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The Ghost in Room 9 | Looking Back

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Pub manager Jamie Clark didn’t believe in ghosts – until the day he moved into the historic King’s Arms Hotel at Blandford in January last year.

By the following morning he not only believed but had accepted the town’s most famous spook ‘into the family’, as he puts it.

‘I’d been telling the builders that I didn’t mind ghosts – that they didn’t bother me,’ said Jamie.

Kings Arms today

‘That night the wind was howling, the bedroom window burst open and I couldn’t get it to close.

‘It was a bit windy outside but not overly so. This was completely different to wind. It was like a vortex in the room.’

The disturbance continued throughout the night and the ghost even strayed into Jamie’s dreams.

‘I think she has some sort of power where she can enter your dreams,’ he said.

‘There are definitely some eerie things around the pub. I’ve never again said that ghosts don’t bother me. I don’t want to upset her.’

The King’s Arms stands at the corner of Bryanston Street and Whitecliff Mill Street on the site of the tallow chandler’s shop where the Great Fire of Blandford began in 1731.

The present pub was built in 1790 and from 1874 was run by John Lewis Marsh, who took over from relative John Lewis and developed a brewery next door that flourished until 1938.

The ghost is said to be that of Amelia – known as Emily – who died in the 1731 fire.

‘Nobody knows exactly where she died but the ghost lives in room 9,’ said Jamie.

‘It doesn’t put off our guests. The previous landlord told me that many actually asked to stay in room 9.

‘One of my customers, who worked here for many years, said she saw the figure of a young girl in the middle of the room.’

The Great Fire of June 4, 1731, was vividly described by the Rev Malachi Blake, a dissenting minister, who lost his home and his church’s meeting house in a disaster that destroyed most of pre-Georgian Blandford.

‘About two of the clock in the afternoon a dismal cry of fire was heard in our streets,’ he wrote.

‘The inhabitants of the place were all soon alarmed; some were called from their business; some, possibly, from their pleasures; some, perhaps, from their cups.

‘The fire first kindled on the outside of a soap-boiler’s house, occasioned (as he conjectures) by sparks that fell from a chimney upon the thatch.


Manager Jamie Clark (left) and his partner Blake Fox with the board recalling the site’s eventful history

‘Some think differently, but all agree [that] it was entirely accidental.’

Blandford’s fire appliances went to work but proved hopelessly inadequate and within half-an-hour were themselves ‘all burnt or rendered unfit for service’.

The changeable north-westerly wind carried the flames in all directions and soon all the adjoining streets were ablaze.

‘The fire spread itself with such speed and fury that everything was soon devoured before it,’ wrote Blake.

‘Not a piece of timber but what was burnt to a coal. The pewter in many houses was not only melted but reduced to ashes by the fervent heat.’

Blandford’s parish registers were lost in the fire but the replacement register lists 12 people as having been ‘burnt and interred’ on June 4.

A later memorial puts the number who perished at 14 but there may have been many more who died as an indirect result of the fire.

Another 37 burials are listed between June 5 and July 13, significantly more than usual for this length of time.

Some may have died of smallpox, which was also raging at the time.

Public buildings lost in the fire included the parish church, the town hall, the schoolhouse, the fire engine house and market house, and the old church almshouses.

All but a dozen of Blandford’s houses and businesses were also engulfed along with parts of nearby Bryanston and Blandford St Mary.

Damage was estimated at £90,000. More than 520 financial ‘sufferers’ are listed with losses ranging from 1 guinea for Mary Flewell to £4,000 for the church.

Donations towards the rebuilding costs flooded in including £1,000 from King George II, £200 from Queen Caroline and £100 from the Prince of Wales.


A typical fire appliance of the mid-18th century

The rebuild was planned and largely carried out by the Bastard family, already a reputable firm of architects, builders and joiners and themselves the greatest private losers to the fire.

The work included 60 temporary homes at the top of Damory Street to accommodate the homeless.

But the main rebuild created the model Georgian twon centre that we know today.

In 1760 John Bastard erected a monument and water pump in the Market Place to commemorate the fire and the raising of the town ‘like the Phoenix from its ashes to its present beautiful and flourishing state’.

Jamie Clark manages the King’s Arms for his brother, Matt, who also runs the White Hart at Sturminster Newton.

They plan to reopen after the latest lockdown on April 12, initially serving drinks in the beer garden.

Roger Guttridge

Housebuilder announces planned development on edge of town to be called Corallian Heights

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A planned new housing development on the outskirts of Sturminster Newton is to be called Corallian Heights.

The 9.5-acre site, located off North Fields and bordering Sturminster Newton United Football Club’s pitch.

