – adult social care, planning, alongside the planning minister, election law (ensuring systems are in place to guarantee public confidence in a democratic vote, preventing any “we was robbed/it was rigged” shenanigans in the UK!). I’m also the minister for the Covid inquiry and the Commons minister for faith, which means I’ll be taking through the Holocaust Memorial Bill.
Today I’m in a Westminster Hall debate on heritage pubs, and later have a meeting about local government funding on the Isle of Wight.
‘But I like to be busy! The devil makes work for idle hands and all that. I think we all like to be busy, don’t we? Just as long as we get tangible results.’

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Magical journeys at Shaftesbury

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THE characters in Shaftesbury Arts Centre youth theatre’s December double bill are all on journeys. In Magic Fairy in a Microwave by Dara Murphy, Sarah is on a chaotic journey into her own overactive imagination. In The Clearing (by Jennifer Reif) a group of teenagers find themselves on strange, moving paths into a mysterious wood.
The two one-act plays, Delightful Dramatic Diversions, are being staged at the arts centre on Saturday 9th December at 2.30pm and 6.30pm.
Magic Fairy in a Microwave won the Overall Best In Fringe award this year’s Shaftesbury Fringe 2023, and the same cast will be playing again. It’s the story of Sarah Williams and her overactive imagination – after a series of events, she eventually becomes trapped deep in her own mind … or has she been trapped by the narrators?
It is a fast-paced physical extravaganza with guns, knives and blood. Kittens will be harmed, and we discover what happens should a fairy ever become locked in a microwave.
The second play, The Clearing, is a collection of ten vignettes. In early autumn a group of teenagers find themselves in a clearing in the woods. Some are searching, some are hiding, some are lost and others found. Each vignette is witty, sweet and poignant – woven together they make for a magical and refreshingly good-natured play.

It’s panto season (Oh yes it is!)

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Poisoned apples, dashing princes, magic lamps or talking cats – which pantomime should YOU choose this Christmas?

ALL the major theatres in the area have their pantomimes ready for your cheering, booing and it’s-behind-you-ing, and now the choice is between distance, cost and which stars you most want to see. In the ten shows in (relatively easy) distance, audiences have a choice of three Snow Whites and 21 dwarfs, two Cinderellas, one Aladdin, one Dick Whittington, one Goldilocks, one Peter Pan and one Sleeping Beauty, so most of the big panto stories are covered!
The cost of living crisis has really hit most of us in recent months, and travel may feel even more difficult this year. But it’s still important to take your children to see live performances of these traditional stories in an atmosphere that can’t be captured on film.
It’s the only theatre where audience noise is actively encouraged, with lots of chances to hiss, boo, cheer and generally join in – and it’s also an opportunity to dress up in your finery. Kids at pantomimes often look as colourful and glittery as the fairy princesses on stage.
Most of us get our first experience of live theatre at the pantomime, and if it weaves its colourful magic effectively, it can set a path for the rest of your theatre-going life.

The best loved pantomime of all is Cinderella, the story of a kind child whose mother has died and whose father has remarried, saddling her with a selfish stepmother and two ghastly and ugly sisters. When she is invited to Prince Charming’s ball, the sisters tear up her invitation. Of course, being panto, it all comes out right in the end.
This year the ever-popular duo of Gordon Cooper and Jack Glanville lead the Evolution show’s move from the traditional Octagon setting to Westlands, while the town centre venue awaits its refit. The panto opens on 8th December and runs to 31st, with several matinees and morning shows as well as evening performances.
The other Cinders is at Wimborne Tivoli, where the show is on from 15th December to 1st January and the stars are Luke Atwood and Brandon Nicholson as the sisters, Lucia-Jade Barker as Cinderella, Courtney Jackson as the Fairy Godmother and Lee Redwood as Buttons.

Dick Whittington
This is the earliest show – it started on 25th November and is running to 7th January at Salisbury Playhouse – and Will Carey takes the title role. While pantomime is often the first experience of live theatre for a child, sometimes it is the professional debut for young actors, too; that is the case for Olivia Hewitt-Jones who is playing the feisty heroine, Alice Fitzwarren. But while Dick Whittington will be her first pro panto, Olivia is no stranger to the traditional Christmas show – her father Brian was a pantomime producer for years and her mother, actress Amanda Bairstow, acted in them. Alongside Will and Olivia are Lindo Shinda as Cosmo the Cat, Will Jennings as King Percy Rat and David Rumelle as Sarah the Cook.

