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Sherborne Second Hand Book, Posteard, Map 8 Ephemera Fair | Saturday, 18th February 2023

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Sherborne Second Hand Book, Posteard, Map 8 Ephemera Fair


Saturday, 18th February 2023 – 9.30am – 4pm with free entry
Digby Memorial Church Hall, Digby Road, Sherborne, Dorset, DT9 3NL


Our fair attracts sellers from the West Country, selling second hand to antiquarian books on many subjects,
together with local maps and ephemera.


A warm welcome awaits and entry is free!


For more information email [email protected] or call Ed Bailey on 07967643579

Enjoy a little outdoor pottering

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Gardener Pete Harcom says that February is far from free of jobs to do, so make the most of a dry day and get outside to be ahead for the year

It won’t be long before the spring bulbs show their faces (image shutterstock)

Spring is just around the corner … the crocuses will be out soon, honestly! February is a good time to look back and evaluate what went well last year and plan for this spring and summer, while getting on with some useful jobs:

Check recently-planted trees and shrubs, as these may have been loosened by wind
There is still time to plant bare-rooted plants – February is regarded by some as the best time to do this, as the soil will soon be starting to warm up and this will give the plants a good start when the sap starts to rise.
Clean up and wash all pots in the greenhouse – this will help keep pests under control.
How about installing a water butt now, ready for the summer (it’s too late once it stops raining!)? Rainwater is particularly useful for watering acid-loving, ericaceous plants.
Find out what type of soil you have. Invest in a soil testing kit to help you choose the right plants for your garden.
Stock up on some organic fertilisers – there are many different types, each with different characteristics. Some of the more common examples are your own garden compost, well-rotted cow, horse and/or poultry manure, blood, fish and bone meal. Seaweed fertiliser is also worth looking for, as it is one of the most beneficial fertilisers and is also good for soil conditioning.
All potted plants will benefit from a top dressing with some of that organic fertiliser.
Pruning
Prune all your winter-blooming shrubs such as mahonia, winter jasmine and heathers once they’ve finished flowering. Be careful not to cut back into old wood.
Check your wisteria and cut side shoots to three buds from the base to encourage flowers in the spring.
Prune Buddleia davidii (butterfly bush) and Elder hard back to the base to keep these vigorous shrubs to a reasonable size.
Before the birds start nesting, trim back any ivy and deciduous hedges, Virginia creeper and other climbers.
Prune summer-flowering clematis towards the end of the month, before active growth begins, cutting stems back to healthy buds about 30cm from the base.
Cut back old stems of herbaceous perennials.
If you have a cold greenhouse you can start potted Fuchsias back into growth. Prune overwintered fuchsias back to one or two buds on each shoot. For the next few months, if you pinch out the lead bud on every shoot, you will have lots more flowers in the summer.

Feed the birds
February can be a particularly hard time for birds. Ensure your bird feeders are kept clean and regularly stocked. Maybe put up some nest boxes for garden birds to pick themselves a home.

Sponsored by Thorngrove Garden Centre

Highest honour in motorsport recognises local man’s bravery

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Steve Tarrant, who suffered life-changing injuries at Goodwood in 2000, has been awarded for his courage and commitment. Rachael Rowe reports

Steve Tarrant with his Motorsport UK Lifetime Achievement Award, after the ceremony at the RAC Club in Pall Mall

‘You haven’t seen the last of me yet,’ Steve Tarrant famously said, after an accident at the 2000 Goodwood Festival of Speed resulted in the amputation of his right leg.
He returned to marshalling in a wheelchair, and has worked at leading motoring events. At this year’s annual Night of Champions at the RAC Club in London’s Pall Mall, Motorsport UK recognised Steve’s 30-plus years as a race steward with a Lifetime Achievement Award – the highest honour bestowed by the Motorsport UK board.
Steve describes the moment he got the news: ‘Initially, it was a shock. You don’t expect something like that coming through the door! And you certainly don’t expect them to recognise a marshal like me when you see the other names on the awards list.’
Previous winners of the Lifetime Achievement Award have included Stirling Moss and Sir Jackie Stewart – and now Steve Tarrant of King’s Stag.
Locals may have seen him at the annual Sturminster Newton New Year’s Day Vintage Car Rally, busily marshalling the cars from the middle of the road. But Steve has marshalled at other, rather more glamorous, places like Le Mans, Goodwood and Silverstone. Marshals are all volunteers who play a critical role in motorsport racing.

Awards night on Pall Mall
‘It was a wonderful evening, and I wish they had filmed it from start to finish.’ says Steve. ‘Although getting me to the RAC Club was quite an ordeal for the taxi driver! They handed out 35 awards for winners of national championships, and then they had the special awards. There were actually two Lifetime Achievement Awards. One went to Ron Dennis, the former owner of McLaren Formula 1 … and the other went to me! It was a bit surreal seeing all these people you read about, on the track or on TV, and they were coming up and shaking my hand.’