Contracts for the land, which has outline planning permission for 114 homes, were exchanged last month.

The land deal with Bellway Wessex is for a 9.5-acre site, located off North Fields and bordering Sturminster Newton United Football Club’s pitch.

Dorset Council approved outline plans in April last year, and Bellway is now preparing to submit a reserved matters application in the coming weeks.

Subject to planning approval, the new development will feature 85 two, three and four-bedroom homes for private sale, alongside 29 affordable one and two-bedroom apartments, and two and three-bedroom houses available for local people through rent or shared ownership.

Shaun Petitt

The 114-home scheme will deliver new housing as part of The Artisan Collection, a bespoke range of house types by Bellway which combine traditional craftsmanship with modern construction techniques.

The housebuilder says it will make significant financial investment in local infrastructure and facilities as part of the plans.

Bellway intends to call the development Corallian Heights, with the name derived to pay homage to the limestone geology from the Jurassic period, which is synonymous with Dorset.

Shaun Pettitt, Managing Director, Bellway Wessex, said: “We are planning to deliver a wide selection of different home styles and sizes to meet the needs of house-hunters in this part of Dorset, including families and first time buyers.

“The design of the new homes at the development will reflect the local vernacular of the area, and we will also be providing public open space to complement the existing wooded surrounds to the east of the site.

“This is a sustainable location for new housing, with a range of local facilities within walking distance including Sturminster Leisure Centre close by, as well as schools, shops and services.

“We intend to submit detailed plans in the coming weeks and hope these will be approved so we can begin work later this year.”

By: Andrew Diprose Dorset Biz News

Sturminster Newton High School | Then and Now

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It’s a sobering thought that the kids in these pictures of Sturminster Newton High School will be in their 70s now.

The photos were taken soon after the school opened in 1960 – although it was the County Secondary Modern School until comprehensive education came along in 1968.

I inherited the pictures from my mother, Connie Guttridge, who was the last secretary at the old Secondary Modern in Penny Street and the first at the ‘new’ school in Bath Road.


Sturminster Newton High School in 1960

Much to her relief, I was never a pupil there but I do have a vivid memory of 1960, as she made use of my ten-year-old muscles during the summer holiday.

I remember unwrapping and stacking a zillion pristine exercise books and text books in the walk-in stationery cupboard.

The school was originally designed for 350 pupils but opened with 497 so it probably wasn’t too far short of a zillion books.

The school was formally opened in September 1960 by the Bishop of Sherborne.

Stan Tozer was the first headmaster and I think Harry Dawes was deputy head.

As we can see from these pictures, the school’s facade has changed remarkably little in 60 years.

One obvious difference is the disappearance of the factory chimney, which I presume reflects a change in heating arrangements.

The windows on the three-storey teaching block also appear to have grown.

The school had an early problem with ground floor windows, some of which opened onto a footpath and caused minor injuries to pupils who walked into them.

A barrier had to be erected to prevent mishaps.

Sturminster Newton High School Today

On the rear side of the school, there have been far more changes including extensions to accommodate science labs, art and textile rooms and sixth-form students.

Steps, paving stones and railings have contributed to a transformation of the Courtyard area in particular.

Roger Guttridge

The Pony Club, How do I join?

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Many of us have been in lockdown for some time, let`s get out in the fresh air!

The Easter Holidays are nearly here.  Is it Time to join The Pony Club?  Pony Club teaches them togetherness, empathy, respect, learning and more importantly it gives them a whole lot of FUN.

If your child is besotted by ponies and is lucky enough to have access to a pony, whether it be own, loan or at a Riding School, then why not join The Pony Club. www.pcuk.org

The Pony Club is a youth organisation for people interested in ponies and riding. It is a registered charity and its aims are to promote learning of how to ride and care for a pony, how to develop sportsmanship, loyalty and self-discipline.

What would my child gain by joining a local Branch or riding school linked Centre I hear you ask?

Lots of lessons, called rallies, and camps, some ridden and some non-ridden activities, with Coaches that are fully accredited and hold DBS, safeguarding and first aid qualifications.  They will get the chance to compete at local, regional and a national level in ridden sports, dressage, show jumping, eventing, mounted games, endurance, polo, polocrosse, tetrathlon and pony racing and non-ridden such as quizzes, triathlon and horse and pony care as well as online learning and competitions.

Competitors at a Fun Horse and Pony Care Quiz at Divoky Riding School . January 2020.

There is the chance to pass tests and receive certificates as their abilities improve.  The later tests can lead to equestrian qualifications.  To help to get to the Test level there are Progressive Awards.  There are many Achievement badges for which they will receive sew on badges as they develop their skills. An example is a grooming badge when they can show that they know how to groom a pony.

