Текст
                    YOUR ESSENTIAL MONTHLY GUIDE TO THE COUNTY

somerset-life.co.uk APRIL 2024

ON TOU R

Sir David
Attenborough’s

WILD ISLES

Discover
Somerset’s
SECRET
ISLAND

Spicy

SEAFOOD
SUPPER
recipes

Escape to the

coast
 Celebrating 200 years of RNLI heroes
 Portishead, Burnham-on-Sea, Weston-super-Mare
 Try land yachting in Brean
 Photography masterclass in Porlock
 Historic shipwreck coastal walk with map

£4.50


2 April 2024 Somerset Life
Somerset Life April 2024 3
4 April 2024 Somerset Life
WELCOME from the editor T PHOTO:THEBRISTOLNOMAD,GETTY he irst time that I truly fell in love with our Somerset coastline has to be about three years ago. I had just completed a challenge of sorts where I had set myself the task of following the River Parrett Trail from source to sea. It was a stunner of a route, and although I acquired a few blisters along the way, I look back on that 50-mile walk so incredibly fondly as it was the time when I felt I really got to know our county. I had tracked the river as it morphed from hidden bubbling spring, to babbling brook, to a vast expansive tidal powerhouse, and with each twist and turn of the footpath I deepened my understanding of how Somerset, as a whole, knits together. On walking the inal few steps to the inishing post at WWT Steart Marshes it was as if Mother Nature knew my feet were throbbing in pain so she presented me with the most perfect of sunsets over the saltmarsh as a gift. It was one of those moments where I said to myself: ‘I love where I live’. That love has, of course, deepened even further over the years since, and that is why I am delighted this month to celebrate our coastal communities with a special focus on our seascapes and the people who live and work in these unique places. It’s all tied in rather fortuitously as this year also sees the 200th anniversary of our maritime heroes, the RNLI. With events planned for this April, do above: Our ‘secret’ island of Steep Holm, seen at sunset save the dates and enjoy the festivities as we thank those brave volunteers at Minehead, Portishead, Burnham and Weston lifeboat stations. camera and boost your photography skills in Porlock Whilst we are thinking of heroes, we are also delighted Bay. Then, it’s time to buckle up as you step aboard an inlatable boat and join me on a spot of island hopping – to be bringing you an interview about Sir David Somerset’s secret island of Steep Holm re-opens at this Attenborough’s most recent award-winning documentary time of year and with limited boat trips it’s series, Wild Isles. Sir David works very an absolute must-see. closely with Alastair Fothergill OBE who is After all that sea air you’ll no doubt have the Somerset-based ilm producer behind worked up a healthy appetite so be sure to the series (amongst many other nature programmes you will no doubt have seen). enjoy the spicy seafood supper recipes which This year Alastair is taking Wild Isles on tour have been brought to you by the Nailsea-based and with Somerset featuring on screen, it’s a Conscious Food Co – delicious! Enjoy your explorations, hot ticket that you won’t want to miss out on. Rachel x Our coastal appreciation is then furthered with a guided walk to the historic shipwreck at Rachel Mead Email rachel.mead@newsquest.co.uk Berrow and a spot of marine lake swimming Editor, @somersetlifemagazine Somerset Life in Clevedon before we invite you to grab your Somerset Life Magazine MEET OUR CONTRIBUTORS Somerset Life Emma Bovill Andrea Cowan Pauline Cox Msc ventures into a contemporary ine art gallery in a bluebell wood near Bruton Page 85 looks for quirky conversation pieces at ive of our best reclamation yards. Page 120 takes you for a bracing springtime swim in Clevedon’s marine lake. Page 159 April 2024 5
INSIDE April 2024 PHOTO:SILVERBACKFILMSLTD Sir David Attenborough’s Wild Isles series is on tour this April 10 22 34 46 WILD ISLES ON TOUR 200 YEARS OF SAVING LIVES PHOTOGRAPHY MASTERCLASS WHAT IS LAND YACHTING? By Rachel Mead We chat with Alastair Fothergill, producer of Sir David Attenborough’s series Wild Isles, and learn about Somerset’s starring role in the acclaimed documentaries. By Steve Roberts Celebrating the lifeboat stations in Burnham-on-Sea, Weston-super-Mare, Portishead and Minehead with an in-depth interview with female helm, Susan Beaton. By Daryl Baker Always wondered how the professionals get those incredible shots? Daryl takes us to Porlock and advises how to capture THAT image of THAT tree! By Malcolm Rigby A trip to Brean reveals an opportunity to set sail – along the sand, not on the water! The club is looking for new members, could this be your new sport for spring? 6 April 2024 Somerset Life
PLUS 27 ARTIST AT HOME IN WESTON-SUPER-MARE PHOTO:AGAKUBISH Relatively speaking The three generations behind Wall Eden Farm 52 Is this the perfect village pub? Emma Dance reviews The Talbot Inn in Mells 56 It’s ish for tea Nailsea’s top ishmonger gifts you two seafood supper recipes for spring 66 Somerset Staycation Why leave the county when we have luxury stays like this one in Hinton St George? 70 Look to the stars A trip to Bath reveals a brother and sister duo whose future was written in the stars 75 Top tickets Enjoy a night out at one of these Somerset events 85 Art watch Creativity can be casual, writes Emma Bovill 96 The Founder of the RSPB Conor Jameson relects on the campaigning conservationist W.H.Hudson ISLAND HOPPING - IN SOMERSET By Rachel Mead Are you in on the secret? Join our editor as she travels six miles across the Bristol Channel to explore the isle of Steep Holm. 40 By Emma Bovill Meet award-winning artist Aga Kubish, who takes inspiration from Somerset’s natural world to create striking linocut prints. 88 URBAN GARDENS PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL 48 By Angharad Paull Spring is springing across the county but have you visited these green spaces in the city of Bristol? 113 From Somerset to Italy How the Romans connected Mendip to Rome 114 Racing Times As excitement builds for the Grand National we chat to Martin and David Pipe ON THE COVER 159 PHOTO:PAULINECOX HAVE YOU TAKEN THE PLUNGE? By Pauline Cox Clevedon is home to a marine lake which is the perfect safe swimming spot for those who are keen to start cold water swimming. Our functional nutritionist advises how best to get started. Somerset Life Celebrating our coastline with the ‘Lighthouse on Legs’ at Burnham-on-Sea. Photo: Ian Wool, Getty April 2024 7
somerset-life.co.uk EDITOR Rachel Mead 07966 257363 rachel.mead@newsquest.co.uk PRINT EDITOR Owen Jones owen.jones@newsquest.co.uk DESIGN AND PRODUCTION The Newsquest editorial designers SALES DIRECTOR Sally Eyre 07473 646200 sally.eyre@localiq.co.uk ADVERTISEMENT ACCOUNT MANAGER Daniel Paxton 01392 888418, daniel.paxton@localiq.co.uk NATIONAL SALES The Mediaforce Group 020 8477 3706 nationalenquiries@localiq.co.uk CLIENT AND CAMPAIGN PARTNER. Charlie Collins charlie.collins@localiq.co.uk SUBSCRIPTIONS CUSTOMER SERVICE 0800 953 0133 (9am – 5.30pm Mon – Fri) subscriptions@greatbritishlife.co.uk RETAIL SALES AND DISTRIBUTION 01603 772738 magazines.circ@newsquest.co.uk Published in Somerset by Newsquest Media Group. Registered oice 1st Floor, Chartist Tower, Upper Dock Street, Newport, Wales, NP20 1DW. Printed by Acorn Web Offset Ltd, Normanton Industrial Estate, Loscoe Close, Normanton WF6 1TW. Somerset Life adheres to the Editors’ Code of Practice (which you can ind at pcc.org.uk/cop/practice. html). We are regulated by the Independent Press Standards Organisation. Complaints about stories should be referred irstly to the Editor by email at: rachel.mead@newsquest.co.uk. It is essential that your email is headed “Complaint” in the subject line and contains the following information: Your name, email address, postal address and daytime telephone number, the title or website, preferably a copy of the story or at least the date, page number or website address of the article and any headline, a full explanation of your complaint by reference to the Editors’ Code. If you do not provide any of the information above this may delay or prevent us dealing with your complaint. Your personal details will only be used for administration purposes. If we cannot reach a resolution between us then you can contact IPSO by email at complaints@ ipso.co.uk or by post at IPSO, c/o Halton House, 20-23 Holborn, London EC1N 2JD. If complaining about thirdparty comments on our website articles, you should use the “report this post” function online next to the comment. 8 April 2024 Somerset Life

The CALL WILD of the Award-winning ilm director and Somerset resident ALASTAIR FOTHERGILL OBE is bringing Sir David Attenborough’s Wild Isles on tour WORDS: Rachel Mead PHOTOS: Silverback Films Ltd
WILD ISLES A northern gannet dives to catch mackerel
WILD ISLES 12 April 2024 Somerset Life
WILD ISLES ho can forget the incredible Wild Isles series that graced our screens last year? With Sir David Attenborough reminding us that ‘Nature is just as dramatic and spectacular in the British Isles as anywhere I’ve seen elsewhere,’ he ensured that over ive million of us tuned in each Sunday evening, with a further seven million catching up on BBC iPlayer since. What many people perhaps don’t realise is that Silverback Films, who are behind the series, are based just up the road in Bristol, and that many of the scenes from the Wild Isles series were ilmed here in Somerset. With so many of us eager to learn more about the nature on our doorstep, Silverback Films are now going on tour with Wild Isles Live this May. In advance of their show in Bristol, I was invited to meet Somerset-resident and co-founder of Silverback Films, Alastair Fothergill OBE, who not only produced the Wild Isles series but has also brought many BAFTA and EMMY award-winning nature shows to our screens; Blue Planet, Planet Earth, Frozen Planet and Chimpanzee to name just a few. On arriving at Silverback Film HQ, I was welcomed into the reception area and greeted by a huge smiling portrait of Sir David Attenborough which graces the walls alongside several trophy-laden shelves. I was shown into the aptly named Gorilla Suite and was joined by Alastair. He has been in the Natural History programming arena for 40 years, having originally launched his career at the BBC in 1983 before creating the Bristol-based production company in 2012. ‘After being responsible for the original Blue Planet series in 2001, I always felt that an amazing series could be made here in the UK. Bristol is the ‘Green > left: A male toad grabs irmly onto a female as he attempts to fertilize her eggs in a pond in Somerset below: Alastair and Sir David during the ilming of the Wild Isles series Somerset Life April 2024 13
WILD ISLES Hollywood’, and all the best wildlife ilms are made here so I promised the BBC that if I could raise the money it would be just as impressive as the planetary series. As you can imagine, it takes millions of pounds an episode to create these types of series and so we needed to raise a lot of money to make it feasible. We’re very thankful that Wild Isles was partly funded by the RSPB and the WWF who joined as co-production partners. For all of us, the real dream of Wild Isles was to move the dial of public appreciation.’ There are some hard-hitting facts delivered throughout the series – particularly when Sir David informs the viewers that Britain as a whole is one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world. ‘The igures in the UK are quite depressing,’ said Alastair, ‘but we do make these ilms predominantly to inspire people. It is still really amazing here in the UK and it’s important that local people realise that they may not be able to do anything to help the polar bears directly, but they can do something closer to home in Somerset for their otters or their starlings for example.’ At the mention of starlings Alastair remarked on the huge changes that have been seen in the wetlands across our county: ‘The Avalon Marshes in Somerset is one of the most important water areas in the UK now and it really demonstrates what you can do when you give nature a chance. People often say to me, “You must get depressed at the loss of our natural world?” and I always say “No, I love my job particularly because I have seen nature restore itself.” The Avalon Marshes near Glastonbury are a great example of restoration. Just 30 years ago they were mostly being dug up for peat. Today they are home to a wonderful range of rare birds – marsh harriers, over ive species of herons and egrets and tens of bitterns ‘booming’ in the summer… it’s our equivalent to the Okavango Delta in Botswana.’ With our county being used as the ilming location for the spotlights on both the dragonlies and the toadlet migration in the Wild Isles series, I wondered why Alastair didn’t choose to ilm the starling murmuration scenes on the Somerset Levels. ‘With the starlings roosting in such a massive area of reeds at Ham Wall it can make ilming very tricky – the birds can roost almost anywhere – so we crossed the border into Devon where they choose to roost in the trees. By using thermal cameras to see the birds at night we could then watch the barn owls hunting at night – that was a big spectacle! I do, however, have on good authority that the bitterns at Ham Wall will steal starlings from the reeds there – but ilming that would have been very challenging!’ Talking of challenges, our conversation inevitably turned to our farming community. Sir David quotes in episode three of Wild Isles that ‘95% of Britain’s hay meadow habitats have been lost since the 1930’s’ and I wondered what Alastair’s thoughts were. ‘The positive story is that farmers are really aware of it. They realise that for their survival and the health of the soil they need to stop logging it. They need to ind a diferent economical model to make it pay – for some that could be embracing tourism or creating a higher quality product that can be sold at a higher price. Farmers appreciate how special nature is and they are absolutely not the enemy in conservation. ‘Hedgerows are really good for nature so many farmers are now leaving the strips on the edge of ields for wildlowers which entices really good insects which > right: A mayly nymph hatching out of a chalk stream 14 April 2024 Somerset Life
WILD ISLES ‘The Avalon Marshes in Somerset is one of the most important water areas in the UK’ Somerset Life April 2024 15
WILD ISLES in turn helps to manage the aphids. If you increase biodiversity on your farm, then most of it is in turn supporting you on your farm. The farmers are the heroes of conservation in the UK, they get a bad rap – but they are a responsible community. I hope the ELM scheme (Environmental Land Management) will inancially reward farmers to be conservationists. With so many people living in crowded cities; we need to remember how important the countryside is for mental health beneits – think of the footpaths and the wilderness areas; these are all provided by the farmers, rather generously in fact. Ultimately, we are all on the same side.’ With the Wild Isles Live tour visiting the county this May, what can we all expect to see? ‘We’ll be taking you behind the scenes whilst delivering a wonderfully immersive experience – a little like the original show only this time you’ll be viewing a huge screen with a massive sound system which means you really will be face to face with a sea eagle!’ The tour promises to appeal to all age groups, taking the audience on a captivating journey through the British Isles’ most breathtaking landscapes, above: Sir David Attenborough with Alastair Fothergill OBE right: A kingisher catches a minnow ‘and by being held at the Bristol Beacon, you are not only seated in a beautiful building, but the acoustics are very 21st century. The sound of nature will be something else and in combination with George Fenton’s beautiful score from the Wild Isles theme tune, well, the Bristol Beacon will show of the sounds of the show just beautifully.’ The show culminates with a Q&A with Alastair and his team ‘and we’ll also be talking about the Save Our Wild Isles Campaign which is designed to show people what they can do to make a change in their own backyard – because as Sir David says, no matter where we live, we can and must play a part in restoring nature to our isles. Never has it been more important to do this for ourselves and for our wildlife – it is our responsibility.’ Tickets for Wild Isles Live at the Bristol Beacon on Saturday May 11 are available from wildisleslive.org . SAVE OUR WILD ISLES CAMPAIGN WWF, the RSPB and the National Trust are working together to bring nature back from the brink. As the TV series showed us, our wild isles are home to some truly special wildlife and habitats, but with our nature in crisis, what can we do to help? To help nature on your very own doorstep in Somerset you can follow 16 April 2024 these top tips from the Save Our Wild Isles team: 1: If you have a garden, set aside areas of longer grass and temporary no-mow areas. If you don’t have access to a garden, could you pot an additional plant in a window box, balcony or courtyard? Every plant will make a difference! 2: Create a home – can you provide the right environment for bees, bats, and birds so that nature can come and stay with you? 3: Cut out chemical herbicides and pesticides – to ensure a variety of wildlife this is a must. 4: Go peat free with your compost when planting. Peatlands store carbon and are wildlife hotspots. 5: Create wildlife corridors within your outdoor space. Can you encourage wildlife to traverse from your garden to next door for example? For more advice, and to join the Save Our Wild Isles campaign visit saveourwildisles.org.uk Somerset Life
WILD ISLES Somerset Life April 2024 17



