The Blackmore Vale logo
Home Blog Page 206

Renowned ethologist, passionate conservationist, inspiring activist … Dr Jane Goodall answers the Random 19 questions

0
Jane Goodall in Gombe National Park
© The Jane Goodall Institute / Shawn Sweeney

Dr Jane Goodall made her name by quite literally redefining what it means to be human. Through her work with wild chimpanzees in Tanzania, she set the standard for how behavioural studies are conducted. She was born Valerie Jane Morris-Goodall in London in 1934. When her father was posted to France early in WWII, Jane, her mother and younger sister Judith moved to her grandmother’s home in Bournemouth, which she has counted as home ever since.
‘When I was ten, I dreamed of going to Africa, living with animals and writing books about them,’ she told CNN in 2017. ‘We didn’t have any money, I was a girl, and the war was raging – so everyone except my mother laughed at it.’
Increasingly unhappy with the restrictions of school life, 16 year-old Jane wrote in an early 1951 diary: ‘Woke up to be faced by yet another dreary day of torture at that gloomy place of discipline and learning, where one is stuffed with “education” from day’s dawn to day’s eve.’

A dream of Africa

Nevertheless, she won two school prizes for essay writing and her exam grades were good enough to go to university. But her family couldn’t afford it, so instead she enrolled at secretarial college, and moved from one clerical job to another. Her opportunity came via an old school friend, who invited Jane to spend a few months at her family’s farm in Kenya.
Jane credits her mother, Margaret Myfanwe Joseph – affectionately known as Vanne – with recognising her talent and passion at a time when girls were often discouraged from pursuing serious professions. Keen to nurture Jane’s ambitions, Vanne promptly said yes, despite society’s attitudes to allowing a young woman to board a ship to ‘deepest, darkest Africa’.
Jane immediately fell in love with the country, and took an office job in Nairobi, where she met the paleoanthropologist Louis Leakey, curator of Nairobi’s natural history museum.
Leakey was impressed by her and offered her a job.
What Jane didn’t know was that Leakey was actually looking for someone to research chimpanzee behaviour, but didn’t want someone carrying the baggage of preconceptions of a university education. Leakey, according to National Geographic, believed Goodall’s lack of formal scientific training – along with her passion for animals – would make her the right choice to study the social lives of chimpanzees at Gombe, because she would not be biased by traditional thought and could study chimpanzees with an open mind.
In 1958, at the age of 25, Jane Goodall travelled back to London and spent some time with experts in the fields of primate anatomy and behaviour. By the summer of 1960, Leakey had raised enough money to fund her work, and she returned to Africa.
Girls were rarely seen embarking on trips for scientific research, and Jane’s mother accompanied her when she began her research on the Gombe chimpanzees on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in East Africa. British authorities complained that a young woman should not be living alone in the jungle, so Vanne accompanied her daughter as a chaperone for four months.

Jane Goodall and her mother Vanne sort specimens in her tent in Gombe Stream Chimpanzee Reserve.
© The Jane Goodall Institute / Hugo van Lawick

Names not numbers

Jane acknowledges that the early weeks at Gombe were challenging. She developed a fever − probably malaria − that delayed the start of her work. Once she had recovered, the rugged terrain and thick vegetation made exploring the reserve difficult and she hiked miles without ever seeing a chimpanzee.
Jane’s first venture into the dense forests of Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania began what would become six decades of intimate study of chimpanzees.
She took an unorthodox approach, immersing herself in the chimpanzees’ habitat. After months of trying to gain their trust, she was able to experience their complex society as a neighbour, rather than as a distant observer.
She then defied scientific convention by naming the chimpanzees rather than using the accepted numbering system, and also by suggesting that the chimps had emotions and personalities. She came to understand them not only as a species, but as individuals with complex minds, emotions and long-term bonds.
Her ground-breaking discovery that chimps use tools challenged long-standing contemporary thinking, forever shifting the boundaries that separated humans from animals.
Recognising her contributions to the field, Louis Leakey advised Jane to earn an academic qualification, which would allow her to gain independent research funding. He paved the way for her to embark on a PhD course in ethology at Cambridge University (only the eighth person ever to be admitted without an undergraduate degree).
There, she found herself at odds with senior scientists over her methodology.
Jane graduated in 1965, after presenting a thesis entitled Behaviour of the Free Ranging Chimpanzee’.

