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WINCANTON RACEDAY NEWS: ALEXEI ENTERS CHAMPION HURDLE RECKONING WITH KINGWELL SUCCESS

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Saturday 14th February

On a St Valentine’s Day card at Wincanton, it was ambition rather than romance in the air as Alexei powered his way into the Champion Hurdle picture with victory in the Grade Two BetMGM Kingwell Hurdle.

Now as short as 16-1 for next month’s Unibet Champion Hurdle at The Cheltenham Festival, the six-year-old (Joe Tizzard/Brendan Powell, 1-2 Favourite) justified market confidence with a decisive performance in the two-mile contest.

Grade 2 Winner, Alexei wins the Kingwell Hurdle @wincantonraces for Garth & Anne ridden by @brendanp1995 – courtesy of Joe Tizzard Racing

Sporting the famous silks of Garth and Anne Broom’s Brocade Racing, Alexei stalked longtime leader Rubaud before sweeping past approaching the final flight. Though hanging in the closing stages, he kept on strongly to secure a length and a quarter success.

Successful trainer Joe Tizzard said: “He was stepping up in grade and Rubaud has got a cracking record around there. The ground was also soft enough.

“He has gone and got the job done in Graded company. There are discussions to be had, but we’ll have a crack (at the Champion Hurdle).

“A bigger field with a stronger gallop suits him. He is a good traveller through a race, and the Champion Hurdle is something to aim at.

“Whether he is good enough, we’ll find out, but I think one thing he will do is travel into it and if he is good enough, he is good enough.

“It is exciting and it was a nice win today in its own right.”

Winning rider Brendan Powell added: “I went to put the race to bed between two out and the last.

“He had a bit of a look at the last, which he has done before, but he got from A to B. It gave the second horse a bit of a sniff but I was really happy with the way he picked up again, especially in that ground.

“He has come here and won a Kingwell and I’ll leave the Champion Hurdle with the boss and Garth and Anne to decide. I wouldn’t mind having a go in it anyway!”

History offers encouragement. Three winners of the Kingwell Hurdle this century – Hors La Loi III (2002), Katchit (2008) and Golden Ace (2025) – went on to land the Champion Hurdle, and connections will hope Alexei can follow in distinguished footsteps next month.

Earlier on the card, Queens Gamble (Harry Derham/Paul O’Brien, 100-30) returned to winning ways in the Listed BetMGM Agatha Christie Mares’ Novices’ Chase, rescheduled from Exeter following last Sunday’s abandonment.

The eight-year-old secured her fourth Listed success – having previously struck twice in bumpers and once over hurdles at the same level – with a determined display in the two-mile contest. She overhauled 1-3 Favourite Bluey just after the second last and stayed on strongly to win by two and a quarter lengths.

Harry Derham said: “I’m so, so pleased for her owners (Alex Frost and Ed Galvin). There are a big group of people behind this mare and she had a torrid summer with two really bad bouts of colic.

“I think her owners would want to say thank you very much to Emily Matten, who looks after her when she goes back to Ladywood Stud and my travelling head girl Amy who rides her at home every day – when she complains she can’t hold her I know she’s in good form. I can claim no credit for this win at all!

“It means a lot for her to win again because at one stage during the summer we were wondering if she would even come back into training as she had such a torrid time. For her owners, I am absolutely chuffed to bits.

“Obviously black type for mares is important, and she is almost like a family pet to the Frosts and Galvins – they adore her. Just to see her get another day in the sun is really, really special.

“Emily and Alex’s team at Ladywood did such a fantastic job and she came back to me in really good condition. We said if the engine wasn’t still there, we wouldn’t continue. She has not become the easiest to train, but I knew having that run a couple of weeks ago it would have improved her. She didn’t love the ground today but travelled beautifully and jumped great.

“It was hugely satisfying.”

For Queens Gamble and her devoted team, the result felt particularly fitting on a day that celebrates loyalty and partnership – proof that patience and perseverance can still be rewarded on the racecourse.

