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Qualified Electrician Required | Tom Christopher Electrical Ltd

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Full time fully qualified electrican required to work in and around Dorset.

Company van provided.
Uniform
Mobile Phone and Ipad for business use
Company Pension
30 days holiday

Salary (hourly rate) dependent on experience and qualifications.

Please contact Tom:

[email protected] or call 07715 669 680

A Gillingham family has lit up their house for charity again this year!

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A Gillingham family has lit up their house for charity again this year – and they would love you to come and see it and help support a worthy charity at the same time.

The lights are all timed with music (lots of songs!), with singing props, a Christmas tree and there are some new additions this year too. Plus extra attention has been taken to improve energy efficiency to keep it as green as possible.

Last year they managed to raise £150 which went directly to ‘Help for Heroes’ for which they are really grateful. Hopefully this year they can raise even more!

The show is on daily (NOW) from 5.00pm and will run right up until the New Year.

Raising money for Help for Heroes (all money rasied will go to the charity), the family hope all visitors will donate to the charity fundraiser – anyone wishing to give can do so via online at www.helpforheros.org.uk quoting chairty reference number: GEN22-1484485-01 – They also also accept donations directly through their letterbox.

Plus! They even have some fab official merchandise for sale all details of which are located on the noticed signs outside their house.

You can find them on Marlot Road in Gillingham, SP8 4FA.

Please visit and give as much as you can.

Barbara Griffin | Message of Thanks

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The Family would like to say ‘Thank you’ to all friends and family for cards and messages of sympathy, and for donations to the British Heart Foundation of £180.

Please take this as our personal message of thanks.

Love through football

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It won’t have escaped anyone’s attention that there’s a World Cup going on in Qatar right now.
The first World Cup I remember was Mexico ‘86 when Maradona’s ‘hand of God’ was etched into my memory forever. But, as a trade unionist and LGBTQ+ and feminist ally, this is the first World Cup since then that I actually considered not watching.


Ever since I was a kid, football has formed an important part of my weekly ritual.
When the old man was still alive, he would call every Sunday evening to talk about the football results. It’s often said that men – particularly those over a certain age – aren’t good at expressing their feelings. But through those exchanges, Dad and I would get a pretty good understanding if there was something bothering one of us, and I like to think that we always found a way to give one another the support we needed. Sometimes we find a different way to communicate:
ours was football.
For me and many other football fans, the beautiful game creates a prism through which we can project our own beliefs and values and put them to the test in a uniquely safe and public space. Perhaps that’s why some have condemned the actions of sportsmen wishing to express their own beliefs and values by shining a light on injustice. Perhaps they realise their own values are destined to fail the test when the lads on the pitch that carry the weight of their hopes on their shoulders make it abundantly clear that they stand against their bigotry and hatred and division.
In the end, I decided to watch.
I decided to support my country and the English values of solidarity and inclusion that our national team represents.
I am proud that they continue to take the knee.
I am proud of them for using their platform to shine a light on racism, sexism and homophobia and the rights of workers building stadiums.
I am proud to be English.
COME ON ENGLAND!
Pat Osborne,
for North Dorset Labour

Does the UK need to be worrying about food production?

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With Putin’s warmongering having further exposed the fragility of our food supply, it is worth reflecting on another Vladimir, Lenin, who wrote over a hundred years ago that ‘Every society is three meals away from chaos’. During the COVID pandemic people fought in shops over loo rolls – imagine the reaction if we were to run short of food.


