Thursday, 30 April 2009

CHARITY FOOTBALL MATCH RETURNS

CHARITY FOOTBALL MATCH RETURNS TO RAISE VITAL FUNDS FOR CANCER RSEARCH UK.

SUTTON COLDFIELD football fans are being urged to join local soccer legends The Aston Villa Old Stars and ex Sutton Town player Andy Biddle, by attending a Charity Football Match at Sutton Coldfield Town FC on Sunday 3rd May 2009

The Charity Football Match in aid of Cancer Research UK is being organised by local fundraiser Judy Mee, after seeing her father suffer from cancer.

Judy’s debut event which took place in May 2008 raised more than £3,000 for charity and she is hoping that this year’s event will raise even more for her favourite charity.

The Charity Football Match involves players from The Aston Villa Old Stars (who are celebrating 50 years of fundraising this year), includes members of the European Cup winning squad and ex players and a Sutton Coldfield Over 35’s team captained by Andy Biddle.

There will be a raffle draw taking place at half time with many prizes. After the match there will be a presentation of Man of The Match Awards.

Miranda Williams, Cancer Research UK’s Area Volunteer Manager for the West Midlands said “Judy has done an amazing job organising this fantastic event and it promises to be a great day out for football fans and families alike.

“Cancer Research UK is extremely pleased to be chosen as one of the charities to benefit from the Charity Football Match. This event gives football fans the opportunity to have fun and at the same time raise money for a good cause”

Event organiser Judy added: "We had tremendous support from people in Sutton Coldfield at last year’s event and we hope that they will be coming along again to show their support on Bank Holiday Sunday May 3rd”.

Kick off is at 2.30pm and entry costs £2.00 per person.

For more information about the Charity Football Match, please contact Judy Mee on Tel No 07779214226.

For information about other ways that you can support Cancer Research UK, visit www.cancerresearchuk.org or call your local fundraising office on 08701 60 20 40

SINGING THE PRAISES FOR VALENTINO'S NEW MENU


Birmingham's top Italian gourmet restaurant Valentino's is so proud of its new menu that it has even brought in a jazz artist to help sing its praises.

Sixties and Seventies soulful song singer Bobby Woods will be resuming his successful monthly series of serenading diners at the 35-year-old eatery in Harborne High Street on Thursday, May 7.

The popular £24.95 music and three-course-meal package follows the launch of Valentino's exciting new spring and summer a la carte menu, in which 90 per cent of the dishes are new to the restaurant.

The sophisticated yet simple courses include a range of 12 starters, ten pasta and risotto dishes, 12 mains and five fish items, all cooked on the premises using local market produce including fresh authentic food from Italy.

Deep fried king prawns, whitebait and squid rings served with a crunchy salad, and goat's cheese wrapped in roasted mixed vegetables, curly endive and basil, are among the succulent starters.

'Mezzalune' (half-moon) and parcel-shaped pasta from Liguria are central to two of the new pasta dishes, the first stuffed with mushrooms and cooked in a passata of rocket, Parmesan, garlic and olive oil, and the second filled with Parma ham in a tomato, basil and mushroom sauce.

Valentino's superb reputation for steaks has been enriched with tantalising new sauces ranging from brandy, red wine and pink and black pepper corns to a creamy tarragon sauce with Italian herbs and a splash of whisky.

Oven-baked fillet of haddock with a cream, ginger and garlic sauce with flaked almonds, and grilled swordfish with a tomato, garlic, dill, white wine and olive sauce are among the ever-popular fish dishes – with the daily specials board often including lobster, Dover sole and scallops.

As well as a wide selection of Italian desserts, Valentino's offers a comprehensive Italian wine list not just for its a la carte diners but also for those opting for the £15.95 three-course Sunday lunch, which features a choice of six starters, five mains and four desserts.

It is also continuing its light lunch menu of two courses for £8.95 and three for £9.95 from Monday to Saturday, as well as its set evening menu at £14.95 for three courses including a glass of house wine from Monday to Thursday.

The restaurant's successful two-course business lunches are also being continued as a result of high demand at just £8.95 for two courses.

Owner-chef Simon Mousa, who runs Valentino’s with his wife Peggy, said: “We hope that our many regular diners and those new to the area will take advantage of our exciting new menu cooked the way Mamma does.

“We enjoy serving freshly cooked authentic Italian food in a friendly relaxed family atmosphere to our delighted guests, one or two of whom have even told us that you couldn’t enjoy better cooking elsewhere.”

Valentino’s Restaurant is at 73 High Street, Birmingham B17 9NS (Tel: 0121 427 2560)

SCOOBY-DOO WHERE ARE YOU?

- The hunt starts for a UK dog to stand in for Scooby -

The country’s 6.8 million dogs are all in for a sniff of canine fame today, as a nationwide search gets underway to find the living, three-dimensional equivalent of Scooby Doo!With kennel clubs, veterinary surgeries and dog charities across the nation invited to get in on the action, the search will confirm, once and for all, which breed is the closest match, both in looks and personality, to the loveable, but mischievous Scooby – reputedly based on a Great Dane.

Dogs up for the challenge will be put through their muddy paces and judged on strict criteria: a nose for mischief, large floppy ears, a spring in their step, brown coat with large black spots, a loveable personality and of course, an endless appetite! The winning pup will get the coveted title of being crowned ‘The Living Scooby-Doo’, with his owner winning an exclusive stage debut on the Scooby-Doo Live Show, which is touring the country over this summer.

Meanwhile, the animated Scooby will be escaping the limelight by escaping on to DVD on the 25th May in his latest adventure: Scooby-Doo! And the Samurai Sword. Packed with even more hi-jinks, thrills and laughs, Scooby-Doo and the Mystery Inc. embark on an exciting journey to the Orient in this full-length animated feature film.

Widely regarded as one of the most loved canine cartoon characters, Scooby and his nose for adventure have held a special place in the heart of the nation for over forty years. The eagerly anticipated search is now on to find his real life equivalent.

Visit www.missingscooby.co.uk for more details

TIFFANY TUNES UP FOR CLUB DEBUT AT OCEANA

An award-winning young singer who has set her sights on stage stardom is making her national club debut as a soloist at top Birmingham nightspot Oceana.

Tiffany Jayne will be singing songs from the stage and screen at the Hurst Street entertainment centre on Friday, May 8.

The talented 20-year-old won a winner’s medal and a distinction for solo singing at the Buckingham Festival of Music and Drama in 2007 and sang in Aylesbury’s Proms in the Park last year.

Tiffany, from Leighton Buzzard and sister of Birmingham Oceana lighting technician Nicholas Campbell, has been trained in musical theatre and classical singing by leading soprano Jill Neenan.

She will be performing free of charge in the Aspen Ski Lodge, one of seven themed venues at Oceana, offering the cosiness of an American ski resort with the music to match.

Zolly Branch, Oceana General Manager, said: “Oceana is always keen to promote young talent - and Tiffany Jayne is exceptional. Guests can look forward to a superb rendition of hits from the stage and screen from this terrific singer in our popular ski lodge venue”

News from the West Midlands Employer Coalition

Driving change, changing lives.

Welcome
Welcome to the April edition of the e-Newsletter of the West Midlands Employer Coalition, part of Working Ventures UK. WVUK is a not-for-profit company limited by guarantee which has evolved from the National Employment Panel and which represents a new centre of excellence in employer engagement.

Care to recruit Ex Offenders?
On 24th March the Coalition, in partnership with Sector Skills Council - Skills For Care and Jobcentre Plus, funded a "seeing is believing event" for around 40 West Midlands Probation Officers, at the Centennial Centre in Birmingham.

The event coincided with the launch of the sector’s nationwide promotion and recruitment campaign designed to dispel some of the myths and negativity around the care sector, and to demonstrate the range of quality careers open to women and men of all ages and life experience – including offenders.

Olivia Redgrave of Skills For Care set out the training and skills pathway available to job seekers while Pauline Jones of JCP highlighted the growth in the sector and the availability of a wide variety of roles - thousands of which are currently unfilled across the UK.

There was practical advice regarding the legal implications of employing people with a criminal record along with common sense "real world" experiences and tips shared by a number of employers.

The event was very well-received by colleagues from the Probation Service and there was plenty of lively, constructive debate and sharing of good practice and ideas. Hopefully this event will strengthen links between Probation staff and their clients and Jobcentre Plus’ services for job seekers.

For more information visit: www.skillsforcare.org.uk

Project Pothole
The Employer Coalition has been working in partnership with Rhino Asset Maintenance Ltd (RAM) and the West Midlands Probation Service to create a highways repair and maintenance employment routeway for Offenders.

