February 2016 FREE … and not forgetting Cheriton, Romsey, Stockbridge, Hursley, Kings Worthy, Littleton, Alresford, Chandler’s Ford, Micheldever, Bishop’s Waltham, and everywhere in between! Issue 020 winchestertoday.co.uk @winchestertoday Inside Focus On Winnall Winchester Markets Winchester Today takes a winter stroll through Winnall Moors reserve Traders urged to contribute to City Council survey of popular markets Parents urged to learn baby CPR: St John Ambulance launches campaign. ...Page 12 Alresford Music Festival: Organisers plan its biggest year to date ...Page 12 Review: 39 Steps Dastardly goings-on at Chesil Theatre ...Page 6 Page 8 Page 3 The price of a school meal is to rise in April - the first increase in six years. County bosses say to meet the rising costs of providing school meals, the 10p increase takes the cost per meal to £2.10. They say the price continues to represent good value for money for a two course, freshly cooked school meal. Children’s Services boss Keith Mans told Winchester Today that a healthy lunch at school contributes significantly to a child’s wellbeing and their capacity to learn through to the end of the school day: “We’re very proud of the high standard of school meals that our catering service (HC3S) provides, using locally sourced produce. “I am keen that school meals remain affordable but we must balance this against the rising costs to provide those meals. In my view, the proposal to put the per meal price up by small increments will avoid sudden, dramatic price rises and ensure the increases are manageable.” Over 70,000 healthy school meals are served in Hampshire’s primary and secondary schools across the county every day. All HC3S school meals meet the Department for Education’s rules for healthy school dinners and HC3S has worked with schools, pupils and parents for over 20 years, to create menus that are varied and follow the guiding principles of healthy eating. Menus also adhere to the Hyperactive Children’s Support Group’s recommendations to remove over 70 additives and colourings that could affect children’s behaviour. In addition to the rising costs of ingredients, an increase to the ‘Living Wage’ is anticipated in the financial year 2017/18 which will have a significant impact on staffing costs. Price Of School Meals To Rise [email protected]It’s Back! Entries open for Criterion spectacular - see back page x
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February 2016 FREE… and not forgetting Cheriton, Romsey, Stockbridge, Hursley, Kings Worthy, Littleton,
Alresford, Chandler’s Ford, Micheldever, Bishop’s Waltham, and everywhere in between!Issue 020 winchestertoday.co.uk @winchestertoday
Inside
Focus On Winnall Winchester Markets
Winchester Today takes a winter stroll through Winnall Moors reserve
Traders urged to contribute to City Council survey of popular markets
Parents urged to learn baby CPR: St John Ambulance launches campaign....Page 12
Alresford Music Festival: Organisers plan its biggest year to date...Page 12
Review: 39 Steps Dastardly goings-on at Chesil Theatre...Page 6
Page 8 Page 3
The price of a school meal is to rise in April - the first increase in six years. County bosses say to
meet the rising costs of providing school meals, the 10p increase takes the cost per meal to £2.10. They say the price continues to represent good value for money for a two course, freshly cooked school meal. Children’s Services boss Keith Mans told Winchester Today that a healthy lunch at school contributes significantly
to a child’s wellbeing and their capacity to learn through to the end of the school day: “We’re very proud of the high standard of school meals that our catering service (HC3S) provides, using locally sourced produce.“I am keen that school
meals remain affordable but we must balance this against the rising costs to provide those meals. In my view, the proposal to put the per meal price up by small increments
will avoid sudden, dramatic price rises and ensure the increases are manageable.” Over 70,000 healthy
school meals are served in Hampshire’s primary and secondary schools across the county every day. All HC3S school meals meet the Department for Education’s rules for healthy school dinners and HC3S has worked with schools, pupils and parents for over 20 years, to create menus
that are varied and follow the guiding principles of healthy eating. Menus also adhere to
the Hyperactive Children’s Support Group’s recommendations to remove over 70 additives and colourings that could affect children’s behaviour. In addition to the rising costs of ingredients, an increase to the ‘Living Wage’ is anticipated in the financial year 2017/18 which will have a significant impact on staffing costs.
It really hasn’t been a good few weeks for the Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt. Just recently he’s had to manage a report into the care of sick children through the 111 non-emergency system following the death in Cornwall of baby William Mead through sepsis. A report suggested that part of the contributing factors came down to inexperienced staffing and questions given to William’s mum over the 111 system. She told Sky News that she “trusted the NHS and 111 and they all failed.” William should have been in A and E, full stop.I well remember the three
times I have used the 111 system in Winchester. On one occasion I passed out as I was giving information over the phone. Not only was there an ambulance on my doorstep within three minutes, but the operator stayed on the phone until the ambulance arrived. Maybe I got lucky.Before that, Mr Hunt had
another crisis, this time the Junior Doctors’ walkout.Just as this edition of
Winchester Today was going to press came news that a planned 48-hour walkout by Junior Doctors in Winchester had been suspended. They had already staged a 24-hour walkout previously in January, though - which ultimately appears to had had little effect on operations or clinics having to be cancelled.Winchester MP Steve Brine
told Winchester Today that it was a “smart move” by the BMA trade union: “The previous strike was unnecessary, talking is always better than striking in my opinion. I think actually the employers and the union are not as far as apart as it is projected and, ultimately, we all want the same thing which is a safe NHS serving patients when they need it.”However, this is a long-running
dispute, with doctors already on 12-hour shifts Monday to Friday.