Snow White
Another orphaned child pursued by a wicked stepmother, Snow White is saved by the efforts of seven dwarfs. It will be on stage at Bournemouth Pavilion (2nd to 31st December) and Weymouth Pavilion (13th to 31st December) and also at Southampton Mayflower, probably the biggest and grandest theatre in the region, from 9th to 31st December, where the stars are Salisbury-born Christopher Biggins and Ashley Banjo and Diversity.
Bournemouth’s show has Su Pollard, Noel Brodie and Jamie Steen in the leading roles, and at Weymouth you can see George Sampson and Jamie Riding.

Aladdin
Poole’s pantomime is Aladdin, starring the popular Chris Jarvis as Widow Twankey, with the eagerly-awaited return of Andrew Pollard and Alim Javardi, (who were named as the UK’s best pantomime duo for last year’s Nadine and Doris) and also Melinda Messenger as the Spirit of the Ring.

Bath and Bristol
Neil McDermott joins the experienced duo of Jon Monie and Nick Wilton in Sleeping Beauty at Bath’s beautiful Theatre Royal from 7th December to 7th January. At another grand old Victorian theatre, Bristol Hippodrome, see David Suchet as Captain Hook in Peter Pan from 2nd to 31st December – it also stars Andy Ford and Faye Tozer.
Book your tickets and get your glad rags on and prepare to shout IT’S BEHIND YOU at the tops of your voices.

Hunting humans for fun

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Lifelong kennelman Jeremy Whaley’s hunting narrative shifts from tradition to innovation, prioritising the hounds’ skill over the hunt’s end

All images © Sharon T Photography

‘I was deeply anti-hunting,’ says Jeremy Whaley – not the conversation opener expected from a lifelong huntsman and hunt master.
‘But as a child I loved my pony, and I really loved dogs. At the yard where I kept my pony there were children who hunted, and I’d see them come back muddy and tired – but they always had that look in their eye that said they’d had the best day.

Jeremy Whaley of the South Downs Bloodhounds


‘Eventually they persuaded me to give it a try – and I was just fortunate that I was out with the huntsman Jim Bennett and the Old Berkeley pack. It was a spectacle! The horses, the chaps in their mustard coats … but most of all, I instantly recognised that one of these men had a magical – and I mean that literally – bond with all these dogs. They were all looking at the huntsman and listening to him, it was spellbinding. Then we moved off and I watched that man working all those dogs, off leads, running around barking … and yet, they were still under full control. I was hooked.
‘I was an academic and sporting failure – horses and hunting became my mental life saver.
‘Jim was a professional huntsman, and I was lucky enough to hunt regularly with him throughout the rest of my childhood and my early adult years. He taught me and showed me that it was hound work, and the relationship with his hounds, that was important to him, not killing foxes.

Megan James with Halo of the South Downs Bloodhounds


‘Just as, for a farmer, raising animals is a passion and the killing of those animals is merely a necessity for feeding humans. It was only ever about his love of hounds, never a passion to kill a fox. That was what set me on the path to 23 years hunting with foxhounds – like Jim, I loved the hounds, but I never enjoyed killing the fox. I was Master and Huntsman of The New Forest, then The Chiddingfold Leconfield and Cowdray, and then The Berwickshire Foxhounds in Scotland. Then the law changed and the Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act 2002 came into force which, due to loopholes in the legislation, allowed an unlimited number of dogs to ‘flush foxes to guns’.
I’d not seen anything like it before, I couldn’t stomach it.
‘So I looked for alternatives. Drag, or trail, hunting is too artificial for me. There’s no challenge in what is effectively following a railway line of scent. Then I saw Nic Wheeler from Coakham Bloodhounds, one of the oldest bloodhound packs in the UK. I went out with them, loved it, and realised it was my answer.’
The hounds come too
Hunting humans with bloodhounds is referred to as hunting the clean boot.
‘It’s not fox hunting by another name. They’re completely different sports. Just as someone who’s good at squash may not enjoy tennis, clean boot hunting with bloodhounds is a sport in its own right, with its own skills and challenges,’ says Jeremy.