Membership is annual from the day of joining for anyone up to the age of 25.

There are types of membership. Branch membership, Centre membership, Centre Plus membership, Family membership and Non-riding membership.  To join please use online membership by going to https://pcuk.org/join-us/

By: Sarah Greenwood

WHY DEMOLISHING NORDON IS MORE THAN AN ARCHITECTURAL DISASTER

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A council decision to demolish Nordon House – an Edwardian building in the centre of a conservation area in Blandford –  has met with huge outcry from the local community as well as two outraged local councillors.

Dorset Council Councillors Byron Quayle and Noc Lacey-Clarke, who fought to keep Nordon and have plans recognised to create a visionary community hub, are determined to fight on for the town and have their vision realised.

In a joint opinion piece, they share their views to the digital Blackmore Vale:

The demolition of Nordon is an absolute travesty for Blandford. We could have used the site to do great things in the town. Some people just weren’t prepared to listen.

It speaks volumes when a cross-party committee in charge of making the decision whether to keep Nordon or demolish it, calls itself ‘The Nordon Disposal Board’. With a title like that, you can’t help but feel this was a done deal long before it came to a vote.  We would’ve had a lot more faith in the ‘Committee who may use this fantastic facility to do something good in Blandford!’ 

And when a venture with a developer is involved, commercial sensitivity means elements of reports can legally be kept confidential from councillors not on the committee. It’s our personal opinion that planning permission was presumed well before the planning committee decision but we have no evidence to support that unfortunately.

The reality is we are two councillors who’ve spent years fighting to protect Nordon, along with so many others in our community including the Town Council, Civic society and many residents. Determined to get the voices of Blandford people heard, we knocked on numerous doors to harvest opinions. Thanks to the tireless efforts of Nicci Brown, secretary of the Blandford Civic and District Society, we rallied a 2000-strong petition in favour of keeping the building.

There were numerous discussions with Historic England. Three times Blandford appealed for them to list the building to protect it. However, being Edwardian, Nordon House apparently didn’t deserve the listed protection that a Georgian building enjoys. The advice from Historic England was that Nordon wouldn’t win a costly legal challenge on the grounds of historic architectural value.

But what about the conservation area in which this building sat? An area that purposefully put Nordon at its heart to protect it. Look at the map and you’ll see there’s a square protecting Nordon.  Again our argument on conservation grounds was rebuffed – apparently it made no sense for an Edwardian building to be protected in this way!

With the help of our campaigning allies like Councillor Roger Carter, then Chairman of Blandford Forum Town Council, Blandford fought on. Ignored by our District Council, the matter was  escalated to central government, writing a letter to the Secretary of State. In this, the town defended the reasons why Nordon should stay at the heart of Blandford. Reasons so much more than architectural value alone.

Our vision, which we’ve been lobbying for since 2017, was to create a community hub at Nordon. With the council vacating the building, the fact local surgeries in the town were contemplating moving and Nordon still in public ownership, this was the perfect opportunity to merge crucial services in the town together under one roof. Even better – to a building that was at the geographical centre of the town and easier to get to for many in the community.

This community hub could incorporate adult and children services, the local library, surgeries and even the town council could have moved there. Co-ordinated facilities bought together in an existing building at the geographical heart of the town – such a workable idea. And a win-win when you consider the large capital receipt gained by freeing up other buildings.

Blandford struggles with space for pop-up businesses due to high street rents. So why not use Nordon to allow budding entrepreneurs to promote themselves in a free space? We even had plans for better transport infrastructure to offer more parking in that area. Joined up thinking that could have transformed lives but time and again our very raised voices were ignored. No amount of different opinion would sway, including the 2000 names on the petition.

Knocking down one house that has a lot of history is sad but missing out on the opportunity to bring so many services together with a joined-up, new way of thinking is criminal. The possibilities were endless.

In the North Dorset Planning meeting on 26th February 2019, the fate of Nordon was sealed, with a vote of seven in favour to demolish and two against. Twenty members of the public attended – significantly less than the 2000 on the petition but that’s in fact a large turn-out for a planning meeting, especially when you consider it was held way out in Durweston Village Hall and half way through the day. We’d like to thank all those people for their support in campaigning and those that attended the meeting.

The reason the planning permission was accepted was a finely balanced argument with the negatives for knocking down the building outweighed by the positive appeal of 40 affordable houses being built. But what is affordable housing? It’s a legal term defining houses 20% below market value. That’s still not affordable for many of us living in Blandford. 

