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From the first homebred winner to the yard’s Cheltenham contenders

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Youth and experience both won this week, sharpening expectations ahead of a Festival packed with opportunity, says Chris Wald

Tythingman won the Hereford Bumper, his racecourse debut

It was a week of extremes at Tizzard’s Yard. At one end of the spectrum, a four-year-old homebred making his racecourse debut. At the other, a 12-year-old veteran who has already earned over £200,000 in prize money.
Both won.
For Colin Tizzard, the Hereford Bumper victory of his first homebred runner felt particularly significant. The gelding – Tythingman – is part of the first crop bred by Colin and raised entirely at the yard. Colin had trained the dam, Queen of the Wind, before breeding the foal, sired by Pether’s Moon. ‘He’s been here his whole life,’ says assistant trainer Chris Wald. ‘His whole education has been here, so it was really rewarding for everyone that the first homebred runner was a winner.’
At the other end of the scale, Copperhead rolled back the years at Newbury, landing a veterans’ race on Saturday.
‘He’s 12 now,’ Chris says. ‘That was his 10th win, and he’s put more than £200,000 in prize money on the board.’
But the victory meant more than statistics. Last summer, Copperhead suffered a serious bout of colic and required surgery. For a time, his racing future – and more – was in doubt.
‘It was touch and go whether he was going to make it,’ Chris says. ‘It’s an achievement just to come back and race. The fact he’s come back and won a big race on a Saturday like that – he’s just a brilliant, brilliant horse.
‘If they don’t want to do it, they don’t tend to have long careers. He’s come through something like that and still has the enthusiasm to race at a good level. That says a lot.’
Now, though, all eyes turn to Cheltenham. Tizzard’s Yard expects to send eight or nine runners to next week’s Festival – a strong team combining established performers and progressive types stepping into the biggest week of the season…


Cheltenham Runners

Rock My Way
Tuesday – Ultima Handicap Chase (3m1f)
Second in last year’s National Hunt Chase at the Festival, Rock My Way returns to a track where he has already proved he belongs.
‘He’s got Festival form, which always helps,’ Chris says. ‘He won the Berkshire National at Ascot earlier in the season.’
He is now higher in the handicap and will carry more weight than for those victories.
‘He’s on his best form, he’s got a good each-way chance. If he can hold a position early and not get too far back, he’ll keep galloping. They’ll go a good gallop and he’ll be staying on at the end.’

Alexei
Image: Courtenay Hitchcock

Alexei
Tuesday – Unibet Champion Hurdle (2m½f )
The yard’s headline act of the week: Alexei lines up in one of the Festival’s championship races after a breakthrough season.
‘It’s really exciting just to have a runner in the Champion Hurdle,’ Chris says. ‘I’m pretty sure Colin never had one, and it’s definitely Joe’s first.’
He arrives in form, having won the Greatwood Hurdle at Cheltenham in November and followed up in the Kingwell Hurdle at Wincanton.
‘He’s coming into it in great form. It’s a tough race – there are some proper horses in it – but we think he’ll run a big race and hopefully give us something to shout about.’

First Confession
Tuesday – National Hunt Chase (3m6f)
A stamina test over nearly four miles for novice chasers. ‘He’s never run over three miles for us, so the trip is a question mark,’ Chris admits. ‘But we’ve always thought he’s a horse with loads of stamina.’
He heads to Cheltenham off the back of an impressive novice chase win at Carlisle.
‘A lot of these horses won’t have run over this distance either. If he gets into a good rhythm with his jumping, he’ll run a big race.’

First Confession

Tythingman
Wednesday – Champion Bumper (2m½f)
The Hereford winner could take his chance in the Festival bumper.
‘It might be a bit ambitious,’ Chris says. ‘But you only get one go at these things … I guess we’ll find out how good he is.’
It’s a huge step up from Hereford – but experience alone could prove invaluable for the yard’s first homebred.

Western Knight
Thursday – Jack Richards Novices’ Chase (2m4f)
A progressive novice who has won at Haydock and Doncaster and finished second in a Grade Two at Ascot: ‘He travels and jumps really well,’ Chris says. ‘This is a step up again, but he’s got a solid chance.’

