April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
Cranham Village Magazine
 With Cranham Parish and Benefice News and Information

              April 2021

Inside this Month:
Food Bank - page 12

Village Hall News - page 14

Diary of a Lockdown Walker - page 18

Dog Thefts - page 20

Lucky Severn - page 22

        Any views and opinions expressed in the Cranham Magazine are
                   attributable only to individual contributors
         Advertisements in this magazine do not imply recommendation

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
Church & Benefice
Rector:                     Rev’d Janet Turville                           01452 245526

                            janetbeacon6@gmail.com

Associate Priest and        Revd. Andrew Leach                             07564 448692
Benefice Administrator:

Church Wardens:             Mr. Keith Ardron                               01452 617648
                            keithardron@gmail.com
                            Linda de Cossart                               07778 215801
                            decossart@icloud.com
Organist:                   Mrs. Beryl Berry                               01452 813200
                            Four Chimneys, Cranham
Hon Treasurer:              Mrs. Helen Daltry, Broadridge House,           01452 863011
                            Cranham, Gloucester. GL4 8HF
PCC Secretary:              Nicki Clapton                                  07824 812384
                            Bakers Piece, Cranham
                            bakerspiece@googlemail.com
Benefice Office:            Lychgate Rooms, Painswick                      01452 814795
                            lychgateoffice@btinternet.com
Cranham Church of England Primary School
Headteacher:          Rebecca Slater                                       01452 812660
                      admin@cranham.gloucs.sch.uk

Magazine & General
Magazine editors:         Sue & Ian Shaw                                   01452 814839
                          editors@cranhammag.co.uk
Church articles:          Sue & Ian Shaw                                   01452 814839
                          church@cranhammag.co.uk
Magazine layout:          Tony Walker                                      07796 175622
                          admin@cranhammag.co.uk
Magazine                  Sue Stick                                        01452 813407
Distribution:             distribution@cranhammag.co.uk
Village Hall              Nicki Clapton                                    07824 812384
Bookings:                 cvhall@cranhammag.co.uk

Community Police:         Police Community Support Officer                 Tel: 101

                          PCSO9073 Deb Collicott
                          debbie.collicott@gloucestershire.pnn.police.uk
Cotswold Warden:          Shelagh Dempsey
                          cranhamwarden@outlook.com

Neighbourhood             Simon Jarvis simon.jarvis@stroud.gov.uk          07811 263075
Warden:
                          https://bit.ly/2Z13gxY

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
A Letter from The Clergy

Hope at Easter

Easter is all about hope and I really want to find some hopeful words to share with
you all. As I sat down to prepare to write this, I came across the words of the poem
“Hope” is the thing with feathers by Emily Dickinson which was a new poem to me,
but which spoke so eloquently of Hope in our present time. Hope depicted as a
bird, sings whatever the circumstances and is something to hold on to, something
to trust in and something which carries us in difficult situations.

The first disciples must have needed hope as they sat waiting between the days of
Good Friday and the death of Jesus and the news of his resurrection on Easter
Sunday morning. Mary’s words - I have seen the Lord echo down through the ages
they brought hope to the disciples - and bring hope to us - we too can see the Lord.

And for us this Easter is one of resurrection, one of hope one of new things. While
Easter finds us not quite in the joy of freedom of movement and relaxed rules, but
still in the midst of gradual relaxations and a slow move back to normality, this is
really ok, because it is here in the hardest moments that hope does its best work.
Hope is like a small bud trying to break through the soil amidst the gravel and
rocks, it can be stamped on, crushed and diminished but shine a light for a moment
and it springs up anew. When we lift our eyes and look around, we see the flower
unexpectedly in a corner. It is with hope in the resurrection that we will open our
church buildings on Easter Sunday for services. What joy we will feel as we gather
once again in person. Yes, we will still need to wear masks, to stay two metres
apart, not sing, and not chat but still we will be together to proclaim that Jesus is
Risen - he is Risen indeed and in doing so we share the hope of a better time ahead.

As we emerge slowly from this crisis, we must be people of hope, who dream of a
better tomorrow, who cry out for justice and mercy and who know that whatever
today feels like, God is with us tomorrow, with forgiveness, joy and peace.

                                                        Rev. Janet Turville Rector

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
CHURCH NEWS - April 2021

Good news this month! The church is re-opening on Easter Sunday and will be
open each Sunday from then on, subject of course to COVID restrictions. The
services in Cranham are listed below. Those across the Benefice are shown on the
church website and in the Beacon Light.