Steve’s main career has been in IT but he has always loved motorsports. He jumped at the opportunity to volunteer as a steward, excited to enjoy the experience of motorsport racing from a different perspective. His life changed dramatically following his accident. He was standing near the finish line with the black and white chequered flag when a car travelling at 140 miles an hour crashed into him. ‘I was in the right place but at the wrong time. And I was the lucky one. The driver was killed and another steward died later in hospital.’
Two years later, Steve was back on the track marshalling, now in his TGA Vita Scooter. He was also invited back to Goodwood – this time as a VIP.
Initially, Steve had to fight for recognition as a wheelchair-bound marshal – somewhat unusual in the world of motorsports. His mobility scooter also featured in his success at becoming a Guinness World Record holder in 2014. The award was for the longest distance travelled in 24 hours on a mobility scooter. Steve’s 190.2 miles was completed with more than 1,800 laps at Goodwood, only stopping briefly for battery changes.

Steve’s a well-known (and easily recognisable!) orange-clad figure at the Sturminster Newton New Year’s Day Vintage Car Rally

He now inspires other wheelchair users to become stewards. ‘There are plenty of jobs out there that you don’t need two arms or two legs for,’ says Steve, a photojournalist with a lifetime of unique experiences.
Is there a stand-out moment in Steve’s career as a marshal? ‘There are several, especially after three decades. Being on the 24 Hour Le Mans race’s grid before the start was momentous. And meeting drivers like Lewis Hamilton or Tom Kristensen and chatting about racing because they want to talk to you just as much as you want to talk to them.’

If you would like to congratulate Steve on such a well-deserved award you can find him on Twitter @leglessmarshal or as motorsportmarshal on Facebook.

Should second home owners pay a premium on Council Tax in Dorset?

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Second homeowners may soon see council tax double in Dorset – but is that good for the county’s residents? Rachael Rowe reports

Okeford Fitzpaine in Dorset’s AONB. Second homeowners typically choose older, characterful property in prime locations and small communities

Coastal towns have hit the headlines in recent years with bans on second homes, especially in places where local key workers can no longer afford to live. Dorset has one of the highest rates of second homes in England, at one in every 34 homes, and the Government’s Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill presents an interesting opportunity for councils to impose a council tax premium on second homes; something Dorset Council is currently debating. But at a time when councillors have challenging decisions to make on budgets, is targeting second homes the right thing to do?

There’s a catch
The Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill was first presented to Parliament in May 2022. It is designed to devolve power and give local leaders and communities the tools they need to make better places and reduce inequalities. One of the components is the opportunity to implement a premium council tax payment on second homes; in effect a double council tax.
With 5,722 second homes in Dorset, the Council report that could potentially generate an additional £9.5 million in income for the county budget.
However, there’s a catch. Dorset Council has to give the government 12 months’ notice of their intentions, and the Bill still requires Royal Assent by April this year.
Dorset Councillor Peter Wharf was set to present the ‘Council tax premiums on second homes and empty properties’ report (read it here) at 23rd January’s Cabinet meeting. However, the Cabinet agreed that it should be discussed by as many councillors as possible before it is taken to a vote at Full Council. The report has now be added to the Place and Resources Overview Committee on Thursday 9 February to consider before providing recommendations to Cabinet on Tuesday 28 February. If agreed, it will then go to the Full Council meeting in March.
West Dorset MP Chris Loder has spoken in support of the proposal, saying it would ‘make it fairer for local people. Firstly, it will provide much needed income for the council for a fairer tax policy. And secondly, it will encourage property owners to think again before leaving their houses empty at a time when there are hard working local people struggling to find a home.
‘I have always maintained that to sustain our community infrastructure, we need to incentivise and support local people to stay and live in our communities.’
Behind the scenes at Dorset Council, any proposal of this nature requires discussion and agreement before notifying the Government of their intentions. And of course, it depends on the Bill being agreed upon.
It all feels a bit chicken and egg – but what benefits, if any, will this premium bring to Dorset? I spoke to Peter Wharf.

What is a second home?
Some people will naturally wonder whether the property they own and rent to key workers will also be eligible for this stealth tax, so I asked Peter to clarify what the council means by the phrase.
‘A second home is a second home. If someone has more than one property, then it is a second home. We have a list of homes that are potentially eligible for council tax; however, if someone is letting the property permanently, for example, that is not a second home.
‘We’re talking about the furnished properties that are left empty or used as holiday lets and rented on sites like Airbnb.’
Dorset Council has previously levied higher rates on empty properties. How has that worked?
‘That’s quite difficult to determine. It is difficult to see and assess all the properties, obviously. However, other councillors tell me anecdotally that it has sped up plans and building in some areas.’