RAM have developed and proven a unique asphalt repair and maintenance process that will reduce carbon footprints - on and off highway - by over 80%, uses over 90% of recycled material, and offers a guarantee of quality which reduces re-working and saves money for those responsible for maintaining our roads.

We have recently funded a number of demonstration programmes delivered by offenders as part of their rehabilitation and reparation to the community in a variety of locations across the West Midlands.

As part of the programme, repairs were made to roads and car parks at community and charity premises, including Guide Dogs for the Blind, by groups of ex-offenders determined to turn their lives around.

In addition to the practical work experience they have gained, they have also each achieved a NRSWA Street Works Card and a HAPAS certificate for the safe application of hot and cold lay bitumen.

Early signs are very positive and job offers have been made to a number of "graduates" of the scheme….For further information contact Nichola Balmer: nichola.balmer@bcoalition.org

Fit 4 Work

17 employers of all sizes from the public and private sectors gathered for breakfast at Birmingham Chamber of Commerce recently to give their thoughts and views on the preliminary plans for a new GP "Fit Notes" pilot which may come to Birmingham in the near future.
Following recommendations from Dame Carol Black, the government intends that sick notes will be replaced in England by electronic "Fit Notes", allowing doctors to say what work their patients CAN do as well as what they cannot.

Sick leave costs the economy £100 billion a year, including the loss of about 172 million working days and the government wants to encourage "a fundamental culture change" to help people stay in work.

The new fit note, which will be introduced in 2010, would encourage GPs and employers to work together to help people with a disability or long-term medical condition keep their jobs or return to work.

Dr Richard Mendelsohn and Roger Matthews of the Improving Health, Improving Employment Partnership along with Elaine Russell of bWell Birmingham, described ways in which the new "Fit Notes" might work in our area and encouraged (not that they needed to!) debate and ideas from employers who will be significantly affected by the changes – hopefully positively...

This is the first in a series of breakfast events which will be part of the development of any proposal for pilot status put forward by our area, and if any employer is keen to take part in the next event they should contact Nichola Balmer at: nichola.balmer@bcoalition.org

Diversity Event: The Importance of Corporate Memory
Irwin Mitchell Solicitors of Birmingham kindly hosted an event co-promoted by the Employer Coalition and Birmingham Professional Divercity on 26th March which focussed on the benefits of employing a diverse workforce, and especially on the critical importance of retaining older workers who are often the source of "corporate memory".

Peter Tomlinson and Andy Finnie of the Coming of Age Partnership described the "demographic tsunami" which will shortly engulf us and how in the current economic climate, older workers are being disproportionately selected for redundancy by some short sighted employers – allowing a wealth of corporate knowledge and wisdom to be lost from those businesses.

While this loss may not become immediately apparent in "quiet times" once business picks up it will be sorely felt…as evidenced by case studies from BT and British Nuclear Fuels.
A copy of their presentation is available by calling Kay Stubbs on 0121 480 3788 and you can learn more by visiting: www.coapartnership.org.uk

Call Centre Age Management Project
West Midlands Employer Coalition is working with a number of growing local call centres including that of a leading Local Authority, to help them develop balanced age-positive recruitment policies and practices which better reflect the demography of their client or service user base.

Call Centre work is often thought of as a "young person’s game" but as the population ages, customers will expect service from "people like themselves". Older workers have been proven to bring a range of critical skills to call centre work including empathy, life experience, patience and active listening skills which more than make up for (their lack - in some cases, though not all) of ICT skills.

As ICT skills are a lot easier to learn than life skills, it makes sense for call centre operators to think about how they can enhance their customer service by employing a more balanced and representative age profile, and this project is in the early stages of helping them do just that!

For more information contact Nichola Balmer: nichola.balmer@bcoalition.org

Young People invited to Buddah Day

The Birmingham Buddhist Centre is hosting parent-run young persons' activities at the Birmingham Buddhist Centre on Buddha Day. If you and your child(ren) would like to participate in this please email Jane Upton (see email address below) for more details:

Please see a copy of the programme for the day below.

Contact Jane on janeupton35@yahoo.co.uk

Buddha Day Festival Programme

Sunday 10th May:
11am - 1pm: Meditation with readings
1pm: Lunch (Please bring vegetarian food to share)
2.30pm: Talk by Abhaya on the theme of the Buddha as 'The Trackless One'
4pm: Tea Break
4.30pm: Discussion groups exploring themes from the talk, or a meditation option for those who would prefer to meditate
6pm: Dinner (provided)
7pm: Puja with mitra ceremonies
By 9pm: Finish

DJ DUO REMIX VAMPIRE FILM IN INNOVATIVE PERFORMANCE AT BASS 2009

An acclaimed DJ duo will breathe new life into the first ever vampire film as part of this year’s BASS Festival.

The Shrine Synchro System, aka DJs Rita Ray and Max Reinhardt, will provide an African inspired live soundtrack to accompany a screening of 1922’s Nosferatu.

The unconventional mashup is part of the festival’s African-inspired lineup. Running for its fourth consecutive year, BASS (British Arts and Street Sounds) Festival is this year exploring the theme ‘Inspired by Africa and Africans’.

The Shrine will bring their sonic soundscapes, derived from a number of African musical styles, to Birmingham’s Electric Cinema on June 21. By choosing to soundtrack director F.W. Murnau’s ‘Symphony of Horror’, the pair’s performance will appeal equally to fans of African music and classic cinema.

The Shrine is the ever-evolving musical unit of DJs Rita and Max, a partnership that developed out of their famed Shrine club nights in London. Inspired by afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti’s Lagos club, Shrine regularly welcomed an array of African talent from Tunde Jegede, Tony Allen and the Noisettes’ Shingai Shoniwa.

Nosferatu vs. The Shrine follows the duo’s involvement in last year’s collaborative live soundtrack for the first ever documentary Nanook of the North, which played to great acclaim at the Brit Doc and Barbican Film festivals.

BASS Festival is the UK’s only month long celebration of urban music and art. Venues across London and the Midlands will play host to live music, theatre and dance performances, art exhibitions, and master classes.
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For more info on BASS Festival 2009, including full line-up details, visit www.bassfestival.co.uk.

JAM HOUSE BOOKS APPOINTMENT WITH DR FEELGOOD


Dr Feelgood, one of Britain’s best pub-rock quartets, are returning to Birmingham’s Jam House on Thursday, May 14 to perform many of the edgy roots tracks that made them one of the top bands of the 1970s.

The group, which was formed nearly 40 years ago, topped the UK album charts in 1976 with their live album Stupidity. They also achieved a top-ten UK singles hit with Milk and Alcohol in 1979, which they will be performing along with other popular successes including Down at the Doctors and She Does it Right.

Tickets for Dr Feelgood are available priced at £5 by clicking on http://www.thejamhouse.com/ or by calling The Jam House on 0121 200 3030.

Axemen Let Loose at Chatsworth Country Fair

September 4, 5 & 6 2009

Back again for the 28th year is the enormously popular Chatsworth Country Fair – one of England’s most spectacular outdoor events held in the 1000 acre park on the banks of the river Derwent. The three day event in September is packed full of things to watch, do and try, and gives visitors a real flavour of life in the countryside.

Country Fair president Alan Titchmarsh will lead the opening ceremony on Friday 4 September at 12pm and will be out and about greeting the crowds at the fair throughout the day.

The Grand Ring provides a focus with an exciting and varied programme of entertainment running from 10.30am to 6.30pm on all three days.

Making their debut in the Grand Ring are The Welsh Axemen, a team of five or more fearless axe racers who deliver a riveting and nail biting performance. The 30 year old sport uses razor sharp axes or saws in competition to simulate the falling of a tree by cutting it up into lengths and carving out chairs for children in the audience. Also new for 2009 is Mark Wylie and The Drakes of Hazard, as seen on Blue Peter; Mark and his sheepdog will entertain and enchant as they work in harmony to direct a troop of fearless Indian Runner Ducks around an obstacle course.

Other highlights include one of the country’s top parachute display teams, The Tigers Freefall Team of the Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment, dropping into the arena - smoke trailing and flags flying, a jaw-dropping low-level aerobatics display with Stephen Carver and Gary Ferriman, the spectacular twice daily hot air balloon lift at dawn and dusk (weather permitting), terrier racing with Cyril the Squirrel and a Vintage Car Parade.
BBC TV presenter Alan Titchmarsh speaking at last year’s event described the Country Fair as the finest outdoor show in England. He said: “The setting and the organisation make Chatsworth Country Fair the best in the land. Sitting on the banks of the River Derwent this really is a patch of paradise that is loaned to us all for three days each summer. You will not find a friendlier bunch of people to welcome you, and you will never have a better day out in the country. That's why I'm happy to come back year after year!”

