January 2008 - West Peckham Parish Council
Transcription
January 2008 - West Peckham Parish Council
MEREWORTH & WEST PECKHAM RECORD THE UNVEILING OF THE NEW FOUR PARISH BOUNDARY STONE January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record Editor: Mark Simpson Black Lion House, 79 The Street, Mereworth, Kent ME18 5LZ tel: 01622 812528 e-mail: [email protected] December 2007 Number 232 COVER PICTURE: THE UNVEILING OF THE NEW FOUR PARISH BOUNDARY STONE (pp 22-25) (See also pictures 1 - 3 on page 25 and picture 4 on right) VACANCY FOR NEW PARISH MAGAZINE EDITOR When I volunteered to take over from Mark Siggers as Editor of this Parish Magazine I stated that I was not sufficiently computer-literate to do the job, and I have found out that this is the truth. I am prepared to carry on as far as the December 2008 issue, but no further. If anyone is interested in taking Ed. over, I will be glad to hand over. 4. The new Boundary Stone, WP and M faces in view: canine ceremonial. Advertising Copy date Articles, information and advertisements for publication in the Full rates 1 month Full page £16. Half page £10. Quarter page: £ 6. 3 months £42. £25. £15. February 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record *Discounts for 6 or 12 month bookings must reach the Editor before: Local charities (per entry) Full page £10 Half page £5 Quarter page No charge. 12 NOON, SATURDAY 19 JANUARY 2008 Note: All cheques in payment for advertising, or in payment of voluntary ‘subscriptions’, should be made payable to ‘M & WP Record’ and sent, in advance, to Mike Darbyshire at ‘Libbits’, 239 Seven Mile Lane, Mereworth, ME18 5NE (tel: 01622 812797 e-mail: [email protected]) All material for publication, and criticism (preferably constructive), should be addressed to the Editor, Mark Simpson (contact details above). CIRCULATION 750 COPIES January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 2 Letters to the Editor I had six cars behind me and the nearest passing place behind me was about fifty metres away. So I reversed her car for her, and advised her to go and practice reversing. Two days later the same thing happened again at the same place. This time it was a Citroen C4. The woman driver refused to reverse four metres, so I volunteered to do it for her. She told me that I should reverse as I had a smaller car, that I was ignorant, and that I hadn’t got as licence to drive her car. Now, with a few cars behind me, she had no alternative but to let me reverse her car, with three screaming children, into the layby. I also advised her to go for a driving refresher course and practice reversing. Yours etc., MAT (name and address supplied). FARMERS’ DIARY Sir, Harry Wooldridge asked (page 17 December 2007 Record) whether a Farmers’ Diary would be of interest in The Record. I think it would, and I would like to read it. Yours etc., Andy Gibb [email protected] REVERSING Sir, A big thank you to Sarah Pascoe for writing in (December Record) about drivers who can not reverse their cars in narrow lanes. I myself have experienced this problem in Beech Road twice this month. I was driving slowly and came head-to-head with a ‘P’ reg. Mitsubishi. The driver would not reverse to a passing place only four metres back - she said she couldn’t. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. GREAT TRUTHS THAT LITTLE CHILDREN HAVE LEARNED No matter how hard you try, you can’t baptise cats. When your mother is mad at your father, don’t let her brush your hair. If your sister hits you, don’t hit her back: they always catch the second person. Never ask your 3-year-old brother to hold a tomato. You can’t trust dogs to watch your food. Don’t sneeze when someone is cutting your hair. Never hold a dust-buster and a cat at the same time. You can’t hide a piece of broccoli in a glass of milk. Don’t wear polka-dot underwear with white shorts. 10. The best place to be when you’re sad is Grandpa’s lap. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. GREAT TRUTHS THAT ADULTS HAVE LEARNED Raising teenagers is like nailing jelly to a tree. Wrinkles don’t hurt. Families are like fudge: mostly sweet, with a few nuts. Today’s mighty oak is just yesterday’s nut that held its ground. Laughing is good exercise: it’s like jogging on the inside. Middle age is when you choose your cereal for the fibre, not the toy. HAPPY NEW YEAR 3 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 4 From the Rectory “Happy New Year” to everyone. However, if this was 1750 instead of 2008, I would not be wishing this until three months hence. In England, up to 1751, the year began on March 25th which, generally, was near Easter or Passover. And, being the Feast of the Annunciation, it was more appropriate for a new beginning. Be that as it may, January 1st sees the start of another new year, with its fresh hopes and expectations allied to old fears and disappointments. In Christian terms, every day of every year is a new beginning, and each day brings an opportunity to put right old wrongs, to try and heal old hurts (real or imagined), to cast aside negative feelings, and to embark upon a more positive course. And sometimes this is just not easy, or seems impossible, particularly as problems seem to come in cascades. But if the Christian faith is anything it is a faith based on hope, as St Peter writes to a troubled people: “But, after you have suffered for a little while, the God of all Grace who calls you to share His eternal glory in common with Christ will Himself perfect you and give you firmness, strength, and a sure foundation.” (1 Peter 5: 10 - Good News Bible). As people of hope, we can live in expectation of better things to come, so it is that we can face with confidence whatever the new year may bring. “The word ‘hope’ I take for “faith”; and, indeed, hope is nothing else but the constancy of faith.” - John Calvin Fr Noel CHURCH DIARY FOR JANUARY 2007 Sunday, 6th January EPIPHANY SUNDAY 8.00 am Holy Communion in West Peckham Church. 10.00 am Matins/ Holy Communion in Mereworth Church. Sunday, 13th January 9.00 am 10.00 am 11.15 am Holy Communion in Mereworth Church. Family Service in Mereworth Church. Family Service and Holy Communion in West Peckham Church. Sunday, 20th January 8.00 am 10.00 am Holy Communion in West Peckham Church. Holy Communion in Mereworth Church. Sunday, 27th January 9.00 am 10.00 am 11.15 am Holy Communion in Mereworth Church. Holy Communion in Mereworth Church. Holy Communion in West Peckham Church. 5 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 THE NEW PARISH WEBSITES Both West Peckham Parish Council and Mereworth Parish Council have now set up Parish Websites which are still being developed. The Mereworth Parish Council Website is: www.mereworthpc.kentparishes.gov.uk and the West Peckham Parish Council Website is: www.westpeckhampc.kentparishes.gov.uk The West Peckham website has posted an excellent video on ‘The Unveiling of the New Four Parish Boundary Stone’ (see pp 20-23) and another video showing ‘St Dunstan’s Church decked out for Christmas’. PART TIME FOOTCARE NURSE NEEDED to work at AGE CONCERN MALLING Training available. Must be RGN/SEN/NVQL4 trained to apply. Contact: 01732 848008 GBS FLOORING Supply and fit carpets, vinyls, screeding and adaptations Samples brought to your home All measuring carried out Free quotes, no obligation - competitive rates 18 years’ experience Professional fitting service guaranteed George Saddington: 01622 726613 / 07958 237919 [email protected] January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 6 POST OFFICE CLOSURES AND THE KCC’S CAMPAIGN TO PROTECT KENT’S POST OFFICES T he Post Office is losing a lot of public money and has been ordered by the Government to reduce its subsidies. However, perhaps because of Union pressure, the Post Office (and the Government) are reluctant to close or restructure the ‘Crown’ (i.e. directly owned and managed) Post Offices which lose of the money. For more admirable reasons they are also not proposing to close Post Offices in very sparsely populated rural communities where residents would then have to travel many miles to another Post Office. The axe has therefore fallen on franchised suburban Post Offices in places like Tonbridge, and on Post Offices in villages where there are other Post Offices within three miles, despite the fact that these Post Offices are popular and may even be profitable (certainly they are not the ones losing most of the money). Kent County Council (KCC) has vigorously opposed this whole process for several reasons: 1. It is entirely the Government’s own fault that many Post Offices lose money: they withdraw pension, benefit, vehicle licence, and other valuable business from them without thought for the consequences. 