the grapevine seamer & tame bridge magazine no. 139 june 2016 - july 2016
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The Grapevine SEAMER & TAME BRIDGE MAGAZINE No. 139 June 2016 - July 2016TRANSCRIPT
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The Grapevine SEAMER & TAME BRIDGE MAGAZINE
No. 139 June 2016 - July 2016
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EDITOR’S NOTES
Let me first apologise for the poor quality printing of the last
edition. Problems with compatibility of different Windows
(10!) versions caused the printing to be done at 90% of the
correct size and thus left bigger margins on the right hand
side of each page. This meant when folded the centres were
misaligned. We hope we have sorted the problem out now. However,
technology problems are something most of us ‘suffer’ from, often with-
out understanding why. I hope you enjoy this edition! The Seamer Show
is the main thing to look forward to, and prepare for, so read on quickly
and get busy!!
The next edition will be August/September and submission of articles to
me by 26th July, please.
Dave Campy
ST. MARTIN’S CHURCH Eucharists at 11.15 on
June 5th and 19th
July 3rd, 17th and 31st
Revd Paul Hutchinson
PARISH COUNCIL NEWS
NORTH YORKSHIRE POLICE WARNING
On Wednesday 11th May, door to door sellers were in Thirsk and they
stated they were working for the Police. This was not the case. If you see
something suspicious in your area, call 101.
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY
We have been asked to circulate the volunteer opportunity below by North
Yorkshire County Council.
Volunteers are being sought to help guide the business of policing in
North Yorkshire and York. Voters have recently re-elected Julia Mulligan
as the North Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner and over this next
term, the North Yorkshire Police and Crime Panel will be tasked with
providing an important check and balance on her plans for policing. The
panel is now offering an exciting opportunity for two people from North
Yorkshire or York to join it as co-opted independent members in this next
phase for a four-year term from October 2016. This will include re-
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viewing the commissioner’s budget for policing, the level of council tax
to be set and key appointments such as for a chief constable.
Further information about the role and an application form are available to
download from www.nypartnerships.org.uk/pcprecruitment or by calling
01609532750.The closing date for applications is Friday, June 10th, 2016.
Sheena Spence Yorkshire Local Councils Associations, York House, Outgang Lane, Osbaldwick,
YORK, YO19 5UP. Tel: 01904 436622. Email: [email protected].
Website: www.yorkshirelca.gov.uk
HAMBLETON BUSINESS AWARDS
Good Luck to Labman in the Apprenticeship Category.
'POND PARTY' The next stage of uplifting the village pond is to restore its plant world.
With the go ahead from the Parish Council, I have ordered Aquatic plants
from a recommended source, (in excess of 500) for delivery on the 8th
July. Therefore, I am trying to organise a 'Pond Party' on the 9th July in
order to get this large amount of plants to be placed in their rightful
positions. There is also bulbs and seeds to be planted around the borders,
for those who do not wish to wade.
As, by the law of averages, July should be summer!! so about lunch-time
there will a tin of beer or a glass of wine along with snacks, to make this
event a bit of a social gathering too.
Anybody who could offer their services for a couple of hours or for as
long as it takes on this date, would be massively appreciated, could you
please let me know. We have a few pairs of waders available but more
would be more than welcome.
Note that we will be using 25th June as a tidying up day to prepare for
the arrival of all of those plants. So please try to help on one of those
days. Contact me for more details. Thanks
Gill Burton. tel: 713985
[Editor. A big thanks to Gill for all her efforts. Please come and support
her party!]
VILLAGE HALL NEWS AND EVENTS GREENFINGERS (Seamer's Garden Club)
The weather has played havoc with our schedule for the last two months.
We kept arranging to go and see the Daffodils. On the first two attempts
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they were late in opening so it was pointless going; then at the 3rd attempt
the weather was so bad we hid in Cherryhill nursery and had a meal!
Because of the attempted trips to Farndale, we cancelled the May meeting,
In June, we were going to be included in the trip to the Forbidden Garden,
which has had to be cancelled due to lack of interest.
So now the Pooled Supper and Plant swap is the June meeting on the 14th.