We’d like to see more truly affordable housing for the people of Blandford, many already struggling with some of the highest taxes in the country.  We need to be looking at how we can protect and help the most vulnerable in our community – low income, young families, single people trying to work and live in Blandford. We see more people needing support of foodbank services. Many in our community are only just getting by.

The new accommodation has been hailed as a “legacy for the town.” This is not a legacy. It’s an absolute disaster for Blandford. It will be hard for the Council to look back and say this was a good decision. It’s not. It’s a huge missed opportunity for the people of Blandford.

We believe the decision to demolish Nordon, which was taken just before the LGR (Local Government Reorganisation) of Dorset’s Councils, would not have gone through today with the new “big picture” council structure.  In fact, none of the councillors that voted for the planning permission were re-elected in 2019.

As councillors, we get a lot of anger from people disenfranchised by the whole situation. Sadly, that is often stoked by people who care more about point scoring rather than about doing good for Blandford. As to the comments on social media and repeated suggestions of bribes in brown envelopes, the only pleasure one of us had was to receive dog faeces through our letterbox!

It’s difficult being a politician – people want to take their frustrations out on the bigger picture and you are that emblem of that bigger picture locally.  People on social media are quick to criticise without knowing the full background.

Blandford is our boss and we want to do the best for the town. Yes, it needs to expand and grow and of course not all decisions are liked by everyone. But now our town has lost a potential shining jewel and we’re left with an angry community and need to pick up the pieces

Nordon is an outrage. We got into politics to make a change and help Blandford. We’re just as frustrated as everyone else at this missed opportunity. We cannot do anything to over- turn it. Sadly. So now, we move forward. We make sure Blandford is safeguarded and look to the future.

Nordon may have been a good option but won’t have been the only option. We will find a way to win and make our vision a reality. This Nordon debacle is one of the reasons we both get up in the morning  –  to do battle for Blandford.

Once more into the breach dear friends!

By: Tracie Beardsley

Sculpture by the Lakes – The Art of Tranquillity

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Nestled in the Dorset countryside just six miles east of Dorchester is one of the county’s hidden gems – Sculpture by the Lakes. 

This 26-acre sculpture park is a glorious gallery under the skies, where visitors can escape from daily worries surrounded by woodland, water, gardens and inspiring works of art. Even those who would never dream of setting foot inside a traditional art gallery find themselves drawn to wandering the sculpture park, confidently enjoying the sculptures in their open air setting, absorbing the tranquil magic that has been created through the park.

And if you’ve never visited before, now is the perfect time: FORM – the Sculpture Exhibition taking place at Sculpture by the Lakes – is now open, with over 200 sculptures on display by 30 of the UKs leading sculptors.

Sculpture by the Lakes Dorset

Sculpture by the Lakes is owned by Simon Gudgeon, an internationally recognised sculptor favoured by royalty and rock stars alike, with more than 30 of his pieces installed in the grounds.

Considered to be one of Britain’s leading contemporary sculptors, despite never having sculpted anything until the age of 40, Simon has become known for his signature, smooth-style and his minimalist, semi-abstract large-scale sculptures. Search for Enlightenment, Simon’s iconic bronze sculpture of two backward-tilted heads, is a firm favourite with visitors to Sculpture by the Lakes, along with another of Simon’s most famous pieces Isis, aka Serenity.

Its elegant pared-back form typifies much of Simon’s tone and style as an artist. 

His works also feature in high-profile public locations, including Kew Gardens and Hyde Park in the UK, as well as internationally, and form part of many important private collections – three generations of the Royal Family own a Simon Gudgeon sculpture.

Sculpture by the Lakes

Over the past decade Simon has turned Sculpture by the Lakes into a piece of art in its own right, not only creating sculptures, but designing and making every element, from benches and hanging seats to fencing and plant supports, while his wife Monique and a small team of gardeners have created the gardens, walkways, wildlife havens, and planted hundreds of trees.

Together the couple have transformed this space from the working fishery it once was, into a stunning and unique visitor attraction, over time opening up galleries, an award-winning café, developing the landscape and every year adding more art works. 

This creative hub also plays host to events throughout the year, from art exhibitions and workshops, to large scale events such as last summer’s hugely successful Dorset Arts Festival, which safely welcomed some 2,000 people.

To experience this magical haven of peace, nature, and art book tickets via the website www.sculpturebythelakes.co.uk. FORM runs from 1st April – 16th May, open Wednesday – Sunday (closed Mondays and Tuesdays).

Tickets must be pre-booked and visitor numbers are capped to ensure social distancing is maintained. 

Honeysuckle; born in the Blackmore Vale, ridden by Blackmore to win the Champion Hurdle

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“I sold her for just over 8,000 sterling – and then she won her first time out, and was sold again for £110,000!”

