Thursday 27 November 2014

50 Christmas Trees in a Church, Dickleburgh, South Norfolk - 30 November to 7 December

50 Christmas Trees in a Church Dickleburgh, South Norfolk
The 11th annual South Norfolk Christmas Tree extravaganza, 50 Christmas Trees in a Church, returns with 53 trees at All Saints Dickleburgh from Sunday, November 30 to Sunday, December 7.

Event organiser Rev James Roskelly said: “We are delighted with the response from the local community, contributing 53 decorated trees to our event. The church will be full of Christmas Trees, celebrating this year’s theme, ‘Signs and Wonders of Christmas’.”

South Norfolk MP Richard Bacon will officially open the Christmas Tree festival at 5pm on Saturday, November 29. The festival is then open daily 10am -7pm, except Sunday, December 7, when it closes at 4pm for the prize giving.

Entrance is free, but there is a charge for the programme and voting slip. The Christmas tree festival is raising money for two charities, Elizabeth's Legacy of Hope and Ormiston Families.

The event has a competitive side, as each organisation that enters a tree has the chance to win prize money in the visitors’ vote for the best adult and children’s tree. There is also a special award for the most innovative tree.

Programme and voting slip charge: adult £3.50, concessions £3, children free and pre-booked groups £2.75 per adult.

Morning coffee, light lunches and teas are served every day throughout the festival in Dickleburgh Church Rooms (next to the church).

Dickleburgh village is to the north of Diss, just off the A140. For more information t. 01379 676256, http://www.50christmastrees.com.

Wednesday 19 November 2014

Christmas at Bressingham Steam, South Norfolk – Father Christmas, Dad’s Army and Victorian Gallopers

Father Christmas on the Gallopers at Bressingham: photograph James Hoye
Father Christmas, his wife and elves are visiting Bressingham Steam, near Diss, South Norfolk, in the run up to Christmas, arriving every day by steam car. As well as meeting Father Christmas, visitors will be able to enjoy a Dad’s Army Christmas at 'Walmington-on-Sea' and take rides on a steam train and Bressingham’s celebrated Victorian steam Gallopers roundabout.

Father Christmas visits are on 30 November and 6, 7, 13, 14 and 20 to 24 December.  Entry on each day will be from 2pm to 5pm, closing no earlier than 6pm, except for Christmas Eve when entry is from 11am to 2pm. On 14, 21 and 22 December Bressingham Steam will also open from 12noon to 2pm.

Please book in advance to guarantee meeting Father Christmas. Tickets in advance are: adult  £9.50, children 3-12 £11.00 (includes a present) and under 3s £5.00 (for a present). Tickets bought on the day are £1 extra. To book, t. 01379 686900, online www.bressingham.co.uk/Christmas, or in person at the ticket office.

The 'Polar Express' at Bressingham Steam: photograph James Hoye
Steam train rides on the ‘Polar Express’ will be on the 2.5 miles (4km) Nursery Line and the Victorian steam Gallopers, which were built by Savages of King’s Lynn in 1897, will be dressed in Christmas finery with rides for all to enjoy.

The Dad’s Army exhibition, home of the national Dad’s Army collection and recreating Walmington-on-Sea, will also be decorated for Christmas. Walk down the high street and see Captain Mainwaring’s bank, Corporal Jones’ butcher’s shop and enjoy a children’s entertainer in the Church Hall. Children can also dress up in Dad’s Army uniforms.

The Gallopers Café will be open at the same time as the Steam Museum, serving hot drinks, snacks and a range of home made cakes. It’s the perfect place to come and warm up after the rides.

Bressingham Steam IP22 2AA is 2½ miles from Diss on the A1066. T. 01379 686900, www.bressingham.co.uk.

Bressingham Steam & Gardens, reg. charity no. 266374, was founded by the late Alan Bloom in 1961. The Steam Heritage Centre and Gardens are open daily for the main season from April to the end of October.