Jane Goodall with her friend Rusty, Bournemouth 1954.
The Jane Goodall Institute / Courtesy of the Goodall Family

She then established the Gombe Stream Research Center, which became a training ground for students interested in studying primates, ecology and more. Today, it hosts a skilled team of researchers from around the world and dedicated Tanzanian field assistants.
The research center at Gombe also attracted many women who had been nearly absent from the field when she began. ‘Jane Goodall’s trailblazing path for other women primatologists is arguably her greatest legacy,’ said Gilbert Grosvenor, chairman of The National Geographic Society. ‘Indeed, women now dominate long-term primate behavioural studies worldwide.’
Jane has spent more than half a century at Gombe National Park. Her research revolutionised the field of primatology, and is one of the longest-running field studies of any species.
National Geographic, recognising her work, started sponsoring her research and published her first article, My Life Among Wild Chimpanzees, in 1963. This collaboration grew. Jane further upset the university authorities when she wrote her first book, My Friends, the Wild Chimpanzees, published by National Geographic, as it was aimed at the general public rather than an academic audience. The book was wildly popular – and her academic peers were outraged. A popular television documentary series, Miss Goodall and the Wild Chimpanzees, followed – and Jane became a household name.

Jane writing up her field notes in her tent at Gombe.
© The Jane Goodall Institute / Hugo van Lawick

Roots & Shoots

In 1977, Jane established the Jane Goodall Institute, initially to support the research at Gombe and protect chimpanzees in their habitats.
A decade later, flying to the first ever Chimpanzees in Context symposium, Dr Goodall saw from her aeroplane window the accelerated pace and scale of deforestation. At the symposium, she heard first-hand from fellow researchers about declining chimpanzee populations beyond her beloved Gombe. She realised she had to act to save chimpanzees from extinction.
The Jane Goodall Institute soon grew to be a major part of Jane’s work, and the institute is now a global non-profit organisation, committed to community-centred conservation, a testament to Goodall’s philanthropic spirit and her belief in the power of individual action.
‘When we put local communities at the heart of conservation, we improve the lives of people, animals and the environment.’
A core part of the institute’s work is the Roots & Shoots programme, launched in 1991, which inspires and empowers young people, from pre-school to university, to become involved in hands-on projects to benefit their local community, animals and the environment.
Jane Goodall’s activism work stems from her belief: ‘You cannot get through a single day without having an impact on the world around you. What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.’
Today, at 89 years old, Jane’s love for the wild, her passion for conservation and her commitment to fostering a better world for all, remain undeterred. Her work remains as essential as ever. While many of similar age might choose to bask in the comforts of retirement, Jane continues to work relentlessly, her determination and zeal undiminished as she continues to inspire and to drive change.

Dr. Jane Goodall speaking at the Chan Centre, Vancouver, BC, Canada. © Catalin Mitrache