2. The closures are being carried out without real thought to the social consequences for the communities which lose their Post Offices. Many Post Offices are now the only retail outlet in their community. If the Post Office is withdrawn, the community (village or part of a town) may lose its last shop. The Consultation Process has been a farce right from the beginning. The six-week consultation period was too short, it was further reduced by postal strikes, and they then gave themselves just three weeks to review and evaluate the information supplied to them. We know that well over 5,000 people sent evidence and responses to Post Offices, and I don’t believe that three weeks gave them enough time to digest properly and take on board that data. The fact that only two Post Office branches have been reprieved suggests to me that they haven’t looked at the evidence properly, if at all. The situation now (December 2007) is that two Post Office branches are saved from closure out of a list of 58, but two additional branches have now been put at risk. As KCC Lead Member for Regeneration, I have been closely involved with the campaign to defend Kent Post Offices. We are now looking at other, more formal options for opposing this destructive process. If you would like to support Kent Post Offices, please: a) use your local Post Office; and b) Write to Gary Herbert, Post Office ‘Network Change Manager’, and let him know your views. Richard Long KCC Member for Malling Rural East and KCC Lead Member for Regeneration. E-mail: [email protected] [POST OFFICE LTD, (Tel: 08457 223344) or FREEPOST CONSULTATION TEAM] 3. 7 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 John D Andersen & Associates Your local professional craftsmen for all types if carpentry and building work including kitchen and bathroom installations. Local references happily provided. Our satisfied customers are the best advertisement for the quality of our work. For professional services and a free, friendly and competitive quote, call: 01622 812084 or 07904 060880 Living and working in the community, we promise a professional, quality job at an affordable price. PAINTING & DECORATING ADAM RUSTRICK Plumbing and Heating Engineer ALL YEAR ROUND INCLUDING WALLPAPERING AND OUTSIDE WORK ● Corgi registered. ● All works undertaken. ● Professional and reliable. MANY YEARS’ EXPERIENCE REFERENCES AVAILABLE ESTIMATES FREE Call for a free quote and advice: Tel: 01732 848654 Home: 01622 815433 Mobile: 07850 395042 (answering service) January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 8 MEREWORTH PARISH COUNCIL Chairman: Tessa Wells Vice-Chairman: Dennis Styles Members: Nancy Olden, Jon Regan, Stephen Reynolds, Mike Setford, Peta Tiptaft Please address all correspondence to: Mrs Gillian Kirby, Clerk to the Mereworth Parish Council, 31 Cottenham Close, East Malling ME19 6BY (tel: 01732 846192 e-mail: [email protected]) Planning Committee and Parish Council Meetings are held in Mereworth Village Hall at 7.30 pm on the fourth Tuesday of every month, and additional Planning Committee Meetings are held at 7.30 pm on the second Tuesday of every month. The Council would like to remind residents that all meetings are open to the public. NOTES FROM THE MINUTES OF THE PARISH COUNCIL (PC) MEETING HELD ON 27 NOVEMBER 2007 (subject to ratification at the next Meeting) Following the Planning Committee Meeting , the full PC met on 27 November 2007 with Tessa Wells in the Chair. The following matters were discussed: DEATH OF MRS VAL EXLEY The PC expressed its condolences on hearing of the death of Mrs Val Exley who for many years had played an active part in village affairs. The Chairman would write to her family. COMMUNITY POLICING Police Constable Andy Sargent reported that seven crimes had been committed in the village during the previous month: theft, burglary, criminal damage, and the taking of lead from the church roof. The Police and the Parish Council hope that everyone will remain vigilant and report any suspicious activity. PC Sargent was still monitoring the parking situation outside Mereworth School. He and a Parking Warden would visit the site again shortly. Consideration was being given to holding a Police surgery at Mereworth’s Airfield Estate. BUS SHELTER IN THE STREET The PC were pleased to have received confirmation that a grant had been secured from the Borough Council towards the provision of a Bus Shelter in The Street. It was hoped plans would be formalised shortly so that the shelter would be of benefit to residents during the winter months. RECREATION GROUND PAVILION Plans were being considered in conjunction with Mereworth Village Hall committee, to repair the security lighting outside the Pavilion in the Recreation Ground. SPEED WATCH It was agreed that two “SPEED WATCH AREA” signs would be purchased and placed at either end of The Street. SpeedWatch sessions continue on a regular basis, and vehicles speeding through the village have been reported to the Police. More volunteers are required to give just a couple of hours a month to help run this scheme. AUDIT Audits of the PC’s books had been satisfactorily concluded, and the recommendations made would be acted upon. A Notice of Completion for the 2006 Audit can be seen on the Village Hall Notice Board. The Parish Precept for 2008/2009 would be debated at the December meeting. Application forms had been sent to the Land Registry to allow the Recreation Ground to be registered. 9 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 BEECH ROAD: OVERSIZE VEHICLES All measures to ease the problem of Heavy Goods Vehicles using Beech Road are being explored urgently. ALLOTMENTS Allotments are still available. Anyone interested should contact our Clerk. FREE TREES Borough Councillor Janet Sergison informed the PC that free trees were available under a Kent County Council scheme. It was agreed that some should be applied for, to plant near the Children’s Play Area in the Recreation Ground. BOUNDARY STONE It was agreed that Mereworth PC would be represented at the unveiling of a replacement four parish Boundary Stone in Hurst Woods. PARISH WEBSITE The PC thanked the Clerk for setting up a PC website: www.mereworthpc.kentparishes.gov.uk NOTES FROM THE MINUTES OF THE PARISH COUNCIL (PC) MEETING HELD ON 18 DECEMBER 2007 (subject to ratification at the next Meeting) The following Planning Applications were discussed when the Planning Committee met on 18 December 2007: 1. Stable Block on land east of Horns Lane - no objection; 2. Change of Planning Condition for Composting Plant at Blaise Farm Quarry - no objection on the basis of no increase in lorry movements and no vehicles passing through the village; and 3. Demolition of Farm House and new development on land in Bull Lane - opposed with the suggestion that the applicant might retain the present building with suitable extensions and refurbishment. Following this meeting the full PC met with Tessa Wells in the Chair, and the following were amongst the matters discussed: CRIME Three crimes in the village had been reported to the Police in the past month. PARKING AT THE SCHOOL Parking at the school was still being monitored by the Police, and it was hoped that further visits would be made by both Police and Parking Attendants. GRANT TO BOROUGH COUNCIL Borough Councillor (B Cllr) Jill Anderson January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record reported that the Government grant to the Borough Council for the next three years was very small and this was causing concern as budgets were being prepared. BUS PASSES B Cllr Jill Anderson gave further details on the new bus passes which would be issued in 2008 and would allow pensioners to travel longer distances. TMBC STANDARDS COMMITTEE It was agreed that the Parish Council would be represented on the Tonbridge & Malling Borough Council (TMBC) Standards Committee. FINANCIAL MATTERS It was agreed that an increase of £500 would be made to the Parish Precept for 2008 - 2009 to cover increased costs of services. Small donations had been made on behalf of the village to Age Concern Malling and to Victim