The Blackmore Vale logo
Home Blog Page 363

The Random 19 with renowned milliner Cozmo Jenks

1

When Cozmo was a little girl her dream was to have the largest hat collection in the world. Today, she is recognised as one of Europe’s leading milliners, famed for her quirky updates on classic British hats and having designed pieces for a host of high profile clients, countless celebrities and many members of the Royal Family.

Cozmo Jenks as Random 19 guest for BV magazine in the Blackmore Vale

1. What’s your relationship with the Blackmore Vale (the loose North Dorset area, not us!)? 

My dad moved down here because of the hunting 30 years ago – chasing hedges! I then attempted to join too. After lots of port, I did finally get over those hedges! 

I’ve been living on the edge of the Vale for the past 14 years and can’t imagine living anywhere else. 

2. What was the last song you sang out loud in your car? 

Elton John, Tiny Dancer! But I’ll also sing the entire album start to finish of the original Les Mis soundtrack. I know every single word!

3. What was the last movie you watched? Would you recommend it? 

Dune. Totally wasn’t expecting to enjoy it, but I absolutely loved it. Desperate for them to make another. I was really very surprised at how much I enjoyed it.
It was amazing. 

4. It’s Friday night – you have the house to yourself, and no work is allowed. What are you going to do? 

Honestly? Marijuana and a box set!! 

But if that’s not allowed, then feel free to say it’s a box of Bendicks Bittermints, good friends and a movie… (Ed whistles innocently)

5. Who’s your celebrity crush?

I fancy loads of people on the TV because that’s all I have to fancy (pause while the editor tunes her violin…) (I didn’t write that – Ed)
Henry Cavill (Superman), George Clooney, Jamie Dornan… 

Cozmo’s handsome trio of current celeb crushes: Henry Cavill, Ceorge Clooney & Jamie Dornan

6. What would you like to tell 15yr old you? 

Have fun. Be kind. Tell the truth. 

7. What’s your comfort meal?

Big chunky fish fingers and veg. Hellmann’s mayo (has to be Hellmann’s) and sriracha (hot sauce made from a paste of chili peppers, distilled vinegar, garlic, sugar, and salt) are essential additions. 

8. The best crisps flavour? 

Originally Walkers smoky bacon (Andy Palmer will no doubt be cheering the first ‘correct’ answer in two years – Ed) but nowadays I love salt and vinegar Squares and PomBears mixed up together in the bag!
(*makes note to try this at first available opportunity* – Ed)

9. And the best biscuit for dunking? 

I won’t dunk. Ever.
And if I found out Henry Cavill dunked, then he’d be straight off my crush list!

10. What book did you read last year that stayed with you? 

Worldbridger by Juliet Carter. Totally mind blowing and eye opening. A few weeks after finishing it, I wandered randomly into a shop with a friend and saw the book on display. I got chatting to the guy behind the desk and found out the shop was owned by the author!

I’m now completely obsessed with their shop Portal in Glastonbury and buy a lot of things from them. 

11. What’s your secret superpower? 

My psychic powers. Which I’m lucky enough to have harnessed, and now practice and teach energy work thanks to the amazing Louise Mita (www.taoenergy.com).

12. A penguin just walked in the door wearing a panama hat. Why is he here?

To get a new hat obviously. I AM a milliner!

13. Your favourite quote? Movie, book or inspirational – we won’t judge. 

‘Fit in or f**k off!’
Because it’s completely true – it’s how I run my house!

Cozmo and four of her six dogs: Two labradors, Hamish and Betty; two terriers, Cabbage and Maud; and two whippets, father and son George and Wilfred

14. Cats or Dogs?

Dogs, obviously. I’ve got six, about to be seven! Two labradors, Hamish and Betty; two terriers, Cabbage and Maud; two whippets, soon to be three, father and two sons, George, Wilfred and waiting for Frank to be old enough to come and live with me. 

15. Chip Shop Chips or Home Baked Cake? 

A home baked classic Victoria sponge with fresh cream and strawberry jam wins every time.

