MYLOR MAGAZINE - the Tremayne Hall Homepage
Transcription
MYLOR MAGAZINE - the Tremayne Hall Homepage
Your free magazine — please take one MYLOR MAGAZINE November 2014 Serving the whole community Mylor Magazine [email protected] Published by: Mylor Community Publications Group Trustees: Chris Perkins (Chairman) David Eastburn (Membership) John Symons (Parish Council) Revd Jeffrey James (secretary) Editor: Michael Jeans-Jakobsson 01326 374767 Community contact: Val Jeans-Jakobsson 01326 374767 Photography: Geoff Adams 01326 374197 Treasurer: Andy Goodman 01326 373530 Editorial Team: Judy Menage (PCC) Roger Deeming Wendy Fowler Terry Chapman Penelope Bryan Printing: Leaflet Express 01872 865744 Publication date is nominally the 1st of the month Deadline date for copy is now 10th of previous month Advertising in Mylor Magazine Rates - per issue : Colour: Full A5 page £45, Half page £25. B/W: Full page £20, Half page £12, Quarter page £8. E-mail: [email protected] for further details Cover: Farewell to Allan and Leane at the Lemon Arms. More on p12. Photograph: Michael Jeans-Jakobsson 2 Contents 4 5 6 6 8 9 12 12 13 13 13 14 14 16 Vicar’s letter Church notes Church news Chapel news Parish Council meeting Christmas Lights Lemon Arms MyloRhythm Lunch Club Christmas Fair Parish Plan Flower Club Local History Group Book Group Review 16 17 17 21 23 25 26 30 36 41 46 49 51 51 Mylor Movies Trefusis Singers Writing Competition Local History - Horses part two Local Expoits - Birds in Romania Poetry Corner - Caroline Hadley Centre Spread - Nature’s Bounty Wildwatch - Autumn On the water Farming Notes More about - Jonathan Griffin Crossword Crossword solution Cartoon Village Diary November December 1 1 3 3 10 25 26 29 29 3 7 8 13 14 15 19 24 TH 10 CM Trefusis Singers TH 7.30pm Con Piaf PH 7.15pm Parish Council OS 7.30 Flower Club - p14 OS Garden Club ‘Beekeeping’ TH Bingo after lunch club - p13 TH 7.30 Mylor Movies - p16 TH 10-4 Craft Fair - p13 TH 7.30 History Gp lecture - p14 FVC 7.15pm Parish Council TH 2.45 Trefusis Concert - p17 6pm Lights Switch-on - p9 TH 9.30 Big Coffee Morning MC 4pm Christingle service OS Garden Club ‘Isles of Scilly’ Sch Term ends MC 6pm Candlelit service Key: AS: All Saints Church, Con: concert, CL: Christmas Lights, CM: coffee morning, FVC: Flushing Vlge Club, FSM: Friends of StM, MC: Methodist Chapel, MFC: Mylor Flower Club, MGC: Mylor Garden Club, MM: Mylor Movies, MS: Mylor Sessions, MYH: Mylor Yacht Harbour, OS: Ord Statter pavilion, PF: Playing Fields, PH: Parish Hall, Sch: Mylor School, StM: St Mylor Church, TH: Tremayne Hall, TL: TDFAS lecture, Mylor Theatre, Truro College. 3 Vicar’s letter ~ Revd Jeffrey James November is for many of us a sombre month. There’s the sense captured by the early 19th century poet Thomas Hood whose poem November ends: No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease, No comfortable feel in any member-No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees, No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds, November! We who live in temperate lands live with the cycle of beginnings and endings, life and death, played out vividly in the natural world. It’s as if nature holds our gaze in autumn and denies us the luxury of disengagement from the truth of mortality. That sense is magnified for many by the yearly round of remembering those we have loved and see no longer at All Souls and on Remembrance Sunday of those whose lives were given or taken in war. If that was all that’s to be said about life, then November would be just a month to be survived, a time of getting on with things as best we can. But there’s more to be said about November than simply eking out an existence in the dark days of winter. As well as the month of shortening days, November is also the time when thankfulness moves towards hope. In the natural world, the thankfulness of harvest gives way to the early shoots of autumn-sown wheat, green signals in the fields that the Spring is to come. In our gardens, the buds of camellia point towards a burst of life that will bathe drab winter with colour. In the remembering world, there’s the sense of thankfulness for those who have gone before us in peace and in war. As we recall those who have been our guides and mentors and those whose lives were laid down in the cause of freedom, the sense of loss or absence gives way to a resolution to live lives that honour their gift of our inheritance, to live more consciously grateful lives. In the world of Christian faith, the month of remembering ends with the festival of Christ the King. We end one church year acknowledging Jesus as Lord of all that is and all that is to come, and look forward to a new church year and celebrating the story of God’s engagement in the world and our salvation. Perhaps November is not so sombre after all. 4 Parish of St Mylor: Regular Services St Mylor with All Saints, Mylor Bridge www.stmylor.org.uk 8am 10.30am 5pm Sundays Holy Communion* St Mylor Parish Eucharist St Mylor Evening Prayer* All Saints *these services use the 1662 Book of Common Prayer 10am Wednesdays Holy Communion All Saints For feast day services and other occasions, see church notice boards Enquiries about baptisms, weddings or funerals should be made to Revd Jeff James on 01326 374408 or at [email protected] The Churchwarden, Judy Menage, can be contacted on 01326 259909 or at [email protected] Friends of St Mylor Church Registered charity number 1129030 Raising Funds for St Mylor and All Saints Churches Antiques Valuation by Roger Tappin of Bonhams 7.30 pm Thursday 20 November Tremayne Hall Tickets £6 including Pasty Supper plus £1 per item to be valued (only one item per person please) Tickets available from