Support Kent. A grant application had been accepted for consideration by TMBC to help with work on the Recreation Ground Pavilion. Ground maintenance contracts for work to be carried out by Kent Landscape Services would be passed subject to there not being an increase exceeding 5% on current financial year [continued on page 13] 10 prices. NEW BUS SHELTER IN ‘THE STREET’ The PC had received a report from Kent Highways that certain rules and regulations stipulated that more work was required on the site for the proposed new bus shelter in ‘The Street’ opposite Black Lion House, and this would also mean entering into negotiations with landowners. It was agreed that the PC would go ahead with this matter as quickly as it could. PROBLEMS WITH LARGE VEHICLES A report was made on the ongoing problem of heavy vehicles using Beech Road and wide lorries using Butcher’s Lane and Willow Wents. The PC were pleased to learn that Kent Highways had published an official notice for a Traffic Regulation Order for vehicle weight restrictions in the village. CHILDREN’S PLAY AREA It was agreed that remedial work on the Children’s Play Area, mainly on the safety surface surrounding the swings and infant rides, would go ahead. ALLOTMENTS Allotments are still available, and anyone interested should contact the Clerk. It was agreed that broken boundary markers on the allotments would be replaced. DAMAGE TO RECREATION GROUND The PC were concerned that, although clubs had been asked not to use the ground when it was water-logged, a match had been played and serious damage had been done. It was agreed that a new Hire Agreement would be drawn up and would include a clause stating that any further such incidents would result in action being taken against the parties involved. In the meantime, no games would be played on the ground until a report had been received from Kent Landscape Services and necessary remedial work had been carried out. Kent Landscape Services would also be asked to look at heavy tractor wheel marks left in the Recreation Ground after hedge-cutting. A number of trees had been obtained free of charge, and would be planted in the Recreation Ground in due course. LEYBOURNE GRANGE RIDING CENTRE FOR THE DISABLED The PC agreed to support the Leybourne Grange Riding Centre for the Disabled (Birling Road, West Malling) in their efforts to stop some of the land they use being taken for development purposes. Dennis Styles Parish Councillor Another successful year of fund-raising (House-to-House Collection in April 2007, House Boxes in October 2007, the Annual Supper and profits from Christmas Cards, and the Christingle Service, in December 2007) raising a grand total of £2,186. The Children’s Society helps over 50,000 families a year, and this money will help support vulnerable youngsters including runaways, the homeless, refugees, and the disabled. Thank you for your support. Claire Simpson Parish Coordinator 01622 812528 11 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 MAIDSTONE ‘CATS PROTECTION’ CLEANING & IRONING SERVICE also DOG WALKING (DAILY OR ODD DAYS) Could you give a permanent, loving home to one of our many rescue cats, or foster one on a temporary basis ? We supply food and litter and pay any vets’ bills for our foster cats. RELIABLE & TRUSTWORTHY SEEKING PRIVATE HOUSEHOLDS M-F We also need volunteers to help in our shops, and with fundraising. EX VETERINARY NURSE WHO LOVES ANIMALS For more information please phone: PLEASE CALL ME FOR A CHAT 01622 817517 DOREEN: 01892 725777 after 7.00 pm, or MARION: 01622 741591 also KINDLING FOR SALE £2 PER BAG - CAN DELIVER LOST AND FOUND: 01732 847572 SEASONED APPLE LOGS Seasoned apple logs for sale, cut to any size. Prompt delivery. The best burning wood you can get; or open fires or wood burners. To discuss your requirements, phone Rod on: Telephone no: 01622 871442 Mobile no: 07944 256630 Also available for paddock maintenance, hedge cutting, tree work & other agricultural services. We also supply good quality hay. January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 12 WEST PECKHAM PARISH COUNCIL Chairman: Kathryn Ritchie Vice-Chairman: Mark Freed Members: Jonathan Cannon, Michael Corfe, Sarah Gracey, Jim Simpson, Harry Wooldridge Please address all correspondence to Mrs Susan Canning, Clerk to West Peckham Parish Council, Cobtree House, The Green, West Peckham, Kent ME18 5JW (e-mail: [email protected]) Council Meetings are held on the third Monday of every month at 7.30 pm at the West Peckham Village Hall, and are open to all. EXTRACTS FROM THE MINUTES OF THE PARISH COUNCIL MEETINGS HELD ON MONDAY 17 DECEMBER 2007 The monthly Parish Council Meeting took place on Monday 17th December 2007. Among matters discussed were: BOROUGH COUNCILLOR’S INPUT Borough Councillor Mrs J Anderson thanked Mr K Ritchie for her hard work and said she was sorry she was standing down. Mrs Anderson reported she had put in good work for the Church Wall Grant and the decision will be taken in January. As there is still no movement on the Boundary Signs, Mrs Anderson said she will look into the problem. ROADS • Weeds along the road and raised path outside the Church have been cleared. • Three Counties have been asked to trim the hedge beyond Parson’s Corner. • Swanton Lane will be closed for five days in February for tree-cutting to clear power lines. The dates of the closure are to be confirmed. • Salt Bins were discussed and are to be checked on. • The Rag Stone for the triangle at the bottom of Stan Lane will be acquired by Mr H Wooldridge. • A quote will be acquired for repainting the village gates. DEEDS OF EASEMENT The Deeds for the north residents are now with the solicitors. The Deeds for the south residents will be dealt with by a small committee. The north access road will be repaired during the year, and the cost will be shared as agreed. BOUNDARY STONE The unveiling ceremony was reported as being a great success and much enjoyed by those that took part. Cecil Williams’ stories of times gone by and mulled wine provided by Clive Selby of ‘The Swan’ were greatly appreciated. There is a video film of the occasion on the web site. (See also pages 22 - 25 of this issue of The Record’). KENT COUNTY COUNCIL The Kent County Council have started a Trading Standards Service Scheme. The web site is: www.buywithconfidence.info and the telephone number is: 01233 652385 RESIGNATION Mrs K Ritchie handed in her letter of resignation. Mr M Corfe gave a vote of thanks to Mrs Ritchie for all her hard work over the years, saying how much she would be missed. Mrs S Canning gave notice that she would be standing down in the near future. 13 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 For all your hard LANDSCAPING requirements: All types of BRICK & BLOCK PAVING, YORK STONE DRIVEWAYS, PATIOS, TARMAC, TAR & CHIP, FENCING, TURFING, ALL GROUNDWORKS and DRAINAGE etc JCB JCB AND ALL TYPES OF TREE WORK UNDERTAKEN We are a small family business based in Mereworth, offering a personal, polite, reliable service. We have more than 20 years’ experience, are fully insured and guarantee all our work. For a free, no obligation survey and written quotation Please call NICK DE BOLLA and we will be happy to discuss and help you with your ideas. Tel: 01622-813775 (home) 07866-545034 (mobile) January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 14 BOROUGH COUNCILLORS’ SURGERY We believe in life before death HUNGER LUNCHES FOR CHRISTIAN AID Your Borough Councillors, Jill Anderson and Janet Sergison, will hold a Borough Councillor’s Surgery in the Choir Vestry, St Mary’s Church, Hadlow on Saturday 19 January from 10.00 to 11.30 am. F rom all the lunchers, a Happy New Year. May it be a blessed and bright one for us all. This is the opportunity for us to say a big “Thank you” to all our hostesses who have welcomed us throughout the year: Rachel, Enid, Jenny D, Jenny T and Rene, Sue, and Ann. As a result of their efforts, we have, with your help, been able to send £556.07p to Christian Aid, and, because of a kind donation from friends in the village, we can add £300 to this total. Well done. When we began these lunches in 1994 the first amount we raised was £151.54p Not only have our donations increased, but the monthly meetings have been a source of friendship and pleasure to us all. There will be another on 15 March 2008 again the third Saturday in the month, the same day as the St Mary’s Church Market Stall. And so