OUR COASTLINE For views of the water and a taste of salt on the breeze SECRET ISLAND IN FOCUS We visit Somerset’s isle in the channel Professional photography guidance for the perfect shot PHOTO:DARYLBAKER LIFE SAVERS Celebrating the RNLI’s 200th anniversary LIGHTHOUSE ON LEGS Burnham-on-Sea has three lighthouses, but this lighthouse on legs – also known as the ‘Low Lighthouse’ – is the only one which is actively working as a navigational aid for those at sea. Built in 1832 it provides a white lash of light every 7.5 seconds Somerset Life which shines through a window on its front. Loved by photographers, the Low Lighthouse is painted white with a single vertical red stripe on its sea-facing side and provides a striking silhouette along the beach as the sun sets behind it. The hard-packed sands make this stretch of coast a good spot for a dog walk before heading into Burnham to enjoy a cuppa in one of the beach-side cafés. With thanks to Daryl Baker for his photography. @darylbakerphotography April 2024 21
S ta R 5 I RI
Susan Beaton, helm of the Portishead lifeboat station ‘WITH COURAGE, nothing is IMPOSSIBLE’ As the country commemorates the 200th anniversary of the RNLI, Stephen Roberts meets SUSAN BEATON, who volunteers to keep our Somerset waters safe PHOTOGR APHS: RNLI > April 2024 23
LA LABEL (RIGHT) absolutely love it. The pager goes of at all times of the day and night but I’m not inconvenienced by that one bit. You don’t respond to a pager at 3am unless you enjoy it.’ Susan Beaton became the irst female helm at the Portishead lifeboat station last year, a decade after joining the team. ‘Being born and raised in a coastal community on Scotland’s west coast meant the sea was ever present, so I joined the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) in 2013 when I was struggling to ind a job after uni. Then, after relocating to Somerset for work, I joined Portishead lifeboat station. ‘Our crew volunteers respond to on average 40 ‘shouts’ a year at Portishead. These are diferent to a seaside town as we have no beaches, so there’s no inlatables – but we get lots of other call outs: broken down boats, open water swimmers, kayakers who’ve unfortunately got into diiculty, false alarms, and sadly, mental health issues. ‘Open water swimming has boomed and people go out swimming in high tides without understanding our tidal range and get caught out. They’re mostly adults who may not have done enough research of our area, but we never judge. I can respond to most ‘shouts’ ‘I when working from home – my employer’s more than supportive. I just message my boss with a single word: “lifeboat”.’ In 2024 the RNLI celebrates its 200th year and the scale of the operation is staggering. RNLI volunteer lifeboat crews and lifeguards saved 506 lives and helped 39,680 souls last year. Tragically, around 140 people die annually in our UK and Irish coastal waters and the RNLI’s vision is to save every single one of these. By working with communities and partners the stations try to prevent people getting into danger in the irst place, with males over 15 years old most at risk. As well as the lifeboat crews there are thousands of dedicated fundraisers and volunteer shore crews helping with launching and recovering lifeboats. There are 238 UK and Irish lifeboat stations covering 19,000 miles of coastline with RNLI lifeguards patrolling around 240 UK and Channel Island beaches. Of the four lifeboat stations in Somerset the oldest is Burnham-on-Sea, established in 1836, followed by Weston-super-Mare (1882), Minehead (1901), and the newest recruit, Portishead – when the Portishead Lifeboat Trust was adopted into the RNLI charity in 2015. above: Susan with her colleagues, Dave (left) and Jake (right) right: The Portishead Lifeboat, My Lady Anne on exercise 24 April 2024 Somerset Life
‘ You don’t respond to a pager at 3am unless you ENJOY IT’ Susan says: ‘The RNLI prepares you for the worst possible outcome, then if the casualty turns out to be ine it’s OK – but you always need to be mentally prepared in case you have to cope with that situation. There’s loads of training and competencies today, from understanding our personal protective equipment (PPE) to knowing where everything’s located on the lifeboat so you don’t have to think if asked to locate something. Navigation, search patterns, irst aid and casualty care are constantly rehearsed during training sessions. ‘There is a diference between an inshore lifeboat (ILB) and all-weather lifeboat (ALB). On the former we’re not expected to know everything inside out but we should nevertheless be able to operate anywhere within that boat and be interchangeable. Someone else must be able to take over the operation in an instant. One of our rescues from Portishead featured on the BBC’s Saving Lives at Sea when a man and dog went over a clif, the man sufering a punctured above: The RNLI responds to call outs at all times of day right: The Portishead lifeboat responds to about 40 ‘shouts’ a year Somerset Life lung. It was a collective efort to help them both and it was a story with a happy ending as they were both ine afterwards. ‘The vast majority of people on our coast don’t expect to get into diiculty. Medical emergencies happen and a boat breaking down is no diferent to a car; you’re just more vulnerable out there on the water. Experience, or lack of it, isn’t always the determining factor. We’ve had ‘call outs’ to people who’ve just bought a boat, and others who have boated for 40 years. But as I’ve said, there’s never any judgement. Even people you feel have misjudged going to sea, you just try and ofer advice, or local information, which will hopefully help keep them safe in future. When someone’s just had a terrible experience, it may not be the best time to start lecturing them about not wearing a lifejacket!” . HONOURING THE RNLI IN SOMERSET There will be a programme of activities to commemorate the charity’s 200th anniversary across the UK and Ireland this year. April 28 Open Day at RNLI Portishead, BS20 7EA Meet the volunteer crew, see the lifeboat in action and take a look around on board. In a family-friendly event, the RNLI will be joined by the other emergency services as well as the ‘Beach Buddies’ lifesaving puppet theatre. Expect face painting, crafts, a treasure trail and cake! September 28 RNLI 200-year Anniversary Ball, Weston-super-Mare A black-tie event with three course meal on the Grand Pier. Enjoy dancing to live music, a silent rale and delicious food at this glitzy event to honour our heroes in style. The cost of running the RNLI in 2022 was £188 million; 81p of every £1 funds lifesaving activities with the remainder used to help generate more funds. Please support this vital and worthy institution ‘for those in peril on the sea’. rnli.org.uk April 2024 25
26 April 2024 Somerset Life
RACHEL MEAD
LA LABEL (RIGHT) ’m going to hold my hands up in complete honesty and admit, that until last year, I did not know that Somerset had an island! I’m admitting to having this gap in my knowledge in case there are any other fellow ‘not-in-theknowers’ out there. With my confession out in the open, let me introduce you to this very special ancient outcrop of rock which has been inhabited on and of (for those who knew it was there) for over 8,000 years. Meet my most recent acquaintance – the Somerset island of Steep Holm. When you choose to step ashore on this ‘secret’ island, you’ll be committing to her from the of because once the boat drops you on ‘The Beach’, you’ll be waving goodbye to your ride home for 12 hours. The tidal range here is huge, the second largest in the world, so depending on tide times, your day is likely to begin early doors (we set sail from Westonsuper-Mare at 7am) and you won’t be back until the same hour later that evening. For the adventurers amongst you, you’ll be able to 28 April 2024 feel as though you are channelling your inner Captain Cook – or William Dampier if we’re keeping to our Somerset theme. You can opt to explore the island blissfully solo because there are no tour guides keeping you to a set route. Or, for those of you who enjoy some camaraderie whilst stepping out onto new and exciting lands, knowledgeable company is on hand in the guise of the volunteering team from the Kenneth Allsop Memorial Trust, which owns and helps maintain the island. These stalwart ‘Steep Holmers’ will take you on a guided tour, if you wish, and as a heads up they have so much knowledge of the place, you’ll be shown things that you might otherwise miss if you’re not eagle-eyed. Steep Holm was purchased as a living memorial to the broadcaster and conservation campaigner Kenneth Allsop in the mid-70s and since then these incredible volunteers have been sympathetically restoring the history of the island whilst preserving the unique landscape, lora and fauna for explorers like you and me. Somerset Life
STEEP HOLM Your day begins bright and early in Westonsuper-Mare. You’ll meet your fellow island hoppers at the Knightstone Harbour slipway before all climbing aboard the Bay Island Voyages craft. The excitement starts here, because not only is your mode of travel a speedy RIB, it’s one of those sporty ones which invites you to sit astride your seat as if you’re riding a motorbike. With the sea air whipping through your hair, you’ll be across the six nautical miles in about 20 minutes and your day will have begun with a real adrenaline rush. As you disembark you are greeted with the remains of the old inn before you pick up the > above: The old barracks are now a visitor centre. Photo: Kenneth Allsop Memorial Trust top right: Preparing to set sail from Weston-super-Mare. Photo: Rachel Mead right: Arriving at the island via RIB. Photo: Rachel Mead Somerset Life April 2024 29
SET SAIL IN SOMERSET Trips to Steep Holm are organised by Bay Island Voyages with 2024 sailings starting on March 29 at 07.30. The cost of the return trip is £45 per person which includes a donation to the Kenneth Allsop Memorial Trust. The nature of the RIB means that the trip is only suitable for those over 1.1 metres tall. bayislandvoyages.co.uk
STEEP HOLM zig-zag track of the old incline railway used by soldiers when Steep Holm was fortiied during the Second World War. This is the irst hint of historical military occupation on the island, but as you explore further you will realise that a vast majority of the defences are Victorian, from when Steep Holm was also a crucial link in the set of four Palmerston forts protecting the Bristol Channel from French attack. On digging even further back into the archaeological surveys and inds, it is believed Vikings were using Steep Holm as a secure base from which to raid the mainland in 870AD, plus there have been countless Roman artefacts uncovered which suggest that the Empire had also set up home here for quite some time too. But fear not, you have 12 hours to uncover all the mysteries and marvels from Steep Holm’s deep past and as you reach the top of the island at 256 feet above sea level, you’re not far from the museum, and the barracks where you can pore over plenty of books and informative displays. Converted into the Visitor Centre, the old barracks is your base camp for the day, and it is here that you’ll be able to chat to the band of volunteers, enjoy your packed breakfast, lunch and tea, and take cover from any poor weather, or from the gulls. It’s probably now that I should also make my second confession for the day – the gulls are very well established here and will, without fail, make a lasting impression on your trip. If you’re a keen birdwatcher and you want to experience a vivid insight into gull behaviour then make sure you time your visit to coincide with breeding season from late April to July. With 1,000 gulls choosing Steep Holm as their ideal nesting ground, the very cute and very lufy chicks fearlessly toddle around, but what is also crucial to know is that gulls are incredibly protective parents so you’ll need to walk around with a brolly as a defensive Somerset Life mechanism against the occasional swoop, or more likely ‘poop’. If you’ve brought your binoculars along then other notable spots are clif-top cormorants, water rails (which are a bizarre sighting as they normally prefer the Somerset Levels) and the superstar crowd pleaser (and logo for the Kenneth Allsop Memorial Trust charity), the peregrine falcon. For those visitors who prefer to explore this remarkable island without fear of a dive-bombing gull, then book aboard the boat later in August and head to the island for an early autumnal trip instead. Remember, it’s just you and your fellow 11 visitors taking up temporary residence for the day so it’s incredibly peaceful and gives you above: The old cannons are a favoured resting perch for the gulls. Photo: Rachel Mead left: The old inn is the irst thing that greets you on arrival to the isle. Photo: Rachel Mead below left: During gull breeding season, it is wise to sit beneath a brolly to avoid a swoop or a poop from above! Photo: Rachel Mead below right: The luffy chicks are fearless and wander along the footpaths, though keep an eye out for their parents who won’t be far away! Photo: Meandering Wild > April 2024 31
LA LABEL (RIGHT) Sunset on Steep Holm, looking across to the mainland. Photo: Tim Barrett ‘For the naturalists amongst you, a day trip to Steep Holm is the VIP ticket, it’s the front row seat at a nature documentary screening’ ample opportunity to switch of, explore at leisure and just be. By now you’re probably realising that a trip to Steep Holm is not a standard walk in the park. Steep Holm is very much an island which is celebrated as a nature reserve and bird sanctuary whilst also being recognised as a key Site of Special Scientiic Interest due to its rare plants such as the Mediterranean wild peony. It is rugged, in places it is overgrown, and the facilities are somewhat rustic, but this is where its charm and authenticity prevail. For the naturalists amongst you, a day trip to Steep Holm is the VIP ticket, it’s the front row seat at a nature documentary screening. For the lovers of our coastline, you’ll get unique views of the Somerset and Welsh mainlands in addition to tangible insights into the workings of this exclusive 50-acre island. For the historians, there are so many stories With 12 hours on the island this busy editor even found time to write an article. Photo: Richard Howes 32 April 2024 to uncover – plus you’ll have open access to the aged gun emplacements, ammunition stores and searchlight posts. From legends of Steep Holm being a monks’ retreat to tales of bears having brawls in the inn there’s much to discover. It seemed there was even a bit of a loophole in the law when it came to the selling of alcohol on Steep Holm during the 1800s. Although the island falls under Somerset’s county jurisdiction, the landlord of the inn believed that he was outside the mainland laws of licensing due to the fact that he was six miles of the coast and he managed to serve drinks for 50 years before being summoned to court. Once the law had inally caught up with him, he realised that he’d need to relocate his business however he didn’t go far – just a short boat trip across to the neighbouring Welsh isle of Flat Holm. Cheers! Steep Holm is, without doubt, one of our county’s gems which deserves more of a spotlight, and yet due to the very nature of her location, she is able to maintain a sense of exclusivity. It is a privilege to be one of those few who have ventured across the Bristol Channel to walk amongst her histories and current Laridae inhabitants (thank goodness for my brolly!). Under the care of the Kenneth Allsop Memorial Trust, humankind very much comes second place here, the island is home foremost to the birds, and I do confess, gull poop and all, that after making acquaintance with Somerset’s secret isle there is a certain magnetism about her which ensures I’ll be going back to improve my knowledge of our county’s secret island even further. . Peregrine falcons feature on the logo for the Kenneth Allsop Memorial Trust as they are regular visitors to Steep Holm. Photo: Getty THE KENNETH ALLSOP MEMORIAL TRUST Best known as a broadcaster, writer and environmentalist in the 1960s, Kenneth Allsop was a regular face on the BBC’s Tonight programme. Steep Holm island was bought as a living memorial in his name and is maintained as a nature reserve and bird sanctuary. The island survives on monetary donations and the incredible gift of time from the volunteers. The team are always keen to hear from potential volunteers, those who can help with maintenance tasks as well as helping out in the café, shop or fundraising. steepholm.online Somerset Life
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PHOTOGRAPHY estled along the South West Coast Path and within Exmoor National Park stand t wo magnificently preserved dead trees in Porlock Marsh. They have to be the most photographed trees in the whole of the National Park and are a must see when visiting this part of the county. Whether you have set of from Porlock Weir or Bossington, you will stumble across these incredible ornaments, a somewhat bizarre but at the same time mesmerising mark on this historical part of our Somerset coastline. The trees remind me of an ancient monument, standing here in solidarity and serenity as if they were planted here on purpose for me to photograph – though of course I know they perished due to the unexpected arrival of sea water almost 30 years ago. The marshland in which these preserved trees are located has changed over the years after a severe storm in 1996 called Storm Lili caused a breach of the shingle ridge between the sea and the original freshwater lood plain behind it; resulting in the catastrophic failure of one ecosystem whilst indirectly creating another. As the salt water washed into the marshes and mixed with the fresh water lowing down from the Exmoor hills a salt marsh was created – a new habitat for rare coastal plants and wildlife to merit the area’s accreditation as a SSSI (Site of Special Scientiic Interest) in 2002. There’s a lot of Somerset history in this area and as you walk along the coast path it is easy to let your mind wander back to the times of our ancestors. Once known as Portloca, Porlock has been on record since the 10th Century with the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle stating that the Saxon King Harold of 1066 and his brother voyaged from Ireland with nine ships and landed at Porlock Bay. They made quite the arrival, burning the town to the ground before then marching their way to London. Fast forward to the 17th century and the smuggling of contraband tobacco was rife along the Somerset coastline, becoming so widespread that small ports such as Porlock Harbour, with its temporary discreet hiding places, were notoriously known for stripping HM Customs of a lot of revenue! N LOGISTICS Car Parking: If approaching from Porlock Weir there is a pay and display car park, postcode: TA24 8PB. If you start in Bossington you can park at the National Trust car park, postcode: TA24 8HQ Places to eat: There are several eateries in Porlock Weir including Porlock Bay Oysters, The Ship Inn and Locanda on the Weir. Head to the thatched cottage of Kitnors in Bossington for a cup of tea and piece of cake in the garden. (Check opening hours before you set out) Tides: The Somerset coast is tidal. Check tide times at tidetimes.org Getting the shot Back to today and I have wanted to capture the skeleton trees at Porlock Marsh for many years, but time and tide wait for no man, and that was certainly the case for me. However on this day, it so happened that I changed my location last minute due to the unpredictable weather elsewhere on Exmoor. I had pulled left: Follow the South West Coast Path and check the tide times to see this iconic skeleton tree. Photo: Daryl Baker above: ‘Think about the ilters you may want to use for the best possible exposure’ advises Daryl. Photo: Charlotte Baker Somerset Life the car over, quickly checked the tide times on tidetimes.org, and found that luck could inally be on my side for capturing the elusive skeleton trees! The perfect conditions for the most sought-after relection shot need the combination of a high tide with a low wind speed. But you do need to be careful and manage your time carefully; after all this particular part of the coast path is tidal. If you’re after this shot you’ll need to work quickly, thinking about the ilters you may want to use, and also the settings required for the best possible exposure time for this image. I used a tripod with a combination of a polariser and neutral density ilters to achieve a slower exposure time, with my camera on settings ISO 100, aperture f11 and a shutter speed of ive seconds. Though, if you are using a smartphone you could try using a lightweight tripod and the Slow Shutter Cam app to achieve a similar result. Daryl regularly captures striking images from around Somerset. See them at darylbakerphotography . April 2024 35
36 April 2024 Somerset Life

38 April 2024 Somerset Life
PEOPLE & PLACES Meeting local personalities who shine a spotlight on Somerset EXPLORING TEXTURE THREE GENERATIONS TAKE TO THE SANDS Aga Kubish, from Weston-super-Mare, invites us into her lino-cutting art studio Let’s chat with the family behind Wall Eden Farm Holidays in Highbridge Forget the ocean, let’s go land yachting at Brean BOSSINGTON BEACH PHOTO:MALCOLMLEWIS This image, which was kindly sent in by reader Malcolm Lewis, shows one of the two pillbox beach defences that can be explored when you visit this part of our Exmoor coastline. The hamlet of Bossington is very pretty with thatched cottages aplenty. The National Trust rents out holiday homes here including the large ive-bedroomed Holnicote Lower House with its latticed windows and log-burning stove. You can also stay at the nearby Bossington Hall which is an adult’s only luxury B&B with sauna, tennis court and squash court. For far-reaching views along the coast head up to Hurlstone Point. Somerset Life April 2024 39
The moment that Aga’s Roots linocut print is revealed 40 April 2024 Somerset Life
AGA KUBISH THE SPACE BETWEEN THE LINES Award-winning artist Aga Kubish brings meticulous creativity and a love of nature to her exquisite linocut prints WORDS: EMMA BOVILL April 2024 41
hen you choose to make somewhere your home, your relationship with it takes on extra depth. Which is apt for the extraordinarily talented printmaker Aga Kubish, whose creative practice is wrapped up in exploring texture and detail. The Polish-born artist and her husband had long dreamed of exploring the British landscape, sentimentally watching episodes of Escape to the Country on TV in their native country. 42 April 2024 In 2018 she and her family ‘sold everything’ and took a chance on a move to the UK, landing irst in Nailsea before adopting Weston-super-Mare as their base. Aga takes inspiration from the natural world to inform her linocut prints, which study botanic motifs. It may be a coincidence, but the establishing of roots and generating fresh shoots in a new place has a warming synergy with the focus on plants in her artwork. Listening to Aga talk animatedly about her exploratory walks, which she says help her balance family life with her artistic passions, reveals just how much she enjoys her surroundings. She is often found with a camera in hand capturing intricacies in the lora she encounters to reference back to in her home studio. In quick succession, and with very little prompt, she eulogises about the sound of the waves hitting the shingle beach at Porlock, her love of walking in the Quantock Hills (the basis of her piece The Forest) and the positive energy of Wells and its cathedral. Her infectious joy in the county in which she lives is echoed back. Her work is on permanent display at Heart of the Tribe gallery in Glastonbury, where she has also held solo and group exhibitions. ‘Inspiriting, absolutely breathtaking and amazing skill’ was one visitor’s response to her live demonstration at the venue. Somerset Life
AGA KUBISH For all her success – Aga was accepted as a member of the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers in 2022 and awarded the Canns Down Press Award for Panoramix in 2023 – and dedication to her practice, Aga is incredibly modest. She makes art simply because it’s part of her daily way of being in the world and connects her to it. ‘It was my complex that I hadn’t attended art school, so it was an important moment when I delivered my portfolio to the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers at the Bankside Gallery,’ she explains. ‘It was life changing when I heard I was accepted.’ Heart of the Tribe gallery describes Aga as ‘incredibly proliic’ and it’s an accurate relection. She produces her limited-edition large-scale linocut prints on nearly a monthly basis, actively seeking out stimuli to spur her to extend her body of work and develop as an artist. Watching her unveil her artwork, Roots is a delight and privilege, a magical moment of reveal where the viewer joins the artist in seeing the impression of the cut lino and ink on paper for the irst time, recognising the way > above: The Panoramix linocut in progress top right: Aga’s linocut The Forest right: Incredible detail in this print Ferns Somerset Life April 2024 43
AGA KUBISH ‘It’s not like painting; if you make a mistake there’s no way to ix it’ it creates a mirror image of the original design. ‘With lino printing you have to think about a complex project at the beginning,’ she reveals. ‘It’s not like painting; if you make a mistake there’s no way to ix it.’ This is part of the enjoyment and challenge for Aga, who inds the act of cutting lino ‘like therapy, a mantra’. Being connected physically to her work is important to Aga. She applies pressure by hand to transfer ink to paper, variously using glass jars or lids, allowing her to bring out subtleties of tone in her monochromatic work. ‘I love this handmade approach, it’s a lot of fun and I’m in control of the process.’ Aga works in one layer and one colour of ink on large paper, keeping her technique as simple as possible to allow for a deep dive into the minutiae of her subject matter, the repetition and variety in form of leaves and petals. This is played out beautifully in her interpretations of the Palm House at Kew Gardens and artwork, Ferns. The resulting pieces are timeless and elegant and as suitable for a country house or a Victorian terrace. She is conscious of how art its into the interior aesthetic of a home and of how her prints, typically 1m by 70cm in size, are appealing for customers as much as they are rewarding to work on. Deeply committed to her craft, Aga isn’t immune to feelings of sadness when completing a run of prints (she typically produces 50 with a handful of additional artist’s proofs) but lacks no impetus to begin new projects. ‘I need to produce art every day, it’s natural to me,’ she reveals, using her available time ‘200 per cent to be creative’. Her involvement with the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers brings extra rigour and focus to her compulsion to make art and she hopes to join her fellow members for the annual summer exhibition at its home next to the Tate Modern in London. ‘I’m quite a shy person,’ she admits, ‘I prefer to speak via my work’. Luckily for Aga, her prints speak for themselves, loudly, efortlessly creating a 3D feel that give credit to the painstaking efort that goes into each composition and eliciting the urge to own not just one, but several. There is a warm, bordering on impish, quality to Aga and perhaps her only reticence is to reveal the type of paper that she uses. ‘It’s a secret!’ she laughs. When giving so much of herself in her artwork, and ofering such a compelling window into the British countryside, it’s only fair to aford her a few mysteries. seanestart.square.site @agakubish . above: House of Ferns by Aga Kubish right: Behind by Aga Kubish 44 April 2024 Somerset Life
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VILLAGE LIFE PHOTO:MALCOLMRIGBY Malcolm Rigby takes a look at village life in Somerset Land yachting at Brean Sands 46 April 2024 Somerset Life
VILLAGE LIFE T HIS MON T H W E V ISI T: BREAN DOWN rom Brean Down to Burnham-onSea there are seven miles of beach – so what can you do there? You can go land yachting of course. I met up with Derek George at the Brean Land Yacht Club, not much more than a cabin plus storage unit but somewhere to keep warm, have a cup of cofee and meet other enthusiastic members. Derek is a former British champion; he introduced his son to the sport at the age of 12 and now Craig is the current champion. The activity can be traced back to 6th century China and it came to Brean in the 1920s when the locals would make the vehicles from the remains of World War One aircraft. Now it is recognized as one of the best European beaches with two regattas a year. Derek said: ‘This is a good beach in general, it’s lat, it’s quite hard sand and we’re well positioned for south westerly winds and that comes straight on the shore here and that makes perfect sailing. ‘I get as much buzz out of doing this as racing motor bikes. You can get the adrenalin going, being low to the ground and going at speed. If you’re doing 35 you feel as if you’re doing 60. The other enjoyment out of it is the eco-friendly thing, you’re not actually using fuel, just using the power of the wind to give you that adrenalin feel.’ The ‘yacht’ looks like a sophisticated go-kart frame with three wheels and a sail. It is, but it can go up to 65mph, is classiied as an extreme sport and there are no brakes (don’t worry, you just sail into the wind to stop). Wind speed is important, you need at least 10mph and generally you can go at about twice the strength of the wind. ‘Hiking’ is when you go on to two wheels, apparently it is a fun factor but you do lose speed. F ‘We have had higher numbers in the past but we are losing the younger generation because they’re on computers and PlayStations. We’re looking to encourage the younger ones for sure. If anyone’s interested in joining the club we do taster days and we have got club yachts here so they have got use of them for a year. Come and try it, we guarantee you’ll be smiling very soon.’ Donning a helmet, I had a short go, it was truly amazing – I shall return with my son for a taster session. The Morrison’s cashier conirmed that Brean was indeed a village of two seasons; population down to under 700 in winter months with a shop, a chippie and a pub, but in the summer with the small city of caravans and chalets, people swell into the thousands (land sailing is not permissible in July and August). The numbers game is further complicated by the fact that EDF have taken over the Pontins site for 900 Hinkley workers. Martin Chatterton, chair of the parish council, has had a working life at sea so it’s not surprising he moved to Brean 23 years ago. ‘My house opens onto the beach so I can get up in the morning open the gate and I’m on the beach. That is wonderful, that’s the reason I moved here. I can see the sun rising over the Mendips in the morning and I can see it set over the Bristol Channel, depending on the time of year, anywhere from Cardif in the summer down to over Exmoor in the winter.’ On a bright Sunday, even out of season, the National Trust car park will be full and there’ll be a row of cars on the beach (tide permitting); there will be dog walkers, hardy ishermen, children playing, horse-riders, husky club members, kite buggies and of course land yachts. It’s a giant pleasure park. Highs and lows Geographically, Brean’s claim to fame is that it has one of the greatest tidal ranges in the world, second only to the Bay of Fundy in Canada. The sea has some strong and dangerous currents at low tide and red warning lags should be observed. Somerset Life THE FORT/ PALMERSTON FOLLY Take a walk up the hill and a stroll along the Brean Down peninsular and you ind the fort. It’s a kind of unintentional folly. Built and manned during the Victorian era to stem a potential French invasion, then re-commissioned during World War Two to keep the Germans out, the fort never actually saw any conventional action. It was one of four spanning the Bristol Channel the others being on Flat Holm, Steep Holm and Lavernock Point in Wales. Seven large guns were installed at the battery but they soon became largely redundant. In 1900 a soldier ired his rile into a gunpowder magazine and that ended this particular military occupation. However, the isolation of the spot did make it suitable for some experimentation by the Admiralty’s Department of Miscellaneous Weapons Development. A seaborne version of the bouncing bomb was tested here, as were torpedo decoys and rocket grappling irons. The National Trust took it over as a managed ruin. INFO POPULATION: 635 (2011 census) STAY OR BUY: The Old Rectory is a seasonal family run bed and breakfast just 400m from the beach. The property is situated in the quieter centre of Brean but is within walking distance of the main attractions. It has an acre site, including attractive gardens, ish pond and play area. admin@oldrectorybrean.co.uk Situated in an enviable position with direct access to the beach from the rear garden, St Bridgets Close on Church Road offers spacious accommodation throughout, along with outstanding views. Outside there are gardens to the rear with a summerhouse. £675,000. Westcoast Properties, Burnham-on-Sea. April 2024 47
PHOTO:DAVEWALL The three generations: Andy, Dave and Colin Wall KEEPING IT in the FAMILY This month we chat to three generations of the Wall family: Dave, Andy and Colin who run the award-winning Wall Eden Holiday Park near Burnham-on-Sea WORDS: 48 Malcolm Rigby PHOTOS: Dave Wall April 2024 Somerset Life
FAMILY BUSINESS Dave (aged 33): The farm originally was a dairy one. My Great Grandad bought it in 1927 and then my Grandad took it over in the 60s and we had a dairy herd here until the late 90s. Then unfortunately with milk quotas and various other things we couldn’t keep the business going. So, 2004 saw my Dad put the irst log cabin in and then the next year we got another one, 2008 two more and then we added the other accommodation. I joined Dad in 2014, after gaining a business and management degree at Bournemouth University and spending two and a half years at Leonardo Helicopters, as part of their graduate programme. It’s now been ten years, and we’ve gone from just six lodges to now having 19 units of accommodation, a bar and café, farm shop and adventure centre. As well as the day-to-day operation, I manage the company growth through new corporate partnerships, including a range of leading holiday and experiential companies. We’ve created great relationships over the years, helping to continue growth as well as adding new facilities year on year. Grandad still has some beef cattle on the moors, he keeps between 50-80 depending on the year. He’s still doing that every day in the summer. Me and my dad are more concerned about the business now. I run it day to day, I’m more of the managing director and he’s more of the executive, making new contacts and working on projects. The inal say, that will be with me, overall I’m in charge of the staf and operations. There are eight employees over the winter then going up to 15 or 20 during the summer months. Our business was very summer focussed but now we have built the bar, the café and the farm shop we get a lot more winter trade and we also introduced hot tubs in 2021. The hot tubs have been a real success, you have to have them in because that’s what people are looking for – it’s quite a competitive market now. Sports-wise there’s ishing, kayaking, canoeing and paddle boarding, they’re very popular between May and September, good for getting people in from the local area, they like to take part in the adventure activities. We’ve also got target sports; we’ve got shooting, archery and axe throwing as well. That’s diferent but very popular. Food-wise we’re looking to ofer proper lunches. At the moment we do pasties and sausage rolls but we’re hoping to do proper plated food as well as fried breakfasts in the morning. We’re also hopefully reintroducing massage therapies. Winning the Gold as the Holiday Park of the Year (in the Bristol, Bath and Somerset Tourism Awards) was quite a boost for us all. Hopefully now we might go through to the South West Regional Awards. We’re proud that our little holiday farm has managed to beat the big boys. There’s other family connections too. My wife, Sami, does all the accounting and payroll; her Dad provides the apple juice and cider; not forgetting our three year old son, Luke, who likes to feed the sheep! Inside the lodges at Wall Eden Holiday Park Andy (aged 59): Working with your family can at times be very stressful and it can ofer up a number of challenges. But when those challenges have arisen in the past we have been able to work through them and come out better and stronger. I would encourage people who are in a family business to work things through together. My son is very operational in his approach and the way he works and I am very strategic. Though those two ways of operating might clash you actually need those two strengths in order to grow the business. My role is to help establish the vision and continue the growth and development of the business with interested parties such as charitable organisations; the army rehabilitation centre often use us. We look to work with local schools and to support children who require additional support outside traditional learning, mainstream schooling. We want to ofer people an experience to take away rather than just being somewhere to go on holiday. I’m looking to create links with businesses and people who would want to use our site and bring their staf to us as a workplace training experience. When I was a kid growing up on the farm it was an idyllic life; as a seven-year-old I was driving tractors, picking up hay bales, feeding calves and lambs; doing all the things I possibly shouldn’t have been doing. But times have changed and we’ve all moved on. COMPANY STATS ESTABLISHED: 2004 ADDRESS: Wall Eden Farm – Rural Holiday Retreat, New Road, East Huntspill TA9 3PU NEXT EVENTS: New menu in the spring Live music events in the spring and summer SOCIALS: Wall Eden Farm Holidays walledenfarm @WallEden Colin (aged 81): I’m really the odd job man, I help out when I’m needed. I’ve got a tractor still, so if they want things moved around, then I do it. The Holiday Park has done a brilliant job really. It’s a piece of land that wasn’t suiting anything else really, unless you built houses on it – and I don’t think that was going to happen. Diversiication was necessary so that we could get a living out of it. I deinitely enjoy my role, it gives me something to get up for, I wouldn’t want to be sat around. . Between you and me . . . Dave on Andy: Dad is always of swimming outdoors, even when it’s freezing. He’s a bit crazy like that. Doesn’t matter about the weather, he will be out there in his budgie smugglers Dave on Colin: He likes to drop by for a cofee…and, occasionally, a whisky Colin on Dave: He goes to the gym every morning Andy on Dave: Dave has an attention to detail and perfectionism - the glue that makes a successful business Andy on Colin: Wherever Dad goes, his dog Towzer goes there too Somerset Life April 2024 49