And so to the 19 random questions…

  1. What’s your relationship with Dorset?
    Well, where I live now – Durley Chine Road on the West Cliff, it is where I grew up. The only difference is that back then it was part of Hampshire! I forget when our area became Dorset.
  2. The last film you watched?
    My Octopus Teacher. Everyone should watch it to understand the uncanny intelligence of the octopus.
  3. It’s Friday night – you have the house to yourself, and no work is allowed. What are you going to do?
    Well, I cannot imagine a time with no work allowed. But if it was so I would play a Beethoven, Mendelsohn or Dvorak symphony – or another piece of classical music. Loudly!
  4. What book did you read last year that stayed with you? What made you love it?
    I have almost no time for reading – by bedtime my eyes are tired from gazing at a screen, or it is late after a lecture.
    I do, however, read my Kindle on planes. I love books – my house is full of them – but my Kindle can come with me with all sorts of books.
    The book that always stays with me, and the one which I read sections of on long flights, is Lord of the Rings.
    I love it because it is a completely imaginary world – yet it’s so very real. Also, it mirrors what is going on in the real world today. The Dark Lord is a combination of Putin, Bolsonaro, Trump etc. The black riders and the orcs are the CEOs of the extractive industries, animal traffickers and so on. We need to hugely increase the Fellowship of the Ring. And we all have to be prepared to join the fight to save planet earth. Of course there is hope – the ring does get thrown into the volcano and the hobbits are rescued.
    And I love that the dust given Sam by Galadriel restores damaged environments.
  5. The best biscuit for dunking?
    None – I HATE the very thought of dunking ANY kind of biscuit!
  6. What would you like to tell 15 year-old you?
    Exactly what my mother told me – if you want to do this (for me, this was to go to Africa, live with wild animals and write books about them) you must work hard, take advantage of all opportunities and if you never give up, hopefully you will find a way (of course, I did!).
In her early days at Gombe, Jane Goodall spent hours sitting on a high peak with binoculars or a telescope, searching the forest below for chimpanzees.
© The Jane Goodall Institute / Hugo van Lawick
  1. Tell us about a sound or a smell that makes you happy?
    Gombe with the waves of Lake Tanganyika gently breaking on the beach.
    Or if I am in the forest, it’s the sound of rain pattering on the canopy of the forest above me.
    But what did make me happy, and I still think of it, is when on summer evenings, after I’d gone to bed, I’d hear my grandmother playing Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata on the piano downstairs, window wide open, and the smell of roses coming through my open bedroom window.
  2. What would you like to be remembered for?
    Two things, if that’s not greedy.
    The first is for helping to change attitudes about the true nature of animals – that they are sentient. They can feel emotions.
    They can feel pain.
    They are not just things.
    The second is for starting the Jane Goodall Institute’s youth programme, Roots & Shoots. It’s now in 69 countries (and growing), and involves hundreds of thousands of young people from kindergarten to university. Even adults are joining in now – there are some 1,600 groups in the UK alone. All the groups choose for themselves three projects; one to help people, one to help animals and one the environment – they are all interconnected.
  3. What’s your secret superpower?
    Opening my mind to the great spiritual power that gives me strength when I am exhausted. Also, I am obstinate and won’t give up!
    And I get strength from audience reactions – you have to be energised when 10,000 people stand up cheering when you enter an auditorium. And then do it again after I’ve spoken!
  4. Your favourite quote?
    From the Bible “As thy days, so shall thy strength be”. I think of it when I am facing something I dread – for example when I went into medical research labs where chimpanzees were being used as guinea pigs, giving them human diseases which other animals, less like us, could not be infected with. Seeing our closest living relatives – who I knew wild and free in their social groups in the rainforest of Gombe – confined, alone, in 5’ x 5’ cages surrounded by bars for testing vaccines or cures. Bored, imprisoned, frustrated and some fallen into deep depression.
    But I couldn’t talk about the conditions unless I had seen them with my own eyes.
  5. Your top three most-visited websites (excluding news and social media)?
    I use Ecosia rather than Google because every time you use it they plant a tree. And it is basically the same platform as Google.
    I don’t often visit websites – only to check out stories sent to my email about events in the outside world. But I do use the BBC and Al Jazeera to check on news.
  6. What was the last gift you either gave someone, or received?
    I gave a beautifully carved wooden woodpecker, made from soft wood by a local artist in Halifax, Canada. It was a gift for someone who lent me his cabin for a free weekend during a tour in Canada – a little cabin on a lake shore surrounded by tall trees. The only problem – if you put a toe outside it was instantly attacked by ten large hungry female mosquitoes (males live on nectar, not blood)!
Dr Jane Goodall beside a waterfall in Gombe National Park, Tanzania
© The Jane Goodall Institute / Bill Wallauer
  1. Tell us about one of the best evenings you’ve had?
    After 89 years on the planet I cannot possibly pick out a single best evening!
    But there are some that do live in my memory:
    Sitting around a camp fire on the Serengeti, with the sound of lions roaring.
    Sitting out by the Platte river at sunset, listening to the sound of thousands of sandhill cranes as they fly in, formation after formation, to roost in the river.
    A few evenings with my mother, long ago when I was first study-ing the chimps. We would sit round a little camp fire, lit by a hurricane lamp, and were almost always accompanied by Terry the Toad and sometimes a genet, who became tame. We called her Crescent because of a distinctively-shaped spot on her coat. I would tell Mum about what I had seen during my day in the forest.
    Oh, and New Year’s Eve with my family in Bournemouth, when all the lower rooms were lit by only candles, waiting for midnight.
  2. What is your comfort meal?
    I’m vegan, and for me it’s a plate of spinach, asparagus and sautéed mushrooms, with mashed potato.
  3. What in life is frankly a mystery to you?
    What happens after I die.
    On a more mundane level – I don’t know, sometimes, how I keep going through an exhausting tour.
  4. Cats or dogs (or, in this case, chimpanzees)?
    Chimpanzees are too like humans. I don’t think of them as animals, and there are some nice and some less so. Dogs win every time. The dog I had as a child, Rusty, taught me that animals have personality, reasoning power and emotions – because of him I was able to insist that we humans were not alone in having these qualities when I was told by ethology professors in Cambridge University in 1961 that humans were completely separate from the rest of the animal kingdom.
    Now, of course, we know about the amazing intelligence of pigs, rats, crows, parrots – even octopuses. And they all have personalities and emotions.
Roots & Shoots Day of Service, San Francisco, October 11,2017. © Susan Janowski
  1. What shop can you not pass by?
    I seldom have time to go in anywhere, but if I am walking down a street in the old parts of London, Paris, Vienna, New York etc – in the NON touristy parts! – and I have a few minutes before my next event, then it would be a shop selling secondhand curiosities.
    You never know what treasures you may find.
    Or the little shops in Venice selling Venetian glass – the little animals and so on.
  2. What’s your most annoying trait?
    I’ve asked five people who know me well and they could not think of even one! But I irritate myself by not remembering things – like what name I filed a document under, or where I put something.
  3. You have the power to pass one law, uncontested. What will you do with it?
    Give all animals the equivalent of legal personhood.

