Sutton Parva Shoot

Sutton Parva Shoot offers driven days of between 150 – 200 bird days at Haydon Farm, Sutton Parva over a variety of drives across 1600 acres, some of which are high and challenging, constantly praised by visiting teams, and can cater for all levels.

They are happy to organise loaders/instructors for you and have an efficient and friendly team who they can recommend. They can organise gun hire and supply cartridges by prior request.

They always welcome well behaved dogs on the day.

One Game Day Available 15th October 2024. Up to 200 Birds.

email: chris@haydonfarm.com

www.haydonfarm.com/game-days/

The Death Of Bridget Stokes

Wednesday 18th September 2024

Bridget Stokes, formerly of Bore Hill Farm, Warminster, died on Wednesday 14th August 2024, aged 91. The funeral will take place at West Wiltshire Crematorium, Semington, on Monday 23rd September 2024, at 1.00 pm. Family flowers only. Donations if desired to the Injured Jockeys Fund and the Friends Of Savernake Hospital.

Glimpses Of Wilton Sheep Fair With Jack Hargreaves On Out Of Town “Calendar”

Sunday 28th July 2024

In an episode called Calendar, made in 1980 and first broadcast in 1981, as part of the 21st anniversary of the Out Of Town series produced by Southern Television, we see a short piece of film – just 87 seconds – glimpsing Wilton Sheep Fair with a commentary by Jack Hargreaves. This episode was re-broadcast, today, Sunday 28th July 2024, on Talking Pictures TV, and is available to view (in the United Kingdom and Ireland) until 4th August 2024 on the Talking Pictures TV Encore website.

The episode, in which Jack says “Today, more and more people are not doing what their parents did,” has a running time of 24 minutes and 38 seconds. It features the subjects for calendars; a pony riding competition for children in the New Forest; a riding lesson for the sons of sheikhs in a desert in the Persian Gulf; grandfather clock making by the Tribe family who had a shop on London Bridge (Jack notes that a current member of the family wears a digital watch while doing the craftmanship that has been carried out since the time of the Great Fire of London); making lace and how bobbins were once love tokens; lobster catching off Swanage which mentions Tom Harris who had the contract to supply the Savoy Hotel; sea fishing 45 miles off Poole Harbour where there are unchartered wrecks; catching conger eels; a riverside garden maintained by a busy wife; a poultry show in the ballroom of a Bournemouth hotel; fishing for barbel on the river Kennet; and the three lives of the extraordinary mayfly.

Wilton Sheep Fair is the penultimate item in the programme, commencing at 17 minutes and 21 seconds from the start. The glimpses of the sheep fair commence with a long view to Wilton which Jack describes as “a little town in the middle of Wiltshire.” Then we see some of the haulage lorries with the names, addresses and telephone numbers painted on their doors – from as far afield as Blagdon; Lyons Gate, Cerne Abbas; Stanford In The Vale, Faringdon, Berks; and Mere, Wilts. Two well known hauliers’ names are seen: A.E. George of Bruton, Somerset, and A.J. Stokes & Sons of Codford, Wiltshire.

Jack, who is bearded, wears glasses and smokes a pipe, tells us that there has been an annual sheep fair at Wilton ever since the days of sheep being brought many miles over downland, with dogs to help the shepherds.

We see the booth of the auctioneers Woolley & Wallis. Referring to the name Woolley, Jack muses “I always like to believe the auctioneer collected that name many years ago, as a nickname from the shepherds, when his great-great-great-grandfather was selling sheep.”

We also see what Jack calls “the other fascination” for him: the hurdles for the pens, stacked in a barn and being used on fair day. He says “It’s the only place I know where there are over 10,000 handmade hazel wattle hurdles. It’s amazing they go on and on using the same [type of hurdle] that was made in Anglo-Saxon times, because it is the best thing to pen these thousands and thousands of sheep every year for the Great Wilton Sheep Fair. I wonder how long [the use of] wattle hurdles will last? Someone will want to find a plastic substitute for those before we go on very long.”