FOOD & DRINK The tastiest stories from across the county CATCH OF THE DAY FOOD CRITIC FISHFINGERS & BEANS? What does Emma Dance think of The Talbot in Mells? This busy chef in Wells also turns to a quick ix now and again PHOTO:WESTCOUNTRYDESIGNS Rustle up this monkish recipe for the ultimate seafood supper ARTIST ANNA’S RURAL INSPIRATION Nestled in a sunny home studio, Anna of West Country Designs, blends inspiration from the countryside with cherished childhood memories, weaving together a whimsical world. A move from a bustling city life to Somerset acted as a catalyst for Anna in reigniting her passion for art. Immersed in the breath-taking landscapes of the West Country and drawing upon her original watercolour Somerset Life illustrations, Anna brings her imaginative scenes to life through a range of greetings cards and gift designs. Each piece is infused with the warmth and charm of rural life. This Hare & Dandelion beech serving board is £45 and can be personalised on request. westcountrydesigns.com @westcountrydesignsengland April 2024 51
PHOTO:EMMADANCE The Perfect Village Pub Treat yourself to a memorable meal at The Talbot Arms, where quality food and a warm welcome combine to create a very special dining experience WORDS: 52 April 2024 Emma Dance Somerset Life
DINING OUT ising running costs, staf shortages and customers battling a cost of living crisis; it’s a tough time for the hospitality industry right now, that’s for sure. And with diners and drinkers demanding to feel that their hard-earned pennies have been well spent, more so than ever, there’s little room for error for those that do keep soldiering on. The Talbot Inn in Mells seems to have captured the holy grail of hospitality however – being both a proper local boozer and a destination dining spot. The latter is undoubtedly helped by its location; Mells is frequently named as one of the prettiest villages in the UK, and it’s just a stone’s throw from Soho House’s members’ club and hotel, Babington House. But that’s not to take away from what the team at The Talbot has achieved, which is something really very, very lovely indeed. We enter and immediately ind ourselves in the cosy bar. Most of the tables are full – even on a damp of-season afternoon – and it feels cheerful and buzzing. We shimmy our way through and into the dining area R left: Cubes of succulent Creedy Carver Duck below: Raspberry steamed sponge with crème anglaise for a real taste of nostalgia below right: The Talbot is classy and relaxed which is lighter and brighter and all Farrow and Ball tones. The welcome is warm – and not just because of the roaring log ire, and we’re shown to our table. There’s a great mix of people already there enjoying themselves, from families to muddy-booted dog walkers, to trendy out-of-towners on a weekend escape, and it makes for an atmosphere considerably brighter than the dull skies outside. The menu has been cleverly split - with there’s a selection of pub grub classics like ‘The welcome is warm - and not just because of the ROARING log ire’ a ploughman’s, steak and chips, burgers and ish and chips, as well as some more ine dining-esque dishes. As my husband and I are on a rare child-free outing (and can therefore eat at leisure without simultaneously trying to persuade an excitable toddler to sit still for more than a nanosecond), we decide to make the most of the opportunity and go for the fancier options. We are, however, almost swayed when we see plates loaded with towering burgers, oozing with cheese, being delivered to the family seated on the table next door. I start with courgette fritters, which are calm and comforting when eaten on their own but which take on a new energy when paired with a iery garlic aioli. My husband’s game terrine is butch and beguiling. The terrine is rich and dense, with a prune ketchup adding a welcome sweet note to the deeply savoury meat. My main course of Creedy Carver duck breast arrives and is a much prettier, more delicate afair than I had expected. Cubes of perfectly rested, succulent duck with golden, crispy skin are artfully arranged on the plate, along with a beguiling assortment of garnishes. There’s a silky smooth parsnip puree, a soft buttery fondant potato, a Stornoway bon bon that adds crunch and a deep earthiness, and pickled blackberries that are delightful little pops of sharp zinginess that set the palate alight. It’s a wonderful assortment of textures and lavours, and while each element on its own is in itself utterly delicious, it’s when they are combined that the real cleverness of the dish becomes apparent. Pan-fried salmon with cuttleish ink risotto, tiger prawn and octopus looks both simple and dramatic with a whole baby octopus sitting atop the black-as-night risotto – its arms curling around a shining, pink prawn. > PHOTO:JAKEEASTHAM PHOTO:EMMADANCE Somerset Life April 2024 53
‘There’s CRUNCH, AND CREAM; there’s juiciness from the pear and a crumbly cake to soak it all up’ above: Saffron poached pear and cardamom cake right: The bar is cosy and inviting 54 April 2024 the pear and a crumbly cake to soak it all up. I love it. Not as much, though, as my husband loves his raspberry steamed sponge with crème anglaise. He’s so enamoured with his choice that the irst bite elicits an actual little happy dance. It’s a real taste of nostalgia – but better. A hug in a bowl that can’t help but make you smile. The whole place makes you smile, actually. It’s relaxed and welcoming, and the staf seem to genuinely enjoy being there and interacting with the customers. There’s a careful attention to detail that makes it feel like somewhere special, but without even a hint of erring into the pretentious. Prices aren’t cheap – but they’re far from outrageous either. At around the £25 mark our mains were at the pricier end of the menu – but it’s worth noting that they are complete dishes, and no-one will try to upsell you endless sides. The Talbot Inn is the kind of pub that you wish you had just down the road from your house. And whatever challenges might be facing the hospitality industry right now, the team at The Talbot have made creating the perfect village pub look easy. talbotinn.com . PHOTO:JAKEEASTHAM It’s a fairly admin-heavy dish, with prawns to shell and an octopus to navigate, and we need to ask for a inger bowl to mitigate the mess. The efort is deemed worth it, however, with each element cooked just-so, and the lavours of the sea shining through. The pudding menu makes great reading. It’s full of delicious-sounding things like sticky tofee pudding and raspberry trile. On the advice of our charming waitress I plump for a safron poached pear with cardamom cake, maple cream and candied pecans – and I don’t for a second regret my decision. It’s all kinds of brilliant – the heady spices of safron and cardamom are almost savoury, the pecans unashamedly sweet. There’s crunch, and cream; there’s juiciness from Somerset Life


FISH RECIPES PHOTO:CONSCIOUSFOODCO. Spicy y SEAFOOD SUPPERS Jonny Burnett is the founder and sales director of Conscious Food Co. Not only do he and his team supply the South West’s top restaurants and hotels with sustainable ish, they also own the Conscious Fish Shop in Nailsea which sells day-boat ish and shellish fresh from Brixham April 2024 > 57
PHOTO:CONSCIOUSFOODCO Thai Monkish Curry This monkish curry ticks all the boxes, and it really is not very time consuming to make. Monkish complements this curry so well, the meaty texture soaks in all of the lavour and creates a wonderful dinner. Plus, it’s dairy and gluten free and low in fat so you can enjoy, guilt free! (Serves 2) INGREDIENTS • 2 monkish tails • 1 white onion (chopped) • 2 peppers (red, orange, or green) sliced • 2 cloves of garlic (chopped) • 1 thumb of ginger (chopped) • 1 stick of lemon grass (chopped) • 1 red chilli (chopped, I kept seeds in for heat) • 7 baby corn (halved) • 1 spring onion (chopped) • 1 handful of fresh coriander (chopped) • 1 400g tin of coconut milk • 2tsp of ground coriander • 1tsp of cumin 58 April 2024 • 1tsp chilli powder • 2tsp turmeric • 1 lemon • vegetable oil • salt • rice METHOD Heat some oil in a large pan, and when hot add your onion, garlic, ginger, half of the chilli. Add a good pinch of salt, sweat for 5 minutes, then add the spices, sliced pepper, and lemon grass, cook for a further 5-7 minutes. Add 250g of the coconut milk, along with the juice of half a lemon, and cook for around 15-20 minutes on a simmer. You should see the colour become pale yellow; this is the colour you want. Add a further 100g (or the rest of the coconut milk) to the pan, and add the halved corn and remaining chilli, remaining lemon juice and a pinch of salt, cook for a further 15 minutes on a simmer. When there is 10 minutes left, heat a non-stick pan, add some vegetable oil, and when the pan is hot, add your monkish. Fry for 3-4 minutes on one side, turn and repeat (You can add the monkish to the curry at the end after cooking if you would like it to soak in all of the lavour, I did not, as I wanted to present mine with the whole monkish tail on top of the curry). Dish the curry onto a plate, and pop the monkish on top, garnish with the coriander and spring onions, and serve with rice. Somerset Life
FISH RECIPES Spicy Haddock Goujon Tacos with Caulilower Ceviche & Pickled Red Cabbage Spring is oicially here, and I wanted to create something special, a spectacle of colour, vibrancy & health! The beauty of this is, you can make the pickled cabbage and caulilower ceviche in advance, in fact you can even bread the haddock in advance! That way when you are cooking, you have minimal work or cleaning, and maximum joy! (Serves 4) Enjoy, Jonny PHOTO:CONSCIOUSFOODCO. INGREDIENTS! Haddock Goujons: • 2x haddock illets cut into goujons (cod, whiting, pollack, hake, red gurnard, also work) • 100g breadcrumbs • 3tsp cajun spice • 2tsp paprika • 40g plain white lour • Handful of fresh coriander (chopped) • 3 eggs (whisked/beaten) • 2 pinches of salt Caulilower Ceviche: • 1/2 head of caulilower (150g- 200g) • Juice of 3 lemons • 1/3 of a cucumber (cut into even cubes) • 2 salad tomatoes • Pinch of salt Pickled Red Cabbage: • 200g – 250g red cabbage (inely shredded) • 600ml cider vinegar • 150g – 275g white caster sugar • water (enough to cover the cabbage) • Tacos (I bought mine from Sainsbury’s) METHOD Start by pickling the cabbage (as you want this to be cold when you serve). Pop all of the ingredients in a medium saucepan, and bring up to a boil, and then turn down to a simmer, and simmer until the cabbage is cooked (20-35 minutes). lined tray until you need it. Leave to one side, you want to leave the cabbage in the liquor, as it will help absorb the lavour. Pop the breadcrumbs, eggs and lour into 3 separate bowls. Put 1tsp of cajun spice and paprika in with the lour, and put the rest in with the breadcrumbs, along with some freshly chopped coriander. Add a small pinch of salt in each bowl and mix well. Now to make the caulilower ceviche. First chop the caulilower into small pieces (the caulilower is not being boiled or roasted, the lemon cooks the caulilower, so you want them chopped up pretty small!) Place into a bowl. Put the haddock goujons in the lour, then the egg and inally the breadcrumbs. Make sure the haddock is fully covered. Sometimes, you may have to run it through the egg and breadcrumbs twice. Pre heat the oven to 180°C. To cook the goujons, you can either bake in a pre-heated oven at 180° for 15-20 minutes, or pan fry and inish in the oven. The method I will explain here is the pan frying! Now you are ready to serve your ish taco feast, drain the cabbage, spoon on the caulilower, and tuck into this ishy bit of goodness. Pour over the lemon juice, and cover and chill in fridge for 1 hour (minimum). The haddock should be coated in a herby and spiced breadcrumb, pop onto a Heat a non-stick frying pan, and cover the bottom with vegetable or olive oil. Place the goujons in consciousfoodco.co.uk /consciousfoodco /consciousishco Somerset Life When the caulilower mix has been in the fridge for at least an hour, take it out and mix through the prepared tomatoes and cucumber, season with a touch of salt if needed. carefully, and pan fry one side down for 2 minutes (until the breadcrumbs start to go golden brown, turn and repeat again. Once all golden brown, pop into the oven for 5 minutes. Heat your tacos in the microwave (or follow the package instructions). April 2024 59
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FOOD & DRINK MEETtheCHEF Andrea Cowan meets a local chef who tells us about their culinary experiences and inspiration Rob Howell Chef/director of ROOT WELLS, in Sadler Street, the sister restaurant of Root Bristol. Rob has received the Michelin Bib Gourmand for his modern, veg-led, sharing plates Tell us about the food of your childhood At the time I didn’t think too much of it, I suppose. However, looking back now, I was very lucky, with plenty of home-cooked meals, Sunday roasts, cakes at weekends. Along with the yearly visit to France, good food was a regular from a young age. When did you decide that being a chef was your calling? It took a while until it all clicked and became more than just a job. I had been cooking for a few years and I was living in Edinburgh. There was a good 12 of us that all worked together and spent most of our time outside of work together too. That’s where I fell in love with food and everything that went with it. Who are your biggest inluences? Earlier in my career I read cookbook after cookbook, always looking for ideas and inspiration. I would say Nathan Outlaw’s cooking was always something I really took a lot from, the simplicity of it, the producedriven cooking. Now I would say the teams in the kitchen inluence my cooking and the dishes that go on the menu. PHOTO:EDSCHOFIELD What inspires your menus? I would honestly say anything and everything. We cook with what is best and available to us, using local growers and producers in the South West. So it always starts there, but what we do with it is a collaboration of ideas from the team. Always talking about what we enjoy eating ourselves and creating tasty familiar lavours for our guests to enjoy. What other elements inluence your cooking? We always try and keep it as simple and tasty as possible when cooking. The kitchens in both restaurants are very small so can be limiting, however I believe it’s a good thing. Means you have to be a little cleverer with how you think about putting a menu together. Somerset Life ‘Earlier in my career I read cookbook after cookbook, always looking for ideas and inspiration’ What would be your perfect supper? Honestly, if someone is cooking for me, I’m happy with anything! We cook simple dishes at home and with two little ones we usually end up eating pretty early as we always try and eat all the same thing. If I had to choose anything to eat I would say a big plate of grilled shellish with some fries! But the closest I get to that at the moment is ish ingers and beans. . April 2024 61
WELLS A N D R E A C O WA N ’ S W E L L S WA N D E R I N G S PROOF THAT A BOWL OF SOUP IS GOOD FOR THE SOUL AS WELL AS THE STOMACH H S below: Edgar Phillips, founder of Art Experience Days, the winner of January's SOUP! 62 April 2024 far.’ The name of this community focused event comes from the bowl of soup and roll that is included in the entry fee, courtesy of students at The Blue School and the head chef of the Connect Centre, and with ingredients donated by several Wells supermarket and local traders. So to the order of the afternoon, overseen by compere Paddy O’Hagan. The format allows time for the previous winner to return and explain how the money has been put to use. This time it was Richard Jones, a volunteer co-ordinator from The Strawberry Line, working on the restoration of the Wells to Dulcote section. He handed over to the irst contender for the afternoon: Nicky Hall of the Wells Trishaw Project. This bookable bike ride, powered by volunteers, enables older and isolated people to get out for trips around the city, as well as the chance to ‘feel the wind in their hair’! The overwhelming response has proven a need for a second trishaw. Next was Ian and Ruth Ames-White of Wells in Mosaic. Ruth is creating a unique six-metre diameter mosaic, walkable map of Wells’ historic centre. They are in the last stages of the 10-year project and are installing the mosaic next year, where it should last for hundreds of years. Ruth then handed over to artist Edgar Phillips. Believing in the power of art to break down barriers, Edgar works with charities and groups such as Mind in Somerset, Heads Up, and Spark Somerset, and provides free one-to-one bespoke Art Experience days. Participants learn about the history of stained glass in a safe and reassuring environment, creating their own piece to take home the same day. Last to take to the stage was 15-yearold Sergeant Iris Marshall from Wells Air Cadets. Iris outlined the invaluable life skills that the organisation provides for the 35 young cadets, ranging from teamwork to building conidence. Integral to this is a light simulator which urgently needs updating. The 85-plus attendees then had the diicult job of voting for the project they felt the worthy winner. It was a close-run thing, but Edgar Phillips won the day and received a respectable £350. Delighted, he said ‘this will pay for someone to access an Art Experience Day, including all the preparation, travel, lunch and materials. It’s so much more than making a stained-glass window together.’ Best of all, the remaining three organisations each received a cheque for £118. It was a really heart-warming afternoon: I learnt about some inspiring local groups, met interesting, community-minded people and enjoyed a bowl of delicious soup! I’ll be making a return visit. SOUP! takes place on April 6, July 6 and October 5 2024. Visit the website for more information wellsindependents.org/soup . Somerset Life PHOTO:PHILIPWELCH OUP! was devised in 2010 by Amy Kaherl in Detroit as a way to raise money to fund local, creative projects, described as ‘grass roots action in the absence of public services and the collapse of the private sector.’ Its success quickly spread and by 2016, when Ross Young of Wells Independents decided to start one in Wells, there were 43 similar set-ups in the UK and over 115 worldwide. It’s a fantastically simple, but efective, format. SOUP! in Wells takes place quarterly in the Connect Centre. Visitors pay £5 at the door, take a seat and listen to volunteers from four community groups who each have four minutes to explain what they do and then take four questions from the audience. Everyone assembled is then able to vote on the group that they feel would beneit most from the money on ofer. The money collected at the door is match-funded by a business sponsor (Wells Business Centre on the day I attended) and the organisation with the most votes wins half the money, whilst the three ‘runners-up’ receive a share of the remainder. As Ross says: ‘We believe everyone who makes it to the stage is a winner and deserves to beneit inancially – over 80 have been helped so
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LIFE & LEISURE Celebrating our culture and enjoying the county this April SHEPHERD’S HUT STAYCATION STARRY-EYED IN BATH TOP TICKETS Where better to enjoy a luxury retreat than 10 minutes up the road? The brother and sister duo with royal connections Have you secured your place at these prime events? FARMERS MARKET, FROME PHOTO:TAMSYNGREGORY Artist Tamsyn Gregory has lived in and around Somerset most of her life and her paintings and illustrations relect her love of the area. Capturing leeting moments in local towns and landscapes using vibrant colours, Tamsyn’s unique eye discovers joy and beauty in everyday scenes, which she paints using traditional and digital media. Her art works, cards and prints can be found in galleries across the South West including the Frome collection, available from The Black Swan Art Gallery Shop. tamsyngregory.art @tamsyn_gregory Somerset Life April 2024 65
Lakeside Luxury A rural Somerset retreat takes the shepherd’s hut experience to a whole new level WORDS: 66 April 2024 Angharad Paull PHOTOGR APHS: M J Heritage Somerset Life
SOMERSET STAYCATION himsical images of stargazing telescopes under willow trees, twinkling lakefront gardens, rustic outdoor kitchens and steaming tubs are surely what mini break dreams are made of (and what Instagram was made for). I have been, somewhat surreally, stoking the ire of The Shepherd’s Hut Retreat near Hinton St George for months. It has, unabashedly, been the object of my Instagram scrolling afections multiple times a week. Even Taylor Swift wrote a whole two albums on such romanticised woodland escapism, but the reality is also right here in Somerset. And, as luck would have it, it was about to become a reality for me too. As we only live a short ten minute drive away, you’d think this adults-only, rural hideaway would be something that I’d never be able to justify but as a special gift for my husband’s birthday, I decide to go ahead and treat him (and me!). I make him shut his eyes to try and keep the exact location of the Shepherd’s Hut a mystery. But the surrounding scenery and approach to the glamping site is so striking, I have to let him see. Acre after acre of sweeping green ields, a narrow country road that drifts of into the picturesque landscape and a 140 metre-high mound of a motte and bailey castle (possibly Norman), which we shortly discover, also provides the backdrop to our stay. On arrival, a lengthy driveway lanked by black metal and timber gates bearing bespoke lettering (F and C for Fords Croft – the estate’s working farm) signals the entrance, and sets the tone for the meticulous attention to detail that will characterise our getaway. Circling around the castle hill, it is the water glinting W through the trees, and the six individuallystyled wooden huts all set around a lake that next attract our attention. Each has its own private hot tub, kitchen, private garden, al fresco cooking areas, sumptuous interiors and eco credentials (they use spring water from their own well, electricity from a huge solar array and locally-sourced timber). The most recent addition, HUT 1898, is the grandest in both size and style – this is the one I had my beady eye on, and as I had imagined, it’s love at irst sight. With the kind of ‘lived-in’, homely interiors you’d expect to ind in The PIG hotels, a private hot tub, ire bowl area, outdoor Ooni pizza oven, and a gin bar (the irst drink is on them, with a suggested contribution of £5/drink thereafter), it could have been designed based on my very own ‘country escape’ wish list. Despite its ‘hut’ status, nothing about this place feels like we might be skimping on conveniences. This is a level of luxury that shepherds of old could scarcely have fathomed. Not only is it a sizeable space, both inside and outdoors, but everything here has been carefully considered to enhance your stay. Kitchen facilities comprise a tworing hob, kettle, toaster, oven, fridge and sink. Big glass doors that open onto the deck and a window overlooking the lake beside the bathroom’s monsoon shower bring the outside in, and mean you don’t miss out on lake-gazing opportunities even when indoors. We quickly get to exploring our little abode for the night. Both of us are like excited children pointing out the thoughtful details to each other – from a jar of marshmallows to toast over the ire bowl, to a built-in trivet helpfully placed beside the barbecue. > above: The wood-ired hot tub is the perfect place to relax right: The homely interior of one of the six huts Somerset Life April 2024 67
LA LABEL (RIGHT) left and below right: There’s great attention to detail both inside and outside the huts below left: Guests can cook up dinner in the Ooni pizza oven ‘We wallow for a while, before heading inside, popping on the TV and sinking into EGYPTIAN cotton sheets’ Mini toiletries, matching gold kitchenware, board games, fresh white bathrobes and a ‘roaring’ electric ire add to the charm. And a discreet TV (plus DVDs) in handsome wooden shelves that have been strategically placed to separate the living space from the sleeping area. A bottle of Prosecco kindly welcomes us, which will go perfectly with that hot tub. Talking of which… The instructions explain that the hot tub will take around three hours to get up to temperature, so we start illing it with the hose and getting the ire going. While we wait, there’s more exploring to temporarily lure us from our hideaway, namely snacks from the honesty shed, a beautifully-renovated, open-plan 100-year-old barn, housing a yoga and activity space, wood burner, gym, sauna, table tennis and pool table, and a woodland sauna. We secure a one-hour session in the latter by signing our names in a time slot on a board outside, grab our towels, and soon ind 68 April 2024 ourselves peering out through the trees, trying to spot some nocturnal bird life while we sweat. The hot tub isn’t quite ready when we return from the sauna, but in the twilight, the deck is now glowing with fairy lights and I half wish we were rustling up pizzas and cosying down at the hut for the evening. However, we are child-free for the night, and the law states we must go out, which isn’t too much of a hardship given one of our favourite pubs, The Lord Poulett Arms, is just down the road. Although walkable from the retreat (about 40 minutes each way), I’d say that’s best saved for daytime or summer, as when we step away from our glittering abode, the deep South Somerset countryside is pitch black, save for the gleaming eyes of a lone deer caught in our headlights as we head out for the evening. Back at the hut after dinner, the water in our hot tub has reached scorching proportions, which is easily remedied with a dash of cold and then it’s ready for us to take a dip in the dark. We wallow for a while, before heading inside, popping on the TV and sinking into Egyptian cotton sheets. Come morning, my husband is up before dawn to get the hot tub going again. The fairy lights are still glowing and the moon is still shining over the lake when I join him. Wisps of steam rise bewitchingly from our hot water, as cheerful bird song and the sound of ducks quacking and lapping provide the soundtrack. The magnetic pull of the water and enthusiastic warbling of the birds are hard to tear myself away from, but I’m eager to soak up some of Somerset’s countryside at its inest. There are a number of walks right on the doorstep, including a leisurely 20-minute woodland stroll, and a footpath to the market town of Crewkerne. Of I trot, counting my lucky stars and revelling in the magic of it all. theshepherdshutretreat.co.uk @theshepherdshutretreat theshepherdshutretreat@gmail.com . Somerset Life
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Sir William and Caroline Herschel hard at work in their house cum workshop. In a possibly sexist commentary Sir William appears to be pondering the ininite while Caroline lays on the tea. She was actually a more than capable astronomer in her own right. Photo: Colour lithograph by A. Diethe, c.1896, source – Wellcome Collection. Sibling Stargazers With Dr Brian May, lead guitarist of Queen and astrophysicist, as its patron, Stephen Roberts delves into the celestial history behind the Herschel Museum of Astronomy in Bath 70 April 2024 Somerset Life
THE HERSCHELS t never ceases to amaze me, the famous personages with links to Bath. If Bach was the star who provided the music (as per our February issue) then it was the Herschels who supplied the stargazing. The funny thing about William Herschel is that he came to Bath as a musician and ended up discovering a planet. Sir (Frederick) William Herschel (17381822) was a German-born British astronomer, and brother of Caroline Herschel (1750-1848), who was aptly born in Hanover during the Hanoverian period. From first visiting England in 1755 as a young oboist in the Hanoverian Guards band, he became, in 1766, an organist and teacher in Bath. Sister Caroline was also Hanover-born where she stayed in some misery until 1772 when she joined William in Bath, ostensibly to run I ‘In 1773-74 William made a relecting telescope which he used in March 1781 to discover the planet Uranus’ his household for him, but also with an eye on a better life. Although unused to being in the public gaze and only speaking very basic English to start with, Caroline soon began performing soprano in concerts staged by her brother. William took up astronomy (as you do), with Caroline acting as his assistant, but also making her own independent observations and thereby discovering eight comets, several nebulae and many star clusters. In 1773-74 William made a relecting telescope which he used in March 1781 to discover the planet Uranus, but which he actually called ‘Georgium Sidus’ (the Georgian Planet) in honour of King George III. This historic event occurred at the Herschel family home, 19 New King Street, in Bath, which is home to today’s Herschel Museum of Astronomy. In a moment the self-taught Herschel had doubled the size of the known solar system and with nothing more than his home-made telescope. The Herschels had moved into New King Street four years earlier, Caroline commenting, possibly ruefully, that ‘almost every room in the house turned into a workshop’, William busily ‘grinding glasses and turning eye pieces’ to create his epoch-making telescopes. The following year, 1782, Herschel was appointed private astronomer, or King’s Astronomer, to George III, and he continued his researches, ably abetted by Caroline, but now in Slough, handily near the royal castle of Windsor. In 1789 William Herschel erected another telescope, this time one that was 40 foot long, the biggest of a number of larger such contraptions that he built. Size isn’t everything though and despite its bulk it was not the most accurate of his devices; it was nevertheless suiciently grandiose to impress the King. It was lauded as a marvel of its time and incorporated a speaking tube such that William, aloft on his observer’s platform, could communicate with Caroline down below. In 1798 meanwhile Caroline was to publish her star catalogue. Although William acknowledged her as his ‘assistant’, Caroline was recognised as an astronomer in her own right and earned money for her work, which included the discovery of those eight comets. She was only four foot three inches tall yet saw further than most who were taller! William Herschel was knighted in 1816 and died in 1822, the year that Caroline returned to Germany. She’d win the Royal Astronomical Society’s prestigious Gold Medal in 1828. Between them they had greatly increased our knowledge of the solar system, Milky Way and nebulae. Besides Uranus, William also discovered two of its moons, and two of Saturn’s moons, noted the rotation of Saturn’s rings, the period of Saturn’s rotation, the motions of binary stars and the presence of infrared radiation through his observations of the Sun. He also made a famed catalogue of double stars and was the father of another astronomer, Sir John Frederick William Herschel (1792-1871). FROM THE PAST TO THE PRESENT 19 New King Street is part of a terrace which was built around 1764, very early in the long reign of George III. The Herschels moved here in 1777 at a time when the builders were still in and the unmetalled road on their doorstep a scene of noise and mess as work continued. The ive-loor townhouse was designed with the so-called ‘middling’ sort in mind, artisans, and it seems discoverers of Uranus. The Grade II*-listed building has been fully restored in the authentic style of the Georgian period and is open to the public Tuesday to Sunday 10am to 5pm. An annual pass costs £12 per adult with accompanied under 18s going in for free. herschelmuseum.org.uk . above: William Herschel was appointed the King’s Astronomer in 1782 far right: The music room at the Herschel Museum of Astronomy with telescope right: You can enjoy access to the gardens at the Herschel Museum of Astronomy. Photos: Herschel Museum of Astronomy/ Bath Preservation Trust Somerset Life April 2024 71