Committee Members 01209 820357 or 01326 373128 5 Church and Chapel News Church News: Our Parochial Church Council has spent some time discussing the future of All Saints Church. We recognise that the building needs a great deal of work and expenditure to secure its use in the long term, and it needs urgent attention for mission purposes in the short term as a centre for Anglican worship. We are therefore seeking estimates for a more efficient heating system, secondary glazing and an improved lighting system. We will consider these at the November meeting of the PCC. Recently, pews have been removed and seating re-organised in an effort to improve the internal appearance of the building. It definitely looks very different. Sadly, due to very limited support, the 9 am Sunday Eucharist has been suspended indefinitely. The following services continue to be held at All Saints – Evening Prayer on Sundays at 5 pm, midweek communion on Wednesdays at 10 am. and morning prayer at 9 am. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. At the Parish Church, the last all age worship service this year will be held on Sunday 30 November at 10.30 am, preceded by Breakfast Club at Mylor Cafe at 9 am. All are welcome to join us. Judy Menage Chapel News: We held our annual Harvest Festival on 14 September, led by Revd Peter Facer and the Chapel was beautifully decorated with an abundance of flowers, fruit and vegetables. The traditional harvest hymns were sung and the young people of the Church sang for us. They chose Autumn Days, a Harvest Nursery Rhyme performed to the tune of Oranges and Lemons. Laura and Ellie sang Autumn Leaves, whilst fighting off leaves from above. Michael kindly agreed to play the organ for us at the opening of the service and he also played the piano for the collection. At the close of the service all the children helped transport the fresh goods to the Sunday School Room, where coffee was served and the auction began, led by Robert Rogers. After much banter and fun, all items were sold, raising £86.15 for the Children's Hospice South West. Many thanks to all who attended or helped in any way for this very good cause. We now look forward to our next Family Service on 19 October - more information to follow. Our plans look fairly quiet for November but we still meet regularly for services at 10.30 am and everyone is welcome to come along. Martin and the children are now meeting weekly after the summer break for music, craft and fun activities at 10.30. Vyv Curnow 6 7 Community News and Views Parish Council: The monthly meeting was held at Flushing Village Club on Monday 6 October. Details of the Section 137 Grant have been publicised and applications should have been returned by 24 October. This is a grant awarded by the Parish Council to local, non-profit making organisations, for the benefit of the community. Further details can be obtained from the Parish Clerk. The Work Party intends to clean the Cemetery gates and the new cemetery sign is being organised. The telephone boxes at Mylor Harbour and the Leats Car Park have now been painted by BT. This request by the Parish Council has taken a year to be fulfilled. Resulting from the Parish Inspection, Knotweed in the Leats Car Park is to be treated and yellow lines indicating disabled parking will be redone. Damage was noted to the stonework on the clock tower and organisations are being asked not to tie anything around or to it. There is space for a seat on Mill Quay; if anyone wishes to place one in memory of someone, please contact the Parish Clerk. Boats are being left without permission on the foreshore off Mylor Playing Field and quay. Truro Harbour Authority is being consulted. A seat on Trefusis Road, Flushing is to be repaired. The public toilets at Mylor Bridge are to start winter opening hours in November i.e. open week-ends only. This is under the auspices of Cornwall Council. Details regarding the mobile library have been placed on the Mylor Village notice board. It appears that a library van will be visiting both Flushing and Mylor, once a month, dates to be arranged by Cornwall Council. The Flood Plan continues to progress. Members of this sub-committee will be visiting residents around Mill Quay and those at risk in Flushing, to discuss flood response plans. Any one interested in being a Voluntary Flood Warden or requiring more details should phone Councillor Bridges on 01326 373830. The next meeting will be on 3 November at 7.15pm in Mylor Parish Hall. Public participation is from 7.15 - 7.30pm. Concerns/queries/comments can be emailed to [email protected], or in writing to the Clerk. Details of venue/agenda can be seen on Village Notice boards or at www.parish-council.com/mylor. We hope you will come along. Jan Robson 8 Community News and Views ~ continued Christmas Lights: Although business seemed brisk at our Table Top Sale in the Tremayne Hall on 4 October, as is the nature of such things, trade probably varied among table holders. Most however, seemed reasonably satisfied with their morning and we, the organisers were delighted to have made just over £300 from refreshments, our book stall and some very generous donations. We’re extremely grateful to everyone who supported us, and may well repeat the idea sometime in the future. We’re now into our busiest period and, with Switch-on only weeks away on 8 December, we’ll soon be looking for our trusty team to prepare and rig the display. The lights that we enjoy so much rely solely on the generous financial support of the village. Many thanks for the continued practical and financial support that keeps Mylor looking so special at Christmas. Terry Chapman Claire Freelance hair and beauty therapist Oxford