According to the Council’s background paper on second homes in 2021, Dorset’s Coast, the AONB that runs to the north of the county and much of West Dorset have a particularly high proportion of second homes (see image right). There’s a lot of negative publicity about second homeowners, but does Peter think they bring any benefit to a local economy?
‘Well, there are benefits and disbenefits. One disadvantage is the schools don’t get enough pupils, and there is a lack of community in some areas. However, there is a counterargument.
People come here and eat out in the restaurants, visit the beaches and go to the attractions. So they may add to the economy but detract from communities as they only live here sometimes.’
While the new proposal to double council tax may potentially help with house prices and the housing demand, I’m wondering what else councils can do to stop communities from becoming overwhelmed with second homes. Peter has a view:
‘There is very little we can do as it’s all about a free housing market and what people choose to do. However, it is possible to get an agreement that new housing should not be used for second homes. What we don’t want to see is a situation where second home owners are made to feel very unwelcome in Dorset. We don’t want that here.’

Airbnb wins
So how could doubling the council tax affect tourism?
‘It is possible that second home owners won’t come here if we charge a premium. There is a possibility some will sell up. We also don’t know whether the £9.5 million quoted in the report will be realised because some people may sell up. I have spoken to some second homeowners who tell me they can get far more with Airbnb-ing their property than they can renting. It isn’t easy to generalise as people will choose what they want to do.
‘We are presenting this proposal now because it is an opportunity to regenerate communities in Dorset. It will go to the Place and Resources Overview committee, the Cabinet, and then the full Council. The public has an opportunity to attend.’
Second homes are like Marmite in rural and coastal communities and are guaranteed to stir up a debate. But, like them or loathe them, all councils are under pressure to find ways of funding core services.
Details of the process and discussion on this proposal are on the Dorset Council website. If you have strong views, contact your local Councillor.

• Dorset Council has 82 councillors, of whom 24 have disclosed second properties and are therefore excluded from this vote

DorsetBizNews loses its Diprose

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Andrew Diprose took the plunge and started an upbeat local business news website – three years later, he’s sold it to Black Ox. Laura Hitchcock reports

Andrew Diprose on the day he launched Dorset Biz News in 2019

Dorset Biz News was launched in October 2019 as Dorset’s first and only journalist-owned-and-run business news website. After three years, founder and editor Andrew Diprose is hanging up his notepad after selling the business to Black Ox Ltd for an undisclosed sum.
Andrew says: ‘It will be wonderful to finally have the time to just sit still with a book!
‘The last three years have been so full, and by last autumn I began feeling the time was right to stop. But I didn’t just want to write a goodbye post and hang up the “we’re closed” sign. It deserved more than that.’
Andrew approached his preferred purchaser, Black Ox, in November 2022, and the contract was signed last month. ‘I love their plan to spread the BizNews brand to every county,’ says Andrew. ‘To be honest, if I was 30 years younger I’d have loved to do it myself. But after 44 years in the business, it was time.
‘It was a very odd experience, sitting around the board table with the Black Ox team, listening to their enthusiasm and plans for MY business, this brand that I created. Anyone who has created a business from scratch knows it’s intrinsically “yours”.’

No crime, no bad news
‘I remember so clearly watching the clock count down on 2nd October 2019, waiting for 9pm and the site to go live. The very next day the phone started ringing, and it hasn’t stopped. There was such a need and a desire for upbeat, interesting journalism. In the twilight of my career I went right back to my roots – in 1979 my job was going out and interviewing people, writing their stories.’

Richard Thompson, Black Ox Chief Executive Officer, said: ‘We love what Andrew has built at DorsetBizNews.co.uk. It is a positive and dynamic news site which has become a voice for Dorset business, celebrating the people and the companies. We have exciting plans to expand the BizNews brand, always keeping it as a voice for business at the county level and with a commitment to quality content.’
To what does Andrew attribute the success of his rule-breaking news business?
‘I don’t do crime, I don’t do bad news, and therefore I’m not searching for the same story as everyone else. The general impression is that “business is boring” – the websites’ too corporate, the images too bland. I use lots of bright colour, lots of faces. Because business is integral to all our lives. It’s just people. It’s not “business” news when it’s about your friend or your local café. It’s just news.’