Jack sums up Wilton Sheep Fair by saying “It is a scene I can’t resist. I shall see it again next year and I hope I shall go on seeing it every year for the rest of my life.”

Jack Hargreaves died in the Winterbourne Hospital, Dorchester, on 15th March 1994. He was aged 82.

Warminster Town Council Objects Again To Bore Hill Farm Development

Thursday 20th June 2014

Press release from Warminster Town Council:

Town Councillors Renew Objection To Bore Hill Farm Planning Application

Warminster Town Councillors continue to oppose planning for 84 dwellings, associated landscaping and access and drainage works on land at Bore Hill Farm, Deverill Road, Warminster.

Councillors discussed the proposal at the Planning Advisory Committee meeting on Monday 17th June 2024, with concerns raised due to potential overdevelopment of the site as well as a lack of facilities to meet the demands of the new properties.

It was noted that many of the statutory authorities had already objected to the application citing the proximity to the Malaby Biodigester and proposals for a bulk energy storage system, raised by the Environment Agency. Concerns were also raised over potential problems with drainage and access.

Members unanimously objected to the application on the same grounds to which they had objected to the previous planning applications adding their objection to the bulk energy storage system and its associated environmental risks.

The comments from Warminster Town Council are only advisory, any decision on whether to grant planning permission and any associated conditions will be made by Wiltshire Council.

For more information contact Warminster Town Council, Tel: 01985 214847 or email: admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk

Home Farm B&B Say Wiltshire Countryside Is Some Of The Best In The World

Thursday 24th May 2024

From the Facebook page of Home Farm, Boreham, Warminster:

We might be biased but we think the Wiltshire countryside is some of the best in the world.

Photo credit to an energetic guest who went on one of the many walks you can do from Home Farm.

www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100063619987775

theleggs221@aol.com

Telephone 01985 213266

Bernard Elliott Has Died

Wednesday 10th April 2024

Bernard James Elliott, who formerly farmed at North Farm, Norton Bavant, has died. He passed away, peacefully, at his home at Sambourne Gardens, Warminster, on Saturday 16th March 2024. He was 88. He was a beloved husband to Ann, a much loved father, grandfather and great grandfather. The funeral service will be held at West Wiltshire Crematorium, Semington, on Friday 19th April 2024, at 11.00 a.m. Family flowers only. Donations, if desired, may be made to Diabetes UK, the British Heart Foundation or the Wiltshire Air Ambulance. Funeral directors: F. Curtis & Son, 11 Portway, Warminster.

Bishopstrow Free Range Egg Shed

 Wednesday 20th December 2023

Bishopstrow Free Range Egg Shed

Both egg sheds open and stocked – including potential double yolkers on the cardboard trays in the brown egg (a number of these are white eggs from our new white chickens).

Payment by cash or QR code (links to Apple or Google pay or input your card details manually- no need to download the app, just scan, scroll down to the bottom and enter your payment details).

PRICES
Grey egg shed holds the MIXED WEIGHT free range eggs (you will start to see some white eggs from our new baby white hens in this shed – they are delicious). £2.40 a dozen. £6 a tray (30 eggs).

Brown egg shed holds the MIXED WEIGHT organic free range eggs, £3.50 a dozen, £8.75 a tray (30 eggs).

The brown egg shed also holds the jumbo eggs – much larger eggs and likely to be double yolkers – find them on the cardboard egg trays – £4.80 a dozen. 👍🏻

Find us as per the dot on the map below just near the Bishopstrow Hotel.

River Wylye To Be Enhanced Through A New Collaboration Between Conservation Charities And Farmers

From The Wiltshire Wildlife Trust website:

Thursday 14 December 2023

The Wylye Chalk Stream Project has been successful in the second round of the Government’s Landscape Recovery scheme.

