Monday, 29 April 2019

It's that time of year again...


I was reminded, not that I needed reminding, that we are fast approaching the May Day public holiday, by this representation of the Jack, or Green Man, hanging in the Jolly Fisherman, Hastings first micropub (blog). Of course you'll be reading more about this over the next week, and not just here, but a wee reminder that Hastings Jack in the Green festival runs from this Friday 3rd May to Monday 6th May 2019, when the climatic procession is held (website).

Sunday, 28 April 2019

London Marathon: Best Wishes!


I'm sure I must know people running in the London Marathon today, so, very best wishes to them and, indeed, all the runners, who annually raise £millions for charity, like my friend Paul, who ran for Macmillan Nurses 4 years ago, in memory of our friend Debbie (blog), and for whom I followed closely writing many blogs that year (eg blog).

Best wishes and congratulations, in advance, to everyone, and if you know anyone who has entered or you did, please feel free to let me know and I'll publicize them/you and the charity for which money was raised, good luck all!

Saturday, 27 April 2019

Sussex Young Person Natural History Award

Filsham Reedbed*

The Sussex Wildlife Trust is seeking nominations for the David Streeter Award for Natural History in Sussex 2019 (website). This award is for a young person (aged between 11 and 25 on the 1st of January 2019, closing date the 31st July 2019) who has made an 'outstanding contribution' towards one of the following in Sussex: 
  • the study of natural history;
  • practical nature conservation;
  • biological recording;
  • advocacy for conservation.

The winner will receive a choice of either £250 in Natural History Book Service vouchers (website), or the fees paid for a weekend Field Studies Council course (typical residential fee £250, website). Apply on the website.

For further information either go to the website, or email swtceoffice@sussexwt.org.uk 


* Filsham Reedbank is located between Hastings and Bexhill, to the east of Combe Haven river (Grid Ref: TQ775097), is one of the largest reedbeds in Sussex, and is a Sussex Wildlife Trust nature reserve. It is a stopping off point for many birds, including swallows, warblers, bitterns and marsh harriers, plus reed warblers, bearded tits and water rail breed there. There are many rare plants growing there, and amphibians and insects live within the varied habitat of reed and open water.

Friday, 26 April 2019

Hastings Lifeboat Naming Ceremony and Launch.


I was looking forward to the 'naming ceremony' of the new lifeboat, Richard and Caroline Colton, tomorrow (Saturday 27th April) at the Hastings Lifeboat Station (facebook page), however, I just saw on their twitter page that, unfortunately, "due to the inclement weather forecast... the naming ceremony will take place inside the boathouse" restricting the numbers who can attend to "invited guests only..." 

What is still planned though, is the launching of the boat at 13.00, so not all bad for the uninvited, keeping an eye on the weather forecast (Met Office), fingers crossed...

Sunday, 21 April 2019

Early-ish Morning Walk...


I thought I'd get out early to beat the crowds, so, there I was down at the seafront (luckily, I only live a 4 minutes walk from the beach, so not that difficult to get there early), and it was pretty quiet indeed, here at the White Rock Theatre...

White Rock Hotel 


Opposite the White Rock Theatre and the White Rock Hotel, of course, is our (sadly not ours anymore though) lovely award winning Hastings Pier...


Just think of the film Byzantium (YouTube trailer), OK, Palace Court really, but a fine old Victorian Gothic building it is (Historic England).

Sculpture on Beach (blog) 

St Mary in the Castle (blog) 


The Hastings Lifeboat Station, RNLI, with the East Hill in the background, and with respect to the crew and volunteers who continue this proud service that is run as a charitable organisation, without central government funding (thankfully, as it means the service does not get hit by central government austerity cuts, phew!).


Hastings Miniature Railway, that travels parallel to the seafront between Rock-a-Nore and Marine Parade (website) and is run by Dan Radcliffe, who also set up and runs the miniature railway in Alexandra Park (blog).


Blue Reef Aquarium (website) 

Shipwreck Museum (website) 


Hastings Fishermen's Museum (blog), also in Rock-a-Nore Road (you can see where I'm going with this early morning walk now), and which also has been the starting point for the Old Hastings Preservation Society (OHPS) guided walks that returned for the year this weekend with their Stade Walk (website).