                     Sunday Services in Cranham - April 2021

4th April     11am         Holy Communion      Revd Andrew
                           Easter Sunday
                           Readers      Julie Berry Acts 10;34-43
                                        Nicki Clapton 1 Cor.15;1-11

11th April    6.30pm       Evening Prayer BCP Revd Janet
                           Readers      Janet Gazzard Acts4;32-35
                                        Sylvia Ardron John 20;19-en

18th April    11am         Morning Worship     Phil Stick
                           Readers      Jean Garratt Acts 3;12-19
                                        Rob Garratt Luke 24;36b-48

April 25th    6.30pm       Evening Worship     Linda de Cossart
                           Readers      Mark Crowther Acts 4;5-12
                                        Helen Daltry John 10;11-18

                     Cranham Parish Council website
              lots of info including the minutes of meetings
                         https://cranhampc.org.uk/
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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
Church Flowers
4th April         Janet Whitton for Easter
11th April        Janet Whitton
18th April        Deb Carrington-Stait
25th April        Deb Carrington-Stait
2nd May           Di Blandford

Church cleaning
3rd April         Janet Gazzard
10th April        Kate Ryan
17th April        Linda de Cossart
24th April        Gill Firth
1st May           Di Blandford

             Lighting up St. James the Great Cranham
Cranham church will be lit for the evenings of the 3rd and 4th April to
mark Jesus’ joyful resurrection.
                                                      Rev Janet Turville

All articles or enquiries with regards to the Cranham Magazine should
be emailed to:
All general articles: editors@cranhammag.co.uk
All church articles: church@cranhammag.co.uk
Advertising enquiries: advertising@cranhammag.co.uk
Distribution enquiries : distribution@cranhammag.co.uk

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
Message from Bishop Robert
                  Telling the Story
Stories really matter. We have a deep desire to hear
them and to tell them. Love or loathe it, this is one of
the key attractions of social media. It is the place
where I can share ‘my story’ and be invited into other
people’s lives and stories. Our social media has been full of stories these last
weeks. Stories of lockdown, and vaccines, children returning to school, and
especially, in these last days, of the murder of Sarah Everard and the right to
protest it. Sarah’s murder has rightly brought anger that this should happen
on our streets, a wave of sympathy and love for her and her family, and then
with it, a cry of pain and anguish. Like Rachel, we are weeping in anguish
for our children and cannot be comforted (Jeremiah 31).

The scale of the affront of this horrific event is such that words are at first
hard to find. Whatever is said or written can so easily be superficial, or
self-serving, especially if you are a man. Yet the scale of the affront is such
that we cannot go speechless. As a husband, a father of daughters, a
believer in the dignity and worth of every individual, I too must cry out. My
cry must also acknowledge the responsibility I bear, both for how we are,
and how we will be. I cannot say simply, “This is not me”, because it is, and
it asks me what stories I have told. Have I sufficiently told the stories of
human dignity, of responsibility, of the care one must have for the other?
Have I played my part in sharing the stories that together will shape a
culture in which this tragedy is, as it should be, unthinkable?

In these coming weeks, as followers of Jesus Christ, we will tell the story of
betrayal and death, and hear again the words Jesus speaks from the cross
of abandonment, “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?” as we see
before us the pain of the world and its people. From this we will go on to
tell more, of how from darkness and despair, through the action of God,
love triumphs over hate, life over death.
                                                              Continued on page 7

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
Message from Bishop Robert - from page 6

We will tell the story of hope even in the darkness. The scale and audacity
of this story is such that here too words are at first hard to find. The story
takes time, and we cannot rush it. We must stay in the garden, linger at the
foot of the cross and wait.

We will be convicted, and that may be almost unbearable, but we will be
redeemed, as from the deepest darkness we find the brightest light, and we
will tell the story of the world as it was intended to be, the world as it can
be.

With every blessing,

                           MARAH in Stroud
           https://marah.org.uk/ https://marah.org.uk/contact-us/

    Supporting & giving hope to the homeless and to
               anyone who is struggling.
Since the first lockdown MARAH have provided over 6000 takeaway meals.
In order to help them continue this much needed service, if you can
please make a donation online at: https://marah.org.uk/donate/
or phone for a donation form. 01453 367006 (please leave a message)

     Fruit, vegetables & bread (near to the use by date) are supplied by
                             local supermarkets.
                  Stroud Food Bank provide non-perishable
                          items of food & toiletries.
               https://marah.org.uk/see-what-we-do-at-marah/

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
Sunday Worship for those at Home

      10.30am Zoom Morning Prayer, message Rev’d Janet for a link

          9.00am Live worship on the Church of England website

     https://www.churchofengland.org/more/media-centre/church-online

             10.15am Gloucester Cathedral Sunday Eucharist

   https://www.gloucestercathedral.org.uk/worship/services/services-live-
                                 stream/

                     8.10am Radio 4 Sunday Worship
                       1.15pm BBC1 Songs of Praise

Weekday Worship
9.30am Thursday weekly via Zoom from Sheepscombe Morning Prayer
If you would like to join in or would like a copy of the service sheet please
email Karen Riding kriding07@yahoo.co.uk.