Now in its third year, the Fine Food Village returns bigger and better than ever before. It showcases the best of specialist food and drink producers, many of them local to Chatsworth, with plenty of quality produce on offer to take home. Food lovers can pick up some top tips with cookery demonstrations from celebrity chef Rachel Green, amongst others, some even from top Michelin starred restaurants around the area.

The Band of the Prince of Wales's Division, one of the 23 Regular bands of the Army will be providing musical entertainment three times each day, coming to a rousing finale on the last day. With over 300 varied trade stands and rural crafts, and lots of events around the show ground from highland dancing to horse driving, this is an event that really will deliver a great day out for all the family.

As well as a feast of entertainment, what makes the Country Fair so popular is the opportunity to get stuck in to a whole variety of activities from archery and clay pigeon shooting to game fishing and dog shows. Many of the activities come with tuition and demonstrations, so beginners are more than welcome.

Adult tickets are £13 for Friday, £15 for Saturday and Sunday. Gates open at 9am with the closing ceremony at 5.30pm on Friday, 6.00pm on Saturday and 6.15pm on Sunday. Children aged 14 and under enter for free when accompanied by an adult. Car parking is free and dogs are welcome on a lead. Advance tickets can be bought online, by visiting www.countryfairoffice.co.uk. The farmyard and adventure playground will be closed during this event, although they will have a strong presence on their stand at the Country Fair.

Chatsworth is 8 miles north of Matlock off the B6012. It is 16 miles from the M1 Junction 29, signposted via Chesterfield (follow brown signs), 42 miles from the M6 Junction 19 and 30 mins from Chesterfield rail station. For more information visit www.chatsworth.org.

STORYTELLING CAFE NEWS MAY 2009

www.TradArtsTeam.co.uk

We have a range of events to offer to you from the Traditional Arts Team. Our Storytelling Café Tour this month is with Wilf Merttens, Young Storyteller of the Year 2009, and Ruthie Boycott-Garnett who was runner up. At each venue they will be joined by other local young storytellers. Monday 4 May (and for the whole of May) Radio Wildfire Storyteller Graham Langley in conversation with Dave Reeves will discuss the background of Storytelling Cafe and the latest storytelling developments. He will describe opportunities for storytelling both as performer and audience. The show can be heard live by logging on to www.radiowildfire.com between 8 and 10pm. You can also log on to Radio Wildfire and listen to The Loop at any time and hear a repeating programme of spoken word and music.
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Tuesday 5 May 8pm
BIRMINGHAM STORY SESSION
Upstairs at The Bull's Head, St Mary's Row, Moseley, Birmingham B13 8HW
www.tradartsteam.co.uk/storytelling/bhamsession.htm
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Thursday 7 May 8pm
BIRMINGHAM TRADITIONAL SONG SESSION
Kitchen Garden Café, York Road, B14 7SA
www.tradartsteam.co.uk/song/songsession.htm

Monday 11 May 7:30
SPINNING YARNS (Matlock story session)
The Boat Inn, Cromford, Derbyshire DE4 3QF
www.tradartsteam.co.uk/storytelling/boatsession.htm

Monday 18 May 7:30
MATLOCK STORYTELLING CAFÉ
The Boat Inn, Cromford, Derbyshire DE4 3QF
Tickets £7.00 from 01629 826939 or the Boat Inn Food available from 6:30
www.tradartsteam.co.uk/storytelling/matlock.htm

Tuesday 19 May 7:30
SANDWELL STORYTELLING CAFÉ
Wednesbury Library, Walsall Street, WS10 9EH
Tickets £5.00/£2.50 from the library 0121 556 0351
www.tradartsteam.co.uk/storytelling/sandwell.htm

Wednesday 20 May 7:30
BIRMINGHAM STORYTELLING CAFÉ
Kitchen Garden Cafe Tickets £7.00 from KG Café, 0121 443 4725
Food available from 6:30
www.tradartsteam.co.uk/storytelling/bham.htm

Saturday 23 May 8-11pm
BANK HOLIDAY BARN DANCE
in Birmingham All Saints Church Hall, Vicarage Road, Birmingham B14 7RA
Tickets £7 (£5 unwaged) from 0121 246 9873 £8 on the door (if there are any left)
www.tradartsteam.co.uk/dance/May09.htm

PEAK PERFORMANCE training for storytellers
Sunday 3 May 10:30 -4:00
www.tradartsteam.co.uk/storytelling/training.htm

Storytelling Café is presented by the Traditional Arts Team with support from Arts Council England and Awards for All

Solihull Together


Launch of major awareness-raising campaign for Solihull’s Third Sector

A major campaign to raise the profile of Solihull’s voluntary and community organisations launched at this week’s Third Sector Network events.

Named ‘Solihull Together’, the campaign is aiming to increase awareness of the great work being done by Solihull’s Third Sector and to generate more support from local people and businesses.

The campaign launched with the premier of a promotional DVD, showcasing just three of the 600+ fantastic organisations in the borough. The DVD will be shown on our website and at events leading up to Volunteers’ Week, to inspire more people to get involved.

You can find everything you need to know about Solihull Together on our re-launched website from Friday 1st May – www.solihull-sustain.org.uk/solihull-together.

Campaign highlights:
Solihull News – a half page feature every week for five weeks, including a ‘wanted’ column where you can advertise for any skills, people, resources that would help you
Local press – coverage in Solihull News, Radio WM, BBC Midlands Today and Your Solihull, with more coming on board all the time
Volunteering leaflet campaign – Solihull Council and Care Trust have already pledged their support with distribution
Business support – many companies have already offered their skills and time for free, as well as competition prizes and other resources
Phase 1 of the campaign will run for five weeks up to National Volunteers’ Week, with plans underway to extend the campaign to create a legacy for the future. SUSTAiN is being supported by Solihull-based media company Big Umbrella to run the campaign as part of the company’s Corporate Social Responsibility.

Now it’s over to you
‘Solihull Together’ needs you! The Solihull News will feature a ‘Wanted’ column throughout the campaign where voluntary and community groups can advertise for the skills, resources and people they need. Anything from a kettle, to exhibition space to someone to help balance the books. If you would like to request for some support via the Wanted column contact Martin Clarke at SUSTAiN at martinc@solihull-sustain.org.uk or call 0121 711 3148.

You can also help publicise the campaign by using the Solihull Together logo and displaying the volunteering poster. Check our website from Friday 1st May for all the information relating to the Solihull Together campaign – www.solihull-sustain.org.uk/solihull-together.


Solihull SUSTAiN
0121 711 3148 (Central Solihull)
0121 770 8889 (North Solihull)
http://www.solihull-sustain.org.uk/

Solihull student rows in Two Cities Boat Race

A student from Solihull will race in the North’s answer to the Oxford-Cambridge boat race.

University of Salford undergraduate Hannah Thomas, will be part of the crew in the Two Cities Boat Race on Saturday 9th May at 2pm, when Salford and Manchester will go head-to-head on the Manchester Ship Canal.

Thousands of spectators will line the banks of Salford Quays to watch rowing clubs from the two universities take to the water in the fiercely-contested races.

26-year-old Hannah, who is in the second year of a BSc (Hons) physiotherapy degree at Salford, will take part in the Salford Women’s Senior 8. In 2008 Manchester were victorious so this year Hannah hopes her boat will be the first across the line.

Hannah, who wants to work in sports physiotherapy when she graduates, started rowing when she came to Salford University.

She said: “ I’m really looking forward to taking part in the Boat Race and representing Salford University. Rowing is exciting and challenging and I can’t wait to get out there on the day and win the race.”

The crews will compete along the traditional River Irwell course at Salford Quays – starting at Sam Platt’s pub and finishing at the Lowry Bridge.

Salford University Boat Club President Caroline Dangerfield said: “We’re really looking forward to taking on Manchester this year and hopefully we’ll come out on top.

“The Two Cities Boat Race is a great way for our team to show what we can do and we can’t wait to cross that finish line first and get revenge on Manchester.”

Admission to the event is free. For further information please visit
http://www.twocitiesboatrace.co.uk/

Challinors exhibits for Focus Birmingham

(Seated): Sarah Corser, Joyce Young, Carl Dean
(Standing): Eileen Glass, Pat James, Gloria Priest (Challinors)



The skills of a group of visually impaired amateur artists are being showcased at the Birmingham city centre offices of law firm Challinors, in the latest step in its fundraising efforts for local charity Focus Birmingham.