it is on this note of thanks and pleasure that we finally say: “Thank You All and God Bless”. Enid & Ken. WEST PECKHAM VILLAGE FETE Do drop in to discuss anything that concerns you. If we can’t help, we generally know someone who can! 5 JULY 2008 Meetings will be held in the Village Hall at 7.30pm on: 13 FEBRUARY 9 APRIL 9TH and 11 JUNE Everyone is welcome to attend. Please come along if you wish to be involved. Jim Simpson 15 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 Buy online the best fresh local food and drink for home delivery from Farm Fresh Express - 60 local producers with over 900 fantastic products to choose from Do you have ancestors in Kent or South East England ? An experienced genealogist will help you track down your English/Kentish roots, or do it for you if you prefer. Friendly service, very reasonable rates, and honest advice. Contact: Sarah Talbutt, Springfield, Mereworth Road, West Peckham, Maidstone, Kent ME18 5JH Tel: 01622 813862 Family history evening classes now available. Please contact me for details. WEB PAGE: www.roots-in-kent.com E-MAIL: [email protected] January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 16 MEREWORTH VILLAGE HALL TOTE RESULTS ROYAL BRITISH LEGION POPPY APPEAL NOVEMBER 2007 L5 MR D ALLAWAY £50 C1 MR G EPPS £25 T5 MR & MRS O’GORMAN £25 G10 MR & MRS COLLINS £25 W2 MR & MRS TYE £20 G6 MRS T REYNOLDS £20 The Poppy Appeal at Remembrancetide in Mereworth raised £701.79 from donations at static collection points, house-to-house collections, and offerings in Church on Remembrance Sunday, as well as the sale of wreaths. CHRISTMAS DRAW A5 MISS S PASCOE £20 F6 MR A JEFFORD £20 S5 MRS H CARD £20 Z5 MRS D WILLIAMS £20 Many thanks to all who contributed so generously to help the British Legion continue their vital welfare and benevolent work. Tessa Wells SATURDAY BULKY REFUSE COLLECTION SERVICES 12 January 0930 - 1030 Beaufighter Road, Airfield Estate, Mereworth, (dead end junction with Spitfire Road). 12 January 1100 - 1200 West Peckham Village Hall, Church Road, West Peckham. 19 January 0800 - 0900 The Street, Mereworth, (layby outside Mereworth School). 1100 - 1200 Beaufighter Road, Airfield Estate, Mereworth, (dead end junction with Spitfire Road). 26 January FRIDGE AND FREEZER COLLECTION SERVICE & BULKY WAST COLLECTION SERVICE The T&MBC operates a FREE collection service to dispose of old fridges or freezers. You may also request collection of up to 12 bulky items from your property. There is a charge of £22.50 for this service, but it is free to residents receiving certain means-tested benefits. To arrange, or make further enquiries about, these two services, please contact the Waste Services Team on 01732 876147 or e-mail [email protected] 17 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 VALERIE EXLEY (1938 - 2007) A TRIBUTE FROM HER NEPHEW, SEAN RUSTRICK Aunty Val was born in Chilham, Kent, and moved to Mereworth in September 1941 at the age of 3. She attended Mereworth Primary School and, later, Maidstone Girls’ Grammar School. After working for a while as a secretary with the engineering company, Tilling and Stevens, she moved to Canada where she joined the Royal Canadian Air Force. She eventually returned to Mereworth and, in October 1962, she married JB with whom she had two daughters, Pauline and Shelagh. When I was asked to give this tribute at Aunty Val’s funeral in St Lawrence’s Church, Mereworth on Friday 7th December, I took a little time to contact other members of the family and friends about their thoughts and memories. Many spoke of her “no nonsense” approach to life, with one or two nephews and nieces confessing to being more than a little scared of her when they were younger! My brother, Bill, has a recollection which I think illustrates this perfectly, that “not long after we moved to Mereworth and I, then only 6 years old, was being obstinate about going to my new school. I was giving Mum a hard time with lots of tears as far as I can remember. Aunty Valerie duly arrived, assessed the scene, gave me one of her fixed looks, produced a handkerchief, and said: ‘now, come along, Billy, you are a big boy now, blow your nose - a really big blow’, and, after a sufficient pause, continued, saying: ‘now, that’s better, you see - you can’t blow your January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record nose and cry at the same time, come along …” Crying stopped, Auntie then firmly gripped my hand and walked me to school, telling me all about her school days at the same primary school! This was my Aunt who, although she “didn’t stand for any nonsense”, was there to help or share her thoughts openly and get me involved, whenever we met. There was always plenty going on when Aunty Val was around. Her arrival always meant something was sure to happen, be it a picnic, a jumble sale, banger racing, or simply a family gathering. She would take the time to get people involved, and she always had plenty of news and activities to brighten up the day. You didn’t seem to have to wait long when she was around before there was something to get involved in. Whether it was projects or work ideas, there was always plenty to do: helping with the milk-round, farm work, restaurant work, fund-raising, youth club, taking her pet Labradors Dan and Sally for walks, helping to move chickens or turkeys, or chopping wood - the list goes on. I know I am not alone when I say I’ll miss the person with whom I’ve shared all those memories, the person who gave so much colour, help and conviction in those early years in Mereworth. I think that Aunty Val will be particularly remembered by most of you here as the local milk and egg lady. This started when the dairy that was delivering to Mereworth decided to stop 18 its Sunday round. This upset a lot of the villagers, so Aunty took up their cause and wrote to the Kent Messenger on their behalf. Her letter was read by Ken Goodwin. He got in touch, and decided to include Mereworth in his delivery rounds. Aunty Val had her milk round, with her very own, somewhat unreliable milk van. I often helped out on this milk round, and, I have to say, Aunty Val was certainly a force to be reckoned with as she zoomed around the very narrow lanes. More than this though, she was a great help to all those she came in contact with. The truck was used for many things other than delivering milk: from furniture to chicken runs - you name it - if it needed delivering, it was on the back of that milk van! Aunty Val would complete her daily round whatever the weather and despite her not so trusty van. She always kept a watchful eye to make sure all was well with her customers, and she kept their dogs fed from the supply of dog biscuits she carried in her pocket and van. My most enduring memory of my time with Aunty Val on her milk round is of the carpets of bluebells in the woods at Swanton. I know that this was one of her favourite routes, and we would often detour just to see the sight. Aunty Val passed her love of this special place on to me, and I have continued to visit this place every year with my own family. Aunty Val was very much part of Mereworth village life. She raised money for the new sports pavilion by completing the Mereworth mini-marathon in 1984, and she was involved with the Village Fête for a number of years. More recently, she was Booking Secretary for the Village Hall which is the venue for the monthly pensioners’ Lunch Club where, I’m told, her famous mashed potato will be sorely missed. Her homemade trifle should also be mentioned, along with her raspberry jam which was often made from locally produced supplied with no questions asked!. All this produce was made in Aunty Val’s kitchen at 182 Butchers Lane, and gladly distributed throughout the family and village. I know that everyone who was at her funeral will have there own special memories of Aunty Val, and it has been difficult to include the many tales and recollections that have been shared with me over the last week or so. I had intended to tell more of her love for her many animals; of hair-raising trips in cars with doors that had to be held shut and a hole in the footplate through which you could see the road flying by; and of the time when her false teeth went missing on a flight to Canada. However, I would now like to finish by reading a few words from an old friend of Valerie’s who lives in the village. She says “Val was a dear friend and a lovely person