Neville the pig
‘The most popular stories were always a new business start-up. A story about someone – anyone – who had decided to just go for it, no matter what the business was. Which of us hasn’t dreamed of doing that? I certainly did!
‘Of the 3,600 plus stories one of the most unusual? Neville the pig. I ran a story for a local animal charity. Neville the pig was looking for a new home. It wasn’t a business story. It had no place on the website really. But I had a slot to fill and the charity needed a little push. Obviously it was the most viewed story not only that day, but that week. And every now and again Neville pops back up on the revolving ticker, more people click on him, and his stats just keep on climbing …’

So what now?
I’ll be doing a handover until the summer, and then I’ve been invited to stay as brand ambassador for three years, helping with the expansion.
‘I plan to read a lot and to sleep a bit. I am going to have adventures with my wife. But to just stop? No. That would be odd for someone who’s worked six days a week for three years. I’ve already had some interesting offers and I can safely say I won’t be bored.’
dorsetbiznews.co.uk

Letters to the Editor February 2023

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Want to reply? Read something you feel needs commenting on? Our postbag is open! Please send emails to [email protected].
When writing, please include your full name and address; we will not print this, but do require it.

But first, this month’s Letter from the Editor…

Laura Editor of the BV Magazine

A quick apology to everyone looking at our website on their phone for the last few weeks. It probably hasn’t escaped your attention that we’ve been proudly titled ‘Newsweek’ since Christmas.
We’re not, I assure you, in the midst of a grand takeover bid. Rather, we have a new website, and the simple task of tracking down why we were called Newsweek when looking at it on a phone utterly escaped me.
But through grit, perseverance (and a lot of YouTube watching) I fixed it.
GO ME. high five
But that fix promptly broke the menu. In fixing the menu I broke the sections page. And then I managed (and I still don’t know how) to put the sections page all over the home page.
By this time, in a flustered frustrated panic, very very bored with my own incompetence and frankly raging at the dark and evil arts of website maintenance generally, I hit the big server switch which resets the website to the day before.
Aaannndddd … hello Newsweek. Sigh.
Anyhoo. Suffice to say I was ultimately victorious. The website works, and we are no longer Newsweek.
We’ve big things in this issue; Dorset Island Discs and Random 19 have returned with two pillars of our Dorset community. I interviewed Henry ‘Blowers’ Blofeld, who’s coming to Dorset next month. Luke Rake gave us an exclusive on the damaging rumours that have been circulated in some areas about the cancellation of apprenticeships at Kingston Maurward College. Local man Steve Tarrant has been awarded motorsports’ highest honour – an award reserved for the likes of Stirling Moss and Sir Jackie Stewart. Farmer James Cossins tells us about his horrifically stressful January, and we take a look at whether second home owners should pay additional Council Tax in Dorset.
Plenty to get your teeth into this month – go make a coffee. And don’t let the websites grind you down.

Laura

PS CONGRATULATIONS to our farming journalist Andrew Livingston and his wife Ellie on the birth of their son Charlie this week.
PPS special mention to our German-speaking daughter in law Sally who provided the correct phrasing for the lucky pig Valentine’s traditions in Germany. Who knew? Apart from flower columnist Charlotte Tombs. And all the Germans, obviously…
PPPS Thanks to fellow business owner and website-battler James for his support through the disaster-strewn Website Of Doom. His helpful advice extended to “You’re still Newsweek? It’s been a month. May as well stick with it now, just change your Facebook name”.


Letters to the Editor, Feb 23:

Re. A motorway in Dorset
Andrew Livingston’s article in the Jan issue (read it here) on the potential for a motorway in Dorset raised a number of emails:


In response to Mr Livingston’s article on the need for a motorway, perhaps he could inform us as to which ancient holloways, protected AONB’s or productive farmland he might like to plough up?
The fact that we have no motorway has actually preserved so much of our county from over-development – and the presence of one would actually detrimentally impact the very local producers he’s trying to help.
Sheila Grange, Dorchester

Is Mr Livingston seriously suggesting that Devon’s local producers are assisted by people flying along the M3 to London? The success of ANY business lies in the quality of its product and in its marketing. In fact, many a weak product has succeeded thanks to its marketing strength. If local producers need more success, they need to learn how to be better at their business, not blame it on the lack of easy access to big roads.
Jack Pleacher, Wimborne

If we must have a motorway in Dorset, Mr Livingston, let’s at least make it end at Dorchester.
I, for one, am sick and tired of Dorset being a Jurassic Coast and nothing else; three quarters of the county is a fair drive from the coast, and yet the beautiful rural majority is consistently overlooked in terms of funding and services. Bring us people, and the County’s eye may finally turn upon us.
Julie Nokes, by email


On solar panels:
Hear, hear Rupert Hardy (Rooftops vs Fields, BV Jan 23). It is astonishing that for far too long there has been a seemingly broad acceptance to the quick and easy fix of letting private landowners and developers opt for huge scale solar farms when the rooftop solution bears so much scientific evidence for success and does so little visual harm. WHY is no one in authority paying attention to this?
Karen Bowen, by email