Twenty-seven paintings and several clay sculptures created by ten visually impaired artists, all members of the Focus Birmingham Art Group led by volunteer tutors Graham Barber and Ian Reynolds, make-up the exhibition at Challinors’ Edmund House offices’ reception and meeting rooms. Organiser and Partner at Challinors David Corser explains:

“Challinors has a long association with Focus Birmingham and the idea of an exhibition of a selection of its art group’s works was originally germinated last year when the charity’s chief executive Rob Legge first told us of the group.

“It’s a win-win situation – Challinors’ staff and clients have the pleasure of seeing the wonderful artworks, and the artists get some valuable exposure and recognition for their work and talents to a wider audience. I am amazed by the artistic abilities of the group and the beautiful art work on display at our exhibition.”

Focus Birmingham’s Rob Legge adds: “Challinors has long been a good friend to Focus Birmingham and we are grateful for the dedicated fundraising efforts of the firms Charity Committee. This exhibition cements our friendship and we are truly grateful for the support of the firm.”

Challinors’ Charity Committee involves Partners, fee earners and support staff from each of the firms’ West Midlands offices in Birmingham, Edgbaston and West Bromwich. Sarah Corser, an Associate in Challinors’ Clinical Negligence team and a member of the Charity Committee explains: “To date, the Committee has raised £7,500 of its £10,000 target for Focus Birmingham through a number of fundraising activities such as quizzes, raffles, dress-down days, and even a sponsored leg wax. Joe Kerrigan, a partner and Head of the Family Law team at the firm, raised over £600 for Focus Birmingham when he completed the Birmingham Half Marathon last year.”


The Focus Birmingham Art Exhibition runs from now until the end of June. Some of the art works are available for purchase. Artists whose work is for sale will be donating part or all of the money raised to Focus Birmingham.

For more information about the Challinors Focus Birmingham Art Exhibition, Tel: 0121 212 9393. For more information about Focus Birmingham, visit: http://www.focusbirmingham.org.uk/.

Challinors has offices in Birmingham, West Bromwich and Nottingham. The firm has 23 partners and over 100 fee earners, and is ranked as one of the top legal firms in the West Midlands, being Number 1 in the Chambers UK Directory in a number of categories. For more information visit: http://www.challinors.co.uk/.

Eric & Doris West, David Corser, Rob Legge

Young Disabled People Sought For Birmingham Arts Project

Playtrain has been awarded funding to facilitate an arts project with disabled children and young people in Birmingham. We hope to deliver an element of the project in partnership with a prestigious local arts organisation and would like to identify a group of ten young people with physical and/or sensory impairment aged 13 to 17 to take part in a fairly advanced level community arts project.

Interested? Contact: Andy Davies
Director
Playtrain
Promoting the creativity of children and young people through a range of bespoke services
Participatory Arts Projects
Creative Consultation
Training Courses
Action Research
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149 - 153 Alcester Road, Moseley, Birmingham, B13 8JW
Tel: 0121 449 6665
Fax: 0121 449 8221
http://www.playtrain.org.uk/

IMPORTANT Check your UK driving licence

Thousands of motorists are at risk of being fined up to £1,000 because they are unwittingly driving without a valid licence.They risk prosecution after failing to spot the extremely small print on their photocard licence which says it automatically expires after 10 years and has to be renewed - even though drivers are licensed to drive until the age of 70. The fiasco has come to light a decade after the first batch of photo licences was issued in July 1998, just as they start to expire.Motoring organisations blamed the Government for the fiasco and said 'most' drivers believed their licences were for life. A mock-up driving licence from 1998 when the photocards were launched shows the imminent expiry date as item '4b' They said officials had failed to publicise sufficiently the fact that new-style licences - unlike the old paper ones - expire after a set period and have to be renewed.
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To rub salt into wounds, drivers will have to pay £17.50 to renew their card - a charge which critics have condemned as a 'stealth tax' and which will earn the Treasur y an estimated £437million over 25 years. Official DVLA figures reveal that while 16,136 expired this summer, so far only 11,566 drivers have renewed, leaving 4,570 outstanding. With another 300,000 photocard licences due to expire over the coming year, experts fear the number of invalid licences will soar, putting thousands more drivers in breach of the law and at risk of a fine.At the heart of the confusion is the small print on the tiny credit-card-size photo licence, which is used in conjunction with the paper version.

4b: The small print on the back of the driving licence is easy to miss Just below the driver name on the front of the photocard licence is a series of dates and details - each one numbered. Number 4b features a date in tiny writing, but no explicit explanation as to what it means. The date's significance is only explained if the driver turns over the card and reads the key on the back which states that '4b' means 'licence valid to'.Even more confusingly, an adjacent table on the rear of the card sets out how long the driver is registered to hold a licence - that is until his or her 70th birthday. A total of 25million new-style licences have been issued but - motoring e xperts say - drivers were never sufficiently warned they would expire after 10 years.
The DVLA said failure to update the photocard after 10 years fell into the same category as failing to inform them of a change of address.
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CHECK YOUR LICENCE EXPIRY DATE!!!

http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Motoring/DriverLicensing/NeedANewOrUpdatedLicence/DG_078070

Social Enterprise opportunity

A fantastic opportunity for someone — the Social Enterprise Coalition is seeking a Communications Intern — closing date 14th May.

JD attached below but see also:

http://www.socialenterprise.org.uk/pages/jobs-in-the-social-enterprise-coalition.html

Communications internship

Social enterprises are businesses run for a social or environmental need. They are driven by their social and environmental mission and are not motivated by maximising profit for profit’s sake.

The Coalition represents a wide range of social enterprises, umbrella bodies and networks, with a combined membership reaching more than 10,000 social enterprises.

As the voice for the sector, the Coalition provides a powerful platform for showcasing the benefits of social enterprise while supporting and representing the work of its varied members, influencing national policy and promoting best practice.

The Coalition is rapidly expanding and is looking for a highly-skilled intern to take some of the pressure off the busy press and campaigns office.

This is a great opportunity to be part of a dynamic organisation, get media and communications experience, network and learn more about the inner workings of the media and Government.


Responsibilities:

Compile a daily newspaper round up (circulated to all internal staff)
Find and assemble relevant news coverage of social enterprise and send out a daily report (a media monitor)
Keep records of media coverage
Find and write stories for fortnightly newsletter (circulation 6,000+
Organise the organisation’s image library both off-line and at the Coalition Flickr page
Assist with the writing of quotes and press releases
Identify possible media targets (through daily media round up)
Research case studies for journalists
· Assist campaign manager and comms officer with work around campaigns
General press office admin
Support other members of the communications team
Update online press office

Skills and experience:

· Good copy-writing skills
· Understanding of the British media scene
· Good telephone manner
· Attention to detail
· Enthusiastic and flexible

Desirable:

· Awareness of social enterprise movement, the wider third sector and related issues

Details

· Unpaid work experience
· Travel and lunch expenses covered
· Duration: three months
· closing date: May 14 2009
· Start: As soon as possible – ideally May 2009
· email CV and covering letter to vicky.brooks@socialenterprise.org.uk, 020 7793 2282.

John Bird, Founder of The Big Issue

John Bird, founder of The Big Issue, spoke to CNBC on the 26th April about how the Homeless threat will rise with recession. Please see interview on link below.
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http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=1099935192&play=1
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PROFILE:
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Started in 1991 by John Bird, The Big Issue is probably the best-known social enterprise in the UK. The street newspaper, compiled by professionals and then sold to homeless people to sell on the street at profit is not a charity, The Big Issue is, first and foremost, a business. In 2000 he helped to launch the writers website abctales.com.
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In June 1995 Mr. Bird was awarded the MBE for ‘services to homeless people’ and in 2006 he received the prestigious Beacon Fellowship Prize for his energy and originality in raising awareness of homelessness and his support of homeless communities worldwide. In 2006 he set up the Wedge card, an internet-based affinity card system designed to support small business and local enterprise, with the slogan “Think local. Shop local“.
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In March 2007 he announced his intention to stand for election to the post of Mayor of London as an independent candidate. In May 2007 he unveiled his election manifesto for the 2008 poll. However, in October 2007 he announced that he had decided not to stand for election, and was instead going to launch a movement that was “going to try and do what the CND did over the bomb, but over social injustice.“
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Mr. Bird is a Social Enterprise Ambassador. Social enterprises use a business to address a social or environmental need. The Social Enterprise Ambassadors programme is led by the Social Enterprise Coalition and is supported by the Office of the Third Sector, part of the UK government’s Cabinet Office.