JULY WE WILL BE INVOLVED IN THE PRODUCE SHOW SO DUST
YOUR ROSES AND FEED YOUR VEG.
September ? Visit to the Transporter and 'Salthome' - to be arranged.
October 11th Pumpkin carving
November 8th Pooled Supper and Quiz.
December 13th Christmas Wreath
You do not need a Garden to join 'Greenfingers', the outings are all plant
orientated but are chosen by the group. Club Membership is £10 with
meetings held in the Hall priced at £2 which includes a glass of wine.
Where a member's car is used for an outing a donation of £2 towards petrol
is suggested.
ZUMBA GOLD
Will start again on Monday 13th at 12 o'clock, this gentle Exercise will help
keep us fit! (See separate advert)
BADMINTON
The official night for Badminton is moving to Friday night. The Equipment
is all there, it's a shame it is not being used.
SEAMER PRODUCE SHOW
Copies of the schedule and entry forms are available from the Village
Hall, off the website, or if you ring me
Margaret Smith 01642 710611
SEAMER VILLAGE HALL 100+ CLUB
March winners were: (140 members)
1st £20 23 Gwen Aston, Stokesley
2nd £17 150 Don & Hilary Spencely, Tame Bridge
3rd £14 54 Kathy Mark, Tame Bridge
4th £11 81 Colin Wormald, Stokesley
5th £8 20 Edmund & Pam Philips, Tame Bridge
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April winners were: (140 members)
1st £20 130 Dave Swales, off Hilton Road
2nd £17 71 Mike Walton, Stainton Road
3rd £14 80 Jean Webster, Tame Bridge
4th £11 19 Audrey Reeve, Tame Bridge
5th £8 111 Mike Bollands, The Green
Due to the Bank Holiday, the May draw will be in the next Grapevine.
In November the 100+ Club was 1 year old. We now have 140 members.
For those members who joined last June/July, this means that you are due
to join again. If you wish to do so, please get in touch with me on 01642
710294 or by e-mail on [email protected].
New members can join at anytime - £1 per month/£12 per year.
Full details are on the village website: seamervillage.co.uk
I look forward to hearing from you.
Christine Cooper
HALL TIMETABLE
Monday Pop-In 10.00am
Zumba Gold
12.00 Art Group
1.30pm
Beginner’s Pilates Class
6.00-7.00pm Craft Club
7.00pm
Tuesday Carpet
Bowls 10.00am
Improvers and Intermediates
Pilates Class
6.00-7.00pm
Hall Committee meeting
(1st Tuesday in month)
Greenfingers
7.00pm (2nd Tuesday)
Seamer Parish Council (3rd Tuesday)
Wednesday Table Tennis
7.00pm
Thursday Zumba Class
5.45-6.30pm Bridge Group
7.00pm
Friday Metafit
9.30am
Badminton
6.00-9.00pm
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FORTHCOMING EVENTS
June 12th Queen's Birthday Celebration . Final details from the
board on the railings outside the Village Hall - see later
(or from Mark Murphy 01642 712371)
June 25th Bus trip to Forbidden Corner - Cancelled
Sunday July 24th Seamer Produce Show
August No Event planned
September Games night and Indoor Car Boot
October 7th Harvest Supper with the Fishermen's Choir.
November Quiz
December Candlelit Supper with Carols
New Years Eve Old fashioned Party night (pooled supper)
2017 Burns Night
QUEEN’S 90TH BIRTHDAY PARTY
HM Queen’s Birthday Celebrations at to be held at Seamer Village Hall,
Sunday 12th June 2016. Music, tables and chairs provided. Please bring
your own food and drink and join in the fun! Hall open from 16.30, meal
eaten together from 17.00 onwards. All from Seamer welcome. Please
contact Mark for more details on 01642 712371.
Mark Murphy
JAM JARS WANTED
It is now a year since I told you about my friend Jenny Firman who in her
spare time makes jams, jellies, chutney's and pickles of every description
to sell to raise money for Cancer Research UK.
In the seven years' she has been doing this, she has raised the amazing
sum of £15,600, which includes £3,700 for the last year ending on April
30th.