Chris Wald with Rock My Way
Image: Courtenay Hitchcock

Sunset Marquesa
Thursday – Mares’ Hurdle (2m4½f)
A consistent mare stepping into Grade One company: ‘She’s had a good season and won nicely at Sandown,’ Chris says. ‘This is her first time in a Grade One against the best mares in Britain and Ireland. It’s a big ask, but we really like her and hopefully she can be competitive.’

JPR One
Thursday – Ryanair Chase (2m4½f)
A high-class performer who showed improved form when he stepped up at Musselburgh to win the Scottish Champion Chase.
‘We think he’s better suited by two and a half miles now,’ Chris says. ‘If we get a bit of a dry week and the ground dries out, that will help him. If everything falls right, he can run very well.’

Western Knight winning at Haydock

Ambion View
Thursday – Pertemps Handicap Hurdle (3m)
A lightweight outsider – if he makes the cut.
‘He’s towards the bottom of the handicap and it depends how many get in,’ Chris says. ‘If he gets in, he’ll have a very light weight and could run well. But he might just miss out.’

JPR One on the gallops
Image: Courtenay Hitchcock

Kripticjim
Friday – Albert Bartlett Novices’ Hurdle (3m)
Perhaps the yard’s strongest novice hope. Winner of his last three races, including a Grade Two at Cheltenham in January, he steps up in trip.
‘He’s a big chasing type who should be suited by three miles,’ Chris says. ‘If the ground dries out a bit, he’d have a really solid each-way chance. He’s been great for us all season. He also holds an entry in the shorter Turners Novices’ Hurdle, and the ground will likely dictate the decision.’

The yard heads to Cheltenham with depth, realism and quiet confidence: ‘It’s exciting just to be going there with this many runners,’ Chris says.
In a week where fine margins decide everything, that measured confidence may count for plenty.

Appeal launched to unlock Sylvia Townsend Warner archive

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A new fundraising appeal has been launched to catalogue the archive of Dorset writer and LGBTQ+ pioneer Sylvia Townsend Warner (1893–1978), opening the collection to researchers and the public for the first time.
The project, led by Dorset Archives Trust (DAT), aims to raise £48,000 to create a full online catalogue of Warner’s archive, held at Dorset History Centre in Dorchester. Once catalogued, the material will be searchable online, allowing readers and historians to explore the life and work of one of Dorset’s most distinctive literary figures.

Sylvia Townsend Warner with one of her many cats 1970s


Warner wrote seven novels, as well as poetry and short stories, including 154 pieces published in The New Yorker. Much of her life was spent in Dorset, where she lived with her partner Valentine Ackland.
The archive itself is substantial, containing 85 boxes of material, including diaries, letters, photographs, drawings and printed works that chart Warner’s creative life and relationships.
Chris Fowler, chair of Dorset Archives Trust, said the project would bring a major Dorset literary archive into clearer public view.
‘This significant writers’ archive deserves to be fully in the limelight,’ he said. ‘Sylvia Townsend Warner was a great observer of Dorset life during the war years and beyond. DAT is delighted to spearhead this fundraising effort.’
Interest in Warner’s work has grown in recent years. A statue of the author in Dorchester, depicting her with her cat and manuscripts, was unveiled following a campaign by the charity Visible Women. Author Tracy Chevalier, patron of Dorset Archives Trust, said making the archive accessible would help readers connect more deeply with Warner’s life: ‘This is an extensive archive of one of the county’s most interesting writers,’ she said. ‘Documents like this open up the past to us, and really bring a person to life.’
Donations can be made through the Dorset Archives Trust website.

The BV community news section is sponsored by Wessex Internet

The BV is shortlisted for Regional Publication of the Year 2026

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We’re very pleased to share that The BV has once again been shortlisted for Regional Publication of the Year at the 2026 Newspaper & Magazine Awards.

This marks our fourth time on this national shortlist, and follows our previous win in 2024.