Thank you for your illuminating article from Rupert Hardy on the solar farms vs rooftop panels debate. It has always been my instinct that fields of reflective panels are WRONG, but at a time when we must begin to generate more green energy it has been difficult for me to argue my case effectively; the horror of discovering oneself to be a NIMBY!
Your article provided such a clear case with published evidence to support my instinctive understanding. Why oh why are we NOT implementing rooftop solar as a matter of urgency?
Rita Madeley, Blandford


On the politics
It has slowly become apparent that the representative for the Labour Party in North Dorset tends to veer towards haranguing those in charge of our very broken country, while not suggesting any alternative solutions from his own party. This is, I feel, no reflection of him as a person, but rather is symptomatic of the party as a whole.
North Dorset may be a permanently blue seat, but that doesn’t mean that every constituent votes that way. We can all see, hear and feel that it’s broken. What many of us want is to hear what other parties might actually DO. The point of these columns is surely to understand a different point of view if we are tired and frustrated by the current crop of blues in charge, and to raise discussions on local and national issues?
Alan Wills, Wimborne


On the haunting of Sandford Orcas manor
(Britain’s most haunted house? BV Jan 23):
We were lucky – I think it was about 30 years ago we took our son [to Sandford Orcas manor] when he was a small boy. We cheekily knocked on the door and Sir Mervyn himself answered. Instead of getting rid of us he asked us in and gave us a personal tour, during which he told us of all the facts in the attached article.
We thanked him very much, it made our day. What a lovely man!
Barry Wraight, via Facebook

We were privileged to be given a superb guided tour of this fascinating house by Sir Mervyn Medlicott in 2019. He really brought the history to life and the group we were in was spellbound!
Joss Mullinger, via Facebook


Are you related to Roger Ridout?
I have been reading your article about Roger Ridout (The BV, November 2020) with great interest. I am not a Ridout but I am descended from the Fords of Shillingstone. I have a will left by Thomas Ford in 1805, and in it he leaves ‘the Roger Ridout house’ to his wife:
WILL OF THOMAS FORD (1719-1805)
ffebruary 7? .4.1805
THIS IS MY LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT
I give to my wife late Roger Ridouts house and Orchard and ten pounds a year for her life she might receive it herself if my son dont pay her she might go to Mr Tice of Blandford and receive it but if she marry again she is to lost it directly to James or his ffamily/
I thought Roger Ridout died in 1811 so I am now very puzzled. Could this be a house belonging to his father or another older relative who died before 1805? Thomas’ son, James, died two years later in 1807 and he left the house to his own son, James:
”and also a dwelling house with offi…? and all unto belonging called and known by said name of Ridouts during my said term therin unoccupied it being located and situate in the parish of Shillingstone or Shilling Okeford”.
I can’t find a Shilling Okeford and wonder if it is actually Okeford Fitzpaine? I can see on an 1885 map that there is a mill on the road between Shillingstone and Okeford Fitzpaine, and another one in Fiddleford, but I am wondering which house Thomas and James Ford are referring to and how did they come to own it in the first place? Were they part of the smuggling gang I wonder?
I wonder if Roger Guttridge or any of your readers could shed any light on it for me please?
Veronica Barrett, Guildford

Roger Guttridge comments:
Veronica’s puzzlement is based on the assumption (which I had also made until now) that Roger Ridout remained at Okeford Fitzpaine Mill until his death, which was indeed in 1811. But we don’t know that and my guess now is that he and his wife Mary (died 1809) must have left there at some point between 1787 and 1805, probably selling the house to the Fords. I say ‘1787’ because he is listed in the Dorchester Jail Registers that year as a ‘miller’ of Okeford Fitzpaine (and his crime as ‘smuggling’), so was presumably still there then. He was a well-known character in North Dorset so it’s no surprise that his old house was effectively named after its association with him.
I’m guessing that the stream which once powered the waterwheel here may also have marked the Okeford Fitzpaine-Shillingstone parish boundary. The property, which last time I passed still had the old millstones on show as ornaments, probably sat in both parishes, which may explain any confusion there. Shilling Okeford or Ockford is an old name for Shillingstone, making it the third of the ‘three Okefords’, the others being Okeford Fitzpaine and Child Okeford.
Roger Ridout’s father (born 1708) was William not Roger and he lived at Farringdon in the parish of Shroton. Roger the smuggler effectively introduced their surname to Okeford Fitzpaine.
Roger’s mother was a Fiddleford girl, Susannah Appowell, and in 1746, as a boy of ten, Roger inherited a leasehold house and land there from his maternal grandfather. Fiddleford Mill was where the Ridout gang stored their contraband in later years and may also have been where Roger learned his milling skills, though that is speculation on my part.
Veronica’s information about the Fords adds another piece to a Roger Ridout jigsaw that has been gradually growing since I interviewed my grandfather Jim Ridout of Fiddleford about the family legends for a school project in 1967.
Thank you, Veronica!
Roger Guttridge – [email protected]