Weekday Worship for those at Home
                9.45am Daily Service - Radio 4 (Long Wave)
              3.30pm Wednesday Choral Evensong - Radio 3
 https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/join-us-service-daily-
                                 prayer

Daily Hope offers music, prayers and reflections as well as full worship
services from the Church of England at the end of a telephone line. 24 hours
a day on 0800 804 8044.

                    www.beaconbenefice.org.uk

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
Extracts from The Messenger – April 2021
Happy Easter
With the promise of warmer weather in the air and the gradual lifting of lockdown
restrictions, this Easter feels like it is heralding in dramatic change.
Stories of how Christian generosity and initiative is making a difference in the
world are everywhere. Over 1,200 Easter meals were sponsored and delivered to
people across the Diocese through our Comfort and Joy Easter project. Delicious
shepherd’s pies or gardener’s pies cooked by The Long Table, with a freshly baked
hot cross bun were delivered to doorsteps across the area, as a way of showing
our neighbours that they are cared for and loved.
Huge amounts of money are being donated to Christian Aid in thankfulness for
vaccinations - at the time of writing, in early March, over £7,000 had been given in
this Diocese, in collaboration with the local Methodist Circuit. This money will be
used to support those for whom Covid restrictions have had other significant
impacts.
In this month’s edition we’re including an extract from a special edition of
Growing Together which you can share with your worshipping community. To
download the full edition and lots more family friendly resources to share locally,
please visit www.gloucester.anglican.org/your-ministry/children-youth-and-families/
growing-together
Events and training
Churches across the Diocese of Gloucester will be worshipping together
for Easter, whether online or in person. If you want to find out the latest
information from your local church, visit www.achurchnearyou.com
Maundy Thursday Eucharist (Live stream only from Gloucester
Cathedral)
Thursday 1st April, 11am
Open to all. This service will see members of the clergy from across the Diocese
of Gloucester renew their ordination vows. The oils for use in services will also be
blessed for the coming year. Got to gloucestercathedral.org.uk/worship/services/
services-live-stream/ to join.
                                                                Continued on page 10

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April 2021 Cranham Village Magazine - Cranham Parish Council
Messenger - from page 9

Easter Day Eucharist (Live stream from Gloucester Cathedral)
Sunday 4th April, 10.15am
This is a traditional Easter morning service with Bishop Rachel, the Bishop of
Gloucester. All are welcome via Zoom.

EcoChurch Zoom Seminars – The Next Steps
Thursday 22nd April, 11am to 12:30pm and again at 7pm to 8pm
If you’re working on your EcoChurch award, either Bronze or Silver and are not
quite sure how to progress things, this seminar will be helpful to you. Visit
shorturl.at/bxK39 to book.

The Language of Spirituality
Saturday 15th May, 10am to 12 noon
The disciples understood there was something in Jesus’ relationship with God that
they couldn’t grasp. They needed a new language, a new approach and so they
asked Jesus how to pray. Debbie Helme and Jo Wetherall have developed a
language of Spirituality to help describe our understanding of who God is and how
that effects our everyday lives – to people who don’t have an experience of faith.
Book at gloucester.anglican.org/event/the-language-of-spirituality

Have your say
Visit Facebook Diocese.of.Gloucester, email Katherine at kclamp@glosdioc.org.uk, follow us
on Twitter @glosdioc, view videos on YouTube Diocese of Gloucester or visit our website
gloucester.anglican.org

These extracts are from The Messenger, a monthly communication produced by diocesan
communications office at Church House, College Green, Gloucester, GL1 2LY. The full
‘Messenger’ is available on www.gloucester.anglican.org and can be emailed to all parish
and church representatives who request it. The extracts printed here are provided by
Church House and published without alteration and therefore do not necessarily reflect the
views of the Cranham magazine editorial team.

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“Poverty, pestilence & privies”

An illustrated talk on Zoom, by John Dixon

    7.45pm - Thursday 6th May 2021

      Members: Free                 Visitors: £3.50

        Please contact Norma Kay: 07720 046802
   kaynorma05@gmail.com if you would like to attend.
  If you are a non-member, please contact Liza Darroch
 by email at: lizadarroch@gmail.com to arrange payment.