and will be so missed by relatives, friends and acquaintances, and indeed by people who didn’t know her, but were helped by the many things she did for us all.” THANK YOU We would like to thank everybody for their support and kindness. It was lovely to see so many friends and neighbours attending Mum’s funeral, and a big thank you to everyone who contributed to the Mereworth Church Tower and Spire Fund a total of £383. Shelagh and Pauline Bell 19 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 THE UNVEILING OF THE NEW FOUR PARISH BOUNDARY STONE B done by pick and shovel. No machinery at all. And they had traction engines which used to come through and take the stone away, and horses and carts. Now most of the pathways you know of today were roadways where the traction engines and horses and carts came. Every road on this hill top has got a name. This is ‘Lost Fields Road’. The one straight up there, the third to the left, is called ‘The Straight Road’, and so on. There’s one called ‘The Engine Road’. They dug it out for the traction engines. All the roads go somewhere. There’s one important road which I filled: most of it is in Plaxtol parish, and it leads up to ‘The Keepers Cottage’. Now that one over there is called ‘The Coach Road’. That is where the coaches used to go, right out to Platt, across the bottom of Wrotham Hill, and on, all the way to London. And that’s were Jack Diamond, the Highwayman, done his business. Jack Diamond actually lived in the house where I was born. The place was haunted. I found a ‘Monk’s Pistol’ in the cellar, and I’ve still got it - that’s what the ladies used to carry to look after themselves in their muffs. ack in the days of yore there used to stand in Hurst Woods a tree and a nearby stone to mark the spot where the four parishes of Crouch (now part of Platt), Plaxtol, Mereworth and West Peckham met. Regular meetings took place at the stone so that differences between the parishes could be sorted out. The tree and the stone have recently been replaced. On the morning of Saturday 1st December 2007 forty people from the four parishes walked into Hurst Woods to attend the unveiling of the replacement Boundary Stone. The ceremony commenced with a short talk on the history of the area by former West Peckham Parish Council (PC) Chairman Cecil Williams of which the following is a rough transcription: I was born on this hill in Diamond’s Cottage and spent forty years of my youth here in West Peckham, apart from when I served Her Majesty in The Berlin Airlift. I have never really left the area. Now, as you know, the ‘Hurst’ means ‘the wood on the hill’. You probably noticed the contours of the land and the holes on your way through. I brought the WI up here recently and two of the ladies said they thought the holes were bomb craters, but they weren’t. They were digging up stone. There was a very large industry going on here in the 1800s. They didn’t have to smash it up like they do in a quarry: surface mining, I think they called it. You just dug it up. There were seams of it: thousands and thousands of tons. Nearly every road around this area was built with stone that came from ‘The Hurst’. At one time there were up to 400 people working on ‘The Hurst’ digging stone. It was all January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record Diamond’s Cottage, West Peckham, was the house where the Highwayman, Jack Diamond, lived. It was here, one Friday 13th, that he was burned to death. His ghost has reportedly been seen here on many occasions, but only on that supposedly unluckiest of days, Friday 13th. Now there were ‘Boundary Marks’ in the woods here years ago, marked out mainly with trees and roads. There’s a 20 fine example behind you. That is called a Beech Gowell (phonetic). They were cut off. That must be 400 years old. They were mainly Beech trees because, being stony soil, Beech seems to survive better than most trees, Beech and Yew. And that used to mark the boundary. If you look there, there’s another nice Beech tree. Linked up with that. And that’s how the parishes are split up. With roadways and those trees. Now this to the right here is West Peckham, to the left is Mereworth. Across the left hand side is that roadway: there is Plaxtol, and you have Crouch here. Now that’s something - to get four parishes to link in one spot. Now there used to be four to five estates which used to own the woods. There was Oxenhoath: Sir William Geary used to have that, and that was West Peckham. You had Lord Falmouth, which was Mereworth. You had Squire Dannison (phonetic), which was Plaxtol. And you had the Right Honourable Sammy Little for Crouch. And that’s how the boundaries were all demarcated: by the roads and the trees. And I think I walked with Ken (Ken Gunn, also a former Chairman of West Peckham PC) the other day; it’s quite easy to walk the boundary - just follow the trees. The woodlands over there used to be called ‘Oxenhoath Woods’, and if you look on the old maps you will see ‘Oxenhoath Woods’. In 2003 the new maps came out: instead of being ‘Oxenhoath Woods’ it is now ‘Shipbourne Forest’. I think that is so sad; and how the PCs allowed people to get away with it I shall never, ever know. I haven’t forgiven them. I never will. You’ve probably been up ‘The Coach Road’ to ‘The Keeper’s Cottage’. It used to belong to Sammy Little of Crouch. I remember them with two brothers, Sam and Isaac. They were very friendly when I worked in the woods here, and it was Isaac who taught me to call the cuckoo. And I brought my grandchildren up here with my wife, Sheila, to call the cuckoo - this is going back a few years there don’t seem to be so many here now. But straight down there, there is a nice bush. We would go down to this tree and call the cuckoo. It would come and land in the bush, and the children were so excited. During the war, here, around this area, they used to put Bofors Guns (ackack guns, they called them, to protect West Malling Airfield which was straight through there, and this was one of the sites where one of the guns used to stand, and they used to move around. They never stayed in one spot. And I think, then, that is the time that the old ‘Boundary Stone’ disappeared. They must have taken it out. At the beginning of the war all the signposts were taken down, and I think some of the boundary stones were removed at the same time so that the enemy would not know where they were. Down in ‘Lost Fields’ my father used to rent from Lord Falmouth. We used to have fruit trees and various things down there. During the war my father, who was a ‘tough nut’, came back from France luckily. We would take the horse and cart, because, when we were boys, we had to work, it was something to do we never had toys - so it was much easier to get an axe in your hands, or a saw, and do something useful in the woods. So we used to come down here. My father put some corrugated iron in the bottom of the cart so that, if there was any shrapnel flying around we could get under the cart. Well, this Saturday morning we were in ‘Lost Fields’, my brother and I, and a German aircraft came through here, very low, and the ack-ack guns from around the woods 21 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 fired full blast. We got under the cart and the poor horse, we never gave it a thought. We were under the cart , and the shrapnel, absolutely true, was coming down and cutting the branches off the trees and landing red hot and burning the leaves. That was quite an experience, but it seemed that people who lived on ‘The Hurst’ were never afraid. Because, of a night-time, there were no lights. If you wanted to go out, you had to go out in the dark. You had to go through the woods, and we never seemed to be afraid. We just took it in our stride - the horse too. Now, I suppose I’d better get onto this stone, hadn’t I. Anyway, now what set the ball rolling about this stone, and the Beech tree, it’s unfortunate that Mr Earl from Mereworth is not here today because he wrote a lovely letter in ‘The Record’, the parish magazine, about ‘Mark Beech’, and he wanted to know what ‘Mark Beech’ was about and how it got its name. He wrote a lovely letter, but everything he wrote wasn’t true. He thought ‘Mark Beech’ was up there. There’s an old tree which is falling down. But ‘Mark Beech’ used to be in line with that one (pointing) and the one there you can see which is in the road. Now it’s altered. The road’s