Then on to the Stacey Marie RX134 (facebook page), the Fishermen's Museum owned retired fishing boat, and a bit of a project of ours, and more about which you can either read on her facebook page, or by visiting Hastings Fishermen's Museum.


On the other side of Rock-a-Nore Road is the Dolphin Inn (facebook page), where I decamped for a coffee and a couple of pints; they now open for breakfast at 09.00 at weekends and 10.00 weekdays, so they were open for us early birds!


Enjoy the rest of your Easter Weekend, indeed, enjoy 2019, cheers!

Friday, 19 April 2019

Warning from East Sussex County Council!


I nearly forgot to share this, I saw this online from the Council yesterday: 

East Sussex Trading Standards issued the warning following a spate of cold callers offering house improvements or gardening services. One resident was quoted more than £10,000 for replacement garage doors but was astute enough to turn down the offer. Other services being offered include jet washing of driveways, removing moss from roofs, driveway resurfacing and offers to repair allegedly loose or damaged roof tiles.

Matthew Knowles, East Sussex County Council Trading Standards enforcement and investigations manager, said: “Bogus callers prey on the vulnerable, pressuring them into paying for work they don’t need for over-inflated prices. Our advice to people would be to never agree on the doorstep to have work carried out and don’t be tricked into thinking you’re getting a good deal in return for payment in cash or an immediate start to work. Always use a reputable trader, preferable someone who has been recommended by a friend or relative, take your time before making a decision and get several written quotes before agreeing to have any work done.”

Anyone who has concerns about doorstep callers is urged to call the police on 101, or the Citizen’s Advice Consumer Service on 03454 040506.



Easter Weekend in Hastings


It certainly appears that there is plenty going on this weekend, as you'd expect, I'm always happy to support Hastings RNLI Lifeboat, crew and volunteers, and this Saturday heralds Easter at Hastings Lifeboat Station! From 11.00 am to 3.00 pm you are invited to join in with "some Easter fun" including refreshments and cake, stalls and tombola, a bit of singing, the chance to meet the Easter Bunny, a goodie bag for every child who visits wearing an Easter Bonnet (facebook), and, of course, the chance to help raise money for the RNLI and Hastings Lifeboat.

Great to see that this Saturday and Sunday also heralds the return of the first of the 2019 guided walks organised by the Old Hastings Preservation Society (OHPS) with their Stade Guided Walk (website). If you wish to participate, you need to meet up outside Hastings Fishermen's Museum, Rock-a-Nore Road, at 11.00am both days (meet indoors in inclement weather, but the forecast looks very good with blue sky every day of the weekend - Met Office). You will be led on this tour of the Stade Fishing Quarter by an experienced volunteer from the Fishermen's Museum, and it usually lasts between 60 and 90 minutes. Strong shoes are advised, and if, like me, you burn easily, a hat and/or Factor 50 might be advisable. The walk is free, but any donations to Hastings Fishermen's Museum would be very much appreciated, many thanks!


One building along from the Fishermen's Museum in Rock-a-Nore Road is the Shipwreck Museum (website), also well worth a visit! In addition, this Saturday they have organised a guided walk of the wreck of the Amsterdam, a Dutch East Indiaman that ran aground at Bulverhythe in 1749 (website). This guided walk costs £6 for adults and £2 for children, and meets at the viewing platform above the beach opposite the wreck at Bulverhythe at 7.00 pm on the 20th of April; appropriate footwear is necessary and more details can be found at the website.


One building further down in Rock-a-Nore Road is the Blue Reef Aquarium (website), where you are invited to meet Mermaid Anna today (Friday 19th between 11.00 am and 3.00 pm), and with Easter events until Monday the 22nd April.


Back to the Stade Open Space in front of the Lifeboat Station, and Saturday, from 4.00 to 10.00 pm will be the Hastings Easter Music Festival, with EDM, Hip Hop, Rap and Soul live music featured. From 12.00 to 4.00 pm over the weekend there is also an associated art exhibition (website).


