PARISH

ISSUEISSUE 36 33 JUNEMarch 2012 13

This newsletter is distributed to every h ouse in the five parishes to commun icate the activities of the Bishopstone Group Parish Council and other local events

About Truffle The Truffle Card is designed to offer customers exclusive treats and offers across a wide and varied range of Independent Herefordshire Businesses. As businesses we know our customers can shop anywhere. We want them to shop with us. Truffle will promote Herefordshire Independent Businesses and help them to flourish.

Sign Up is FREE for customers. Truffle Herefordshire works by emulating “ Martin’s Money Saving Tips ” and “ My Voucher Codes ”. In short there will be a weekly email of offers from the participating businesses which will be collated by Truffle Herefordshire, and sent to cardholders. This will backed up by this website and viral marketing using Twitter and Facebook.

Customers will be able to sign up for the scheme right across the county at any of the 635 (and growing fast) participating shops, restaurants, bars, pubs, nightclubs... the list goes on!

Customers will also be able to sign up at www.truffleherefordshire.co.uk and their card will be sent to them in the post. They will also be able to fill in the application

form in the comfort of their own home and post it to Truffle Herefordshire’s Free Post address; it really could not be easier. Background It is the first scheme of its kind in the UK and cardholders will get exclusive treats and offers only available to them, along with invitations to new product launches as well as exclusive Truffle Cardholder events

The initial concept came from Heather Gorringe ( Wiggly Wigglers , Herefordshire), Luke Conod (FIT , ), James Smith ( Stagecoach Restaurant , Hereford) and Maurice Jones ( Philip Morris & Son , Hereford), and has been driven forward by the Private Sector.

Get Your FREE Truffle Herefordshire Card! To get your FREE Truffle Herefordshire card just fill in the form opposite, sending it freepost and we'll get it in the post to you as quickly as possible (please allow up to two weeks, though it should be much quicker). By requesting or using a Truffle Herefordshire card you agree to the Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy (see website for information.) The items marked * are optional; all the others are required and we can't process your request without th em. *Title ______Cut out and send this form to: First Name ______Last Name ______Truffle Herefordshire Address ______FREEPOST ______RSLS-YREJ-TZRY Town/City ______PO Box 4 *County ______Hereford Postcode ______HR4 0XH *Home Phone Number ______*Mobile Phone Number ______Phone: 01432 261784 www.truffleherefordshire.co.uk *Date of Birth ______Email Address ______

Communication No information through Truffle on offers & promotions (including special card holder offers) from Truffle or Choices participating companies No information on offers & promotions (including special card holder offers) directly from participating companies No contact for market research purposes

WEOBLEY MUSIC – 2013 CONCERT

Following the success of our ‘Queen’s Jubilee’ event in 2012, Weobley Music is staging another concert. This will be on Saturday 9 th March at Weobley Village Hall (HR4 8SN) from 7.30 pm to 10.30 pm (doors open at 7 pm) and there will be 3 acts:

Pickin’ In The Kitchen - Weobley’s own bluegrass band of 6 ‘seniors’ who enjoy playing bluegrass standards in ‘the old way’, around a single ‘mic’.

The Remi Harris Trio - Remi started playing aged 7 and, at 24, is now one of the UK’s top Gypsy Jazz guitarists. On 17 th December 2012, Remi played at the Buckingham Palace Christmas Party hosted by The Queen, who was among the 2000 invited guests with many other members of the Royal Family. Don’t miss this amazing young talent.

The Down County Boys - Our most popular and ‘fun’ UK bluegrass band, the DCBs are precise and tight with great harmony and fun. They were here last year and are back in Weobley ‘by popular demand’ .

Each will perform a 50 minute ‘set’, with time between to visit the bar for beer, wine or a soft drink. Tickets £9 (up to 28 th February) then £10, including at the door. As last year, for bookings please email [email protected] or call 01544 318513. Bob and Kate Best

Bishopstone Group Parish Council The members of the Parish Council are elected to represent all residents of the villages in the group and can influence decisions made by the various departments of the County Council and other Government organisations such as the Police and Fire Brigade. Please contact your councillor if you have any concerns on: - Housing and Planning, Roads, Traffic, Public Transport and Rights of Way, Refuse Disposal and Waste Recycling or any other local issues.