To achieve this sum she has required an awful lot of jam jars and produce
to fill them with. Many of you have been saving them for her and she
would be grateful if you could keep on doing so. Please save any glass
jars varying in size from the small breakfast jam/marmalade ones and
baby food jars – to put samples in – and others in-between up to 1lb or
454g.
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As it will soon be the season for soft fruits and later on other fruits and
vegetables, if you have a surplus of any produce and don’t know what to
do with it, she will be glad to take it off your hands and is willing to pick it
as well.
The glass jars can be left at the village hall when it is open for activities or
they can be left at Lowfields Farm, Stainton Road, Seamer – by the gates,
or you can contact Jenny and she will collect them and/or any produce
from you.
If you would like to see what she makes and wish to place an order, or if
you have an outlet where you could sell her preserves, look on her
Facebook page.
Her details are:
Jenny Firman: Phone: 01642 723934 / 07725207515
Facebook: easby charity preserves
e-mail: [email protected]
With your help I hope she will be able to raise a lot more money for this
very deserving charity.
Many thanks
Christine Cooper 01642 710294
APRIL’S JUMBLE SALE
Seamer take a bow!
A big thank you to everyone who donated and helped out at this now
popular annual event - where would I be without you!
The turnout was as good as ever with many staying back for a cuppa and
homemade biscuit before heading off laden down with bags. We raised
£380 on the day, then £56 for 'rags' and more money from furniture; the
final figure being £532.15.
Last year's you may recall made over £600 though £272 of that was from
two special donations we listed on Ebay. This year there was only one
such lot and that made £25. Suffice to say the 2016 jumble sale was the
best ever. Then add the feedback from our regulars: "I never forget the
jumble sale", "what a happy event this is", "how many black sacks have
you got?" and from the student who kits out himself and most of his year -
"they all love what I bring back from here".
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A real feelgood day brought to you by the people of Seamer and this year
Daisy Chain, an autism charity that supports Christine Cooper's
grandson, has also benefited from everything we had left.
Please start saving for next year :)
Jo Batey 01642 713143
SEAMER METHODIST CHURCH The next few weeks will, undoubtedly, be dominated by the referendum on
whether to stay in the European Union or to withdraw. The problem with
the debate so far is that there has been far more dark
than light upon this very important decision. Whilst I
have my own opinion, I am not going to go into print
with it. What I do ask is that we try to avoid an
emotional response to the headlines and scare tactics
but seek a calm and considered response.
I came across the following quote by Robert F Kennedy:-
‘Each time someone stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of
others, or strikes out against injustice, he or she sends forth a tiny ripple of
hope, and crossing each other from a million different centres of energy
and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest
walls of oppression and resistance.’
The decision made in the referendum will have very deep and profound
implications for our future and for the whole of Europe and the world.
Don’t leave others to vote.
TIMES OF WORSHIP
June 5th @ 10.30 am at Hutton Rudby led by Rev Richard Bradshaw
June 12th @ 10.30 am All Age Worship led by Christine Campy
June 19th @ 10.30 am led by David Sills
June 26th @10.30 am led by Ken Hudson
July 3rd @ 10.30 am led by Elaine Wilson
July 10th @ 10.30 am at Hutton Rudby led by Elaine Wilson
July 17th @ 10.30 am All Age Worship led by Rev Daniel
July 24th @ 10.30 am led by Laura Atkinson
July 31st @ 10.30 am led by Peter Jackson
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THOUGHT FOR THE MONTH
Every day is a celebration because instead of waiting for happy endings,
we open our eyes to the wonder of life, to see the humour and magic in
each moment. Delighted in the way things turn out, amazed at the beauty
of it all.
TIME FOR A SMILE
A minister called at the home of one of the Church members. The door
was answered by a 10 year old boy smoking a cigar and smelling of
whisky. ‘Is your mother in?’ asked the minister.
‘What do you think?’ replied the boy.
Ron Kirk
INTERESTING FACTS 1. WHY do men's clothes have buttons on the right while women's
clothes have buttons on the left?
