Home Blog Page 4

Meeting Mr Hardy:Thomas Hardy and music, part 2

0
Members of the Mellstock Quire in Under the Greenwood Tree, commissioned by Dorset Opera Festival. Photograph ©JulianGuidera2024

THE recent resurgence of West Gallery music and traditional Dorset carols and songs is partly attributed to Thomas Hardy and his early novel, Under The Greenwood Tree. It’s the story of a village quire, playing old tunes on ancient instruments, and their replacement by the new-fangled organ, part of the Victorians’ fetish for modernising and tidying up old village churches.
Now, there are groups of musicians and singers, including West Dorset’s Ridgeway Singers and Band, who regularly perform the old songs and carols, many collected from church archives. Public performances are well-attended and the revival has also brought renewed interest in the writing and lives not only of Thomas Hardy, but of his fellow Dorset writer and poet, William Barnes.
As well as the music, songs and dances, the restoration of these simple folk tunes has also brought back some of the instruments that were played by the old West Gallery quires and bands – notably the serpent. It was this strange, centuries-old instrument that attracted Phil Humphries to the West Gallery revival. A long-standing member of the Mellstock Band, Phil is one of the few musicians who can play the unwieldy thing. Dating from the Renaissance – late 16th century is the generally accepted period – it is an early ancestor of the tuba – and has attracted much comment over the years.


Phil has traced a total of 11 mentions in Hardy’s writing, not all of them as enthusiastic as this quote from Under the Greenwood Tree: “The serpent was a good old note; a deep, rich note was the serpent!”
Handel was not impressed when he heard it: “Aye, but not the Serpent that seduced Eve,” he said. The 20th century German musicologist Willi Apel described it as “a drain pipe suffering from intestinal disorder.” And music historian Charles Burney, father of the famous 18th century novelist Fanny Burney, said it was “not only overblown and detestably out of tune, but exactly resembling in tone that of a great hungry, or rather angry, Essex calf.”
But in Dorset it is much loved and Phil’s virtuosity has won him many fans, not only with the Mellstock Band but in his role with the Ridgeway Singers and Band, which he has jointly directed with Tim Laycock. You can listen to the Mellstock Band in action in the video on this page, including Phil on the serpent. It will also doubtless make its booming presence heard at the annual Tea with William Barnes afternoon of music, poetry and food at Sturminster Exchange on Sunday 22nd February.

Tim Laycock, in Hardy era costume, outside Hardy’s Cottage at Bockhampton. Photograph by Tony Gill

A great chronicler
The West Gallery revival began in the 1980s and one of the key figures is Mellstock Band founder Dave Townsend, a musician with a particular interest in old Dorset tunes and the folksong and folklore in Hardy’s writing. With fellow enthusiast Caroline Jackson-Houston, Dave discovered a collection of old gallery music books at St Mary’s Church, Puddletown, one of the Dorset churches which still has a fine West Gallery. These books are now in the Dorset History Centre, and Dave’s arrangements of some of the carols are regularly performed. These and other carols from similar Dorset manuscripts, mostly now held in the Dorset History Centre, are central to the Dorset West Gallery repertoire.
Another influential figure was the late Rollo Woods, founder of the Madding Crowd West Gallery singers and later the Purbeck Village Quire, who unearthed manuscripts from the Purbeck villages. Other localised collections and traditions have been discovered, notably at Durweston and Long Burton. The Bloxworth carols, predating the West Gallery revival, were compiled by the Rev WA Pickard-Cambridge, vicar of Bloxworth, from gallery books from many Dorset parishes. First published during Hardy’s lifetime in 1926, it includes carols sung at Bloxworth that date back to the beginning of the 19th century.
The lasting appeal of the story of the Mellstock Quire and the struggle to save the traditional carols and instruments from the new fashion for organs is well-illustrated in a new opera, commissioned to mark the 50th anniversary of Dorset Opera. Paul Carr’s charming work had its premiere at the Coade Hall at Bryanston School, Blandford, as part of Dorset Opera Festival’s 2024 golden jubilee season.
Hardy’s importance to the revival both of the West Gallery music and other seasonal rituals is recognised by Tim Laycock: ‘Dorset is unique in having an internationally-renowned writer who was also a folk musician and a great chronicler of the music, song and dance that inspired his father and his grandfather in their music making. And most importantly, he understood how the music worked in the community, and the importance of season and celebration in the lives of the people.
‘The more I’ve learned about oral history, folksong and stories and traditional celebrations, the more I relate to Thomas Hardy and his insightful and sympathetic comments about the joys and the difficulties of homemade music-making. We are very fortunate to have such a rich resource of traditional music, dance and song here in Dorset. The writings of Hardy, informed by his own musicality and affection for the inherited music of his family and friends, complement and inform the collections of songs made by [folk song collectors] Henry and Robert Hammond, and the dance tunes and carols found in the Hardy family music books.’

