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Letters to the Editor December 2025

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Laura
Laura Editor of the BV

It’s been a year, hasn’t it?
Not the triumphant hoorah kind. More the head-down, keep-plodding, ‘is it bedtime yet?’ sort of year. Whether you’re a farmer battling the weather (and the government), in hospitality and wondering where the customers are (and the tax money is coming from), a local journalist trying to keep the lights on (ahem), or simply doing your best to pay the heating bill – 2025 has not been gentle.
But we made it. Just about. And as we shuffle slightly frayed and biscuit-fuelled into December, I’ll admit: I’m tired. Possibly delirious. Almost definitely weepy. ClassicFM keeps ambushing me with Somewhere in My Memory from Home Alone, which is frankly a cheap shot when you haven’t seen your eldest child in over a year. But he and his wife will be home in under three weeks – we’ll have a full nest for Christmas. We really will have ‘All of the music. All of the magic. All of the family, home here. With me.’
(…nope, weepy again. Definitely need more sleep.)
But even as we’re winding down for Christmas, we’re winding up behind the scenes. We’ve got big, exciting things planned for 2026 at BV Towers – and no, we can’t share them yet. But oh, we really want to. Just know that we’re already plotting and scribbling and quietly fizzing with anticipation.
Until then, we’re officially off-duty. We don’t do the fake “oooh we’re still monitoring emails” nonsense – the office door is shut, the mince pies are out, the wine is mulling, and January’s issue will be along on the 16th. Ish.
Wishing you a peaceful, joyful, well-fed Christmas. May your trifle be boozy, your mince pies plentiful, and your egg nog just the right side of questionable.
See you next year.
(But not too early.)

Laura x


On more doctor strikes
With more junior doctor strikes ahead, we’re being told – again – that this is all about pay. But is it really?
According to Guido, even the BMA’s own chairman, Dr Phil Banfield, recently admitted that junior doctors have had a 7.9% real-terms pay rise since 2015. That may not match inflation perfectly, but it certainly undermines the narrative of complete stagnation.
The real crisis isn’t pay – it’s retention. We spend up to £250,000 training a single doctor, only to make it near-impossible for them to progress or specialise. Many leave the NHS entirely or emigrate.
We urgently need to widen training opportunities, reduce pointless bureaucracy, and create a system that values and keeps the doctors we already have. Throwing slogans and strikes at the problem won’t fix what’s become a deep-rooted failure of long-term planning.
Name and address supplied


On devolution
I was pleased to see the vote tonight in favour of Dorset Council continuing its discussions on Wessex devolution. It was not, as some seem to fear, a vote to sign us up to a mayor or a new tier of bureaucracy. It was simply an essential step to keep Dorset at the table while Government works out the national framework.
Given the funding landscape, refusing even to explore this route would be an act of self-harm. The Leader made the point plainly: without a Mayoral Strategic Authority we are already losing around £300 million a year in investment that other regions can access. Transport, skills, housing, economic development – these are areas where Dorset has long struggled to attract serious Government money. Standing alone, we simply don’t carry the weight.
Acting with BCP, Somerset and Wiltshire offers us a realistic chance of being heard.
No one pretended tonight that an elected mayor is universally popular. But the direction from Westminster is unambiguous: no mayor, no meaningful funding. We can dislike that reality, but we cannot afford to ignore it. Keeping the door open is not capitulation; it is prudence.
It’s not a major decision moment yet, and the council made the right call. Continue the talks, shape whatever deal emerges, and bring the final proposal back for a proper democratic decision. Dorset’s residents deserve the chance to benefit from the investment that almost every other region is now positioned to receive.
Elliot Marsh, by email


