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Meet Your Local | The Swan Inn, Sturminster Newton

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This month we’ve been chatting to Geoff and Emma Dunne who run the Swan Inn, Sturminster Newton.

How did you end up at The Swan Inn?


Emma and I originally applied to take on the Upton Inn at Upton Cheyney in the Cotswolds, but coincidentally that is where our predecessors have moved to and it was already a done deal; which in turn made The Swan Inn available. So here we are!

What’s your favourite local place to visit on an afternoon off?


Our favourite has got to be the delightful Bank House Brasserie here in Stur, and then maybe walk off all those calories up at Bullbarrow Hill or Okeford Hill with our Westie called Monty. We are so spoilt for choice with walks here, from just walking out of the pub and along the river bank to Fiddleford Mill, Hambledon Hill or Emma’s all-time favourite (and Monty’s) Piddles wood.

Tell us about your pandemic?

Well – what an introduction to the world of publicans! We took over on July 1st; took three weeks to get ourselves
together and we re- opened the pub on July 27th 2020. In August the Eat Out to Help Out’ campaign really got our restaurant off to a flying start – we had diners from all over Dorset enjoying our fine dining a la carte menu. Restrictions were quickly imposed – table service only, masks and social distancing all put a lot of people off and
it went very quiet very quickly until the second lockdown in November. Then of course the third one in late December so Christmas Parties didn’t happen, and likewise New Year.

The whole winter season impact of COVID19 hurt pubs and restaurants in particular, and we were no exception.
Government grants and the Furlough scheme helped but we still had considerable costs and cashflow was a major concern.

We were lucky though – unlike many we had considerable support from Hall & Woodhouse, the family-owned Dorset brewer, but even so it was a long and hard enforced closure.

What’s been your biggest challenge since taking over? What are you proud of?


Our biggest challenge (after Covid of course) has been recruitment. Covid and (allegedly) Brexit have wreaked havoc on the hospitality sector and nowhere more so than with kitchen staff. It is proving very very difficult to recruit quality Chefs and support staff – where are you all?!
I think there are two things I’m deeply proud of; one is the work Emma carried out in our now- amazing garden, and second is quite simply surviving the lockdowns and still being here at the end (we hope this is the end…).


What part of the pub is your absolute favourite?


Obviously I love the whole building – it has such a rich history and you can feel that wherever you are. But… for me
this has to be out in the garden. Even though it’s late summer now (did we have summer? I might have blinked and missed it…) and most of the flowers and shrubs have had their better days, it’s still brims with some very pretty flowers, and there’s nowhere better in my view to sit and enjoy a glass of wine in a quiet moment.


Which dish is your most popular?


Without a doubt our Sunday roasts. It is the most booked up meal time of the week and hugely popular, a very substantial meal and enjoyed universally both for price and quality.


So what’s next – do you have big plans on the horizon?


We did have big plans for our restaurant but these have been shelved whilst we consolidate following the financial hit of the various lockdowns and trading restrictions. Right now it’s really a matter of building our business; the food, the beers and our very well appointed accommodation, recruiting another chef and aking our food offer to 7 days and perhaps expanding the menu. Quiz night has returned and is now every Monday night (we were amazed at how many Quizzlers there in and around Stur!). We have Jason and the Alco-Noughts performing live on Saturday 18th at 8:00pm. We’ve four teams planned for the local Dart league (recommencing in October) as well as our own Darts Knockout Competition due to take place in September.
Finally, we hope, an amazing Christmas and New Year to make up for last year’s washout!

The Swan Inn

Letters to the BV Editor September 2021

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In the August Letters, P Bone of Shaftesbury took me to task for saying I prefer Plain Salted crisps to any other flavour (see the Random 19 July issue), declaring that Smoky Bacon and Prawn Cocktail were the only correct answers to that question. Even just reading of those flavours made me turn pale, but for the sake of the scientific method, I sampled both. The Smoky Bacon reminded me – and not in a pleasant way – of the Bac-os Bacon-Flavored Bits that used to be served at salad bars across my native USA. As for the Prawn Cocktail – I draw a veil over my reaction.

However, PB has perhaps sensed that I was not entirely truthful in my original reply. The only thing that could cleanse my palate of those crisp flavors was tortilla chips (plain, lightly salted, of course). I far prefer them to crisps. Maybe that’s the American coming out in me again.

Or, maybe they just do things differently up in North Dorset.