trained NVQ III Professional Hair Dressing in your own home Highly qualified & experienced Please call Claire on 01326 560960 or 07899 868588 9 10 11 Community News and Views ~ continued Lemon Arms: We are sad to report that Allan and Leane are leaving the village pub at the beginning of November. They have had 19 very happy years there and their three children have grown up there. They would like to say a big ‘thank you’ to all their customers who have supported them over the years. They are going to have some time off at first, living in Comfort Road, and will review their plans in the New Year. Exact details of the timing of hand-over arrangements are not yet available, but the new licensee will be another family member Mylor-born Andrea Czunys. Her fiancé, Tony Cheeseman, will be working behind the scenes and Joanna Curnow will be cooking. Editor MyloRhythm: The MyloRhythm Ladies have had a lovely summer, full of song! Our latest venture was to sing in the Tea Garden at Enys. For the tail-end of our beautiful summer, when we have had a repertoire of ‘outdoor’ songs, it seemed a fitting place for our last gig of the season. We had an appreciative audience who enjoyed listening to and joining in with our singing. All our songs this spring and summer have been about flowers, trees, nature and the joy of living. Uplifting and happy songs to raise our spirits. The piece-de-resistance at Enys was when we sang in the hallway of the house. The acoustics were superb. With luck we will sing there again, hopefully in December. Candles, carols, mince pies and mulled wine have been mentioned! Maybe a ‘concert’ for our friends and families. Watch this space! We have grown, both as a group and in the type of songs we sing. The ladies have gained in confidence and it’s a joy to behold! We look forward to our Winter programme which will include Christmas songs & carols. MyloRhythm welcomes new singers and particularly those who think they can’t sing. Do come along to the Tremayne Hall on a Monday at 1.30pm – you will soon feel at home amongst our friendly and joyful group. Pat Hobden 12 Community News and Views ~ continued Lunch Club: Welcome back to the over-sixties Lunch Club every Tuesday at noon in the Tremayne Hall. Please do join us for a delicious home-cooked meal and light-hearted chatter - all for £2.50! New members are always welcome. As winter draws in we plan to have monthly entertainments after the meal for about half an hour. - for example, floral art and Christmas decoration demonstrations, Bingo and Beetle Drives. Libby Grubb Christmas Craft Fair: This popular annual event will be held in the Tremayne Hall from 10am - 4 pm on Saturday 29 November. Refreshments will be available all day and the usual range of jewellery, knitwear, ceramics, home accessories, textiles, basketry, stationery, plants, festive food and gifts will be on sale. Everyone is most welcome. Further details from 01326 375252 Jan Robson Flushing and Mylor Parish Plan: A big thank you to all who filled in our questionnaire. The response was terrific with 550 returned, many more than the average for this type of survey. We are now in the process of collating and analysing both your answers to the questions and your suggestions for the future of our Parish. Needless to say, this is a big job, although well worth the effort. Following that, we will carefully study the results and put together a plan based on the evidence provided. We are also conscious that we still have to consult the younger members of our community, i.e. the 12-18 year olds. This is important because they will play an important role in the Parish for many years to come. Very shortly we will print a brief survey for this age group, and hopefully we will receive a worthwhile response to be included in the final analysis. It is important that our updated Parish Plan, when published, belongs to everyone in our villages. We have made an excellent start. If you would like to contribute further regarding any issue about which you feel strongly, please contact the committee by telephone or email, details below. We are confident that a robust plan will give our community an advantage when decisions about funding for future development are made. Michael Willmore Phone: 01326 372168 Email: [email protected] 13 Local Arts and Crafts Flower Club: An EGM was held prior to the AGM in order to amend the constitution. The usual business of the AGM was transacted, though sadly without our president, Margaret Underwood. We wish her well. The annual cups were awarded: 1st: Elizabeth Doidge; 2nd: Margaret Underwood; 3rd: Ann Redgrave; and for the novices: 1st: Alvina Menary; 2nd: Jacqui Andrew; 3rd: Chris Westwood. Following the AGM, members exchanged bunches of flowers with each other and the arrangements were discussed. Next month’s meeting will be on Monday 3 November, when the demonstrator will be Caroline Crabb from Bodmin. The competition title is ‘My surprise in a box’ and the exhibition space is 2 ft. New members are always warmly welcomed. Irene Gardiner Local History Group Lecture: On 27 September we welcomed Frank Howie from the Geo-conservation Group of the Cornwall Wildlife Trust. He gave us an illustrated talk about the submerged forests around the Cornish coast. He began by telling us that 15 million years ago the relative sea level was 75 metres higher than now. Then he described how fluctuating sea levels had affected our county’s coastline through the geological periods. Maps of the coastline, including the Scilly Isles, showed dramatic changes. More landscape was gradually exposed and became covered in forests but after a long time these were eroded. The depressions that repeatedly hit Cornwall over the