The Wylye Chalk Stream Project will be the first landscape-scale collaboration of its kind focused on enhancing a large stretch of chalk stream for the benefit of wildlife in Wiltshire. The project will be led by Wiltshire Wildlife Trust and delivered in partnership with the Wylye Valley Farmers group and Wessex Rivers Trust.

River Wylye
River Wylye. Credit: Robin Leech.

World-famous, globally rare and extraordinarily biodiverse, Wiltshire’s chalk streams are an irreplaceable part of England’s natural landscape. However, like many, the River Wylye has been dredged, straightened and polluted over the last few centuries, putting its unique flora and fauna at risk of irreversible decline.

As a result of reduced water quality, low flows, and poor-quality river habitat, wildlife such as river flies, Atlantic salmon, grayling and wild brown trout have suffered, whilst invasive plant species such as Himalayan balsam have been outcompeting native flora on river banks. Water meadows along the river have also disappeared, becoming fragmented and scarce, limiting the ability of wading birds, such as snipe, green sandpipers and lapwings, to spread and flourish.

This partnership will re-establish the vitality, diversity, and ecological abundance of the Wylye Valley by restoring the river’s natural relationship with its floodplain over a 20km reach of currently under-utilised farmland. The river’s resilience to extreme temperatures and flows as a result of climate change will also be improved, as well as its ability to capture and diffuse any harmful excess nutrients and pollutants from the wider landscape.

The work will include chalk stream restoration, floodplain reconnection, regenerative farming, and the creation of natural river valley habitats such as water meadows, ponds and streams.

This is a key project contributing to Wiltshire Wildlife Trust’s goal of landscape-scale nature recovery by 2030, by restoring natural processes, restoring biodiversity, managing more land for nature and creating nature-based solutions with partners.

We are really excited to work with the Wylye Valley Farmers and Wessex Rivers Trust on this project along the River Wylye and its floodplain. The scale of this project and the enthusiasm and involvement from the farmer group will enable us to work together to restore and enhance the Wylye at a landscape scale, creating opportunity for wide ranging benefits for this precious chalk stream and the biodiversity it supports. – Alice Eley, Water Team Manager at Wiltshire Wildlife Trust.

The Wylye Valley Farmers are custodians of this chalk stream. Working with Wiltshire Wildlife Trust and Wessex Rivers Trust, we believe that we can achieve some really pioneering work to fully enhance the biodiversity that lives here. Through this collaboration, we can secure the future of the landscape by leaving it in a better shape than we found it. Robin Leech, Wylye Valley Farmers.

The scheme has been built from the ground-up, with farmers and experts shaping a pioneering and exciting vision. The dream-team of Wylye Valley Farmers, Wiltshire Wildlife Trust and Wessex Rivers Trust will give the legendary River Wylye valley the boost it truly deserves. Dave Rumble, Chief Executive of Wessex Rivers Trust.

www.wiltshirewildlife.org/river-wylye

Theft Of A Heifer From A Field At East Knoyle

Wednesday 30th November 2023

Warminster Police report:

We are appealing to the public for help following the theft of a heifer from a farm in East Knoyle.

The theft occurred between October 17 and 20 from its field overnight, but was only recently reported to us.

The heifer is described as an 18 month old South Devon heifer, solid chestnut in colour.

If you have any information, please contact us on our website or via 101 quoting reference 54230121328.

Tim Daw Reveals That The Cover Photo On The Led Zeppelin IV Album Is Of A Wiltshire Thatcher – Lot Long From Mere

Wednesday 8th November 2023

Tim Daw, on his blog www.sarsen.org/ reveals some fascinating information:

Led Zeppelin’s Missing Photograph Has Been Found

The original of the iconic photograph on the cover of Led Zeppelin IV was recently discovered and will soon be on display at the Wiltshire Museum.

Visitors will for the first time be able to clearly see the face that has stared out from millions of albums across the world.