Some Tory politicians think the UK doesn’t need to worry about growing its own food, because we’re relatively wealthy and can buy what we need from other countries. North Dorset’s MP Simon Hoare recently wrote about the need to sustainably increase UK food production, but he focussed entirely on livestock farming and claimed there is no ‘argument to sustain’ a decline in the livestock sector. West Dorset MP Chris Loder has similarly written about how effective pastureland is as a carbon sink, and said that science does not support a plant-based diet. I respectfully suggest they both need to look more closely at the evidence, perhaps starting with DEFRA’s reports.
Livestock is presently the major part of Dorset’s farming industry, but we can and must change that. At present we have to import so much else of what we eat. Animal farming is a hugely inefficient way of producing food, using large areas of land to produce relatively little food. Around 71 per cent of UK land is used for agriculture, and 72 per cent of that is grassland for grazing. Most of UK-grown wheat, barley and oats is used for animal feed, while we import almost half our fresh vegetables and 84 per cent of our fruit. That cannot continue.
With the changing climate we cannot rely on other countries to be able to grow what we need.
We have to recognise that farming is the most important occupation, bar none. Farmers must be properly rewarded for their efforts, and we need to encourage younger people into the profession. We must incentivise farming that produces more of the food varieties we need, and in organic ways that regenerate the health of our depleted soils, make our waterways clean again, increase biodiversity and capture carbon. It can be done, and our healthy future depends on it.
Ken Huggins,
North Dorset Green Party

Get me out of here!

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Well, this 12 year bush tucker trial is beginning to come to a head. I am no celebrity but what with Royal Mail, nurses, ambulance and rail strikes, the cost of food, energy, services (you name it and it is up), the immigration mess, the ineptitude of Brexit implementation, water quality, social care misery… I am minded to get out of here!
We won’t go, though.
We will persist and adapt. We will listen and work with people with shared values to define a much better future.
The thought leadership of the nation does not reside with the Conservative party. Time and again their focus, their whole strategy, is to cling on to the people who voted for them, a minority of the population.
There are two hard years ahead, though. Despite having less than any mandate at all, this government will cling on until the last possible moment. It will continue to use the tactics we have already seen in the autumn statement of postponing the more acute funding pain until after the next election. Remember that note left by Labour in 2010, “There is no money”?
We will continue to see swathes of Tory MPs, including the new crop, declining to fight again. In sum, they know they are losing so they are setting up the next government to fail and meanwhile they are looking after their own. They are frail, fraught and full of fractious factions. Vote them off the show now, I say!

Mike Chapman Lib Dems
Mike Chapman Lib Dems

Doughnut economy
So, to the positives: at our Annual General Meeting we were delighted to welcome Sarah Dyke, Somerset Councillor and prospective parliamentary candidate for Somerton and Frome. It was inspiring to hear how our neighbours are bringing new, radical ideas to bear, including, for example, the principles of Doughnut Economics. We are familiar with economic models based on the flow of work and money between employers and employees which results in the supply of – and demand for – goods and services. Simple enough. The problem is that we are trashing our environment as we go and leaving a trail of inequality and want in our wake.
Doughnut economics seeks a fair social foundation for the economy whilst not breaking our planet’s ecological constraints. We need to maximise the re-use of goods and services and properly harness and recognise the value of the unpaid inputs we make as parents, in running our households, in helping others in our communities and at work. This isn’t the wokerati at work. This is the sustainable future of the human race at stake. Without thinking like this, the nationalists, the plutocrats, the factionalists get to win. They do not create, they destroy. Witness poor Ukraine.
Mike Chapman
Liberal Democrats Blackmore Vale

Levelling Up in the south

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Westminster policy has a habit of ignoring the less populated rural areas of the country, says MP Simon Hoare

Simon Hoare MP
Simon Hoare MP

For a little too long for comfort, the important policy initiative of Levelling Up has been translated in the media, by commentators and by much of the voting public as being solely reserved for towns and cities north of Birmingham.
No one will doubt the desirability of making our former industrial towns attractive places to live, work and socialise; in so doing we better balance the national economy but also relieve pressures for house building and economic development south of Birmingham.
However, to see it as Northern-facing only is a mistake and it is one where the Government needs to be doing more to demonstrate that there is something in Levelling Up for everyone, irrespective of where they live in the country.