The tiny church of St Andrew in Winterborne Tomson still has its original West Gallery, and is locally known as having been ‘saved by the ghost of Thomas Hardy’. A century ago, the church was ‘given over to donkeys, dogs, pigs and fowls’ of the neighbouring farm. In 1931 it was saved from ruin when The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings sold a collection of Thomas Hardy manuscripts to pay for repairs. Image courtesy of Rupert Hardy

Keeping the music alive
Although Hardy’s story of Mellstock and its village quire is a well-known part of the West Gallery tradition, there are descriptions of other traditional and seasonal festivities and music in the work of both Hardy and William Barnes.
Tim Laycock says: ‘The two Dorset writers shared a mutual interest in folklore and the “long-loved customs o’ the poor”. Hardy’s dramatic use of seasonal rituals rings true – the preparations for the mummers play in The Return of the Native and the description of the performance itself at Mrs Yeobright’s party, convey not only the anticipation and the effect of the performance, but also the attitude of the players and their audience to their mumming. What Hardy’s stories do is to provide a convincing context for the performance and the appreciation of community song, dance and music.
‘I have had so much pleasure and fun over the years playing the music in the Hardy books, telling the stories, reading the poems and making plays from the novels with the New Hardy Players. We as modern-day performers recognise so much truth in the way Hardy writes about the ups and downs of village music making. Every time I re-read a Hardy novel, I’m struck by how accurate he was in his depiction of the musicians and their craft (or occasionally, lack of craft). Usually, I’m chuckling at his humorous comments about the music making and its effect on the listeners.
‘Thomas Hardy continues to be a great inspiration to me. And I feel that here in Dorset there is a real continuity of interest in the music, the fiddle playing, the songs and the stories that he loved so much, and we in turn love to keep alive.’
Before Covid, Tim could often be found at Max Gate or Hardy’s Cottage, reading and sharing the tunes, poetry and stories of Thomas Hardy. Sometimes he would be accompanied by local musicians. For Tim, this brought Hardy even closer. The author was a keen folk fiddler himself: ‘To hear Colin and Ruth Thompson playing Enrico, Hardy’s favourite hornpipe, in the cottage where Hardy himself would have learnt and played the tune, is an extraordinary sensation. You can shut your eyes and hear Hardy and his father playing jigs at a country dance in 1855.
‘I’m sure Mr Hardy would be thrilled that Colin and Ruth Thompson, Tatterdemalion, The Ridgeway Band musicians and the Dorset Fiddlers keep the music so vibrantly alive. “Strings forever!” as little Jimmy says in Under the Greenwood Tree.’

Sustainable Online Shopping: How to Buy Less, Better, and Smarter

0

Online shopping makes it easy to get what you need without leaving the house. It also makes it easy to buy things you did not plan for, then deal with boxes, returns, and buyer’s remorse. 

Sustainable shopping is not about being perfect; it is about being more intentional with what you bring home. You can still enjoy the hunt, you just set a few rules that protect your wallet and the planet. Here are five ways to buy less, better, and smarter. 

Photo by Negative Space on Pexels
  1. Pause, research, then add to cart

Start with a 24-hour rule for anything that is not a true need. Put it in a wishlist, close the tab, and come back later. During the pause, read a guide, check sizing charts, and look for real user photos. The goal is fewer impulse buys and fewer returns. 

This “learn first” habit works for anything online, even when you are researching something different, like a step-by-step online purchasing guide on kraken. If the item still makes sense tomorrow, you will buy with confidence.

  1. Build a quality filter that beats cheap pricing

Low prices feel good until the item breaks, sheds, or stains. Scan materials, stitching, and care notes. Look for repairable parts, spare buttons, and solid zips. Be sure to also read the one and two-star reviews first, because they show patterns. 

Additionally, check whether the brand offers a real warranty and replacement components. Buying one durable item often replaces three throwaways, and it reduces packaging, delivery miles, and return waste.

  1. Choose brands that support repair, refill, or resale

Look for repair programs, replaceable components, or refill packs. For basics, search for parts or replacement on the product page. If you can’t find anything, that item is probably built to be replaced, not maintained. 