After conservation work an exhibition “The Wiltshire Thatcher: A Photographic Journey through Victorian Wessex’ is scheduled to open on Saturday 6th April 2024 and run through until Sunday 1st September 2024

The photograph was spotted in a Victorian album at a public auction by Brian Edwards, a Visiting Research Fellow with The Regional History Centre, UWE Bristol.

The mystery of who the figure was been solved after half a century.

He was a thatcher from Wiltshire, Lot Long (1823 -1893) from Mere.

Led Zeppelin IV
The untitled album, usually known as IV, was released on November 8, 1971, and has sold more than 37 million copies worldwide.

The album was Classic Rock’s Greatest Album of All Time – https://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/steveparker/classicrock.htm and remains Led Zeppelin’s “most streamed album today.’ https://musicdatablog.com.ar/en/ranked-albums/led-zeppelin-discography-streaming/

The album’s cover artwork was radically absent of any indication of the musicians or a title but featured the iconic framed image, often been referred to as a painting, which was discovered by Robert Plant in an antique shop near Jimmy Page’s house in Pangbourne, Berkshire.

The framed colour image of an elderly man carrying a large bundle of hazel sticks on his back will be recognised worldwide. 

Closer inspection reveals this framed image was a coloured photograph, the whereabouts of which is now unknown.

The original, which is now in Wiltshire Museum, has tantalising fingerprints from it being copied using coloured inks. 

The discovery
The Victorian photograph was discovered by Brian in an auction catalogue of sale in Dorchester, an album titled “Reminiscences of a visit to Shaftesbury. Whitsuntide 1892. A present to Auntie from Ernest.‘  Tim Daw was able to attend the auction, verified it was the genuine photo and bought it on behalf of the Museum.

Featuring exceptional photographs from Wiltshire, Dorset and Somerset, the Victorian photograph album contained over 100 architectural views and street scenes together with a few portraits of rural workers. Most of the photographs are titled and beneath the photograph made famous by Led Zeppelin the photographer has written “A Wiltshire Thatcher.

Brian Edwards said: “Led Zeppelin created the soundtrack that has accompanied me since my teenage years, so I really hope the discovery of this Victorian photograph pleases and entertains Robert, Jimmy, and John Paul.” 

A photographer named Ernest
There was no further clue to the photographer’s identity and either side of the turn of the century there were over 300 photographers named Ernest. 

The search was on for a largely unknown Victorian photographer of great talent and skill, probably with extensive training in chemistry.  

A part of a signature matching with writing in the album, suggests the needle in this haystack is Ernest Howard Farmer (1856-1944), the first head of the School of Photography at the then newly renamed Polytechnic Regent Street. Now part of the University of Westminster, Farmer had worked in the same building as the instructor of photography since 1882, when it was then known as the Polytechnic Young Men’s Christian Institute. 

The Wiltshire Thatcher
About 50 thatchers were identified through trade directories and the census. In the Southwest of Wiltshire, where the other album photos were taken, only one was of a similar age to the figure in the photograph. 

This was Lot Long (sometimes Longyear), who was born in Mere in 1823 and died in 1893. At the time the photograph was taken, Lot was a widower living in a small cottage on the Shaftesbury Road in Mere. Whilst certain corroboration has not yet been found, family resemblances and circumstantial evidence support this identification.

Note on the exhibition
David Dawson, Director of Wiltshire Museum, said: “This exhibition will be a celebration of the work of Ernest Farmer, who today is little-known but was a leading figure in the development of photography as an art form. Through the exhibition, we will show how Farmer captured the spirit of people, villages and landscapes of Wiltshire and Dorset that were so much of a contrast to his life in London. It is fascinating to see how this theme of rural and urban contrasts was developed by Led Zeppelin and became the focus for this iconic album cover 70 years later.”

Posted by Tim Daw at Wednesday, November 08, 2023 

www.sarsen.org/2023/11/led-zeppelins-missing-photograph-has.html

www.sarsen.org/

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