  Cranham Local History Society

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Stroud District Food Bank
Painswick, together with Pitchcombe, Edge, Cranham and Sheepscombe, have shown
amazing support for the Stroud District Foodbank collections during the pandemic, with
many people turning up regularly each month to drop off donations at Stamages Car Park or
the Stocks. So I thought there might be interest in learning more about what happens to your
donations.
Firstly, the Painswick team take all the donations to the Foodbank warehouse in
Brimscombe. We are met by other volunteers who help unload and take the donations inside
where they are weighed prior to being sorted and stored. All food is stored by type (ie coffee,
soup etc) and by expiry date. This enables the food with the shortest expiry date to be issued
first, minimising any waste.
In ‘normal times’ food is then transferred as needed from the warehouse to the drop-in
centres situated around Stroud District – at Dursley, Stroud, Stonehouse, Wotton,
Nailsworth, Farmhill, and Cam. During covid restrictions, these have all been closed, and food
is bagged up into emergency bags at the warehouse.
People in need of food are identified by one of many care agents working in the district –
Charities Aid Foundation and P3 are the largest, but also care workers, GP practices and
many others. They issue the person with a voucher which they can bring to a drop-in
centre and exchange for a bag of food. While the client has a cup of tea and their bag is being
prepared, trained volunteers offer a listening ear and practical guidance as to where to find
support to help them break out of their crisis.
While the drop-in centres are closed, the voucher details are automatically transferred to
staff at the warehouse, who contact the recipient to arrange delivery of the bag.
Each bag is designed to provide 3 days’ worth of nutritionally balanced food for the client
and their household. It will typically include breakfast cereals, soup, pasta, rice, pasta sauce,
tinned beans, tinned meat, tinned vegetables, tinned fruit, tea or coffee, sugar, biscuits,
snacks. Toiletries are also available.

Apart from three part time staff to manage the admin, the whole system is run by
volunteers. There are 8 volunteer trustees (of which two live in Painswick and one in
Sheepscombe), about 150 regular volunteers and another 150 who get involved in special
collections. And many, many wonderful donors!
Thank you everyone for braving the wind and cold in March and generously donating
314Kgs to the Foodbank in Painswick.
The next Painswick collection will be on Tuesday 13th April 10am – 12noon in Stamages Car
Park, St Mary’s and by the Stocks. Suggested items are UHT fruit juice, UHT milk, tinned
fruit, tinned custard, tinned tomatoes, tinned puddings, savoury snacks. But, as always,
any non-perishable items will be gladly received. Please do check use by dates so that we
can provide the most appropriate support to those in need.
Archway School would also still appreciate any old laptops and iPads too.

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VILLAGE HALL NEWS – APRIL

Due to the COVID- 19 lockdown, the Hall is still not open for any of it’s usual
activities. From 12th April, parent and child groups of up to 15 people will be
allowed, and from 17th May meetings of up to 6 people, or two households will
be OK. Hopefully, more normal activities will be fine after 21st June!

However, the Hall will be used for the Elections on 6th May.

The Village Hall is now registered for the Lucky Severn Lottery Draw – see details on
page 22 of this magazine.

At a Zoom Committee Meeting held on Wednesday 10th March, we drew the
100-Club for:

100 Club Winners:

       February 2021        (£100) Ken Clapton (78)

       February (extra)     (£25) Adam George (49)

                                   Next Meeting

                          Wednesday 12th May, 7.30pm

                                (Probably by Zoom)

                     Jane Shepherd (Chairman VH Committee)

                                   01452 814873

                                 Fix my Street
                  website to report potholes and fly tipping etc
                           https://www.fixmystreet.com

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Brimpsfield & Mid-Cotswold Garden Society
If all goes well, April should bring us both slightly warmer
weather and a gradual relaxation of the lockdown rules, allowing
more opportunities for getting out and enjoying our gardens,
perhaps with family and friends. It’s also that time of year when many of us go to
garden centres and nurseries in search of new plants for our gardens – or just to
enjoy the sight of all those colourful flowers!

The trays of cheerful bedding plants may look tempting, but don’t forget that,
depending on your circumstances and how much work you want to make for
yourself, it may be better to hold off buying until the weather is reliably warmer.
Half-hardy bedding (any good garden centre or nursery should be able to tell you
which are hardy and which not) may not be ready to face the great outdoors for
some weeks yet, until the risk of frost is past (usually late May). If you have a
greenhouse or indoor space such as a conservatory, glazed porch or wide
windowsills to keep them in for a few weeks, there’s no reason why you shouldn’t
indulge; just remember that you will have to harden them off gradually, putting
them outside for a few hours and taking them in again at night for a couple of
weeks before planting them out. Even the garden centre’s hardy bedding may
have been kept under cover at night (ask them whether this is so) and so will also
have to go through the hardening-off process before being planted out, although
after that they should be safe outdoors from April onwards.

Another factor to bear in mind when buying bedding plants before they are
ready to plant out is that those in small cell-pack modules may outgrow their
space before it’s warm enough to put them outside, in which case you may have
to transplant them into larger pots to prevent them becoming potbound.

If all that sounds like too much bother, consider waiting until May to buy your
bedding plants; they may be larger plants and a little more expensive, but that’s
because someone else has saved you a lot of trouble.

If you’re looking for more permanent plants for your garden, consider how they
will look when they’re not in bloom (which will be most of the time). Some plants
have lovely flowers but are uninteresting when not flowering. It’s worth looking
for plants with good foliage as well as flowers, which will enhance your garden
throughout the growing season.
                                                               Continued on page 16

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Brimpsfield Garden - from page 15

Should we be fortunate enough to have a warm spell in April – it does happen! –
don’t forget that the weather can still turn cold again; it’s easy to be caught out by
a late frost. Also do remember that April is not too early to start watering plants
in a dry spell, especially those in containers or recently planted.