List of Parish Councillors Village represented Name Tel. number Bishopstone Trevor Hunt 590325 Sharon Knights 590626 John Macklin (Chairman) 590620 Rosemary Morgan 590282 John Verry 590680 Bridge Sollers Lillian Allsopp 590210 Byford Muriel Holmes 590233 Sue Hubbard (Vice-Chairman) 590319 Penny Redshaw 590634 Kenchester Serena Crump 590644 Petra Hickey 590630 Mansell Gamage Cathie Draper 590284 Ann Midwinter 590485

Clerk to the Council Katrina Bevis 07980 652868 Email : [email protected]

Parish Paths Officers Village represented Name Tel. number Bishopstone John Macklin 590620 Byford & Mansell Gamage Sue Hubbard 590319 Bridge Sollers Lillian Allsopp 590210 Kenchester John Macklin 590620

Herefordshire County Councillor Adrian Blackshaw Tel: 01432 260201 (contact via Herefordshire Council Offices)

Parish Council Meetings ParishParish Council meetingmeeting dates dates 2013 2013 10thThe10th nextJanuary, January, 2012 14th 14th Parish March, March, Council 9th 9th May,MeetingsMay, 11th 11th willJuly, July, be 12th 12th on September ThSeptemberursdays and andJuly 14th 14th 12th; November.Sept.13th;November. Nov.8th TheseThese will will be bebe heldheld in inat theThethe New New New Bridge Bridge Bridge Community Community Community Cent Cent Centrere restarting starting starting at at at7.30 7.30 7.30 pm pm pm.

Parish Plan Members of Focus groups, ensuring that the Bishopstone Group Parish Plan is implimented, are as follows:

Traffic and Rights of Way John Verry and Sue Hubbard Local services Contact Clerk Recycling Penny Redshaw Community Centre John Macklin and Sue Hubbard

Web Page Readers with access to a computer can read Council notices, past issues of this newsletter and other local information on the Parish Council Web site. This can be reached by logging on to www.bishopstonegroupparish.co.uk

Notice Boards The appointed key holders for the Notice Boards in each village are:- Bishopstone John Macklin Tel. 590620 Bridge Sollers John Macklin Tel. 590620 Byford Penny Redshaw Tel. 590634 Byford Common Sue Hubbard Tel. 590319 Kenchester Petra Hickey Tel. 590630 Mansell Gamage Sue Hubbard Tel. 590319 Please contact one of the above to display any article of public interest.

Recycling Facility There is a local recycling facility at Oakchurch Farm Shop on the main A438 near Staunton-on-Wye.

Sandbag provision . The sandbag stores are at the bottom of Bishon Lane, Bishopstone, in Mansell Gamage and at Bridge Sollers. In times of flooding call 01981 590620 for assistance with sandbags.

HOME CARE PROVIDERS

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Stay independent at home with Kemble Care

NEW WORDS

AQUADEXTROUS, adj., Possessing the ability to turn the bathtub tap on and off with one's toes.

CARPERPETUATION, n., The act, when vacuuming, of running over a thread or a piece of fluff at least a dozen times, reaching over and picking it up, examining it, then putting it back down to give the vacuum one more chance.

FRUST, n., The small line of debris that refuses to be swept onto the dust pan and keeps backing a person across the room until he finally decides to give up and sweep it under the rug.

PEPPIER, n., The waiter at a fancy restaurant whose sole purpose seems to be walking around asking diners if they want ground pepper.

PHONESIA, n., The affliction of dialling a phone number and forgetting whom you were calling just as they answer.

PUPKUS, n., The moist residue left on a window after a dog presses its nose to it.