You should also consider resale value. If an item holds value, it usually holds up in real life. Check if the brand offers trade-in, refurb options, or a certified resale channel. This keeps products in use longer and reduces new production.

  1. Choose shipping that matches the moment

Fast shipping feels great, but it also tends to split orders and increase last-mile emissions. If you can wait, pick standard shipping, bundle items, and avoid multiple checkouts. Some retailers let you select fewer packages or a scheduled delivery day. 

Be sure to use local pickup when it is convenient, as it can reduce failed delivery attempts. If you shop from multiple brands, pick one delivery day each week to reduce packaging overlap and missed drop-offs.

  1. Shop with a list

A list sounds basic, but it is your best sustainability tool. Split it into needs, upgrades, and nice-to-haves. Then do a quick home audit. You might already have the ‘new’ version in your home; it is just buried somewhere. Create a one-in, one-out rule for categories that increase fast, like shoes, gadgets, and kitchen tools. You buy less because you can see what you own, and you keep your space calmer.

Endnote

You do not need a perfect zero-waste lifestyle to shop sustainably online. You just need better friction, a pause, a checklist, and a little patience. Over time, you will buy less, enjoy what you own more, and waste less money on items that never earned a spot in your life.

Name that village …

0

We had fewer correct guesses of last month’s mystery postcard which was of East Stour. We’re thinking his pick this month is the hardest yet (and no, we don’t know either). We’re offering no clues except a date – 1921 (we don’t think that helps!) – and no prizes. You just get the smug satisfaction of solving a postcard mystery. Do you know that cottage? Surely the wall is still standing?
If you recognise it, let us know – we’ll reveal the answer in the March issue.

The soft paws of spring

0

Pussy willow catkins are among late winter’s most generous and quietly important natural wonders, says Jane Adams

Also known as the pussy willow, the male catkins of the goat willow look like a cat’s paws. Once they burst into bright yellow ‘flowers’ they provide early spring support for more than 450 types of insect

When did you last stop to look closely at a catkin? We usually think of the strange blooms as the dangly swaying yellow threads which hang from several species of shrub and tree at this time of year … but pussy willow is by far my favourite catkin. The soft, furry buds grow on goat willow (Salix caprea), and they look and feel just like the paws of a tiny kitten – hence their pussy willow nickname.
As a child, I adored the book Pussy Willow, written by the American author Margaret Wise Brown. It told the story of a small, fluffy kitten exploring the changing seasons in search of her namesake. A frog eventually tells her she will find the pussy willow when the small birds sing, the sun shines warm, and the frogs ‘peep’.
A wise frog – though, for the record, Dorset frogs definitely ‘croak’ rather than ‘peep’!
Sadly, willows are woefully overlooked, despite there being around 20 species in the UK. Perhaps it’s because they aren’t as long-lived as oaks, or as showy as horse chestnuts. Yet goat willow can reach ten metres in height, and the oldest specimens may live for up to 300 years. Straggly, but still beautiful.

Screenshot

The humming tree
It’s not as if humans haven’t found willow useful across the millenia. Its branches have been woven into wattle for house building for more than 6,000 years, while its bark’s pain-relieving properties were known long before Felix Hoffmann isolated the active compound in 1897 and it was marketed as Aspirin.
But it’s insects that really go wild for this understated tree. Willows have been found to support more than 450 species of insect, from 162 butterflies and moths to 104 bees and wasps. Add over 150 species of lichen, and it’s easy to see just how vital these trees are to the natural world.
Goat willow is dioecious, meaning male and female catkins appear on separate trees. By mid-to-late February, male catkins are at their fluffiest, weighed down with pollen and nectar. Female catkins are less kitten-like, but still offer essential nectar. Unlike the dangly yellow hazel catkins, which rely on the wind for pollination, goat willow depends on insects, especially bees. On a sunny, calm day, a flowering willow will literally hum with bumblebees, solitary bees, honeybees and hoverflies. Later, when its rounded, curly-tipped leaves appear, they are food for many moth and butterfly caterpillars, with the purple emperor perhaps its most regal and rare diner.
In medieval times, people brought branches of pussy willow indoors to ward off evil spirits – a tradition that feels worth reviving in our troubled times. For now, though, I’ll listen for the frogs and follow in the footsteps of that childhood kitten, stopping every so often to feel the softness of pussy willow’s paws.