A letter from Val Singleton is always welcome in the BV postbox:
Lovely photo of Stourhead on the last issue! I have attached a photo I took when I was living in Corton Denham of a little owl that spent the summer perched on a post that led into part of the garden. I would love you to use it!
Roll on spring! Val


Neglect of Newell house in Sherborne
Sherborne CPRE are deeply concerned at the parlous state of Newell House – a Grade 2 historic building, which stands in an exceptionally prominent position at the junction of the A30 and the Marston Road. The western side of the house is thought to date back to the 17th century, and the house was listed in 1950.

However, in recent years the fabric has been allowed to deteriorate, as the photo shows, and is now on the SAVE At Risk register. Alongside the house, there is a listed barn dated as being built in the early to mid-16th century; no access is permitted to either building. Sherborne CPRE have repeatedly raised their concerns with the conservation team at Dorset Council, but while seemingly sympathetic to our case, they seem totally unable or unwilling to do anything to reverse the decline of this important feature of the Sherborne townscape. Offers to engage with the owner have also been fruitless.
It is clear that our county representatives are either powerless or disinclined to take any positive action to preserve our precious heritage buildings. We find it disappointing that a house listed seventy-two years ago by an official government agency is then effectively abandoned by local authorities when it deteriorates. It is sadly ironic that as Sherborne House is being transformed into a remarkable asset for the Town centre, another, even older, much-loved building has been allowed to become derelict. Something must be done before it is too late; and with some 350 listed buildings in Sherborne, this needs to be a wake up call for us all. By raising further our concerns, I am confident that all residents and our Town Council will then call for urgent action from Dorset County Council.
Sir Christopher Coville
Sherborne CPRE Chairman


The image below was sent in from Mike Lloyd-Jones in Shaftesbury, who said:
‘This was tree surgery in St James’ today – not sure I’d fancy it!’

A Dorset man – Tim Laycock answers the Random 19 questions

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Folk musician, singer, actor, storyteller, historian, Thomas Hardy expert … Dorset’s Tim Laycock is a man of many talents.

Tim Laycock at a William Barnes party. Image: Tony Gill

Folk musician, singer, actor, storyteller, historian, Thomas Hardy expert … Dorset’s Tim Laycock is a man of many talents.
He was a founder member of Hambledon Hopstep band and his CV includes writing music and playing for the National Theatre’s production of Lark Rise to Candleford, leading The New Scorpion Band, and playing William Barnes in The Year Clock, his own one-man show. He has written community plays and song cycles and is actively involved with the New Hardy Players, for whom he has adapted and directed several Hardy novels.
He is co-founder, with multi-instrumentalist Phil Humphries, of the Ridgeway Singers and Band, who continue the West Gallery tradition of carols and songs. Tim will lead the merriment at the Ridgeways’ annual Barnes tea party in Cerne Abbas village hall, at 3pm on Sunday 19th February. This is a celebration of the dialect poetry of the Dorset writer and polymath, who was born near Sturminster Newton. There are readings, songs and a cream tea – quintessential Dorset. And so, to the questions …