TELECRASTINATION, n., The act of always letting the phone ring at least twice before you pick it up, even when you're only six inches away. Parish Council Report At the 8 th November meeting the Parish Council discussed and decided on the Precept budget for 2013/14. It was decided unanimously that the precept will be kept the same as last year at £4174.00. As a way of cutting back spending, a resolution was proposed that Parish Council meetings should last no longer than 2 hours, cutting hall costs by £7.00 each meeting. All Cllrs agreed and the resolution was passed. The Councillors have dealt with three planning applications over the last few months, Proposed erection of a Managers dwelling on land adjacent to the Lord Nelson Antiques Centre Bridge Sollars Change of use from a single dwelling to holiday accommodation, The Woodhouse, Kenchester. Proposed car port, wood store and provision of wood burner with flue and installation of window to living room, 7 Shetton Barns, Mansell Gamage

Amey, who I think, will be struggling to retain their contact with Herefordshire Council when it comes up for renewal in June, have failed to carry out any Highway repairs in our parishes in the last two months. We continue to chase them, they have now allocated job numbers to the work required but it appears there is a lack of finance and manpower to carry out this work. The Parish Council are actively looking at the Lengthsman scheme to see if it would benefit our parishes to carry out some of the minor highway repairs and maintenance.

John Macklin. Chairman

Advertising If you are interested in advertising in our newsletter or if you have articles for future editions please contact the editor: Penny Redshaw 01981 590634 or e-mail: [email protected]

Advertising costs are as follows: Half page inside black & white ...... £3 per issue or £10 for 4 issues (1 year) Half page inside colour ...... £4 per issue or £15 for 4 issues (1 year) Half back page colour ...... £5 per issue (£20 for 1 year)

Notices about local events or charitable causes will not be charged.

Coffee and Chat – a Coffee Morning with extras A chance to meet old friends or make some new ones, catch up on local news, or try a game of Trionimoes (like dominoes only more so!). Borrow books and magazines from the free library, use the free broadband internet access and wi-fi and take home some goodies from the cake, plants and produce stall. At the New Bridge Community Centre Every Wednesday 10.30 till noon

Pest Control ? All known pests and vermin ? Quick response -24 hours ? Friendly and Professional ? ‘Think Wildlife’ supporter ? Member of Herefordshire Council Trader Register

Pest prevention programmes also provided for businesses and private houses.

Tel. James Ostler on 01981 590534

www.Positive-Environmental.co.uk

GRAVE TENDING SERVICES

Are you unable to visit a loved ones grave as often as you would wish to.

We offer a reasonably priced grave tending service.

For a leaflet/price list, Tel: 01432 880615 Crossing the River by Sue Hubbard

For many centuries there was only one bridge across the in the whole of our county, and that was at Hereford. In 1600 it was joined by Wilton Bridge at Ross; both were partially destroyed during the Civil War and had to be rebuilt when the fighting ended. On our side of the county we had to wait until 1760 for Bredwardine Bridge to appear but each parish adjoining the Wye had its own system of fords and ferries used to move people, livestock and goods across the river. Most of theses date back to mediaeval times or even earlier and many were associated with nearby wharfs and landing places for the barges that carried goods up and down the river between Hay and Chepstow. Once very busy, their importance began to decline at the end of the nineteenth century as more bridges were built and motor traffic began to appear. Shortly after the First World War a man called Arthur Lamont explored the course of the Wye recording the location of these crossing places and the memories of the local people who had used them. His findings were published in the 1922 Transactions of the Woolhope Club from which the following notes are taken. At Monnington, Godsells Ferry had for many years carried passengers from south of the river to join the mail coach route from Hereford to Aberystwyth at the Portway Inn. This ferry became obsolete in 1860 when Sir Velters Cornewall built his own toll bridge at Moccas. There was also a ford for cattle and horses at Byecross, just below Monnington Falls and the Island. The ford at Byford, which gave its name to the parish, ran diagonally across the river from Lower House to an old road that led to Preston on Wye church. It could only be used when the water was moderately low and so there was also a ferry, slightly upstream of the ford, running straight across to the same point on the south side. It had two boats, a punt for foot passengers and a wide flat-bottomed boat that could carry livestock and even a carriage and pair. This ferry was very important for Byford as part of the parish land lay south of the river and the clergyman based in Byford Rectory sometimes served Preston on Wye and Blakemere as well. The Byford ferryman also kept a pub in his house but by 1922 the ferry had closed and the house had become a blacksmith’s shop (now the Old Forge) while a private punt owned by Mr Wootton at Lower House was the only means of crossing the river. There was a similar ford and ferry set-up at Bridge Sollars with a ford situated just up stream from the present bridge and a licensed toll ferry used when the river was high, while the ferryman supplemented his income by running the Salmon Inn. The ferry closed when the bridge was opened in 1896 but when Mr Lamont visited the site he noted that the lane leading to the Madley side of the ford still existed on Mr Matthews’ farm, and the track up from the ford, joining the road near Bridge Sollars church, was still in use. He also identified another ford in Bridge Sollars known as Rowlands Ford, approached from a meadow on the Marsh Farm, which gave access to Lulham across the river. The two remaining sites in our parishes were both near the Weir at Kenchester. The first was Canon Bridge Ferry near the New Weir where the ruins of the ferryman’s house were still visible in the trees on the Madley side. Half a mile downstream, at the Old Weir was a crossing place with a bridge or causeway built in the first century AD and used regularly by travellers between south Wales and the Roman town at Kenchester. And one final thought – given the straitened circumstances of Herefordshire Council and its desire to encourage a Green agenda, might it be a good idea to go for the simple option, remember what worked for our ancestors and replace the proposed walking and cycling bridge between Bartonsham and Rotherwas with a ferry?