Monday 17 November 2014

Magic Moments at Fairhaven Garden – Broads Artist David Dane Exhibition November 22-30

Late Afternoon Turf Fen - David Dane
Renowned Broads artist David Dane returns to Fairhaven Woodland and Water Garden  at South Walsham from Saturday 22 to Sunday 30 November 2014 with Magic Moments. This exhibition features a brand new collection of 11 oil paintings, capturing fleeting images of the Broads. There will also be a selection of high-class giclée prints in various sizes. The exhibition is open every day from 10am to 4pm (free entry).

Visitors will be able to meet David, who will be at Fairhaven throughout the exhibition. He has been one of Broadland’s best-known artists for more than 40 years. In the 1980s and 1990s, David took the Broads worldwide with a series of prints, published by Rosentiel’s in London. Jenny White writing about his work in Artists and Illustrators magazine said: “David Dane’s Norfolk is a land of mystery, poised between this world and the next.”

For more information about David Dane see www.dfdaneoilpaintings.co.uk

Winter River Horrning - David Dane
Fairhaven Woodland and Water Garden NR13 6DZ is at South Walsham, nine miles east of Norwich, signposted off A47 at B1140 junction, t. 01603 270449, www.fairhavengarden.co.uk. The garden is open daily all year (closed Christmas Day). Garden entry is £6.10 adult, £5.60 concessions and £3.60 child (under 5 free). Free entry to tearoom, gift shop and plant sales.

There is wheelchair access throughout the garden, including a Sensory Garden. Visitors requiring special facilities are advised to telephone in advance, mobility scooters available. Dogs are welcome on leads; small charge to cover poop scoop.



Monday 10 November 2014

Memento Mori – Cambridge World War I Memorials Trail from Art Alive in Churches

Pembroke College Memorial - photograph by Mike Dixon

East Anglian charity, Art Alive in Churches has produced Memento Mori World War I Memorials in Cambridge, a trail leaflet featuring colleges, churches and Mill Road Cemetery. Download the trail leaflet here.

Complementary trail leaflets are also available for Norfolk and Suffolk and can be downloaded from Memento Mori in the projects section of www.artaliveinchurches.com. Leaflets can also be picked up at participating colleges and churches.

Jennie Hawks, Director, Art Alive in Churches said: “Art Alive aims to increase understanding and appreciation of the wealth of heritage, arts and crafts in East Anglian churches.  With this year’s 100th anniversary of the start of the First World War, we decided to focus on the memorials to those who made the ultimate sacrifice in the war.”

“The range of memorials is quite amazing. We have selected 10 locations in Cambridge, with 17 in Norfolk and 13 in Suffolk. I recommend exploring our trails as a way to begin to understand the impact of the war on local communities, as well as appreciating the care that went into creating these permanent memorials to the catastrophe of the Western Front, along with Gallipoli, the Middle East campaign and the war at sea. The memorials at Cambridge colleges are a stark reminder of the terrible loss of both students and academics in the war.”

Cambridge churches and colleges featured: Jesus College, Sidney Sussex College, Great St Mary’s, Clare College, St Catharine’s College, Little St Mary’s, St Botolph’s, Pembroke College, Emmanuel College and Mill Road Cemetery.
   
Mill Road Cemetery - photograph by Mike Dixon

Examples of Memorials 

Mill Road Cemetery – there is an online trail at www.millroadcemetery.org.uk featuring 19 First World War Commonwealth War Graves. More than 100 Cambridge men who died overseas are commemorated on family graves. The Friends of Mill Road Cemetery are researching the stories behind these memorials and further trails will be created.

Clare College – the memorial in Clare College Chapel demonstrates the impact of the war on Cambridge colleges. Among the seemingly endless list of names is William Denis-Browne (1888-1915) who was a composer, pianist, organist and music critic. A close friend of Rupert Brooke, he was commissioned into the Royal Naval Division with Brooke and died at Gallipoli on 4 June 1915. Memorial Court (architect Sir Giles Gilbert Scott) was also built to commemorate those who died in the First World War.