16. What shop can you not pass without going in? 

Harts of Stur. And I have to go and buy something from Alistair at Holebrooks butchers and deli in Sturminster Newton because he sells the best meat ever! Any time I celebrate anything I’ll get a big fillet from Al.

17. What’s your most annoying trait?

Wind!!!
(Burping and farting)
(sorry)

18. What in life is frankly a mystery to you? 

The desire for drama in people’s personal lives. Why people want to make drama and thrive off it is a complete mystery to me. 

19. You have the power to pass one law tomorrow, uncontested. What would you do? 

Legalise cannabis. It’s a total wonder plant.

Put your heart into endurance rides

0

How do you go about preparing for one of the equestrian world’s most fulfilling events? Local endurance rider Claire Fowler explains.

Endurance riding is a sport in which most horses and riders can take part. If you enjoy spending a few hours in the saddle and would take pleasure in riding over different terrain, then why not give endurance riding a try?

Endurance GB is the sport’s governing body in England and Wales – it runs classes from 16km (10 mile) pleasure rides to 160km (100 mile) competitive rides.
To get a taste for the sport, riders can enter the non-competitive Pleasure Rides or sign up for a ‘Try Before You Buy’ scheme, which permits entry in up to two Novice Graded (affiliated) classes of between 20km and 40km.


Claire Fowler riding her 11 year old pure Arabian ‘B Wing’ (William at home!), an ex-racing Arabian now turning his hoof to endurance.
Here they are midway on a 35k novice class, in which they gained a grade one with a final Heart Rate of 44 and an average speed of 11.3kph.

Can my horse participate?

While pure and part-bred Arabs dominate the longer distances of endurance, any fit healthy horse can compete easily up to 65km and beyond. There are many horse breeds and types currently competing in endurance very successfully.

Most horses in regular work will be fit enough to complete a 30km ride within the required speed and heartbeat parameters. Before moving up the levels, horses will require a variety of slow and fast work, schooling and rest periods to build the correct stamina and fitness.
Safety and comfort of both horse and rider is paramount. Correct saddle fit is essential, and balanced riding makes it much easier for the horse to carry a level load. Riders also need to consider their own fitness. Safety hats to current standards are required.

Fitness checks

Horse welfare is obviously key to endurance riding; at Graded (affiliated) rides pre- and post- ride vet inspections are administered to ensure that all horses competing are fit and sound to do so. At pre-ride, the horse will be briefly examined, have its heart rate noted (must be 64bpm or less) and trotted up to assess soundness. The post-ride check follows the same pattern.
There is also a farrier check which is done during the pre-ride inspection just before presenting to the vet. This is to ensure the hooves and footwear are satisfactory for the ride distance entered. Horses can be shod, barefoot or hoof-booted.

Claire performs a last minute check of tack before starting a 35k graded ride.

For Graded rides, grades are awarded based on speed and final heart rate. Fit horses who complete at good speeds and have low heart rates at the final vetting will be rewarded with higher grades.
In Novice competitions the minimum speed is 8kph. Completing three Novice rides enables a horse to upgrade to Open level, where the minimum speed rises to 9kph. Placings in graded rides are also given based on a formula derived from the speed and final heart rate.

A pre ride vet check for B Wing: Heart rate checked followed by a trot up away and back to the vet.

A collaborative sport

What is great about this sport is riders can involve family and friends to be part of their crew team; handing out cooling water for the horse, refreshments for both horse and rider at designated crew points on the ride route and of course lots of moral support along the way! Endurance riding is a great opportunity for developing a partnership between horse and rider. It offers access to beautiful countryside, and chances to win titles at all distances and levels of competition.

For more information on getting started, regional groups and rides in your area https://egb.myclubhouse.co.uk or follow the Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/ EnduranceGB

The calm before the storm

0

Lucy Procter, co-owner of The Glanvilles Stud, shares a diary of life on a Thoroughbred stud.
This month – sales foals and poo-picking after 30 horses.

Sending colts to the salesroom requires more work than at first glance – as does overwintering a stud filled with thirty horses, shares Lucy Procter.