Join authors Mez Packer and Iain Sinclair for FREE event at Coventry Central Library on Saturday 9 May

As part of this year's Coventry International Festival of Literature there will be a high quality author and FREE event at Coventry Central Library, Smithford Way on Saturday 9 May.1.00pm
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Local Coventry and Tindal Street Press author Mez Packer will be reading from her thriller, Among Thieves, set in 2 Tone Coventry of the early 1980s. This is a gripping taIe of drug smuggling, racism, friendship and revenge. Mez will also be giving tips and ideas to would-be authors and will be signing copies of the new novel.
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2.00pmPoetry reading by one of Britain's top writers, the award winning poet Iain Sinclair. Iain has lived in and written about Hackney in East London since 1969 with award winning novels, Downriver, Radon Daughters, Landor's Tower, and most recently, Dining on Stones.
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His non fiction work includes, Lights out for the Territory; London Orbital; Edge of Orison; London, City of Disappearances; and most recently, Hackney, That Rose- Red Empire, published in 2009. Iain has won the James Tait Black Prize, the Encore Prize and has presented films for BBC2's Late Show and the documentaries for Channel 4. This is a great chance to see and hear from one of the country's foremost writers and poets. There will be opportunities to meet both writers at the Central Library and buy signed copies of their work.
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www.coventry.gov.uk/libraries

Wednesday, 29 April 2009

Help the cubs hit their target

Cubs from various packs around the Rea Valley district in Birmingham have been raising funds so that their trip to France and Belgium this year will be successful.

The cubs have raised a couple of thousand pounds already which will help to finance the Rea Valley Odyssey this summer on which cubs from all over the district will travel as one group to the continent.

But the cubs still need to make a final push to bring in the extra money needed for activities whilst in Europe. Due to the poor value of the pound against the Euro, cub leaders are having to review their estimated expenditure and the cubs and their parents have been helping out to raise the money needed to meet the shortfall, by doing things like charity car washes and bag packing at supermarkets.

If your company can support the cubs reach their extra target of £1000, in return I can offer your some publicity for your company.

Send an email to me (Pete Millington) at info@bignbostin.com

WARWICKSHIRE LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY

On Tuesday the 21st of April 2009, Dr Stephen Roberts from the History of Parliament Trust, talked about Republican MPs of Warwickshire, 1649-60’, examining the careers and motives of those men who, following the execution of Charles, represented the county in Cromwell’s Republican Parliament.
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Dr. Roberts recounted many fascinating incidents, including the passing of special legislation to allow a candidate aged only twenty to be elected in order to avoid paying his father’s debts, amounting to some £200,000.
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The next event will be on Saturday 9th May, beginning at 2 p.m. when members will assemble for a village walk around Princethorp, before driving to the 29th Division Memorial at Stretton on Dunsmore. .Following a walk around Stretton, there will be tea and a talk and display in the village hall, including information on Joseph Elkington, Warwickshire farmer and eighteenth-century land drainage pioneer.

The outing, for which pre-booking is essential, costs £9 for guests, and application for this should be made to:-

Neville Usher, 6, The Fold, Payton Street, Stratford upon Avon, CV37 6NJ Telephone 01789 205 043, E mail Neville.Usher@ic24.net

The Animal Man to Star at Lodge Vet Centre’s Charity Open Day


2.00-5.00 pm, Saturday 16 May 2009
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Roger Pearson, known as ‘The Animal Man’ because of his passion for animals and his conservation and rescue work, is to be special guest at a charity Open Day to celebrate the completion of a major expansion project at The Lodge Veterinary Centre in Hodge Hill on Saturday 16 May 2009.
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Roger runs the National History Lecture Service (http://www.theanimalman.co.uk/) and has been speaking at schools and colleges on animals and conservation for 40 years. He’ll be bringing with him a selection of his more unusual ‘friends’, including frogs, spiders, beetles, snakes and birds so that visitors to the Open Day can take a close up look.
The Lodge Vets is based on Coleshill Road and employs 19 staff. It has now invested in a range of new facilities to enhance the care it offers to pets. In addition to meeting Roger Pearson, visitors to the Open Day will be able to tour the new practice, chat informally with practice staff and hear talks on aspects of pet health and welfare.
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Other attractions include a drawing competition for children. Children are invited to draw their favourite animal and bring them along to the Open Day. The competition will be judged during the day with a first prize of a family pass for a day out at Twycross Zoo. Second and third prizes of animal books are also up for grabs. All entries will be displayed in the surgery and proceeds will go to local charity Cats in Care. Refreshments will be provided.
The new facilities created by The Lodge’s expansion include a new sterile theatre, a special area for dental and other procedures and enhanced laboratory facilities. The extended practice will also be able to offer separate wards for dogs, cats and ‘small furries’, such as rabbits and guinea pigs, and an isolation area for contagious cases.
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Commenting on the Open Day, Fintan Farrelly, vet and practice principal, said: “We’re so proud of the new facilities we have here that we can’t wait to show them off to pet owners. We’re also honoured that Roger Pearson is coming along to share Open Day and know our visitors will love having the opportunity of getting up close and personal with some of his ‘special friends.’

“We’ve got some great activities planned for our guests on the Open Day and some special offers to help them get through the credit crunch. We’re particularly looking forward to seeing the pictures our young artists draw for us.”
The practice is based at 64 Coleshill Road, Hodge Hill, Birmingham B36 8AB and can be contacted on 0121 783 2327 or 0121 783 7158. The practice has a branch surgery at Coventry Road in Coleshill.

Two new practical guides from The National Trust - Allotments and Ponds

ALLOTMENTS
Inspiration and practical advice for would-be smallholders
Jane Eastoe

18 May 2009 / Hardback / £7.99

Fresh and delicious organic fruit and vegetables, plus armfuls of cut flowers, are the best advertisement for running your own allotment. Nothing beats the self-satisfied glow that comes from growing your own food and cooking it for family and friends.

In ALLOTMENTS, Jane Eastoe guides you through allotment life, from how to find an allotment, how to plan one out, what to grow, crop rotation, how to store your harvest plus some of the best recipes so you enjoy the fruits of your labour. With all the details on the cost of having an allotment, self-management, and protecting your allotment, this is the easiest guide to settling up, running and enjoying your own allotment.



PONDS
Creating and maintaining ponds for wildlife
Chris McLaren

18 May 2009 / Hardback / £7.99

There is no better way of creating a wildlife haven in your garden or plot of land than with a pond. These beautiful additions to any land provide homes for some of our most important indigenous wildlife: plants, insects, fish, amphibians, birds and even mammals. A limpid pool edged with rushes, the humming of damselflies, the croaks of frogs and the swooping flight of swallows will be a microsite of the best of the countryside.

Pond expert Chris McClaren introduces the reader to the world of ponds: how to create one, how to maintain one and how to introduce wildlife to this idyllic pool and help it thrive. Ponds come in all shapes and sizes, and with different purposes. For most gardens – and in the wider landscape – a new pond will almost certainly need to have visual appeal, be reasonably easy to maintain, be safe (especially where children are concerned) and hopefully attract a wide range of beneficial wildlife. This practical guide explores everything you need to know about creating and maintaining your own pond.

For more information please contact Jane Ellis on 020 7605 1471 or email jellis@anovabooks.com

ALLOTMENTS and PONDS are both published by National Trust Books, an imprint of Anova Books.

Navy relatives sought

The Royal Navy is seeking the living relatives of Chief Gunner Israel HardingVC., and Sergeant Norman Finch VC.,to attend the opening ceremony of two new accommodation blocks at HMS EXCELLENT in Portsmouth, which have bee named after the two men. The ceremony will take place on May 13th. If any reader can shed any light on the whereabouts of any descendant of the two men then please contact Heather Tupper Press officer Portmouth Naval Base. 023 9272 3737.

Heart appeal launches in Coventry


Left to right, Peter Knatchbull-Hugessen, Alex Barrett (nephew of Sir Derek Higgs) and West Midlands Ambulance Service Community Response Manager for Coventry and Warwickshire, Ian Inglesant.


Organisations in Coventry are being urged to support a campaign to introduce more defibrillators into the community in memory of a prominent businessman.

The Derek Higgs Start a Heart Appeal wants to place 50 defibrillators across Coventry which will cost £50,000, and is calling on businesses to protect their workforce and customers by buying one of the life-saving machines.

The appeal is in memory of Sir Derek Higgs, a trustee of the Alan Edward Higgs Charity, who died suddenly of a heart attack in April last year at the age of 64.

The successful businessman was director of Coventry City FC and the chairman of Alliance & Leicester, but was best known for his work on reforming the way Britain’s businesses are run.

Every year in Coventry around 500 people suffer a cardiac arrest, which is when the heart stops pumping effectively.

For every minute that passes after a cardiac arrest, the chance of survival decreases by 10 per cent, but this can be radically improved if a normal heart rhythm can be restored before a paramedic arrives.

