Wednesday, 30 January 2013
A WAKE UP CALL FROM HIBERNATION
I'm afraid it has been a few months since I last "blogged" but I have now been shocked and stirred from my winter hibernation! By courtesy of a village group called LoveGoostrey I learn that we have yet another battle on our hands. Yes, you can guess, if not already informed, we are about to face another invasion from the developers who believe that Goostrey's green fields are ripe for what on the Spanish costas would be labelled urbanisation . Hand-in-hand in consultations with Cheshire East Council's Local Plan several builders are already rumoured to have quietly crept under the village radar to discuss at least three sites ( off Station Road. Main Road and Mount Pleasant) where 234 new homes can be plonked on green acres.What is more insulting is that in planning speak we have been robbed of our rural status and an ancient name that was mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086. Goostrey is now classed as a small town, lumped together in Cheshire East in 13 areas known as Local Service Centres, including Holmes Chapel, Chelford and Alderley Edge, where 2,000 new homes will be built if developers and, no doubt, housing associations have their way. The insane council mandarin who thought up this one must have been breast-fed on George Orwell's 1984!
It may be of news to many that with less than a month to go before discussions on the proposals must end on February 26, the bid to expand Goostrey is currently part of Cheshire East Council's consultation with the community over its Local Plan. Now, I know I have been a little inactive over the past few months but until the LoveGoostrey newsletter arrived on my mat from its chairman Martin de Kretser I was largely ignorant of the issues unfolding about the Local Plan, or that my views were being sought. I must have missed out somewhere. Even local newspapers serving the area appear to have ignored the story although I am sure it must have been given a mention. But it seems sad I have to rely on a residents newsletter to keep informed. Fair enough, Cheshire East Council does have a website devoted to the issue but take your eye off the ball and how do you know it exists ? Or that you can look at the draft plan in Holmes Chapel library! Surely in this age of mass communications it was not beyond the wit of the council to send a note to all households seeking their comments.Get behind with the rates and I'd bet they would soon be knocking on the door!
According to LoveGoostrey (website http://LoveGoostrey.wordpress.com) there is now the opportunity (if belatedly) for residents to make their views known to influence where (or if) all these houses will go in the village. "The Local Plan affects everyone in the village but you can influence how Goostrey will look in the future," the LG say. The initial reaction to the proposals is that it currently appears to encourage a disproportionate development of Goostrey. Rightly it maintains that too much development would affect everyone in the village with too many additional houses, people and cars and all the infrastructure to support them. "If you want to go on living in a rural village you need to act now and add your comments to the Consultation to limit the development." Few would claim that Goostrey is one of those pretty postcard villages beloved of chocolate box makers but it does have its own charm and picturesque corners. The rash of development in the sixties and seventies managed to take place without the loss of its soul and was welcomed by and large by its inhabitants of then little more than 1,000. It seemed to me to have been a seamless merger of new and old, and certainly I have yet to meet anyone who has not felt a genuine welcome in the village. But there are limits to this kind of passive acceptance and overkill can lead only to resentment. Over the past 30 years Goostrey has grown at a slower, more natural rural pace, with any new housing on a small scale or in individual plots. Needs of local families should now be the issue for a Local Plan - not several hundred mansion-style homes (and no doubt a few so-called affordable houses) built by speculators and designed for wannabe country people at asking prices far beyond what any young couple from Goostrey can afford.
I would urge anyone interested in the future of the village to log on to the LoveGoostrey website to read its well argued assessment of the Local Plan. Cheshire East's website for comments is: http://cheshireeast-consult.limehouse.co.uk/portal/planning/
Thursday, 27 September 2012
GOOSTREY'S CROWN REIGNS AGAIN !
Since scaffolding went up around The Crown in Goostrey several weeks ago villagers have waited anxiously for completion of its transformation. The Crown is more than just a pub though. It has been a centre of local life for generations - albeit in recent times a dubious title as the sadly missed late Gerry Bridgwood and his wife, Cynthia, struggled against all the odds to keep it open.
Now under a new team it is being reborn this Friday (September 28) and among the feast of food and beers on offer Gerry has not been forgotten - a real ale called Bridgwood has been created in memory of the former landlord and ex-professional player with Stoke City!