Both sides in this dispute will know the volatility could go on for months to come, whatever the outcome of these talks.By the way, Junior Doctors’
pay starts at £22,636. Twenty-two grand for having your life in their hands.
***
I changed my car insurance recently. I know that and I’m constantly reminded of it now because the phone doesn’t stop ringing. It’s mainly injury lawyers asking me “about the accident I had in the last five years.” Most stop talking when I ask them if they mean the one in which I was almost killed on the M3. One last week though insisted on continuing to ask whether I had sought compensation. Unbelievable. David Cameron says he wants an end to these people. Our own Steve Brine once talked about eliminating nuisance phone calls. I suggest to both of them that they could
go a long way by ensuring these kind of personal details are never passed on to third parties.
***
I see yet another consultation is looming, this time over the market. “Unfair competition” is being bandied about over some of the traders outside in the High Street. I would really like to know which businesses seem to think they are under threat from those delicious lunchtime hot offerings that are cooked up on the spot. Wafts of jealousy...?
***
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Pictured: the protest outside the Royal Hampshire County Hospital in January.
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FEBRUARY 2016 WINCHESTER TODAY 3
Evidence is being collected over the next few weeks to inform the next steps for the development of the busy programme of markets in the city. Winchester City Council says the markets have been a huge hit with visitors and with many regular shoppers since their introduction to the High Street in 2010.Following discussions with the Business
Improvement District (BID) to review the Christmas trading period, the Council is set to consider further ideas to develop the markets to ensure maximum benefits to shoppers and retailers alike.The current programme of markets was
introduced to add vitality to the High Street at a time when cities around the country were anxious about the effects of the recession. It brings fresh food and produce in the High Street on a Wednesday, general provisions from Thursday to Saturday and a series of speciality markets on Sunday which include the long-standing Hampshire Farmers’ Markets.
Face-to-face research carried out in the central shopping streets by Tourism South East at the end of 2011 found that “94% of local residents and 95% of non-residents felt that the markets made the experience of visiting Winchester more enjoyable”. 85% of local people and 92% of visitors felt that “markets added to the vitality and vibrancy of the city centre”. Meanwhile 83% of local people stated that the “markets offered a greater variety of goods”. The markets were considered to be an example of good practice by national consultants carrying out a retail ‘health check’ of the city centre in 2013.However, there have been continued
concerns expressed through the BID about the frequency and location of the markets. Congestion, unfair competition, intrusion on the street scene, restricted access, smells and rubbish on the streets have all been cited over the years. Combined with the additional challenge of restricted parking capacity at Christmas, they claim, this means that regular customers delayed or cancelled shopping trips or visits to the hairdresser or dentist and loyal, high-value local shoppers went elsewhere.The BID has consistently called
for the markets to be reduced in number and removed from the High Street, and the Council is now carrying out an in-depth review of the markets ahead of a Cabinet decision in late March.Economy and Communities Assistant
Director Eloise Appleby says the markets were introduced to support our year-round retailing offer at the height of the recession. “We believe that this very successful programme has protected footfall in the city centre in recent years, and enhanced Winchester’s reputation as a shopping destination.“However, the original market plans
were intended to be temporary, with the
development of Silver Hill offering new opportunities. With the timetable for Silver Hill slipping, I believe that now is a good time to review the markets programme and make some decisions about its future shape and form.”
The Council is commissioning independent research from The Retail Group into the views of BID members about the markets. This will also consider proposals for changes to the current location, and gather other suggestions for developments. It is part of a package of evidence - including the BID’s regular ‘Business Barometer’, parking statistics, footfall data and feedback from the Cathedral – on which decisions will be made.Catherine Turness is Executive Director at
the BID and says they are pleased to have helped bring this review about by voicing the feedback from their members: “Working with the Council, we have already seen a number of changes to the original line-up and presentation of stalls but the frequency and location can result in congestion, especially at Christmas, which deters some clients and customers from visiting the city. It makes sense, five years on, to pause and take stock of the whole programme. I would urge all businesses in the town to respond to the survey when they are visited by The Retail Group in the coming weeks.”