  1. What’s your relationship with Dorset?
    I came to Dorset when I was three, so I don’t actually remember arriving! My father had got a job as headmaster at Fontmell, in the Blackmore Vale, and we moved here from Wiltshire. So I grew up in North Dorset, and went to the old grammar school in Shaftesbury. I moved away for probably ten or 12 years, but I came back in the 80s and have lived here since.
    Basically, Dorset is the inspiration for everything I do – all the traditional music and stories and to a large extent the drama is all connected to Dorset and the oral history of the county.
  1. What was the last song you sang out loud in your car?
    It’s an old song, part of the play that I’m working on at the moment (Spinning the Moon, 4th-15th April, Hardye Theatre Dorchester), which is set in the aftermath of the battle of Bosworth Field. One of the songs is a drinking song of the time, and I’ve been driving around the county singing at the top of my voice ‘bring us in good ale, good ale, bring us in good ale!’ The song lists all the different foods that were eaten at the time, and most were … not very good. But you could always rely on ale!
  2. The last film you watched? I’d certainly recommend it. I saw it on TV over Christmas – Sam Mendes’ 1917. It’s the story of two soldiers who are given a mission to cross no man’s land during the First World War, across enemy lines, to take a vital message to another group of soldiers who are about to be trapped. They have to get this message through – and that’s it.
    It’s just the story of their journey – but it’s so well done. It’s tremendous.
  3. It’s Friday night – you have the house to yourself, and no work is allowed. What are you going to do?
    I suppose it depends whether you think it’s work or not for me … I’ve been learning the cello for a long time, and during lockdown I really got stuck into it. So what I absolutely love to do, if there’s no one else around, is to play it – as loud as I like! In fact, we live in a semi-detached cottage, and our neighbours have moved out, so with no one next door I can really go for it!
    Playing my cello out loud, accompanied by a small glass of scotch … that is a very good way to spend a Friday night.
  1. What is your comfort meal?
    Chicken curry of some sort!
  2. What would you like to tell 15 year-old you?
    I think I would like to tell myself to get on and learn to play the piano. It’s the one thing I regret – if I’d learned when I was much younger, it would have been so very useful.
  3. The best crisps flavour?
    Well now. I do like crisps, but recently I have discovered vegetable crisps, and I really really like them. So I would just go for a nice bag of veggie crisps please!
  4. And the best biscuit for dunking?
    Oh, it’s got to be a Bourbon!
  5. What book did you read recently that stayed with you?
    The one that has stayed with me was Natasha Solomons’ Mr Rosenblums List.* She’s actually a local author, and this book is partly based on her grandfather who was Jewish and came to this country just before Second World War.
    When Mr Rosenblum and his wife arrived in England, he was handed a list as he got off the boat; things he had to do to become a proper Englishman (including join a golf club!).
    He moved into London, set up a business in the East End, then promptly got moved to an internment camp when the war started. But he came down to Dorset when he was released and he fell in love with the place. He came to somewhere which sounds very much like it’s in the Ibberton area, and the book is about how this Jewish business man becomes integrated into the local rural community.
    It’s such a delightful book. It’s poignant, and it’s funny, there’s lots of humour in it. But the thing I love about it is that there’s so much folklore in it. Some is real folklore that I already knew about, but quite a lot of it Natasha has tweaked a bit because I’ve never heard it before in relation to Dorset! The book quietly builds up a wonderful picture of this rather eccentric chap who moves to a quiet Dorset village, and how the locals relate to him and his wife.
    And he does in fact solve the problem of the golf course (none of the London ones would accept a Jew, of course) by building one for himself on the side of Bulbarrow.
  1. What would you like to be remembered for?
    I think I’d most like to be remembered for helping to keep alive the flame of Dorset oral history. So many people over the years have given me stories and songs and taught me things, generally people of an older generation.
    Now I feel that I’m in a position to do the same. I love it when other people become enthused by the old stories and customs and songs of the county. That I find deeply rewarding.
  2. Your most annoying trait?
    I’m told, even though I don’t regard it as annoying myself at all, that it is ‘leaving heaps of stuff about the house’. It might be heaps of clothes to other people, but they are, in fact, simply clothes prepared and ready for use the next day.
    Or it could be (and to be fair, it usually is) heaps of scripts and writing paper etc. Which are actually laid out carefully, in order, ready to be worked on.

‘Heaps’ are a source of annoyance, apparently!

  1. What shop can you not pass by?
    Very easy – just down the valley (I now live in the Bride Valley) is the Modbury farm shop. And it’s just wonderful – a lovely range of produce, loads of it is local, and it’s a very social place to go, too; you nearly always meet someone you know. I recommend it to everyone – and it’s extremely hard to pass without going in!
  2. Your favourite quote?
    I thought hard about this. It’s probably the last line of William Barnes’ famous poem Praise of Dorset. Barnes wrote wonderful poetry in the Dorset dialect, nearly all of it inspired by friends and faces and people he know in the Sturminster Newton area. I think this is just wonderful:

‘Vor Do’set dear,
Then gi’e woone cheer;
D’ye hear? woone cheer!’

Tim Laycock
  1. Tell us about one of the best evenings you’ve ever had?
    This was fantastic! Last year the Commonwealth Games were held in Birmingham, and we were lucky to get some tickets to the closing ceremony. We took two of our grandchildren, and it was just the most fantastic celebration of Birmingham. All the athletes were there and relaxing, and it was a whole string of (mostly) singers and dancers from all sorts of cultural backgrounds, and all connected to Birmingham. The whole audience had come for a good time, and you felt the entire city was patting itself on the back. It was just a real celebration of a city. I’ve been to Birmingham so many times to sing in folk clubs, but I saw it in a different light that night. Everyone was so friendly, so exuberant. It really was a wonderful evening.
  2. What was the last gift you either gave, or received?
    The last gift I received was yesterday! We’d lent a little electric freezer to someone in the village, and when they brought it back they gave us a small framed photo of a cat. We both initially thought ‘oh, well, that’s quite nice, but not sure why they gave us that’! But then when we looked more closely, we realised it was a photo that they had taken of our last cat.
    We don’t have any cats at the moment, but outside our house we’ve got a stone statue to our last cat, Bimport (named after the place in Shaftesbury). And they had a photo of Bimport which they’d taken years before – it was such a touching thing to receive and to be unexpectedly reminded of a very, very dear pet.
  3. Your top three most-visited websites?
    Um, my top three are all the same one – YouTube. I absolutely love YouTube, I use it more than anything else. There’s so much wonderful music, and history, and I admit I very often use the ‘how to’ repair guides!
    It’s that or the news, I’m afraid.
  4. What in life is frankly a mystery to you?
    Computers! I’m constantly thinking that I really ought to be better at them than I am.
  5. Chip Shop Chips or Home Baked Cake?
    Cake, definitely.
  6. You have the power to pass one law tomorrow, uncontested.
    What would you do?
    I think I would pass a law that every child ought to be able to study art and music at school to the level they would like to. It’s being eroded, isn’t it?