Paramedic (ECP) or NursePractitioner (ANP) | Milborne Port Surgery

0

Milborne Port Surgery is looking for an Emergency Care Practitioner or Nurse Practitioner to join our fantastic practice team.
We pride ourselves on being an exceptional practice with a friendly team, a beautiful purpose built surgery with spacious rooms, countryside views and highly appreciative patients.
We are looking for a candidate who fits in well with the ethos of the practice.
Our priorities being great patient care, work-life balance and teamwork.
As a training practice we strongly encourage staff to develop and would support the right applicant to complete their advanced practitioner training if this could be done over a suitably short timescale.


The surgery prides itself on our very high patient satisfaction scores and continuity of care.
Our patients have made the following comments:

  • “Excellent service, friendly, efficient, always tell people how lucky we are with our GP Service.”
  • “Can’t thank all the surgery staff enough for their amazing service. It’s by far the best out of previous surgeries.”
    Informal visits are encouraged so get in touch and come and see the surgery for yourself.

    The successful candidate will act as an autonomous practitioner working independently and in conjunction with other health care professionals to assess, diagnose and treat the conditions of patients attending within primary care and initiating internal and external referrals as appropriate.GP and ANP colleagues provide opportunities for education, advice and support.

    The candidate will have (or be near to completing) an Independent prescriber qualification. G practice experience is desirable.

    Involvement in our in-house educational and multidisciplinary team meetings will add to job satisfaction and contribute to good patient care.