Forthcoming Events at New Bridge Community Centre

Saturday March 9 th Hereford Rail Male Voice Choir Thursday March 14 th Parish Council Thursday March 21st History Society – The Story of Barrs Court Station Friday March 22 nd Bridge Sollars PCC Annual Meeting

And don’t forget regular events: Coffee and Chat, Wednesdays 10.30 – noon Keep Fit Tuesdays 7 – 8pm

For further details see Parish Notice Boards and Hereford Times. Booking enquiries: Wyn Fisk 01981 590234

LOCAL HISTORY EVENINGS PROGRAMME FOR 2013

January 31 st History of the Foxley Estate February 28 th Hereford Cattle March 21 st The Building of Barrs Court Station April 25 th Land of Lost Content Museum (life in the 1930s – 1960s) May 30 th Blanche Parry of Newcourt, confidant to Queen Elizabeth I June 27 th Village Walk – details to be announced September 26 th An Introduction to Hereford Museum Service October 31 st The Wye Tour November 28 th Victorian

We meet at the New Bridge Community Centre at 7.30pm. Everyone is welcome, there is no membership fee. Just come along, if a subject takes your fancy, pay the £2 admission and enjoy an interesting talk followed by coffee and biscuits and a chat with friends.

Wackey Walkers

The Festive walk in December and the walks in January and February were all led by John and Jo Macklin. The Festive Walk started at the Bay Horse Inn, Kings Acre Road and followed a circular path past the new livestock market, crossing the A438 before returning to the Inn. The January Walk started from the car park in Norton Canon, crossing snow covered fields and climbing up to Yazor Wood where walkers were delighted to see a group of deer. The walk returned through fields with wide set-a-side edges back to the car park. Lunch was at The Portway Hotel, Staunton-on-Wye. The February Walk started from the Nags Head, Canon Pyon, a dry frosty morning provided excellent views as the walkers passed the 17 th century Butthouse with its unique gatehouse. After visiting Kings Pyon Church we returned following the footpath that connects Kings Pyon to Canon Pyon Church. The next walk will be on Saturday 23 rd March, meet at the Kilpeck Inn, Kilpeck (HR2 9DN) at 10.15am. The walk will start at 10.30am; it will follow footpaths along grass and arable fields, lanes and minor roads. There are a few slopes and a number of stiles on the route, but there are marvellous views to the West and North from higher points on the walk. Walks usually take place on either the third or fourth Saturday in each month. They often start at a Public House where bar snacks can be enjoyed after the walk. Many walkers stay, but this is optional! The starting place and time are announced in the County Section of the Hereford Times under Bishopstone.

Walkies with your best friend!

Wags and Wellies is a 5km sponsored dog walk in aid of St Michael’s Hospice. Starting and finishing at Wyevale Garden Centre, Hereford, you are invited to walk around the parish of Breinton; a midpoint refreshment stop is offered at Breinton Village Hall. When you have completed the walk you will receive a doggy treat and a St Michael’s Hospice dog tag.

Plenty of entertainment is planned at Wyevale making this a fun day for all the family (with two legs or four!). Entry prices do apply, please check the website for full details: www.st-michaels-hospice.org.uk . Wags and Wellies takes place on Sunday 17 th March with registration from 10am, the walk starts at 11am. For further information contact the Events Team on 01432 851000.