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New team in charge at The Crown, Emma and Chris |
With a minimum of structural change, the inn has been sympathetically refurbished to become a true village local, in appearance I guess more than it has been for a century or so. Anyone who feared it was destined to become a trendy chromium plated eatery filled with gastronomic overload will be delighted at the result.
I had a sneak preview with Edward Barlow as a battalion of tradesmen fought to finish off before the 5 pm opening deadline. It is astonishing what has been achieved in such a short time - and only the incessant rain this week prevented the completion of the outside face-lift and removal of scaffolding.
The man in charge at The Crown, Chris Jennings, formerly manager at the Church House, Bollington, and his assistant manager, Emma Small, say they will be working all out to put the Crown back on the map at the hub of village life.
"We're a local team and we think we know what's been missing in Goostrey - our concept is simple, we want to recreate what we believe is a true village local and a fabulous place to eat, drink and be merry."
And I think we can all say cheers to that!
Tuesday, 25 September 2012
CROP OF HARVEST FESTIVITIES
Goostrey's parish church has organised one of its most ambitious harvest
festivals since its foundation more than 800 years ago.
St
Luke’s is holding the week-long celebration of harvest-time in
the run up to the church’s traditional
harvest thanksgiving service this coming Sunday (September 30).
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Harvest in the sun! |
With so much rain lashing down it has not been much like harvest but each day this week is being marked in the church with an event and displays.
The displays of harvests of grain, ocean, garden, earth and flocks is also providing
children from Goostrey Community School and other local schools with the
opportunity to take part in hands-on activities such as pottery making, weaving woollen thread, sowing seeds and even
making a boat to illustrate a Bible story from the Sea of Galilee.
The event called Harvest Experience, which
is being arranged by a team of volunteers, is based on the success of the
Easter Experience held at St Luke’s two years ago.
Adults
are being invited to take part in activities in the church linked to the
harvest displays on Thursday between 7.30 pm and 9 pm .
A
harvest supper open to all together with a folk band in the village hall on Saturday has also been organised as part of
the celebrations.
The
vicar, the Revd Ian Gregory, tells me the events will focus on the religious significance as well as the practical aspects
of the different harvests.
“Harvest festival is one of the most important times in the rural
calendar and as such it was felt it was more deserving of attention during the
week leading up to our celebration week-end,” he says.
St
Luke’s was built around 1220 and rebuilt in the 18th century when
the timbered church was demolished, but
a place of worship may have existed on the site since the Anglo Saxons.
The
first recorded vicar was Abel in 1220 and a yew tree in the churchyard has been
identified as 1,200 years old.
Sunday, 9 September 2012
TRYING TO GET ON THE RIGHT LINE
I've just returned from another little adventure on the bus to Northwich. It was quite a jolly jaunt but this time the round trip took no more than five hours ! But it did include a spot of retail therapy before returning via train from Sandbach station. Now, I've often joked at being "confused of Goostrey" - some say it is no joke ! - but on this occasion after the bus dropped me off outside the station I can honestly say I was totally confused. So too was the lady I asked if she knew which side of the station did the Manchester-bound trains stop ! She confided it was also her first visit to Sandbach station as a Secret Shopper to check on the station staff and she had no idea either. Like many stations on this line, it was securely padlocked, not a soul or fellow traveller in sight and certainly no rail staff to point the way. Several other passengers arrived and, like me, they had no idea but as in TV's Who Wants to be a Millionaire one of them phoned a friend who guessed we'd be on the right tracks if we crossed the bridge to the opposite side. Sure enough, I then spotted a sign on the platform saying Manchester trains - only trouble was there was also an arrow that appeared to direct us back over the bridge the way we came! All very confusing but by this time my lady SS had vanished after ascertaining no staff were ever on duty so I decided to stick it out. Wise move as moments later the train came,but it would be helpful if Northern Rail marked its up and down lines clearly.
A notice on the platform told me that moves were afoot to revive Friend's of Sandbach Station.
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Station master with five staff at Goostrey Station (Click on picture to enlarge) |
This is an excellent idea. Since such a group was formed at Goostrey, the station has regained some of its old sparkle with fresh plantings of flowers and hacking back the jungle of grass by enthusiastic volunteers. I hear there are more improvements planned to make the station a more pleasant travelling experience, including the possibility of a shop in the old waiting room. I can hardly believe that in living memory Goostrey was a hive of activity with its own station master and staff but the evidence is in the picture I reproduce here.