    Our salaried GP says:”I can honestly say [joining Milborne Port Surgery] was the best work-related decision I’ve made. We have a wonderful team, who work well together and is supportive. I was made to feel welcome from the start and ever since.”
    Please apply promptly if interested. We reserve the right to close applications early if suitable candidate(s) are found.

Milborne Port Surgery is a general practice located near the beautiful abbey town of Sherborne on the Dorset Somerset Border. We provide NHS services to 7200 patients with a well established team including 4 GP partners, 2 salaried GPs, 2 Advanced Nurse Practitioners, 2 Practice Nurses and 3 HAs plus allied HCPs: Pharmacists, Health Coaches, Mental Health Nurse. And of course an excellent reception and administrative team.
We are part of a Primary Care Network of like-minded small to medium sized rural practices, which grew out of a pre-existing collaboration to deliver transformed patient care as part of an innovative NHS Vanguard programme.
We are a training practice with a trainee GP, sometimes medical students, and we are supporting various members of our team to gain additional professional qualifications.
As a practice our ethos is to deliver excellent patient care, maintaining the best of traditional general practice and continuity of care, whilst adopting new approaches that complement these goals. We work as a team and maintain an open door policy where all staff have a voice and are able to access advice and support.
If you share our enthusiasm for the NHS; believe in the value of primary care; and want to join a forward-thinking team committed to patient and staff wellbeing we would be delighted to hear from you. Milborne Port Surgery is an equal opportunities employer.

Job responsibilities
Brief Summary Follows. Formal job description available on application.
Core role:
Working as a team member with other health professionals to deliver routine and urgent care for patients including assessment, advice, treatment and onwards referral – whether to other team members or to secondary care. Appointments are delivered by phone or face to face with appointment length variable according to the complexity of the issue. GP advice will always be available.

Training and personal development:
The practice is supportive of relevant personal development and training.
In-house training and clinical meetings are provided in some subjects and online training is available for all statutory mandatory training.
Attendance at suitable courses is also supported with prior agreement.
The post-holder will develop and maintain a Personal Learning Plan and participate in any training programme implemented by the practice as part of this employment, plus other relevant training as agreed. The post-holder will maintain training as required for ongoing registration and practice in their role.
Additional responsibilities
All team members are expected to take on some administrative, leadership or managerial duties according to their abilities and expertise, and often their personal interests. These should not be excessive and will not be the main role of a nurse practitioner or ECP (see above).

Person Specification
Knowledge, Attributes and Skills
Essential

  • Good interpersonal and communication skills.
  • Good written skills and clear concise record keeping.
  • Understanding of clinical governance issues in primary care.
  • Good professional standing.
  • Works well in a team, supporting colleagues and seeking advice where necessary.
  • Recognises limits of own practice and expertise.
    Desirable
  • Understanding of general practice funding & reporting. e.g. Awareness of QOF and its implications for the practice.
  • Knowledge and skills in resource management.
  • Comfortable with change in working environment and working practices over time.
  • Phlebotomy.
  • Able to contribute to colleagues’ education.

  • Qualifications
  • Essential
  • Full registration with NMC (UK) or CoP(UK)
  • Evidence of Advanced Practice Qualifications or near-complete training as Advanced Practitioner
  • Qualified or near-qualified as Independent Prescriber
  • Relevant nursing degree or Paramedic qualification
  • Eligible to work in UK primary care
    Disclosure and Barring Service Check
    This post is subject to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act (Exceptions
    Order) 1975 and as such it will be necessary for a submission for Disclosure to be made to the Disclosure and Barring Service (formerly known as CRB) to check for any previous criminal convictions.
    UK Registration
    Applicants must have current UK professional registration. For further information please see NHS Careers website https://www.healthcareers.nhs.uk/working-health/overseas-health-professionals


Employer name
Milborne Port Surgery
Location
Gainsborough
Milborne Port
Sherborne
Dorset
DT9 5FH
Employer’s website
https://www.milborneportsurgery.nhs.uk
For questions about the job, contact:
Senior Partner
Ian Wyer
[email protected] 01963251947

Salary
£48,000 to £58,000 a year According to experience. Pro-rata for part time.