Rachael Blackmore made racing history last month when she became the first female jockey to win the Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham with her victory on Honeysuckle.

Honeysuckle and Rachael Blackmore win the Unibet Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham. 16/3/2021 Pic Steve Davies/Racingfotos.com

But the connection to our little area of north Dorset is far closer than the jockey’s name – Seven-year-old Honeysuckle is from Glanvilles Wootton, just outside Sherborne, bred by Dr Geoffrey Guy and Guy’s co-owners and managers of The Glanvilles Stud, Doug and Lucy Procter

“It’s funny” laughed Doug Procter, when I caught up with him last week “I tried to sell her as a foal at Doncaster, and didn’t get a single bid. She wasn’t by a fashionable stallion, y’see. Then as a three year old I took her to the Derby sale in Ireland, and got €9,500 for her.”

He held a polite few second’s silence when I innocently enquired if that was far below what he would have hoped for, and then couldn’t hold back.

It was a thumping great loss! And to make it worse, the following Spring she won the first time out by 15 lengths, and literally four days later Mark O’Hare sold her on again at the Punchestown sale to Peter Maloney, who bought her for owner Kenny Alexander for £110,000!”

(In case, like me, you’re wondering, if she’d been by a fashionable stallion Doug would have expected to get £20-£30,000 for her himself as an untried 3yr old).

Honeysuckle has stayed in Ireland, trained by Henry de Bromhead – and she’s never been beaten. She’s won 11 races under rules, including the Mare’s Hurdle at Cheltenham last year.

“It was the way she did it!”

said Doug after the Champion Hurdle race at Cheltenham two weeks ago

“The way she jumped and pulled clear at the second last and then just kept on going, that’s quite a way to win a Champion Hurdle.

“I always remember people saying of Desert Orchid, ‘he’s a marvellous horse, but he hasn’t won a Gold Cup’. But as soon as he ticked that box, it cemented him up there at the top.

“What else can you say about the mare? She’s never been beaten. 11 races on the trot, six Grade 1s on the trot and seven in total. She is just fantastic. I was clearly having a good day when I planned that mating!”

At first glance, one might think Glanvilles Wootton (“population not-a-lot” Doug quipped) is an unlikely spot for a Champion Hurdle winner.

And yet there appears to be something in the grass that racehorses like: where the Blackmore Vale meets the chalk downs seems to be perfect land for rearing Thoroughbreds.

Glanvilles Stud was originally an organic dairy farm, and the land with its beautiful mature hedges and trees has created 60 acres of safe paddocks.

Doug & Lucy Procter have produced two Grade 1 winners:

(“the horseracing equivalent of a football team winning the European Championship.” explained Doug)

Sam Spinner won the Long Walk at Ascot in 2017, and of course now Honeysuckle. Believe it or not, the 1959 Grand National winner Oxo was also bred in the tiny village. And just over the hill, Rooster Booster, who won the Champion Hurdle in 2003, was bred in the Piddle Valley.

Another random chance connects the Honeysuckle story to her Dorset roots – Henry De Bromhead came to visit his aunt in Sherborne, and whilst there he visited Robert Alner (himself a Dorset dairy farmer who turned his hobby of point-to-pointing into a successful training career) because his aunt owned a horse being trained at Lockets Farm in Droop, nr Hazelbury Bryan. He came for a couple of weeks, stayed for the whole season and has been training horses himself ever since.

Gillingham Medical Practice – Important Info, please share

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Gillingham Medical Practice are about to change the way patients make appointments. Long gone will be the days when everyone queues for ages at 8.30am on the phone to get an appointment – they are introducing a triage system to ensure patients are seen by the right person in a timely manner. Like all changes, there will be concern and lots of questions – so here’s all the info you need:

We need your help… 

We are looking toward a post-COVID future, whilst still expecting to be vaccinating our community against COVID until the end of the year. As of 30th March, The Barn Surgery will be undergoing extensive refurbishment requiring it’s temporary closure. We are expecting this to last at least six months.  

From April 14th, we are bringing in a better system of allocating appointments, with the clinical team assigning the right type of appointment at the right time, based on information from our patients.   

Our goal is to produce the best possible system – Total Triage should mean that the care you receive from us is delivered faster, more safely and of the best possible quality. 

We will ask you to help us by giving us some information about your symptoms, and what you’re hoping we might be able to do to help. The easiest way for you to do this is by completing an eConsult. If this is not possible, the next option is to answer some simple triage questions with one of our Patient Services Administrators, to give us the information we need to give you the right appointment. Our entire team subscribe to the same very high standards of confidentiality.  