A defibrillator interprets the heartbeat and can give a controlled electric shock to restore the heart’s normal rhythm.

Peter Knatchbull-Hugessen, brother-in-law of Sir Derek Higgs and co-organiser of the appeal, said: “Derek cared passionately about Coventry and its people and we think this is a fitting tribute to the good work he carried out in the region.

“Individuals can help by finding out if their club, workplace or gym has a defibrillator, and if not then to get them to contact the appeal. These machines should be available everywhere. It is a small cost to protect lives."

The defibrillators usually cost £1,300 plus VAT but if bought through the appeal it will only cost organisations £1,000.

The appeal is also asking for donations to ensure that community centres and public places can have defibrillators.

Through West Midlands Ambulance Service, the Derek Higgs Start a Heart Appeal will provide all organisations that buy a defibrillator with a free accredited basic life support training course, which would normally cost between £250 and £300, and includes cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and how to use the life saving defibrillators.

West Midlands Ambulance Service Community Response Manager for Coventry and Warwickshire, Ian Inglesant, said: “The training package the organisations receive allows staff to carry out basic life support including CPR and the use of a defibrillator.

“This means that they are fully equipped to help save a person’s life; that person may be a close friend, family member or a complete stranger but it is vital they receive help quickly.

“Using a defibrillator is very simple and if you ask any volunteer who has done so what their greatest achievement is; they will undoubtedly say it is having saved a life.”

To sign-up to the appeal or to make a donation, call 08444 120552.

A Warm French Welcome To West Midlands Band


Coleshill Town Band Trip to Chassieu Easter 2009

Wednesday 15th April saw Coleshill Town Band arriving for four fabulous days of hosting by their friends L’Ensemble Orchestral de Chassieu.

The band was welcomed upon their arrival in the town by the electronic notice board displaying the sign “Welcome to our friends from Coleshill” which really set the scene in terms of the planning and organisation which was behind this visit.

The evening began with a performance from some of the members of the French Orchestra and an aperitif and formal reception which saw the speeches from the chairs of Coleshill Town Band and L’Ensemble Orchestral de Chassieu. The speeches commented on the strength of the 26-year friendship that had been established between the two organisations.

Thursday began with a visit to the ancient hospital in Beaune in the Burgundy region where the band was given a very informing tour of the hospital which, remarkably only closed in 1987. The weather was slightly inclement but this did not take away from the enjoyment of the tour.

At lunchtime the band were treated to a fantastic meal of Beef Bourguignon a speciality of the region, at a very beautiful restaurant. Afterwards it was on to a wine tasting afternoon in which we were encouraged to use all of our five senses to discern the taste of the wine, which was very enlightening.

Following this we went to visit the personal wine producing plant of the Mayor of Pommard in which we tasted yet more wine and were able to see some of the plant used in the wine production of the Burgundy wines.

The next day began with a concert at a local attraction the parc des oiseaux (bird park) and then a traditional meal in one of the park’s restaurants followed by a tour of the park and a show which saw some magnificent birds flying within centimetres of our heads!!

Following party night on Friday night, Saturday saw the final day of the tour and the grand finale of the joint concert in Chassieu’s Salle des Fetes (Community Hall). After some free time with our host families our cases were packed for the return trip to Coleshill and the stage was set for the joint concert.

The evening began with a performance from the Ensemble Orchestral de Chassieu followed by a set by Coleshill Town Band then they both came together for a joint finale which featured “Dynamissimo” composed by the EODC’s conductor Michel Trux especially for the two bands and the traditional Hootenanny.

Coleshill Town Band’s Chairman, Tim Speakman, presented the Orchestra with an embroidered plaque and made a formal invitation for them to make a trip to Coleshill in the near future.

After a sing-song, the band said a heartfelt au-revior to their friends from Chassieu and boarded the coach in the early hours for their return to Coleshill.


Local Trio Raise Brass for Band!


Three Coleshill Town Band members ran the Shakespeare Half Marathon in Stratford on Sunday 26th April raising over £1,000 of much-needed cash for Coleshill Town Bands.

The money was needed for the Youth Brass and Beginner Brass, which currently has membership of over 60 young people from the Coleshill area, in order to furnish more youngsters with instruments and other equipment to ensure it continues to grow from strength to strength.

The band has a policy of never turning anyone away, even if they do not have the funds to be able to buy a costly brass instrument. The money ensures that the band can run another “Make Music Workshop” in the autumn to enable more youngsters to have an instrument on which to learn.

Tuesday, 28 April 2009

Denis Shaw's regular golfing feature - May edition

Have a New Knee…& Get on with the Game !

By Dennis Shaw


At the time, I was stretched out on the sofa, with a pair of crutches nearby, contemplating a kilo packet of Tescos frozen peas perched perilously on a seriously swollen left knee. As you do.

Weeks, maybe months, of inactivity lay ahead. No car driving for a considerable time. No golf driving until spring turns into summer, and who knows how long after that. And yet…do you know how I felt?

Lucky, that’s how. .

Lucky that, at the age of 76 I could have undergone what is known as a TKR (Total Knee Replacement) and, thanks to the miracles of modern surgery, can look forward to being back to normal, including playing golf, in the foreseeable future, 12 weeks maybe.

Just imagine that: a clapped out knee joint, with cartilages missing and arthritis setting in, has been surgically removed. In its place has been fixed a metal surface to the head of the femur, a polyethylene cushion has been cemented into the head of the fibula and, after some weeks of recovery, away you go.

New knee joint for old, sir? Certainly!. How about that? Quite commonplace now, actually. And hip replacements, I’m assured, are even easier….

There were two reasons that, with time on my hands and not much to do, I was indulging in a spot of homespun philosophy to pass away a few moments.

It’s not all that long ago that I attended the annual general meeting of a group of care homes for old folk. One of the speakers told us that when the group was founded in the aftermath of World War 2 the average age of their inmates was in the fifties.

Back then, sixty-plus was regarded as ‘very elderly’, comparatively few reached their 70s and many who did, unless in rare good health, were pretty much regarded as living on borrowed time. Many did live on into their nineties and even a hundred then, of course, but only a fraction of those who do now.

Fact is that that the ‘problem’ has shifted. A smaller number go into those homes before they’re in their 80s and some of those fortunate enough to remain in good health are active members of golf clubs rather than taking up beds in care homes for the elderly.

There is nothing unusual nowadays in seeing a group of four guys, or gals, having a thoroughly competitive and enjoyable 18 hole match, all on foot, and each of them is 80 or thereabouts. And younger bloods might consider that the fairways are being cluttered up by the grey brigade.

The other thought that crossed my mind was of playing with a teenage junior member in a competition some months ago now. He was one of the admirable, well-coached modern breed of long-hitting young bucks with Tiger-like swings and aspirations to follow in the great man’s footsteps. Good for him….

If I recall correctly he was off a handicap of five but was desperate to get down to four and could have done so had he scored a shot or two below par in this Wednesday medal. (I suspect he wasn’t too happy at finding himself playing with this high handicap septuagenarian and another guy of much the same age and ability so that may not have helped his mood)

The whole affair seemed three and a half hours of unmitigated torture for our Young Buck. Dropping a shot to par, even on the longest of holes, and in difficult playing conditions, reduced him to the depths of despair. When he missed a six-foot putt for one of the several birdies he felt were his god-given right, he appealed to the heavens as though unjustified and unbearable penance was raining down on him.

To be fair, at that age, when you have some ability, have been taught by a PGA pro, have watched the elite of the world game perform their wondrous deeds in the major championships, it is not easy to accept that you may just be like the rest of us…destined to play the game for fun and frustration.

It’s a hard lesson, and part of growing up. No-one should criticises a young person for wanting to be the best, but patience, perspective and humility are three more of life’s lessons that also have to be learned, especially if you’re to survive the indignities that golf can heap upon us.

As we played the final hole I said to him:” Today, playing with us, you’ve seen the most encouraging thing you’ll ever see on a golf course… and if I were you I would never forget it.”

He looked at my mate and I and, with a withering, disbelieving expression, asked: “How do you mean?”

“It shows that you if you stay healthy you can carry on playing this game for another sixty years or more…”, I explained, getting all grandfatherly. He obviously didn’t understand. And why should he when his priorities are NOW, not in his dotage. But he will…especially if, one of these days, he has to have a dodgy knee replaced…

Editor: I am very grateful to Denis Shaw, former sports writer with Birmingham Mail, for his regular golfing articles in the Coleshill Gazette

Caroline is Puter Tutor - May article

Do you Facebook or Twitter?


Social Networking, for some, is as important as socialising in person. The premise is the same. To share information about what you have been up to or are interested in; either in a public forum or limited to those you choose as “friends”. Facebook and Twitter are two of the most popular websites; with celebrities making the headlines for their not so politically correct comments about other celebrities.