How Cerne Abbas outlived its obituary

0

A 1938 postcard captures Cerne Abbas in a quiet in-between moment: after decline, before revival – when the Giant didn’t warrant a mention

In his 1906 book Highways and Byways in Dorset, Sir Frederick Treves painted a bleak picture of Cerne Abbas as ‘decaying and strangely silent’: ‘It is a clean, trim, old-world town, which has remained unchanged for Heaven knows how many years … The place, however, is empty and decaying and strangely silent. Grass is growing in the streets; many houses have been long deserted.
‘One feels compelled to walk very quietly through the echoing streets, and to talk in whispers, for fear that the sleep of Cerne should be broken.’
Treves concluded, bluntly, that ‘Cerne Abbas is dying’, its vitality lost, he believed, when the railway reached Dorchester and the coaching traffic that once used the village as a staging post disappeared. Attempts to reinvent the town as a centre of manufacturing failed and, by the end of the First World War, the Pitt-Rivers family – faced with heavy death duties – decided to sell it from their estate.
On 24th September 1919, some 4,700 acres of ‘residential, agricultural and shooting’ land were auctioned at Dorchester Town Hall in 75 lots. Present was Frederick Harvey Darton – publisher, Dorset devotee and author of The Marches of Wessex – who toured the properties beforehand and found the same level of decay Treves had noted more than a decade earlier.
It was a reality the auctioneers’ catalogue failed to mention, preferring what now read as rather familiar estate-agent phrases such as ‘well-constructed small private residence’ and ‘pretty creeper-clad cottage’.
Darton later described the sale itself: ‘It was full, quite full, of farmers, with a sprinkling of gentry… There was a subdued undercurrent of feeling which could not be mistaken: it broke out in cheers when a tenant bid successfully.’


A small number of tenants did manage to buy their homes – the butcher, baker and a shopkeeper among them – but fewer than a quarter of the lots went to sitting tenants, many of whom were already relatively well off. Some cottages sold for under £100; the medieval jetty-fronted houses of Abbey Street went for just £340.
The Swanage Times reported that ‘over £95,000 was realised at the sale’. One of the chief properties, the Melcombe Estate, was bought by Mr Clough of Burley, Ringwood, for £29,250. Barton Farm was purchased by its tenant, Mr J Sprake, for £12,300, while The Abbey House, with guest house, gatehouse,
Abbey site, outbuildings and 196 acres which included Giant Hill sold for £7,600.
The sale may have helped the Pitt-Rivers estate finances, but it did not halt Cerne’s decline. Maintenance proved beyond many of the new owners, pigs were reported living in Abbey Street houses, and within a decade the population had fallen to around 450.
Yet from the 1930s onwards, Cerne began to recover. New residents arrived in search of tranquillity, restoration followed and the village slowly found a new footing. Today, with housing developments on the village edge and revived local amenities, the transformation is striking. Once written off as dying, Cerne has long since proved Treves wrong.


The postcard, sent from the village on 22nd July 1938, captures something of that quieter, transitional period. Writing after a long walk in summer heat, the sender noted the ‘good hostel here – a converted workhouse’. Between 1932 and 1955, the former workhouse served as a youth hostel; during the Second World War it housed evacuees from a London school, before later becoming flats. It is now a residential care home.
‘Reached here last night from Iwerne Minster after walking about 18-20 miles & got a lift for 4 miles in a lorry. Weather’s lovely, but very hot – no rain so far. Good hostel here – a converted work-house. Just off to Piddletrenthide & Dorchester. Dick’

Sweet potatomacaroni cheese

0

‘This is a great way to add some veggies to your macaroni cheese. I also use a creamy garlic cheese with a hard cheese such as Cheddar. Look out for James’s Cheese: for this version I used the garlic cheese and Old Winchester.’ – Lizzi

Sweet potato macaroni cheese

Ingredients
(serves two generous portions)

  • 1 sweet potato
  • 150g macaroni
  • 35g butter
  • 35g flour
  • 275g milk
  • 120g garlic cheese
  • 100g hard cheese
  • Salt and pepper
  • 1 tsp dried thyme
Sweet potato macaroni cheese

Method

  1. Roast the sweet potato in its skin for 45 minutes until softened. Peel.
  2. Boil macaroni for 12 minutes, and drain.
  3. Melt butter and flour in a small pan and gently cook for two minutes. Keep whisking as you slowly add the milk over a low heat – keep stirring. The sauce will begin to thicken.
  4. Add the garlicky cheese in pieces and leave to melt. Stir again.
  5. Put the sweet potato in a bowl and season well with salt, pepper and thyme.
  6. Add the macaroni and the cheese sauce, stirring until the ingredients are combined
  7. Pour the mixture into an oven dish and grate the hard cheese over the top. Bake for approx 30 minutes 190ºC/Gas 5 until browned on top.
  8. Serve with salad or green veggies – delicious!