got wider because of the tractors and the various vehicles, and, when I was about 6 years old ‘Mark Beech’ was there (pointing), and it had been struck by lightning and was rotting away. So ‘Mark Beech’ wasn’t up there. It was here. I had to explain that to him. ‘Mark Beech’ was called ‘Mark Beech’ because it marked where the four parishes met. Hence ‘Mark Beech’ and the ‘Boundary Stone’. THE QUEEN’S HEAD NEW: LIVE SKY SPORT Happy New Year to all our customers and readers of ‘The Record’. Opening Times Sunday to Thursday 12 noon - 11pm Friday & Saturday 12 noon - midnight House Ales Harvey’s Best Abbot’s Ale January Guest Ales Brass Monkeys Harvey’s Old Ale • • Food Served Monday - Sunday 12 noon - 3 pm No food served in the evenings. RACE NIGHT (PLACE YOUR BETS): Thursday 17 January COUNTRY & WESTERN FANCY DRESS THEMED KARAOKE: COME AND SING ALONG TO YOUR FAVOURITE COUNTRY & WESTERN SONGS time and date to be confirmed! • QUIZ NIGHT: LAST THURSDAY OF EVERY MONTH Come and watch the live Sky Sports: phone 01622 812534 to find out what’s on. 133 Butchers Lane, Mereworth, Kent ME18 5QD January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 22 Telephone: 01622 812534 So it’s really thanks to Mr Earl that this thing was set going. Now what I did suggest when I wrote the letter is that the PC might get interested in replacing ‘Mark Beech’ with ‘Mark Beech II’ and the ‘Boundary Stone’. Well, this was about two years ago, and at that time I met Ken (Gunn) on the Village Green. I didn’t know who he was, and he didn’t know who I was. We got talking, and we’ve been good friends ever since. But it was Ken who showed a lot of interest and we went on from there. Ken’s going to say a few words later on, so I won’t steal his thunder. And that’s about it really regarding the stone. But not stealing your thunder, Kathryn, I would like to propose a vote of thanks to Roy Keeler, the Wood Reeve for Lord Falmouth, and Roy’s son, David., who unfortunately are not here. They have been so helpful in this. Roy Keeler actually grew that tree from seed, and thought it out, and planted it from a pot in his own garden. He also helped with bringing the stone here because it’s heavy, and he helped me cement it in. And so I would like you to put your hands together. That’s just about it. Please enjoy Hurst Woods. 1. Boundary Stone veil secured by ribbon. Kathryn Ritchie, Chair of West Peckham PC then thanked Cecil Williams, and introduced Ken Gunn. Ken agreed that there had originally been some confusion. He and Tessa Wells, Chair of Mereworth PC had looked for ‘Mark Beech’, but it had turned out to be ‘Table Beech’. Tessa Wells then thanked West Peckham PC on behalf of Mereworth PC, remarking that, although the initiative had come from Mereworth, West Peckham had done all the work. This is a rough transcription taken from an excellent video recording produced by West Peckham’s “Young Reporters”, video by Joshua Freed, and stills by Charlie Fox. 2. Ribbon removed. Stone still veiled. 3. Boundary Stone unveiled. 23 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 WICKS GAS Heating & Gas Engineer CORGI registered with 28 years’ experience Service, repair and installation of heating and Gas appliances: Boilers, fires, cookers, hobs, water heaters, warm air units, unvented hot water Powerflushing, central heating system repairs & upgrades: Radiator valves, leaking pipes, radiator moves, boiler changes 01732 883544 0774 878 0811 NEW IMAGE CONSTRUCTION HOME IMPROVEMENTS For all your building requirements including Plumbing...Electrics...carpentry… Plastering...Brickwork NO JOB TOO SMALL Fitted kitchens our speciality For a FREE estimate telephone Terry Wiles on 01795-435858; mobile: 07850-885632 We’ve moved but we still work in your area January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 24 THE HEART OF KENT HOSPICE The Heart of Kent Hospice serves the community of Maidstone and the surrounding villages. It provides care for 400 - 500 patients in any one year, and comprises inpatient and day therapy units, family support services, and a community team who visit patients in their own homes. The Hospice is a charity: we need to raise approximately £2.9 million a year in order to provide this care. CUBA CHARITY CYCLE RIDE In November 2006 two members of the Hospice staff wished to celebrate the Hospice’s 15th Year anniversary by taking part in a charity challenge. The challenge was to cycle across Cuba. It was an ambitious challenge for two people who had little cycling experience. We allowed ourselves almost a year to get fit enough, and the training began. In total we raised almost £15,000. This challenge not only provided much needed funds for the Hospice but also gave us a fascinating insight into the country and its culture, and it improved our personal fitness. We found our trip to Cuba an amazing experience: cycling is certainly a wonderful way to see a country and its people. We particularly valued: • Meeting the Cuban people, with their warmth and ingenuity - it was a humbling experience. • The Friendship and camaraderie of the group helping each other achieve such an amazing goal. • The Cuban bicycles were the greatest challenge for the group; they were very basic and made the 100km a day extremely tough. • The dancing in the streets of Trinidad will be remembered forever: the skill, the colourful costumes and the music brought Salsa alive. • The opportunity to swim with dolphins was an unexpected bonus. RAJASTHAN CHARITY CYCLE RIDE In fact our 2006 Cuba Charity Cycle Ride was such a great experience that we are planning another challenge cycle ride soon. This time it will be across Rajasthan (the largest State in the Republic of India) in February 2008. We plan to cycle from the Taj Mahal to the city of Jaipur (500km), through two national parks. This is where you can help by supporting local fundraising events or by donating on www.justgiving.com/kateandjoan If you would like to sponsor us offline, please ring the Hospice’s fundraising team on 01622 790195 Staff will be happy to help you. We are fully funding the cost of the trip ourselves so that all money donated goes directly to the Hospice to support patients and their families. Richard and Sue Jones are holding a Coffee Morning at Herne House, Butchers Lane, Mereworth on Thursday 7th February from 10.30am to 12.30 to support the event. If you would like to attend, please come along. We plan to be there to tell you all about our trips. We are always looking for people to undertake challenges such as these. Would you be interested in doing something similar for the Hospice? Visit www.charitychallenge.com or ring the Hospice’s fundraising team on 01622 790195 for more information. Kate Bosley and Joan Poynter 18 December 2007 25 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 26 WEST PECKHAM W I arranged for the last Tuesday morning in the month (i.e. 29 January). Further information will be given out at our January Monthly Meeting, and you can also ‘phone Carole Ross nearer the time. CHRISTMAS TREE FESTIVAL A tree was decorated and placed in St Lawrence’s Church, Mereworth on behalf of the WI for the Christmas Tree Festival. We hope it went well and had plenty of visitors. CONTINUED SUPPORT NEEDED Don’t forget. We need your continued support to keep our Meetings “humming”: think about inviting a friend or neighbour to one of our Meetings during the coming year - they might like to join us. Looking forward to 2008. CHRISTMAS PARTY Candlelight, charades, poems, readings, hand-bell ringing, Rosemary’s fun piano recital, cards. What a wonderful way to spend an evening with friends. Whilst also enjoying mulled wine, nibbles and mince pies. The Bell Ringing team of our WI members had some seven or eight rehearsals under the watchful eye (and ear) of Sheila Dobbie, performing “Away in a Manger”, “Good King Wenceslas” and “Jingle Bells”, to which we were able to sing-along - well done, team! Sheila will be continuing with the group in February and would like to enlist two or three more ringers - give it some thought over the holiday period! JANUARY MEETING The January Meeting will be held, as usual, on the second Monday of the Month, (i.e. 14 January), in the West Peckham Village Hall, starting at 7.30 pm. An evening of games, quizzes, and chat. Don’t forget it’s subscription time. We need bits and pieces for the “Bring and Buy” stall”, and the “Flower of the Month” competition will be resuming. WALK WITH CAROLE Weather permitting, a walk will be Beryl Knight Press Officer THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 1. You believe in Father Christmas. 