New Year, new ideas for Winchester’s thriving markets programme Businesses urged to contribute to survey over the coming weeks
Congestion, unfair competition, intrusion
Makes visiting Winchester more enjoyable
4 WINCHESTER TODAY FEBRUARY 2016
Gardening February 2015 With The Veg Man.This month check over seeds and dispose of any out of date ones. Order new seeds, shallots and onion sets. Do not tread on recently dug ground, as wet soil compacts and when dry becomes unworkable. Wait until conditions are right, tread down loose soil and break up the top few inches with a cultivating tool, to create a fine tilth. This aids seed germination and make hoeing to keep weeds down, easier. I like to rake off loose stones at this stage, as my ground is quite stony. The canny gardener can do much to produce early crops. Peas, broad beans and some hardy salads can be sown in February. I ensure an early start by
covering some ground with fleece, to warm up the soil. I pregerminate my broad beans seeds, by soaking them for an hour or two and wrap them in damp kitchen paper. In a plastic bag, in a warm place, they shoot quickly. Check daily and plant out 9 inches apart, two inches deep. Use hoops and peg the edges of fleece down to keep it from damaging young crops in windy weather. Plant salad seeds in succession and in very short rows. I have three metre wide beds and plant North/South. For some fast growing crops like radishes, make three or four plantings per row, at three weeks intervals. A start can be made this
month on sowing brassicas such as sprouts, early cabbage and cauliflowers. Traditionally these are planted in seed beds, but are always targeted by slugs and snails. I prefer to plant seeds individually in segmented seed trays, using compost, raising them in warmth initially and growing on in a greenhouse. Harden off before planting out when the seedlings have formed several leaves. Cover to avoid pigeon damage. Tomato, pepper and chilli seeds for growing on in the greenhouse can also be started, in warmth. Chit early potatoes, using egg boxes and ensure that the growing points get the light. Plant out in March, using fleece. Earth up as growth
progresses to stop late frost damage. Many gardeners make the mistake of planting the same seeds in the same places each year and ignore the need to rotate crops. Disease builds up and nutrients needed by specific plants can be used up. Never grow potatoes in the same ground because of blight. Brassicas will be attacked by cabbage root fly. Always rotate crops. I have divided my land into four plots and use a four year cycle to maximise yield. Sprinkle a general fertiliser like Growmore thinly before
sowing seeds. With careful planning, more than one crop can be raised in each plot. For example early potatoes can be followed by brassicas or leeks. February can be cold, but in recent years the weather has been mild and often dry. Take advantage of opportunities, but be prepared for late frosts. There is not space to mention all vegetables individually, so follow instructions on seed packets over sowing dates, but as we are in the South, taking a chance on the weather to sow earlier, can pay off.
Jobs for February: Sow chillies, peppers and tomatoes for raising under glass. Try some early salads, particularly mixed cutting ones. Sow a few peas and mange tout peas. Chit early potatoes, placing in egg trays with the growing point uppermost. Garlic can still be planted and at the end of the month, plant shallots and onion sets.
project:Alfie150 is giving young people aged 16-25 free training in all aspects of media - radio, print and online.
A free course in Winchester will help local people who have lost their sight to regain their confidence and independence.The ‘Finding your Feet’
course, run by charity Action for Blind People, is taking place at Level 10 Church, 86 Stanmore Lane, Winchester, Hampshire, SO22 4BT,
from 10am – 3.30pm on Wednesday 10 and Thursday 11 February. The two-day course will provide information, advice and practical skills for anyone who has sight loss as well as their family and friends.The sessions will
provide people with sight loss advice on a range of essential
everyday skills such as how to get around outside, use public transport, cook healthy meals, shop and bank online and even how to make a cup of tea safely.Lizzie Abnett, from
Action for Blind People agrees that it can be frightening and overwhelming for someone newly
diagnosed with sight loss but practical and emotional support is available: “Being blind or partially sighted does not have to mean losing your confidence or independence. We hope anyone in Winchester living with or affected by sight loss will sign-up to the ‘Finding your Feet’ course, come and
share their experiences with others, and benefit from the wide range of information and advice on offer.” For further information
and to register for the course, call 01722 345440.
Free course offers support for blind people in Winchester
FEBRUARY 2016 WINCHESTER TODAY 5
Indian and Bangladeshi cuisine to take away. Call us now on 01962 859606Happy Valentine’s Day from Shafi and all the staff - love the food!
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Chesil Theatre had a well-deserved sell-out with their latest production, 39 Steps, adapted from John Buchan and Alfred Hitchcock’s classic by Patrick Barlow and directed by Flavia Bateson.Anyone old enough to
remember listening to Dick Barton, Special Agent on the ‘wireless’ will be very familiar with the genre. Actually I’m not quite old enough, but the familiar theme tune, put to good use in this adaptation, is synonymous with the double-breasted, pencil-moustached, man-of-mystery stories that belong to the era before TV, reality programmes and video nasties.John Buchan’s original
novels were actually set pre-WW1 and pre-date the home radio era by some three decades. They featured true Brit Richard Hannay getting involved in all sorts of shenanigans in remote corners of England and Scotland, on moors and in steam trains in heroic efforts to protect military state secrets from foreign agents. Hitchcock’s 1935 film took Mr Hannay into the era between wars with new characters and more film/stage versions followed.Eventually, Patrick Barlow
re-wrote the whole things as a tongue in cheek comedy spoof and Ms Bateson has used a talented team and some impressive technology to enhance the story even further.With only a cast of four –
the hero Richard Hannay plus three others playing numerous other parts from a milkman to cross-dressing
guest house owner, an evil Professor, numerous spies, policemen and glamorous ladies (all ladies being played by the same person) – the story starts with the murder of one beautiful and mysterious lady in the London apartment of Hannay and the rest of the play is a rollicking romp across the UK as he goes on the run from the police and seen/unseen spies; he survives being shot at close range, falling from the Forth Bridge and numerous other unlikely antics, all slickly acted out by Alec Walters as the pencil moustached man of the moment. Playing the part dead straight, as
it should be of course, the laughs came thick and fast. Mr Walters was born for this era and his timing – not to mention the double breasted tweed suit – was perfect. Newcomer to Chesil Theatre, Julia Mantell, played the three (remarkably similar looking) glamorous ladies of the adventure with just the right mixture of slapstick and deadpan aloofness when necessary. One gets the feeling Chesil audiences will be seeing her again.The two remaining cast,
Charlie Seligman and John Wakeman, played all the other characters and extremely funny they
were too, often poking fun at each other as they raced from one costume and character to another.