We will not ever prevent anyone from receiving care – the goal is to deliver care that is: 

FASTER – Total Triage with eConsult requires no waiting on the phone and will help you avoid the rush for appointments when the phone lines open.  

SAFER – Total Triage with eConsult highlights symptoms to us that could be serious, and so reduces the risk of patients with these problems not being able to get through to us on the phone.  

BETTER – Under Total Triage, appointments will be allocated by clinicians, which will allow us to make sure that we give you the right appointment at the right time with the right clinician.  

Our aim is to maintain continuity of care whenever possible. Continuity of care means each patient ideally seeing the same, or a small team of doctors, rather than lots of different doctors. We think this helps us to spot more easily when something is seriously wrong, and helps us to help you make difficult decisions, if they come up.  

Our fabulous team of Patient Services Administrators are key to implementing this system, as the vital link between our community and our clinical team.  

There are lots of other ways you can help us make this a success such as signing up for online access via SystmOnline and using the NHS app. 

Thank you for your continued support, 

Katie Pearce (Practice Manager), Dr Lewis and Partners 

Q & A’s

I don’t have access to email – does this mean I can’t receive care?

Please call us and speak with a member of our friendly Patient Services team. They will ask you some simple triage questions, so that you can be given the right appointment with the right member of our team.

Normally my relative or carer contacts the practice on my behalf – can they do this under Total Triage?

Absolutely. We are used to receiving eConsults or other contacts from patient’s representatives, such as family, friends, carers or care home staff. In order to then disclose confidential information we would need the patient’s consent on record.  

I need to speak to a Doctor very urgently – what should I do?

Problems which could be life threatening are best managed by ringing 999, as they are likely to be time critical and will need hospital care.  Otherwise please complete an eConsult or speak to one of our Patient Services Administrators.  

Is there a best time of day to send in an eConsult?

The eConsults received through our Total Triage system will be monitored and actioned throughout the day – what time you contact us will have no bearing on when we can see you. The experience of fighting for an appointment at 8.30am or 2pm will be a thing of the past.

What do I do if I need medical advice at the weekend or evening?

This hasn’t changed. You can access eConsult to obtain lots of useful information, use the NHS app or NHS 111 service., or ring 999 in an emergency.

When can I complete and send an eConsult?

You can complete an eConsult any time of the day or night, from first thing on a Monday morning until 1830 on Friday evening.

How soon will I hear after sending my eConsult?

We will tell you how we’re going to respond within 24 hours, in terms of which team member will help you, at what time and in what kind of appointment.

What if I don’t want to answer any questions, as I don’t feel comfortable giving my details/symptoms to a receptionist?

Our Patient Services team subscribe to the same very high standards of confidentiality as our medical staff and take pride in their role as a professional, highly trained link between our patients and clinicians. Part of this role is the ability to empathise and respond accordingly when patients find it uncomfortable to discuss their symptoms. We would not prevent access to our services in these circumstances.

Won’t this make it harder to speak with my usual GP or discuss an existing condition?

One of the benefits of Total Triage is that it will help us re-instate continuity of care, after the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic. You are more likely to see or speak to your usual GP under Total Triage than at any other time.

How do you know that the Total Triage system will be beneficial?

Our colleagues in other Practices who have implemented a total Triage System give us assurance that patients receive faster, safer care through having appointments with the right person in a timely manner. The system has been carefully designed and analysed to make it more likely that we can respond to more patients, and give us the best chance of being available if you’re really poorly.

If  the COVID-19 vaccination programme is successful and cases fall – why can’t we expect GP services to go back to how they were before?

New data has shown us that each day we aren’t receiving information from enough patients who want our help. We don’t wish to continue like this. We have also been fighting for a number of years to have our town centre site, The Barn Surgery, made fit for the future. For these reasons we wish to start allocating appointments on the basis of clinician-led decision making, using information from our patients about what they want us to help with. 

Is the Barn Surgery shut indefinitely?

No! The necessary building works will take approximately 6 months. All patients will be seen at Peacemarsh surgery during this time. We have secured additional consulting space at Peacemarsh to make this work for our patients.

Does this apply to nursing appointments, injections, dressings or blood tests?

No – the simple rule is that if you would normally ask to see or speak to a GP or nurse practitioner, then Total Triage will apply. For practice nurse or HCA appointments, please speak to one of our Patient Services Administrators, who can book these in directly.   

I didn’t have my usual annual review last year, due to COVID-19 restrictions. What should I do?

Please navigate to the option “Start a review,” at the bottom of the right hand column of options on the eConsult page, then select “Medication Review.” Your GP will let reception know if you need a blood test. If you cannot use eConsult, please contact our Patient Services Administrators.