winter of 2013/14 have provided unique opportunities for geologists to study sections of the beaches which have not been so exposed in living memory. The stripping away of sand revealed the historically famous Mounts Bay Forest between Wherry Town and Long Rock. This was so spectacular that it received national press and television coverage. Areas of similar submerged forests were also exposed at Portreath and Daymer Bay. It was, in all, an excellent evening and good to meet up again for the first talk of the season. Our next meeting on 29 November sees a return visit of Tony Mansell, about the history of Camborne Town Band, accompanied by a musician. There will be wine and mince pies for all! Rosemary Spooner 14 Tremayne Hall and Ord Statter Pavilion offer excellent facilities for weddings, parties, meetings and other group activities. Accommodation for up to 160 people. Very competitive rates. For details, please phone 01326 372168 (TH) or 08454 744894 (OS) Conscious Parenting Course Nicky Rangecroft - Life Coach Being a parent is the most important job you will ever have. Venue Near Flushing, Falmouth For information and dates call Nicky Rangecroft 07971520391 Email: [email protected] Spanish, German and Greek language tuition offered by experienced graduate tutor. All levels taught, including GCSE, A-level and degree level exam preparation, as well as recreational classes for all age groups. Tuition is available on an hourly or daily basis. For more information please call George on 01326 375161 or email: [email protected] Translation services also available. 15 Local Arts and Crafts ~ continued Book Group Review: ‘And the Mountains Echoed’ by Khaled Hosseini. Set against the backdrop of Afghanistan, beautiful but perennially unstable, this book explores relationships, fate and heritage. Starting with the unimaginably painful giving up of a child and ending with a reunion, this book nevertheless does not deal with endings that are necessarily happy or neat and in that sense mirrors real life. Characters touch and influence the lives of others but often drift away and feature no more. The group on the whole enjoyed this book. However, there was a view that it had a somewhat random structure even to the extent of following seemingly irrelevant stories within the main story, leading to a feeling of interrupted continuity. However, the message of an inborn sense of family links and belonging to a place came through strongly. This was the second book by this author that the group had read and it was agreed that he is one of the finest writers around at the moment. Pat Willmore Mylor Movies: Our film this month is ‘The Love Punch’. Spanning locations in Paris, London and the French Riviera, the film brings together Pierce Brosnan and Emma Thompson as ex-husband and wife, Richard and Kate, whose biting banter suggests that the flames of their former relationship are not fully extinguished. Unfortunately the same cannot be said for their retirement nest egg which is wiped out when Richard's investment firm is defrauded and the pension fund siphoned away. Learning that the unscrupulous French financier behind the scheme has just purchased a $10million diamond for his bride to be, the divorced duo grudgingly agree to set aside their differences and hatch a plot to gate-crash the wedding and steal the rock. Roped in to assist in the heist are the couple's former neighbours played by Timothy Spall and Celia Imrie, who are also rooting for their reconciliation. The foursome form an unlikely band of lawbreakers in this classic comedy caper. We hope that you will join us in the Tremayne Hall on Wednesday 26 November at 7.30 pm. Jo Robertson 16 Local Arts and Crafts ~ continued Trefusis Singers: “We only have eight more rehearsals, girls, before our Christmas Concert” said Bridget Westlake, our Musical Director, “but we know we can do it, although some of the members will be away on holiday for some of the rehearsals”. We settled down to an evening of concentration and laughter. We are thoroughly enjoying the Christmas songs and carols we are practising. 0ur concert is on Sunday 7 December in the Tremayne Hall, starting at 2.45 p.m. with high tea in the interval. We will add together the takings from this concert and our Summer Concert, and then decide on which charity we support. 0nce again, by popular request, we have James Stevenson, baritone, as our guest artist. There will be a raffle and tickets are £6 at the door. We always welcome new members to join our very happy choir which meets every Tuesday evening, 7.30 pm in The Methodist School Room. Just come along or telephone me on 01326 619019. Irene Gardiner Creative Writing: Entries have started to arrive for our writing competition (see p18). The deadline is 14 December, but don’t leave it too late and get caught in the Christmas rush. If you need some inspiration come and join us at the Saturday morning sessions in the Tremayne Hall. Our next one, on 25 October, is called ‘Open the door’. Like Alice in Wonderland and the children of Narnia, we’ll be peeking behind doors, through arches and under hatches, to find out what lies behind. Keep an eye out for intriguing doorways and bring your lively imagination with you! Our final Saturday session for the year will be on 6 December with the theme of ‘Bringing the outside in’, a cosy prospect as we move into winter. Expect hedgerow berries, Christmas lights and other seasonal stimuli. All you need to bring is your pen and notebook; inspiration for memoire, poems and stories will be provided. Our Wednesday evening group is on hold for the moment, until enough people are able to attend. If you would like to join a friendly mid-week evening writing