Lizzie Crow is better known to most as Lizzie Baking Bird. From her tiny bakery in west Dorset, Lizzie creates an impressive range of sweet and savoury bakes, which you’ll find at Poundbury and Wimborne Farmers’ Markets, Bridport Market and the county’s food festivals and agricultural shows. A member of the Guild of Food Writers, Lizzie has won numerous Great Taste Awards. Find her on lizziebakingbird.co.uk

Jam-packed January in the saddle

0

Winter may have soaked us to the skin, but training camps, bold horses and big plans mean the event season suddenly feels tantalisingly close

Blondie and Jess training with former British Team Performance coach Yogi Breisner at the first Howden Way U25 camp

I think the best way I can describe this month is by calling it Jam-packed January. It might have rained a lot, but we have also trained a lot, learned a lot, worked a lot … and fallen off NOT a lot! Phew!
Although we’ve been working hard, the winter months make me appreciate being based at the Fox-Pitts’ more than ever. The undercover barn, indoor school and brilliantly draining all-weather gallops mean that winter doesn’t really feel like winter here. And that’s without mentioning the heated laundry room!
But before anyone gets too green-eyed, don’t worry – there have still been plenty of days where I’ve been soaked to the skin, physically unable to pry my fingers from the neck strap I’ve been so tightly clinging onto whilst riding some very fluffy, untidy and generally unruly event horses, regretting all my life choices and wishing I’d pursued that career in biochemistry instead …

Henry, back at home, practicing what he learned at camp. Image: Courtenay Hitchcock

Off to camp
Winter woes aside, we’ve also been up to some pretty cool stuff this month. At the end of January we were lucky enough to attend the first Howden Way U25 Rider Talent Academy training camp. Blondie, Henry, mum and I headed up to the National Training Centre in Northamptonshire for two days of intensive training – both on and off the horse – with some pretty prestigious coaches.
I rarely get butterflies, but I have to say I definitely noticed them as we trucked along the A34 through the early hours of Monday morning. I don’t think it was just the idea of training with some of the Big Guns that gave me that feeling of anticipation – it was also about riding among my peers.

Henry practicing his halts in the February cold, making him appear part dragon! Image: Courtenay Hitchcock


As an U18/Young Rider (in other words, before I got old!), we did lots of training camps, but it’s been a few years now since I’ve had ‘away training’, and I could definitely tell. I had to catch myself before I went down the rabbit hole of ‘what if everybody else is better than me, or has nicer horses than me, or, or, or…’. I reminded myself that I am on my own journey, it’s all about personal progress. Not comparing myself to others is something I’ve always had to work on, and where I’ve been so lucky to have both mum and William to remind me to enjoy each individual moment.
As soon as we drove in, all the butterflies went away, and I remembered just how much fun these camps are. The horses were impeccably behaved and we received some invaluable coaching – a highlight for me being Blondie’s arena cross country session with Tina Cook. Blondie’s showjumping background means she’s still relatively new to this scene, but she pricked her ears and gave it her absolute best.
She is so bold and genuine, which makes her an absolute joy to work with.
We had a really educational two days, and I got to catch up with all the other riders too (now that we’re out of hibernation!). I’ve really enjoyed applying what we learned with the team at home, and I am already looking forward to the next camp.

Jo Rimmer (Jess’ mum) riding Basil in the floods – Temporarily in possession of their very own water treadmill, beneficial in so many ways … not to mention fun!


Over the next month or so we have some exciting things in the pipeline – the horses are getting fitter, and with event plans in the making and our first cross-country school in the diary, the event season is starting to feel less and less like a distant fantasy! Winter is long … but it finally feels like we’re almost there. Don’t worry though, I’m sure it’ll start raining again soon.