Young chefs impress at Rotary Youth competitions

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Rotary’s 2026 Youth Competitions launched in style with the Young Chef event, supported by the Rotary Clubs of Shaftesbury, Sturminster Newton, Gillingham and Blandford.


Held at Sturminster Newton High School on 22nd January, eight students from Shaftesbury and Sturminster Newton competed to create a healthy two-course meal on a budget. Judgeswere Liz Bailey (Beautiful Buffets) and Cllr Barry von Clemens, both highly experienced chefs.
Sturminster Newton High School was represented by Phoebe Chick, Amber Barlow, Hannah Kilvington and Benjamin Thompson. From Shaftesbury High School came Harvey Woods, Kara Rudd, Matthew Cawley and Isaac Stone.
Two winners were selected: Benjamin Thompson (Sturminster) wowed with chicken curry and homemade ice cream, while Isaac Stone (Shaftesbury) impressed with garlic butter steak and apple crumble, describing his pudding as ‘evoking the cosy ambience of home’.
The judges commended all entrants for their skills – with Barry joking that one contestant’s pastry was better than his grandmother’s. Winners received certificates from Rotarian David Wynn Mackenzie and will progress to the Wessex District Final.
Thanks were given to the schools and judges for their support.
shaftesburyrotaryclub.org

The BV community news section is sponsored by Wessex Internet

Are we talking to a brick wall?

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Every parish has one (I think we have at least six) – older gentlemen of the village, full of profound local knowledge who are the eyes and ears of the parish. There are experts on ditches, hedges, farming, deer … all manner of rural life. Some will happily escort me to troublesome places, pointing out the defects.
Each time I bump into them, I come away knowing much more about traditional methods of doing things, yet I still don’t know enough. In parish council work you learn something new every day.
However … even with the assistance of these wonderful residents, there are times when I really need the help of Dorset Council. It could be a tricky highway issue or a question about planning. I might need to speak to a qualified engineer about a problem with gullies.
I was intrigued, then, to see a recent local report about the savings Dorset Council is making simply by not replacing staff when they leave. Apparently, they expect to save £1.3 million over the current and next financial years this way, with up to 30 vacancies left unfilled.
We’re all aware just how tight the council’s budget is … but in the back of my mind was another question. If all these people are leaving, who exactly is doing their work?
Knowing what the same action would mean in my day job, I can just imagine some council employees having to contend with inheriting someone else’s portfolio, or at least parts of it.

Is it me?
Then I put two and two together and a few things started to add up.
For weeks I have been trying to arrange a site meeting to deal with a challenging rights-of-way and planning issue. Emails have disappeared into cyberspace and there has been no response whatsoever. Meanwhile, residents are inconvenienced and annoyed at the lack of progress. I have to go in disguise to the village shop to avoid being questioned – again.
The lack of response was what bothered me. I had begun to wonder whether it was just me, and the council had a vendetta against the village. I re-read my emails, and there was nothing abrasive about them. It just seemed as though ‘no one was in’.
And before you say it, this has nothing to do with Storm Chandra: it has been going on for months. Was it just me?
I decided to do a little market research and phoned a couple of fellow parish councillors from across the county.
One promptly said they were trying to get a town council vacancy advertised. He was tearing his hair out – all the correct forms had been submitted in a timely manner, but no one responded, the post wasn’t advertised and of course people were asking what’s happening. Finally, giving it one more go, he managed to speak to a human. The person who managed this aspect of council work had left – and, crucially, no one had set up any email forwarding, nor had the inbox been delegated to someone else.
Another friend was asking for some planning advice, having faced down some bullish developers who were trying to ride roughshod over a pending development. Help and advice was very much needed.
Instead, there was no response to her query – now she’s considering standing down as a councillor as she feels so ineffective.
We should not have to put up with that.