Working pattern
Full-time, Part-time, Flexible working
Reference number A3701-23-0001

July’s BV is here!

0

We have a long slow delicious read full of treats for you this month.

Child Okeford’s most famous resident celebrates his 75th birthday. He started life as a simple holiday purchase in Blackpool, but the little yellow hand puppet became a national treasure.

Editor Laura has fulfilled a lifetime ambition interviewing renowned ethologist, passionate conservationist and inspiring activist Dr Jane Goodall – who answers this month’s Random 19 questions. Spoiler alert – Lord of the Rings and a controversial biscuit-dunking policy lay in store.

A retrospective at Sladers Yard gallery celebrates the remarkable career of Philip Sutton RA – an artist who has never followed fashion. Fanny Charles interviewed the 94-year-old painter who lives in Dorset and looked back at his life’s work

Sophie Giles swapped working on an industrial estate for life as an island girl – Tracie Beardsley met Brownsea Island’s youngest ranger, and hears how working on the land has entirely transformed her life.

On the first day of his first archaeological dig, CPRE’s Rupert Hardy made a major – though grisly – discovery and uncovered a sad mystery.

All this plus you could win tickets to the Cheese Festival, farming, wildlife, food and drink featuring the Crown at Marnhull, Smash Burger Tacos and officially the best wine retailer in the UK.

Come on now, where else would you get all that for FREE?

Agriculture Teacher | Kingston Maurward College

0

To teach and assess across the Agriculture curriculum, providing specific support for the development of the Agricultural provision at KMC.  This role may include Higher Education teaching and course tutor responsibilities dependent on experience.

£21,902 – £27,273 per annum which is points 4b – 9c on the academic salary scales dependent on skills and experience.

Part-time or full-time contracts available. 7.4 – 37 hours per week, Monday – Friday with flexibility to meet the business needs.

We are seeking a motivated person to join our team in the heart of Dorset. The role promises a varied and interesting workload, teaching a range of livestock, machinery, agri-science and associated units, with the potential to collaborate with our Farm Manager to support the college farming calendar commitments within planned teaching sessions.

For more information and to apply: https://www.kmc.ac.uk/college/vacancy/agriculture-teacher/

WIN a cheese lovers delight at the Sturminster Newton Cheese Festival!

19

*** THIS COMPETITION IS NOW CLOSED ***

Brimming with excitement for a perfect blend of crafts, food, music, and more? Or are you simply mad for cheese? Whatever tickles your palate, we have a treat for you! We are so excited to announce our latest competition – you can win a pair of tickets to the Sturminster Newton Cheese Festival.
But hold on, that’s not all! You will also win a £40 voucher for The Exchange in Sturminster Newton.

Now how’s that for a cheesy treat?!

For those not familiar with this cheesy extravaganza, Sturminster Newton is situated in the heart of the Blackmore Vale, referred to by Thomas Hardy as ‘The vale of little dairies’. It has a long history of dairy farming and was home to the largest calf market in Europe until 1998.

The Sturminster Newton Cheese Festival, taking place on the 9th and 10th of September 2023, is more than just an homage to the beloved foodstuff – it’s a community celebration of local artisans, live music, real ale and cider. This year, there is a keen focus on sustainability, with efforts made to reduce reliance on mobile generators and recycle all waste produced during the event.

Your winning spree doesn’t stop at the festival gates. You will also be treated to a £40 voucher for The Exchange, a vibrant arts, entertainment, and business venue, and a community hub situated on the site of the former calf market.

How To Enter

To be in with a chance to win the pair of tickets to the Cheese Festival (the winner can choose the day they’d prefer to attend), just answer the first two options in the widget box below – choosing whether to opt in or out of subscribing to the BV and the Cheese Festival’s newsletter list. There are more chances to win by completing the other entry options if you so wish – they’re entirely up to you! The closing date for this competition is 18th August 2023 and only entries received on or before that date can be included. The prize will go to the first three randomly chosen entries. Good luck!