‘Costumes’ for these too, a little like their various accents, were deliberately token affairs and much fun was had in Keystone Cops-style chases across stage, flashing torches at the audience whilst doing
double takes and circus falls galore.David Woodward’s set
was simple – in fact there it comprised plain flats painted a very neutral grey to soak up the many and effective different lighting plots played on them, a few real props like tables and period telephones, and some stage blocks used to form various seats, beds and lecterns. 30-odd impressively hand drawn sketches by Ian Fraser were projected onto the back wall and set each of the 33 scenes beautifully whilst period frenetic music (including ‘Devil’s Gallop’ borrowed from Dick Barton), numerous sound effects of bagpipes, steam trains, aircraft and audience participation, all on cue and using a great deal of technical wizardry, completed the picture.All in all, a wonderful spoof
and huge fun. If I had one small criticism it was that, despite it not being a long show, the pace of the play, including scene changes, could have been a bit faster. In places it was a little
too measured and needed speeding up to match the ‘Devil’s Gallop’. But Flavia Bateson proved her worth as a veteran director at Chesil once again and she and her team (special mention for sound and lighting man Tony Rogers) should be very proud of this technically tricky and challenging, chuckle-making romp.For more information on
Chesil Theatre shows, visit www.chesiltheatre.org.uk.David CradduckImage: Tony Rogers
Review: 39 Steps – Chesil Theatre – January 2016Dastardly goings-on at The Chesil!
A wonderful spoof and huge fun
FEBRUARY 2016 WINCHESTER TODAY 7
The 5th annual
4-12 NOVEMBER 2016Submission deadline: 1 October 2016Early Bird deadline: 31 July 2016For more information please visit: winchestershortfilmfestival.comOr follow: /WinchesterShortFilmFest @WinchesterFilm @_wsff_Image courtesy Rupert Cresswell, Dir. “Charlie Cloudhead”, 2015 WSFF entry
Now open for entries!
8 WINCHESTER TODAY FEBRUARY 2016
In the heart of Winchester, just 5 minutes away from King Alfred’s Statue, lies a hidden oasis of peace and tranquility, Winnall Moors Nature Reserve. Walking along The Road Of Memories - a boardwalk through a seemingly infinite sea of reed beds - it becomes hard to remember you are still in the bustling city centre. The road is named after the carvings found on both sides of the walk which showcase memories collected from the The Over 50’s Lunch Club at Winnall Community Centre. It features messages such as “No wonder you were late for work, said my son - you’re always looking at the animals” and “I went down there with a dog. My dog came back with a chicken”
- sure to bring a smile to your face. The entrance to the road is marked by The Mosaic Stone. According to an introduction to the sculpture trail, the stone echoes the motifs on the grand entrance arch and suggests “that something is unusual about this place!”Winnall Moors Nature
Reserve dates back to medieval times, being shaped during the 17th and 18th century. Back then, it was used as floated water meadows and belonged to Hyde Abbey and a small chapel by the name of St Gertrude’s Chapel. Today, this area is managed as a nature reserve by the Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust and it serves as a gateway to a wonderfully relaxing
evening for Winchester’s families, a nice morning run for joggers and a great place for spotting water voles and otters, the most common among the protected wildlife of the reserve. Having successfully purchased and extended the reserve in 2006, the Trust continues to enhance conditions for wildlife, preserve important historical features and engage with the local community.
And so, over the years, Winnall Moors Nature Reserve has truly turned into a community treasure, especially as 2013 saw the end of a big transformation for the reserve, a £1.3m restoration project funded by the Heritage Lottery which lasted no less than five years. As part of the project, artist Rob Turner and storytellers Orange Apples created ‘The Adventure of Winnal Moors’, a story that is accompanied by a sculpture trail. The story, which can be picked up at the entrance to the reserve with the promise of returning it before leaving, features characters such as Toad Emperor, the Otter and Samuel Slipper, a slug, and was created with the help of local schools and community groups. If you need even more evidence of the community feel of this local gem, walk along the Water Vole Trail neighbouring the North Walls Recreation Ground, and you may find loaves of bread left hanging on the low branches of trees by Wintonians eager to share the joys of feeding
the ducks.If you’d like to learn more
about the reserve and the protected species that call Winnall Moors their home, be on the lookout for the many activities as well as courses available for young budding explorers and their parents. In fact, coming soon, on the 11th of February, is a session running from 9:30am to 11am, The Smartest Giant in Town. Nevertheless, whether you choose to take part in the activities the Wildlife Trust has on offer or not, you can always explore the reserve on your own, either by hiring a discovery pack from the City Mill and Tourist Information Centre for a returnable £10 deposit or by simply enjoying the peace, tranquility and fresh air the reserve is popular for. And if you do visit the Winnall Moors reserve, why not take photos on your walk and share them with the Trust on Facebook,HampshireandIsleofWight WildlifeTrust, or on Twitter @HantslWWildlife.