Tracy Chevalier
Piddle Valley


(NB – If you missed Andy Palmer’s August column, you may wish to click & read it here before continuing. A hornet’s nest was stirred)

As ever I enjoyed reading Andy Palmer’s article in the August BVM, not least about the delights of Mappowder Village Hall events (cannot remember why I missed the curry night – and there are loads of proper china plates in the corner cupboard in the kitchen if you had looked Andy, rather than use paper ones).
Yes I agree Thomas Hardy is not the author whose works should be the first books you grab if you are feeing a bit depressed. I dont agree with him being a mysoginist though – his works do spell out a few home truths to his Victorian middle-class readers about the subordinate position of women at that time, and the double standards operating even more then than now. Hardy the feminist?
And thanks for the plug for The Emporium Andy, just one of our four excellent “charity” shops in Stur busily recycling once loved goods.

Cllr Pauline Batstone
Sturminster Newton


Despite being a Thomas Hardy fan of old, there are times when the author’s relentless pursuit of misery does rather crush one’s spirits.
For Andy Palmer to single out the story of Tess as an award winner in the category of Wretchedness is fair, and one could go as far as to say that despite using every means at his disposal to lay bare the hypocrisies of Victorian society, Hardy could just be the Morrissey of the mid to late 1800s, without the blunt rudeness.

Matthew Coldicutt
Hardy Country resident


This is the first time I have felt compelled to write in about an article in a magazine.
I thought Andy Palmer’s article decrying Hardy for being a ‘little bit miserable’ was refreshingly honest but perhaps reckless living as he does in Hardy’s Vale.
My main concern, being Mr Palmer’s neighbour, is that offended Hardy fans don’t target our house by mistake.
Maybe I’ll put a sign up, ‘Mr Palmer resides next door’?

Derryl Darling
(Location withheld for Ms Darling’s own safety…)


Rather than write in the royal ‘we’ as if I represent the entire Thomas Hardy Society (though as the Secretary and general dogsbody perhaps I might get away with it!), I am writing in the capacity of a sometime Hardy academic and an all-the-time lover of Hardy’s works.
Your article asking why Hardy is so popular produced more than a couple of smiles across my visage, but I do wonder exactly how much of Hardy’s oeuvre Mr Palmer may have perused?
I grant that Tess of the d’Urbervilles is not one of Mr Hardy’s chirpiest novels, and Jude the Obscure is indeed a tad bleak – one critic summed it up as follows: one cousin marries a bimbo while the other marries a rather misguided teacher. Bimbo does a runner, teacher grants a divorce so that the cousins may marry, cousins don’t marry but have offspring, one of whom turns up on the doorstep claiming to be from cousin #1’s marriage #1. Being a rather miserable little chap he proceeds to kill his half-siblings and then himself. Cousin remarries returned bimbo, other cousin remarries deluded teacher after a still-birth, cousin #1 coughs up blood and dies, cousin #2 spends rest of life self-flagellating.
Divorces 3, Deaths 5.
I ask you, what is not laugh-a-minute about this plot?

Alas it seems to be these rather tragic stories that are most loved by Hardy readers, instead of those containing his dry wit and genuinely lough-out-loud moments, such as the novels The Trumpet-Major (the character of Festus Derriman is a creation of comic genius) and The Hand of Ethelberta. Or the short stories such as ‘The Thief Who Couldn’t Stop Sneezing’.
The subject of Hardy’s poems include drinking cider, dancing and flirting. Indeed his poem ‘The Ruined Maid’ is utterly hilarious; so much so that the Dorchester Town Crier Alistair Chisholm adapted it to a male perspective, calling his version ‘The Roué’, which is, if anything, even funnier than Hardy’s original!

Mr Palmer, I only hope that your good self and your plethora of devoted readers do not conflate Hardy’s supposed miserableness with those of us from the Society who are his mortal representatives on Earth! We’re actually an ok bunch who quaff vast amounts of cider, partake in barndances and other general silliness, and engage in lively debates on social media, where we ask such pressing questions as: ‘if you could sit on a bench with any Hardy character, who would it be and what would you say?’
(My own answer – I would ask Marty South from The Woodlanders why she didn’t give Grace Melbury the enormous slap she deserved)

I encourage you and your readers to come and join our convivial community and attend one of our events. I can’t guarantee that you will drink cider, dance or flirt, but at last one of the three will inevitably be engaged in!
Dr Tracy Hayes

https://www.hardysociety.org/


Just to say I very much enjoyed the latest issue of the BV – but I don’t THINK (I may be wrong) that the first of the ‘Readers’ Photographs’, though lovely, is Compton Abbas church?

C Owen
I spoke to Benn Churchill the photographer of the image in question, and he confirmed the picture features St Mary the Virgin’s church, Compton Abbas. Ed.


