This year the G&S show has taken on a new format, moving from one day to two. The ever-increasing cost associated with putting on a show of this size means it makes financial sense for the show to span over two days, in the hope that the Great British weather is on our side for at least one of them! Along with the transition to a longer show we have seen a complete change of team in the office, with Nick Hill our new secretary supported by the Show Team. A huge amount of work has been done this year to ensure the show is a success.
There are some new additions this year – the sheep shearing demonstrations have moved to incorporate a new shearing competition, which is set to be a crowd-pulling spectacle. The Heavy Horse Village is even bigger this year – more room for them, and even better for watching these gentle giants. We will also see them join the Grand Parade, sponsored by Strutt and Parker and The Environmental Farmers Group, on both days in the Main Ring, sponsored by Gritchie Brewing Company; I’m pleased to say that the parade’s re-introduction last year after a 15 year absence proved to be a huge success.
The Jamie Squibb Freestyle Extravaganza will thrill you with a stunning motorcycle display in the Main Ring, and the Reme Lightning Bolts display team will float from the skies again on Wednesday this year. A procession of new and old farm machinery is a striking physical demonstration of its changes through the years.
The agricultural trade stands go from strength to strength and we greet many first-time stands this year as well as welcoming back all the familiar ones. The new 2022 layout stays – being able to walk completely around the outside of the main ring worked perfectly – and there is a big range of food and drink, enough to cater for every taste!
The show only comes together through the hard work of more than 300 volunteers and 100 paid contractors – they put so much time and effort in throughout the year, not just during August, to bring the show to you. Without them it really would not happen and we are so grateful for their support. I hope you enjoy your day (or two days) at the show!
Giles Simpson, Gillingham & Shaftesbury Show Chairman
LETTER FROM THE CHAIRMAN
A stoat is stoatally different, a farming crossroads and the tale of Gold Hill
In the second of August’s podcasts – still in the new longer format which has proved popular – Jennie talks to both Jane Adams and owner of Little Waddon Vineyard Simon Priestman
- ‘A weasel is weasily identifiable, whereas a stoat is stoatally different’. Jennie talks to widlife expert Jane Adamas about the stoat – its mesmerising effect, how to spot it and why Dorset may be a perfect home for the mysterious little creature
- Former Royal Navy officer Chris Taylor has lived a career in the skies The acclaimed civil certification test pilot explains the unique skill set required for the job
- Is farming at a crossroads? Andrew Livingston looks at the unfair struggle between agriculture and supermarkets
- After 40 years in the TV industry, Simon and Karen Priestman bought a boutique vineyard on the Dorset coast – and promptly created an award-winning wine
- Crumbs! It’s 50 years since that Hovis ad. Exactly half a century after an iconic Hovis commercial hit our TV screens, Roger Guttridge takes a stroll through the story of Dorset’s most famous street
Idyllic Hatch House to Host Annual Open Garden

Hatch House, situated in the heart of the Wiltshire countryside just outside Shaftesbury, will once again hold its annual Open Garden next month, by the kind permission of Sir Henry and Lady Rumbold. This wonderful event for the entire family provides a rare opportunity to explore the 17th Century walled Dutch garden, offering breathtaking views over the Vale of Wardour.
This year, the event will be on Saturday 2nd September, and the garden will open slightly earlier, from 11am until 5pm. Compton McRae will be returning with their barbecue, following last year’s great success.
Visitors can enjoy traditional cream teas, ice cream, cake stalls, second hand books, plants, shoes, bags and hats – and the star of the event is always Lady Rumbold and Mrs Vernon’s renowned clothes stall, packed with extraordinary finds, and a true magnet for bargain hunters. This year the separate tents for ladies and gentlemen returns too.
As always, proceeds from the event will go to the Salisbury Hospice Charity – last year the event raised an incredible £20,000.
Lady Rumbold has stressed the importance of community involvement, stating:
‘We badly need the support of local volunteers for Salisbury Hospice Charity, which caters for young and old alike. Younger blood is needed to continue the important work of supporting patients with terminal illnesses and their families – community service used to be part of school education!
‘The fund-raising events are enormous fun as well as charitable, and we implore the community to please assist us in recruiting dynamic folks from local schools, youth clubs, sports facilities, the churches and elsewhere to give some time helping the cause of Salisbury Hospice Care, which does crucial humanitarian work in support of the NHS.’
•Saturday 2nd September | 11am to 5pmAdults £5, Children £1 | hatch-house.co.uk
The official Dorset County Show pre-show magazine is here!
We have been bursting to share the news that we have been working closely with the County Show team to produce the first official Dorset County Show pre-show magazine! Dive in to get a sneak peek of everything that awaits you at this year’s vibrant celebration of rural life in Dorset.
Here’s a taste of what to expect:
- Tracie Beardsley caught up with Michael Murty, the man at the wheel of the world’s biggest monster trucks as his team prepares to rev into the main ring
- Is this Dorset’s biggest larder? With a super-sized new Food Hall and more than 100 producers, we’re thinking: ‘Yes, yes, it is!’
- Brilliant and unmissable, The Sheep Show hilariously highlights the importance of wool and the truth about sheep farming … while debunking certain sheep-related myths
- Get set to cheer your favourite team – as the Pony Club Mounted Games gallops into the Dorset County Showground for the first time, we find out what happens during the exciting speed games
- Meet Dorset’s soap star Kirsty Hearne (and more importantly, Honeybee the matriarch) – creator of a thriving artisan cottage industry selling goats’ milk and the soaps she makes from it.
- Planning your visit? Don’t miss the Show Map and Timetables, ensuring you don’t miss a thing during your visit. Make notes and set a plan of attack – it’s a BIG show!
- Take a nostalgic stroll through the showground with farmer and columnist Andrew Livingston
Get acquainted with the county’s rich agriculture, food, and farming legacy, thanks to the unwavering efforts of James Cox and his passionate team. If you’ve not got them yet, don’t forget to book your tickets NOW: TICKET DISCOUNTS END ON FRIDAY 1ST SEPTEMBER 2023!
Get ready for an unforgettable experience at the Dorset County Show 2023. We can’t wait to see you there!
Inside Out with premieres and giant puppets
Dorset’s outdoor arts festival is back with events stretching from Wimborne to Weymouth, from woodland soundscapes to street circus
Street performers, circus acts and artists from across the region and around the world will be coming to Dorset in September for Inside Out, the biennial outdoor arts festival,
Activate Performing Arts in conjunction with the Inside Out team have created an exciting programme of performances, workshops, installations and parades in rural and urban venues including the Moors Valley woods in East Dorset and Woodbury near Bere Regis. The festival has run in alternate years since 2007; more than 28,000 people attended events in 2021.
This year’s festival, which runs from 15th to 24th September, will include two world premieres and five UK premieres.
Inside Out aims to remove the traditional barriers to the arts, while encouraging people to discover and appreciate some of the unique places across the county. Most events are free.
The Dorset-based arts organisation works with Dorset Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and the National Association for AONBs, along with European partners with complementary interests in the relationship between the landscape, artists, land stewards and the climate emergency.
Music in the canopy
Events at Moors Valley Country Park will see spectacular art, music and sound installations located across the 800-acre site.
Two of the pieces have been created by the Frome-based composer and sound artist, and founder of Artmusic, Helen Ottaway. Lachrymae and Saeflod will be located in the woodland canopy, creating an immersive experience. In 2014 Helen’s Lachrymae was commissioned by Inside Out Dorset and Dorset AONB to be presented on the South Dorset Ridgeway. Such was the success of the piece, she has been asked to present it again this year. Her inspirations include landscape, water and nature, and her style is predominantly minimalist with influences from folksong, English pastoral and church music traditions.