Pictures: Rachel Gover
A Focus on Winnall - Part 2Winchester Today’s Simona Rata takes a stroll through Winnall’s own wildlife heaven
FEBRUARY 2016 WINCHESTER TODAY 9
The Little Wedding Bakery makes bespoke hand-crafted Wedding Cakes, Wedding Cupcakes and Favours.Our cakes are made using top quality ingredients sourced locally wherever possible and local free range eggs. Our wedding cakes, cupcakes and favours are made to order and are individually designed in consultation ensuring that the client will receive a truly unique wedding cake as well as a personal service right through from the consultation to delivery.Our cakes are made fresh to
order, and the delivery and set up at the wedding venue in Hampshire, Berkshire, Surrey, Sussex or Wiltshire is included in the price.Free no-obligation Wedding
Consultations available either at your home or at our studio in Winchester. Gluten free and dairy free cakes are available by arrangement.We have been based at Winnall Industrial Estate for nearly two years and
have found it be an easily accessible location for customers and deliveries being so close to the M3 motorway. Its also great being so close to the town centre.
The Little Wedding Bakery The Southern Bookcrafts ClubBookbinding is a fascinating craft with many facets – from producing decorative booklets through to repair and restoration of antique leather bound volumes. But many amateur bookbinders struggle to provide the essential facilities at home. Bookbinders’ clubs overcome these problemsThe Southern Bookcrafts Club has been
renting a unit at Winnall since 2003. With our members coming from a 30-mile radius around Winchester we get real benefits from being so accessible from the motorway and from the City. Our landlord wants us to succeed and helps us where he can.Our bindery is fully equipped to meet the
needs of the most advanced bookbinders and members have 24x7 access. Fridays are ‘club’ days when many members attend to exchange information and ideas.We support the craft of bookbinding
by offering training. For those with some experience there are monthly Saturday Training Days, normally given by a professional specialist. But we very much welcome complete beginners. Currently we provide introductory training in bookbinding on Fridays but we are also introducing a mid-week evening class. Full details of all our activities are available from our web site at www.sbookc.org.uk or by contacting our Club Secretary, Sonia Brown, email [email protected], phone 07980 917745.
Wintax cars are Winchester’s oldest and - we like to think - one of the most trusted taxi firms. Years of experience in the trade has helped us become one of the safest and most technological firms in Winchester. We strive on maintaining and increasing our reputation as the best taxi firm to use for local and long distance journeys. We can take payment by cash credit/ debit card, we also have the option to create personal accounts as well as corporate accounts for small or large business.We are always investing in new technology to make life easier for our
customers. You can currently book a taxi via our website at www.wintaxcars.com/bookings . You can also call a taxi on 01962878727.All our drivers have enhanced
criminal record checks before we employ them, our telephone operators are trained to ensure the best customer service. We always provide competitive pricing with a premium service.We provide a service to
Winchester and all surrounding towns and villages we specialise in;Hope to see you soon!
Tall HatsWhether you are arranging a wedding reception, need to wow prospective clients or are holding a special celebration, you want food that fits perfectly with your own style, your guests’ tastes and the overall feel or theme of your event - food, in short, that makes the event yours.At Tall Hats we feel that it's a privilege to be entrusted with the responsibility
of catering when the choice of food can make all the difference, and there is only one chance to get it right. This is why we take the time to understand you, and to appreciate your tastes and style, so that we can recommend exactly the foods, dishes, combinations and menus - and the style or theme - that will delight you and your guests.At Tall Hats Catering and Events we also offer a comprehensive range
of events’ guidance and resourcing services, advising on every possible element to make your event go with a zing and without a sting!If you’re after bespoke expertise, speak to us. Please call us today on
01962 600173 for a friendly and without-obligation discussion of your requirements. Trusted expertise since 1991 - and we're very glad to be part of the village community.
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Advertising Feature
FOCUS ON
Winnall
10 WINCHESTER TODAY FEBRUARY 2016
a month of sundays
by bob larbey16-19 mar
2016
all tickets
£10.00see below for details
www.thecheritonplayers.org.uk
Tickets available online from www.ticketsource.co.uk/cheritonplayers or tel 0333 666 3366 (standard rates apply)
all telephone enquiries are handled through TicketSource - this is not an exclusive number for Cheriton Players
This amateur production of “A Month of Sundays” is presented by special arrangement with SAMUEL FRENCH LIMITED
Wednesday 16th – Saturday 19th March 2016 7.30pm (doors open 7pm) at Cheriton Village Hall SO24 0PZ
NEWDATES
FEBRUARY 2016 WINCHESTER TODAY 11
Alresford Music Festival 2016 to be ‘bigger and better’ £15k raised for charities through music event in AlresfordOrganisers of the 2016 Alresford Music Festival say this year’s event at Arlebury Park will be even bigger and better than before, with more space, more camping available and even more live music.They say that support from
an ever-growing audience has made a difference to many deserving charities, with more than 15k raised over the six years of the Festival. A record number of 3250 people came in 2015; testimony to the achievement of the musicians who have all performed for little or no fees so that as much as possible could be raised. There has been an impressive 30% growth over the last two years.The Festival has helped
clubs and organisations like the Alresford Youth Association, the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, Alresford Town Football Club, the Rugby Club and the Hampshire and Isle of Wight Air Ambulance Service. £2k was donated to the service at a fundraising event launching the release of the ‘Rescue Me Too’ CD. The musicians involved in
the blues project played at the Festival in 2015 and will be back for 2016.The Festival has also sent
money to both the Kusadevi and Mhendo water projects in the area of Nepal stricken by an earthquake in 2015.