The category includes The Chronicle, Manchester Evening News, The Irish News and The West Dorset Magazine.

Independent and digital from inception, The BV is rooted in rural Dorset, with magazine-led journalism and sustained public-interest reporting. We are grateful to our readers and partners whose support makes recognition like this possible.

Winners are announced in London in April.

Letters to the Editor March 2026

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Laura
Laura Editor of the BV

This month’s cover photo wasn’t meant to be symbolic. After our usual heated tussle and group vote, we finally plumped for the bright, buttery yellow flowers with a rain-soaked ladybird perched on top, both of them looking slightly surprised by the amount of water involved.
Only afterwards did I realise we had rather serendipitously chosen daffodils for the cover of the fourth anniversary of the war in Ukraine. They’ve become one of the symbols of the conflict – their bright, sturdy yellowness standing for hope and resilience. Quite unintentionally, our cover now carries a small reminder of a war that still hasn’t gone away, even as the world keeps finding new ones to worry about.
It’s all a bit much, isn’t it?
Ukraine is still at war, but the news is suddenly full of Iran. The cost of… everything… continues its determined climb upwards. And every economist on the radio sounds like someone who has just opened a very alarming electricity bill.
So this week I did what any sensible person does in publication week: I scrolled TikTok every time the kettle boiled. Which, to be honest, is quite often.
I have learned several important things.
Firstly, pandas are absolute chaos merchants. There is a whole genre of videos devoted to pandas being jump-scared, falling out of trees or simply rolling downhill for reasons known only to themselves. Secondly, Ring doorbells have created an entirely new category of comedy in which unsuspecting humans step confidently out of their front doors and immediately vanish sideways down the steps.
And thirdly, there are endless videos of people being surprised by a much-missed daughter, son, cousin, friend or parent appearing unexpectedly through an airport gate or front door. I am apparently powerless against these. Within seconds I’m sniffling over strangers hugging each other in a departures lounge somewhere in Ohio.
TikTok also assures me, several times a day, that growing up in the 1980s was the greatest moment in human history, that owning a cat will improve – or ruin – your life by 300 per cent, and that a mid-life crisis is really just a perfectly sensible decision to stop wearing uncomfortable shoes. I find all of this oddly cheering.
And sometimes a rain-drenched ladybird lands on a daffodil and reminds you that even in very soggy weather, life keeps going.

Laura x


On When Water Rises
Your excellent article on groundwater flooding highlights something that many residents have been saying for years: the figures used to assess flood risk are hopelessly out of date.
Planning decisions are still being made using models and assumptions that simply no longer reflect the reality we’re living in. Rainfall patterns have changed, winters are wetter and extreme events are more frequent. Yet developments continue to be approved based on calculations that appear to belong to another climate entirely.
Until planners begin using realistic projections that properly account for current conditions – not historic averages – we will keep repeating the same mistake: building homes in places that are increasingly vulnerable to flooding.
Communities then end up paying the price when those models inevitably prove wrong.
If climate change is already altering how and where water moves through the landscape, surely our planning system needs to catch up with that fact as a matter of urgency.
Catherine Small
Gillingham


Your recent article on flooding was fascinating, but I suspect many of us living in rural Dorset are drawing a simpler conclusion. Over the years it feels as though a lot of the routine maintenance that once kept water moving has disappeared. Ditches, gullies and culverts that used to be cleared regularly are now often choked with leaves and debris. When heavy rain comes, the water has nowhere to go. The same with rivers and streams – they used to be cleared of debris and fallen trees far more frequently than they are today, and were dredged. It’s hard not to feel that the basic housekeeping that once helped manage water has been neglected.
Flooding is a complex issue and climate change is real. But before we leap to complicated solutions, perhaps we should start by making sure the drains, ditches and waterways we already have are actually able to do the job they were designed for?
Name and address supplied