You can hear some of Tim’s folk music on Spotify here and keep up with his latest projects on TimLaycockMusic.

*Natasha Solomons was a previous Random 19 guest of the BV (June 22) you can read her answers here.

February’s BV magazine out now!

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The latest issue is jam-packed (even for us) with fascinating local people and important North Dorset issues. Is farming suffering from being Countryfile-d? SHOULD Dorset’s second home owners pay more tax? The BV gets the actual facts with an exclusive scoop form Luke Rake at Kingston Maurward college – have they really just decided to pull all apprenticeships? Pauline Batstone shares her Dorset island Discs, and Tim Laycock answers 19 random questions (he has the BEST cat story).
Plus I asked 83 year-old Henry ‘Blowers’ Blofeld if he’d considered retiring. Yes, that went as well as you’d expect…

Inside this issue:

  • Should second home owners pay a premium on Council Tax in Dorset? They may soon see the tax double – but is that good for the county’s residents? – P.4
  • We hear the truth behind the rumours. Following an outcry based on inaccurate information, BV editor Laura spoke to Luke Rake, principal of Kingston Maurward College – P.6
  • There’s been a complaint … With our national newly-sanitised view of ‘Countryfile-d’ farming, complaints about animal welfare are on the increase – P.6 (and don’t miss the real life story of farming columnist James Cossin’s distress when it happened to him. P.76 Rawston Farm)
  • Folk musician, singer, actor, storyteller, historian, Thomas Hardy expert … Dorset’s Tim Laycock is a man of many talents. He answers the Random 19 questions this month – P.20
  • Legendary cricket commentator and broadcaster, Henry Blofeld OBE, invites you to join him in a new show, My Dear Old Things – coming to the The Exchange, Sturminster Newton next month. Editor Laura had the temerity to ask him if, at 83, he might have considered retiring? It didn’t go well. P.54
  • Not sure why but we had to go to four pages for Letters to the Editor this month. Opinions are running high. Plus it’s always lovely when Val Singleton pops into the inbox. – P.86

(Quick reminder – we’re NEVER PRINTED. The only way to read the BV’s jam-packed goodness is right here online)

From Cheselbourne around Nettlecombe Tout | 6.3 miles

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Starting just outside Cheselbourne on Drake’s Lane, this is a wonderful route with endless views incorporating our favourite track over Lyscombe Hill and across Dorsetshire Gap; a shorter circuit perfect for a winter’s afternoon.

To follow this route using the Outdooractive App, please find the route here.


Total people encountered – 0 (though Dorsetshire Gap and Lyscombe Hill are both well-walked, so that won’t always be the case. We got lucky!)

Bridleway crossroads on the top of Lyscombe Hill – you curve to the right here. © BV magazine

The path is straightforward, well signed and easy to follow – with lots of potential variations if you wish to lengthen it.

Dorsetshire Gap is another meeting of ancient holloways – this was the only leg of the crossroads we’ve never walked before. Not ashamed to say we plotted the whole route in order to walk this lane.

As you circle the bottom of Nettlecombe Tout, keep an eye on the map. The obvious path goes straight ahead through a wide gate, but instead you want the narrow, dark path that cuts closer to the foot of the hill, up through the trees. Do NOT miss it – you can work around, but you’d miss a stunning green holloway fwhich was beautiful in January. I’m guessing it will be spectacular in the summer.

The wonderful lane round the base of Nettlecombe Tout. Even in January it was magical. © BV magazine

Pick a fine day, and you’ll be rewarded with some of the most stunning views across the Blackmore Vale and beyond. It really is a special place for a  walk in North Dorset.

The uninterrupted view from Bowdens to the coast

We parked on the side of the green lane the route begins in – please park considerately and do not block farmer access. If it’s not possible, the next suggestion would be to add a little to the mileage and park in Cheselbourne or Melcombe Bingham and simply walk to the route.

The beauty of the winter trees tracing the sky