Error! Sunday Lunch 12 – 2.30pm From £8.45

Different choices every week using the freshest seasonal local produce

21 st Century Comfort with 16 th Century Charm

★Introducing OAP “Never have we found a Tuesdays & Thursdays! th venue that has ticked every box. The From 5 March★ Inn itself is cosy, clean and 12 - 2.30pm welcoming. The staff went out of 1 course = £4.95 their way to make us at home & the 2 courses = £6.95 breakfast was by far the best we've Including tea or coffee had. All in all a fab place”

Mr & Mrs Thomas, Feb 2013 Chose from classic homemade dishes such as fish and chips and bread & butter pudding

BOOK Open all day NOW Well kept ales, lagers & ciders 12 - 2.30pm 2 Courses Free Wifi! £11.95 Mother's New! Coffee Menu: Day Sunday 3 Courses Espresso, Latte, th Cappuccino . Soon… 10 March Special £14.45 Sunday Afternoon tea 2.30-5pm Lunch Daily from 1 st April!! Menu

Lunch 12-2.30, Dinner 6 – 9.30 Daily. Closed Sunday from 5pm Staunton-on-Wye HR4 7NH On the A438 next to Oakchurch www.theportwayinnhotel.co.uk Tel 01981 500474

HEREFORD CATHEDRAL PERPETUAL TRUST MARCH Saturday 9 March Chorister open morning An opportunity for any boy (aged 6-8 years of age) and their families who have considered the possibility of joining the choir to attend a morning rehearsal. For further information on the open morning and the opportunities for choristerships, please contact the director of music, Geraint Bowen [email protected] 01432 374238. 10 am Cathedral Choir Do you know of a boy, aged 6–8 years of age, who might be interested in joining the internationally-renowned Hereford Cathedral Choir? As well as singing in the cathedral, the choir regularly tours (South Africa last October), broadcasts on TV & radio (BBC Radio 3 in November), performs in London (Guards’ Chapel in November) and takes part in the world-famous Three Choirs Festival.

It may be your son, or equally it may be a grandson, nephew or the son of friends – sometimes a gentle nudge of the parents might be needed! If a parent or guardian would like an informal discussion about the opportunities, Geraint Bowen, the director of music, would be delighted to hear from you (01432 374238, [email protected] or visit www.herefordcathedral.org ). All choristers receive generous scholarships to the cathedral school and, in some cases, fully-funded places can be made available.

Great Great SpringSpring GardeningGardening Event Event Wednesday 24 April, 10.30am - 4.30pm Whitfield Estate, near Allensmore, Hereford HR2 9BA

Admission £7 (or £6 if booked online) > Access to gardens and grounds > Garden, home, food and gift related stalls – many specialist plant nurseries > Light refreshments available all day – special pre-booked lunches available in private area of main catering marquee > Coach parties most welcome by prior arrangement For details and a list of stallholders please phone 01432 373020 . To book advance tickets and pre-booked lunches, please visit: redcross.org/gardeningevent . 24-hour info hotline with recorded updates 0844 893 0080. (Please note that calls to this line are charged at 5p/min, calls from broadband phones and mobiles could be considerably more).

