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Slow Worms

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On the top edge of our allotment, between a grassy path and a sprawling patch of Russian Comfrey, lies a sheet of old corrugated iron. The corrugated iron was already there when we took on the allotment some years ago. It was half buried under a mound of rubble, just waiting to be pulled out and relocated to a new sunny position. We wasted no time in doing this. If there were Slow Worms anywhere on our plot, they’d soon find it.

Slow-worms (Anguis fragilis) – sometimes known as blindworms – are neither slow, nor are they worms. They look like small snakes, but are in fact lizards with no legs. Like all reptiles, slow worms are cold blooded, which means they can only regulate their body temperature by lying in the sun to heat up, or crawling into the shade to cool down.

Although completely harmless to humans, slow-worms are wonderful predators of slugs and other garden pests, so it is well worth providing a refugium (a piece of material which catches the sun to heat up, and retains warmth even when it clouds over) somewhere on your plot. This doesn’t have to be a sheet of corrugated iron; a piece of old carpet would do just as well, as would slate, stone, or a plank of old wood. So long as it is placed in a position where the sun can easily warm it up, and with dense vegetation nearby to give the slow-worms cover, pretty much any of these materials will do. Compost heaps are also key habitats; providing both warmth, in the form of decaying vegetation, as well as a plentiful supply of slugs, earthworms, and other invertebrates.

Six years on, a thriving population now enjoys the benefits of our refugium, and last year we found baby slow worms beneath it. Slow worms are ovoviviparous, meaning the eggs hatch out as the female lays them, or just moments later. The young are delightful – around 6cm in length and perfect miniature versions of the adults which can, apparently, live for up to 30 years in the wild, and even longer in captivity where there are of course no predators. The record for longevity is held by a male that lived at Copenhagen Zoo from 1892 until 1946. Slow worms are a protected species in Britain (they are absent from Ireland) under the 1981 Wildlife and Countryside Act.

by Brigit Strawbridge
http://beestrawbridge.blogspot.com
Twitter: @B_Strawbridge

Plumber Manor Hotel | Chamber Maid

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Plumber Manor Hotel

Chamber maid required for Plumber Manor Hotel Sturminster Newton.

Saturdays and/or Sundays 8am – 1pm approx. Uniform provided. – Start May 2021

For more information contact:

Office: 01258 472507

Email: [email protected]

Wanted | Painter & Decorator

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Painter & DecoratorSkilled or semi-skilled painter & deocrator required for established company based in Blandford Forum

For more information contact:

Office: 01258 721337

Mob: 07930 492646

Paul Leatham | In Memoriam

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A Life Remembered

In Memoriam

Paul Leatham

1st April 1993

Remembering a kind husband and dad who left us so suddenly

With Love

Jan, sons and family

Sarah J. Naughton’s The Festival review

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I started reading Sarah J. Naughton’s The Festival in publication week, just to get ahead of interviewing Sarah for the Random 19. This was a bad idea – I do not have time to read for fun in publication week.

And yet… it just kept luring me back, and in bite-sized chunks and ever more frequent tea-breaks I find myself writing this having almost-but-not-quite-finished. And I’m on tenterhooks. By the time you’re reading this I’ll know the ending.

Four Women

Orly, Lenny, Mel and Thea have been best friends since school. But now it is 20 years later and inevitably they have drifted apart.

One Weekend

It is Lenny’s 40th birthday, plus Orly and Mel need cheering up, so Thea suggests a weekend away at a festival in their hometown. It’s a chance for them all to reconnect. 

Not all of them will survive.

But their holiday soon takes a sinister turn, and not all of the friends will leave the festival alive…

Sarah J. Naughton's The Festival
Sarah J. Naughton’s The Festival is out on 29th April

Readers of Sarah’s bestseller ‘The Mothers’ will be familiar with the format as it switches between the four women sharing the tale. It’s a seamless transition, and though the first couple of chapters are a little disconcerting as you’re trying to straighten the characters out, you’ve soon spent enough time with each to know them, to understand their lives, see their flaws, and want to go for a drink with them anyway. And the friendships are as complicated and imperfect as any we all know from our teenage years. 

The view of motherhood is instantly recognisable, and yet different for them all. The faint dark whispers of tension start early, and the echoes of it build with ever increasing speed until a pumpingly noisy, tired, oh-so-familar festival fairground feels physically assaulting to your brain… and that’s all I can tell you, because that’s where I’m up to.

If you enjoyed The Mothers, you’ll love Sarah J. Naughton’s The Festival. Even now, without knowing the ending, I’m strongly suggesting you read it in – in one long sitting, with an endless upply of hot tea, preferably. 

Out now as an eBook, The Festival releases on 29th of April – order from Wayne at Winstones here.