Dorset musketeers
If buses come along in threes, then so do Dorset Tory MPs seeking to catch the eye of Mr Speaker in an important recent Commons debate on Levelling Up our rural areas.
Messrs Drax, Hoare and Loder – the political equivalent of the Three Musketeers – spoke up for our county. I spent most of my time talking about the need to ruralise the rubric. This is not the sexiest of topics but it is vital.
One could be forgiven for thinking that too many central government funding equations are still rooted in calculation methodology which specifically ignores the pressures of delivering public and other services in rural areas.
Steps have been taken recently to recognise this in terms of school funding; I spoke up for such changes in Parliament on many occasions and we are now seeing the benefit of the rural location of schools being taken into account.

A Rural Tzar
Too many of our funding rules have been written in Whitehall for Whitehall by people who think that a country walk is a saunter round Hampstead Heath. In my speech I called for Government to appoint a Rural Tzar (or Rural Squire?) who would have a cross-departmental brief to ensure that policies had been ‘rural proofed’.
What do I mean by that?
Well, that it has taken into account a sparser population, the fact that the age profile is older and that delivery of, for example, in-home adult social care is more difficult given that customers may live many miles apart.
That our village school buildings are older and therefore more expensive to heat and maintain.
That housing is less plentiful and therefore more costly, making it more expensive for youngsters starting out on their careers to get on the local housing ladder.
That our police and ambulance services face geographic challenges – four policemen in central Manchester, for example, cover far more people per square mile than the same in rural Dorset.
When it comes to flood prevention works carried out by the Environment Agency, they need to assess the bang they get for each buck per head of the population.
£500k spent on a scheme that benefits 200k people meets the funding test but a (just as much needed) £500k scheme that benefits 1,000 people does not, simply because rural populations are smaller.
If everyone is paying their taxes, there is clear merit in ensuring that there are urban hurdles for proposals to overcome and there are rural hurdles to overcome: they just cannot be the same hurdles.
The Minister replying to the debate told us all that he understood the message.
It wasn’t just the Three Dorset Musketeers making the case but every rural MP who spoke. . There was no doubting the passion and commitment we all felt on these important issues. The Prime Minister, representing a rural seat in North Yorkshire, gets it too.
The message has been delivered.
Pressure will be maintained. Watch this space.

A happy browse around Nutty Parrott’s Christmas Cracker

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Edwina Baines has been browsing the products gathered from 24 makers by Caroline Parrott and Wendy Nutt for their Christmas event in Wimborne

Caroline Parrott in the Nutty Parrott Christmas Cracker exhibition

As a mature student, Caroline Parrott secured a place for her Applied Arts degree by telling her interviewer that she ‘wanted to make people happy’ with her designs – and she’s still working to that plan today.
Caroline’s chosen metal is aluminium, working around its limitations by hand printing, dyeing the surface, experimenting with designs, colour and recycling. She also teaches how to colour aluminium to create jewellery and other items, including sculptural forms and swarms of butterflies. Caroline shares the little studio, wittily entitled ‘Nutty Parrott Studios’ with long-time friend and silversmith Wendy Nutt, whose style shows in her simple elegant patterns. She uses various techniques such as piercing, photo etching and enamelling to create her timeless pieces of silver jewellery.

Some of the exhibits in the Nutty Parrott Christmas Cracker event at Walford Mill in Wimborne. All images: Edwina Baines

A chequered history
Their studio-shop is just inside Walford Mill, the beautiful listed building on the outskirts of Wimborne.
When commercial milling stopped in 1966, the premises became successively a coal yard, builders’ yard and furniture showroom. After the death of Henry Bankes in 1982, the mill was included in the Bankes Estate bequest to the National Trust, along with Kingston Lacy House, Badbury Rings and Corfe Castle. In 1983, the old East Dorset District Council bought the mill along with 13 acres of land designated for development.
In 1995, the Walford Mill Education Trust took over the centre which it continues to oversee. Artists now hire their own studios.
Alongside the workshops, pop-up exhibitions and special projects with schools, there is an exhibition area where, until Christmas Eve, visitors can enjoy the “buying feast” that is Nutty Parrott’s Christmas Cracker.
Caroline and Wendy have gathered together more than 20 artists and makers, offering a diverse range including ceramics, jewellery, textiles, glass and handmade decorations. Various artists will also be demonstrating and selling their work in pop-up spaces. True to Caroline’s ambitions, browsing the gift suggestions is bound to create a happy and festive frame of mind!