The money and practical help was directly delivered by Jon Vallis. He’s a water expert, adviser and band member of festival favourites ‘Southampton Ukelele Jam’. Jon went out to Nepal with a small team to set up water
systems. The funds from the Festival bought water cubes and infrastructure that enabled villages to have running water.The Festival is on Saturday
11 June 2016 at Arlebury Park, with camping
available on the Friday and Saturday. You can follow the Festival on their website, on Facebook and on Twitter for news and updates of what is being planned between now and June.Images: Richard Turner
You may remember in our last issue we started to talk about Winnall and how this newspaper would be behind an opportunity to enhance the area. This came ahead of being asked to chair a special breakfast meeting on Winnall’s future.Both the feature and the
meeting seem to have rattled a few cages already. They drew this response from prominent local businessman Keith Webb.“For too many years, the
powers that be have failed to recognise and deal with the causes of congestion in what is such an important part of Winchester, Winnall. Those who live in Winnall have votes and are represented by three councillors, but the businesses who employ hundreds of local people,
have no representation and very little opportunity to express their views on the subject.“Recently one major bottle
neck, the junction of Easton Lane, the A34, the A272 and junction 9 of the M3 was at last improved after years of being ignored. Finally! Traffic lights and the creation of a third lane have made significant differences to traffic flow, but the requested creation of a slip road onto the A34, has not yet materialised. This would not be expensive to build and until a major rebuild of the whole junction is undertaken, could significantly improve traffic flow from the roundabout serving Tesco, the Shell Garage and Homebase.Recently Easton Lane has
had to cope with extra traffic from new businesses that have appeared, such as the Premier Inn, The Fire Station and now Wickes Builders Merchants. A (stupid in my mind) decision was taken to put in hatched lines outside the Fire Station; these even further limit traffic flow. The simple provision of traffic lights, triggered whenever an emergency situation arises, would have achieved the same end. It takes a few minutes to man a fire engine.“The major problems that
still exist, are the Easton Lane junctions with Winnall Manor Road, an important bus route and Moorside Road, which serves so
many business premises. Emerging from both these roads into Easton Lane, is a major headache that has never been addressed.“Elsewhere in the City,
namely Bar End Road and at the junction of Chesil Street, Bridge Street and Magdalen Hill, mini roundabouts have been created and work well. These were cheap because no road widening was needed, only a paint job.“Surely the powers that
be, if they cared, should have recognised that
putting mini roundabouts at the junctions of Easton Lane with Moorside Road and Winnall Manor Road, would also work wonders. As I have said many times before, only those who daily have to experience the congestion, realise that something needs doing. Most of our councillors live outside Winchester, the area does not concern the Chamber of Commerce and BID is only interested in the centre of the City. Where do we go from here?”
Winnall - What About the Traffic?A headache, according to one businessman!
12 WINCHESTER TODAY FEBRUARY 2016
Parents across Winchester are being urged to attend infant first aid classes after new research showed only a third in the region would know what to do if their baby stopped breathing. St John Ambulance says it
will run three-hour, baby first aid courses in Winchester in February as part of its latest life saving campaign.The first aid charity has also
released a video, starring nursery rhyme characters, which demonstrates how to give Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) to a baby that is unconscious and not breathing.Research, commissioned
by St John Ambulance, found three out of four mums and dads in the South East said this first aid emergency scared them the most, when given a list of potential dangers that included febrile convulsions, severe allergic reactions and severe bleeding. While nearly two-thirds said they had
learnt first aid – most from a workplace course – only one in three knew how to treat babies.CPR for babies is different
from adult CPR, in that only two fingers should be used to give pumps to the baby’s chest and its nose and mouth must be covered by the rescuer’s mouth to give life saving puffs.Last year, St John
Ambulance ran an award-winning campaign, The Chokeables, to teach parents how to save a child from choking, which led directly to
the saving of 46 children.Sue Killen is CEO at St John
Ambulance: “The Chokeables was a real step forward for us and the response was amazing.“We’ve listened to parents
and we know that they want to learn first aid skills in a way that’s easy and memorable. That’s what inspired the creation of Nursery Rhymes Inc.“We know that a major
barrier to parents learning is that baby CPR frightens them, so we’ve removed the fear factor and made it as reassuring as possible by making this new video and putting on a set of courses.“As well as learning the
technique themselves, we’re asking everyone to share the video so that all parents, grandparents and carers know what to do in those crucial minutes after a baby has stopped breathing.”The baby CPR campaign is
being backed by Hampshire mum, Natasha Jones. Her daughter, Ava–Mai, almost died when she was just 11 weeks old. She’d put Ava-Mai down for a nap. When she went to check on her, she found she had stopped breathing and had turned blue. Guided only by instinct and TV portrayals of CPR, the mum managed to
successfully resuscitate Ava-Mai. After a frantic 36 minute wait for an ambulance, Natasha and husband Karl were told their daughter’s ordeal was ‘near-miss cot death’.Ava-Mai is now a happy,
healthy five-year-old, and to help prevent other parents or carers feeling helpless, the Hampshire mum has set up ‘Baby Resuscitation’, a community project that teaches baby first aid. Now, Natasha is encouraging others to save lives by sharing the new advert by St John Ambulance: “I’m supporting St John Ambulance’s new campaign because first aid is easy to learn and every parent should know what to do in that situation. I urge everyone to share the advert because a two minute clip could be the difference between a baby living or dying.