The First World War poet and writer Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967) was a Clare College alumnus spending one year at the college from 1905-6. His semi-autobiographical Memoirs of a Fox Hunting Man (1928), Memoirs of an Infantry Officer (1930) and Sherston’s Progress (1936) graphically record his experiences in the trenches of the Western Front. Sassoon was made an Honorary Fellow of Clare College in1953.  

Pembroke College – the memorial, close to the entrance to the chapel on the west side of the Hitcham cloister, features 308 former members of the college community who were awarded thirty-four Military Crosses, four Croix de Guerre, six Distinguished Service Orders, and three Victoria Crosses. A full list of those who died including their military career and where they are buried is available via the ‘Lest we Forget’ section of the Pembroke College website www.pem.cam.ac.uk.

Thursday 6 November 2014

Autumn Colours Tour at Fairhaven Garden – Sunday, November 16 - Norfolk Broads


Enjoy the spectacular autumn colours at Fairhaven Woodland and Water Garden, South Walsham, Norfolk Broads, with its mature oak and beech trees, on this guided walk with Head Gardener Ian Guest on Sunday, November 16 at 11am. Included in the walk is the ancient King Oak, which was a sapling at the time of the Battle of Hastings.

Garden entry is £6.10 adult, £5.60 concessions, £3.60 child (under 5 free) and dogs 25p (to cover poop scoop) - no additional charge for the guided walk.

There is also a Christmas Fayre on November 16 from 11am to 3pm (free entry to the fayre) with locally made Christmas cakes, jewellery, decorations, woodcrafts and more.

Fairhaven Woodland and Water Garden is at South Walsham, nine miles east of Norwich, signposted off A47 at B1140 junction, t. 01603 270449.

The garden is open daily all year (closed Christmas Day), free entry to tearoom, gift shop and plant sales. There is wheelchair access throughout the garden, including a Sensory Garden. Visitors requiring special facilities are advised to telephone in advance, mobility scooters available. Dogs are welcome on leads; small charge to cover poop scoop.

Take Part in Dickleburgh Church 11th Annual Christmas Tree Extravaganza - South Norfolk


The 11th annual South Norfolk Christmas Tree extravaganza, 50 Christmas Trees in a Church, is set to take place at All Saints Dickleburgh from Sunday, November 30 to Sunday, December 7.

Forty-three local organisations, businesses and children’s groups have already booked to take part in the event by entering decorated Christmas trees. Just seven more trees are needed to make the round 50.

The event has a competitive side, as each organisation that enters has the chance to win prize money in the visitors’ vote for the best trees. There is also a special award for the most innovative tree. For more information, and to enter a tree, contact Rowena Roskelly, t. 01379 676256. The deadline for tree entries is November 15.

South Norfolk MP Richard Bacon will officially open the Christmas Tree festival at 5pm on Saturday, November 29. The festival is then open daily 10am -7pm, except Sunday, December 7 when it closes at 4pm for the prize giving.

Entrance is free, but there is a charge for the programme and voting slip. The festival is raising money for two charities, Elizabeth's Legacy of Hope and Ormiston Families.

Programme and voting slip charge: adult £3.50, concessions £3, children free and pre-booked groups £2.75 per adult.

Event organiser Rev James Roskelly said: “We are really looking forward to a ‘full house’ of Christmas Trees and are sure that we will reach 50 or more. This year’s theme is ‘Signs and Wonders of Christmas’. Our event is an excellent way to begin the Christmas season and we look forward to welcoming visitors to the festival to enjoy the glorious trees, but also to take time for peaceful reflection.”

Morning coffee, light lunches and teas are served every day throughout the Christmas Tree festival in Dickleburgh Church Rooms (next to the church).

Dickleburgh village is to the north of Diss, just off the A140.