On one councillor’s attitude to ADHD
Today I came across a Dorset councillor posting on social media, questioning whether ADHD is “the new normal”, suggesting that we should stop labelling people and simply celebrate everyone’s uniqueness instead. While I believe the sentiment was meant to be kind and inclusive, the comment reveals a worrying misunderstanding of what ADHD actually is.
ADHD isn’t a personality quirk or a lifestyle choice. It’s a recognised neurodevelopmental condition, involving a measurable chemical imbalance in the brain. For many of us, it affects executive function, time management, memory, focus and emotional regulation. It’s not about being “different” – it’s about trying to function in a world that wasn’t built for our brains.
The current so-called “gold rush” to get a diagnosis is not people jumping on a trendy bandwagon – it’s people, especially girls and women, finally being listened to after generations of being overlooked, misdiagnosed or simply told to try harder.
For those with ADHD (which is estimated to affect up to 20% of the population), a label isn’t a limitation – it’s a lifeline. It opens the door to understanding, support, medication, workplace adjustments and, crucially, self-compassion.
Being told to just “be yourself” is not helpful when “being yourself” can mean struggling to manage relationships, hold down a job, or complete simple daily tasks without overwhelming exhaustion.
I’d respectfully suggest that before public figures comment on complex neurological conditions, they take the time to understand what they actually are.
Name and address supplied


On the wax-jacket-wearing Grumbler
As a 60-something man with a strong attachment to my Barbour, I read last month’s Grumbler with both a chuckle and a slight sense of unease. I appear to also be the suspicious wax jacket man. I’ve triggered more than one doorbell camera while returning misdelivered parcels, and been pinged on the village WhatsApp group while walking my dog (who, for the record, is considerably less suspicious than I am).
Still, I won’t be giving up the wax jacket. It’s absolutely older than some of the tech that’s now apparently accusing me of shoplifting.
G. W., Marnhull


I wonder if local readers are familiar with William Barnes’ Christmas invitation? He seems to have loved Christmas – he write about it beautifully. The following is my favourite of his, in his perfect ‘Dorset-ese’, and I thought you might like to give it an airing in your December issue? Merry Christmas to all!
Annie Bartlett, Blandford

Come down to-morrow night; an, mind
Don’t leave thy fiddle-bag behind;
We’ll sheake a lag, an’ drink a cup
O’eale, to keep wold Chris’mas up.

An’ let thy sister teake thy earm,
The walk won’t do her any harm;
There’s noo dirt now to spweil her frock,
The ground’s a-vroze so hard’s a rock.

You won’t meet any stranger’s feace,
But only neighbours o’the pleace,
An’ Stowe, an’ Combe; an’ two or dree
Vrom uncle’s up at Rookery.

An’ thou wu’lt vind a rwosy feace,
An’ peair ov eyes so black as sloos,
The prettiest woones in all the pleace, –
I’m sure I needen tell thee whose.

We got a back-bran, dree girt logs
So much as dree ov us can car;
We’ll put ’em up athirt the dogs,
An meake a vier to the bar.

An’ ev’ry woone shall tell his teale,
An’ ev’ry woone shall zing his zong,
An’ ev’ry woone wull drink his eale
To love an’ frien’ship all night long.

We’ll snap the tongs, we’ll have a ball,
We’ll shake the house, we’ll lift the ruf,
We’ll romp an’ meake the maidens squall,
A’ catchen o’m at blind-man’s buff.

Zoo come to-morrow night; an’ mind,
Don’t leave thy fiddle-bag behind;
We’ll sheake a lag, an’ drink a cup
O’eale, to keep wold Chris’mas up.


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.

December’s BV – and a formal apology from the BV Team.

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After a year-long internal review, we regret to report that The BV has repeatedly caused unexpectedly high levels of enthusiasm across rural Dorset.

Findings include:

• Weekend conversations derailed by ‘Did you read that BV piece?’
• Excessive forwarding of stories to unsuspecting family members.
• Local businesses experiencing statistically significant boosts in visitors.
• Readers developing firm emotional attachments to our photographers. And our equestrian’s horses.

Further investigation shows that our Christmas issue – historically responsible for seasonal outbreaks of delight – is shaping up to be the biggest culprit yet. Forecast models suggest raised heart rates, involuntary smiling and a tendency to say ‘Dorset’s actually brilliant, isn’t it?’

We sincerely apologise for any disruption this may cause.
We will not, at this time, be reducing journalistic quality, local storytelling or photographic excellence.
Management has agreed to allow the cheer to continue unchecked. Please proceed to open our Christmas issue at your own personal joy level. You have been warned.

