Monday, 18 October 2010
Barton Blog closed
Thursday, 1 April 2010
Is this Amy Winehouse in Barton???
She had a good look at the job board at the job centre! I was thinking she won't find much on there... |
She then headed down past the Doctor's surgery and turned right. Where was she going??
Tuesday, 30 March 2010
Get Involved at Baysgarth House Museum
Barton on Humber’s Community, Heritage, Arts and Media Project (CHAMP) has been awarded a £50,000 grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.
The grant will enable CHAMP to facilitate Get Involved! , an exciting new volunteering project at Baysgarth House Museum. Working in partnership with North Lincolnshire Museums Service, Voluntary Action North Lincolnshire, Jobcentre Plus and John Leggott College this unique project will encourage local people to become involved in museum volunteering.
‘We are delighted to have received this grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund’ said Neil Turner (CHAMP Chair) ‘Volunteering is a fantastic way to meet new people and learn new skills. Through the Get Involved! Project we hope to encourage people to join our volunteering team and become more involved in their local heritage.
The Get Involved! Project offers volunteers the chance to participate in a variety of museum based activities from collections care and research to greeting and guiding visitors through the museum. The project also offers training and support to help volunteers develop skills in range of different areas.
‘This is a fantastic new volunteering opportunity for North Lincolnshire, said Jacky Birkett of Voluntary Action North Lincolnshire. The Volunteer Centre and vinvolved team look forward to supporting the project by referring potential volunteers of all age groups, and offering additional support and guidance on volunteering matters to the CHAMP team
The project also seeks to encourage younger volunteers looking for experience to help them further their careers.
John Leggott College Careers Adviser Allison Peters said: “We’re delighted to be working with Baysgarth House Museum. The project will provide a great opportunity for our students to gain experience in museum activities and receive training in all areas of volunteering.”
‘The great thing about Get Involved! is that anyone can participate, said Louise Walker Volunteer Coordinator for the project. ‘If you are looking to meet new people, learn new skills or improve your career prospects we would love to hear from you. We welcome anyone no matter what your interests, time commitments or level of experience. You just need to be enthusiastic and willing to learn’
For more information email contact Baysgarth House Museum on 01652 637568 or visit our website at www.champltd.org
Sunday, 21 March 2010
Barton Band triumph at Brass Band Championships!
I had the pleasure of accompanying the Barton Town Band to the North of England Championships in Darlington yesterday. The weather might not have been up to much, but that didn't dampen the spirits of the players who confidently stepped out on to the stage to delight the crowd with a staggering performance. I made a 2-minute film of the day, which is posted on the new Barton Blog YouTube page.
Congratulations to the band!!
Tuesday, 9 March 2010
Star-studded trip to Sunderland for Baysgarth teacher and pupils
Friday, 5 March 2010
Pints and Paintings
Monday, 1 March 2010
The Woolly Workers of Far Ings
When you hear the term ‘conservation worker’ do you immediately think of earnest young people wearing hard hats, stout boots and wielding scrub cutters? Well, think again! Over at Far Ings you can see workers of a very different type who live out on the old meadows day and night whatever the weather. They make a fine sight clad in smart woolly coats with most sporting at least one natty pair of horns. No need for scrub cutters with this intrepid bunch, the only tools they use for tackling encroaching scrub are their very effective sets of teeth.
Lounging in the sunshine, until....
These Far Ings workers are, of course, Hebridean sheep - a small, hardy and long lived breed thought to be descended from sheep brought over by the Vikings when they settled the Western Isles and Highland regions of Scotland more than 1,000 years ago.
... the Shepherdess shook a bag of food and the group came thundering over at great speed!
An unusual characteristic of the breed is that many have multi horns maybe four but sometimes more and it was this attractive feature that probably saved them from extinction.
The breed was the mainstay of shepherds in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland prior to 1750 but gradually, after the Highland Clearances when families were forced from their homes to make way for large scale sheep farming, landowners replaced them with larger breeds such as the Blackface and Cheviot. By the mid twentieth century these Hebridean sheep only survived as ornamental animals in the parklands of a few large country estates and in 1973 they were identified by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust as a breed in danger of extinction.
However, all was not lost! Because of their hardiness and the fact that they thrive on vegetation too poor to be eaten by other breeds, Hebridean sheep are finding a new role in conservation. Their preference for grazing broadleaved vegetation such as dock makes them ideal for pasture improvement and for controlling the spread of invasive species and they can now be found on nature reserves all over Britain. The Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust itself has 500 of them spread all over the county with 24 currently at Far Ings in their winter quarters. These will soon be brought in and made ready to be sent out for summer grazing in other parts of Lincolnshire.
The sheep at Far Ings are used to stop scrub growing around the old clay pits as birds don’t like tall vegetation around the water bodies they use. They need a clear line of sight so that they can identify any predators. In other parts of Lincolnshire these sheep are used to restore low lying heathland and heather moorlands as, unlike other breeds, they prefer to eat the strong growing grass that smothers the heather rather than the heather itself. Over on the sand dunes and salt marshes of Spurn Point they are used to encourage a diverse plant life by preventing the regrowth of invasive sea buckthorn which would otherwise soon form a dense canopy.
Of course, you can’t have sheep without a shepherd! These sheep are cared for by Karen who has worked for the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust for 17 years based at Far Ings. As well as caring for the sheep she does general conservation work all over the county, tasks such as maintaining footpaths and bird hides and leading group visits to the nature reserves. She started as a volunteer but has now graduated to become the full time assistant warden at Far Ings.
Norbet, enjoying a hearty treat.
As shepherd, her work involves feeding and monitoring the health of the sheep, worming, foot trimming and lambing although she was quick to point out that there will be no lambing at Far Ings this year. Even so, there is a flock of Hebridean sheep there all year round for you to visit and admire!Friday, 26 February 2010
Reeds Hotel: a Social Enterprise in our midst
Tuesday, 23 February 2010
Calling all Barton eateries!
St. Mary's Church Altar Frontal
The way I went about it was to suggest that each interested person should take away a small square of cloth that I prepared, read the book of Proverbs, and express something about it which struck them in visual form on this piece of cloth. Thus, some chose one proverb to illustrate, some chose a theme - e.g. lady Wisdom of Proverbs ch 8, who has a counterpart of lady Folly. (Another aspect of the book of interest to feminist scholars). I have made a chart to show who has done which square and why.
When I put it together, I didn't want it to be symmetrical, as then it would look like a bed quilt (some joked that it did anyway!) and wanted it to have a bit of movement about it, hence it is sort of off to one side. The idea is that the strips in between are like weaving, and an the left hand end it is 'unfinished' - as though waiting for us to weave ourselves into the text, which the people have done who have studied in and produced designs, and the idea is that we continue to do so - every time we read a text, it is different because of the new person we have become.
Do you have a story about your project in Barton? Please let me know. Email me at daretoknow@mac.com.