“Starting Farming” by Russell Carrington Following an inspiring time at the Oxford Real Farming Conference at the beginning of January I thought it was high time to start laying down some foundations for my own farming business. This has long been an aspiration of mine but I have felt it worthwhile to wait and gain some experience elsewhere before making the commitment. Entering into agriculture is not a decision to be taken lightly – crops and livestock come with a responsibility for care on a 24/7 basis. This can make it appear off-putting to many, plus difficulty in raising capital and the availability of land are further hurdles to getting a foot on the ladder. Also, farm business figures released by Defra last week for the financial year 2011-2012 were not exactly encouraging: the lowland livestock farming sector where most new entrants get started in the industry showed to have the lowest rates of return. However, the mixed farming sector, which we might relate to as ‘traditional farming’ showed the highest rates of return for the same year, presumably because the risks are spread and each enterprise supports the others. A mixed farm where different enterprises are integral as opposed to independent, would seem the best way to go, and I genuinely believe that many of the other hurdles can also be overcome. So it was with great enthusiasm that I took up the offer of some livestock gifted to me by a retiring farmer (yes, that’s right, a farmer actually retiring) in the form of 17 laying hens. And yes, I know it’s nothing big and sexy but it is a start and does enable me to practice the required commitment without a massive capital outlay. (To buy a cow for example would cost over a thousand pounds and it would take 2 years to rear a calf before it could be cashed in as prime beef.) Things immediately got off to an exciting start: The day before collecting the hens my sister and I traipsed through the snow to prepare an old out-building we would use to house them at night. The shed was pretty ripe with a hole in the door and some of the timber rotten. However, on opening the old door we were presented with a surprising sight – a fox looking straight back at us! He had probably been sheltering from the snow but was quite mangy and stank! We quickly shut the door and I pulled a heavy crate across to block the hole from which he had entered. I couldn’t think of any realistic way in which the soon to arrive chickens could co-exist whilst this fox was at large on the same farm. There was only one thing to do. I got my shotgun and sent him to foxy heaven. We then spent a few hours repairing the rotten floorboards and the hole in the door (and the further hole in the back of the shed created by the gun blast) until it was quite secure. The next evening we picked up the chickens from the retiring farmer. (This is purposely done in the evening so that the hens are easily gathered and with minimal stress - in affect they go to sleep on a perch in one hen-house and wake up on a perch on a new one!) All went well and the following morning we let them out to their new surroundings and found them to be quite charismatic with a definite pecking order. The same ones were always first out of the door and the first to go for food – they were quite comical to watch. Although the upheaval of moving had disturbed their laying we soon had a steady trickle of eggs which tasted amazing. The yokes were so golden – the tell-tale sign of fresh free range eggs that you’d struggle to buy in the supermarkets. …………Continued on next page …………. I should have taken heed when one night I heard a fox calling in the distance. A few days later we were presented with a most tragic scene. There were feathers everywhere, chicken heads and chicken bodies scattered amongst the hen-house, some buried under the straw bedding and some lay strewn where they fell. Everything was dead except for two very distraught chickens huddled in the corner. It was a shocking mess and there in the wired window no less than four feet off the ground was a small hole where a certain Mr Fox had forced his way in during the night. I was amazed he’d managed to climb in but equally stunned that he should have been so greedy as to kill nearly all of them. We totted up 15 heads but only 14 bodies so he had only carried one away, presumably leaving the rest buried under the straw for later. Quite what the significance of the beheading was I don’t know but he’d clearly taken great delight in it as all of their gullets and neck bones were exposed and gnawed. As for the two remaining hens they were moved to a more secure location. Russ 1, Foxes 15. Whilst pondering my next move I am saddened to read that urban foxes are causing havoc in the cities too – with another recent baby attack in which the infant lost a finger. It begs the question as to whether the demise of fox hunting has led to a population increase but does however highlight the incredible amount of food waste that people are inadvertently feeding these civic animals with – food that some of us are having a frustrating time to produce! I’m now just plucking up the courage to tell my retired farmer friend. Russ Carrington Twitter: @CiderRuss

Russ is the assistant farm manager at Caplor farm in Fownhope but still lives on the family farm in Bishopstone where he helps out when time permits.

QUIZ Wednesday 7th April at 7.30 pm in the church/community centre £5 per person to include refreshments XÇàxÜ tá t àxtÅ ÉÜ }É|Ç ÉÇx ÉÇ à{x Ç|z{àAAAAvÉÅx tÇw Ñ|à çÉâÜ ã| àá4 Tickets from Nancy Malins 01981 590601 or Claire Hancock 01981 590252

ALL WELCOME

In aid of St Andrew's Church, Bridge Sollars

Serena Crump & The Cookery Club Sue Goring

The Woodhouse Kenchester Hereford HR4 7QJ

Enquiries: Sue 01981 550280 [email protected] Serena 01981 590644 [email protected]

Sue & Serena invite you to book a place on one of their evenings of cookery demonstration with a ‘hands on approach', followed by dinner. Gain ideas of how to conjure up delicious meals to 'wow' your family and friends in the surrounds of ‘Oakwrights’ beautiful oak framed show home. Price: £32 Time: 7pm - approx 10pm Gift vouchers available Please contact us for further enquiries. Facebook page: “The Cookery Club”