As we start to get out and about again, remember that many gardens are open for
visiting. Check before you travel whether or not you need to book in advance, as
this is often required now to keep visitor numbers manageable. Destinations such
as the arboreta at Westonbirt and Batsford have wonderful displays of spring
blossom at this time of year, almost guaranteed to lift the spirits and put you in
the mood for the summer ahead!

The Garden Society is also hoping for better times soon, and is making plans for
limited events from this summer onwards. We shall keep you posted on
developments as the situation becomes clearer.

           Did you know that you can now advertise in
                    the Cranham Magazine??
                Contact: advertising@cranhammag.co.uk

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Diary of a Lockdown Walker

Sylvia and I have always loved walking, whether in Britain or further afield in the
Europe or North America, and with the arrival of lockdown last spring, and with
most of our commitments paused, we found we had an opportunity to really indulge
our hobby by walking local footpaths. By the time that lockdown ended walking had
developed into a serious habit and I think that our hiking boots have never clocked
greater mileage than we managed in the summer and autumn of 2020. I know that
a lot of Cranham people also love to explore the countryside on foot so thought
readers might be interested in our walkers’ diary.
Once free to travel last July, our first venture away from home was to the Cumbrian
Lakes where we managed to climb ScaFell Pike, England’s highest mountain, for the
first time in 25 years (it seems to be higher these days!). Just below the summit that
day we passed a distressed St Bernard dog called Daisy which that evening made
the BBC national news as the poor animal had to be carried off the mountain on a
stretcher by a rescue team (she was ok). A couple of weeks after Cumbria we were
again hill-walking in the Northumberland National Park (an undiscovered gem) and
a few weeks after that exploring the South Cornwall coastal path.
In between these trips we developed a taste for the long-distance National Trails
closer to home, beginning in August with the Cotswold Way, the 102 mile footpath
that runs along the western edge of the Cotswold Hills between Chipping Camden
and Bath. We divided the route into 15 day-long walks, leaving cars at both ends of
each section so we could drive back to the start each time. We felt the loveliest
parts of the trail were in the northern section - particularly the stretch between
Birdlip and Kings Stanley that runs through Cranham parish of course. Descending
into Bath on the final leg of the journey on a hot Saturday at the beginning of
September gave us a real sense of achievement.
Missing the Cotswold Way and the routine of planning and completing the trail
sections we were soon on the lookout for another long-distance footpath within a
manageable driving distance of home, and decided on the slightly more ambitious
Offa’s Dyke Path that runs along the Welsh border from Chepstow to Prestatyn on
the North Wales Coast – a distance of 177 miles. Much of the path follows the
defensive wall built by the Mercian King Offa in the eighth century, to deter Welsh
raiders. Again, we divided the trail into sections – this time 22 in all – which could be
done from home in a day, at least to start with. The scenery of the Wye Valley with
its steep-sided wooded ridges was quite different from the gentler slopes of the
Cotswold Way, whose route we could see in the distance as we made our way north.

                                                                    Continued on page 19

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Diary of a Lockdown Walker - from page 18

The ruins of Welsh castles along the trail also spoke of the more troubled history
of this border region. The walking was harder than in the Cotswolds with steeper
climbs and longer daily distances to cover, but after 5 outings we had reached Hay
Bluff overlooking the town of Hay-on-Wye, having just hiked along the magnificent
westernmost ridge of the Black Mountains with its sweeping views across
Herefordshire and Worcestershire. By then it was mid-October and days were
getting shorter, and our plans met disaster when the Welsh Government closed
the English border for what they called a “fire-break lockdown”: it’s still closed
today. Stories of English walkers on Snowdon being fined for climbing the
mountain have deterred us from continuing with Offa’s Dyke.

Why not try the Ridgeway? someone suggested. At least it’s in England. So we
did, and on October 25th set off on a cold clear morning on the first section of this
historic 89 mile National Trail that runs from near Avebury in Wiltshire to Ivinghoe
in Buckinghamshire. This long distance footpath joins up sections of an ancient
trading route between Dorset and East Anglia that long pre-dates the arrival of the
Romans. From Avebury the pathway runs east along the North Wessex Downs
before turning northwards along the Chilterns Hills after crossing the Thames. The
landscape is mainly rolling chalk downland, with much gentler slopes than we
encountered on the Welsh borders, allowing us to increase the length of our walks
which was necessary as the drives were getting longer and the daylight hours
shorter. November arrived, bringing with it a second English lockdown but
mercifully unlimited travel for exercise was still allowed so we continued our
Ridgeway trek. Walking these ancient roads in November in the early morning
mist, it was easy to imagine the ghosts of Saxon warriors marching westward to
confront the Danish armies at the Battle of Ethandun which took place in this area
in the ninth century: that Wessex victory is said to mark the first step in the
creation of the Kingdom of England.