I expect a reply
I noticed this week that if Simon Hoare rings the council they jump to attention – as happened at Winterborne Kingston when the residents were desperately trying to get some help. To be fair, it was an urgent problem and it needed sorting fast.
But perhaps I should start mimicking Simon Hoare when I ring the council?
Or should I stage a sit in at County Hall until I get a response?
Of course I do not expect the council officers to spend all day checking emails and responding immediately. Nothing else would get done.
I know it’s also easy for an email to get buried. However … I do expect a response from a department when I have to raise an issue. I have to go back to my parishioners and explain why nothing is happening.
Why is there a system where the local MP gets a response but parish councillors are ignored? I don’t contact the council for fun or to be a nuisance. I – and every parish councillor I know – only contact them when there is a serious issue that needs an answer.
I know how the council portal works: if I’m asking, it’s because it’s a complex issue that cannot be answered through the automated service. And if I can’t get through to someone to sort out my issues, how does a vulnerable person manage to get help?
All that said, I am also rather concerned for the welfare of some of the council officers – those having to take on the additional work in order for the Cabinet to be able to crow about savings.
And ‘saving’ what exactly? Corporate memory and expertise are valuable assets. When they are not replaced, gaps begin to show. As an elected parish councillor representing a community, I’d really like to see Dorset Council being more helpful and responsive, instead of hiding behind a metaphorical brick wall. Especially to those representing their local communities.

The Dorset Insider is a no-holds-barred column pulling back the curtain on local affairs with sharp insight, unfiltered honesty and the occasional raised eyebrow. Written by a seasoned parish councillor who prefers to remain anonymous (for obvious reasons), it cuts through the noise to expose the frustrations of grassroots politics, and say what others won’t.
Rest assured, their identity is known – and trusted – by the editorial team. Expect opinion, candour and a healthy dose of exasperation …*

The constancy of change

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Change arrives daily – often overwhelming, sometimes hopeful – and when it does, being heard can make all the difference, says Jon Sloper

involves change – from personal concerns to national policy. It might mean adapting to external pressures – changes to benefits, housing or family crises – or navigating personal upheaval like illness or redundancy. Sometimes, it’s simply wanting to get involved and make things better … these things fill so many of our conversations.


I am often a witness and participant in responding to these changes. People talk about what is happening to them, how things are impacting them, what they think is going to happen and how they feel about it
We often observe traumatic changes – sudden, overwhelming moments that trigger survival instincts. The conversations are laser focused, and consideration of wider contexts, or reflecting on the causes of the change, are drowned out by the emergency – ‘I have no food, I had to spend the money on an unforeseen and unavoidable expense. Can you help? Where can I find some food for my family? Now?’
I’m often a sounding board too – people approach me quietly after meetings or send hesitant messages: ‘Um, I’ve been wondering…’, ‘You don’t happen to know…’, or ‘Could I talk to you about…?’ These are just as important as the more urgent conversations. I always feel that being entrusted with heartfelt thoughts, ideas or passions is a huge responsibility.
So many feelings accompany our experiences of change: hope, anxiety, shame, insecurity, anger, compassion, love, generosity, embarrassment, confidence, confusion, kindness, isolation …
Feelings often shape the way that change is approached, framing the story we create for ourselves to make the change understandable or manageable. As a result, the story can be big and ambitious – ‘I’m going to change the world!’ – or broken, humble and personal – ‘something bad has happened to me’.

It’s all too much
Feelings can also create barriers – or connections. If we’re overwhelmed and threatened, we might lash out, be angry, push people away. If we’re feeling confident and calm, we are able to consider others’ perspectives and engage in uncomfortable conversations.
They also shape the actions rising from the change. Actions in response to traumatic change are usually direct, focused, solution-orientated and sometimes an effort to maintain the status quo. In effect, the change is too much. ‘I want things to stay the same’, ‘Don’t talk to me about all this stuff’ or ‘Fix it!’. Defences spring up.
When change feels less threatening, our responses can be more creative – even playful. Telling and retelling the story and comparing with others’ experiences and narratives also becomes part of the journey to action.
Life is change. Growing, learning, working, relating – all are just different forms of it. Whether those changes are big and scary or big and exciting, a patient, gentle listener can be a lifeline. Whether the feelings are raw and ragged or passionate and expansive, sharing them with someone who can listen to our story, as it is, can provide a safe hand to hold that helps us take the next step.