Dazzlingly inventive’ – Sunday Times

‘A meticulously plotted exploration of friendship, foe-ship and the lies that bind, which builds to a gripping and powerful conclusion’ – Cara Hunter 

‘The perfect dose of thrills and suspense, this will keep you engrossed to the very end’ – Heat 

‘Tautly thrilling . . . This has hit thriller written all over it’ – Evening Telegraph

Win 1 of 2 Ruff and Tumble drying coats from DogsDogsDogs worth up to £70

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***** THIS COMPETITION IS NOW CLOSED *****

We here at the digital Blackmore Vale magazine are always excited to be working with the canine team at Dogs Dogs Dogs – and we’re kicking things off with a giveaway of TWO Ruff and tumble drying coats – depending on the size you need, they’re worth up to almost £70 each!

If you win you get to choose the size you need, obviously: if you have a terrier we suggest you don’t need the GSD version.

Dogs Dogs Dogs are a local company with a national reputation, with a website which is quite strict on its product range. No, they don’t do cat stuff.

And we’re thrilled to be giving away TWO dogs drying coats by Ruff and Tumble  – one in Beach (the yellow stripe above), and one in Harbour (the blue stripe below).

With one of these drying towels in the car, you can head to the beach or the river without fearing for the car on the way home. Or simply keep it by the back door in the winter – hose them off in the garden when you get home from a long walk, and then wrap them in their own hooded towel just like you would a toddler. The effect is the same – warm, dry and zero mess! It’s even designed so that your dog isn’t sitting in a chilly damp towel, the dog actually dries before the coat does. It’s magic I tell you.

To be in with a chance to win, just answer the first four questions in the widget box below. There are more chances to win by completing the other entry options if you so wish – they’re entirely up to you! The closing date for this competition is 5th May 2021 and only entries received on or before that date can be included. The prizes will go to the first two randomly chosen entries. Good luck!
(competition opens when the April issue of the magazine publishes on the 2nd April)

Win 1 of 2 drying coats from Ruff and Tumble worth up to £70

Martin Cowan | In Memoriam

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27/03/1980 – Martin Cowan (Marv)

In Memoriam


Today you should be 41 but in our hearts and minds you remain forever 21. 


Love from Mum, Ken & all the family xxx

ROBERTS, Pam

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Death of much-loved Stalbridge ex-teacher Pam Roberts

Many ex-pupils of St Mary’s Primary School will be saddened by the death of ex-head teacher Pam Roxburgh (née Roberts) who died early last month in Blandford Hospital.

As ‘Miss Roberts,’ Pam taught at Stalbridge for in the 1970s before being appointed head of a primary school in Cornwall. She returned to Stalbridge as head of St Mary’s.

For the full oblituary please read here

Silver Stars | Community Care Assistant

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Come and join the team as a COMMUNITY CARE ASSISTANT and make the SILVERSTARS Homecare difference.

We are looking for a kind and caring person who want to make a difference in the lives of others in their own homes.

If you have a caring attitude and willingness to make a difference, come and join our fantastic care assistant team based in Sherborne and the surrounding areas. You won’t regret it.

We’d love to hear from you if you’re:

· Prepared to drive from client to client as a part of your role (potential for a company car for the right candidate) terms and condition apply

· A caring attitude and a willingness to make a difference

· A desire to see elderly and vulnerable people treated with care and respect

· Reliability, flexibility, hard work, and honesty

· Good communication skills and a good sense of humor

· Good teamwork skills

· Previous experience desirable but not essential as we are providing in-house training and comprehensive induction.

As one of our care assistants, you will get to meet our wonderful clients and build relationships. Not only do we offer fantastic rates of pay, job satisfaction, and very flexible hours that suit you, but we also offer the following:

  • Guaranteed Hours (to reassure you that you will have a constant regular wage)
  • 7.00 – 14.00 and 14.00 – 22.00 plus every other weekend
  • Local work
  • Great rates of pay – £9.65 TO £14.10 per hour
  • Company Car 
  • Enhanced rates of pay for bank holidays
  • Paid holiday
  • Free care assistant induction training
  • Regular paid care assistant refresher training
  • Free care assistant uniform
  • Opportunity to study for Diploma in Health and Social Care
  • Roles are subject to DBS checks
  • Exclusive care assistant employee discounts on your favorite brands helping you make great savings (Blue light card)
  • Exceptional support from our management and senior staff.

As a care assistant, you can be the highlight of somebody’s day, or you can be there for them in their darkest hour, but you’ll do it all with the full support of our fantastic team of office staff and existing care assistants. Below are some examples of what our clients may need your support with as a care assistant:

Light cleaning, laundry, shopping, meal preparation, medication, personal care, help to get dressed, washing and bathing, medical appointments, day centers, appointments, and social activities.

Part-time hours: 25 – 40 per week

Job Types: Full-time, Part-time, Permanent

Salary: £9.65-£14.50 per hour

Contact – TEL: 01935 507792 or EMAIL: [email protected]