I have no beef with Northern Rail and have no idea why Sandbach station deserved a Secret Shopper. Just to keep the record on line, I've always found its train staff excellent and most helpful !
I have no beef with Northern Rail and have no idea why Sandbach station deserved a Secret Shopper. Just to keep the record on line, I've always found its train staff excellent and most helpful !
Tuesday, 21 August 2012
JODRELL BANK IS THE MEMORIAL TO SIR BERNARD
It seems an eternity since the night in Congleton town hall when a slightly-built, academic-like figure held a capacity audience spellbound with his vision of outer space. I'm afraid his world of planets and pulsars were way beyond my horizons. But then Professor Bernard Lovell, later to become Sir Bernard, was on a mission to show Jodrell Bank radio telescope would not be a blot on the landscape. Many years later when Jodrell Bank was not only well-established but had listed status as an iconic structure of the 20th century, I had good reason to thank Sir Bernard for his powers in persuading the planners to allow its construction. Most people are unaware that JB has the final say on significant developments because of the increased risk of electrical interference to its operations.
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Sir Bernard Lovell |
Sir Bernard, as everyone is aware, died earlier this month at the great age of 98, still in the house at Swettenham where occasionally as a cub reporter I would call with my news editor, the late John Condliffe, who in later life took over the ownership of the Congleton Chronicle, in search of the hottest news from Jodrell Bank. He was always most courteous and I don't believe he ever sent an inquiring journalist away without a nugget for his paper.
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First moon landing |
The funeral service for the telescope's founding father is to be held appropriately in the tiny church of St Peter this Thursday in his village where the radio astronomer played the organ for some 40 years. I hear the great and the good will be present, the church filled with family and close friends, the service relayed to the overflow congregation on closed circuit TV in a series of marquees on the car park of the Swettenham Arms. Sir Bernard's final request was for a simple burial in the churchyard with his wife, who died in 1993. And I guess his most fitting memorial will be that giant neighbour of ours towering above the Cheshire landscape.
Monday, 30 July 2012
GOOSEBERRY SHOW: PICTURE BLOG
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Winner Tom snapped by the local paper |
SEE BLOG FROM THE BONGS:
Tom's a Gooseberry "Olympian" after 64
Years (click images to enlarge)
Tom MacCartney, 88, had much to smile about when he won Goostrey Gooseberry Show for the first time in 64 years of raising berries
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The show is filmed by the BBC for a new food series in October |
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David Heath, last year's winner, is in the picture |
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Late Geoff Basford who weighed the Goostrey berries for many years |
Sunday, 29 July 2012
TOM'S A GOOSEBERRY "OLYMPIAN" AFTER 64 YEARS
Word from the bushes was there wouldn't be a world champion at the Goostrey Gooseberry Show after the worst growing season in memory. But dogged dedication paid off for veteran Tom McCartney at Saturday's event at The Crown - his berry won the village show for the first time since he began competing 64 years ago!
The premier Montrose berry of 22 pennyweights 16 grains was a tiddler compared to golf ball-sized fruits of other years. Even previous champions like David Heath, last year's winner, and Doug Carter, struggled for top places with berries a little over 21 pennyweights separated by a few whiskers.
Kelvin Archer, a world champion, held the top spot with a berry of only 27 pennyweights 4 grains at the Red Lion. Lower Withington - a long way from his biggest ever in excess of 34 pennyweights.
All together Tom, 88, collected five trophies for his entries, including the award for the heaviest twins in the show. But he was less than cock-a-hoop in victory on the same day as the start of the London olympics.
"I am almost ashamed at the size of it. But this year I never expected to have a berry even that weight. The year I won the Swettenham show it was over 30 pennyweights."
Tom began raising gooseberries in 1948 when the olympic games were last in Britain and even he admitted that perhaps size didn't matter this year after all. "It is just like winning something in the olympics."
The outcome of the show will be there for the world to see in October. The BBC filmed the event for a new celebrity chef series fronted by James Atherton
David Heath, who has the consolation of the trophy for presenting the best showplate of berries, said: "I forecast it wouldn't be a good year for weights but I still think it was a very good show. Tom did very well indeed."
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