LA LABEL (RIGHT) Ship to shore Step aboard this spring to explore the new living botanical exhibits on the SS Great Britain nown as the largest passenger ship of her time, the SS Great Britain was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel as a transatlantic service sailing between Bristol and New York. Since her maiden voyage in 1845 she was in service for over 40 years before being retired to the Falkland Islands where she was used as a warehouse ship before being abandoned. Thankfully, in 1970 monies were raised and SS Great Britain was brought home to the West Country, braving 8,000 miles of stormy conditions to save her from ruin and keep her fascinating story alive. Recognised now as one of Bristol’s most visited tourist attractions, the historic ship regularly launches new exhibitions and this spring sees a new living exhibit on the top deck. Visitors will be invited to step back in time, immersing themselves in the era when this ocean liner transported ferns, orchids and other specimens across the world. By collaborating with the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the National Archives, the curators at SS Great Britain have been able to build a picture of how plants would have been transported for sometimes PHOTOS:VISITBRISTOL/ THEBRISTOLNOMAD, K Somerset Life weeks at a time. Cargo manifests and passenger diaries have also revealed details which have enabled the team at SS Great Britain to partner with local gardeners so that accurate Wardian Cases can be recreated for visitors to fully experience botanical life aboard. Whilst embracing this unique moment in time, visitors will also be invited to try their hand at lower pressing and Victorian crafts whilst creating their own cyanotypes – an early photography technique to record plant specimens. Keep an eye out for talks and tours which will focus on botanicals and how they have inluenced our medicines and cosmetics. A longside Brunel ’s eng ineering masterpiece the SS Great Britain, you can also visit the Brunel Institute free of charge which houses a comprehensive maritime collection including access to objects from the archive vault. It’s also worth noting that if you visit on a Sunday you can book a table in the ship’s opulent First Class Dining Saloon and enjoy a roast dinner whilst being surrounded by Victorian memorabilia. SS Great Britain is open Tuesday to Sunday, 10-5 ssgreatbritain.org above: Plants crossed oceans in Wardian Cases like these aboard the SS Great Britain below: Explore the various exhibitions this spring aboard the SS Great Britain and enjoy a roast dinner on a Sunday! . April 2024 73
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WHAT’S ON COMPILED BY: Laurence Mcjannet Somerset Life PHOTO:FROMTHEFILMETERNALFLAME,BANFFMOUNTAINFILMFESTIVAL Guide to THE BEST events in April CINEMA Banf Mountain Film Festival Action-packed adventure returns to the big screen at Bristol’s Victoria Rooms this month. The Banf Mountain Film Festival World Tour comes to town with another spectacular cinematic programme of ilms, from mountain biking across America to skiing in Kyrgyzstan. It’s the most comprehensive collection of new works by some of the inest adventure ilm-makers from around the world. There are two diferent ilm programmes to choose from, or for double the action come to both. From 7.30pm April 11-13 Victoria Rooms, Bristol £17 or £15.50 for concessions, plus booking fee banf-uk.com April 2024 75 >
WHAT'S ON COMEDY CHRIS McCAUSLAND: Yonks! Following his recent sold-out tour including over 140 dates, Chris is back on the road with his new show Yonks! He’s been called an ‘overnight success’, even though he’s been doing this for ‘bloody yonks’, performing stand-up for two decades and now a regular face on British television. He’s an established favourite on such lagship comedy shows as Have I Got News for You, Would I Lie to You?, QI and The Last Leg, and last year presented his own travel series on Channel 4, Wonders of the World I Can’t See. Yonks! promises to be Chris McCausland’s biggest show yet. From 8pm. April 3 Forum, Bath. £22.50 plus booking fee bathforum.co.uk COMEDY DANIEL FOXX: Villain What’s a little evil amongst friends? Fresh from a sell-out extended run at the Edinburgh Fringe and New York City, TikTok starlet Daniel Foxx brings his sensational debut show Villain – about childhood, Tilda Swinton and bullying (but in a chic way) – to the Hen & Chicken in Bristol. With his trademark wit and grandmother’s pearls, Daniel takes us back to the 2000s, and his formative years, when the Special K diet was all the rage and the only queer representation on our screens was Aladdin’s nemesis, Jafar. From 8pm. April 11 Hen & Chicken, Bristol. £15 henandchicken.com EXHIBITION These Mad Hybrids EXHIBITION Earth, Wind, Water And Fire PHOTO:LUCYEVANS ACEArts in Somerton hosts an immersive and thoughtprovoking exhibition of works by artists Lucy Evans, Elizabeth Raeburn and Rodney Lawrence, which runs until May 25. Each exhibit, whether a landscape on canvas or ceramic, embraces the elemental aspects of nature in some way. Open from Tuesday to Saturday, from 10am to 5pm. ACEArts also holds a wide range of artist workshops - from charcoal drawing to pottery painting. From April 13 ACEArts, Somerton Free acearts.co.uk 76 April 2024 Running until May 12 at Bristol’s RWA, These Mad Hybrids comprises a collection of ceramic sculptures made by abstract painter John Hoyland RA in dialogue with a spectacular, international assembly of contemporary sculpture by artists including Phyllida Barlow and Hew Locke. A display of paintings by Hoyland shows the dynamic connection between his sculptures and work on canvas. Curated by sculptor Olivia Bax in collaboration with Sam Cornish and Wiz Patterson Kelly of The John Hoyland Estate, the exhibition is inspired by a group of unique ceramic sculptures by Hoyland, which he afectionately called his ‘mad little hybrids’. This is the irst public display of the ceramics since 1994, and their irst presentation alongside Hoyland’s abstract paintings from the 1960s to 2010s. Throughout April at RWA Bristol. £9.90, concessions £5.45. rwa.org.uk Somerset Life
WHAT'S ON EXHIBITION IMAGE:MUSÉED’IXELLES-BRUXELLES Toulouse-Lautrec And The Masters Of Montmartre Blockbuster exhibition Toulouse-Lautrec and the Masters of Montmartre will open at the Victoria Art Gallery in Bath this month, running until the end of September. Artwork featuring Montmartre, cancan dancers, the ‘Chat Noir’, and characters from the Moulin Rouge will transport visitors to turn-of-the20th century bohemian Paris in this vibrant exhibition. This is the only chance to see Lautrec’s complete collection of around 100 posters exhibited together in the UK before it moves to a permanent home at the Musée d’Ixelles in Belgium. From April 26. Victoria Gallery, Bath. £10, concessions £9, children £3.50 victoriagal.org.uk DAYTIME TALK THEATRE Mark Thompson’s Spectacular Science Show JOHN ROBB: Do You Believe In The Power Of Rock ‘N’ Roll? YOU’RE BARD You think science is boring? Well, think again – this is science like you have never seen it before! Designed for children and adults alike, Mark’s Thompson’s Spectacular Science Show explores the strange and magical properties of matter with exploding elephant’s toothpaste, vortex-generating dustbins and even howling jelly babies! Awarded ‘Best Kid’s Show at Edinburgh Fringe’ by The Derek Awards, this interactive show promises to entertain and educate in the most innovative and spectacular way. From 2.30pm. April 7 2024. McMillan Theatre, Bridgwater. £17, under-16s £15 mcmillantheatre.com Author, musician, journalist and presenter John Robb brings his new UK tour celebrating his life in music to the Folk House in Bristol. In it he discusses everything from his recently released book The Art Of Darkness – The History of Goth to his experience being the irst person to interview Nirvana, his coining of the term ‘Britpop’ and his adventures on the post-punk frontline. John Robb is a manyfaceted creature. Not just a well-known face from TV, he is also a best-selling author, musician, journalist, presenter, pundit, music website boss, publisher, festival boss, eco-warrior, vegan behemoth and talking head singer from post-punk mainstays The Membranes. April 19. The Folk House, Bristol. £15 plus booking fee. bristolfolkhouse.co.uk THEATRE The Passion Of Living Spit Come to the Tobacco Factory in Bristol for a hilarious theatrical journey through the life and unfortunate death of the bearded, ethnically ambiguous ofspring of God, Jesus H. Christ. The show features all of JC’s greatest hits including water into wine and loaves and ishes, as well as parables and miracles galore! And with a holy host of reimagined Easter hymns, this promises to be a Sunday school lesson unlike any other. With a dash of irreverent wit, a sprinkle of divine inspiration and a hearty helping of tasteless biblical bufoonery, The Passion of Living Spit promises to give a whole new meaning to the term ‘cross-dressing’. From 7.30pm with some 2.30pm matinees. Until April 13. Tobacco Factory, Bristol. £20, concessions £16 tobaccofactorytheatres.com Somerset Life MAGIC SHOW The Greatest Magician Following a sell-out run in 2022, James Phelan – the magician most infamous for jamming the BBC switchboard after correctly predicting the lottery numbers – arrives at the Komedia in Bath with a dazzling new show for 2024. James is a polished showman and raconteur and his new theatrical project will leave you dizzy with disbelief. If you’re lucky enough to get tickets before they sell out, you’ll see why The List magazine called this show ‘the one to watch in the world of magic’. April 2. Komedia Bath £24.50 komediabath.co.uk Taunton’s Brewhouse Theatre presents Shakespeare like you’ve never seen. Four actors, four Shakespeare plays. Endless possibilities. You – the audience – decide everything, from the play to the performance style. Even which actor plays which part. This hilarious, unpredictable new show, featuring actors whose past experience includes the RSC, Bristol Old Vic, Cheltenham Everyman and the West End promises an unforgettable evening of Shakespeare that will never be repeated. From 7.30pm. April 5. Brewhouse, Taunton £21.50 tauntonbrewhouse.co.uk CL ASSICAL MUSIC GILDAS QUARTET Ilminster Arts Centre hosts an evening of classical music, including pieces by Haydn, Debussy and Puccini, performed by the Gildas Quartet. Praised for their energy, verve and refreshing approach, the quartet have performed to critical acclaim at major venues including the Bridgwater Hall, Purcell Room and Wigmore Hall, as well as live on BBC Radio 3. Determined to bring the visceral experience of string quartet performance to audiences at close quarters, the Gildas launched their immersive ‘Surround Sound Sessions’ project in 2019. This series ranges from short one-work ‘pop-up’ concerts in unusual settings to full-length recitals, with the audience literally in the midst of the players, in surround sound. From 7.30pm. April 19. Ilminster Arts Centre £18 ilminsterartscentre.com April 2024 77 >
EXHIBITION OLIVIA BAX: Cavalcade PHOTO:TIMBOWDITCH For her irst solo exhibition at Bo Lee and Workman, artist Olivia Bax creates new work to occupy the distinctive architecture of the former Methodist church. A cluster of enigmatic forms stand in the balcony pews like a choir, quietly observing the sculptures from which they have been separated. The latter have either taken their position on the loor or are hanging of the gallery walls. The closer one gets, the true complexity of Bax’s work becomes more apparent. The sculptures conjure up the human body, both in their scale and form, so that they become both the spectacle and the spectators in this unique Cavalcade. Until April 13. Bo Lee & Workman, Bruton. Free admission. boleeworkman.com THEATRE What’s Next? PHOTO:STUARTMCCLYMONT Alice Roberts Join anthropologist, author and broadcaster Professor Alice Roberts as she reveals the inspiration behind her novel, Wolf Road - in which she takes readers on a journey into the Ice Age. Find out about the archaeology that informed the book, from stone tools and animal bones to painted caves and carved mammoth ivory. And discover how cutting edge science is challenging and changing our ideas about the deep past and bringing our ancient ancestors into focus, letting us see them more clearly than ever before. From 7.30pm, April 20. Cedars Hall, Wells £18.50 cedarshallwells.co.uk 78 April 2024 Somerset Life PHOTO:MIDDLEWEIGHTTHEATRECOMPANY TALKS The intimate venue of Bristol’s Alma Theatre and Tavern is the ideal setting for a performance by Exeter-based Middle Weight Theatre Company. Returning from an award-nominated 2023 UK tour, the touring company presents its latest original comedy-drama, recounting the incredible life of Harriet Quimby, the irst woman to ly solo across the English Channel, and uncovering the historical event left unheard of for over a century. From 8pm, April 17-19. Alma Tavern and Theatre, Bristol. £14, concessions £12 almatavernandtheatre.co.uk
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PHOTOS:TOMHAYES SOCIAL DIARY £22,000 raised for St Margaret’s Hospice n evening of glitz and glamour was enjoyed by 270 elegantly dressed supporters at the St Margaret’s Hospice Charity Ball. Following a meal at Taunton School – the perfect scene for an extraordinary evening – rale winners were delighted as they collected bespoke hampers, bottles of izz and a huge TV. Guests were also encouraged to bid on a range of auction prizes donated by local businesses and supporters including Exeter Chiefs tickets, a Mulberry handbag, and a luxury holiday to Antigua. As Greenslade Taylor Hunt Auctioneer, Jamie Batt brought the hammer down on the last auction lot, reaching an incredible total of £22,000 of fundraising for the night, the dance loor came alive as local sensation Haus Band took centre stage. A 80 April 2024 Kerry Baillie, community partnerships manager at St Margaret’s, said: ‘This year’s charity ball was a wonderful success – not only in terms of the funds raised but the shared sense of purpose and community spirit that illed the room. The £22,000 generously donated by our supporters will enable us to continue to provide vital care and support to people across Somerset, whenever they need it, and we’d like to extend our heartfelt thanks to everyone who made this a night to remember.’ The charity ball will be back in 2025 as the hospice celebrates its 45th anniversary. For ways to get involved, from sponsoring the ball to donating items or getting your booking in early to reserve your table, contact charityball@st-margarets-hospice.org.uk. . Somerset Life
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PHOTOGRAPHS:NICKWILLIAMS SOCIAL DIARY Photographs from the 2023 Bristol, Bath and Somerset Tourism Awards at The Bristol Hotel Tourism Awards Open for Entries he Bristol, Bath & Somerset Tourism Awards opens for entrants on April 8 and will close on June 23. The awards are free to enter and with more than 20 to choose from, one of the main questions has to be – which categories will you be applying for? The awards are open to small, medium and large businesses from Somerset including the cities of Bristol and Bath. The judges are keen to receive entries from across the county and are used to comparing businesses of very diferent types and sizes. A series of online workshops is being run to support businesses which have never entered before or those who would like some help with their entry forms. Details of these and all the award categories for 2024 can be found at somersettourismawards.org.uk. T 82 April 2024 The awards can make a huge diference to both your business and your team, says Deborah Stanyon from the Porlock Information Centre. ‘We were delighted to achieve Silver in the ‘Information Centre of the Year’ category. We are a self-funding, volunteer-led centre and this award gives our team a great morale boost and conirmation that they go above and beyond in the services which we ofer. It keeps the beautiful Porlock Vale in the spotlight and gives us a great opportunity for extra promotion.’ Somerset Life magazine sponsors the awards annually. Last year we were delighted to present the Gold Spa & Wellbeing Experience of the Year Award to the Aztec Hotel & Spa in Bristol. The 2024 Bristol, Bath & Somerset Tourism Awards will be held on December 5 at Batch Country House in Bleadon. . Somerset Life
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A CHANGE OF ART Join Emma Bovill as she opens doors to art and explores the creative scene in Somerset PHOTO:ELLENMULCRONE PHOTO:PIPPAO’KEEFE KEEPING CREATIVITY CASUAL Tholos, slate tiles, by Ellen Mulcrone at Moorwood Art Art amidst the bluebells What warmer invitation to enjoy art than in the context of a home. An idiosyncratic space devoid of white walls and engineered lighting. A human environment where art interacts with the everyday. This is what Camilla Drinkall, and by extension her family, offer at Moorwood Art, a contemporary ine art gallery in a cottage nestled in an ancient bluebell wood near Bruton. Inspired by the concept of a gallery within a home from trips to New Zealand, where she encountered them regularly, and making the most of her background as an interior stylist, Camilla has been opening her doors since 2010 and runs group exhibitions twice a year, one in spring and one leading up to Christmas. A proportion of the proceeds of every sale is donated to charity. Each two-week event is bookended with a preview and ‘end of’ party and Camilla takes as much joy in these uplifting socially orientated events as in the exhibitions themselves and the bustle of the pack down, unhanging and wrapping artworks ready for them to travel from her home to someone else’s, interacting with buyers as they come to collect their chosen pieces. ‘It’s wonderful having the shows in our home. It feels very relaxed and it’s not a perfect house and in a strange way I think that helps,’ explains Camilla. ‘I enjoy being the link between the artist and the buyer Somerset Life and the happiness that brings to everyone. No one buys art unless they love it, and a red dot sticker will make a very happy artist and is a big reason why I do this work.’ Moorwood Art’s location on the outskirts of the village of Redlynch means even getting there is part of the adventure. Once visitors have found their way along a track through the trees, where sculptures are displayed as part of the exhibitions, they encounter a warm welcome in a living, breathing ecosystem provided by both the woodland and inside Camilla’s home. It’s no surprise that she relishes visiting participating artists or that Camilla also works with people in their own homes to hang art, recognising the intricacies and nuances of the process, the interplay between individual artworks and where they’re placed and the potential for reimagination and change over time. Curation and installation are crafts Camilla both delights and excels in. ‘It’s fun to discover how many diferent types of space artists work in, I go to some incredible studios and have a good rummage around,’ reveals Camilla. ‘I choose art that speaks to me, with colour, composition and subject matter being the main reasons why I go for something. I ind I go into a ‘zone’ when choosing the art for a show so each piece its and works with others in the exhibition.’ moorwoodart.com @moorwoodart.bruton Sometimes we all just need a bit of fun, and if art can’t stake a claim in this space then it would be a great shame. Pop up social evening organisers Pour & Draw have got the balance just right, hosting twice a month, light-hearted art sessions across Bath. Launched in November 2023, they have collaborated with venues including Hauslife homeware and lifestyle shop, creating a cosy Danish den and hygge vibe in their lounge space to spark conviviality and creativity, the Hidden concept store (above) and Robyn’s Yoga Studio. The artistic focus lexes with each event and venue, from life drawing to capturing live musicians as they perform, and the pour element often has a seasonal feel, ranging from cockle-warming hot chocolate from local suppliers Harth Chocolate to a refreshing glass of Aperol. Pour & Draw is about unwinding the mind and enlivening the spirit and lends itself to meet ups with friends, taking the pressure off a date, an evening without the kids or a funky work social. They also curate private events and have organised a fundraiser for the Samaritans. ‘We offer a little motivation to get out via an organised event but nothing too serious, an antidote to the busy day to day,’ explains founder Pippa O’Keefe. ‘People can enjoy a creative space with a theme where there are no egos; it’s really welcoming and sociable. As one guest said: “You just start drawing”.’ pouranddraw.com April 2024 85
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OUTDOOR LIFE Making the most of our county’s greatest gift BRISTOL’S BOUNTY BEACH DAY ITALIAN LINKS Let’s explore the green spaces of the city Follow our guided walk for shipwreck sightings and sea air What connects the Mendip Hills to Rome? WALK & TALK This year sees the Bath Royal Literary and Scientiic Institution (BRLSI) celebrate its 200th anniversary by hosting a packed calendar of events. Known as a centre for learning and information sharing, BRLSI has contributed to culture and academic study in the city. On April 23 you can join the ‘Canals, coal mines & the science of geology’ walk from 10.30am to 12.30pm. In the early 1800s important advances were made in and around Bath in the Somerset Life ‘new science’ of geology. This walk will visit several locations in the city centre which were signiicant to the industrialisation of Britain and explain why, at its formation, BRLSI saw itself as ‘the cradle of English geology.’ There are several walks arranged for the year ahead including ‘Nelson & Bath’ and ‘Bath in the 1850s vs today’ – all of which can be booked via brlsi.org/whatson April 2024 87
BRISTOL in BLOOM WORDS: PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL As spring irmly takes hold, it’s the perfect time to venture out of hibernation and see Bristol’s gardens in full bloom. Here’s our pick of the city’s best gardens including a vast estate in rolling countryside, an intricate Tudor-style knot garden, an urban nature reserve and a Victorian garden cemetery Angharad Paull PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL BOTANICAL GARDENS This botanic garden in Stoke Bishop is often overlooked by locals. Within the ive-acre site there are four core plant collections, inviting visitors to stroll through several distinctly diferent worlds. Wander through prehistoric flora in Evolution to tropical vegetation and vibrant displays in the Mediterranean Climate Regions section, to a recognisable English country garden mix. Learn about medicinal plants, marvel at verdant glass houses teeming with exotic species and discover an African Rondavel. The garden hosts a variety of events during the year (don’t miss the Easter Sculpture Festival March 29 -April 1), plus a diverse programme of gardening courses. botanic-garden.bristol.ac.uk 88 April 2024 Somerset Life
BRISTOL ROYAL FORT GARDENS Originally designed by English landscape architect Humphry Repton in 1800 (who also has Ashton Court gardens in his portfolio), the sloping green lawns belong to the University of Bristol, but are open to the public for most of the year. Last year, the gardens were bestowed with a coveted Green Flag Award and are the perfect spot for hill-rolling and picnicking. Visitors are encouraged to explore – seek out a wildlower garden and public artworks; dart in and out of Jeppe Hein’s mirrored labyrinth (a favourite with kids) and be wowed by ‘modernist grotto’, Hollow, created using 10,000 tree samples from across the globe by Katie Paterson and architects Zeller & Moye. bristol.ac.uk/ external-estate/historicgardens/ THE RED LODGE PHOTO:IANSTORROR Behind an unassuming red door on Park Row lies a 16th century house with a captivating history and an Elizabethan-style knot garden. Following a restoration in the 80s, the garden was redesigned to showcase how it might have looked when the house was built over 400 years ago, drawing inspiration from plasterwork designs in the master bedroom, one of Bristol’s oldest rooms. Brimming with plants reminiscent of English gardens before 1630, the borders complement the Tudor knot garden trend. Red Lodge is open to the public from April until mid-December. One of the best times to visit to see the garden in all its glory is in late May/June when the roses are in bloom. bristolmuseums.org.uk/ red-lodge-museum Somerset Life April 2024 89
BRISTOL PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL BRANDON HILL When Brandon Hill Nature Reserve was opened by Sir David Attenborough back in the 1980s, it was a pioneering testament to urban conservation, and remains a haven for wildlife to this day. In spring, the meadow glows with cowslips, while summer introduces the likes of daisies and knapweed. Located just of Bristol’s steep Park Street and framed by handsome Georgian houses, views soar over rooftops 90 Cheshire Life: <%+1m><%M> <%Y> and boat masts to the distant Mendip hills. The century-old Cabot Tower, surrounded by a pretty water garden, stands as the best vantage point in the sloping Brandon Hill park. Accessible via steep, winding steps to the top, those that dare make the climb will be treated to phenomenal views in every direction. avonwildlifetrust.org.uk/naturereserves/brandon-hill
A short hop across Clifton Suspension Bridge and you’re in Ashton Court’s whopping 800 acres of parkland. It’s a favourite with mountain bikers, horse riders, golfers, dog walkers and families, who lock here for countryside ventures close to the city (whose rainbowcoloured houses can be seen in the distance). At the heart of the woodland, deer park and green grassy areas, lies a 16th century manor house surrounded by formal sunken gardens, and a pond, with lower-illed borders and 160 species of rose. Tree lovers rejoice! The estate is home to a large number of unusual tree species, including gargantuan redwoods and a 700-year-old Domesday Oak. bristol.gov.uk/page/leisure-and-culture/ashton-court-estate ARNOS VALE CEMETERY NATIONAL TRUST TYNTESFIELD Established in 1839, this Victorian garden cemetery, set among 45 acres of woodland, was Bristol General Cemetery Company’s solution to overcrowded, unhygienic 19th century parish graveyards. On a hillside surrounded by fields, a scenic, nature-illed environment was created, with architecture mirroring classical Greece. Arnos Vale is now a peaceful sanctuary in a bustling urban environment. Winding paths lead visitors through evergreens and woodland, grassland dotted with wildlowers, and a community garden. Pick up or download the Discovery Trail or Woodland Walk map, keeping an eye out for fairy doors, wildlife and monuments honouring notable former Bristol residents. arnosvale.org.uk Just seven miles from Bristol, the National Trust’s Victorian Gothic Revival mansion house is surrounded by 540 acres of picturesque parkland, woodland and gardens. The driveway, lanked by topiary yews gives you a glimpse of the horticultural delights that await, largely unchanged since the early 1900s. Large open lawns sit alongside formal terraces that burst with colourful bulbs in spring, while a rose garden with Mendip views and two restored Victorian gazebos is a treat for the senses, with over 100 highly-fragrant roses. There’s also an arboretum showcasing champion trees, an orangery, a cut-lower garden and an impressive kitchen garden which supplies produce for the on-site Cow Barn restaurant. nationaltrust.org.uk PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL ASHTON COURT ESTATE April 2024 91
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GARDENING TIPS Jane Earthy of Monkton Elm Garden Centre gives some seasonal advice JOBS IN THE APRIL GARDEN Its time to be organised now, as the gardening year ramps up another level. Make a regular checklist of what tasks need to be undertaken, breaking it down into manageable chunks so you don’t become overwhelmed. This is an ideal time to move evergreen trees and shrubs, if necessary. Mulch borders with compost to feed plants and conserve moisture. Tie in climbers as they grow, and start supporting rapidly growing herbaceous plants such as Delphiniums and Peonies. Trim winter lowering heathers – a good shear over the top works well. Many Euphorbias (spurge) are at their lowering best during spring, and as one of the largest plant genera in existence, there really is a Euphorbia for every garden. In fact, there are well over 2,000 species and cultivars found across the world, some low growing and statuesque, others sun loving and shade tolerant, or found from woodland to desert – the list goes on. Some non-hardy Euphorbias are treated as houseplants in the UK, such as our favourite Christmas plant, the Poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima) and the cactus-like succulent, Euphorbia horrida aka African Milk Barrel (‘horrida’ means ‘spiny’ in its native South Africa). Here I focus on some of my favourite garden varieties that do well for me and suit diferent gardening styles. I grow several Euphorbias in my garden, but my favourite is E. characia subsp. wolfenii. This tough sun lover is statuesque and architectural, reaching 1.5m tall and perhaps a metre wide. The impactful heads are actually numerous bracts surrounding tiny lowers, so their lime green colour persists for weeks after the lowers fade. From the mediterranean, it will thrive in gravel gardens in full sun, or a sunny border, which is where it resides in my garden, surrounded by the perennial walllower Erysimum ‘Bowles Mauve’ and Allium ‘Purple Sensation’ – a delightful combination. Cut out old lowering stems – Somerset Life fresh growth is already waiting in the wings to lower the following year. E. ‘Silver Swan’ is a lovely cultivar has silvery leaf margins that seem to glow in the dark and is around 1m fully grown. Perhaps plant with grasses. A harsh winter might see it of however, so protect if necessary or grow in a pot that can be moved under cover. For part shade, Euphorbia griffithii may be for you. It also has the advantage of tolerating heavy soil. Useful for diicult areas under trees, it’s a vigorous spreading plant that reaches around 1m x 1m, with red and orange ‘lowers’, along with decent autumn colour. For deeper shade, choose the tried and tested E. amygdaloides var. robbiae. It thrives under trees and will form a carpet of upright lime green lowers during early summer, against attractive dark evergreen foliage. This wood spurge should be chopped back each autumn to keep it in check. E. myrsinites is a spring flowering evergreen spurge that forms a low carpet of waxy blue leaves, with contrasting lime green lowers just 10cm high. I have seen this looking fantastic in a hanging basket. All Euphorbias exude a milky sap which is an irritant, so wear gloves when working with or near them. They can also be short lived – expect to replace them every four years or so. Slightly tender perennials such as Penstemon can be pruned back now to encourage fresh growth. Deadhead lowering bulbs as they fade, leaving foliage to die back naturally to feed the bulb. Feed lawns now. PHOTO:GETTY PHOTO:GETTY Spring Blooms Sow tender vegetables such as beans and courgettes. Use single pots or modular seed trays and keep warm until germinated. . April 2024 93