The BV community news section is sponsored by Wessex Internet

North Dorset’s forgotten Scallywags

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They were farmers, labourers and tradesmen, but Dorset’s Auxiliary Units trained in silence to become Britain’s last, lethal line of defence, says CPRE’s Rupert Hardy

Spetisbury Patrol. The following men are recorded as being present in the patrol, but individual identification in the photo is unconfirmed: Sgt Maurice Tory, Cpl Walter Strange, Pte John Bugg, Pte Reginald ‘Reg’ Goddard, Pte Anthony Little, Pte Gilbert Snook, Pte Henry Spicer and Pte Jim Strange. Image courtesy of Coleshill Auxiliary Research Team (CART)

It is only in the last 20 years or so that details have become known of the secret guerrillla army created in the aftermath of Dunkirk, in the summer of 1940, specifically to deal with a German invasion. Innocuously called Auxiliary Units, they were trained in sabotage, explosives and irregular warfare in order to be the last line of defence. Churchill had seen how quickly Britain’s allies on the continent collapsed, and was determined to set up a trained resistance force in Britain.
The Home Guard they were not, even if they reported to GHQ Home Forces, and would only be activated once local regular defences had been overrun.
The role of the Auxiliary Units was to attack key transport lines and fuel dumps, as well as assassinate senior German officers. Much of the inspiration came from the success of Boer Commandos during the Boer war, and TE Lawrence’s exploits in the First World War.
Overall they were expected to slow down any invasion, attack the Germans from behind their own lines and allow a retreating British army to regroup. The aim would be for them to cause maximum harm over a brief but violent period. They were quickly nicknamed ‘Scallywags’.
They were initially commanded by Colonel Colin Gubbins, experienced in guerrilla warfare from the Irish War of Independence. In 1940 he had commanded a predecessor of the British Commandos during the Norwegian campaign.
He said: ‘Time was of the essence … at the shortest we had six weeks before a full-scale invasion could be launched.’
He set up units totalling 3,500 men on a county-wide basis, primarily around the south and east coasts. Later, command of the Scallywags fell to Colonel Bill Major – a Dorset man who had served with the Dorset Regiment.

The locations of the Dorset Auxiliary Units

Pimperne Patrol
Dorset had six groups: East Dorset, Wareham, Dorchester, Weymouth, Blandford and Bridport. The North Dorset group was based at Chestnut House in East Street, Blandford, reporting to Major Robert Wilson. It had eight patrols, each of four to eight men. They operated autonomously in self-contained cells using hidden bunkers in Child Okeford, Hinton St Mary, Leweston, Motcombe, Pimperne, Plush, Stourton Caundle and Woodyates. Many Scallywags were recruited from the Home Guard, and most were in reserved occupations essential for the war effort. Gamekeepers (and poachers!) were especially valued for their local knowledge.
Service in the Auxiliary Units was expected to be highly dangerous. Peter Wilkinson, GS02 Auxiliary Units, said: ‘It was doubtful whether many of them would have survived the first few days of invasion’.
Patrol members had orders to fight to the death, and to shoot each other if capture by the enemy was likely. Although they wore some elements of Home Guard uniform, it was expected the Germans would treat captured members as irregulars … and shoot them.

Details of the Pimperne Patrol

Dorset’s patrols would have been swiftly mobilised in the event of a German invasion. Enemy plans pointed to a possible landing in Lyme Bay, while other intelligence suggested Studland Bay – even closer. Blandford would be a strategic inland target for invading forces heading north to Bristol.
Just east of the Stourpaine and Blandford to Shaftesbury roads, the patrol’s underground operational base was well-disguised in a small copse on Bushes Farm, alongside the original showground for the Great Dorset Steam Fair. The hideout had a shaft down to a Nissen hut-style camouflaged, underground construction with a concrete pipe tunnel – probably an escape tunnel. Operational targets would have been Blandford Camp if it fell into German military hands and the sabotage of enemy movements on the Blandford-Shaftesbury and Blandford-Salisbury roads. The hideout was well-stocked with supplies of explosives, hand grenades and ammunition.
As countrymen, the patrol members knew the local area well, and they would have been trained in hand-to-hand combat. Auxiliary role members would not have told family members that they had become ‘Scallywags’.