Hastings Pier (facebook page) has also announced that there will be another "grand reopening of Hastings Pier" at 11.00 am on Saturday 20th April, this time with "Free Entertainment" and an Easter Egg Hunt, Mascots, Ice Cream, Tea, Coffee and Cake.

Whatever, wherever, there will be plenty more happening with the usual sites, beach and music events, good food and drink, and gorgeous weather, enjoy!

Queens Road Temporarily Closed!


Queens Road is temporarily closed off between Cornwallis Street and South Terrace (07.25 19th April) because of a vehicle left there that had been involved in a Police incident elsewhere, just waiting for it to be collected...

Thursday, 18 April 2019

Hastings Foodbank 7 Years!


I nearly missed this, but Hastings Foodbank announced yesterday that it was 7 years ago when they opened and, since the 17th of April 2012, they have dealt with 17,030 referrals and provided the equivalent of 370,773 meals!  

Now, I wish to congratulate Hastings Foodbank, and the people and businesses of Hastings that have contributed towards this outstanding feat, but also to condemn the Government of one of the richest countries in the world that has allowed the need for foodbanks to exist...

Shame on the Government and the 9 years of austerity measures it introduced!

If you would like to contribute to Hastings Foodbank see this blog.

Monday, 15 April 2019

Hastings to Battle, with quite a long detour!


This walk is approximately 18 miles long, but with coming from home, and allowing for slopes up and downhill, when we walked it at the weekend it was likely over 20 miles long, it took us about 10 hours with stops for food and drink, and a few parts were particularly muddy, which slowed us down a bit... Plus the weather changed from sunny to hailstones and back again with regularity, making us take off/put on cagoules, don/take off caps and shades etc etc... We started from home, but my first photograph is looking down at Rock-a-Nore Road and the Stade from Tackleway.


We decided to avoid taking the whole walk via Saxon Shore Way, particularly as a section is cut off, and headed up the East Hill and to Barley Lane, rejoining the Saxon Shore Way at Fairlight.


We often sit at the bench above when walking this way, and the amount of surrounding blossom provided a new image for me.

View from the bench


From Fairlight, the streets of which we are very familiar with, it's a relatively short walk over to Pett Level (above), where we both ate our first sandwiches of the journey.


We then crossed over to the Royal Military Canal (website), constructed over 200 years ago to help defend the country from the threat of a French invasion under Napoleon Bonaparte. Walking eastwards along the canal and the photograph above provides evidence of the possible consequence for people not controlling their pets, that is for the pet, not the human 😉

Royal Military Canal

We carried on down the canal to just before the New Gate at Winchelsea, then crossed to the north side and headed back westwards, when we reached Pannel Valley Reserve we looked out from 2 of their birdwatching hides.

View from Hide, Pannel Valley Reserve


We then headed northwards, joining the 1066 Country Walk, towards Icklesham, passing this windmill and home, in a field where on our last visit it was full of mushrooms and rabbits, apparently the wrong time of year and day this Saturday.


We reached the parish church of Icklesham, All Saints with St Nicholas, a 12th century Norman building, with additions and restoration up to and including the 19th century (website), and entered as we hadn't visited for a few years, well worthwhile.


We then crossed the road and walked up to the Queens Head Inn (website), early 17th century buildings that merged and were turned into a public house 200 years later in 1832. I was pleasantly surprised to chat to Martin, one of the two lads soon to be opening a micropub in Bexhill, who was working behind the bar! Excellent looking food being served up here, indeed, and 6 real ales, which we did sample (though not all, still miles to walk), and food-wise, we had to wait to eat our second sandwich a little later.


We had by then rejoined the 1066 Country Walk, and headed roughly westwards along it all the way from Icklesham, on the way spotting these rather delightful primroses by one of the short pieces of road we passed along, until we reached Westfield.