On December 12th we completed the eighth and final section of the Ridgeway,
arriving at Invinghoe Beacon on a cold but sunny afternoon not long before sunset.
Just in time! Next week the dreaded ‘Tiers’ arrived and we were again forbidden
from travelling outside our area, and that more or less remains the case as you read
this today. So, we’re back to those local walks again, but still thankful for where we
live, and for those battered high-mileage hiking boots of ours.

                                                                       Keith Ardron

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20
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Cranham Village Hall - needs your help

You may have seen the announcement in the latest SDC News
regarding the launching of a local good causes initiative, the Lucky
Severn Lottery with a weekly draw, top prize £25,000, but more
importantly 50p from every £1 ticket sold goes to your nominated
charity. Another 10p from each ticket goes into a central pot, which
we can bid for. Currently there are over 50 organisations, large and
small, all supporting this scheme.

Cranham Village Hall has been the centre of so many much loved and
worthwhile events for many years, but it does have costs.
Particularly at the moment we need a new boiler and a refurbished
kitchen. The hall depends upon rentals for its income, but obviously
that source of income ceased last March, but essential overheads did
not. Fortunately a grant from the District Council saved the day, but
our finances are still precarious, hence the decision to participate in
the Lucky Severn Lottery.

All tickets are sold online, and we need to sell at least 20 to start
with.
        Full details are online at www.luckysevernlottery.co.uk

        Please give your support to help Village Hall to flourish

                                                    Nigel Cooper 813870

                                    22
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Museum in the Park
Welcome to our new series of ‘sustainable stories’
This is a new monthly series, our Collections Assistant, Fern Ryan, explores
different objects from the past which reveal useful lessons for kinder, more
sustainable, living in the present and future. We hope you enjoy reading and
thinking about the ideas each object provokes.

Many of the objects in the Museum in the Park’s collections, have had
long lives. They were made in such a way that they could be maintained,
repaired and passed onto the next generation or re-purposed into something
new rather than thrown away. Our objects reflect how many consumables
and possessions were bought and made locally, with products often sold in
containers that could be reused. We hope that by telling some of their stories
our objects can spark a discussion about sustainable living in the past and
the present. With Stroud District Council’s target for a carbon neutral district
by 2030, the sustainable stories these objects can tell are more relevant
than ever.

Story Three – Make do and Mend
                    This shirt and collar are from a collection of material
                    belonging to Alec Cathcart, local farmer and cyclist, who
                    was a founder member of the Stonehouse Wheelers
                    cycling club in 1948. We have over a 100 objects of his
                    dating from the 1940s to the 1990s including his touring
                    bike built to his specifications in 1962. The shirt is made
                    of cotton poplin and features a fabric label for a retailers
                    called Hopton’s in Fishponds, Bristol. The cotton collar
                    is 1 of 3 that could be worn with the shirt, attached using
                    brass collar studs. This shirt is made of natural materials
                    and its label suggests it was made in the UK. It had
                    collars that could be washed and starched separately
                    to avoid washing the whole shirt. They could be kept
                    and re-used with other garments. There is a darned
                    repair on one of the shoulders, reflecting how it was
common practise in the mid- 20th century to repair garments rather than
throw them away when they got damaged.

Since the 1950s consumers have increasingly embraced mass-produced
clothing sold cheaply to keep up with fashion trends. In the 1990s and 2000s
the term ‘fast fashion’ emerged to describe companies producing low-quality
clothes to follow fast-moving trends, cheap enough to be considered
disposable. Each year in the UK, 350 000 tonnes of wearable clothes end
up in landfill.

                                                             Continued on page 25

                                       24
Museum in the park - from page 24

The clothing industry is now the second largest polluter in the world after the
oil industry. Due to the energy required in production, manufacturing and
transportation, it accounts for 10% of global carbon emissions. Today most
of our clothes (72%) contain synthetic fibres such as polyester and acrylic,
which are made from fossil fuels. Each time we wash a synthetic garment
more than a thousand individual microfibres are released into the water,
making their way into our waterways and eventually into the food chain.
At the end of their life synthetic fibres are not bio-degradable and take
approximately 200 years to decompose, emitting harmful gases as they do.

Clothing made from natural fibres like our cotton shirt, also have an impact.
1kg of cotton requires 20000 litres of water to grow and the chemicals used
can lead to soil degradation. The dyeing and finishing of all clothes requires
huge quantities of water and in some countries these wastewaters are
dumped straight into rivers. It is evident that the impact of the fashion
industry on the environment is a vast and complex subject, without even
mentioning the human impact.