group that covers fiction, poetry and life writing, do get in touch at [email protected] or call 01326 377419. Jane Moss 17 18 19 Mylor Stores Dedicated to serving the community with a wide selection of fresh fruit and veg with freshly baked bread, pasties and pastries. Also a good range of wine, dairy and general groceries. Open seven days a week, 8am - 8 pm (Except Winter Sundays - 6.30 pm) 01326 373615 Local gardener providing a professional service 20 Local History ~ Around the village streets Last month we saw how our village blacksmith would have been kept busy shoeing the many horses that were so important to our farms. Horses were required for heavy haulage work along the roads too, with Gilbert's Farm, at Rosehill, usually supplying the horses to haul building stone from local quarries and also to unload the coal boats. Coal was delivered around the villages in smaller carts carrying a few hundredweight at a time. Our villages rang out with the clip-clopping of hooves, as local people travelled by horse, some on horseback, such as Edwin Porter shown here outside the cottages at the end of New Row, whilst others rode in horse-drawn traps or carriages, and there were even 'horse buses' operating in the Penryn area. Shops were supplied by horse and cart, and there were travelling shops, such as the horsedrawn wagon of Mr Prime of Penryn, who brought paraffin, lamp glasses, wicks and burners, soaps and much more besides. Mr William Beer, a Master Baker at Flushing, had two horses, Queenie and Bess, who pulled a trap, but when he visited the Lemon Arms each evening he rode one of the horses, since 'they could find their own way home'! But Dobbin is my favourite. She pulled Eddie Rollason's mobile butcher's shop from before WWII, stopping off for tit-bits from customers, although she was fussy about who she would accept them from. Perhaps her favourite treat was a well-buttered crust from Mrs Curnow at the Lemon Arms. During the war years rationing of meat meant Dobbin was not needed, but after the war she returned to her previous round. On her first time out she reached the Lemon Arms and steadfastly refused to move any further - until provided with her buttered crust! Tractors started to take over from farm horses from the 1920's, while increasingly vans and lorries delivered supplies to the shops, and we took to driving cars. The smithy has closed down, and with it an age when 'man's first servant' was also part of our community. Margaret Whysall Mylor Local History Group The Archive Centre in the Tremayne Hall is open during Thursday afternoons. Do call in and have tea with us. Maybe you have something old to show us? You can also find us on www.tremaynehall.org Jill Quilliam 01326 376403 21 Waterings Boatyard Mylor Creek Builders of traditional craft in GRP Rigging and General boat repairs Sam Heard Boat Builder Tel: 07977 239341 Email: [email protected] Tosher 20 How about trying one or more of our specialist treatments: Facials, Spray Tanning, Waxing, Manicure, Pedicure, Hypnotherapy Gift vouchers available Experienced therapist - established 1996 21 Lemon Hill 01326 375476 www.cinnabarbeauty.co.uk 22 Local Exploits - Birdwatching in Romania I went on a fascinating birdwatching holiday in September to Romania’s Danube Delta and the Black Sea – an internationally important corridor for birds migrating from as far off as the Russian Arctic to the Nile Delta. We saw 184 different species of bird, including hundreds of White Pelicans, both in flight and at rest, many spoonbills, Booted Eagles, Lesser Spotted Eagles, colourful Rollers and Bee-Eaters, warblers, thousands of waders and 6 different kinds of woodpecker. The vast rolling plains had blue chicory, purple loosestrife and pink mallow flowering profusely. It must be a picture in the Spring when all the wild flowers would be a their best. Migrating Cardinal, Silver Washed Fritillary and Great Banded Grayling were the largest wild butterflies I have ever seen. The cultivated areas were a patchwork of strip farming – maize, sunflowers, and vineyards, contrasted with the rich dark soil. Rural houses, built for the equivalent of £8,000, had plots of maize, peppers, cabbages, fruit trees, roses and Morning Glory and many had haystacks, woodpiles and corncob mounds. Horses pulling wooden carts, itinerant shepherds, goat- and cow-herds, with their charges, roamed the uncultivated plains, completing the medieval picture. We were amused by an altercation between a cow-herd and shepherd over watering rights at a lake where the cows were seeing off the sheep. None of us understood the words, but the gestures were international! The Danube Delta, a UNESCO World Heritage site, includes 156 hectares of reed marsh – one of the largest in the world. Staying on a boat hotel, we set off daily in small boats, exploring reed-fringed waterways harbouring a wealth of wildlife including Golden Jackal, Kingfishers and Squacco Herons. Chinese Carp – fish farm escapees – thrive in the Delta. They jump high and one leapt right into our boat where it was promptly dispatched and given to a delighted local fisherman. Staying in such an untamed area was a joy and a privilege. Gerard Manley Hopkins said:“O let them be left, the wildness and wet; Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet.” Joanna Garton 23 CREEKSIDE COTTAGES NR FALMOUTH, CORNWALL Situated by the wooded creeks around the Fal Estuary and Carrick Roads, we offer a fine collection of individual waters-edge, rural and village cottages sleeping from 2 – 10 persons. Whatever the time of year, there is always something happening that makes Cornwall special; perfect for family and friends Cottages available throughout the year: open