Stourton Caundle Patrol. Back row (left to right): Charlie Lake, George Harris, Frank Hollex and Sgt George Furnell
Front Row: Robert Ashford and Vernon Caines.
Image courtesy of CART

No monument in North Dorset?
The Auxiliary Units were kept in being long after the threat of invasion had passed and were only formally stood down in late 1944. Many then joined the SAS and other special forces and saw service liberating Europe in the regular forces.
Four men from North Dorset units took part in the ill-fated 1944 SAS Operation Bulbasket, to hamper the progress of German reinforcements towards the Allies’ Normandy beach-heads. They were captured and executed as ‘commandos’ by the infamous 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich.
There has been little recognition of the part these brave men played in protecting their country – even their wives and families were often unaware of their role. In South Dorset there are a number of memorials, but I know of none in North Dorset.
Surely it is time for one?

More information on the Auxiliary Units can be found on staybehinds.com compiled by the Coleshill Auxiliary Research Team volunteers (CART).
In a later article this year I will cover the Special Duty Sections, recruited from the civilian population who acted as “eyes and ears”, as well as Scout Sections, who were regular soldiers with the role of training the patrols.

Roman Society award for east Dorset volunteers

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The East Dorset Antiquarian Society (EDAS) has received the prestigious Britannia Award from the Roman Society, recognising their ‘outstanding voluntary contribution to Roman archaeology in Britain’ for excavations at Druce Farm near Puddletown. From 2012 to 2018, a core team of 20 EDAS volunteers – led by Lilian Ladle and Andrew Morgan – excavated the site of a Roman villa, supported by members of other local groups.


Over 4,800 volunteer days uncovered the villa complex, Neolithic remains and extensive Roman features. The project actively welcomed the public, including school visits and open days, and was praised for its high-quality research and rapid publication.
In 2022, Ladle’s monograph The Rise and Decline of Druce Farm Roman Villa (60–650 CE) was published to acclaim.
EDAS, based in Wimborne, continues to offer practical archaeology opportunities to its 270 members. and remains committed to exploring and preserving Dorset’s rich archaeological heritage.

The BV community news section is sponsored by Wessex Internet

Biodiversity loss is now seen as a national security risk

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The loss of biodiversity threatens national security, says a new government report – and Dorset is already feeling the effects

Silver studded blue butterfly

Wildlife populations are down by 73% since 1970. Freshwater species have fallen by 84%. These two examples are not just ‘nature loss’ – they are the result of the sweeping erosion of the systems that feed and stabilise civilisation.
The Government’s new national security assessment, quietly released on 20th January, reaches a stark conclusion: global biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse are no longer ‘just’ environmental issues, but are direct threats to national security, economic stability and the food supply.
Using intelligence-style risk frameworks rather than academic modelling, the report warns with high confidence that ‘ecosystem degradation is occurring across all regions. Every critical ecosystem is on a pathway to collapse (irreversible loss of function beyond repair).’ The consequences are likely to include food insecurity and rising prices, alongside political instability, increased migration and conflict over resources.