To many of us Twitter is the noises birds make but increasingly it is referring to the website www.twitter.com. Twitter describes itself as ‘… a service for friends, family, and co–workers to communicate and stay connected through the exchange of quick, frequent messages. People write short updates, called "tweets" of 140 characters or fewer. These messages are posted to your profile or your blog, sent to your followers, and are searchable on Twitter search.’

Famous users of Twitter include Stephen Fry, with 450,000 followers (people who have elected to follow their twittering), and Britney Spears with 1.1 million followers.

Essentially you end up with a time line of all the people you are following and what they have been up to. This may be as simple as “Fish and Chips for supper tonight” or to quote Stephen Fry from the 21st April “Eyes on stalks as I inspect the diary to discover that I have an evening in. An island of domesticity in an ocean of commitments. Blissikins”.

Updates can be posted from your computer or from your mobile phone.

www.Facebook.com states its mission is to give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected. Millions of people use Facebook everyday to keep up with friends, upload an unlimited number of photos, share links and videos, and learn more about the people they meet. In addition to this Facebook offers its users the chance to play games like Scrabble or even run a virtual farm where you can grow and sell crops!


Signing up to either of these sites is easy; you only need an email address. As for the issues surrounding privacy and identity fraud, the same rules apply as for any other website. It is advisable not to put too much personal information on there. Be careful what you say, once it is said it cannot always be retracted before other people have read it.

By Caroline, The ‘PuterTutor.

TV Producer and Campaign Strategist to Visit Water Orton

Mark Dowd, TV Producer and Director of Operation Noah wants to enthuse rather than scare us about climate change which he visualizes as coming towards us like a juggernaut.
Everyone reading this paper is welcome to attend the meeting on Thursday 4th June 7.30p.m.at the Parish Church, Water Orton, to hear Mark speak and to question him.

His subject ‘Beyond changing lights bulbs; how people of faith can engage with climate change’, presupposes that our children and grand children’s generation will want to know what we were thinking about in the response we have made to this issue.

Admission is free and donations will go to Operation Noah. For further information on Mark, the BBC programmes he has produced and presented and on Operation Noah , check out the internet. We look forward to seeing you on June 4th

I Lost 5 Stones & Found a Career!

Katie Whitehead

After a roller coaster weight loss journey over the last few years I have finally found the perfect way to my channel my enthusiasm for healthy eating which fits in with family life. I love food, I always have- it’s always been the one thing I can talk about for hours, from the latest chocolate bar in the shops to what meals I’ve enjoyed on holiday. So when I heard that there was a Slimming World group available in Coleshill I jumped at the chance.

I’ve been attending my local group in Tamworth for about 2 ½ years and it has always been a home from home to me, a sanctuary where I can escape my hectic life as a full-time mum and enjoy the interaction with other members over a cup of coffee. I’d struggled, alone, to loose the 1st 2 stones but joining Slimming World gave me the help I needed to loose the final 3 stones, dropping 4 dress sizes as I went!

Loosing weight though, meant more to me than just fitting into smaller clothes. The excess weight I was carrying had meant that I had been struggling to control my asthma, having to frequently stop for breath and take my inhaler two or three times just to walk round the block. Now I rarely need to take my inhaler and have the energy I need to stay active and have fun with my children.

The eating plan fitted in perfectly with my family life, allowing me to prepare filling home cooked meals such as cottage pie, lasagne and chips and the good old British fry-up- all Slimming World style of course! I never felt like I was missing out as I could fill up on huge meals with out having to weigh and measure and still enjoy a chocolate bar, packet of crisps or glass of wine later that night. No one ever believed me when I said I was on a diet- they all thought I was eating too much to loose weight!

Now I really hope I’ll be able t o draw on my experiences to help others to find their way to a healthier lifestyle. I had times when I wanted to give up but going along class each week kept me going. I can’t wait to be a part of that supportive atmosphere in Coleshill as the whole group gives one another the encouragement they need to reach their goals.

I’m hoping to keep my class very community orientated, involving local businesses wherever possible, promoting local fresh produce and attending local events with my family. I’ve already started going to the rhythm and rhyme classes at the Coleshill library with my 2 young children who I’m keen to keep involved as I really want my part time consultant job to fit in with being a mum. We’re also planning on going to the open day at the Shustoke Sailing Club, which we read about in the Gazette.

I have to say that as I’ve gone about my promotional work, leaving leaflets and posters with local residence and businesses, I have been overwhelmed with what a warm and friendly area it is. Everyone has been so kind, welcoming and helpful. I know taking the group i s going to be a pleasure as there is such a fantastic community spirit.

My group meets at 7pm at the Coleshill & District Social Club. I can’t wait to welcome our new members- the stars of the future who I’m sure will soon be on these pages, showing off their before and after photo’s!

For more information on the Coleshill group, call me on 07961 014 580.

Vin Garbbutt in Bromsgrove

Vin Garbutt at Avoncroft Museum of Historic Buildings
Stoke Heath Bromsgrove B60 4JR

A fund raising evening to the benefit of Avoncroft Museum and Worcestershire Special Olympics

Friday 26th June
Vin Garbutt and friends including
Capt. Swing
Ceri Davies
A Merrie Noyse
Angeline Morrison
Moseley Village Band
Wilmcote Fiddle Band
Rue Royale

Tickets £12.00 from FunRaySing at 07930 553 493 or tob@nailtown.co.uk

The Big China Weekend this Bank Holiday


Journey to the East arrives in the West …. Midlands
British Museum Tour of Chinese Treasures visits the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum

This bank holiday the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum welcomes the Big China Weekend as the venue will be transformed into a family friendly feast of colour, dance, acrobatics, performance and activities. The weekend of FREE activities start on Saturday, May 2nd and continue on Sunday May 3rd and include Lion Dancers, story telling, traditional Chinese music, watch and learn Thai Chi and children's make and take art classes (making paper dragons!).

The weekend of Chinese activities celebrate the exhibition launch of China: Journey to the East touring from the British Museum. This unique exhibition featuring over 100 objects from the British Museum is the largest loan of Chinese material the Museum has ever undertaken within the UK and will arrive for display in the West Midlands for the first time at the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum, Coventry this weekend.


Christopher Kirby – Herbert Art Gallery and Museums Head of Collections and Programmes commented 'It is an honour to play host to such a prestigious exhibition for the first time in the West Midlands. The generosity of the British Museum, BP, DCMS and other key stakeholders help sharing important artefacts across the country a reality. We hope the people of Coventry, Warwickshire and beyond take advantage of this rare opportunity and enjoy all the family events and activities programmed FREE of charge to help support this exhibition'.

CHINA: Journey to the East Exhibition explores 3,000 years of Chinese history and culture through five themes that will resonate with audiences of all kinds: Play & Performance, Technology, Belief & Festivals, Food & Drink, and Language & Writing.

The exhibition presents key Chinese inventions such as the abacus (the world’s first calculator) and compass along with developments such as silk and porcelain manufacture and woodblock printing.
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Visitors will have fun learning about Festivals and Belief systems as well as Play in China with items spanning 2,000 years. There are board games from the Han Dynasty (206 BC–221 AD) and shadow puppets from the 20th century. Other displays will explore Chinese traditions of eating and drinking and provisions for the afterlife.

Finally, the exhibition will investigate the development of China's writing system and its development as an art form by looking at artefacts ranging from an ancient oracle bone to an example of calligraphy written by Mao Zedong.
Colourful paintings made for the export market and silk textiles from Bristol’s fine East

A range of events and activities supporting the exhibition continue after Big China Weekend. For further details on these and other FREE family events, exhibitions, talks and activities visit www.theherbert.org


CHINA EXHIBITION EXTRAS:

Big China Weekend
Saturday May 2nd and Sunday May 3rd
11am – 3.30 pm
FREE Lion Dance Performances, Story Telling, Thai Chi Display and Classes, Tessellation Paper Folding and family paper dragon make and take classes

Curators Talk
Friday June 5th
12.30pm – 1.30pm
Jessica Harrison-Hall, a curator from the British Museum brings the exhibition to life in this fascinating talk

Peking Opera Revealed
Saturday July 11th 12 noon – 3.30pm
A day of insight into the art and magic of the Peking Opera. Performances by traditional artists followed by workshops in making costumes and learning opera skills.

Chinese Film Festival
Manufactured Landscape, cert U
Thursday 14 May, 7.00pm start
Travel through China with this beautiful and insightful photographic film which aims to shift our consciousness about the world and the way we live in it.