2. You don’t believe in Father Christmas. 3. You are Father Christmas. 4. You look like Father Christmas. 27 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 PAINTER & DECORATOR Based in Mereworth • External & Internal Work • 32 Years’ Experience • Top Quality Work • Fully Insured • References if Required Also Small Building Work Undertaken For Free Quote & Friendly Service Please ring: Gary Tel: Mobile: January 2008 01622 812540 07791 881927 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 28 MOVES TO STEER LORRIES AWAY FROM COUNTRY ROADS AND VILLAGES Readers may have missed the following article which was published in the Daily Telegraph on Monday 17 December 2007: Department of Transport, goods vehicle traffic has risen by 11 per cent over the past decade. According to the Road Haulage Association, a typical truck driver covers about 100,000 miles each year, often visiting destinations for the first time. Navigation is particularly tricky for the increasing numbers of foreign drivers, many of whom might not speak fluent English. According to recent figures, three quarters of all lorries crossing The Channel last year were registered overseas. Under the new scheme, every local authority will create freight route maps which highlight the council-recommended roads for hauliers. Staff from Ordnance Survey will then feed that data into existing maps. The move should cut congestion, improve safety, and save the hauliers money. But hauliers’ groups gave the report a cautious welcome. Geoff Dunnage, of the Road Haulage Association, said it was a step in the right direction, but it could take years to set up the system. He said, “The majority of satnav errors on the UK’s roads are from foreign vehicles, and it’s going to take even longer to persuade them to adopt the new technology.” The national mapping agency is to redraw its satellite navigation routes to steer lorries away from country roads and villages. Ordnance Survey, which provides the road network data to the satnav industry, is asking local councils to submit “preferred routes” for heavy goods vehicles. The information will be programmed into satnav units for lorry drivers, who will be diverted away from unsuitable roads. It is hoped that the initiative will end the farce of lorries getting stuck in narrow country lanes and clogginbg up village high streets. Tom Satterthwaite, Ordnance Survey’s transport manager, said faulty satnav directions caused problems for freight firms, residents and councils. “We hope to give hauliers the full picture of Britain’s roads, highlighting the best recommended routes from local authorities as well as the roads to avoid,” he said. Each day 12,000 foreign and 95,000 British lorries are using the transport network. According to figures from the 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. GREAT TRUTHS ABOUT GROWING OLD Growing old is mandatory; growing up is optional Forget the health food; you need all the preservatives you can get. When you fall down, you wonder what else you can do when you’re there. You’re getting old when you get the same sensation from a rocking chair that you once got from a roller-coaster. Time may be a great healer, but it’s a lousy beautician. Wisdom sometime comes with age, but sometimes age comes alone. 29 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 Safe & Sound House-Sitting Services DO YOU WORRY ABOUT GOING AWAY AND LEAVING YOUR HOME UNATTENDED? DO YOUR PETS SUFFER WHEN THEIR ROUTINE IS CHANGED? If you answer “Yes”, then let us take over and move in as you move out. We are a mature, non-smoking and non-drinking couple who have experience in caring for dogs, cats and horses. We have been house-sitting for 11 years and can provide references. We are not an agency. We can stay for a day or a month. We will care for your pets as you do. We will give you peace of mind to enjoy your time away. Phone Tony or Barbara and arrange an appointment to discuss how we can help you. 01634 244529 January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 30 NEIGHBOURHOOD WATCH (NhW) MEREWORTH WEST PECKHAM Mike Setford Phil Canning Area Coordinator Area Coordinator Tel: 01622 814808 E-mail: [email protected] Tel: 01622 812135 E-Mail: [email protected] District Inspector for Tonbridge & Malling: Inspector Glan Chahal (responsible for delivery of neighbourhood policing) POLICE CONTACT NUMBERS Crime in progress, Police attendance required urgently: 999 Non-urgent matters: Central switchboard (can put you through to any Police department): 01732 771055 Neighbourhood Watch Liaison Officer: Leila Hughes 01892 502159 Neighbourhood Policing Team (Mereworth & West Peckham): PC Andy Sergeant and PCSO Holly Wilkes) 01732 379232 E-mail: [email protected] MEREWORTH NEIGHBOURHOOD WATCH REPORT In December 2007 the spare wheel and wheel cover were stolen from a vehicle parked in Kent Street; a vehicle parked in The Street had its rear windscreen smashed and its paintwork damaged; and a digger was stolen from Seven Mile Lane. If you have any information that might interest the Police, please ring the Police Control Desk - 01732 771055. Also in December there was a respectable-looking middle-aged man knocking on doors and asking if the occupants had any old books to sell. This is a scam to gain entry to the house and steal property, or to come back later to steal. Never let anyone into your property unless they have proof of identity to read meters, etc., or unless they are well-known to you. As a general reminder, villagers should be particularly vigilant at this time of year. Always lock up when leaving your house, and keep vehicles on driveways locked with any valuables removed or well-hidden. A number of SpeedWatch sessions were held in late December and the number of people found to be speeding through the village were very few. This is encouraging and shows that the scheme is working for us. WEST PECKHAM NEIGHBOURHOOD WATCH REPORT Between 9.00am and 9.50pm on Monday 3 December the door of a motor vehicle parked in Beech was levered open and a black Apple iPod was stolen. If you have any information that might assist the Police in their enquiries, please contact your local Police Station, telephone number 01732 771055 quoting Crime Reference Number BZ2088407 or contact your local Neighbourhood Watch Coordinator. 31 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 Hadlow College Innovation. Experience. Excellence. Hadlow Further Education: College Full and Part-Time Courses in Agriculture, Animal Management, Countryside Management, Equine Management, Fisheries, Floristry, Horticulture, and Training for Business. Higher Education: as above, plus Garden Design, Landscapes, and Sustainability. Events: Sunday 13 Jan: Equine Dressage Show (1st Dip/LBS). Sun 17, Thu 21, Sat 23, Sun 24 Feb: Hellebore Days. Sun 24 Feb: Equine Show Jumping Competition. Well worth visiting at Hadlow College: Broadview Gardens, Garden Centre, Tea Room, and Kent Produce Shop. ENROL NOW ! FREEPHONE 0500 551434 Address: Hadlow College, Tonbridge, Kent TN11 0AL Tel: 0500 551434 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.hadlow.ac.uk RESIDENTIAL Independent Chartered Surveyors and Estate Agents selling property for over 100 years WITH LOCAL OFFICES AT WEST MALLING AND TONBRIDGE ALSO AT SEVENOAKS, MAIDSTONE, AND TUNBRIDGE WELLS AND WITH 14 OFFICES IN KENT, SURREY AND LONDON Whether Buying or Selling For All Property Matters Contact Your Local Branch WEST MALLING 01732 842668 or TONBRIDGE 01732 770588 January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 32 T MAIDSTONE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA he M a i d s to n e S ym ph o n y Orchestra - Conductor: Brian Wright - will perform on Saturday 2nd February 2008, commencing at 7.30pm, at Mote Hall, Maidstone Leisure Centre, Mote Park, Maidstone. The programme consists of three works: • Bizet Carmen Suite • Weber Clarinet Concerto No. 2 (Soloist: Mark Simpson) • Rachmaninov Symphony No. 2 This concert has a programme for every taste, with the current BBC Young Musician, Clarinettist Mark Simpson, joining the MSO in Weber’s delightful 2nd Concerto. Elsewhere, Rachmaninov expansively exploits both sumptuous harmonies and lyrical, romantic melodies in his 2nd