The special courses run by St John Ambulance will last three hours, cost £30 and cover key first aid emergencies for babies and toddlers, as well as how to give CPR. St John Ambulance also runs three-hour Emergency First Aid All Ages courses throughout the year, which include baby first aid.
The Hampshire courses run from 9.30am to 12.30pm at the following day at the Winchester local venue: 19 February – SJA Winchester in Worthy Lane. St John Ambulance also runs three-hour Emergency First Aid All Ages courses at various Hampshire venues, which include baby first aid, throughout the year.
Winchester parents urged to learn baby CPRSt John Ambulance launches new life saving campaign
TICKETS FROM £12 - CAMPING £10CHILDREN UNDER 5 GET IN FREE!
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SAVE THE DATE
ONE GREAT DAY OF LIVE MUSIC!At 10pm, other radio stations want to send you to sleep...
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The Music From Your Life - for those who DON’T want to sleep!
Tonight from 10pm on www.winchestertoday.co.uk
FEBRUARY 2016 WINCHESTER TODAY 13
The 4 star Holiday Inn at Winchester has built a reputation for presenting great entertainment and interesting events, combined with high quality food. The elegant contemporary hotel’s What’s On list of events, in the early part of 2016, starts off with a special Romantic Evening of Swing on Saturday, 13th February, with music and dancing to renowned swing singer Nigel Smith, featuring music from Buble to Sinatra. This includes a delicious three course menu, created by the hotel’s talented head chef and costs £29.95 per person.
For diners who want to make it an even more relaxing evening, rooms are available from £99.
The hotel’s Morn Hill Brasserie, has recently been awarded 2 AA Rosettes and is the perfect place to enjoy and celebrate the highlights of the spring, including Mother’s Day Lunch on Sunday, 6th March, when Mums will be treated to a free lunch when ordered with three paying adults at £19.95 per head and £9.95 for children under 12.
Easter Sunday Lunch on Sunday, 27th March will be the next big event to celebrate and the delicious Sunday lunch is £19.95 per adult and £9.95 for children under 12. Easter Sunday lunch is also served in the Morn Hill Brasserie and children under 12 will receive an Easter egg.
Music and dining eventsCombining fine dining and music has
been a very successful combination for the hotel, with sell-out events featuring high quality performers. On Friday 29th April the ‘Someone Like Adele’ Tribute Night is destined to be a popular event,
particularly following the success of the real Adele’s recent fastest selling album. Ami performing as ‘Someone Like Adele’ offers a stunning performance with her incredible vocal range. Tickets, including a three course set meal, entertainment and disco cost £29.95 per person and guests can also enjoy a relaxing overnight stay in the hotel from £90 per room.
WeddingsThe hotel is also the perfect venue
for weddings with a comprehensive selection of wedding packages from just £2016.
“We understand just how important everyone’s wedding day is,” commented Siobhan Thomasson, General
Manager. “As a predominantly female management team at the hotel we all love helping to organise the weddings and ensuring that every wedding is memorable for all the right reasons. The high quality of our food is maintained at every event we have in the hotel. Our wedding menus are interesting and imaginative and we get great feedback from our wedding parties.”
The contemporary venue also offers many picture perfect places to take all the important wedding photos, from the elegant, light, contemporary and very spacious reception area, with its staircase leading to a balcony, to the stylish outside courtyard terrace and romantic bridal suite. There are also 7
contemporary designed ceremony and reception rooms to choose from, with the hotel licensed for civil ceremonies.
The 141 room hotel can accommodate large wedding parties and guests, with special rates for wedding guests and ample easy car parking.
Delicious foodThe hotel’s food offering is extensive
and as well as the new season a la carte menu the hotel also offers a very varied and wide menu selection including a table d’hote menu, bar menu, children’s menu, afternoon teas and Sunday lunches. The hotel is also ideally located for business and corporate events with a range of meeting rooms. Business associates can also meet up informally in the hotel’s comfortable reception area or in the bar and the hotel’s award winning Morn Hill Brasserie presents the perfect place for a business breakfast or lunch meeting.