Working Boys Club
At Poole and Wimborne, Inside Out events will include Serving Sounds from The Working Boys Club, as well as international circus acts and multi-sensory sound installations.
The Working Boys Club is identical twins Jason and Adam Dupree, who make and create work by mixing the arts with their past lives as tradesmen.
Wild Woodbury at Bere Regis will have a wide-ranging programme, including workshops, talks and local food vendors.
As well as an Iron Age hillfort, Woodbury was also a medieval religious site and the setting for the Woodbury Hill Fair. It is undergoing a process of rewilding and will provide a unique location for Inside Out Dorset to work alongside Dorset Wildlife Trust and Dorset AONB.
Giant dolls
The Inside Out finale weekend will see a spectacular parade of light and music weave through Weymouth led by Transe Express’ Poupées Géantes. Readers with long memories may recall Transe Express dazzling the crowds in Salisbury Market Square with an aerial drumming and acrobatic performance. For Inside Out, these French street performers will bring three giant dolls who will glide magically through the crowd, with the voices of three opera singers transforming the Weymouth streets into an outdoor opera house.
The good, the bad – and the downright ugly

The Uxbridge by-election had it all. It was good for the Conservatives, winning narrowly by focusing on the Labour mayor of London’s plans to penalise the ten per cent of most-polluting cars by charging them to drive in the area.
It was bad for Labour of course. And it was downright ugly for anyone wanting common sense to dominate in our battle to stop climate change. Both parties have started rowing back on their already inadequate plans to tackle global warming. As if Net Zero would just be nice to have, instead of an absolute necessity.
Where was the grown-up conversation, for example, about the economic benefits of a fair transition to a cleaner world?
Or the costly – massive – damage to lives and health from fossil fuel-driven air pollution?
Aside from clean air, there are two other absolutely essential requirements for survival: clean water and healthy food.
And at the moment we’re doing our damnedest to deprive ourselves of those too.
Water has hit the headlines recently, with decades of failed privatisation having seen waterway sewage pollution increase. Water companies have been loaded with billions of pounds of debt, while billions of pounds have been paid out in dividends to shareholders – most of them based overseas.
As for food, we urgently need to reform what we eat, how it is produced, and where it is grown. Targeted support for farmers is key. More than a quarter of all the food we grow is never eaten. That’s 13 million tonnes wasted. Industrialised farming is a major cause of damage to our soils, and the pollution of our waterways with pesticides, fertilisers etc. Agriculture uses 71 per cent of land in England, with 85 per cent of that used for feeding and rearing livestock – growing plants for human consumption generates around 12 times more calories per hectare than using the land for meat production.
We presently import 46 per cent of the fresh vegetables we eat, and 84 per cent of the fruit. Poor diet causes diabetes, cardiac disease and other obesity-related conditions. It is blighting the lives of millions, predominantly our poorer citizens, and is costing the NHS billions. Unsustainable.
The Government knows all this, but isn’t taking the action needed. Time for change.
Ken Huggins
North Dorset Green Party
Guttridge, Roger
Roger Stephen Guttridge passed away on 8 August 2023 at the age of 73 at Poole Hospital, four years after his leukaemia diagnosis.
He battled his illness with courage and determination right up until the very end.
Roger was well known throughout Dorset as a journalist and local historian, having written for the Bournemouth Echo, Blackmore Vale, Dorset Life, and latterly here in the BV Magazine and authored over 20 books.
He is survived by his loving wife Sylvie and son Andy, and his granddaughter Eliza.
Services will be held at Poole Crematorium on Friday 25 August at 1pm.
No flowers please.
The family requests donations be made to the Dorset Wildlife Trust.