With all these things to consider, it is difficult for consumers to know what
choices to make. Sustainable clothing companies are a growing part of the
industry, offering clothes made from recycled materials or organic natural
materials with certifications regarding the use of chemicals and working
practises. There are more opportunities to buy second hand or swap clothes
and high street retailers are offering schemes to pass old clothes onto
charity or be recycled. To keep it simple, many are starting to look back to
what their grandparents would have done: buy less, buy clothes that last,
repair or repurpose and then pass it on.

                   THANK YOU

to all the volunteers who faithfully look after the
churchyard with grass-cutting etc. and have been undeterred by COVID. We’ve
had appreciative comments from several parishioners who pass on their thanks
and gratefulness that you have continued your efforts during this difficult time.

                                  Linda and Keith
                                 Churchwardens

                                         25
DISASTER WAITING:
           The Story of the Severn and Wye Railway Disaster

A talk given by Paul Barnett to the Cranham Local History Society

In William McGonagall’s words, The
Tay Bridge disaster happened ‘On the
last Sabbath day of 1879,/Which will
be remember’d for a very long time’.
That’s the same year a bridge, built to
the same box girder design, was
opened across the Severn estuary. It
survived rather longer, until 1960, and
then was brought low by two river
barges colliding, in thick fog, with the
bridge and bringing down one of the pillars, pier 17. Sections either side were
taken out, and the petroleum spirit cargo (252 tons) of the Wastdale exploded,
setting off a fire on the black-oil-carrying (191 tons) Arkendale which burnt for
several days. This was the point at which our speaker, Paul Barnett, who brought
his customary wide knowledge and brio to his talk, signed off. ‘That’s it, folks,’ as
I think he said. Only it wasn’t. It’s where Paul got started. Bridge disasters always
have big stories and a good few myths attached. The Severn Bridge Railway was
no exception. Paul set out to separate the two.

The prosaic side is fascinating: built to carry coal the Severn from an over-loaded
Lydney to Sharpness, it had twenty-one spans, with a turntable at the Sharpness
end, and a viaduct at the Lydney end, over the South Wales line, to which it had
no connection. It was a single-purpose line, and with the reduction in coal traffic
it lost much of its reason for existence.

Could the bridge have been repaired? One of the myths that Paul debunked was
that it was Dr Beeching who brought about its demise. Wrong: there was a second
crash, into pier 16, in 1961. The bridge was deemed irreparable and demolished in
the late 1960s. Another myth: a gas main ran across the bridge and exploded
when the crash happened. The reality: repair work was underway on the bridge at
that time, and the gas was turned off. Men were indeed working in the bridge at
that time – but they’d been given time off to listen on the radio to a big fight from
the Albert Hall.

                                                                  Continued on page 27

                                         26
Disaster waiting - from page 26

The two barges were tied together went the old story. The reality: they’d started
out from two different ports, Avonmouth and Swansea. Both had been caught in
the same strong current that runs north of Sharpness, they’d run into each other,
been turned round by the tide and swept back out and on to the bridge. The
barges could make six knots on a good day. The tidal race at peak runs at thirteen.
Wreckage if the two barges can still be seen at low tide, along with several of the
bridge piers.

Paul’s illustrations were based around thirty-nine remarkable glass sepia
photographic plates put together by the bridge’s designer in the 1870s to
promote the project. Paul also has a photo from the time of a policeman standing
by the big gap left by the crash. He’d been posted there to tell people they
couldn’t get across the bridge. He stood there, apparently, for three days. Or so I
understand the story. And finally… pier 17 was already badly corroded. It had
been struck by a boat in 1939. Since then it had, in Paul’s words, ‘been held
together by gravity’. A big big thank you to Paul for a memorable talk.

                                                                        Chris Collier

             Magazine subscription 2021/22
                   Remains at £10.00 for the 5th year
    Thank you to the many who have already set up a standing order
      or who plan to pay by BACS – I will send a reminder email in May.
    Cash payments will be collected during April/May by the person who
                        delivers** your magazine.

     But - please consider paying by bank transfer if you can.
        Thank you in anticipation for your cooperation.
                   Sue Stick: 813407 suemstick@gmail.com

 ** Thank you to all the deliverers: Joan, Kate, Deb, Nita, Len, Alan,
 Philippa, Gill, Andy, Helen, John, Jennifer & me!

                                        27
28
In order to vote in the upcoming Police and Crime Commissioner for
Gloucestershire, County, District and Parish Council elections taking place on
May 6th 2021 you must be registered on the Electoral Roll.

Planning is already underway and we would like to reassure you that our highest
priority is the safety of our staff and our electorate. We will be adhering to
Government Guidelines, so your Polling Station may look a bit different, please
help us to help you keep safe by following the guidelines.

To register to vote, please go to www.gov.uk/register-to-vote. You will need
your date of birth and national insurance number and registering only takes a few
minutes.
If you are not able to cast your ballot at a polling station or would prefer not to
vote in person you can apply for an “Absent Vote”.