Love, loss and the books between

0

Victoria Sturgess from Black Pug Books lets personal grief open a wider reflection on why literature has always returned to an uneasy pairing

I thought I would interweave two seemingly contrasting emotions this month: one brought about by the heartbreaking loss of my beloved cat, Sophie, my dearest companion every day for 14 years. The other is St. Valentine’s day of love.
HE Bates – he of the life-affirming Larkin clan in the Darling Buds of May – wrote a quietly understated, bittersweet gem called A Moment in Time. It tells of a young girl falling in love with, and marrying, a fighter pilot in the second world war with the inevitable outcome. It is written in such a way as to be neither maudlin nor heroic. It will stay with you for a long time.
Perhaps the most acknowledged and influential title is CS Lewis’s A Grief Observed (written as NW Clerk to allow separation from his public persona). Just three years after their marriage, his wife Joy died from cancer. This is a poignant collection of reflections on very personal grief, the nature of love and the connection between deep love and intense sorrow.
Helen MacDonald’s H is for Hawk was acclaimed when published in 2014, and is now being released as a powerful film. It tells of her severe grief following her father’s sudden death, and her obsession with training a notoriously difficult goshawk.
The untamed nature of the bird echoes the wildness of grief – but also how it can help with human loss, and bring comfort. It is slightly reminiscent of another outstanding book, Barry Hines’ A Kestrel for a Knave, following the life of a young working-class boy, troubled at home and school, who finds and trains a kestrel. Kes was the award-winning film made from the book, and my final choice is yet another which is now a box office hit film – proving that these powerful emotions resonate far beyond the printed page.
Maggie O’Farrell’s 2020 novel Hamnet focuses on the life and tragic death of Shakespeare’s young son, though it concentrates mainly on Hamnet’s mother Agnes.
Deep love and raw grief haunt the family, and Shakespeare can only process it by turning to what he does best: write.
From the ancient Greeks to now – via Dostoevsky, Dickens, Hardy, Woolf, Ian McEwan, Julian Barnes and many others – authors have recognised the overwhelming connection between two seemingly opposite emotions. What compels authors to explore this, to try and define it … and why do we readers seem to devour it unreservedly?
Perhaps because we all understand intuitively that grief is the price we pay for love.

Castle Cary home praised for warmth, kindness and care

0

A not-for-profit care home in Castle Cary is celebrating receiving ‘Good’ ratings in all areas from the Care Quality Commission (CQC).
Cary Brook provides day care, respite breaks, residential care and specialist dementia support. At its latest inspection, the CQC rated Cary Brook as Good in all five assessment areas: Safe, Effective, Caring, Responsive and Well-led.
The CQC’s report concluded that Cary Brook residents were ‘safe and well cared for’, with their privacy and dignity respected.
Relatives of those receiving care praised the ‘kindness and attentiveness’ of the Cary Brook team, who delivered person-centred care in a ‘warm and respectful’ manner.
The report commended the team for working well with other health professionals to ensure ‘continuity of care’, and noted that ‘end-of-life care was delivered with compassion’.
The CQC said that: ‘Compliments dominated the feedback we received, and people said they would recommend Cary Brook as a good place to live’

Cary Brook celebrated their CQC success with a party for residents and their loved ones
© Somerset Care Group

Outstanding at a difficult time
The positive themes noted by the CQC are reflected in independently-verified customer reviews for Cary Brook on carehome.co.uk. Feedback from residents and their loved ones celebrates the care and support provided, the clean and welcoming environment, and the warm and approachable attitude of the Cary Brook team.
‘Always happy staff and residents. My husband is so well looked after, the staff go the extra mile all the time. Home is always clean and well staffed. I cannot fault anything about this lovely home. All staff are very approachable and always happy. I am so glad this home exists.’ – wife of resident
‘The home looked after both of my parents, and the care given was second to none. End of life care for my father was dignified and professional. Acknowledgement and support towards his family were outstanding at a difficult time. I would have no hesitation in recommending Cary Brook Care Home.’ – son of resident
Lisa Warne, Cary Brook Registered Manager, explains what this feedback means to the team:
‘We are thrilled with Cary Brook’s latest CQC report. To be rated Good in all areas is a reflection of the happy place which our team have poured so much love and care into, and our wonderful residents who call Cary Brook their home.

Cary Brook provides day care, respite breaks, residential care and dementia support
© Somerset Care Group


‘It means so much more to us that the CQC’s findings reflect the individual experiences shared by our residents and their loved ones in independently-verified reviews.
‘Whether someone is visiting us for the day, staying for a short respite break or receiving longer-term residential care or dementia support at Cary Brook, our passion is to provide the best possible care within an environment where they feel welcomed, comfortable and supported. It is humbling and heartwarming to hear – from our customers and our regulator – that we are achieving this ambition.
‘Thank you to everyone who helps to make Cary Brook such a special place to work and to live.’

To enquire about Cary Brook, please visit somersetcare.co.uk/cary-brook or contact Somerset Care’s friendly and knowledgeable care advisors on 0800 8174 925.