Female House Sparrow in Flight Feeding on Insects

Does it matter in Dorset?
For many people, the report feels distant – rainforests and coral reefs are a world away from rural Dorset. But according to Dorset Wildlife Trust (DWT), the impacts are already being felt much closer to home.
‘It can be difficult to envisage how nature loss somewhere else affects us locally,’ says Imogen Davenport, DWT’s director of nature-based solutions. ‘But we’re already seeing it with climate change. The security risks – food supply, political instability, migration – are happening now. The same applies to biodiversity loss. It will affect food prices, availability and the water cycle.’
One of the report’s clearest warnings is that when ecosystems break down, the consequences don’t stay local: fertile soils, clean water, pollination and climate regulation all unravel together.
These changes can be seen most quickly in the marine environment: ‘The ocean is more fluid – obviously,’ Imogen says. ‘Temperature and acidity shifts move quickly, and species respond by relocating.’ Off the south-west coast, octopus numbers have surged, tuna are appearing more frequently, while basking sharks – once a familiar sight – have largely moved north. ‘It’s not just about loss,’ she says. ‘It’s the speed of change. Add biodiversity decline, and the impacts multiply.’
On land, Dorset’s sheltered position as a southern county means it can become a refuge for species moving north – but that does not mean ecosystems are healthy.
‘We’ve seen long-term degradation to the point where systems struggle to function,’ Imogen says, pointing to Poole Harbour. Excess nutrients entering via rivers have fuelled algal growth that smothers mudflats and saltmarsh, weakening the entire system. ‘Once degraded, ecosystems are far less able to adapt.
‘It becomes a vicious circle.’

Screenshot


Farming or wilding?
The report identifies food production as the biggest driver of biodiversity loss on land – an uncomfortable finding in a county where farming is economically and culturally central. But Imogen firmly rejects the idea that food security and nature recovery are in conflict. ‘You can’t have a healthy food system without nature,’ she says. ‘If soil washes off fields into rivers, it’s not growing food – and it’s causing damage downstream.’
In some places, work is already under way to undo historic decisions – including more costly options like ‘daylighting’ rivers that were forced into underground sewers decades or even centuries ago.Restoring ecosystems, the report argues, is often cheaper and more reliable than technological fixes applied after failure. Imogen agrees – with caveats. ‘There’s definitely some fantastic uses for technology, but some of the ‘fixes’ we’ve used historically have made things worse,’ she says. ‘Simply adding more fertiliser to degraded soils just means more nutrients end up in rivers.’
Restoring natural watercourses can reduce flooding and pollution, and can be simple where water is given the space to establish wetlands. In some places, work is already under way to undo historic decisions – including more costly options like ‘daylighting’ rivers that were forced into underground sewers decades, or even centuries, ago.
Water sits at the heart of the issue. Dorset has swung between drought and flooding in the past year, exposing how fragile its landscapes have become.
‘If we keep water closer to where it falls – slowing it, holding it in soils and wetlands – we reduce flood risk, recharge supplies and help nature at the same time,’ she explains.
Much of that thinking is embedded in Dorset’s Local Nature Recovery Strategy. ‘The challenge isn’t the ideas,’ Imogen says. ‘It’s implementation. These are big, interconnected jobs that require commitment across sectors.’
Framing biodiversity loss as a national security risk could now sharpen that commitment – but only if it changes decisions on planning, land use and infrastructure. The report’s warning may be in the language of global risk and national security, but its impacts are felt in Dorset’s stressed landscapes and harbours, in the heated debates about farming vs. development.
The distance between those global warnings and everyday life in Dorset is shrinking fast.
Read the Nature Security Assessment on Global Biodiversity Loss, Ecosystem Collapse and National Security in full here

Rain, reactors and running out

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Bovine TB dominates farm life, George Hosford says, as flawed testing and policy inertia persist (and January rain only adds to the pressure)

Strip grazing in action: youngstock marching across the broad acres of cover crops in fields destined for spring cropping this year (the black dots are the cattle). All images © George Hosford