The South Downs Bloodhounds out

‘The point is, the hunting of most wild animals with hounds is illegal. It doesn’t matter if it was bad law – it is what it is, it is not going to change and, if we want hound sports to survive, we need to not only move on and hunt within the law, but do so in a way that seeks to impress and educate the average, tolerant, man, woman or any other of the myriad genders that currently exist on the Clapham omnibus.
‘I started the Borders Bloodhounds Hunt in 2002 – and the more I learned, the more I loved it.
Due to a change in circumstances I had to move back south, so I found a kennels to rent and brought the hounds with me. I started the South Downs Bloodhounds (SDB) in 2004, on an absolute shoestring budget!
‘One day we had 126 riders turn up we realised we really needed to set up a booking system! We usually average about 30 riders a hunt now, and most simply pay a cap to attend for the day.

Jeremy Whalen leading the South Downs Bloodhounds, accompanied by amateur whipper-in Amanda Pole
All images © Sharon T Photography

Tub hunting
We start in August with tub hunting (because the quarries are a bit tubby that early in the season …), and we do four or five hunts of around a mile each in a day to get the quarry, the hounds and the horses fit. We have the formal opening meet in the middle of October, and by then we will have three or four longer hunts of two to three miles; up to five miles if I can manage it.
‘The routes are mapped in advance, and I try to always vary them, even if we’ve been to the same place before. The hounds learn a route very quickly, so we always try and make each one different.
‘We’ll go anywhere – Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorset, Somerset … we’ve just been up to Fife in Scotland! In fact, the Fife and the Lauderdale Hunts are both now converted to a bloodhound hunt.
‘Hunting human quarry with bloodhounds has all the vagaries of the proper chase – you can see them working the trail out. It’s not just a case of the quarry running as fast as they can along the route that’s given to them, it’s far more complex.

The South Downs Bloodhounds Quarries l-r: Liz Wheeler, Tom Hawthorne, Richard Taylor and Quarry Captain Nick Hudson


‘Last week we had six quarry out as a group, and really that’s too many. The hounds just flew without checking. Obviously there were some who enjoyed a fast ride, but for me it’s far better to make life difficult for the hounds. Just two quarries, and let the hounds struggle a little.
‘We used to hunt a policeman, he was really good. One time we came up into a really big stubble field and I knew the quarry should have gone half way down before turning right. But the hounds flew along confidently, shooting past where the quarry should have turned. We made it to the end of the field, and the hounds checked. I watched them casting about, and started to wonder if the quarry had got lost somehow. Then, just one individual hound, Subtle, started to move her way back up the line. I called the rest of the pack, and they followed her – half way back across the field they roared off in the right direction.
‘I spoke to the policeman afterwards, and he said he’d decided to cause us some problems – he ran all the way to the end of the field, doubled back to re-trace his own steps up the line, and then cut left across the field as planned. Brilliant!’

Jeremy Whaley, senior Master of the South Downs Bloodhounds, leading the way.

A hound is a hound
How big is the South Downs Bloodhounds pack?
‘I normally have 18 couple in kennels,’ says Jeremy. ‘And I take 12 to 13 couple to hunt.’
A pack of hounds is always counted in couples. Two hounds are a couple and one hound is one hound – unless he is with others, when he is, naturally, half a couple. It is traditional for a huntsman to take an odd number of hounds out for a day’s hunting, so he might take 20½ couple – or 41 hounds.

The South Downs Bloodhounds in full voice, ‘roaring off in the right direction’.


‘Everyone is welcome to join the South Downs Bloodhounds. Riders must book ahead via the website, but anyone is welcome to attend the meets on foot and follow, or to become quarry. The SDB hunt is renowned for being welcoming to newcomers and isn’t overly concerned about the ‘right’ hunting dress, or people understanding hunting terms. There are always hunt members to buddy up with, whether you’re riding for the first time, or watching on foot. You do not need references to join the SDB. Details are all published on the website, and Jeremy encourages anyone to come and experience it for themselves.
‘To be honest, we take the piss out of each other a lot. And that’s not accidental. We really want people who will come along, muck in and have fun. We’re not frightfully grand, and we’re not there to impress anyone. We’re just ordinary people who love our animals, enjoying our sport.’

The South Downs Bloodhounds pack

With thanks to equestrian photographer Sharon T Photography for the use of all images.