I was surprised that you gave so much space in your magazine to the vandals who created that crop circle near Okeford – you mention that it cost the farmer

£600 in lost wheat. Do you not think you’re glorifying willful destruction which will only encourage more lost crops?
Name withheld

It was a story of public interest and our stats show that a huge amount of readers spent a lot of time on those pages – probably due to the high quality photography.
We took great care to dicuss the issue regarding the agricultural and financial damage, and the illegal access and trampling issues; hardly glorifying it. In the same issue we also reported on an incident of alleged illegal hare coursing – balanced discussion is not glorifying. Ed.

Beth Wood Artist Exhibition

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Exhibition at Longham United Reformed Church Hall Ringwood Road Longham BH22 9AW

23rd – 26th October 10am – 4pm

Original Oil Paintings (various sizes to suit all budgets) | Prints, Greetings Cards and Calendars | 20% off pet portraits booked on the day | A select number of original oil paintings reduced – ideal for that special gift (get ahead for Christmas).

Beth will also be accompanied by Jon Fraser who will be selling wood turning pieces, to include bowls, vases, pens, pots all sizes.

www.bethwoodartist.com

Sturminster Newton Cheese Festival

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11th & 12th September

Fine Cheese, food & drink, crafts, real ale, entertainment and much much more…

A great day out for the whole family

Get you tickets online now to guarantee entry click the link below

https://www.cheesefestival.co.uk/

JARAPA – Warehouse Operatives Required

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Warehouse operatives

Part time – seasonal contract

Small family business looking for 2 part time people to work in our warehouse 4 – 5 mornings a week 4 – 5 hours per day. Flexible start time, would suit a parent with school age children. Possibility of more hours when busy.

Job would be until December 20th and will be reviewed then so we can assess work load ongoing.

The main responsibilities will include: Picking & Packing of orders, stacking goods on pallets, general tidying in warehouse.

You will be working alone as well as working with others

Must be reliable, punctual, motivated and able to work under pressure working with a small team.

Must be physically fit Due to the amount of lifting and moving of stock.

Start time 8.30am Monday – Thursday.

Please email [email protected] or call 07939 555737.

We are based at the Bennetts Field Trading Est, Wincanton.

Wessex IM – JUNIOR ADMINISTRATOR required

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JUNIOR ADMINISTRATOR required

A new opportunity to join a team of 6 supporting our Award Winning Independent Financial Planners.

Ideally, you’ll have experience working for an independent financial advice firm but if not, we’re happy to teach you and provide a career path in financial services.

Benefits

* Competitive Salary reflecting level of experience
* Company benefits include Death In Service, contributory pension, employer-sponsored private medical insurance and 25 days holiday plus bank holidays
* 37.5 hours per week working hours
* Assistance with improving upon your industry qualifications and Continuing Professional Development
* Office based role in Shaftesbury with free parking 
* You’ll also get all the tea and coffee you can drink, the occasional foodie Friday or tasty Tuesday and a dynamic vibrant workplace!

Further information and application details can be obtained by contacting Lisa Bailey at [email protected]

WESSEX INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT Limited, Number ONE, The Wincombe Centre, Wincombe Business Park, Shaftesbury, SP7 9QJ

WESSEX INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.

Carer Wanted – Sherborne Area

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Carer Wanted

Immediate Start

Live in carer required for 97 year old lady living in her own home.

Near Sherborne dorset

Non Smoker – Car driver essential

And a good sense of humour!

Please contact via email:

[email protected]

Concept Cables – Production Staff Required

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Production Staff Required

Blandford based cable manufacturer is looking to recruit new members of staff for their busy production team.

Roles available at both Blandford and Pimperne sites for machine minders, setters, operators and quality control technicians.

Full time, 40hrs per week.

Experience working in a production environment would be advantageous but not essential as full training will be given.

Salary dependent on experience.

For further information please apply in writing to [email protected]

Margaret Green Animal Rescue – Animal Welfare Worker

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We have an exciting opportunity available at our Lincoln Farm Centre for the position of a full-time Animal Welfare Worker!

The role includes delivering the highest standards of animal welfare, training and rehabilitating the rescue dogs, providing help and support to members of the public both on the phone and in-person and maintaining database and paper records.

The successful applicant should have a qualification in animal care and/or experience working with dogs, as well as good customer service and communication skills.

A full current driving licence is essential.

If you are interested in finding out more about the role, please visit our website here: https://www.margaretgreenanimalrescue.org.uk/vacancies and download the Job Description and Application Form.