So, don’t delay – enter now and get ready for a weekend filled with food, fun, music and – most importantly – cheese!

Win tickets to Sturminster Newton Cheese Festival PLUS £40 voucher for The Exchange!

Important Information

Gates for the Cheese Festival open at 10am and close at 5pm.
Please note, much as we love dogs they cannot enter any of the food tents due to Hygene Regulations – that being the case we would really recommend that you leave your pet at home. If you do bring your dog it must be kept on a lead and cannot be taken into any of the food marquees. Please do not bring your dog and then leave it in the car!

So what are you waiting for? Enter the competition now and grab the chance to be part of this fantastic event. We can’t wait to see you there!

Terms and conditions apply.

A stunning circular walk from Wardour Castle | 8.3miles

0

This lovely circular route starts and ends from the beautiful Wardour Castle. It takes interesting and varied paths across farmland, with a couple of spectacular ancient holloways and a beautiful cathedral-like forest too.

The castle itself is owned by English Heritage, but the car park is free and open all year round. It can be busy in summer, but we’ve never seen it full and if you time it right the castle will still be open and you can pop in for an ice cream from the shop when you finish!

dog walking route from Wardour Castle

Much of the route is across the folded countryside typical of the Dorset/Wiltshire border, with steep wooded valleys and surprise wide views.

Not much beats a cathedral of a pine forest on a hot sumemr’s day

The castle itself is open 10am til 5pm in the summer months (closed in winter), and if you want to explore, entry is £7.50 per adult (free for EH members). It’s a lovely place to visit – we’ve been taking our children since they were babies: english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/old-wardour-castle/

The route travels down three different ancient holloways

wiltshire holloways

Though there are some steep ups and downs, none are very long and the walk isn’t too strenuous. It is well signed – though a few paths suffered from waist-high nettles when we walked it in June. A decent stick may be required! – and it’s lovely to come out of the fields into the quiet lanes of Ansty and Swallowcliffe (the ancient Swallowcliffe yew shouldn’t be missed).

swallowcliffe ancient yew tree
The Swallowcliffe yew tree

(You may potentially be interested to note that about three-quarters of the way round, a very short detour will take you via the Compasses at Ansty for a cheeky pint!)

The final stretch back to the castle is a grand and dramatic close to the walk, with astonishing views across the valley to the castle itself.

walk from Wardour Castle

All the Dorset Walks we feature have been created and walked recently by ourselves, so you know you can trust them – we aim for unpopulated routes with as little road and as many views as possible! You can always see the route and follow it yourself via the free Outdoor Active app – see all our routes here.

JUNIOR CONTRACTS MANAGER | Rose Engineering

0

This is a progressive role in a growing family business based in the beautiful Dorset countryside. Assisting the current Contracts Manager in the daily management of all our projects, liaising with clients, suppliers and site workers. Working on projects from small repairs works to large scale new builds in the industrial and agricultural sectors.

This is an amazing opportunity for someone who thrives on working in a fast-paced and varied working environment.

Please apply in writing with CV and covering letter to [email protected]

Area Coordinator (Dorchester/Bridport) | NMR

0

If you enjoy the outdoor life, NMR have a great opportunity to work within a Farming environment

Salary: £22,560.23

Holidays: 33 days holiday including bank holidays

Excellent Benefits

The Area Coordinator will be responsible for delivery of a full milk recording service to approximately 40 farms within the Dorchester/Bridport area. You will need to live within close proximity to the areas mentioned, as this role involves visiting the farms and collecting event data about individual cows and sometimes taking milk samples.

Full time hours averaging a 37 hour week Monday-Friday, the daily and weekly hours will have some flexibility to suit the business needs, daytime farm visits and working from home, with early mornings and late evenings. You will be provided with the relevant equipment to undertake the role, including a company van.

For more details & how to apply, please visit our careers page: www.nmr.co.uk

Closing date: 17/07/2023