Do I need to send an eConsult or answer triage questions to request my medications?

No – please use Systmonline, the NHS APP or your repeat prescription slip. Patients who are housebound or suffering from certain disabilities can request their prescription over the telephone between 3pm and 6pm.

Can I send you an email instead?

We don’t think that email is a safe system to receive medical queries – it is so easy to miss an email, and email doesn’t highlight potentially serious symptoms in the way that eConsult does. eConsult, or answering triage questions from our Patient Services Administrators, is so much safer that we would ask you not to use email to contact the practice.

How do I complete an eConsult?

Please head to our website www.gillinghamsurgery.co.uk and click on “Consult your GP online,” under Online Services, or click on “Online Consultation,” in the middle of the home page.

How can I find out more about eConsult?

https://econsult.net/nhs-patients gives a lot of useful information..

DUMPING GROUND DORSET

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Beauty spots across Dorset are blighted by the scourge of fly-tipping as cases across the UK spiral out of control. We’ve all seen the sorry sights.  Sofas, mattresses, fridges and car tyres dumped in laybys, woods and in farmers’ fields.

These eyesores are left for local councils to clear away, at tax-payers expense, or the cost falls on private landowners, who have to pay out of their own pocket. According to Countryside Alliance, a farmer foots a bill in the region of £800 each time someone thinks it’s fine to leave a cooker with his cows.

Image by: Courtenay Hitchcock Blackmore Vale

David George, a spokesperson for The National Farmers Union (South West) told the digital Blackmore Vale: “This is a source of great irritation to farmers and the fact they have to pay to get rid of it just adds insult to injury. Mainly, it’s people getting rid of waste they may be charged for at the local tip, or that they can’t be bothered to take. We urge people to please dispose of their waste responsibly, especially if they are having a spring clean over the Easter holidays.”

The issue of fly-tipping falls on the shoulders of local councils. Some have reported a 50% increase in fly-tipping since Covid, with official rubbish and recycling centres shut during the first lockdown.  Litter campaign charity, Keep Britain Tidy, estimates fly-tipping is costing this country over £58 million a year in clean-up costs. Putting that into local context, Dorset Council had to pick up the tab for clearance and disposal costs to the tune of about £112,000 in 2019/20 with 1,870 incidents of fly-tipping reported. For April to December 2020, the council received 1,356 reported incidences of fly-tipping, costing just over £80,000 to clear away properly.

And bear in mind that thousands of cases go unreported so the picture is even more rubbish – quite literally.

Images by: Courtenay Hitchcock Blackmore Vale

Sadly, it would seem that in many cases people are just too lazy to dispose of their rubbish correctly. James Potten from Dorset Council told us that, frustratingly, a lot of fly-tipping in this county is rubbish that could easily be disposed of for free. “Whilst trade waste, especially building materials is consistently dumped illegally, the majority of fly-tips consist of black bag household waste and other materials that can be taken to a household recycling centre and dropped off free of charge, such as furniture, white goods and garden waste.”

In a recent report by BBC’s Panorama, ’Rubbish Dump Britain’ it was revealed that there is only one prosecution for every 300 fly-tipping incidents. Staggeringly, local authorities dealt with close to one million cases in 2019 and 2020. With council resources already under intense pressure due to cuts, their chances of catching perpetrators, let alone bringing them to justice, are slim.

Images by: Courtenay Hitchcock Blackmore Vale

Allison Ogden-Newton OBE, Chief Executive of Keep Britain Tidy, said: The fact is that this environmental crime is being driven by ‘man with a van’ operators – responsible for a third of all fly-tips – who are conning the public with what appears to be a cheap way of getting rid of their rubbish, but one that leads to illegal disposal and environmental devastation.”

Keep Britain Tidy is calling on the government to make tackling fly-tipping an urgent priority. It wants immediate reform of the waste carrier licensing system – very few checks are carried out at present – and dedicated use of income from the landfill tax. It’s also demanding tougher sentencing in magistrates courts for those found dumping waste illegally. Though this serious crime can warrant jail sentences and huge fines, this rarely happens.

Dorset Council’s James Potten said:Our Enforcement Team are out every day investigating incidents, and have set up pro-active partnerships with Dorset Police, the DVLA and Litter Free Dorset, as well as working with private landowners, the Environment Agency, Keep Britain Tidy, and various housing associations.

“In 2019/20, we took around 300 enforcement actions related to fly-tipping, including fixed penalty notices and prosecutions. We also have a high profile case going through the courts right now that we hope to be able to report on soon.”