Walking the sales foals for 20 or 30 minutes each day is an important step in getting them fit enough for long days of being shown to prospective purchasers. Image – The Glanvilles Stud

At the time of writing we still have several mares living out, albeit well rugged against any rain. The erection of our temporary stables is finished, so by the you’re reading this column these last mares will be coming in at night – and then the real slog of winter begins.

Winter with 30 horses

We’ll have over thirty horses onsite, which means 30 horses to put out into the all-weather turnouts, over 30 boxes to muck out and mares to be exercised on the walker. At the end of the day, the turnouts need poo- picking and preparing for the following day… and so the cycle begins again.

Shortly, this will be added to by newborn foals and a morning routine of breeding scans as we start to get mares ready to visit their chosen stallion.

We will all be flat out so, most importantly, we keep the staff well fuelled with bacon rolls, cake and biscuits at morning coffee.

Colts together

Our main focus this month is the GoffsUK Breeding Stock sale in Doncaster at the end of the month. This year we are sending ten foals and one pregnant mare; some of our own and some for clients. All the foals have been ‘in prep’ for the past month which involves daily walking in-hand for 20 or 30 minutes to make sure they are fit enough for long days of being shown to prospective purchasers when at the sales. During prep, the foals also have a daily groom and are turned out in a field together for a few hours. But beware – see the video above. Turning out three colts together is like touching a match to tinder!

By the sale, the foals will also have been checked by our equine physiotherapist in the hope that a few tweaks might help them walk with a longer, more athletic stride, the most important attribute of a potential racehorse.

The sales foals all have equine physiotherapy sessions to help them walk with the long, athletic stride of the successful racehorse.

A buyer’s dealbreakers

Along with the walk, there are several other factors a purchaser considers when they are trying to decide whether a particular foal might turn into a good racehorse. Often, before even arriving at the sale, purchasers will examine the foals ‘page’ in the sales catalogue. This will show the racing and breeding performance of several preceding generations of the family. Purchasers will also be influenced by the foal’s sire and whether or not a particular stallion is currently fashionable.

A horses catwalk

Buyers mark the foals they would like to view in a catalogue. Then they walk the sales stables complex asking for particular foals to be brought out and ‘shown’ – walked and trotted up and down showing strips to assess their athleticism. They then stand to be examined for their overall conformation. Good conformation doesn’t just look nice, it improves the chances of a foal maturing into a horse who will stand up to the demands of training to become a racehorse, one that we can excitedly follow the career of in the coming years. By this time next month, we’ll hopefully have at least a couple of newborn foals to report on – watch this space!

by Lucy Procter

Is your car ‘winterised’? Do you know the icy road rules?

0

Voice of the Blue Light:

Monthly news from the North Dorset Police Team. This month – Sturminster Newton’s PCSO Mandy Robinson

Driving in the winter has its own challenges; wet weather, flooding, fog, snow and ice all lead to hazardous driving conditions. Stur’s PCSO Mandy Robinson shares the police tips to keep you safe.

Prepare your vehicle correctly

Always check the following:

• Lights are clean and working
• Battery is fully charged – batteries typically last three to five years, and even a healthy, fully charged battery only supplies about 65% of its power at 0oF. If you typically make lots of short journeys, aim for an hour’s drive every couple of weeks to fully recharge it.

• Windscreen, wiper blades and other windows are clean and the washer bottle filled with screen wash

• Tyre condition, tread depth and pressure (of all the tyres, including the spare) – minimum tread is 1.6mm check the inner, centre and outer areas of the tyre.

• Brakes are working well
• Fluids are kept topped up, especially windscreen wash (to the correct concentration to prevent it freezing), anti-freeze and oil

shutterstock

Winter driving

You can keep yourself and others safe by:

  • Slowing down and driving to the conditions of the road. Is it wet, icy or muddy?
  • Keeping a greater distance between yourself and the vehicle in front, (increase the 2 second rule to 4 seconds or even more)
  • Setting aside extra time to complete your journey
  • Keep your mobile phone fully charged.
  • On colder days be particularly careful on tree lined roads – the trees prevent the sun’s warmth from reaching the road, which may still be icy when all around has thawed
  • Properly demist and clear frosty/snow covered windscreens – don’t start driving as soon as
    a small patch on the windscreen is ‘good- enough’! Demist and clear mirrors too.
  • Use headlights when foggy and in poor light. Do NOT use fog lights unless it is foggy.
  • Do not drive through road closures – they are there for a reason!