Sincerely,
The BV Team

P.S. The December issue is out now – filled to the brim and behaving exactly as predicted.
PPS – MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU ALL! From Laura & Courtenay

The BV puzzles December 25

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Welcome to December’s BV Puzzles page – your free spot for a quick brain workout. Complete the crossword, test your logic with a classic sudoku, or relax with our massively popular seasonal Dorset-themed jigsaw: this month we have a very seasonal picture of crows heading home to roost at sunset.
No logins, no printouts – just free puzzles updated every month right here on The BV.
Perfect for puzzle fans across Dorset and beyond, our digital puzzles work on mobile, tablet or desktop. Enjoy a quiet moment of challenge with new puzzles published every issue of The BV magazine.


Made by The BV Magazine with the free cross word generator from Amuse Labs

Play Sudoku online!

Win a 55″ Smart TV worth £400 for Christmas!

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****NOW CLOSED****

EB Marsh & Son have very generously offered one lucky BV reader the chance to win a fantastic £400 LG 55″ 4K Ultra HD Smart TV – delivered in time to settle in for all your favourite Christmas films.

The LG 55UA74006LB.AEK is a cracking all-rounder: a big, bright 55-inch screen with true 4K Ultra HD clarity, bringing sharper detail, richer colour and a noticeably more immersive picture. Whether you’re binge-watching a new series or sticking on a family film, the upgraded sharpness and depth make everything look that bit better (you can see it on Marsh’s website here)

It also features LG’s 4K Upscaling, meaning even older or lower-resolution content is intelligently enhanced to look closer to true 4K. The TV runs on LG’s webOS platform – simple, intuitive and packed with the streaming apps most households use daily. From Netflix to iPlayer, everything sits neatly together for quick, easy browsing. You’ll also find FILMMAKER Mode for a more cinematic picture and HDR for improved contrast and realism.

In short: it’s easy to use, great to watch and a serious upgrade to anyone’s living room.

To enter, simply answer the questions in the widget below. It takes moments – and someone will be getting a rather excellent early Christmas present.

Important details:

Delivery area: The winner’s delivery address must be within 25 miles of either EB Marsh’s Sturminster Newton or Sherborne stores.
Closing date: Midnight on 19th December.
Winner drawn: Saturday 20th December, with details passed straight to EB Marsh & Son to arrange pre-Christmas delivery.

Good luck – and a huge thank you to EB Marsh for such a generous Christmas treat!

WIN a 55" LG TV worth £400!

Join Julia’s House for a magical evening of carols

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Start your festive season with a heart-warming evening of music and community spirit at the Julia’s House Christmas Carols, held for the first time at All Saints Church, Branksome Park on Tuesday 16th December. The evening promises traditional carols, seasonal readings from Julia’s House families and staff, and a performance by local acoustic singer Shelley Edwards, who will be joined by the Julia’s House Choir.


.Julia’s House provides essential, specialist care for local children with life-limiting and complex conditions, bringing support, compassion and respite to families when they need it most. Care is delivered both in family homes and at their hospices in Corfe Mullen and Devizes – entirely free to families, made possible only through fundraising and donations.
‘We’re so excited to hold our carol concert at All Saints Church for the first time,’ says fundraiser Sarah Agnew. ‘It’s a lovely way to come together with the community, share festive joy, and raise vital funds to support seriously ill children and their families.’
Julia’s House Christmas Carols takes place on Tuesday 16th December, with doors opening at 6.15pm and the concert starting at 7pm.
Tickets include mince pies and mulled wine, with all proceeds supporting Julia’s House.
Tickets: £10 adults, £5 children, under 5s free.
Book now at juliashouse.org/Carols2025

Sponsored by Wessex Internet

Dorset’s hidden poverty, real power, and a cadet you won’t forget | BV Podcast

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November’s podcast has hidden poverty, climate ambition, a teenage cadet scaling caves – and a parish power shift no one voted for. It’s a deep dive into rural Dorset’s quiet realities – and the people trying to change them. Just hit the play button below.

“It’s not always visible – but that doesn’t mean it isn’t there.

This month’s podcast starts with Dorset’s hidden poverty – the kind no one likes to talk about, but far too many are living with. Help & Kindness CEO John Sloper explains why it’s everywhere and invisible – and how small, local action makes the biggest difference.