I’ve noticed numerous comments on your Facebook page suggesting that dredging our rivers would solve Dorset’s flooding problems. It’s an understandable reaction – many of us remember a time when rivers and ditches seemed to be cleared more regularly.
However, dredging is rarely the solution people imagine it to be.
In most cases it simply moves the problem further downstream. By deepening and straightening channels, water flows faster and arrives in larger volumes elsewhere, increasing flood risk for those further along the river.
Modern flood management tends to focus on slowing water down rather than speeding it up – allowing floodplains to hold water, restoring natural river meanders and managing land higher up the catchment so rainfall is absorbed rather than rushing straight into rivers.
Dredging has a place in very specific situations, but it is not the simple fix many people believe it to be.
Flooding is becoming more complex as rainfall patterns change, and unfortunately there are no easy answers.
Harry P, Shaftesbury


THANK YOU!
To the two kindest gentlemen who rescued my daughter when she hit a pothole near Three Legged Cross two weeks ago. The first stopped and changed her tyre for her, and when she discovered her spare was flat after he left, a second gentleman not only pumped it up, but gave her the pump to ensure she got home safely.
Fay-in-the-Micra’s mum, Bournemouth


On the sheep cruelty conviction
Your report on the North Dorset farmer banned from keeping sheep was deeply upsetting to read, and rightly so. No animal should suffer neglect, and the court’s decision makes clear how serious the situation was.
However, people do not often set out deliberately to mistreat their animals. Farming is not just an occupation but a way of life, and when things go badly wrong there can sometimes be underlying problems that the wider public never sees.
Farming charities have repeatedly highlighted the mental health struggles within the industry. RABI’s 2021 Big Farming Survey found that 36% of farmers are probably or possibly depressed, many reporting isolation, financial pressure and an inability to ask for help.
None of that excuses cruelty, of course. But it does suggest that when animal welfare collapses on a farm, it may sometimes reflect a farmer who has also reached a point of collapse.
If that is the case, the question becomes not only how we enforce welfare standards – which must be done – but also whether the right support systems are in place before situations reach this stage.
Compassion for animals and compassion for people are not mutually exclusive.
Hannah G, Sherborne


As a farmer, the cruelty case you reported was sickening. Anyone who keeps livestock knows that their welfare is the first responsibility of the job. Most farmers care deeply about their animals and are rightly horrified by this case.
At the same time, I think it’s important the public understands that this is not normal farming. Cases like this are rare and the vast majority of us livestock keepers work long hours, in all weathers, to ensure our animals are well cared for.
When something does go this badly wrong there is usually more going on behind the scenes. That doesn’t excuse the suffering of animals, but it may explain how standards can collapse. Animal welfare comes first. But supporting struggling farmers before things reach this point is just as important.
Name and address supplied


On the Blacksmith’s wife who died in her chair
My husband is William James Hunt’s great grandson. We still own The Old Forge where his grandfather Charles and Great Grandfather William had a wheelwright and blacksmiths. The carving of the screen in the back of Piddletrenthide Church was done by William James Hunt, and we have the diagrammes he used to carve it.
Hils Hunt, via Facebook

This lady was my husband’s great great aunt – I believe her name was Emily.
Lyn Hunt, via Facebook


On a 1938 postcard from Cerne Abbas
Dick [the sender of the card] is Richard W Larkman (b. 1917), writing to his mother Mabel E Larkman, who of course would be addressed as ‘Mrs W Larkman’ since her husband’s name was William. It was easy to find the household in the 1939 register online. From press announcements, Dick (Richard W. Larkman) was a Captain in the Royal Army Ordnance Corps – he married in Kings Lynn in 1945. Quite a relief, since the RAOC would’ve been part of the British Expeditionary Force in France and Belgium in May 1940, and their retreat to Dunkirk. Well done Dick.
Pam Booth, via Facebook


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.

Read March’s BV here

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Welcome to March’s The BV – we’ve got potholes and developers (though it’s moderately tricky to create an issue without them, if I’m honest), Dorset’s most expensive council tax, beautiful skylarks, a frozen Cold War beret, two hangings, potholes again (100-year-old ones this time: look out for that one, it’s such a good read), some great letters, some even greater muffins, George Hosford telling us We Need To Talk About about Roundup, pages of stunning readers’ photography, books, puzzles… oh, and some insider tips for Cheltenham.
Seriously. All that for the low-low price of … *checks* absolutely free.
Read it. You’ll like it. Or your money back.