Special rules for icy roads

The Highway Code has the following advice when driving in icy conditions:
• Drive extremely carefully when the roads are icy. Avoid sudden actions as these could cause loss of control.
• Drive at a slow speed in as high a gear as possible; accelerate and brake very gently
• Drive particularly slowly on bends where loss of control is more likely. Brake progressively on the straight before you reach a bend. Having slowed down, steer smoothly round the bend, avoiding sudden actions
• Check your grip on the road surface when there is snow or ice by choosing a safe place to brake gently. If the steering feels unresponsive this may indicate ice and your vehicle losing its grip on the road. When travelling on ice, tyres make virtually no noise.

BIMBY – Beauty in my backyard

0

The CPRE is often accused of being NIMBY (Not in My Back Yard) – Rupert Hardy explains that the correct accusation is that CPRE are BIMBY.

Attractive vernacular estate at Old Dairy, Okeford Fitzpaine
Image Rupert Hardy

Over the last year Dorset CPRE has been very critical of Dorset Council’s (DC) housing strategy in its Draft Local Plan, particularly on excessive targets. However we have not said much about housing design recently, other than chastise DC for its total

lack of ambition in pushing developers to adopt more sustainable and energy efficient building standards, compatible with its declared Climate Emergency strategy. Good aesthetic design, which is mostly lacking in new housing estates, is so important if Dorset’s residents are to accept the large numbers of new houses that will be built regardless of the target that is finally adopted.

Back in 2014 the Prince’s Foundation for Building Communities developed an online toolkit BIMBY (Beauty
in My Back Yard – click here to explore it)
to help communities have a say on new housing in their area, and overcome opposition to new building.
The Toolkit supported communities to tell planners about the type of housing they wanted. Many communities
tried out the resource, especially when developing Neighbourhood Plans.

CPRE is often accused of being NIMBY (Not in My Back Yard) so a good response can be that we are really BIMBY.

Leading designers share their experience and thoughts

Last year Dorset CPRE staged a highly successful conference to examine the question of how
to achieve new housing that is better designed and planned than is currently the norm. Speakers included Ben Bolgar from The Prince’s Foundation, who traced the gradual acceptance of the Prince of Wales’s once-ridiculed concerns for design and planning.

The well-known designer Ben Pentreath (who has been very much involved in the Poundbury development) concluded that ultimately it was for the landowners who release the land for development to make sure that higher standards were observed, and that most new housing fitted better with local vernacular traditions.

The landscape designer Kim Wilkie made a plea for landscape to be central to any new major developments.
It was generally agreed that the small number of big developers, who dominate housing, do
not have the answers to the challenge, since they rarely employ proper architects and are more interested in big profits than aesthetics. Small local builders, such as CG Fry and Morrish, were much more likely to be sensitive to the Dorset context.
The conference was attended by many of the county’s leading landowners, along with a number of Dorset Councillors and members of the planning department. It came hard on the heels of the publication of the report of the government’s Building Better, Building Beautiful Commission.

Led by the late Sir Roger Scruton it observed “We seem to have lost the art of creating beauty in our built environment”.

It recommended a much greater emphasis on the need for new housing developments to be visually attractive, to take greater account of local architectural traditions, and generally to be acceptable to the local people on whom they have the most impact.
Although the government has largely accepted most of its recommendations, there appears little sign yet of this being implemented at either national or local level.

In Praise of Dorset Vernacular Architecture

In 2019 I extolled the virtues of Dorset vernacular architecture. Before the 17th Century all domestic architecture was generally vernacular with houses built from local materials, based on the variety of the underlying geology, so that in North Dorset around Shaftesbury the local greensand stone was used most effectively, as you can see in the Ship Inn. We do not expect modern housing estates to fully emulate historic vernacular buildings, but to blend into existing villages they need to pay more than lip service. Some builders try quite hard to do vernacular; but it has been the local rather than national developers. The former were hit hard by the 2008 financial crisis, with little support provided by government. We praised estates that were both well designed and vernacular in style, such as Old Dairy in Okeford Fitzpaine (Parsons & Joyce, image above and Manor Farm Close in Pimperne (Wyatt Homes, image below).