Meet the makers
Nicole Purdie is a printmaker and illustrator who owns and runs Prints By The Bay from Bridport. She says ‘Linocut is a handmade and traditional method. Unlike modern digital illustration styles, one can really feel the connection between artist and image by seeing and responding to the mark making and imagery. As an illustrative medium, it perfectly suits strong visual narratives and storytelling, which are key to driving my work in print.’

Much of her work addresses ideas of nature, climate and our environmental connection.
Linda Rowe is a distinctive glass artist based near Cranborne. She creates a range of vibrant, contemporary designs whose inspiration comes from natural forms and colours. These include framed “Tiffany” pictures and sun-catchers, vibrant fused glass jewellery, glass hangings, coasters and bowls. She is captivated by the glass’s light, texture and colour combinations and explores the traditional techniques of stained glass, copper foil Tiffany, mosaics and glass fusing.

No visitor can resist a surge of happiness in the wonderfully eccentric world of Bournemouth-based potter Emily Stracey, who specialises in humorous animal ceramics, textiles and illustration.
Her ceramic cats are great fun and are bound to bring a smile to any cat-lovers face.
Caroline Buckman is a Dorset printmaker who lives ‘between the sea and the countryside,’ inspired by the surrounding nature. Her bold, stylised prints simplify the intricate shapes of flowers and foliage that she finds on her walks. She says she is ‘firmly rooted in my happy place. My designs are purposefully pared down to evoke a feeling of simplicity and calm … I hope they bring that same sense of joy and tranquillity wherever they find their home.’

The talented Jo Burnell creates individual hand-thrown earthenware pottery, beautifully decorated with lively colourful designs, featuring cheerful spotted birds and hares – all inspired by nature and the Dorset countryside.
A visit to Walford Mill’s Nutty Parrott’s Christmas Cracker will be a key stop on the festive shopping itinerary for many who are looking for a unique present. There is always something going on, a great sense of community and the makers are happy to talk about their work.
Caroline and Wendy hope you will feel happier when you leave!

Nutty Parrott’s Christmas Cracker is open until
Christmas Eve:
Wednesday to Saturday, 10am to 5pm; Sunday 10am to 4pm. www.walfordmillcrafts.co.uk

Eat, drink & be merry with Dorset Food and Drink

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Dorset is known as a natural larder, from meat to dairy and veg to cakes. Caz Richards of Dorset Food & Drink suggests some seasonal favourites

The Wasabi Company’s take on the classic Limoncello

Unless you’re the most organised person on the planet and have done your Christmas shopping by Hallowe’en – the sudden realisation that we are only a few weeks from Christmas Day can send us into a spin.
It’s OK. Relax.
We’ve got a holly jolly basket full of local Dorset loveliness that won’t break the bank and if we choose to buy Christmas gifts and groceries from local makers, producers and retailers, we can all make a genuinely big difference to our small businesses and independents.
Whether it’s local cheese, funky craft ales, free-from sweet treats, chocolate, wine or something made by talented artisans – there’s plenty to choose from in Dorset, and you can shop small or large depending on your budget. It’s a great way to support your local producers, many of whom have won multiple national awards for their products! Keep it local, and get to know the people who make, bake, brew, cook, sew, grow, craft and create beautiful things.

Don’t forget the extras
Our top pick for Christmas condiments takes us to the far east via Dorset! Spice up your festive faves with a contemporary twist from The Wasabi Company – the only grower of fresh wasabi in the UK, with farms in Hampshire and Dorset. Try the Yuzu mustard – delicious with mini roast beef yorkie canapes. For a festive tipple, try the amazing Yuzucello; whole yuzu fruits from Kōchi distilled into The Wasabi Company’s take on the classic Limoncello.
Cheers!
Warm winter wishes from everyone at Dorset Food & Drink. x

P.S. Don’t forget to use up all your festive leftovers. There are lots of ideas at Love Food Hate Waste!