Then it’s on to the climate. Don’t switch off – this isn’t doom and gloom. Dorset COP organiser Giles Watts explains how we make climate ambition actually work in a rural county, and why language matters more than you think.

And if you’ve been wondering what “devolution” really means for Dorset’s towns and villages? The Dorset Insider has some strong views, a few sharp one-liners, and one big question: is this local empowerment, or just shifting blame?

Finally, we meet Wimborne cadet Charlotte Bedford – caver, climber, award-winner, and proud recipient of the UK’s top cadet honour. She’s brilliant. Don’t miss her.

Pop it on. It’s full of courage, climate, community and a healthy dose of quiet outrage.

This episode is based on stories from November’s BV. Read the issue here: https://bvmag.co.uk/Nov25
News, people, politics and rural Dorset life – every month, always free.

The BV – named Best Regional Publication in the UK (ACE Awards) and Regional News Site of the Year (Press Gazette). Always worth your ears.

Join the Team at Holroyd Howe!

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Set within one of Dorset’s most breathtaking school environments, Holroyd Howe is looking for enthusiastic and talented individuals to join our dedicated catering team at Milton Abbey School.
We are now hiring for Chefs of all levels, Front of House Supervisors, and General Assistants to support our vibrant, welcoming dining experience for pupils, staff, and visiting guests.

As part of the Holroyd Howe family — one of the UK’s leading independent foodservice providers, you’ll be working in a kitchen that champions fresh, seasonal ingredients, creativity, and genuine hospitality. This is a fantastic opportunity for anyone wanting to build their career in a supportive, food-led environment.

What We Can Offer You:


• A great work–life balance


• 5 over 7 working pattern


• Daytime shifts 


• Free meals while on duty


• A friendly, forward-thinking team culture


• The chance to be part of something truly special in an inspiring school setting

If you’re passionate about food, people, and delivering an exceptional service, we’d love to hear from you.
To apply, please send your CV to: Tim Flageul – [email protected]
If you don’t have a CV that’s not a problem, you are welcome to send Tim an introductory email. He’d love to hear from you!

Revving up for 2026 Canford Classic & Supercar Sunday

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The organisers of Canford Classic & Supercar Sunday are already gearing up for 2026 – still buoyed by the overwhelming success of this year’s move to Canford School.
The event, which has rapidly become Dorset’s fastest-growing automotive showcase, drew more than 5,000 visitors and featured over 700 cars in August – from rare classics to cutting-edge hypercars. The school’s sweeping parkland provided a suitably dramatic backdrop for what many are already calling the county’s most exciting motoring day out.

Screenshot


Among the standout stars were two Ferrari F40s – one earning the People’s Choice Award after its generous owner allowed children (and a few parents) to climb inside the £2 million icon.
The Aston Martin Valour and Valhalla made memorable appearances, alongside the ultra-rare Koenigsegg CCX, which proved a crowd magnet from start to finish. Bonhams Cars added extra glamour, displaying models worthy of any concours lawn, including the exquisite Aston Martin DB4 GT Zagato. Event director Zander Miller, of Aperta Events, said: ‘The success of this year’s event at Canford was beyond anything we expected. To see so many incredible cars and passionate people come together in such a setting was a proud moment. We can’t wait to build on it for 2026.’
The next Canford Classic & Supercar Sunday returns on 23rd August 2026, with early-bird tickets and updates coming soon at apertaevents.com
Whether you’re a petrolhead, a photographer, or simply love the spectacle of beautiful engineering, this is one date already revving loudly on Dorset’s event calendar.

Sponsored by Wessex Internet

The fine art of botanical illustration

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With meticulous patience and a deep love of nature, Pauleen Trim’s delicate work has twice won the RHS’s highest honour for botanical art

Pauleen Trim

Pauleen Trim grew up surrounded by wildflowers, plants and trees in Winterborne Whitechurch, one of the villages that follow the meandering winter bourne (stream) south from Blandford.
She still lives in the village, with her husband Jim, surrounded by friends, family – and that beautiful landscape of fields, hedges, trees and gentle hills.
She always loved painting and drawing, but it was only when she retired, after many years teaching a wide range of art courses, that she really fell in love with nature.
That love, and her remarkable talent as an artist, which earned her membership of the exclusive Society of Botanical Artists, have together brought her not one but two coveted RHS (Royal Horticultural Society) gold medals at the prestigious RHS botanical art exhibition.
In 2021, one of her suite of gold-medal-winning illustrations of six trees was chosen as Best in Show. This year, she again won gold with another tree series, in the RHS show at the Saatchi gallery.