The total rainfall on the farm for January is 313mm – 12 and a half inches in old money. The previous monthly record was 304mm in January 2014, and all other months since 1985 pale into insignificance. It’s no wonder springs have broken all over the place, and many people are spending a lot of time filling sandbags, hiring pumps and nervously checking their insurance policies. The Blandford area seems to have been hit quite hard: the town centre has been closed off by flooded roads for several days, and the Stour rose to a level this week that we’ve not seen in many years.
In the image above, two groups of youngstock are marching across the broad acres of cover crops in fields destined for spring cropping this year (the black dots are the cattle). They spend a day on the plot, approximately a hectare, and then very happily move on when the fence is opened for them. The fresh grazing every day, where the animals can choose what to eat from a multi-species mixture, does them very well – they are not fed anything else such as silage, hay or straw.
This approach last year led to all animals gaining weight over winter, which was not the case before we began this regime. Previously they would have been on a maintenance ration of hay or silage, plus a thin strip of turnips every day. Not so good for the land, which would get badly poached, or for the animals, who spent months standing in mud. There is an awful lot of electric fencing needed to graze the cattle like this, but Brendan takes it on with great gusto come rain or shine (if he counted the miles perhaps there should be an award in it!).
On our particular patch of Dorset the ungrazed land on our chalk-based soils drains well, even after the recent heavy rainfall, so moving the animals onwards daily minimises poaching. Farmers on heavy clay may weep to read this: they have no alternative but to house their livestock over winter, and feed them with stored forage.
The unrepentant group at the bottom clearly got fed up with the miserable cold rain this afternoon though (Sunday 1st) – they broke out through the electric fence, and were only noticed when they arrived in the yard at Shepherds Corner, clearly keen to get indoors with their mothers. Sorry chums, it’s back to the field for you!

Youngstock winter feed

TB time
Theo and Mr Red, our bulls, make do with hay, some light grazing when it’s not too wet, and a pound of grass nuts every day to keep them sweet – particularly important come TB testing day, which we had to face once again a fortnight ago. The ‘Inconclusive’ animal from the previous test 60 days ago was once again declared an IR – so now becomes a full Reactor – which is, to be frank, a death sentence.
The same was pronounced out of the blue for another animal, in a different group, and he obviously took a pretty dim view of the decision. On the day the death wagon rolled up, he couldn’t be seen for dust (well, mud), and led the team on a 4½ mile steeplechase around the farm, ending up back with his original group. After ten days away with a stranger – the other inconclusive reactor – he still knew exactly where his herd was.
Cattle psychology is rightly being studied more closely, as these poor animals are forced to endure the blunt tools of the response to a disease which the dim humans seem so utterly incapable of getting rid of.
We can put men on the moon, we can ‘undress’ pictures of people on grossly unpleasant social media platforms, but when it comes to TB in cattle, we are still using a test invented in the 1890s as the first line of defence in rooting out infected animals from our herds.
The SICCT skin test is very good at telling you if you have TB in your herd, but is hopeless at telling you which animals are infected, leaving on average 20 to 25% of infected animals undetected. This is the same test which is used pre-movement to tell you whether animals you plan to buy from other farms are clear of TB prior to bringing them into your own herd …
What could possibly go wrong?
Looking for a way forward
The NFU has helped to set up a new TB management group in Dorset, and other counties, in the aftermath of the badger cull, to take advantage of the (temporarily) lower badger numbers, and to encourage farmers to take advantage of the things that they can control, rather than agonise over the things that they can’t. There are other tests available, though they come at private cost and with no government compensation for any TB reactors they detect that weren’t picked up by official testing. Biosecurity measures can also help – protecting cattle from infection by badgers or by other livestock, such as neighbouring animals over a fence or escapees from nearby farms.
One promising approach is to closely study the lump sizes recorded during previous TB tests. These can be used to rank animals by risk, allowing farmers to manage higher-risk cattle in separate groups – or cull them earlier than they otherwise might. The size of the lump in response to the TB test is a good indicator of the animal’s immune reaction, indicating prior exposure to the TB organism.
There’s also the IBTB online service, which lets farmers check the TB status of holdings they might be buying replacements from. That cow farmers do not all operate closed herds in the TB era completely stumps me: buying in cattle for your herd is like Russian roulette, you have no idea which barrel is loaded.
As the vet leading last week’s meeting pointed out however, those of us who THINK we operate a closed herd, probably aren’t.
Even if you use AI (artificial insemination, not intelligence!) on all of your cows, and breed all your own replacements, can you really call yourself a closed herd if you have neighbours with cows, or badgers on your farm, or even deer, which also carry TB?