North Chideock to Golden Cap and Seatown | 6.8miles

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There’s no denying that in parts this is a moderately hard walk: the South West Coastal Path on this part of the Jurassic Coast is a continuous roll of steep ascents and descents. But each is duly rewarded by spectacular coastal views.
(For a shorter 4-mile version, simply start in Seatown and use the coastal circular section only)

The pictures are a couple of years old, but we last walked this route last autumn (in the rain, hence no pictures!). The first pull is across farmland – it’s pretty flat for this section, and you’re mostly following the ancient tracks that criss-cross the area, but if the weather’s not been perfect, it’s likely to be muddy. 

Take time to stop and explore Stanton St Gabriel on the west side of Golden Cap. It’s a derelict settlement and ruined chapel owned by the National Trust. Then it’s time to gird your loins and make for the headland … The slog up Golden Cap is worth every lung busting step – the views are GLORIOUS from the top and once you’ve made it and sat aroudn for a whiel drinking in the SPECTACULAR views, it’s plain sailing down the other side, straight to the door of the beautiful Anchor at Seatown for a well-deserved pint. 

Each month in The BV Magazine, we share a new Dorset walk through the beautiful countryside, under our ‘Take a Hike’ series. We walk and create every route ourselves — you can explore all our previously published Dorset Walks here, plus many more personal routes with downloadable GPX files on our OutdoorActive profile here.
We’d love to hear your feedback if you try one — and don’t forget to send us your photos!
All images © Laura Hitchcock.

The BV puzzles – March 2026

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Welcome to March’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 puddle. But it’s a pretty one, right? And hopefully it’s the last bare-branch picture for a while. The leaves are finally starting to show!

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.


Constructed by The BV using PuzzleMe’s free crossword puzzle maker

Play Sudoku online!

2026 season announced for Music at St Greg’s

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Music at St Greg’s has unveiled its 2026 concert programme, promising a varied series of performances ranging from organ recitals and chamber music to the spectacle of silent film accompanied by live improvisation.


The opening event will see David Bednall, Organist and Choral Director at Clifton Cathedral, provide a live organ score to the classic silent film The Phantom of the Opera. The screening takes place at 7pm on Saturday 7th March, with audiences invited – if they wish – to arrive in suitably dramatic costume.
Bednall is widely recognised as one of the leading choral composers of his generation and has held posts at Wells Cathedral, Bristol Cathedral and Gloucester Cathedral, as well as directing several leading choirs. Alongside his work as a composer and conductor, he is also a noted improviser and recitalist who has performed across the UK and Europe, including at Notre-Dame in Paris.
The Phantom of the Opera screening marks the start of a season that organisers say aims to showcase the versatility of the church’s organ while also exploring a broader range of musical styles. Later events will include a harp guitar concert, a flute and piano recital, and the return of the popular Last Night of the Organ Proms to close the programme.
Tickets for the opening event cost £12 and can be booked by calling 07817 379006 or online at
wegottickets.com/event/689597.
Further details about the full programme are available via the Music at St Greg’s Facebook page.

The BV community news section is sponsored by Wessex Internet

Project Manager | Future Roots

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Rural Remedies: Nurture Through Nature (4-year fixed term contact, Lottery Funded)

Salary Range: £35,000 – £40, 000.

37 Hours per week for 52 weeks of the year, with need for flexibility.

We are looking for an experienced manager to run our lottery funded programme, our aim is to help children aged between 8 – 13 through outdoor learning and animal assisted therapy mostly on our 30-acre care farm near Sherborne Dorset, we are looking for an experienced person who can guide our team to create meaningful change for vulnerable young people.

For further information and an application pack please contact Julie Plumley on 01963 210703 or email: [email protected].

The closing date for all applications is 9pm
Friday 13thMarch 2026