Stroud District Council Elections web page has all the information
you need:
https://www.stroud.gov.uk/council-and-democracy/elections/how-do-i-vote

Postal vote deadline - 5pm, Tuesday 20th April 2021

Proxy vote deadline - 5pm, Tuesday 27th April 2021

                                         29
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     31
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  Occasional Advertisements – space available

Due to the lack of articles concerning events cancelled or
postponed due to Covid-19 there maybe room in the
magazine for occasional advertisements, over and above
our 8-page quota. Inclusion is at the Editors discretion.

    If you would like to take advantage of this please email
               advertising@cranhammag,co.uk

                              32
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                                     34
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                                        35
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              Call: 07870 967 359
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                             37
REGULAR EVENTS (although all may be subject to cancellation or
change, so please check directly with the organisers)

Club Pulse          Mondays 6.00 - 7.30pm - Painswick Youth Centre
                    (Nathan Youlton 07875 681130)
Orchestra           Mondays 8.00pm - V Hall (Beryl Berry 813200)
Post Office         Tuesdays 10.00am - 12noon - V Hall
Coffee Morning      Tuesdays 10.30 - 11.30am - V Hall
Cranham Art Group Tuesdays 7.00 - 9.00pm - V. Hall (Lyn Barker 813025)
Choir               Tuesdays 7.30pm - V Hall (Ian Wotherspoon 812387)
Beavers, Cubs       Wednesdays - Scout Centre - times as follows:
& Scouts            Beaver Scouts (6 to 8 yrs)     4.45 to 5.45pm
                    Cub Scouts (8 to 10 yrs)       5.50 to 7.10pm
                    Scouts (10 to 14 yrs)          7.30 to 9.00pm
Table Tennis Club   Wednesdays 7.30 - 9.30pm - V Hall - time change
                    (Clive Hayden 07833 635762 chayden814@gmail.com
Handbell Ringers    Thursdays 9.30am - TBC
                     (Jenny Barraclough 07977 997375
                    jenny.barraclough@btinternet.com)
Cranham Ramblers    Alternate Thursdays 9.30am – Village Hall
                    (Joan Charman 812708)
S’Combe Bridge Club 2nd and 4th Thursdays 7pm - Sheepscombe V Hall
                    (Contact Joy Edwards 812588)
Parent and Toddler Fridays 9.15 - 10.45am - V Hall
                    (Jemma Pockett 07500 800626)
Explorer Scouts     Fridays 7.30 - 9.00pm - V Hall
                    (Ian Coupland ian@couplandclan.co.uk)
Church Bell Ringers Alternate Saturdays 9.30am - Church (Rob Garratt 07703 503547)
Garden Club         Brimpsfield, Phone Francis Ellery 01452 862412 for further info.
Village Lunch       Monthly on a Monday 12.15 for 12.30pm
                    (Nicky Overs 07884 432886)

No new people this month.

If we have missed anyone, please accept our apologies!

Please make yourself known and we will include you next time.
                                         38
MAGAZINE CONTRIBUTIONS
 All articles for the forthcoming month should be forwarded to
                       the editors by email to
      editors@cranhammag.co.uk (preferred option).

Articles should be forwarded as either a WORD or WORKS
document and preferably in Ariel or Calibri font size 10 on A5
size paper settings. Articles may also be sent manually typed
or hand written.

Please refrain from using ADOBE EDITOR as all articles have
to be edited prior to inserting into the magazine.

All hard copies should be forward to Baggend (at the Knoll).

All items to be included within next months magazine will
need to be in the hands of the editors by the following dates:

               WEDNESDAY 14th APRIL 2021

          Magazines will be available for distribution:
            on Sunday 25th April or thereabouts.
    The date will be confirmed to the distributors by email.
                                .

                       Sue & Ian Shaw
                            814839
                 editors@cranhammag.co.uk

                              39
CRANHAM DIARY
Forthcoming events:
April 2021
1     Thurs Ramble                              Village Hall   9.45am
6     Tues Rubbish/Food Waste
13    Tues Food bank Drop off                   Painswick      10.00am - 12noon
             Recycling/Food Waste
14    Wed    ** Magazine Contributions Due **
15    Thurs Ramble                              Village Hall   9.45am
20    Tues Rubbish/Food Waste
27    Tues Recycling/Food Waste
29    Thurs Ramble                              Village Hall   9.45am

May 2021
6     Thurs CLHS Talk                           Via Zoom       7.45pm
12    Wed    Village Hall Meeting               Via Zoom       7.30pm
13&27 Thurs Rambles                             Village Hall   9.45am

                            For Regular Events
                            please see page 38

                           Cranham Lunch
             Cancelled until further notice due to COVID-19

                                    Nicky
                      (Tel: 07884 432886 or 812429
                      or nickyovers@hotmail.co.uk)

                                     40
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