Symphony, and there’s the evergreen suite from Bizet’s Carmen. Concert Tickets: £10, £16, and £20, seats for children and students with a student card: £5, are available from BBC Young Musician, Clarinettist Mark Simpson Membership Secretaries on 01622 736392 paid for and collected on the concert evening at Mote Hall, or from Maidstone Leisure Centre on 0845 1552277 when payment can be made by credit card. David Bramley Maidstone Orchestral Society WEST PECKHAM PARISH COUNCIL VACANCIES FOR NEW PARISH COUNCILLOR AND NEW PARISH CLERK Are you interested in getting more involved in the workings of the Parish? The Council are eager to find replacements for Councillor Kathy Ritchie and Clerk Susan Canning following their recent resignations. Both have made major contributions to the village, and we are paying tribute to them elsewhere. We do however need to find replacements urgently. The Councillor’s role requires a minimum commitment of one evening a month. The Clerk’s role is paid and is expected to take approximately 8 hours a week. Whilst more details will be posted in The Record and on the Notice Boards, if you want any more information about either vacancy, then please do not hesitate to contact me or one of the other Councillors. Mark Freed E2W Limited DDI: 01732 897722 Mobile: 07711 164145 33 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 THE GARDEN IN JANUARY T GROWING AN AMARYLLIS IF YOU were given an Amaryllis (sometimes called a Hippeastrum) as a Christmas present you will be surprised at how simple it is to grow these colourful bulbous plants - and, better still, how easy it is to ensure a show of these striking flowers in years to come. The outsize bulbs can be started into growth from this month until March. Use one bulb to a 15-18cm (6-7in clay or ceramic pot, and allow a space of about 2.5cm (1in) between the bulb and the sides of the pot. Use any houseplant soil and let the upper third of the bulb stand above the soil line. Put it in a cool, shady place and keep almost dry until the flower bud is about 15cm (6in) tall, then move it into a sunny window and water heavily. The huge, showy flowers, which come in white, pink, red, orange, rose or violet, are borne on stalks up to 65cm (26in) tall, and appear before the strap-like leaves. It will usually take about 3 weeks or more from planting to blooming. After your Amaryllis has bloomed, keep it growing so that the leaves can make food for next year’s flowers, feeding after flowering until the leaves die down. When the foliage goes brown let the soil go dry for at least 12 weeks, or until you see new buds appearing, then replant in fresh soil. HE CHRISTMAS festivities are a distant memory and the garden looks far from inviting, but there are still some benefits to be had from wrapping up warmly and getting out there - not least of which is working off the effects of a surfeit of Christmas pudding and mince pies! Now is a good time to reshape unruly trees while they are in their dormant winter state and when the absence of leaves makes it easier to spot crossing or damaged branches Using a sharp saw, make a pruning cut on the underside of the branch to be removed - about 30cm (1ft) from the trunk; move further out and saw down from the top. If the branch drops it will not tear beyond the original cut. You can easily prune off the remaining piece close to the trunk. Trim off the top growth of perennials that have died down. Some will already have green shoots appearing round the base, so a light mulch of compost or bark will help protect these. Very congested old perennials that were not tackled in autumn can still be lifted and divided. However, if your soil is wet and heavy, leave this until spring when the plants can start growing away. In the greenhouse check over wintering plants for signs of greenfly and other pests, and treat if necessary. Also bring potted strawberries under cover this month. No apology for appealing again for your help in feeding our feathered friends during the winter months. Blue tits and many other garden favourites are down in numbers after last year’s wet summer, and need cherishing with regular supplies of nuts, bird seed and water. The recipients will reward you by helping keep greenfly and other nasties at bay in the spring and summer. VC January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 34 Village Diary See also Page 5 for Church Diary. JANUARY Tue 8 12 - 2pm 7.30pm Sat 12 11-12 noon 9.30 - 10.30 Mon 14 7.30pm Thu 17 evening Sat 19 8am - 9am 10 - 11.30 12 noon Mon 21 7.30pm Tue 22 7.30pm Sat 26 11-12 noon Tue 29 morning Thu 31 evening Mereworth Lunch Club, Mereworth Village Hall. Mereworth Planning Committee meeting, Mereworth Village Hall. Bulky Refuse Collection, West Peckham Village Hall. Bulky Refuse Collection, Beaufighter Road, Airfield Estate. West Peckham WI Monthly Meeting (p. 27). Race Night, Queen’s Head (p. 22, or tel 01622 812534). Bulky Refuse Collection, The Street, Mereworth (o/s school). Borough Councillors’ Surgery, St Mary’s Church, Hadlow (p. 15). Deadline for copy and advertisements for The Record. West Peckham Parish Council Meeting, W P Village Hall. Mereworth Planning Committee and Parish Council Meeting. Bulky Refuse Collection, Beaufighter Road, Airfield Estate. West Peckham WI Walk with Carole (p. 27). Quiz Night, Queen’s Head (p. 22, or tel 01622 812534). FEBRUARY Sat 2 7.30pm Maidstone Symphony Orchestra Concert, Mote Hall (p. 33). Thu 7 10.30-12.30 Heart of Kent Hospice Coffee Morning, Herne House (p. 25). Wed 13 7.30pm West Peckham Village Fete Meeting, W P Village Hall (p. 15). LOGS Finest seasoned local hardwoods, split to size and delivered. North Star Farm Tel: 01622 813794 Mob: 078 999 46860 from Design to Despatch a complete reprographic service from budget priced duplicating to full colour lithographic and screen process printing. Tel/Fax: 01732 865380 Mobile: 0774 806 6636 E-mail: [email protected] 35 Mereworth & West Peckham Record January 2008 VILLAGE INFORMATION THE RECTOR CHURCH WARDENS Mereworth West Peckham SUNDAY SCHOOL POLICE CONTACTS Rev R N McConachie 01622 812214 Mr A Wells 01622 814608 Mrs Mair Kellett 01732 843006 Mr P Spensley 01732 810041 Mrs P Hamilton 01622 817255 Margaret Collins 01622 812660 Mereworth & ) PC Andy Sargeant 01732 379232 West Peckham: ) & PCSO Holly Wilkes 01732 379232 LOCAL COUNCILLORS Jill Anderson 01732 850445 Janet Sergison 01732 851663 MEREWORTH PARISH COUNCIL - meetings 4th Tue in month, 7.30pm M Village Hall Chairman: Tessa Wells 01622 814608 Clerk: Gill Kirby [email protected] 01732 846192 WEST PECKHAM PARISH COUNCIL - meetings 3rd Mon in month, 7.30 pm WP Village Hall Chairman: Kathy Ritchie [email protected] 01622 812888 Clerk: Susan Canning [email protected] 01622 812135 MEREWORTH VILLAGE HALL AND SPORTS PAVILION Chairman: René Bennet 01732 872892 Secretary: Helen Card 01622 812495 Bookings: Bill Piper 01622 812777 WEST PECKHAM VILLAGE HALL Bookings: Mrs Jacqui Wooldridge 01622 813241 MEREWORTH & KINGS HILL SCOUT GROUP, BEAVERS AND CUBS Mike Darbyshire 01622 812797 WEST PECKHAM WOMEN’S INSTITUTE - meetings 2nd Mon/mth, 7.30pm, WP Village Hall President: Kim Kuwertz 01732 852131 Secretary: Cathy Perry 01622 817736 MEREWORTH PRIMARY SCHOOL Headteacher: Mrs Sue Greenaway 01622 812569 Secretary: Mrs Chris Grehan 01622 812569 Chmn Govs: Dr A Jefford 01622 812734 Chairperson PTA: Therese Camporeale [email protected] 01622 812985 Secretary PTA: Helen Sigward 01622 871227 MEREWORTH PRE-SCHOOL - sessions 9.15 - 12pm Mon-Fri, pm Mon & Thu, Village Hall Contact: Julia Mayhew 01732 870456 MEREWORTH LUNCH CLUB - meetings 2nd Tuesday, Mereworth Village Hall Contact: Sue Darbyshire 01622 812797 TELSTON & MEREWORTH CRICKET CLUB - Captain: David Keeler 01622-817836 WEST PECKHAM CRICKET CLUB Secretary: René Bennet 01732 872892 KATE REED WOOD RESIDENTS’ ASSOCIATION Chairman: René Bennet 01732 872892 ANIMAL WELFARE CHARITY Contact: Brenda Johnson, New Pounds, New Pounds Lane 01622 812195 DOG WARDEN Alison Cooper [email protected] 01732 876181 KENT MESSENGER Joyce Styles (Copy by 9am Monday please) 01622 812741 BBC RADIO KENT Jenny Thorogood 01622 812937 NEIGHBOURHOOD WATCH Mereworth: Mike Setford ([email protected]) 01622 814808 West Peckham Phil Canning ([email protected]) 01622 812135 Kings Hill David Murray 01732 874685 TAXI SERVICE T S Private Hire and Courier Service 01732 846515 Mobile: 07713 702937 January 2008 Mereworth & West Peckham Record 36