Handsome brick and flint houses at Manor Fm Close, Pimperne Image Rupert Hardy

This compares to the dull uniformity of the serried rows of “Noddy box” houses built by national house builders like Persimmon in north Blandford (see below) for example, offering little attention to local tradition and diversity. It is true that traditional building requires more skilled labour, and is a little more expensive – you can see this in the form of thatched roofs, or brick and flint fascias. But the premium is not high.

Rupert describes the ‘dull uniformity’ of the Persimmon estate at Gurkha Rd, Blandford Image Rupert Hardy

We await Michael Groves’s new Planning Bill next year. He has criticised the use of steel and concrete in favour of more traditional materials, saying these materials often had higher embodied carbon.
Conservative Chairman Oliver Dowden has said that the government would now look to “set out in law measures to protect our towns, villages and precious countryside from being despoiled by ugly development”. Will they deliver?

By: Rupert Hardy, Chair, North Dorset CPRE

Bringing Stur back to life

0

You wouldn’t believe the work that goes into making the heart of the Blackmore Vale a vibrant town, says Pauline Batstone.

The start of a new year is a good time to review what Sturminster Newton’s own Community Benefit Society has achieved in the past three years and what it hopes to achieve in the next year. Raising thousands of pounds from people’s unwanted goods to plough back into the town, is a pretty good start!

The Emporium has revived a former bank building into a community shop – with everything you need for your home

Take the Emporium: it brings one old, and unloved, former bank building back to life in the centre of town as a community shop – with everything you need for your home, with: furniture, furnishings, kitchenware, crockery and cutlery, and, for your relaxation, jigsaws, books, CDs, DVDs and even exercise gear.

We’ve also got two fridges and a freezer packed with free food which helps prevent food waste. Inside is also a very upmarket clothes shop for Dapper Chaps! And our other shop, The Boutique, sells quality pre-loved ladies clothes for all occasions.

Of course, a major benefit of second- hand shopping is that you have the opportunity to save a lot of money. But buying second-hand instead of new is also one of the best things you can do to reduce your environmental impact – it’s the greenest way to shop.

The money raised by the community shops goes towards:

  • Running the shops and creating two shopping destinations in the town
  • Installing a defibrillator on the front of The Emporium
  • Developing, managing and paying for running the town web site – sturminster-newton.org.uk
  • Taking on the “Who’s who” listing, print and distribution and online presence
  • Improvements in the Town’s built environment including;
  • Supporting improvements to the entrance to town from the Trailway by paying for new level crossing style gates
  • Commissioning a steam train and station mural to be painted in the Station Road car park (this work is underway)
  • Paying for the large pictures on the redundant bank’s windows.
  • Initiating more flowers in the town centre in winter as well as summer by paying for the first flower troughs – now supported by SturBiz, the Town Council and the traders
  • Paying for the erection of 50 small Christmas trees and their battery lighting around the centre of town in 2020 and 21, the trees being purchased by the traders and organised by SturBiz.
  • Paying for five parasols to go on the tables in the Market Cross seating area
  • Supporting and part-paying for the planting of wild daffodils at the Trailway entrance
  • Paying annually for insurance cover for small events being run in the town including: the monthly Classic Car Event; Producer’s Markets and our popular Literary Festival.
  • Insuring Bib The Bike, the trishaw owned by the Blackmore Vale Practice and used to get otherwise housebound people out into the countryside
  • Underwriting the first Literary Festival costs including payment towards guest speakers’ fees.
  • Providing Yewstock work experience for four students
  • Providing office space for the SturBiz Economic Development Coordinator who organises town events, in particular the Christmas events
The Boutique in Sturminster Newton has an ever-rotating stock of quality pre-loved ladies clothes

Other less obvious benefits of the charity include;