But one man has taken it upon himself to fight fly-tippers. Business man, Martin Montague, is a self-styled waste warrior. He’s founder of the ClearWaste.com app and website. ClearWaste created the first, fully national system for reporting fly-tipping. 

Using a brilliant free app, people can easily report fly-tipping anywhere in the UK as it actually happens. Minute by minute, you can see how quickly the UK is becoming a huge skip. This link from ClearWaste shows reports of rubbish dumped across Dorset – it makes disturbing viewing. https://clearwaste.com/flytipping/england/dorset

‘’The rate of increase in reports of fly-tipping is shocking,” says Martin Montague. “Britain is drowning under a sea of illegally dumped rubbish which blights our town, cities and countryside. Clearwaste.com came about because I was absolutely sick to death of seeing fly-tipping everywhere. I really hate the damage it does to our environment and wildlife, not to mention the cost to taxpayers of cleaning it up.”

Images by: Courtenay Hitchcock Blackmore Vale

The app and website links to every local authority in the country, giving councils the location of the rubbish along with details and photographs.

Tackling the problem before it gets to the countryside, ClearWaste.com also helps people get rid of rubbish properly, giving alternatives to dodgy, unlicensed traders on social media. “When people have DIY leftovers, garden waste or rubbish from a clear-out, they often ask for recommendations on social media but they shouldn’t just hand their unwanted stuff to someone with a van who offers to remove it for a bit of cash,” said Mr Montague.

Their website features responsible waste removal companies with a new price comparison scheme that protects and saves the public money. So confident are they of their trusted traders, ClearWaste.com guarantees to strike the trader off as well as to cover any additional costs or fines up to value of £1000 if waste is illegally disposed.

Martin Montague explained: “There is clearly an increasing demand for legal waste removal so we’re now helping to link consumers with trustworthy, government-registered waste removal businesses to avoid fly-tippers. Our website makes it simple to find honest, reliable, skip-hire and grab bag firms – all backed by our £1000 no fly-tipping guarantee. It’s all about making it easier for people to do the right thing.”

This real-life womble also goes up and down the country investigating fly-tipping incidents for clues of the perpetrators. He uses drones and night-vision equipment in his quest to make them answer for their actions. He names and shames them across social media. ClearWaste.com is also lobbying the government to increase fines and custodial sentences for those who continue to flout the law.

The ClearWaste.com app is available free from Apple and Google Play app stores:
Android:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.taftech.clearwaste
Apple:
 https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/clearwaste/id1462879562

The good news is councils have new and greater powers to tackle fly-tipping but as to whether they have the resources to make this happen is another matter. It can cost around £2k to gather evidence and bring someone to court who can receive a fine under £200.

James Potten advised: “Everyone needs to understand their personal liability when it comes to their waste, which is their legal responsibility until it is correctly disposed of in the right place.

“If you cannot get to a recycling centre and you hand your waste to someone – such as an unlicensed ‘man in a van’ found on social media – who then fly-tips it, you also risk prosecution and a criminal record. Please make sure you only use a reputable waste carrier when handing rubbish to someone else.

‘’Dorset is a beautiful place to live but fly-tipping is a blight on our county, a drain on taxpayers’ money and we all need to work together to tackle it. We will always pursue all avenues to hold offenders to account, so please keep reporting fly-tips to us when you spot them and check out www.dorsetcouncil.gov.uk/tip-off for more information on how to make sure you are covered when handing waste to someone else.”

Dorset Police’s Inspector Darren Stanton, part of the Dorset police Rural Crime Team, also advised: “Whilst fly-tipping is not a police matter, a fly tip in progress can be called in on 999 so that we can catch the offenders in the act.”

Image by: Courtenay Hitchcock Blackmore Vale


FLY-TIPPING  –  how to report it
If you report fly-tipping, the rubbish can be removed and the crime can be investigated. If you see someone fly-tipping, or you want to report an area where fly-tipping has taken place, take note of the following:
Date, time and place of the incident

What the waste looks like and how much there is

Descriptions of any person and/or vehicles involved along with the registration number

As fly-tippers are doing something illegal, they don’t want to be caught. Don’t approach them or put your own safety at risk. Report fly-tipping or illegal waste dumping – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

If the rubbish is on your own land, it is your responsibility to report it and to dispose of it correctly. Report the incident to your local authority or the Environment Agency. Although they have no obligation to remove the waste, they may be able to provide guidance on the best way to deal with it.

Uncontrolled illegal waste disposal can be hazardous to the public, especially if it contains toxic material or asbestos. There could be risk of damage to watercourses and soil quality from the waste.

Reports to the Environment Agency can be made using their national hotline number 0800 807 060.

By: Tracie Beardsley