Prunus spinosa – one of Pauleen Trim’s Six Native Deciduous Trees and Their Galls series, which was awarded gold at the prestigious RHS botanical art exhibition

From childhood, Pauleen (the unusual spelling was a mistake when her birth was registered!) knew she was keen on art – at one point she imagined a career in fashion design. She was offered a place at a leading London art school but didn’t take it up and instead went to work for the then Dorset County Council. She took an ONC in public administration, and went on to marry Jim and have two children. Her father, Robert Maidment, was a well-known local builder who built his own home, and Pauleen and Jim’s.
She carried on painting and joined the Blandford Art Society, where she was one of a small group taking a diploma in fine art. Towards the end of this course she was asked if she would consider teaching, and after taking an Adult Education course at Ferndown she stepped in to run a leisure painters’ course at Bovington. She moved on to a temporary post at Bournemouth and Poole college at the Lansdowne, where she taught art to students on other courses (including floristry and hairdressing). It became a permanent job, and for 25 years she taught art, eventually specialising in theatre make-up and costume design.
Throughout her life, Pauleen has continued to learn – while working at the college, she took a City & Guilds course in textiles and is one of a small group who have just visited Transylvania to learn about and paint the uniquely unspoiled plants, flowers and trees of this region, where farming follows a pre-chemical agricultural cycle. She is also an accomplished miniaturist, and has been a member of the Hilliard Society of Miniature Art for about 30 years.

Amaryllis Beginning and End © Pauleen Trim

A rigorous process
The art of botanical illustration demands exceptional precision and attention to detail. Every element, from the shape of a petal to the texture of the bark, must be captured with lifelike accuracy. Botanical artists must be skilled in traditional painting techniques and have a deep understanding of the plant’s structure and growth. The process is time-consuming and meticulous, with work usually created at life size to showcase the true characteristics of the subject. For artists like Pauleen, the journey from sketch to finished piece involves not only artistic talent but also a thorough knowledge of botany and the natural world.
After she retired 12 years ago she found some paintings of flowers and plants that she had done in the 1970s and 80s and they reignited her interest. She took a course in botanical illustration at Kingston Maurward College. ‘I just thought “Wow!” I fell in love with looking at nature,’ she says.
She joined the South West Society of Botanical Artists, went on to do a diploma in the medium, and was advised by a teacher to start exhibiting. She submitted some work to the Society of Botanical Artists and was accepted as a member in 2018 after having five works accepted in two consecutive years. It has now changed a bit, but is still a complicated and demanding procedure – the current system is to submit a set number of paintings which go before a panel, whose members decide if the artist is to be offered SBA Fellowship status.
There is a similarly rigorous process for the annual RHS exhibition. The artist must submit four paintings (professional quality life-size prints) which go before a selection panel.

If the work is deemed to be silver standard (or above) you have five years to develop an exhibit comprising six pieces of botanical illustration on a coherent plant theme. Once they are completed, you apply for space to exhibit in the RHS annual art show.
The paintings are taken to the Saatchi Gallery and framed. When hung, they are judged by an RHS panel and the awards are given. The level of award is based on all six paintings, so to attain a gold medal, all six have to be of gold standard. If one is not, the whole exhibit award is based on the lowest standard painting.
In 2021, Pauleen submitted six tree paintings including the ash illustration – all six were awarded gold, and the ash was chosen as Best in Show. This year’s six, exhibited at the Saatchi Gallery, were also trees, and once again all won gold. For future SBA/RHS exhibitions Pauleen aims to show other botanical paintings.

Fraxinus excelsior – ASH. In 2021, all six of Pauleen’s paintings were awarded gold, and ASH was chosen as Best in Show

Pauleen is on Instagram @pauleentrim8 – where she shares much of her work.