  • Setting up two re-use, recycle, re-purpose charity shops with minimal environmental footprint.
  • Creating a community-focused, volunteer-led organisation with around 40 full and part time volunteers
  • Creating three new jobs (one full-time and two part-time) in the town
  • Increasing footfall in the town centre to the significant advantage of the town’s retailers by creating two enjoyable browsing venues and supporting retail friendly events
Sturminster’s Community Benefit Society has funded new level crossing style gates to enhance the entrance to the Trailway from the town

In the coming year the renamed Sturminster Newton Community Benefit Society will sustain its projects as above and also work to:

  • Continue to renovate the two upstairs floors of the former Lloyds Bank Building to be used to provide meeting and training rooms plus “hot desking” space for local charities and those endeavouring to develop their own careers
  • Establish a “destination” indoor market on the ground floor of the former NatWest Bank offering space to traders showcasing goods principally produced in the Blackmore Vale
  • Work closely with the Town Council to identify future projects to make Stur. “a good place to live work and play”

Full Time Oil Tank Installer | Ford Fuels

0

Full Time Oil Tank Installer

Location: Stalbridge – DT10 2RU

Monday – Friday (40 hours per week) plus overtime

Salary between £22,000 – £24,500 depending on experience and qualifications.

An opportunity has arisen for a full-time Oil Tank Installer.

We are looking for an energetic, hard-working and friendly person with a full clean driving licence.

Ideally you will be an experienced groundworker and an OFTEC qualification would be an advantage but not essential.

The role will be a real mix between ground working and technical so it is ideal for someone who enjoys a physical job but is looking to progress and develop new knowledge and skills. You will be travelling to various sites around a 50-mile radius.

What we can offer you

  • 28 days holiday (including bank holidays
  • Full training
  • Company pension
  • Cycle to work scheme
  • Employee assistance programme
  • Eyecare scheme
  • Retail discounts
  • Free onsite parking

For more information or to apply please contact us at [email protected]

The birth of a modern Fire Service

0

Our modern Fire Brigade was formed in 1939 with an aim to end a random and inefficient service. Historian Paul Birbeck explains.

The Bridport Fire Service in action in 1906 image – © The Barry Cuff Collection

While leading a group around Yetminster, someone stated that Mallow’s House, a wooden fronted building in Church Road, used to be the village fire station. It was an assertion that led me to reveal some interesting facts about the history of fire management in rural areas. C19th reports in local newspapers suggest serious fires were actually uncommon. Fires in hayricks, thatched roofs, and barns in villages are recorded; often being ignited by natural events like lightening, sparks from chimney fires and surprise changes in wind direction. Loss of human life was rare, but as the following report of a farm fire in 1911 shows, loss of livestock and property was not unheard of.

“Shortly after midnight some straw thatched buildings, in which were a considerable number of farm stock, were found to be alight, and very quickly an alarm was raised. While heroic efforts were being made by the farm bands and villagers generally ‘ for the suppression of the outbreak’ a message was despatched for the Fire Brigade from Dorchester. The Brigade turned out promptly, and with four horses supplied from the Antelope Hotel stables the steam fire engine was quickly on its way to Bere Regis. But this was just over a ten mile journey, and although the best possible pace was made under the circumstances a considerable time necessarily went before the arrival of the Brigade at the scene the fire. The buildings were then practically doomed, and what is a still more regrettable phase of the occurrence is the fact that it was found impossible to save a considerable number of farm animals that were quartered in the premise.”

Extract from The Western Gazette, April 1911

In October 1874 a fire broke out in the kitchen chimney of the Great Western Temperance Hotel in Yetminster. This was interesting because once the cry of fire was raised, many able-bodied villagers were on the spot helping. Females were reported transferring buckets of water from all parts of the village and the owner Mr Wynne and his family were able to escape unharmed. Records show that the property was insured, as were the family possessions. Clearly, before 1938 no village fire stations existed, although Dorchester, Sherborne, Shaftsbury, Sturminster and Maiden Newton had small municipal fire brigades run by local councils.