W.H.HUDSON BIRDS of WISDOM Somerset was a favourite destination for campaigning conservationist and author William Henry Hudson WORDS: n imposing oil painting dominates the main meeting room at the UK headquarters of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB). Curious about the person in the portrait, I began a quest to rediscover William Henry Hudson (1841–1922). I traced the ield naturalist’s path through a dramatic and turbulent era: from Hudson’s journey to Britain from Argentina in 1874 to the unveiling by the prime minister of a monument and bird sanctuary in his honour 50 years later, in Hyde Park, London. Hudson came from South America to the land of his ancestors, to seek his fortune as a naturalist. Before he was born in 1841, Hudson’s North American parents had moved to Argentina to ind a better life on the untamed Pampas frontier. In 1895, 20 years after his arrival in England, and when at last he had found some success as an author and could aford it, one of the irst long expeditions Hudson launched from his London base was to the Westcountry. Hudson was by this time helping to establish the Society for the Protection of Birds, of which he was the only male founder among a group of dedicated women focused on saving wild birds from widespread destruction. He felt the draw of the South West and the land of his paternal forefathers. In spring 1895, Hudson explored the Quantocks. ‘Last evening I spent with an old gamekeeper,’ he reported, ‘he gave me the history of his twenty-ive years’ rule, A Hudson’s inluence ensured that pole traps were banned, preserving barn owls for the future Somerset Life Conor Mark Jameson and how he had succeeded in exterminating all the hawks and ravens. The owls, he said, he did not shoot, as they did no injury, but they got caught in the pole-traps and there were none left.’ Pole traps would be banned within a decade, with Hudson’s inluence key. ‘I hope in a day or two before quitting Somerset to send a letter to one of the local papers,’ he wrote in a letter from Exford, ‘asking the people of this lovely county to do something to prevent the extermination of so many beautiful species.’ His campaigning zeal was tireless. With growing success as an author, Hudson was able to take longer rambles. In early 1899 he returned to Somerset and stayed for at least ive weeks, visiting Limpley Stoke and Englishcombe, and setting out for Combe Hay. ‘I was greatly amused at an old farmer I met, a very primitive looking old man, in a shabby old great-coat, in a trap drawn by a lazy old pony. He asked me to get up and he would take me a mile on my way. I suppose he took me for a “commercial” and asked me what I was “circulating”. I answered that I was “circulating my own blood” at which he smiled grimly. His talk was one long grumble about farm life and the injustice of people and the nature of things… meanwhile he had taken me by the roughest steepest narrowest lane I was ever in, on to a great desolate down; then he set me down and waved his arm and said that I would ind Combe Hay “over there” ... > April 2024 97
W.H.HUDSON I think he only wanted to have a talk and to get it took me out of my way. However I saw some interesting stone quarries and got back to Bath about dark.’ In 1905 Hudson returned to Wells after a ive-year gap. By this time he was revered by many illustrious names in literature – John Galsworthy and Joseph Conrad among them. Conrad famously said of Hudson that he ‘writes as the grass grows’. Some of Hudson’s dispatches from Somerset epitomise the beautiful simplicity of his prose. ‘I came by Shepton Mallet and walked from there in the afternoon,’ he wrote. ‘A lovely walk, by running water in a pretty deep valley, with ine hills, big masses of stone cropping out, on either side.’ memories, and looking for people I knew. Those I particularly wished to see are gone… to go and see them elsewhere would be a mistake – they were part of Bath – my Bath, which is a rather peculiar place with a smell and feel and colour and shape and above all an expression which makes it unlike all other places on earth. The loss… hurts me as much as it would to see a portion of the west front of the abbey pulled down… I have had an hour this morning wallowing in hot water and sweating in blankets …’ The following spring, he stayed for the second half of April on Cathedral Green at Wells, calling it ‘a delightful little city and I shall leave it with sorrow at the end of the week. The cathedral here is wonderfully ‘His talk was one long grumble about farm life and the injustice of people and the nature of things’ He had just been to the morning service in the cathedral. He was fond of a stirring sermon and a rousing choir. ‘There was Bishop Kenyon in the pulpit. I had not heard nor seen him for nine years, and he looked the same as of old – the likeness of a good solid British working man – and not much older, tho’ greyer about his mutton-chop whiskers.’ While in Bath he found the house of two ladies who were to type his notes. ‘They were, I fancy, somewhat startled at the apparition of so big a man in their small interior – one whose head came within an inch of two of the low ceiling: they seemed timid and troubled and anxious in their minds when I gave them my scrawl to decipher and copy… and they gratiied my De Quincey-like craving to know everything about the life of every person I meet…’ In February 1908 he was once again writing from Bath, conlicted. ‘I must make up my mind whether to go to the morning service or for a walk. I want to do both and am like the donkey between two bundles of hay.’ ‘I’ve been strolling about in the rain – now it is ine again – picking up old threads, or beautiful … it is so richly decorated that over two hundred jackdaws ind comfortable nesting holes behind the statues’. Hudson made a pilgrimage to Glastonbury at midsummer in 1910. He spoke of ‘the sympathy I have always cherished for the Mystics of all times and religions… who take us out of this material world.’ There was something of the mystic in Hudson. His close friends often remarked on his magnetism. It owed much to his mysterious origins. ‘The tribes of the pampas had – one cannot say have – a sort of supernatural religion & set of beliefs about the future life of the soul...’ Hudson wrote. ‘They believed in a passage from earth to a spirit world by way of certain lakes – a lake, any laguna, which served as a passage to a ghost...’ Hudson lived to the age of 81. Right to the end he was working feverishly to inish two books, one about Britain’s lost birds. Many of the losses he lamented have since been restored, thanks in large part to the conservation movement he helped to create. He would take a lot of comfort from that. BOOK TALK . above: Hudson explored The Quantocks in the spring of 1895 Photo: Acceleratorhams, Getty right: The oil painting of W.H. Hudson which adorns the walls of the RSPB Headquarters. Courtesy: Conor Jameson Conor is giving a talk at St Andrew’s Community Church in Combe Down, Bath, on April 17. Doors open at 7pm for a 7.30pm start. (RSPB members £3.50/ non-members £4.50) Conor’s talk will trace the ield naturalist’s path through a dramatic and turbulent era: from Hudson’s journey to Britain from Argentina in 1874 to the unveiling by the prime minister of a monument and bird sanctuary in his honour 50 years later, in Hyde Park, London. At its core, this extraordinary story reveals Hudson’s deep inluence on the creation of his beloved Bird Society by its founding women, and the rise of the conservation movement. Finding W.H Hudson - The Writer Who Came to Britain to Save the Birds is published by Pelagic Publishing and available to buy for £17.99 from pelagicpublishing.com 98 April 2024 far right: In April 1909, Hudson stayed in Wells and noticed how jackdaws found comfortable nesting holes behind the statues at Wells Cathedral. Photo: Chris Dorney, Getty Somerset Life
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SECRET WORLD Pauline Kidner, founder of charity Secret World Wildlife Rescue in East Huntspill L ET’S TA L K A BOU T: Nature’s Miracles he start of spring sees the miracle of life taking place all around us – often without us being aware. A chrysalis emerges from the soil as a butterly. Hedgehogs and dormice come out of hibernation ready to mate. Aquatic creatures emerge as insects – and in turn feed all kinds of wildlife. We depend on many of them to pollinate our food. Spring mornings begin with the sounds of diferent species of birds singing and protecting their territory. Birds will also be inding food for their mate who is probably sitting incubating the eggs in the nest. When we used to rear rare breeds of poultry, I was fascinated by incubation, whether it was eggs under a broody hen or in an incubator. The fact that there is everything in an egg to become a chick – from the calcium in the shell to the protein, minerals and vitamins in the albumen. As the incubation continues it T Somerset Life is noticeable that the shell becomes thinner as the chick absorbs the calcium as it grows. Domestic poultry and wild birds such as moorhens or mallard ducks have a yolk that is bigger than the garden birds. This is because the chick absorbs two thirds of it into its stomach as it hatches. They can therefore survive for at least two days as they learn to feed themselves, although still dependant on their mothers for warmth. Garden birds, as an example, have a small yolk in their egg and it is all used up for the development of the chick. When it hatches it will be very vulnerable as it will not have grown any feathers and will be totally dependant on the parents for food. The incubation period is much shorter as they don’t have to develop so far, and this will only be 11-12 days in comparison with 20-22 for the moorhen or 28 days for a duckling. With really brightly coloured beaks they gape to above: In spring we see signs of new life all around us. Photo: Getty attract the adults. It means the chick is the kind of creature that only its mother would love rather than a lovely lufy one! The chick is tightly curled with its head underneath its wing. At the blunt end of the egg is an air sac. Eventually the chick ills the shell and pierces the air sac with its tiny egg tooth on the tip of its beak. The chick now changes from living in luid to breathing air. The neck starts to vibrate so that the chick makes the irst hole in the shell. Rotating its body very slowly it continues to pierce the shell until it has gone right around the egg and the top will come of. The chick will climb out of the eggshell and, exhausted, it will lie as it dries. Life begins. We need to value and be fascinated by the world about us. . April 2024 101
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WA L K Ahoy there! Explore the sand dunes & shipwreck of Berrow ROUTE DEVISED BY: The SS Nornen shipwreck at Berrow can be seen at low tide. Photo: Margaret Clavell, Getty
above: The conservation area and pond provides habitats for wildlife right: Riders take advantage of the lat sands at low tide below: St Mary’s Church used to be white-washed and acted as a beacon for sailors. Photos: Isobel Pring errow beach sits in the middle of seven miles of sandy beach between Brean Down and Burnham-on-Sea and is backed by dunes. Because of its remote beauty, it has become a favourite for ilm and television companies, most recently in the Channel 4 drama Truelove. The walk begins at the Berrow Dunes Local Nature Reserve, which has been protected since 1993. Dunes like these contain a wide variety of coastal habitats that support a diverse range of lora and fauna but are becoming rarer in the UK. The nature reserve is explored in the Berrow Dunes Storywalk and it can be used to navigate your way in and out of the Dunes while discovering more about the nature, history and conservation of this unique area englandcoastpath.storywalks.info B 1 From the Conservation Area car park, take the path to your right as you face the dunes. Follow the hard path until you reach a turning on your left. Take this path until you reach an open grass area. Turn right onto the wide grass pathway and follow it to the end and take the left fork up the hill. Coming down the other side you’ll see another open grassy area. Turn left and walk across this area to the white topped post ahead of you. Stay on this track until you reach two more white topped posts, where you turn right and follow the track to the beach. 104 April 2024 Somerset Life
WALK COMPASS POINTS 2 START POINT: Berrow Dunes Conservation Area car park. It’s also possible to start at St Mary’s Church, Berrow. 1 DISTANCE: 4.6 miles (7.5km). Allow 2.5 hours. The ground is lat with a few sandy slopes in the dunes. 3 MAP: OS Explorer Map 153 (Burnham-on-Sea & Clevedon) 4 REFRESHMENTS: There are refreshments and shops to the north of the Conservation Area and on Coast Road. During the summer months Berrow church offers cream teas for visitors every Sunday. PRACTICALIITIES: The number 20 bus route between Weston-Super-Mare and Burnhamon-Sea passes both start points. This walk is best on an outgoing tide or at low tide, to see the wreck of the Nornen clearly. Check tide times at tidetimes.org.uk 5 2 When you reach the beach turn left and you’ll see the wreck of the Nornen, a Norwegian barque, ahead of you to the right. The Nornen was spotted in distress in the early hours of March 3 1897. The lifeboat from Burnham was dispatched at irst light and pulled alongside just as she was being driven onto the mudlats later that morning. All 10 crew members and the ship’s dog were successfully rescued but attempts to reloat her failed and she was sold for scrap. If the tides allow it is possible to walk out to the wreck BUT only go if the tide is past the wreck and going out and ensure that you stay on hard sand. Looking out to sea you can see Steep Holm, an uninhabited island in the middle of the Bristol Channel, and Wales in the distance. To the south is Hinkley Point Power Station – the irst new nuclear plant to be built in the UK in 20 years and the largest construction site in Europe. 3 After the wreck, continue along the beach until you see a warning sign for soft sand and mud. Turn in to the dunes here and you’ll see a sandy track. Follow this track inland where you cross the golf course and can see the church ahead of you. Take note of the signs that indicate the direction of play. After the golf course you’ll see a small path to the left with a seat at the top. Take this path, which leads to a gate where you can Somerset Life enter the church yard of St Mary’s Church. This 13th century church nestles amongst the sand dunes and was once whitewashed and acted as a beacon for sailors. If it is open during your walk head inside to admire the beautiful stained glass windows. 4 Leaving the church yard turn right towards the main road but follow the footpath to the right just before reaching it. After a short distance turn left onto a wooded path that continues next to the golf course for some distance. At a fork in the path turn right onto Wellington Way. Continue on this path past Berrow Green and the children’s play area on your left, until you reach a short section of quite road. At the end of this, pass through the gate on the right to the golf course. Burnham and Berrow Golf Club opened in 1891 and its irst professional player, John Henry Taylor, went on to win the Open championship ive times. Your path is across the golf course aiming for the inger post that you can see on the hill ahead of you. Again, take note of the direction of play and stay on the foot path as you cross the fairways. To your left you can see the top of the now inactive High Lighthouse in Burnhamon-Sea and views across to Hinkley Point. Follow the footpath signs towards the sea, which take you from the golf course to a boardwalk, where you pass through the reed beds. 5 The path brings you out on to the beach next to a tall wooden post and a short post with the number 13 on it. Turn right and walk along the beach taking in the views to Brean Down ahead of you and Exmoor National Park in the distance behind you. Once past the wreck of the Nornen continue until you reach the row of wooden posts heading out to sea. Turn in towards the dunes, the Berrow Beach sign and the waste bin and take the right fork away from the beach and into the Dunes. If you’re using the Berrow Storywalk you can pick it up again here. Continue along the sandy track into the dunes until you see a small concrete post ahead of you where the path rises to an open grassy area. Fork left into the grassy area and head towards the information panel ahead of you. Stay on the path and pass to the right of the information panel to reach a pond and bench seat on your right. Follow the path round to the right and turn right at the white post. Keep right at the next white post and follow the path back to the car park. . April 2024 105
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CU T OU T AND K EEP WALK WA L K Wellington Basins Walking around the town of Wellington in April promises a fusion of natural beauty, history and community spirit WORDS: ellington is the home of Somerset Activity and Sports Partnership (SASP) charity, and it’s a community we are proud to be a part of. SASP works closely with a number of Primary Care Networks in Somerset and is pleased to be working in partnership with doctor surgeries in Wellington and the surrounding areas. Our health and wellbeing coaching service supports people with long term conditions to access physical activity to promote and protect their health, with new opportunities being provided for those in Wellington in the past year, including the popular sessions, ‘Womens Wellness.’ This is a programme designed to support women to move more and to have a greater understanding of both the physical and W Somerset Life Joseph Madge and Georgina Hainsby above: The Wellington Basin is a local nature conservation area. Photo: Sarah Crossley left: The SASP community welcomes all ages and all abilities to join the walks. Photo: Joseph Madge mental health beneits that being active can bring. We want to help women to move more in ways that suit them, but also break down the barriers women in Somerset are facing. We create a supportive community that contributes to a sense of belonging. As women break stereotypes and defy agerelated expectations, they find joy and fulilment in their commitment to a more active lifestyle, proving that staying it is a timeless pursuit with countless rewards, and the Somerset Health Walks programme can also contribute. April 2024 107 >
WALK GOOD TO KNOW Following paths and well-trodden tracks Parking is ample Paid refreshments available at the Garden Coffee House in the Cleve Hotel 5 4 This route is dog-friendly – be aware of the water! 1 Slight incline during the walk – complete at your own pace 2 PHOTOSARAHCROSSLEY 3 There are two ponds separated by a walkway, set in several acres of open countryside to explore THE WALK Each week in the Wellington area, walkers have an option to join a Level 1 walk or a Level 3 walk on a Monday or Thursday. The Level 1 walks can be up to two miles with lat or gentle slopes, no stiles and ideal for those able to complete 30 mins with minimal stops. The Level 3 walks are slightly lengthier at 3 - 4 miles often with ields and hills, moving at a quicker pace and with possible stiles – these are considered intermediate walks, ideal for those with good walking itness and able to complete 60 - 90 minutes with minimal stops. Around 30 walkers and walk leaders meet just before the start time, register and listen to the safety brieing. Wellington Park is a sprawling green space that provides a serene escape from the hustle and bustle. The park’s wellmaintained paths wind through meadows, ofering a tranquil setting for your walk. When the walkers have decided what distance and pace they would like to walk, the trained walk leaders set of, supported by back and middle markers, this ensures no one is left behind and all wearing SASP and Somerset Health Walks high viz. 108 April 2024 1 2 The Level 1 route leaves Wellington Park at the main gate. Walk down the track past the secondary school. Next take the path with the school on your left and the recreation ground on your right. At the end of the footpath, turn right and walk along the pavement of Exeter Road towards Rockwell Green. 3 Turn right up the lane opposite, Hilly Head, and go through the gate on the left and follow the path across the ield, going through the next gate in the wall and follow the path over the hill and down the hill towards the trees. Cross over the small footbridge with the houses on your left and continue along the footpath that leads to the right, keeping the stream on your right-hand side. 4 Continue along the path, making two crossings over the water. Go through the gate and take the path straight ahead between the Basins, and then turn right into the path between the skate park and the sports centre. 5 Continue on the path into the nature area, follow the path through the area as it curves around to the left and through the trees into the recreation ground. Walk along the left-hand side of the ground towards the steps and go up into the park. Take the path through the park towards the gate at the top to inish. The route is just over a mile and a half with average moving time of approximately 45 minutes with extra stops to take in the views across Rockwell Green and Hilly Head. Somerset Life
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EXPLORE EXMOOR Your monthly update from our very special National Park The Exmoor Coast - Britain’s Best Kept Secret? WORDS: Laura Williams Exmoor’s rich and varied landscape includes some of the most photogenic, yet often underrated, coastlines in the UK. Covering around 35 miles of South West Coast Path it includes the highest coastline (433m at Culbone Hill) and the longest stretch of coastal woodland (Foreland Point to Porlock) in England and Wales. It has many stories to tell – spanning people, nature and climate, past, present and future. From historic tales of sheltered harbours once bustling with trade now popular with tourists, to the ‘Wild Exmoor’ project creating important coastal corridors for wildlife and Exmoor National Park Young Rangers ‘extreme beach cleaning’ at Glenthorne Beach. Exmoor’s coastline overlooks the Bristol Channel, which has one of the highest tidal ranges in the world. This can pose a few challenges. Take Porlock Marsh for example. In 1996, Hurricane Lili took its toll on the bay, with the rough sea breaching the sea wall pushing the shingle ridge inland. Instead of restoring the wall, an early nature recovery ambition was realised and delivered by the land managers (including National Trust, which cares for over half of the Exmoor coastline), Exmoor National Park Authority and Natural England. The wall was not reinstated, but nature was allowed to take hold. The result? A world-renowned haven for wetland wildlife and an increasingly popular spot for walkers, photographers and visitors. Want to experience the Exmoor coastline? Join Exmoor National Park Rangers for a rock pool adventure! Hunt for anemones, crabs, sea sponges and all sorts of marine critters, just across the border on Lynmouth beach. With knowledgeable Exmoor rangers as your guide, learn more about diversity of life on our shores and gain skills to get the most out of rock pooling in your own time. All equipment provided, including identiication guides, nets and buckets. Remember suncream and water bottle (free illing station in Lynmouth near the toilets). Sandals or waterproof shoes are useful. Everyone welcome! Meet outside Lynmouth National Park Centre April 13 14.30-16.30. Somerset Life Enjoy Beach fun and coastal charm WORDS: Emma Thomasson As we head towards Easter, the Exmoor Coast is the perfect destination for enjoying the great outdoors and having fun. With a blend of natural beauty, things to do and vibrant culture, there’s something for families, friends, and solo explorers to immerse themselves in its unique charm. Scenic Journeys: Hop aboard the Exmoor Coaster or the West Somerset Railway for breath-taking views and easy access to the region’s coastal gems. Explore Kilve Beach: Enjoy the Kilve Beach Natural History Storywalk Trail. This shoreline, featured in Bryan Adams’ (Everything I Do) I Do It for You video, is mostly rocky with many little rock pools to explore at low tide. Cultural Discoveries at East Quay: Watchet’s East Quay ofers a cultural adventure for all ages. From contemporary art galleries to creative workshops, it’s a hub for artistic exploration. The East Quay Kitchen adds a lavourful twist to your visit. Family Fun at Blue Anchor: Enjoy the shingle beach, stretching for miles. It’s dogfriendly and perfect for family afternoons of cricket, sandcastle building, or just soaking in the sea views, with the convenience of a nearby West Somerset Railway station. Dunster’s Historical Wonders: Take a few minutes to head inland and visit the medieval village of Dunster. Experience the history of Dunster Castle, enjoy a meal at the Luttrell Arms, and wander through a village steeped in history. Active Outdoor Adventures: Take to the waters! Try kayaking, paddleboarding, ebikes, and more with Channel Adventure in Minehead and Exmoor Adventures in Porlock Weir. Discover Bossington’s Coastal Charm: In the Holnicote Estate, Bossington is a hamlet with a walk to Bossingtons pebbly beach and panoramic views from Hurlstone Point. The village’s thatched cottages ofer a snapshot of Exmoor’s picturesque heritage. Local Tastes and Tales: Sample the inest local produce at shops along the coast, like Stuart Lowen Quality Butcher and Farm Shop in Minehead. It’s perfect for gathering picnic supplies or learning more about Exmoor’s food culture. This April, let the Exmoor Coast be your inspiration. There’s plenty to suit a short break or a day trip; a great way to embark on Easter holiday adventures. It’s the ideal place to create lasting memories. visit-exmoor.co.uk . April 2024 111
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THE MENDIPS Mendip roads lead to Rome Thousands of years of history connect the Mendip Hills with many distant parts of the ancient world WORDS: Andy Chamberlain, ranger and volunteer coordinator, Mendip Hills National Landscape early 2000 years ago, in AD49, the Roman Legions, within six years of invading, headed to what is now known as the Mendip Hills National Landscape. They were searching for the lead upon which their empire depended. Lead and its associated silver were mined all over these Somerset hills but signiicantly around the Charterhouse and Priddy areas. This lead, which was sent all over the Roman Empire as far as Georgia and North Africa, started its journey down The Cheddar Yeo, then the River Axe from Cheddar to the port at Uphill near Weston-super-Mare, where boats took it further than any locals could imagine. Mendip lead has been found in the Colosseum in Rome and the ruins of Pompeii. The lead in our Mendip Hills has now mostly gone, with Victorians reworking much of the Roman mining in the mid-1800s with varying degrees of success. Today, the marina at Uphill is not used for exporting lead but is now the starting point for The Mendip Way, a 50-kilometre longdistance footpath stretching across the hills towards Frome in the east. It’s a fantastic way for the more energetic to see the hills and take in some of the best views in the area N Somerset Life over a long weekend, with a halfway break in Wells. The plentiful footpaths give you the opportunity to visit this unique landscape which forms an area of 200 square kilometres. At the tip of mainland Mendip sits Brean Down, a limestone promontory protruding into the Bristol Channel. Surrounded by clifs and some of the iercest tides in the area, this has, like the Somerset island of Steep Holm, been used as a defensive outpost far back in history. The fort on the tip dates back to Napoleonic times but was repurposed during the Second World War to defend the Bristol Channel against possible invasion. On top of the down, the remains of a Roman temple have been discovered – showing the signiicance of the area, or were they just ensuring their lead got on the right boats in the harbour below? At the end of last year, the new Mendip National Nature Reserve was declared, with a plan to link the management of over 1,400 hectares of diferent habitats, mainly along the southern slopes, in order to protect and enhance the nature of the Mendip Hills into the future. On visiting the Mendip Hills the views across the Somerset Levels are far-reaching. See the water-shaped hills such above: Mendip lead has been found in the Colosseum in Rome and the ruins of Pompeii. Photo: Frederic Prochasson, Getty as Nyland and Glastonbury Tor as well as Wedmore Ridge which alludes a glimpse back in time to when the ancient sea would have covered the area, with much of the southern slopes of Mendip having been the coast. Hundreds of millions of years ago, the hills themselves were born out of the sea, with the limestone being created by the remains of ininite sea creatures and mud settling on the bed of a tropical ocean somewhere of the coast of what is now Argentina! Somerset’s connections are far-reaching whether we are connected by the waves of water, or the waves of trade and people that have come and gone over millennia. To download walks or more information about the Mendip Hills visit mendiphills-nl.org.uk . April 2024 113
The most famous race in the world In anticipation of The Grand National, Richard Walsh chats with racehorse trainers Martin & David Pipe 114 April 2024 Somerset Life
HORSE RACING o followers of Jump racing the month of April means just one thing and that’s the Grand National Steeplechase. The most famous race in the world, it has taken place almost annually since 1839 at Aintree Racecourse on Merseyside. Run over a distance of four miles 517 yards the race is a test of skill, strength and stamina, during which the horses cover two laps of the course and jump 30 fences. In order to ind out more about the Grand National I headed to Pond House, high up on the Blackdown Hills above Wellington, from where both Martin and David Pipe have enjoyed winners of the biggest race in the world. Martin was born in Taunton, the son of local bookmaker Dave Pipe, and from a young age the Grand National has featured in his life. When he left school Martin went to work for his father. ‘It’s one day’s racing but the whole world watches and it’s really exciting. As the son of a bookie it was the biggest day of the year and when I was working in the betting shop people would queue up outside from 7am just to get a bet on. Everybody bet on the race. It was a thrill to be working in the betting shop on the Grand National day. It was really hard work but very exciting and whatever people were doing, everybody stopped to watch the race.’ In addition to working in the betting shop Martin learned to ride and harboured dreams of becoming a jockey. He rode in point-topoint races but didn’t enjoy too much success and after sustaining an injury decided to try his hand at training his father’s string of point-to-point horses. Based at Pond House, which Dave Pipe had initially purchased as a run down pig farm and converted into stables, Martin gained his trainer’s licence in 1974 and enjoyed his irst winner a year later when Hit Parade triumphed at Taunton, ridden by Len Lungo. On his own admission Martin knew nothing about training horses but was a quick learner and studied the way in which some of the leading trainers of that time went about the task. He went on to develop his own method of working, based on thorough preparation, meticulous record keeping, diet and itness levels, as well as regular blood testing to ensure his horses were in peak itness before they ran. Using this unique way of training, Martin became increasingly successful and in 1988-89 won the irst of his 15 champion trainer titles. However, despite being a champion trainer Martin had never won the Grand National. T PHOTO:GETTY Somerset Life ‘I’d always dreamed of having a runner in the Grand National and in 1981 we had Three of Diamonds, one of Chester Barnes’ horses run ridden by Paul Leach who was my irst stable jockey. We were really excited just to get there and to take part in the biggest race in the world. However once you’d been there and had the irst runner you want more, you want to take part and you think “how can I win it?” although you never dream of winning… Just to take part in the whole day is so exciting, the build-up, looking after the horse, making sure it’s prepared to the best of your ability, which wasn’t very much at the time, and to try and get him to run a good race. ‘I wanted to win the Grand National but how do you go about preparing a horse for that race? I didn’t know anything about it – we had to build fences for the horses to jump – some couldn’t get over them and others wouldn’t jump, so they couldn’t take part! It’s a long race so you have to have one with stamina – I didn’t know how to go about it and had to learn by trial and error. It seemed like a lifetime before I achieved my dream to win the race but just to take part was the biggest thrill, it really was.’ All that was to change in 1989 as Martin explained: ‘Freddie Starr, the owner, phoned me up one day in 1989 and asked if I would train Miinnehoma for him because he’d like to win the Grand National. I said: “Hang on Freddie, he’s got to learn how to jump irst.” It was amazing that he wanted to win the Grand National and incredible that ive years later it came of. ‘Miinnehoma came to me in 1989, was well bred, he was a good stayer and had a good preparation, he’d won a few races and had run in the Gold Cup a few weeks earlier. He was only 16-1 and we thought we had a chance. If he’d been trained by a proper trainer then he would have been shorter odds. Miinnehoma travelled up the day before and we stayed with him overnight. We walked the course in the morning as we always did – and it was very exciting to see the jumps, but we worried about the horses and whether they were going to get round. Miinnehoma was always fairly prominent and I can remember him turning for home and he was really going well but there was still a long way to go. The horse was travelling really well and we were hopeful but he just sat there patiently. They reached the last and he pulled out and won nicely. It was very, very exciting and a dream come true. Winning the Grand National was the highlight of my training career.’ > April 2024 115
David Pipe (left) and Martin Pipe pictured with the John Smith’s Grand National trophy after Comply or Die won in 2004 PHOTO:AINTREERACECOURSE. ‘There is a buzz about the whole day and the atmosphere is electric’ Martin added: ‘I was very lucky to win the Grand National which took me a lifetime to achieve – then when David started training in 2006 he won it in his third season on Comply or Die, which was marvellous.’ Martin had numerous runners in the Grand National but was only victorious once. Former jockey Gerry Supple, who is still involved at Pond House, has ridden in two Grand Nationals for Martin: ‘I rode Manx Magic in 2002 and Burlu the next year – both outsiders. It was just brilliant and I couldn’t believe I was going to get paid just to ride in the race. There were only 40 jockeys in the country who got the chance to ride and I was one of them. ‘The excitement starts to build up when you’re getting changed and ready with the other jockeys and then suddenly before you know it’s the Grand National, you get called out and they take the pictures. It’s just amazing, the adrenalin starts to get going with the parade and walking round at the start. The rules at the start are much better now but back then it was just crazy and everyone was trying to canter in and it was diicult to get it started. ‘I spoke to plenty of people before I rode and watched lots of races – although it’s a 116 April 2024 diferent race now, the fences and the drops are much smaller. They jump of very fast and you just want to get over the irst fence and then the irst few and ind yourself a little slot. Money couldn’t buy that feeling. The fences were bigger and it was the drops the other side that caught you out – it’s a massive thrill though to have ridden and certainly one of the highlights of my career.’ Martin Pipe retired in 2006 and handed over the reins to his son David who continued the family tradition by winning the Grand National in 2008. David said: ‘I was very lucky to have an amazing horse in Comply or Die so early on in my training career. ‘It’s not rocket science, you need a horse that jumps and stays the trip. The Grand National is the biggest race in the world, it’s the race that’s watched by the whole nation and it’s the one you get recognised for winning outside our little bubble. It’s the race that every jockey, trainer and owner would love to win. ‘Comply or Die was coming back from injury that season and we sent him up to Newcastle where he won the Eider Chase, so we knew we were going there with a realistic chance. One of our current owners is Professor Caroline Tisdall and it’s the race she wants to win more than any other. She has been very lucky to have had Vieux Lion Rouge who ran in six Grand Nationals before he retired but never won. However she wants another one but they don’t just appear overnight and are hard to come by.’ Being the grandson of a bookmaker David was well aware of the Grand National from an early age and as he grew up learned about the business, before eventually taking over at Pond House. ‘The coverage of the National was diferent then, it was always on the BBC with Des Lynham and there was a great buzz. It’s the Liverpudlians’ race and it’s watched all over the world by millions of people. ‘There is a buzz about the whole day and the atmosphere is electric. The fences were diferent back in 2008 and the racing authorities have done right in my belief in modifying the fences. David added: ‘It’s still a challenge although perhaps not as much of a challenge as it was, but despite this it is still the one race that every owner, trainer and jockey wants to win. To win the Grand National is the highlight of my training career so far and I would love nothing more than to win it again!’ The 2024 Grand National takes place on Saturday April 13 at 4pm. . Somerset Life
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HOME LIFE Interiors inspiration and property advice LET’S TALK KITCHENS BACK TO SCHOOL We chat with a designer who creates the ultimate heart for your home. Will you feel nostalgic over this old School House near Frome? PHOTO:MEGLOVELL TREASURE HUNTERS What will you discover in these top reclamation yards? PROPERTIES OF PAPER Ele Grafton creates bespoke paper artwork, that beautifully captures the spirit of a family home or a special building. Whether a thatched cottage, a country manor or an elegant church, Ele produces each heirloom piece using vintage books, sheet music, maps or other sentimental documents. Each unique commission is evocative and entrancing, telling its own very personal story – making each piece a beautiful memento or a very special gift. Ele Somerset Life also creates stunning and timeless fairytale cottages and castles, captured in frames or inside domes, made from copies of vintage children’s story books and patterned fabric or paper. Ele works from her home studio, surrounded by the glorious and inspiring Somerset countryside. elegrafton.com @ele_grafton_studio Ele Grafton Studio April 2024 119
of the best RECLAMATION YARDS From bricks to garden statues, you’ll ind what you’re looking for - and more for those springtime projects at these popular reclamation yards WORDS: Andrea Cowan GLASTONBURY RECLAMATION This well-established yard specialises in reclaimed building materials, alongside a veritable treasure trove of intriguing decorative pieces for the house and garden. Their customers are local builders and period homeowners, but the showroom is also gaining a reputation amongst set designers and prop buyers with items inding 120 April 2024 their way on to major ilms and TV series. Probably the most eye-catching item in the yard amongst all the garden pots and planters is the 16ft diameter water wheel, salvaged from a mill in Wells. It’s not for sale at the moment, but £12,000 will buy you an equally quirky rare tripod cheese press. glastonburyreclamation.co.uk Somerset Life
RECLAMATION YARDS CASTLE RECLAMATION Conveniently positioned just off the A303 in Martock, both trade and public customers flock to this yard for its stock of traditional reclaimed materials such as roof tiles and bricks. You will also ind new items such as natural Blue Lias lagstones and a range of oak, elm, ash and pine looring. On top of this there is also a selection of unique, vintage items to peruse and discover including, at the moment, a Victorian jardinière, a Dorchester town sign and a large Portland stone with rainbow leaded glass. Prices range from a Double Roman roof tile for £2 to a large stone ireplace for £7500.00. castlereclamation.com WELLS RECLAMATION Established in 1985 this family-run business is set over an impressive ive and a half acres. As well as the extensive outdoor yard, there is an indoor emporium with an everchanging stock of antique and vintage furniture. Customers include architects, ilm companies, garden and interior designers, as well as the general public. It’s a fascinating place to browse – cofee in hand from the on-site café – with large, unusual statues including a life-sized Russian Cossack on horseback and a gold lady standing over 15 feet high. On a more practical level, gardens statues, urns, benches and planters are popular for spring. wellsreclamation.com FROME RECLAMATION Another family-run business, this yard is as reliant on word-of-mouth for sourcing products as other means, which comes down to its reputation. Amongst the traditional building materials, rooing is a speciality, from Welsh slates to clay tiles. There is also an extensive range of architectural salvage and antique items which over the years has included arcade video games, taxidermy sharks, barbers’ chairs and prisoner stocks. Prices start from 35p for a roof tile and the sky’s the limit with regard to garden statuary. Beware – there’s every chance you will go in looking for a tile and leave with a dovecot. fromerec.com PHOTOS:GLASTONBURYRECLAMATION/WELLSRECLAMATION BATH RECLAMATION This is a heavy-duty yard specialising in all types of reclaimed traditional building materials such as Bath Stone Ashlar, Pennant and York flagstones, Bath and Cotswold lagstones, local walling stone, bricks, rooing and looring. Most of the stock is sourced from within a 100-mile radius, although limestone has sometimes been purchased from Egypt and lagstones from India. There is also a stock of salvaged interior features and whilst you are unlikely to ind doorknobs or decorative objets d’art here, you’ll discover a range of ireplace surrounds and cast-iron grates. Visiting is by appointment only, but most products are listed on the website. bathreclamation.co.uk Somerset Life April 2024 121
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The MEET... Kıtchen Designer We are joined in conversation with Anthony Barker , the professional kitchen designer from South West Design located in Priston, near Bath. Tell us a little about you: Having graduated from university with a philosophy and geography degree, I applied to work as a designer for C.P. Hart. Within a year, I knew that design was my passion. I moved to manage a Poggenpohl kitchen studio in London, where I gained my expertise in kitchen design. When the premises became available in Priston, just outside the beautiful city of Bath, my business partner and I saw the opportunity to open South West Design as the irst independent Poggenpohl design studio in Somerset. Being 10 minutes from Bath city centre means we have space to park, bring the dogs and we even have a TV lounge area for the children. Why do your kitchen designs suit this area of the country in particular? Somerset is a beautiful county with elegant townhouses and country homes as well as stunning contemporary properties. We have designed our showroom to cater to a wide range of architectural styles, whether you are looking for a farmhouse kitchen with hand painted doors, or an opulent modern style with a statement island for entertaining, or if you are seeking something truly minimalist and handle less. The one combining aspect is that all our Poggenpohl kitchens feature state-of-the-art storage solutions, which is paramount in any kitchen, large or small. Can you tell us more about Poggenpohl? Poggenpohl is an iconic brand that, in my view, represents the best quality and creative solutions for the kitchen and the home. Working with the company for the past 25 years, I have had many repeat clients over that time who only ever want a Poggenpohl kitchen. It started as a family business in 1892 with an aim to ‘make the kitchen better’ and, 130 years later, it is now the leading brand for luxurious kitchen architecture made in Germany. In addition, because its cabinetry and ittings are so well-thought out, I have also designed utility rooms, boot rooms, cocktail bars, home oices and itted bedrooms using Poggenpohl furniture. What are your top tips when selecting a new kitchen? The kitchen is often a multifunctional space used for cooking, entertaining and socialising with family and friends. It is the most used Somerset Life Anthony Barker is passionate about design. Photo: Gary Askew room in the home so you need to ensure that your new kitchen suits your lifestyle, relects the architecture of your home and that it makes you happy. Planning is crucial – how the kitchen is going to be used, the functionality, diferent zones, from cooking to cleaning to refrigeration all need to be thought through carefully. Next comes design, and this is where a designer, like me, will incorporate our client’s personality into the project including the colour palette and the styling. Budget is also a consideration, so selecting materials and appliances to match our client’s budget is always a consideration throughout the process. Kitchens tend to follow trends. What style and colour scheme are you recommending for 2024? Kitchen islands remain perennially popular, and the Poggenpohl +MODO version features a worktop that sits on a platform above the cabinetry to provide a loating appearance. Ideal as a statement piece, it suits the current trend for industrial kitchen styles. Because the kitchen is often used as a social hub, there is a trend toward including a bar area that is concealed behind pocket doors that fold into side recesses when entertaining, but is otherwise hidden and we have one on display at our showroom. Regarding colours, earth tones are ever popular, with rich dark greens and reds, which are right on point in 2024. These are matched with natural wood inishes including walnut, nut tree and oak. Why should we choose our next kitchen from South West Design? We ofer a complete service from the irst visit to the showroom, throughout the design process all the way to installation. We like to think that this, coupled with our honest and open pricing, gives our client a great overall experience when working with South West Design. How do we get in touch? Poggenpohl by South West Design Unit 6, The Dairy Priston Bath BA2 9EQ T: 01225 433 277 poggenpohlsouthwest.com Open by appointment Monday to Saturday. April 2024 125
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Lounge LIZARDS Create a personal sanctuary that makes you smile COMPILED BY: Kate Houghton CLASSIC STYLE For a long time the Chesterield was considered the epitome of leather sofa style, but we rather love this mid-century spin on the design, creating a piece that its neatly into any space and decor scheme. Stockholm sofa, £599.99, furniturechoice.co.uk 128 April 2024 Somerset Life
INTERIORS Conversation circle TREASURE IT Research has shown that staying in with friends is the new going out, so what better way to encourage conviviality than creating a curvy conversation zone in your sitting room. It’s pretty perfect for home cinema nights, too. Otto cinema corner, £10,750, arloandjacob.com We all have that much-loved armchair, that just...works. Sadly, much-loved often translates to worn out, but reupholstery can revive even the saddest seats, and is, of course, a big tick in our living sustainably box. Poetry collection fabric, £33.60, prestigious.co.uk STATEMENT PIECE SO USEFUL Soft tones and relaxing neutrals make for a calming living room, but adding a blast of colour and pizzazz will bring a smile every time you enter the room. Add a spot of personality with brave shape or fabric choices and prepare to grin. Esk chair in Rapture & Wright Moorish Maze Palm, £1,599, thefootstoolworkshop.co.uk Nesting tables have proven their worth for generations, providing versatile rests for hot cups and cold glasses, and handy for games nights with friends. Find a set that works with your scheme and prepare to entertain. Romsey natural solid oak nest of tables, £229.99, oakfurnitureland.co.uk Somerset Life April 2024 129
SHOW OFF A home with books in is a home indeed, so why not demonstrate your erudition by putting your favourites on display? Also perfect for air-purifying plants and photos of your best ever days. Honey gold Balmoral two-drawer single bookcase, £850, next.co.uk/laura-ashley SET THE SCENE Your living room should wrap its arms around you and ofer you a needful escape. Create the necessary ambience with lighting. The centre light is there purely for vacuuming – instead, dot around table lamps and loor lights, to cast a warming glow, and light up your reading. Jameo loor lamp, £395, with Romneya lampshade, £175, oka.com Curves are so this year With interior trends moving away from geometrics into bringing more curvy, natural shapes into our home, designers are combining trend with practicality, and this useful but elegant cofee table perfectly sums this up. Avani wenge cofee table, £299.99, my-furniture.com 130 April 2024 Somerset Life
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INTERIORS NEWS COME INTO THE GARDEN Clarissa Hulse has added new colourways to two of her botanical mural designs, Enchanted Vale and Tania’s Garden. Two new colourways have been introduced to the beautiful canopy mural, Enchanted Vale, which highlight the intricate layers of leaves and vines tumbling down across a luminous ombre sky. Three new colourways have also been introduced to the Tania’s Garden mural. This stunning mural evokes a wildlower meadow at irst light and is illed with an abundant tangle of cardoons, teasels, dill seed heads and verbena From £42/m2, clarissahulse.com VINTAGE INSPIRATION Designers Guild has launched two beautiful new tableware collections, Ikebana and Porcelaine de Chine, taken from two of the brand’s most popular wallpaper and fabric patterns. Infused with the reined yet dynamic spirit of the ancient Japanese art of lower arranging, Ikebana celebrates the beauty of this loral artistry and the lowers within. Porcelain de Chine has quintessential British appeal. Detailed and intricate paintings of trailing lowers and birds have been gloriously reimagined as a series of tonal patterns, in a subtle palette of indigo and eau de nil, interspersed with pops of rose pink. From £20, designersguild.com 132 April 2024 Colour collab Homewares and lifestyle brand Sophie Allport has launched its irst capsule collection of paint colours, made by B Corp certiied COAT Paints. The carefully curated compilation of 12 shades has been custom-made speciically, with each colour found in Sophie’s natureinspired watercolour designs. Sophie Allport says: ‘We wanted to produce a paint collection that would draw on the natural beauty of the great outdoors and help to bring the outside in. The result is a palette that is a celebration of colour, inspired by nature.’ The paints are solvent-free and almost odourless, water-based and vegan, and made to order and produced in the UK. £57 2.5l, sophieallport.com of the best...STATEMENT ARMCHAIRS Demi velvet wing armchair, Wentworth loveseat, St Moritz Yeti armchair, £1,579, peppersq.com £2,219, bridgman.co.uk £395, peppermillinteriors.com Somerset Life