fires, dogs welcome. It’s time to relax! Telephone: 01326 375972 www.creeksidecottages.co.uk 24 Poetry Corner ~ On Remembrance We grow here for the soldiers who have lost their lives in wars, Some people pass us daily and think of us no more. The wind it blows our heads down, the sergeant shouts “Look out”. Some soldiers hit by angry fire; What is it all about? We grow here for the soldiers, our petals show the blood Of men who died in battle and lay here in the mud. Now some wars still continue, soldiers die for us each day, The poppy’s our reminder; they must not fade away. The poppy grows here daily, why cannot people see That fighting’s not the answer to peace for you and me. Caroline Hadley 25 Nature’s Bounty Can you name them all? Photographs by Geoff Adams 01326 373530 28 September Boat Shows Cockwells Modern and Classic Boatbuilding exhibited at both the Southampton and Monaco Boat Shows during September. We were very excited to unveil the first Cockwells 33ft gentleman’s launch, Impulsive (pictured above). Only the finest materials have been used in the build of this latest addition to our range of custom launches. New Marketing Co-ordinator We have gained a new team member! Alice Préat has just joined us and is looking forward to meeting you. She joins us from Pendennis Shipyard where she was part of the marketing team. She has a degree in journalism and Communications and she speaks four languages! To book an appointment, contact us as shown above. 29 Wildwatch ~ Dorrit Smith It’s hibernation time, folks! We all tend to use this word for hunkering down, lighting a fire and feeling cosy. But what does the word really mean? To start with, it is derived from the Latin hibernare - to spend the winter. Contrary to popular opinion it does not necessarily mean falling into a deep sleep and not waking till warmed by rays of spring sunshine. The biological understanding of it has changed over the years and it is no longer seen as having to be a long ‘sleep’ during which an animal remains in suspended animation. In some animals it is a transitory state punctuated by periods of arousal when the body comes out of ‘sleep’ and metabolic processes resume at normal rates (an example is the squirrel). For these types of animals, although you should avoid ‘waking’ them, it will not necessarily cause any lasting trauma. For others, however, it could be fatal, so just avoid disturbance and let natural rhythms take their course. Hibernation is a response to a variety of events, particularly reducing daylength, lack of food, falling temperatures and so on. Heart and breathing rates slow, blood supply is restricted, the core temperature falls and nonessential organs may shut down. All this conserves energy use to keep essential services working. A significant number of creatures in Britain hibernate for long periods. Well known examples are dormice, frogs, toads, lizards and snakes. Others may take shorter periods of rest in very cold weather, such as squirrels, badgers, bats, hedgehogs, flies, butterflies (which also overwinter as pupae) and bees. Perhaps the most iconic hibernator of all is the dormouse. Its name comes from the French dormir, to sleep. It can spend over half the year dormant. Its chubby build, bright golden-brown colour with creamy-white underparts, large, prominent, shiny, black eyes, small, rounded ears and fluffy tail make it one of our best loved mammal and yet it is nocturnal, shy and rarely seen. It was made famous in the Mad Hatter’s tea party in Alice in Wonderland. Around 100 years ago it was plentiful but today it is on the endangered list because we no longer manage our woodlands and hedgerows in ways that help it to survive. Machines just don’t notice hibernating dormice or their nests in the same way as a person would do and coppicing has almost become a thing of the past. A final word as you contemplate enjoying bonfires on 5 November; beware of hibernating hedgehogs in the woodpiles and scrub which you might use for your fire - they may end up roasted alive! 30 Louise Clearances HELLO BLINDS Nancorras, Herniss Cornwall TR10 9DU Tel: 07779 517749 BRIGHTEN THE WINTER BLUES TOP QUALITY AND STYLE SHUTTERS, WOODEN AND ALUMINIUM VENETIAN, ROLLER & VERTICAL BLINDS VELUX & CONSERVATORY SPECIALIST FULL OR PART HOUSE/GARAGE CLEARANCES Household, Furniture, Bric-a-Brac, Ornaments, Good Quality Clothing & Footwear. Turn your unwanted gold or silver into CASH! Commission Sales considered Phone for a free, no obligation, no gimmick survey 01872 870687 LOCAL ESTABLISHED FAMILY BUSINESS 18 Lemon Street, Truro TR1 2LZ Tel: 01872 274760 Email: [email protected] Web: www.sarahnewton.org.uk Facebook: Sarah Newton MP Twitter: @SarahNewtonMP 31 32 33 34 the stove doctors Wood burning & multi-fuel stoves installed NOW is the time to have your wood-burning stove serviced & chimney swept! Problems resolved: Full service includes: Birds’ nests Sweeping chimney Smoky fires Repainting stove Missing cowls Cleaning glass Leaking flues Replacing rope seal Tired stoves Certificate of Annual Maintenance Help your wood-burning stove burn more efficiently. Book your annual maintenance and repair treatment for trouble-free warmth this winter. Call George on 07815 741240 Email: [email protected] GET THE BEST RESULTS from LEVICK AND JENKIN WINDOWS (High quality uPVC windows, doors, conservatories & porches) Expertly fitted Fully guaranteed Internally beaded A energy rated For a free, no obligation quote, contact: DAVID JENKIN (01326) 377582 35 On the Water ~ Peter Stephens The end of British Summer Time heralds another hectic period of activity at all the local boat yards as moorings are vacated and the yards fill up with all manner of craft being