Theo the bull at Traveller’s Rest Farm

A different route
Our motivation, as a Dorset group, is simple: to ease the burden of this disease in any way we can, and to bring together everyone with a stake in it – in the hope of finding a realistic way forward.
Right now, we’re heading backwards again, despite the earlier drop in outbreaks that followed the badger cull. What that cull showed was that reducing badger numbers can cut the number of new TB infections – but only by around 50%. That makes it just one part of any long-term strategy. And let’s be honest: it’s highly unlikely to happen again. So we need a different route.
Top of the list is getting DEFRA to reassess its approach. The current 25-year TB ‘eradication’ plan is clearly a bad joke – for all the reasons already mentioned. The department must be willing to continually review new tests, new science, and the changing shape of the cattle industry itself.
Frankly, I don’t understand why we still have a category called ‘inconclusive reactor’, or why we persist with both standard and severe interpretations of lump sizes.
The severe version is used where TB is strongly suspected or already confirmed – but if an animal reacts to the test and produces a lump, that means it has been exposed to TB, and poses an ongoing risk to the rest of the herd.

Amidst the madness of the wettest month ever recorded on this farm, these little beauties have decided to compete with the snowdrops popping up everywhere. Tucked under Blackfern wood, sheltered from the east wind and sitting pretty for the afternoon sun as it climbs, by tiny increments, slightly higher in the sky every day.


The problem, of course, is that TB is now so deeply embedded in so many herds that removing every animal with a lump – however small – would cause chaos. And it would cost a fortune. So the can keeps getting kicked further down the road.
If we really want to see an end to TB we need to take the disease seriously and prescribe some very painful and expensive medicine. And by this I don’t mean a vaccine – the nature of the disease makes this very difficult and a long way in the future.
If you’re then naturally asking me why we’re vaccinating badgers against TB, my answer is that it is simply a very cynical, expensive and dishonest political gesture.
This is a condensed version of George’s farm diary. See the unabridged version on his blog viewfromthehill.org.uk

Underfunded rural Dorset pays the price

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As I write it’s been a difficult week for West Dorset, with Storm Chandra bringing torrential rain, some areas seeing more than 55mm in a matter of hours. Coming hot off the back of two other storms in January, the ground is sodden, the sewers are overwhelmed, and there is widespread flooding. Whole villages have become islands, schools have closed, residents have been unable to get to work or to the shops. Right now we desperately need a dry spell to allow the water to dissipate.

Edward Morello MP for West Dorset


Dorset & Wiltshire Fire Service, along with all our emergency services, have been doing a fantastic job supporting residents during this crisis and I pay huge tribute to their hard work.
Many of you will have seen that the Fire Chief has recently announced a consultation on station closures. This is a result of the ‘long-term funding settlement’ (for long-term read three years) announced by the Government, which will result in our fire service having £1.2m less in year one than it requires. The deficit only increases in years two and three. The Fire Service strongly disputes the underlying assumptions that the Treasury used when working out Dorset & Wiltshire’s allocation, and having gone through the numbers with them I agree. This week at Treasury Questions I raised it with the Chancellor and ask that she meet with me and the Fire Service, to review the numbers. Sadly the Treasury declined, but I will be writing to her in the hope we can still secure a meeting.
This past week has shown just how vital our fire service is when crisis hits, and how important it is they have the funding they need.
Sadly, this is just another example of where Treasury funding formulas fail to reflect the reality of life in rural Britain. In a speech in Westminster Hall this week I explained how the same issue impacts children’s services. While the Government is bringing forward legislation designed to improve service provision, unless the funding formula is altered to reflect the challenges faced by rural communities, places like West Dorset will continue to receive less than their urban counterparts.
This needs to change.
Edward Morello MP
West Dorset (LibDem)