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PHOTO:CHRISCOOPER Best in class PHOTO:CHRISCOOPER It’s time for ‘show and tell’ in Marston Bigot near Frome as we explore School House. Could this property ofer you the happiest days of your life?
DREAM HOME PHOTO:KNIGHTFRANK PHOTO:KNIGHTFRANK s you approach the Grade II-listed former School House via the large double wrought iron gates, you’ll be able to appreciate the peaceful and rural position of such a stunning home. Dating back to 1857, School House exudes its heritage and local importance through a recessed stone plaque with the inscription: ‘For the Beneit of the Poor and in memory of his father Edmund 8th Earl of Cork, Richard Boyd Rector of Marston who built this school.’ The current owners completely refurbished the property in 2018, installing underloor heating, new wiring and a new slate roof. Gothic arched stone mullioned windows, stained glass windows and Pugin tiles in the entrance hall all reairm the quality of A this home. The main living space exudes the wow factor with a vaulted ceiling, wooden panelling and a fabulous SimsHilditch/Neptune kitchen with central island four oven AGA. For those who enjoy the outdoors, the mature gardens comprise of formal level lawns which enjoy unspoilt parkland views, a wild garden, tennis court, and a ‘nut walk’ which creates a magical space for children to explore. Outbuildings include a separate lodge with bedrooms and open plan kitchen/living/dining room, as well as the additions of a summerhouse and a stable. School House, Marston Bigot, Frome, BA11 5BP is on the market with Knight Frank for a guide price of £1,400,000. . April 2024 137