Having negotiated our way through the streets of Westfield, not so obvious a route, but my Ordnance Survey map certainly helped, we then again found ourselves wandering across fields, including the rapeseed field above. Until now, we'd not really encountered heavy mud, but that was made up for by 2 encounters before we reached Great Wood, to the west of Battle! Mr Hubris now gave us a good kicking, with brambles and barbed wire fencing helping give us a good scratching too, we had been really happy that we were so near to Battle with reasonably clean boots...


Anyway, we coped with the mud and stinky water, and crossed Great Wood, picking up speed, until coming out onto the road near the Grade II listed Battle railway station. This fun wee building was built in the mid 19th century, opening on the 1st of January 1852, and was where we caught a train back to Hastings, thank you very much. The interesting people also waiting at the station, including one very eccentric, could help me write an essay, but maybe for another day...

We got home half an hour later, great day!

Saturday, 13 April 2019

Seafront Walk, Pier & Beach Huts...


Visit from my brother, so we decided to walk along the seafront to Bexhill and back yesterday, on our way we had a wander to the end of the Pier and back, quite a lot of Gull poo, I'd think it would be a wee bit nasty if wet, but luckily nice and dry! Great to be able to extend the promenade over the sea again... but it was closed by the time we returned, just after 5.30 pm, sadly, as we were going to have another wander along to the end, had to visit the Jolly Fisherman instead!

Oh yes, and apparently one of the animals of Gulzar's pier is missing, a pony, though Dan was impressed with the hippopotamus, so much so he took a photograph for his youngest daughter... and the Elk with golden testicles remains!


And the St Leonards/Azur beach huts are back from their annual winter retreat at Bulverhythe, as happens every spring (last years blog), lovely...

Friday, 12 April 2019

Hastings Foodbank Thanks!


Following their appeal, as I described in my blog last week, Hastings Foodbank, on its facebook page, has expressed its thanks to all the people who had urgently donated food supplies to them, notably the "two generous individuals" who provided the large donations in the photographs above and below!


The people of Hastings are amazingly generous indeed, many thanks to all!

Thursday, 11 April 2019

Register to Vote!

We don't appear to be having local elections in Hastings this year (Hastings Borough Council website), but elections for the European Parliament are starting to look like a distinct possibility now (BBC)! If you are not already on the Register to vote, it only takes a short while to register online at the Government website. Don't lose it!

Monday, 8 April 2019

I've got a ticket to Rye

By Steve the Beermeister

It seems to be a regular event this, visiting the Rye Waterworks micropub (a few blogs now, for example this blog says a bit about it!), this time I traveled by train, but well worth it, yet again! Plenty of pleasant company, obviously the landlord and partner, and Alan (someone I know from Hastings) arrived later for his first visit, coincidentally. Plus five Norwegian lawyers, very pleasant company, women friends from university, who meet up every year, they work all over the place now, coming from Malta to London! Primarily, the lawyers meet up, not just to keep in touch, but to visit vineyards, this time they were about to go to Carr Taylor in Westfield (website) after a quick drink here, and having visited Chapel Down (website) the day before.


As ever 8 real ales, all £3.70 a pint, served straight from the cask by gravity, and a similar number of real ciders, and the odd perry or two. I only tried 3 ales, one more than once, first the Romney Marsh Brewery (website) Romney Gold (4.1%), single hopped with Citra, pale golden bitter, not bad at all! Then the Battle Brewery (website) Black Arrow Porter (4.5%), as usual, porters and stouts are difficult to differentiate (see older blog), as in, it depends on the individual brewer what they call their beers, I'd say this was more like a stout... Anyway, dark, lovely taste and body, though a wee bit lacking in the liveliness stakes, not bad at all though!

The ale I drank the most of was Old Dairy Brewery (website), their excellent session ale, Uber Brew (3.8%), pale dry and bitter, with a lovely fruity aroma and taste from the Citra, Chinook and Equinox hops used. Great that you can get this much flavour and body into a 3.8% ale, wonderful, la même chose!


Oh yes, and this is the toilet flush now in the gents, amuses me, me being a pale dry hoppy ale drinker, not to forget that David (the landlord) is made up with now being included on the Free Town Map of Rye... Anyway, cheers for a very pleasant visit and company, and the excellent ale of course, cheers!