Curse of the Golden Flower, cert 15
Thursday 11 June, 7.00pm start
Yimou Zhang offers intense visual style and breath-taking cinematography in this epic tale of love and power.

Still Life, cert U
Thursday 25 June, 7.00pm start
A revelatory and thought-provoking portrait of people adrift in a world they no longer recognise.

The Road Home, cert U
Thursday 16 July, 7.00pm start
A story of past and present, this simple tale is told with insight and dazzlingly beautiful camerawork.

Come and Join the Roman Army As they Set up Training Camp at the Lunt Roman Fort this Bank Holiday


Come join the Roman Army this Bank Holiday weekend as re-enactment group Vicus bring Coventry’s Lunt Roman Fort back to life through demonstrations of combats and military manoeuvres on the Sunday May 3rd and Bank Holiday Monday May 4th.

Events throughout the day will include a battle simulation, a fashion show, displays of weapons and exciting activities for the whole family. Through this interactive experience, visitors will learn more about our predecessors and get a flavour of what the site could have been like back in the days when it used to host the Roman army, Romano-British civilians and native warriors.

Barbara Berry – Lunt Roman Fort Team Leader commented 'We are privileged to welcome the Vicus re-enactment group to the Lunt Roman Fort on Sunday and Monday this weekend. They are always such an amazing spectacle and families of all ages thoroughly enjoy exploring the rich history of the site in such an interactive and fun way'

The Lunt Roman Fort is the only reconstructed wooden fort in Britain. It was built as a campaign headquarters and supply depot after the Boudican revolt in 60 AD. The site was surrounded by a vicus, originally a temporary settlement which grew up into a permanent community where aspects of the Roman and British culture merged together. The Lunt is also home to a gyrus, a circular wooden enclosure presumably used to train cavalry soldiers and horses.

Weekend Timetable (Sunday and Monday):

11.00 – Living history camp opens
11.30 – Get Dressed for Battle
12.30 – Missile weapons
1.30 – Fashion show
2.30 – Sharp weapon display.
3.30 – Combat.
4.30 – Living history camp closes

The Alphaspaghettical Guide to the West Midlands

E is for Edgbaston Reservoir

First time visitors to Edgbaston Reservoir will be amazed to discover such an idyllic and peaceful stretch of water so close to the centre of Birmingham. Standing on the main public car park next to the Tower Ballroom and looking across the water in the direction of the wooded fringes of the reservoir along it’s border with Portland Road, it is easy to imagine oneself to be staring across a lake in the middle of the countryside.

Edgbaston reservoir is rich in wildlife. At most times of the year, nature lovers can observe several types of water fowl including gulls, ducks, moorhen, coots, geese, swans and grebes. The reservoir is also home to a thriving boating club.

Most of us would presume that the reservoir was created so close to Birmingham city centre to provide a supply of drinking water to it’s citizens. But in actual fact, Edgbaston reservoir was built by Thomas Telford in the early 1800s to provide a source of water for his new canal which ran from Birmingham to Smethwick and on to Wednesbury.

Other interesting facts about Edgbaston Reservoir:

When Blondin crossed the Rezza!

In 1873 the renowned Victorian stuntman, Charles Blondin walked across the entire width of Edgbaston Reservoir on a tightrope. Blondin’s feat is celebrated by a statue by the Birmingham based artist, Richardson of Floodgate Studios. The statue stands in the central reservation of the Ladywood Middleway and was commissioned as part of the Ladywood regeneration project in 1992.

Hero fire instructor on shortlist for award


Picture shows left to right crew manager Donny Clarke with Mark Ashby

One of Warwickshire Fire and Rescue Service’s unsung heroes is to receive some long-deserved acclaim after being shortlisted for the Community Hero Award organised by DHL Logistics.

Mark Ashby is a lay instructor with Warwickshire Young Firefighters Association, a role he has now carried out for the last seven years which he combines with his job as a forklift driver and instructor. He joins the young people for meetings every week at Nuneaton Fire Station and has also helped out at meetings in both Bedworth and Atherstone Fire Stations.

His voluntary work with Warwickshire Young Firefighters Association is, for Mark, some compensation for a career he was never able to pursue. He had always wanted to be a firefighter but, although otherwise fit, he failed the medical when his pulse recovery rate was found to be too slow.

Mark works alongside full-time firefighters and trains young people who have joined the association. His specialist area is working in knots and lines, and passes on many essential tips for the young people in this critical skill as well as advising on the health and safety when the young people are in the drill tower.

Over the years Mark has seen between 40 and 50 young people, aged between 13 and 16, enter the association and devoutly train in the skills required to be a firefighter. Always kitted out in full uniform, with discipline and exemplary manners, Mark feels they are a credit to themselves and to the fire and rescue service. He says:

“We have had children in from all backgrounds. Some have had their own challenges to overcome, such as learning disabilities such as Tourette’s, Aspergers and learning disabilities. But every single one of the young people that joins the association has welcomed the training and matched the commitment of myself and the firefighters who train them.

“Many will go on to serve the community in the role of firefighter. And those who, for whatever reason, do not go on to do so will have a tremendous platform from which to make a positive contribution in whichever field they do go into.”

Mark’s own contribution has been made all the more remarkable after being diagnosed with Leukaemia three and a half years ago. For months as he underwent gruelling treatment regimes, Mark was at a low ebb. It was at these times that the fire service repaid Mark for his efforts over the years. Messages of support, visits and a cup of tea and a chat when he popped along to Atherstone Fire Station all helped Mark in those dark days.

Mark’s courage in facing the illness has not gone unnoticed by colleagues. Crew manager Donny Clarke who works with Mark at Nuneaton Fire Station, said: “Mark doesn’t make a fuss about his illness. The way he has put it behind him and carried on where he left off, helping young people in the community to do something extremely worthwhile, is a shining example not only to them but to all of us who work alongside him.”

RARE PLANTS FAIR

Castle Bromwich Hall Gardens will be hosting a Rare Plant Fair on Sunday 3 May between 11.00 am and 4.00 pm.

These fairs are now organised and run by the Nurseries themselves and there will be a wide range of interesting shrubs, perennials and bulbs for you to choose from. You will be able to get the best advice on plants and planting from the real experts “the growers themselves”. A unique opportunity for plant hunters and garden enthusiasts to source rare and unusual plants at very reasonable prices.

Normal admission prices apply for this event, which are £3.50 for Adults, £3.00 for Concessions and 50 pence for Children.

For further information please contact:-

Castle Bromwich Hall Gardens, Chester Road. Castle Browmich B36 9BT

Tel: 0121 749 4100 e-mail admin@cbhgt.org.uk
Web: http://www.cbhgt.org.uk/

or Rare Plants Fair Tel: 0845 468 1368 e-mail info@rareplantfair.co.uk
Web: http://www.rareplantfair.co.uk/

Air Ambulance Chief conquers Everest


Air Ambulance Chief Executive, Andy Williamson (above), and his wife Linda Williamson (pictured below) have now returned safe, sound although a little exhausted from their fundraising trip climbing Everest.

The daring duo raised over £11,000 in sponsorship for the Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Rutland Air Ambulance and the Warwickshire and Northamptonshire Air Ambulance.

Andy commented, "I have to admit when I decided to take up the challenge it seemed a good idea at the time. However, climbing Everest was quite certainly the most difficult and demanding physical and mental task I have ever undertaken. But through all the pain, discomfort, cold and boredom came a massive sense of achievement".

“The trip had many ups and downs and battling through the low points of feeling very sick due to altitude sickness when I reached 4,000 meters was very difficult. I felt that ill I had to hire a horse to take me on the next stage rather than give up. It was definitely a big challenge.” Andy continued.

The couple who live in Great Doddington, Northampton decided to take up the challenge after discussing it over a few glasses of wine one night with friends. They raised money for the Air Ambulance as Andy aged 49, is Chief Executive of both Air Ambulances, while wife Linda aged 59, is a big supporter and Director/Company Secretary of Milton Keynes based, PR and celebrity agency, Loquendi.

They were joined on the climb and in the fundraising by friends, Bhavish Patel Rob Harris and Louise Ellington from Barclaycard who were among a group of twelve other people from all over the world.


The team climbed to a total of 18,000 feet (5,363 metres) and it took them a total of 13 days to climb up and down. They walked approximately 60 miles as the crow flies although, however including all the climbing up and down it became a whopping 110 miles.

“We were delighted to raise so much money for the Warwickshire and Northamptonshire Air Ambulance and Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Rutland Air Ambulance which are both fantastic charities run entirely on voluntary donations. We feel proud to have done our bit to ensure this vital service keeps on going. Our fundraising activity will help to keep the helicopters and crew in the air and saving lives.” Andy concluded.