winterized. While lists for maintenance on rigs, engines and hulls are scheduled, the activity on the water continues despite shorter daylight hours and Kenny Dunstan (Mylor Marine Maintenance) has been working his magic with the removal, seemingly over-night, of the abundance of seasonal moorings. It also announces the arrival of the Oyster season. Rain or shine and in winds fair or foul the waters off Mylor sees the traditional working boats under sail or powered by oars dredging for their winter catch. They are not the only activity taking place on the water as gig clubs like Flushing and Mylor still row regularly and also put in the foundations that begin the training regimes to hopefully take them to top placings at the World Championships next May in Scilly. A new addition getting afloat, off Windsport and Restronguet Sailing Club during the week, are the outdoor education students. Each year we see an influx of candidates looking to gain experience and create a long term career in the Marine Industry. They are regularly making best use of the beach and facilities to gain the knowledge and skills in Dinghy sailing and windsurfing to attain RYA instructor qualifications. The Frostbite series at Restronguet on Sundays is well under way and continues well into December with good dinghy racing followed by the welcome steaming cup of tea from the galley afterwards and analysis of the afternoon racing! 36 STEPHEN ANDREW PAINTING & DECORATING SERVICE GENERAL HANDYMAN GOOD RATES RELIABLE. NO JOB TOO SMALL The Top Flat 22, Lemon Hill, Mylor Bridge Tel:- 01326-375903 Mobile:- 07796590570 FOR A FRIENDLY AND LOCAL SERVICE 37 Care in your Home Mylor Electrician Jane Wearne Personal Carer Part time Electrician available for small jobs Fault finding - Repair Replacement Emergency callout Landlord certificates NVQ2 Qualified Reliable Trustworthy - CRB References available Telephone 07866 063299 Nathan Hume 07910 571848 [email protected] Adam Drouet DPodM MChS BA (Hons) Health and Care Professions www.fasttrackfabrics.co.uk Council registered Made to Measure Curtains and Blinds PODIATRIST / CHIROPODIST Treatment and advice for all foot conditions Hand Stitched Roman Blinds Hand Sewn Curtains Cushions and Soft Furnishings Fabrics and Linings Contract & Fire Retardant Fabrics 23 Penhalls Way, Playing Place, Truro TR3 6EX EASY PARKING and level access And 3 Lemon Villas, Strangways Terrace, Truro TR1 2NX Call Pam for consultation 01326 377924 or 07831830120 or email [email protected] Home Visits Truro and Falmouth Areas 38 39 SCRAP METAL DEALER & SKIP HIRE FULLY LICENSED WASTE TRANSFER STATION OPEN FOR TRADE WASTE 01326 373345 4, 6 & 8 YARD SKIPS AVAILABLE FOR SCRAP AND WASTE OPEN MON-FRI 8:00AM-5:00pm SATURDAY 8:30am-4:00Ppm TRANSFER STATION MON-FERI 8:00am-5:00pm SATURDAY 8:30AM-1:00pm Mel Brooks Plumbing and Heating Building maintenance Wood burners and solid fuel Fires servicing and installation Chimney sweeping All kinds of work undertaken Trewardrea Bonython Close Mylor Bridge tel: 07803 429817 or 01326 619168 40 Oil Boilers and AGAs Servicing, repairs and installation. Get ready for winter Farming Notes ~ Matthew Dale Deep breath, and relax. Ah! At last the pressure is off for the first time since July when we started harvest. It is not all go, go, go for all that time, but it is hard to totally relax until the crops are in the shed and the autumn planting has been done. It is also easier to relax knowing that the seed was sown into good seedbeds. The soil was so warm from the sunny September that it germinated and emerged from the soil almost as we watched it. The neat rows of pale green plants are looking strong so now the main task will be to keep the slugs from munching them off. With the essential fieldwork done for now, our attention turns to maintenance and upgrading. Our self-propelled sprayer needs some TLC for a start. Nothing major, just servicing. Our big roller doors on the grain-store sheds also need looking at with sensor switches and door runners not working quite right. The main jobs outside will be fencing for the cattle, chopping fallen trees and lopping low overhanging branches that bash the tractor cabs and the combine harvester. We have a post thumper that fits to the front of the loader that will do the hard work for us with the fencing - a 300kg weight on a vertical slider makes short work of putting a six foot long post into the ground. In fact, it will thump an 8 inch thick gatepost into the soil. It doesn’t half make life a lot easier when you can use hydraulics rather than ‘handraulics’. The fallen trees are a great source of firewood and a very green form of heating. The carbon dioxide released when a tree is burned is just the amount that it absorbed during its lifetime. It is also a very comforting source of heat, almost primal in the way that fire holds your gaze. Firewood is a very efficient form of heating as you get warmth three times over from it. Once with the exertion of sawing it up, once with the effort of splitting it and finally when you burn it. Turning on the central heating is never so involved. 