BECAUSE: When buttons were invented, they were very expensive and
worn primarily by the rich. Since most people are right-handed, it is
easier to push buttons on the right through holes on the left. Because
wealthy women were dressed by maids, dressmakers put the buttons on
the maid's right! And that's where women's buttons have remained since.
2. WHY do ships and aircraft use 'mayday' as their call for help?
BECAUSE: This comes from the French word m'aidez - meaning 'help
me' - and is pronounced, approximately, 'mayday.'
3. WHY are zero scores in tennis called 'love'?
BECAUSE: In France, where tennis became popular, the round zero on
the scoreboard looked like an egg and was called 'l'oeuf,' which is French
for 'the egg.' When tennis was introduced in the US, Americans
(naturally) mispronounced it 'love.'
4. WHY do X's at the end of a letter signify kisses?
BECAUSE: In the Middle Ages, when many people were unable to read
or write, documents were often signed using an X. Kissing the X
represented an oath to fulfil obligations specified in the document. The X
and the kiss eventually became synonymous.
5. WHY is shifting responsibility to someone else called 'passing the
buck?
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BECAUSE: In card games, it was once customary to pass an item, called
a buck, from player to player to indicate whose turn it was to deal. If a
player did not wish to assume the responsibility of dealing, he would 'pass
the buck' to the next player.
6. WHY do people clink their glasses before drinking a toast?
BECAUSE: In earlier times it used to be common for someone to try to
kill an enemy by offering him a poisoned drink. To prove to a guest that a
drink was safe, it became customary for a guest to pour a small amount of
his drink into the glass of the host. Both men would drink simultaneously.
When a guest trusted his host, he would only touch or clink the host's
glass with his own.
7. WHY are people in the public eye said to be 'in the limelight'?
BECAUSE: In around 1825, light was produced in lighthouses and
theatres by burning a cylinder of lime which gave a brilliant light. In the
theatre, a performer 'in the limelight' was the Centre of attention.
8. WHY is someone who is feeling great 'on cloud nine'?
BECAUSE: Types of clouds are numbered according to the altitudes they
attain, with nine being the highest cloud. If someone is said to be on cloud
nine, that person is floating well above worldly cares.
9. WHY, in golf, is the term 'Caddie' used for the person helping the
player?
BECAUSE: When Mary Queen of Scots went to France as a young girl,
Louis, King of France, learned that she loved the Scots game 'golf.' He
had the first course outside of Scotland built for her enjoyment. To make
sure she was properly chaperoned (and guarded) while she played, Louis
hired cadets from a military school to accompany her. Mary liked this a
lot and when she returned to Scotland (not a very good idea in the long
run), she took the practice with her. In French, the word cadet is
pronounced ca-day' and the Scots changed it into caddie.
10. WHY are many coin collection jars shaped like pigs (piggy banks)?
BECAUSE: Long ago, dishes and cookware in Europe were made of
dense orange clay called 'pygg'. When people saved coins in jars made of
this clay, the jars became known as 'pygg banks.' When an English potter
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misunderstood the word, he made a container that resembled a pig. And
it caught on.
Submitted by Bryan Sykes.
Re-Starts Monday 13th
June
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AD HOC HANDYMAN REQUIRED A handyman is required to do occasional (on average around 2 hours per
week) for the Village Hall. £10 per hour. Contact Christine Campy for
further details on 01642 710320 or
by email to [email protected]
GRAPEVINE CONTACTS
Magazine Layout and Editor
David Campy, 5a Holme Lane, Seamer
E mail: [email protected] 710320
Illustrations
Margaret Smith, 4 Bracken Hill Walk, Seamer 710611
Distribution
Derek Winterbotham, Kingsbridge, Hilton Rd. Seamer 711617
St Martin’s
Rev Paul Hutchinson, The Rectory, Stokesley 710405
Methodist Church Ron Kirk, 2 Rosehill, Great Ayton 722053
Seamer Village Hall Bookings: Christine Campy ([email protected])
710320
General : Christine Campy (Temporarily) 710320
Village News and Events
Margaret Smith 710611
Seamer Parish Council
E-Mail: [email protected]
Seamer Correspondent for Darlington and Stockton Times
Christine Cooper 710294
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