For more information visit: www.hiwinchester.co.uk
Holiday Inn WinchesterExciting events planned for Spring 2016
Advertising Feature
WINCHESTER
An Evening of Swing Mother’s Day Lunch Easter Sunday Lunch Someone like…Adele Tribute Night
AA Rosette Award
For more information please call 01962 670700 or email [email protected]
2016 Events at the Holiday Inn Winchester...
w Treat your mum to Sunday lunch in the award winning Morn Hill Brasserie.
w Mums eat free with 3 paying adults.
w Sunday lunch £19.95 per adult and children under 12 £9.95.
w Enjoy a family Easter Sunday lunch in the Morn Hill Brasserie.
w An Easter egg for every child under 12.
w Sunday Lunch £19.95 per adult £9.95 per child under 12.
w Ami performing as someone like Adele offers a stunning performance. If you are looking for something different with a touch of class and an incredible vocal, this is the show for you.
w £29.95 per person to include a 3 course set meal, entertainment and disco.
w Accommodation from £90.00 per room, with breakfast, subject to availability.
Saturday 13th February Sunday 6th March
Sunday 27th March
Friday 29th April
w Nigel Smith takes you back to one of the coolest times in musical history with his swing show experience
w Enjoy a delicious 3 course meal, especially created by our talented head chef, in the newly awarded 2 AA Rosette Morn Hill Brasserie.
w £29.95 per person
w Overnight accommodation from £99.00 per room.
14 WINCHESTER TODAY FEBRUARY 2016
Struggling with bookbinding?
Come and see our facilities!
Fully equipped bindery in great Winchester location
with 24/7 access.
We welcome amateur bookbinders of all levels.
Complete beginners are also welcome - training given!
Full details on our website:
www.sbookc.org.uk
southern bookcrafts club
01962 600 173 · 07818 405 319
Weddings, family & friends, clients & colleagues, events management
� Bespoke handcrafted wedding cakes made using the finest ingredients and local free range eggs.
� 10% discount on 2016 wedding cake bookings.� Free no obligation consultations and cake tasting.� Delivery and set up of the cake at the venue is
included in the price.
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FClassifieds
Children and young adults at Naomi House had a fantastic day when their friends from ‘Pony Pals’ dropped by for some cuddles.Organisers say it was a “wonderful experience” for
Winchester Sport and Leisure Trust has written an open letter to the non-executive Chairman of Tesco - John Allan - and the Group Chief Executive - Dave Lewis - urging them both to pledge their support in keeping the Garrison Ground at Bar End. Alongside the letter is a petition, asking local residents to get involved too. This is what they had to say:Dear SirsWe write as concerned
residents of Winchester in Hampshire, to ask for your support. As you may know, Tesco PLC owns land at Bar End, Winchester, which is on your asset disposal list. This land was put forward for housing development
– presumably by Tesco PLC – via the Strategic Housing Land Availability Assessment (SHLAA) for Winchester’s Local Plan. Tesco PLC’s land at
Bar End, known as The Garrison Ground, is a prime sport and recreational venue for our community. It is home to the Winchester City Flyers women’s and girls’ football club and the Winchester and District Girls Football League, as well as to Winchester Amateur Boxing Club. It supports grass training for the Winchester and District Athletics Club, and every year hosts events ranging from Cancer Research UK’s ‘Race for Life’ to the local Fun Fair. It’s also an important venue
for kickabout football, informal play, and dog walking.The ongoing use of the
Garrison Ground for sport and recreation is essential to our community. The City of Winchester has a shortfall in sports grounds of more than 11 hectares, and desperately needs new publicly accessible swimming pools, sports halls and synthetic turf pitches, to meet the requirements of a growing population and in particular increasing numbers of children and young people. Certain facilities – such as those for gymnastics – are completely absent from the local area. Bar End is the best place for any new facilities, but we will need
to retain as much open space as possible there too.In short – we cannot
afford to lose the Garrison Ground to housebuilding or to any other non-sports related development. Please will Tesco PLC
work with us, the residents of Winchester, to protect the Garrison Ground and to develop a community sport and recreational hub at Bar End?Your land could make all
the difference to the future of our City and District. Please give us, and our children, a sporting chance.You can follow the
organisation on Twitter @WinchesterSALT which will provide you with all the links you need.
16 WINCHESTER TODAY DECEMBER 2015
Sport
Tesco PLC: “Give Winchester a Sporting Chance”
Entries are being welcomed for the 2016 Winchester Criterium races. Along with the CycleFest, the spectacular comes to the streets of Winchester on Sunday 5 June 2016.Winchester’s City Centre
will be closed for a day of all things cycling, with racing and a range of family activies. In 2016, for the first time, the Winchester Criterium, will also incorporate British Cycling’s Regional Circuit Race Championships, making it the biggest event of its kind in the regionThe CycleFest will take
place in the Broadway area, by the Guildhall,
with opportunities to try out different bicycles and watch a spectacular stunt show. The Broadway will also host the start of the popular Family Ride, where families have the opportunity to ride the same circuit that will host the racing later in the day.
More details available on www.winchestercriterium.org
Race entries are being taken on British Cycling’s website: www.britishcycling.org.uk - closing date: Sunday 15 May 2016
Top Flight Cycling Returns - and there’s plenty of room for the family too!