41 42 43 ‘One Man Went to Mow’ Gardening Services “If you need a hand to keep the garden looking good then I can help” Call David on 07966 033950 REDUNDANT BUILDINGS WANTED TO PURCHASE Within 15 miles of Mylor We have been successfully revitalising all sorts of structures for 40 years through sympathetic restoration and conversion Ring Chris Perkins in confidence on 01326 378742 or write/email to: Porloe, Mylor, Falmouth, TR11 5UD Email [email protected] 44 45 More about ~ Jonathan Griffin Among the many remarkable people who live in our village, there can be few who are more charismatic than Jonathan. Tall, engaging and articulate, he strides along as though there is simply not enough time for him to do all the tasks he sets himself. Born in Melton Mowbray, the son of an independent schoolmaster, he went to Sherborne School and then studied Physics at Durham University. His first job was in the buying department of Boots but, after six years, he heard the call of the leisure industry and joined a yacht charter company that became Sunsail. A succession of increasingly important jobs including Commercial Manager at Whipsnade Zoo, Marketing Director at English Heritage and heading a government task force on ‘Britain Abroad’ led to him being appointed as director of the National Maritime Museum, Cornwall in Falmouth in 2003, its first year of operation. The impetus behind the museum was a combination of the need to expand the small maritime museum already in Falmouth and the wish of the Greenwich Museum to find a home for all the small boats they had accumulated and had no room to display. The new building became part of a regeneration scheme for the land between the docks and the town supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund. Initially, it was not universally popular and Jonathan had to work hard to engage people from all parts of the waterfront. It housed the Cornwall Collection and formed a catalyst for many events. A particular project was an active boatbuilding area with the valuable support of enthusiast Ralph Bird. Using a host of local volunteers to encourage local interest and participation, the museum became the focus for such varied activities as Ellen MacArthur’s return, the Tall Ships, the Oyster Festival and a host of school visits. This was nicely rounded off, as Jonathan approached retirement at the end of September, with the Daily Telegraph award for the most familyfriendly museum in Britain. A fitting reward for eleven years of hard and inspirational work, supported by his wife Kate who, as a teacher, has always encouraged him to place children at the centre of the museum’s appeal. Retirement will probably involve “sailing, heritage and grandchildren not necessarily in that order!” Michael Jeans-Jakobsson 46 Mylor Bridge 01326 373713 We have a fine selection of locally sourced Quality Meats, Free Range Poultry, Hand made Sausages, Pasties 47 48 Answers inside back cover Crossword Across Across (continued) 1 &20 Down 'Lord of all ___ , Lord of all ___ , whose trust, ever child-like, no cares could destroy’ (11,3) 9 Moses' question to a fighting Hebrew labourer: 'Why are you ___ your fellow Hebrew?' (Exodus 2:13) (7) 10 Acclaimed cellist who contracted multiple sclerosis at the height of her fame, Jacqueline ___ (2,3) 11 'At even ___ the sun was set, the sick, O Lord, around thee lay' (3) 13 A descendant of Gad (Numbers 26:16) (4) 16 'Do not leave Jerusalem, but ___ for the gift my Father promised' (Acts 1:4) (4) 17 Clambers (Jeremiah 48:44) (6) 18 Peter's response to questioning by the Sanhedrin: 'We must ___ God rather than men!' (Acts 5:29) (4) 20 Christian paraplegic author, artist and campaigner, ___ Eareckson Tada (4) 21 Bird partial to the nests of other birds (6) 22 'Such large crowds gathered round him that he got into a boat and sat __ __ ' (Matthew 13:2) (2,2) 23 Infectious tropical disease (4) 25 Tree (3) 28 'No fear of me should ___ you, nor should my hand be heavy upon you' (Job 33:7) (5) 29 For example, to Titus, Timothy or Philemon (7) 30 Week beginning with Pentecost Sunday, according to the Church's calendar (11) Down 2 'O Jerusalem… how ___ I have longed to gather your children together' (Matthew 23:37) (5) 3 Way out (4) 4 Exhort (Romans 12:1) (4) 5 Done (anag.) (4) 6 Highest of the four voice-parts in a choir (7) 7 Concerning the study of God (11) 8 Uniquely, it has Abbey, Cathedral and Chapel (11) 12 Admonish (Matthew 16:22) (6) 14 Frozen (3) 15 Established form of religious ceremony (6) 19 Inscription often found on gravestones (7) 20 See 1 Across 24 Behaved (Joshua 7:1) (5) 25 Time (anag.) (4) 26 Lists choice of meals (4) 27 'For the wages of sin is death, but the ___ of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord' (Romans 6:23) (4) 49 50 Across: 1, Hopefulness. 9, Hitting. 10, du Pre. 11, Ere. 13, Ozni.16. Wait. 17, Climbs. 18, Obey. 20, Joni. 21, Cuckoo. 22, In it. 23,Yaws. 25, Elm. 28, Alarm. 29, Epistle. 30, Whitsuntide. Down: 2, Often. 3, Exit. 4, Urge. 5, Node. 6, Soprano. 7, Theological. 8, Westminster. 12, Rebuke. 14, Icy. 15, Ritual. 19, Epitaph. 20, Joy. 24, Acted. 25, Emit. 26, Menu. 27, Gift. “Oh! We’re very progressive in the 1st Mylor Scouts, sir. We can take cash, cheque or card, and can even set up a monthly direct debit, if you wish.” www.richardgreenillustration.co.uk Crossword Solution New Neighbours? If somebody has moved in near you recently, how about dropping a copy of the magazine through their letterbox by way of an introduction and welcome to the village? New Ideas? If you have an idea that you think might be of general interest, why not submit it. Don’t be shy. If you’re not sure how to go about it, contact us and we can help you put your idea into print and share it with the rest of the community. Contributions can be made in text, Microsoft Word, rich text files (rtf) or jpg attachments—or even on paper ! All Contributions and Advertising to: [email protected] or 01326 374767 Available from: Mylor Stores, Newsagent, Post Office, St Mylor Church, All Saints Church, the Methodist Chapel, Lemon Arms, Hair Design and Cafe Mylor at the harbour. Also available online in full colour at: www.tremaynehall.org then click on ‘magazine’ in menu Printing and Binding: Leaflet Express (see advert on p39) 51
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