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PROPERTY VIEWS David Wild, director of Savills Bristol, updates us with the very latest news in the Somerset property market IMAGE:SAVILLS WHAT’S HAPPENING IN THE MARKET? Mary Berry’s childhood home N Somerset Life more than three decades, its current owners are moving on, ofering up the opportunity for a new family. Mary described the house, which is unlisted, as ‘imposing’, and, from the outside at least, it’s easy to see why. Set within large gardens and arranged over four storeys, the ashlar limestone building is as grand as it is elegant and beautiful. Inside it has a similarly impressive, yet warm and comfortable feel – indeed, from the moment you step through the door, it is clear that South Lawn is a well-loved family home. With period character in abundance, including high ceilings, sash windows, arched doorways and a particularly lovely staircase, it has also been signiicantly extended in recent decades, with a large two-storey extension to the rear, and a swimming pool and garage. South Lawn is located within a stone’s throw of two of the best schools in the city, Kingswood and Royal High School Bath. And with schooling being such a pull-factor for families who are looking to move into Bath, when homes here come to the market they can generate quite a stir. South Lawn is on the market with Savills Bath for a guide price of £2,800,000. PHOTO:GETTY ational treasure Mary Berry has a long and proud association with Bath. It was the city within which she was born and grew up. It was at Bath High School that she learnt to bake – her irst creation being a treacle sponge pudding – and later at Bath College of Domestic Science that she honed her craft. Mary’s childhood home was South Lawn on College Road in the suburb of Lansdown. Speaking to The Times back in 2015, Mary recalled growing up at South Lawn – a magniicent mid-19th century Bath stone villa – during the Second World War. Her memories included hiding in the cellar during blackouts and turning the substantial gardens over to grow fruit and vegetables and keep animals during the years of rationing. She also recollected a celebratory family tea party held on the front lawn on VE Day, where she apparently had her irst taste of a Victoria sandwich. Mainly she spoke of the ‘wonderful’ space and freedom of the house and its grounds. Mary and her family moved from South Lawn in 1950 and it was later divided into two homes. It has changed hands only twice since. Now, having enjoyed living there for Good schooling has long been a key driver of demand across the prime housing markets of the UK, particularly amongst growing families. The Covid-19 pandemic caused some shifts in buyer priorities; living close to family and green spaces became more important than proximity to work and train stations. But one aspect that never faltered was being near to good schools. Schooling is undoubtedly one of our city’s most important attractions, so it comes as no surprise that Savills residential research ranks Bath as one of the top education hotspots in the South West – with homes here commanding an average premium of 55 per cent above the regional average. The most popular areas for families are closely aligned to the most sought-after schools, with Lansdown, Bathwick Hill and Widcombe Hill being notable hotspots. The most prestigious and nationally renowned schools are, if anything, becoming more competitive to get into, and many families look to secure their place irst before making a move. This part of the market is hotting up now, with families keen to target a summer move, giving the children time to settle into their new home before the start of the school year. I have been in this position myself and speaking both professionally and personally, I would advise those who are looking now to be patient while also being ready to act quickly. More often than not, supply of suitable homes in Bath falls considerably short of demand, with good quality family properties remaining in ownership for many years. Enlisting the help of a good agent will stand you in good stead. April 2024 141

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FAMILY From the very young to the young at heart MARVEL IN THE MUSEUMS TAKE A DIP Searching for top indoor activities? Here’s our pick in Bath Explore the health beneits of Clevedon’s marine pool PHOTO:RACHELMEAD SPIN YOUR WHEELS We recommend family-friendly and buggy-friendly walks MEANDER AROUND MINEHEAD Our coastal town of Minehead is well known by many as the oicial start (or end) of the 630-mile South West Coast Path. These huge metal hands holding a map can be found along the seafront. Whilst you’re taking in some sea air it’s also worth keeping an eye out for silver shells embedded in the promenade. The Maritime Mile Heritage Trail tracks you through our history whilst revealing Somerset Life myths and legends from Minehead’s past. Suitable for little legs as well as being wheel-friendly, this route features an open air gallery of images and information. The trail is downloadable from mineheadbay.co.uk and if you take your completed quiz sheet to the tourist information centre younger visitors can also win a prize. You could combine this walk with a visit to the Minehead Museum. April 2024 145
KIDS, THESE DAYS Join Angharad Paull as she explores the best places to entertain children in Somerset Brean Down to Weston-super-Mare. Photo: Siddiqui Media and Super Weston WHEELY WONDERFUL: try these buggy-friendly Somerset walks aving some good buggy-friendly walks up your sleeve is one of the best parenting hacks for those with young children. Somewhere you can escape to when you need to get out of the house with a newborn, a place to meet up and regain your sanity with other adults, or a chance to nap the baby while your older children burn of some energy. Plus, lots of fresh air supposedly helps babies sleep better… so it’s worth a try! Even if you don’t want to bring the pushchair along, all the walks I’ve selected have well-maintained paths, making them easily doable with youngsters in slings or on foot.From a commanding castle with sensational views, to a lockside stroll in rural countryside surroundings, a serene nature reserve with a rustic playground, to a peaceful riverside stroll on the edge of the city and a fabulous North Somerset coastal walk, get H 146 April 2024 your buggies at the ready for these delightful wheel-friendly adventures. Running alongside the 14.5 mile Bridgwater and Taunton Canal, the level tow path connects the two towns from Bridgwater Docks to the River Tone at Taunton. Predominantly rural, the canal makes a wonderful strolling spot for wildlife enthusiasts and those looking for a wheelfriendly countryside amble. One of the canal’s highlights is the Somerset Space Walk, a scaled model of the solar system (1:530,000,000, meaning that 1mm on the ground equates to 530km) created by Tauntonian inventor, poet and astronomer, Pip Youngman. This cosmicthemed canalside journey is a fun way to encourage any reluctant walking kids accompanying you. Planets run in both directions from ‘the sun’, which can be found at the canal’s mid-point, Maunsel Lock – a great place to start or end your stroll, as Maunsel Lock Tea Rooms have great cofee and big slabs of cake – the perfect reward for walkers. Somerset Boat Centre’s The Lock Inn is also nearby and has a dreamy pub garden for sunny days (check ahead for seasonal opening times). The towpath can be accessed from most road bridges that cross it - Bridgwater Docks (TA6 3HR), Kings Lock (TA7 0BG), Maunsel Lock (TA7 0DH), Charlton Engine House (TA3 5PF), Creech St. Michael (TA3 5PZ), Bathpool (TA2 8BZ) or Firepool Lock (TA1 1AJ), all of which have a car park nearby. Keep your eyes peeled for grey herons, kingishers, semi-aquatic grass snakes and, if you’re really lucky, the occasional otter. Best saved for drier days with buggies, as sections of the towpath can get muddy. canalrivertrust.org.uk Somerset Life
KIDS, THESE DAYS PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL The National Trust’s Dunster Castle Sitting atop a tor, surrounded by colourwashed, medieval thatched cottages, tea rooms, cobbled streets, spectacular grounds, rolling countryside and sea views, the red stone Dunster castle is straight out of a fairytale. As with many National Trust properties, accessibility for rolling wheels and families has been well-catered for here, path suitability is marked on a map and there’s plenty to see for a full family day out. A walk around the gardens takes you through four diferent microclimates and it doesn’t really matter which order you explore them in, but making your way up to the South Terrace via the hard surfaced Vine Walk will bring you out near the castle. On a sunny day, it’s easy enough to feel like you’ve been transported to tropical climes - the area has a Mediterranean feel thanks to its balmy (for Exmoor) micro-climate. Spiky palms line the pathway, framing views that reach as far as the Bristol Channel. It’s planted in the Victorian style, with spring bulbs and vibrant summer bedding plants painting the terrace with a riot of colour in season. From here you can wind your way up to The Keep garden, the highest point in the Dunster landscape with views looking down on the castle turrets and green Somerset hills. In 1721, this area was levelled and turned into a bowling green, with the Octagon Tower built to ofer shade to guests. If you have small children on foot, you’ll want to head towards the River Garden at some point, this area is wild and wooded and its lush, native microclimate seems to make everything grow SNUFF MILLS Snuf Mills gets its name from the old mill onsite whose waterwheel can still be seen churning away. It’s part of the Frome Valley Walkway, an 18-mile long path which can be picked up in Bristol’s Castle Park, and followed all the way to the Cotswold Hills. You don’t have to go that far though. Park at postcode BS16 1DL, then follow the River Frome through a beautiful rocky valley. Cross over Halfpenny Bridge and continue past the weirs until you get to a fork in the path. Turning right here will lead you uphill to Oldbury Court Estate, a lovely park with a fantastic kids’ playground. visitbristol.co.uk BREAN DOWN WAY Dunster Castle Gardens seemingly that much larger. Redwoods tower over the rustic log play area, while gigantic rhubarb leaves loom over visitors. Down here, the River Avil runs through the gardens, lowing under the characterful Lovers’ Bridge and made use of by the working water mill, which produces six tonnes of lour a year to make its own bread. It’s labelled on the map as unsuitable for some buggies, but is manageable unless it’s extra muddy. nationaltrust.org.uk The Brean Down Way, an eightmile trail (part of Sustrans route 33), links The Grand Pier in Weston-super-Mare to the tip of the stunning natural pier, Brean Down. The route takes keen walkers and cyclists through Uphill, passing The Boathouse Cafe, the Great Bird Screen of Brean (which protects roosting birds on tidal mud lats), sluice gates and the Walborough Nature Reserve on the River Axe estuary, all the way to Brean Down Fort. You’re not obligated to cover the entire eight miles - the Weston seafront stretch or charming Uphill marina are excellent abbreviated sections. breanbikehire.co.uk/breandown-way/ Chard Reservoir PHOTO:ANGHARADPAULL Situated on Chard’s north eastern fringes, this peaceful nature reserve is made up of native woodlands, wildlower meadows, and a reservoir. Ideal for buggy ramblers, thanks to good-surfaced pathways, there are three trails to choose from, leading of from the main car park at Oaklands Avenue. Visitors can tailor their walk’s length, pottering the 1.5km from one end of the reservoir to the other on the woodland path, or you can extend your stroll by walking along Chafcombe Road, joining the Sustrans cycle route, and then heading left along the old railway cycle route back to Touches Lane (3.3km). Whichever you opt for, be sure to include the woodland play zone and shoreline bird hide. visitsouthsomerset.com/ Somerset Life April 2024 147
SEND EDUCATION in independent schools From smaller classes to specialist facilities, the independent sector has a lot to ofer SEND children WORDS: hoosing the right school for your child can be one of the most stressful elements of parenting; no matter how many visits you make, prospectuses you read, and feedback you get from other families, the proof of the pudding is in your child lourishing, progressing well, and being happy, with all their needs met. And families might feel that inding the perfect placement can be even more of a challenge if their youngster has SEND – special educational needs and disabilities. C 148 April 2024 Kelly Rose Bradford Special educational needs and disabilities can impact a child’s education in many ways. The Department for Education cites both the social and academic setbacks that a SEND child can face, from struggling to make friends because of behavioural issues through to diiculties with reading and writing (for example, because of dyslexia), or the ability to understand or concentrate if they have conditions such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). In the private education sector, the Independent Schools Council (ISC) says almost a ifth of pupils attending ISC schools – more than 100,000 children – receive some form of SEND support, with the 2020 ISC census – the last one to be published before the start of the pandemic – showing that 87,338 pupils attending ISC schools were identiied as having SEND. The ISC census also identiied a 29 per cent rise last year in the number of pupils in its schools with an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP). This, says ISC spokesperson Somerset Life
EDUCATION Emily Roberts, is ‘testament to the trusted range of SEND provision available within independent schools.’ ‘Families often choose independent schools because of the smaller class sizes, or the specialist support they provide,’ she explains. ‘Independent schools are often better equipped to support pupils with SEND, both with their learning and through the process of diagnosing certain conditions.’ Some of these children – an estimated 29,000 – will have EHCPs, and have their places funded via their local authority, but the ISC says there are 90,000 children receiving SEND support in the independent sector without an EHCP. DO YOUR RESEARCH Dr Katharine Sharpe is head of learning support and assistant head (pastoral) at an independent school in Surrey and SEND subject advisor for IAPS. She urges parents to really do their research when looking for a school for their SEND child, and to not be afraid to ask questions. She says local forums and online communities can be a good source of information about the processes involved in getting your child a diagnosis, and inding out more about the provisions available in your area: ‘You can get the most incredibly rich information from families who are already navigating these systems. I’ve worked with lots of parents who have found them to be incredibly supportive and have signposted them to all sorts of things that they hadn’t thought about, or hadn’t found out about.’ Katharine also suggests parents familiarise themselves with Section 41 schools – independent special schools that have been approved by the government for children who have an EHCP, and where places are funded by the local authority. And while individual schools w ill have a diferent approach to their SEND provisions and their admissions process, Dr Sharpe points out that all schools have to operate in line with the Equality Act of 2010, and make reasonable adjustments for children with diagnosed special needs. ‘One of the things about the independent sector is obviously that they can have their own admissions criteria,’ she says, ‘but they all have to follow the legislation which applies in this area.’ PRIVATE ASSESSMENTS Michelle Catterson is executive head at Moon Hall School in Surrey, part of the Moon Hall Schools Educational Trust. A member of ISA, she says early intervention and assessment is key if you suspect your child may be struggling. The school has its own assessment centre so that families who ‘Almost a ifth of pupils attending ISC schools – more than 100,000 children – recieve some sort of SEND support’ have concerns about their children do not have to face lengthy waits for them to be assessed and diagnosed. ‘In our local area, if a child is in a state mainstream school and they need an education psychologist, it’s a minimum 12 month wait,’ she says. ‘And if you cannot get the assessment, and you cannot get the diagnosis, then you ultimately you don’t get the support that’s required and needed.’ At Moon Hall, the maximum amount of time a family would wait is six weeks, and because the assessments are means tested, they are available to all, regardless of their inancial situation. ‘It means that those families who are maybe going through the educational healthcare plan process and trying to apply for funding don’t have to wait,’ she explains. ‘They can get a private assessment done within a quick period of time at a rate that’s afordable for them.’ The centre is open to all families, and they don’t have to be interested in their child attending Moon Hall or live in the area. ‘We’ve had families driving for four hours to come for assessment because there’s just nothing available for them locally,’ Michelle says. And, she points out, what brings a child to the centre for assessment (or indeed any assessment facility) isn’t always down to their learning capabilities. > far left: Adapting lessons to meet children’s needs is paramount. Photo: Monkeybusinessimages/iStock/Getty Images Plus left: Parents should not be afraid to ask questions. Photo: FredericMichel/iStock/Getty Images circle: Dr Katharine Sharpe urges parents to do their research when looking for a school for their SEND child. Photo: Dr Katharine Sharpe Somerset Life April 2024 149
EDUCATION While feedback from teachers, or a youngster not grasping context as quickly as other children, is often the cause for investigation, physical manifestations can also be an indicator of SEND, such as a general reluctance to attend school, or having physical symptoms. ‘They could wake up in the morning with tummy pains or anxiety symptoms, or not go to bed at night or be able to get into a sleep routine very easily,’ Michelle explains. A LIFE-CHANGING EXPERIENCE Once a child is in the right setting and getting the support they need, Michelle says it is ‘transformational’, and that the change in them can be evident from day one. ‘I’ve had parents say it’s the irst time their child has actually talked about their day or spoken passionately about something they’ve learned. Of course, it takes longer for some, but I would say for the majority of above: Michelle Catterson says early intervention and assessment is key. Photo: Michelle Catterson bottom: Smaller class sizes often means more support in independent schools. Photo: monkeybusinessimages/iStock/Getty Images Plus our pupils, as soon as they come here, school is completely diferent for them.’ For some of Michelle’s students, their previous experience of school was quite negative, and left them feeling misunderstood or unable to access the learning. ‘For a number of them, when they then come to a special school it is the very irst time that they’re not seen as the daydreamer, the naughty kid, or the kid who won’t sit still, because the teachers around them are familiar with their needs and how best to support them,’ she says. Moon Hall School follows the mainstream national curriculum, and does the same GCSEs, but focuses the way they learn around the pupil and their needs. The children also spend their time in the classroom in the way they feel most comfortable – perhaps standing up, or while using idget toys. ‘One thing that we really push at Moon Hall is to be aspirational for the children because quite often their skills can be downplayed, or they can be masked or hidden behind their diiculties or their diferences. We try to ind what they really excel in, and support it as best we possibly can,’ Michelle says. ‘And that really is the change maker for the children; when they are inally understood, and inally have their needs met.’ NEED TO KNOW: ABBREVIATIONS AND TERMINOLOGY SEND Special educational needs and disabilities. EHCP An education, health and care plan (EHCP) lays out the educational, health and social support children and young people (aged up to 25) need when they require more than what is available through special educational needs (SEND) support. SENCO In schools, the special educational needs coordinator (SENCO) is responsible for ensuring students who have special educational needs or disabilities get the support they need. . Section 41 schools These are independent special schools which have been approved by the Secretary of State under section 41 of the Children and Families Act. Parents whose children have a EHCP have a right to request this type of school in the same way they can a maintained school. IN ASSOCIATION WITH: The ISC represents more than 1,400 independent schools in the UK and overseas. isc.co.uk The ISA brings all types of independent schools together under its membership; specialist, arts, faith, bilingual and more, educating all ages. isaschools.org.uk IAPS represents around 670 preparatory schools and is a member of the ISC. iaps.uk FIND OUT MORE: Moon Hall Schools Educational Trust moonhallschoolreigate.co.uk 150 April 2024 Somerset Life
The right setting can be transformational. Photo: Ridofranz/iStock/Getty Images Plus Somerset Life April 2024 151
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AMERICAN MUSEUM & GARDENS museums to visit this spring Somerset Life MARY SHELLEY’S HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN PHOTO: HOUSEOFFRANKENSTEIN As April welcomes the Easter holidays (and its customary short sharp showers!) why not take this opportunity for a family trip to marvel at the exhibits on show in these Bath museums PHOTO:CASPERFARRELL Showcasing American decorative arts and recreating periods of American history, Anglo-American couple Dallas Pratt and John Judkyn created this museum to dispel stereotypes of American culture. Expect exhibitions of fashion, music, folk art and maps. Outside, there are 125 acres of landscaped gardens to explore including an arboretum, amphitheatre, children’s garden as well as trails and parklands. americanmuseum.org Whilst living in Bath, Mary Shelley wrote the world’s irst science iction novel – Frankenstein. Set in a Grade IIlisted building, this museum promises to be an immersive experience for all visitors. Uncover Shelley’s history before confronting the formidable 8ft monster that Mary imagined through her writings. There’s mystery aplenty with two escape rooms set up to test your problem solving skills – do you have what it takes to solve the gruesome clues? houseofrankenstein.com April 2024 155 >
PHOTO: RACHELMEAD ROMAN BATHS Book your slot online, pop in your headphones and wander at your own pace among the steaming pools and ancient artefacts. Be sure to keep a look out for the gilt bronze head of the Roman goddess Sulis Minerva which was discovered in 1727. It was a very rare ind and is believed to be an original object from the irst century. romanbaths.co.uk With a collection dating back to 5000 BC, the museum’s comprehensive displays include exhibits of ceramics, bronzes and jade, as well as bamboo and wood carvings. Keep an eye out for the tea ceremonies which run once a month on a Thursday. Set in a tranquil gallery space, the demonstration introduces you to cultural traditions surrounding the Japanese tea ceremony and the chance to have a cup of authentic matcha tea! meaa.org HOLBURNE MUSEUM The ifth baronet of Menstrie in Scotland, Sir William Holburne inherited the family title and a modest fortune. After completing a grand tour of Europe, a lifelong interest in art was formed and an enthusiastic collection of sculptures, porcelain and Dutch landscapes was gathered in his home in Bath. His wish was for his collection to be left to the City of Bath for all to enjoy. holburne.org THE JANE AUSTEN CENTRE MUSEUM OF BATH AT WORK A visit to the Jane Austen Centre immerses you fully into an educational and entertaining journey through the Regency era. Warmly welcomed by costumed guides, you’ll be invited to write with a quill pen and ink before you head to the Regency Tea Room to experience ‘Afternoon Tea with Mr Darcy’. Expect exquisite cakes, inger sandwiches and fresh warmed scones, all served with exceptional quality of service. janeausten.co.uk Step back in time as you enter the reconstructed workplaces of ironmongers, engineering works and even a izzy drinks factory! Buy your entrance ticket at Mr Bowler’s shop, featuring original Victorian shop ittings. Then explore the display of Bath’s working life through the ages. Exhibits include an original ‘Bath Chair’ for those who were carried to the healing baths, and an early car from the Horstmann Car Company of Bath. bath-at-work.org.uk In conjunction with Bath BID 156 April 2024 Somerset Life PHOTO:HOLBURNEMUSEUM PHOTO:MEAA THE MUSEUM OF EAST ASIAN ART
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NUTRITION KNOW-HOW Top Nutritionist Pauline Cox MSc, author of Hungry Woman and owner of Sow & Arrow, answers your health questions Dear Pauline I have heard great things about cold water swimming. I live in Clevedon and have access to the wonderful Marine lake. I am 47 years old, a competent swimmer but have never ventured into cold water swimming before! I know you are a keen cold-water swimmer, I would be grateful to hear some of the beneits of cold-water swimming, as well as any advice you may have. Thank you, Emily Dear Emily, I am indeed an avid cold-water swimmer! Whilst the thought of immersing in cold water may send chills down your spine, there are many physical and mental health beneits. There are certainly some safety considerations, which I will cover, however, irstly let’s begin with the top ive beneits of cold-water swimming: 1 Immune System Support Cold water swimming, which is deined as swimming in waters below 10 degrees Celsius, is reported to boost white blood cells, which helps to ight of infections and other diseases. 2 Reduces Inlammation Cold water can help to reduce inlammation as well as serve as a natural pain-reliever. Long-term inlammation damages our delicate tissues. A reduction in inlammation can be helpful for those with general aches and pains. PHOTO:PAULINECOX 3 Increases Metabolism Immersing in cold water results in a reduction in core body temperature. Over time the body adapts to this practice by converting white body fat (the type we may want to be trying to get rid of!) to a more metabolically active brown fat. This brown fat increases our metabolic rate, helping us to burn more calories. Taking the plunge into cold water swimming them to contract and relax as a result of rapidly changing temperatures. Improved blood low supports healthy tissues and tissue regeneration. STAYING SAFE WHILST COLD-WATER SWIMMING Whilst there are many beneits to cold water swimming, it is also important to follow safety precautions. a) Always swim with company. Swimming with company ensures if one of you needs help, the other can be called upon for support. Swimming with a group is even better! Find a local cold-water swimming group, such as The Bluetits Chill Swimmers, where you will ind swimmers of all experience levels. 4 Improves Mood and Reduces Anxiety When we immerse in cold water, initially there may be an increase in anxiety and much trepidation. However, following this, there is a large boost in our feel-good hormone dopamine. This resultant dopamine spike helps us to feel motivated and energised. b) Be aware of your surroundings Knowing the area you are swimming in is extremely important. Is it tidal, what is the depth, are there objects under the water that you are not familiar with? 5 Blood Flow Our blood vessels contain tiny muscles, helping them to contract and relax. Cold water exposure helps to exercise these muscles, causing c) Choose the appropriate clothing Warm clothing before and after will help you warm up quickly and safely. Wearing wetsuit booties, gloves, appropriate swim wear and a hat is of great importance. Somerset Life d) Don’t get in too quickly! Ease yourself into the water. The cold water can cause your breathing to increase and muscles to tense up. Easing in and slowing your breathing down will help to transition into the cold temperature. e) Enjoy some post-swim comfort! Bring a hot lask full of tea, a hot water bottle and some tasty nibbles to help warm you up and fuel you after the cold. A warming cup of turmeric chai (my favourite!) and some delicious chocolate coconut macaroons are a tasty and healthy way to warm up and fuel up after your swim. For a range of healthy nibbles and plastic-free teas, visit sowandarrow.com or visit the physical store at 15 Old Street, Clevedon. Open Tuesday – Saturday. . The information in this article is not ofered as advice, but as a guide. Always consult an expert before starting any new sports such as coldwater swimming. To learn more from Pauline, follow her on Instagram @paulinejcox or read her latest book, Hungry Woman – Eating for Good Health, Happiness + Hormones. April 2024 159