Our modern fire brigade

The Fire Service we know today was created in 1939 when a National Fire Service ensured uniformity in the basic equipment used by fire-fighters during the war.
This was a busy time. Firefighters assisted in rescues following the Sherborne bombing in September 1940; were on the beaches on the D-Day landings detailed to extinguish any fires caused by the soldiers fighting and to protect the villages. Interestingly, in 1941, the question of providing extra protection for villages in case of fire, was considered by Sherborne Rural Council.

The idea was to locate basic fire equipment in the villages which had pressure water supply. These were to include
a long reel of corrugated hose with the standpipe adjustment and a dual purpose nozzle, as used on a stirrup pump. This equipment, with three fire buckets, would enable the village fire-fighting party to carry out first-aid action on the fires until the fire brigade arrived. The cost was about £5 for each unit (worth £265 today). The Council declared that if villagers desired this extra protection they might be prepared to raise the necessary money by voluntary subscriptions.

In response to a pamphlet distributed into the villages, and at a public meeting in Yetminster, local people expressed a keen interest in learning how to fire-fight. The Council confirmed a mutual assistance arrangement after which time the evidence trail stops.

Also in the Spring of 1941 Sherborne Rural Council purchased 12 hydrant stand pipes – but only four had operating hydrant keys! Each village was allocated a stand pipe to be kept in the village Wardens Post for use by the fire brigade when they arrived with a hydrant key. The Council did order additional keys.

Following the end of the war the National Fire Service was taken over by local County Authorities, and by 1974 many brigades were amalgamated, losing many City and County Borough Fire Brigades.

Since the 1990s firefighting has needed to deal with new and challenging issues from engaging with the community in fire safety to new equipment and techniques to meet a changing new world.
Thankfully, today, we have well-trained and better teams equipped who quickly respond the fire hazards and problems in the countryside.

I would be interested to hear from anyone who has a copy of the pamphlet or evidence of a village brigade. Please get in touch on [email protected].

by Paul Birbeck

Living on the edge: Durweston bridge takes another hit | Then and Now

0

Traffic mayhem at Durweston bridge is nothing new. A spectacular near- disaster 90 years ago is explained by Roger Guttridge.

March 1929, and a lorry hangs precariously over the river after crashing at Durweston bridge

Durweston’s long-suffering river bridge is a regular target for miscreant lorries – and as this picture shows, that’s nothing new. It was taken on March 25, 1929, after a lorry belonging to Park’s of Portsmouth crashed through the stonework and ended up hanging precariously over the river.

The accident happened after the lorry’s gearing snapped as the driver turned left towards Durweston.

‘The lorry swerved to the right and made straight for the
stone wall of the bridge,’ says a contemporary newspaper report. ‘Realising that a collision was inevitable, the driver and his assistant jumped out of the

cab and got clear of the vehicle without any injury.
‘The lorry completely blocked the road, and it was found impossible to haul it back owing to the dangerous position it was in. A crane had to lift it out.’

The road was blocked for hours forcing traffic to make a ‘wide detour, considerable inconvenience being caused to those who were using the road’.

The lorry was carrying cargo of chemicals for the chemists Timothy White’s.

The report adds that driver Mr A O Haker and his assistant Mr Newell, both from Portsmouth, had a ‘miraculous escape’.

Fear of drowning

‘Had they not jumped clear they would in all probability have been drowned as there is a drop of about 30 feet to the river and the water at this spot is very deep.’
As the large crowd in the background suggests, the spectacle generated much interest among the locals.
‘It was quite a thing in those days and hundreds of people went to see it,’ Ethel Light (née Hardy), of Shillingstone, told me about 20 years ago.
‘The lorry had to be unloaded so carefully because the chemicals it was carrying would have polluted the river.’ Ethel, whose brother Herbert is in the picture, lived at France Hill just outside Blandford.

‘I was about 13 at the time and it obviously made an impression on me,’ she said.

‘Even now I don’t like sitting in the front of a coach to come round that bridge. It gives me a funny feeling that it’s going to do the same thing.’
Sue Sloper, of Stour Close, Shillingstone, whose mother is in the picture, told me: ‘She and a friend cycled out from Blandford to see the lorry. The accident was big news.

‘Mum also said the driver was so frightened that he passed out.’

Durweston bridge now: Image Roger Guttridge

by Roger Guttridge