FASHION SHADES of spring Get ready for brighter days with an array of fresh neutrals and subtle pops of colour COMPILED BY: Beth Windsor 3 2 1 5 6 4 1. Dazzling cardigan, £3,995, shop.brunellocucinelli.com 2. Spring Gardens hand beaded bag, £65, joebrowns.co.uk 3. The Hemley fedora in cream, £79, hicksandbrown.com 4. White Greta trousers, £950, connollyengland.com 5. Fakenham shirt in pale pink, £79.95, schoffelcountry.com 6. The Finchley trainer in white leather, £145, fairfaxandfavor.com Somerset Life April 2024 161


WHAT IS IT? F I R ST DR I V E: Lexus LBX Lexus enters new territory with the LBX - but can this small SUV come out on top in a very congested market? WORDS: Jack Evans PHOTOS: Lexus/PA Lexus occupies quite an interesting space in the UK’s motoring landscape. It is known, of course, for its premium models which tend to revolve around larger, more high-end body styles. Take the full-size RX SUV, for example, or the comfort-focused ES. But even Lexus can’t ignore the growing demand for smaller SUVs and crossovers, which has prompted the creation of this – the LBX. It’s built with a little help from Toyota – the LBX shares a platform and engine setup with the irm’s Yaris Cross – but has been tweaked to give it some of the hallmark features which people expect from Lexus, such as a higherquality interior and improved reinement. But in a segment as cut-throat as the one for crossovers, can the LBX stand out? WHAT’S UNDER THE BONNET? The engine setup in the LBX is one thing which remains largely unchanged against the Yaris Cross. It’s a standard ‘self-charging’ hybrid setup which uses a 1.5-litre threecylinder engine at its core, linked to a new ‘bipolar’ hybrid battery which aims to bring more power compared with a traditional 164 April 2024 Somerset Life
MOTORING battery but with far lower weight. In fact, weight is a big factor with the LBX, as at 1,350kg it’s remarkably light compared with many of its rivals. Eiciency-wise, this hybrid system pays dividends. Lexus claims you could get up to 62.7mpg combined alongside CO2 emissions of between 102 and 108g/km depending on wheel size. Power goes to the front wheels via a CVT automatic gearbox and, if you’d like a little extra traction, an all-wheel-drive version will also be available. WHAT’S IT LIKE TO DRIVE? All of the major driving characteristics in the LBX are positive. It’s a light car and this transfers through to the way it drives as it manages to feel nimble and agile through the bends, while the steering has a nice bit of weight to it. With a zero to 60mph time of nine seconds dead, it isn’t what you’d call fast, but the electric assistance that you get from a dead stop means it feels a little bit sharper away from the lights than the igures might suggest. Though Lexus is known for its hushed cabin the LBX does sufer from some prominent wind and road noise – particularly when you’re travelling over rough surfaces – but it isn’t too bad and is largely what we’d expect from a car of this size. The CVT gearbox, as is the case with nearly all cars using it, is loud and raucous if you really press on the throttle – but drive the LBX in a calmer fashion and it feels far more suited to the job. It’s ideal for around-town driving; it’s only when you need to join a motorway that it really becomes noisy. WHAT’S IT LIKE INSIDE? Lexus always aims to take its cars down a more premium route than others in the market and, in most places, this is the case with the LBX. Smart stitching, nicely damped buttons and a good it and inish help to elevate it above rivals, though there are some scratchier plastics placed here and there, with the large glove box being a noticeable area where things don’t feel quite so top-end. Rear-seat space isn’t too bad, though if the driver is taller than the person sitting behind them it’s going to feel quite squashed. Though there’s the capacity for three-abreast seating in the LBX, it really does feel like this would be best suited to occasional use – it’s far too small to be seen as a reliable ive-seater. A 402-litre boot is decent for this class of car, too, and you can extend it to 994 litres with the rear seats down. WHAT’S THE SPEC LIKE? The LBX range kicks of at a competitive £29,995, with entry-level ‘Urban’ grade cars getting plenty of equipment from the of – there’s 17-inch wheels as standard alongside LED headlights, front and rear parking sensors and a 9.8-inch touchscreen with all the smartphone mirroring systems you need. At this price point the LBX makes for quite good value, too, and though you can move through the ranks – and rise as high as the £40,545 Takumi Design speciication – it feels as though this Lexus delivers more than enough equipment without having to trouble the upper echelons of the trim list. FINAL SAY It takes quite a lot to stand out in this crowded market, but we reckon the LBX has done just enough to put its head above the parapet. It’s a ine alternative to cars like the Audi Q2, which is now starting to feel its age, with the LBX’s well-speciied interior and eicient powertrain setup making it a choice which both feels a little bit special and yet still economical to run. We’d argue that at higher speciications the LBX becomes a little too expensive to recommend, but in lower grades – and at that all-important sub-£30,000 price tag – this is quite a convincing small crossover. . TECH & SPEC Model: Lexus LBX Price: from £29,990 Powertrain: 1.5-litre hybrid Power: 134bhp Torque: 185Nm Max speed: 106mph 0-60mph: 9.0 seconds MPG: 62.7 Emissions: 102-108g/km Somerset Life April 2024 165



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JANE TOWNSON OBE The CEO of the Homecare Association, who has extensive experience in the social care, health, housing and technology sectors aring for family or friends who are ageing or unwell gives rise to complex and mixed emotions, such as love, afection, frustration, anger, grief, sadness and guilt. Carer guilt is a common experience among those caring for loved ones, particularly in cases of chronic or terminal illness such as cancer or dementia. This can stem from a variety of sources, including feelings of inadequacy, resentment, feeling overwhelmed and a belief they are not doing enough for their loved ones. Lack of information, training and guidance can also worsen guilt if carers are unsure of how to perform tasks, such as providing care, treatment planning, and treatment decision-making. This may increase their sense of powerlessness, adding to distress. Research focused on carers of people with dementia identiied seven categories of guilt derived from: a carer’s own actions; their sense of limitation; feeling negative emotions; changes in the relationship with the person cared for; neglecting other areas; actions of the person cared for; and guilt induced by others. Researchers explored the dynamics of guilt in family carers of cancer patients. They found that stress processes, contextual factors, and the progression of the patient’s illness heightened guilt. The study also suggested a strong link between feelings of guilt and distress, implying that guilt can contribute to the development and maintenance of depression among carers. Evidence suggests that carer guilt can lead to poorer coping mechanisms and health outcomes. All too often, for example, a sense of guilt delays or stops family carers seeking help from professional care providers. Many view this as abandoning their loved one or failing to provide everything themselves. In reality, part-time or full-time professional care may be the kindest and most beneicial solution for all involved. If carers struggle on alone and damage their own health, they may have to reduce or cease caring. Beneits of drawing on professional care services include: • Rebalancing relationships: When a carer is partially or fully relieved of caring responsibilities, they can return to being daughter, son, partner, friend, rather than carer. Many say they feel more comfortable and able to enjoy the company of their loved one when caring work is no longer the focus. It is very common to hear people say: ‘I wish I’d sought help sooner.’ 170 April 2024 PHOTO: RIDOFRANZ/GETTYIMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO C Hardships of care • Skills and experience: Goodquality, regulated care agencies train professional caregivers to provide high standards of care. Their experience of caring for older and disabled people gives them expertise most of us lack. Some care needs for certain health conditions require specialist training and supervision and are best met by professionals. • Safety: People with memory loss, limited mobility, or impaired judgment beneit from professional support and supervision. This keeps them safe and gives carers peace of mind, as none of us can be on duty 24/7. • Respite: Professional respite care lets carers take breaks to rest and renew. This helps to sustain energy needed for caring over long periods. • Companionship: Loneliness is detrimental to emotional health. Professional caregivers provide meaningful social interaction when a family carer cannot be present. Supporting carers and understanding and easing feelings of guilt are thus vital for the wellbeing of all involved. Some strategies for managing carer guilt include acknowledging the emotions; adjusting expectations; and understanding that needing help or taking time for oneself does not relect a lack of care or love for the individual in need. TIPS TO MINIMISE FEELINGS OF GUILT: 1. Have open conversations with your loved one about care options. Include them in decisions 2. Educate yourself on services like homecare, live-in care, respite care, adult day services, and care homes. Know your options 3. Recognise your limits. You cannot address complex or round-the-clock needs alone 4. Let go of perceptions of yourself as the only one who can care for your loved one. This is unrealistic and adds pressure 5. Focus on quality time with your loved one when you are not caregiving 6. Express your feelings of guilt to supportive friends and family who can ofer reassurance 7. Make self-care a priority every day through healthy eating, rest, exercise, and relaxing activities 8. Relect on the positives and feel proud of yourself for supporting your loved one despite challenges Providing care for a loved one is an enormous responsibility. Normal feelings of guilt can arise, but must not prevent you from seeking help. Prioritise self-care and know that supplementing your care with expert help is wise. With the right balance of care and support, both you and your loved one can beneit. . Somerset Life

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NEXT ISSUE Turn to WHAT’S ON for four pages of great events taking place this month! P75-78 Adam Henson The BBC Countryile presenter is visiting Wells to talk all things farming and media DON’T MISS THE May issue on sale April 19 SOCIAL Somerset Life RED ALERT HIGH ADVENTURE Artist Kirstie Macleod welcomes us into her Castle Cary studio ahead of The Red Dress exhibition in Somerton Innovative Somerset product designers Latitude Tents invite us to road-test a rooftop tent on Exmoor Find us on Facebook /Somerset Life Magazine Snap with us on Instagram @somersetlifemagazine April 2024 175
SOMERSET DIRECTORY 01823 365013 Please recycle this magazine 176 April 2024 Somerset Life
THE CRUCIVERBALIST NOUN. A person who enjoys or is skilled at solving crosswords CRYPTIC CROSSWORD Somerset Life 30 It’s a whiter version of ‘squirm’! (6) DOWN 1 Ogle at open rebellion in all the population’s blueprints (4,4) 2 Rescue to be attempted with lullaby (8) 3 Stone cross, with ebony end as frontispiece (4) 5 Cry out in admiration at playwright’s device (8,5) 6 Fly Emirate of into genealogy (6,4) 7 Mean to use tinned ingredients (6) 8 Lizards are a match for 100,000 egos (6) 10 Purr in an alternate way for the para-normal (13) 14 Ecologically sound discussion document? (5,5) 17 It’s what your sporty baby can wear, maybe (8) 18 Sort of front surface font? (8) 21 Bad state of mind that’s ok for a mushroom! (6) 22 Response? Eat up a cocktail with bad manners (6) 26 Gets a robust chunk for the monarch (4) QUICK CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Elaborate (6) 4 Swings (4) 7 Argument (3) 9 Be on cloud nine (5) 10 Clamour from many people (3,3,3) 11 Gang (4) 12 Scheme (4) 13 Allocation (5) 15 Varnish (7) 16 Bog product (4) 17 In the past (3) 20 Gemstone (4) 21 Chicken (7) 24 Native American tent (5) 25 Pig meat (4) 26 Fruit (4) 28 X-ray medicine (9) 29 Bedlam (5) 30 Rowing gear (3) 31 Considered (4) 32 Arrival (6) DOWN 1 Cloudy (8) 2 Made impotent (8) 3 ‘Goodbye’ (2-2) 5 Turn away (5) 6 Essential (Latin) (4,3,3) 7 Calculate (6) 8 Ambush (6) 10 Spiral (7) 14 Worn out (7,3) 16 Depict (7) 18 Stand still (8) 19 Toy (5,3) 22 Two-sourced (6) 23 Arachnid (6) 25 Picture (5) 27 Dart (4) CRYPTIC ANSWERS: Across: 1 Gibbon, 4 Edifying, 9 Nervy, 10 Pragmatic, 11 Peel, 12 Sera, 13 Lingo, 15 Observe, 16 Iota, 19 Bean, 20 Ideally, 23 Lap up, 24 Toot, 25 Byte, 27 Stag party, 28 Scuba, 29 Drearily, 30 Writhe. Down: 1 Gene pool, 2 Berceuse, 3 Onyx, 5 Dramatic irony, 6 Family tree, 7 Intend, 8 Geckos, 10 Preternatural, 14 Green paper, 17 Playsuit, 18 Typeface, 21 Closed, 22 Uptake, 26 Tsar. QUICK ANSWERS: Across: 1 Ornate, 4 Yaws, 7 Row, 9 Exult, 10 Hue and cry, 11 Crew, 12 Plot, 13 Quota, 15 Shellac, 16 Peat, 17 Ago, 20 Opal, 21 Rooster, 24 Tepee, 25 Pork, 26 Ugli, 28 Radiology, 29 Chaos, 30 Oar, 31 Took, 32 Advent. Down: 1 Overcast, 2 Neutered, 3 Ta-ta, 5 Avert, 6 Sine qua non, 7 Reckon, 8 Waylay, 10 Helical, 14 Clapped out, 16 Portray, 18 Stagnate, 19 Train set, 22 Stereo, 23 Spider, 25 Photo, 27 Scud. ACROSS 1 Ape to play bingo with a blockhead (6) 4 Feign DIY incompetence, to be uplifting (8) 9 Tense diner, vying for a half portion (5) 10 Pam? Tragic type, but practical (9) 11 Ring bells, but scrape elbow in amongst (4) 12 Laser action, reducing blood luids (4) 13 Oh the language at a failed log-in! (5) 15 See how it can be verbose (7) 16 Tiny bit of a preparation I have to take (4) 19 Mr Legume, eh Rowan? (4) 20 In a perfect world of concepts? (7) 23 Happily take in a Pulp Fiction (3,2) 24 Honk also at casual shirt (4) 25 Bystander who darns away for the computer unit (4) 27 Said to be a dear equivalent of a hen party? (4,5) 28 Taken from cub, as ‘Tin Lung’ (5) 29 Dismally, things are drily presented (8) For more free puzzles from Professor Rebus please go to Pitcherwits.co.uk April 2024 177
The world according to CADBURY This month: The arrival of woolly intruders ear Reader You might recall that my most recent column dwelled on my hidden insecurities and that I was consumed by the green-eyed monster, jealous as I was of the preferential treatment received by the Labrador. Far be it for me to labour the point any further than it should be laboured. However – if you will humour me a little more – you will bear witness to an increase in Spaniel Neglect, which began with the arrival of four woolly gatecrashers on Good Friday. Timely, some might say, for a glorious Easter Sunday feast. However, these intruders (or orphan lambs as they were referred to from above) were NOT destined for the table as I had anticipated expectantly. A sad state of afairs indeed, given that the meat-andbone remains of a roast dinner often make their way down the food chain to my Labrador friend and me – Easter being only second to Christmas in the Leftover Stakes. No, these uninvited guests disembarked to much fanfare from a trailer and were warmly invited to step over the metaphorical – and physical – threshold into a cosy stable pen lined with straw, like some ridiculous (and festively mis-timed I might add) Biblical scene. Everyone crowded round and made a huge fuss, picking each one up and discussing absurd names for them. The Labrador was somewhat perplexed as she did not have the athletic ability to stand on her hind legs and peer over the wooden pallet structure as I did, and so had to rely on glimpses through the gaps and a running commentary from my vantage point. There was much bleating and a pervading stench of sheep. I was distinctly unimpressed by this latest invasion. When it became hurtfully clear that our presence was not welcome – and when one too many jokes had been cracked about my admittedly longer-than-usual- D for-this-time-of-year lufy coat and how I might be ‘mistaken’ ha ha ha for one of the lambs – we sloped of in disgust, united for once in our mutual jealousy. Later that afternoon, some guests arrived for the weekend and they were ceremoniously led in the direction of the stables to greet the newcomers. Two days later (and with total lack of awareness at the irony I might add) a distant relative of these orphan lambs was laid on the dining table in all its rosemary-and-garlic-infused glory and greeted with ravenous enthusiasm, all the while observed by yours truly. And if I was confused, you can only imagine how the Labrador’s brain was coping with this U-turn in the human mindset. From stable to table, just like that. Now, twice a day, bottles of milk are prepared for our new guests – the animal ones, not the human – and wolfed down with a greed that is embarrassing to observe. The yard is covered in wisps of straw and wool and conversation is dominated by their arrival. Frankly, I am at a loss as to the attraction. Their recall is non-existent, they are unable to retrieve (even the Labrador can manage this simple task when her arthritis allows) and they have sharp and angular hooves that prevent the sort of proper physical afection that a dog allows. I am therefore consoling myself with the thought that this ‘agricultural’ fad is unlikely to last as long as a simple cat or dog arrangement. Moreover, though I am loathe to admit such sentimentality, I do confess to enjoying the bond it has brought to the more normal animal members of the house as a result. Although the cats are not particularly bothered by any upending of the status quo. Come to think of it, the cats are not particularly bothered by anything. Oh to be a cat, now that April is here. Love, or what you will, Cadbury ‘Everyone crowded round and made a huge fuss, picking each one up and discussing absurd names for them’ WORDS: 178 April 2024 Kate Robinson Somerset Life
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