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The Chameleons – Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery at Mallen Hall. Got Your Tickets Yet? 27th – 29th October

October 3, 2022 By SO53 News Leave a Comment

Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery at Mallen Hall
Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery at Mallen Hall
Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery at Mallen Hall

Without Mrs Hudson to keep him in check, can Sherlock solve the mystery surrounding the deaths at Mallen Hall, including the family dog; all of which are not as they seem?

We are great fans of the Chameleons here at Chandler’s Ford Today. They are absolutely brilliant.

Have you got your tickets yet?

A few of us have bought the tickets for the Thursday show. We hope to see you there!

Chameleon Theatre Company in Chandler’s Ford

Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery at Mallen Hall
Showing: 27th – 29th October 2022

Venue: Venue: Ritchie Memorial Hall, Hursley Road, Chandler’s Ford SO53 2FT (next to St. Boniface Church).

[Read more…] about The Chameleons – Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery at Mallen Hall. Got Your Tickets Yet? 27th – 29th October

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Tags: Chameleon Theatre, Chandler’s Ford community, comedy, drama, event, Hursley Road, Ritchie Memorial Hall

Chandler’s Ford Produce and Craft Market – Saturday 1st October at Age Concern Hall

September 30, 2022 By SO53 News Leave a Comment

Chandler's Ford produce and craft Market reopening 1st October 22 10 am to 1pm At the Age Concern Hall Fryern Arcade Chandlers Ford Behind Co-op

Free on Saturday morning? Why not pop in to the produce and craft market in Chandler’s Ford?

It’s open on Saturday, 1st of October, from 10 am to 1pm.

Location: Age Concern Hall
Fryern Arcade, Chandler’s Ford
Behind Co-op

Chandler's Ford produce and craft Market reopening 1st October 22 10 am to 1pm At the Age Concern Hall Fryern Arcade Chandlers Ford Behind Co-op
Chandler’s Ford Produce and Craft Market


[Read more…] about Chandler’s Ford Produce and Craft Market – Saturday 1st October at Age Concern Hall

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Tags: Age Concern Centre, arts and crafts, Brownhill Road, Chandler’s Ford community, community, craft fair, crafts, event, Fryern Arcade, hobby, local businesses, local interest

Favourites

September 30, 2022 By Allison Symes 2 Comments

Image Credits:-
Most images created in Book Brush using Pixabay images. One photo taken by Allison Symes, the other a family heirloom photo.

My post last week was a reflective one, given the recent (and most moving) funeral of HM the Queen. Usually national reflection is sombre because it is usually connected to Armistice Day/Remembrance Sunday etc.

But reflection can take other forms and I thought it would be nice to have a look at favourites – favourite films, books, music, TV shows etc. The old saying “the past is a different country, they do things differently there” is true but sometimes it is nice to pop back for a visit! And doing that can remind you of things which are well worth bringing back to your recall again.

[Read more…] about Favourites

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Tags: favourite radio shows, favourite sweets, favourite TV shows, favourites, nostalgia, personal memories, recollections

A Special Trip to London Before the Queen’s Funeral

September 24, 2022 By Janet Williams 3 Comments

A street artist's tribute to the Queen

A group of us took the train to London last Sunday Morning, the day before the Queen’s funeral. We were very lucky that day as the train ran very smoothly. We bought the Super Off-Peak Return tickets, and it cost £25 for each of us. The direct train (The South Western Railway) ran from Eastleigh to London Waterloo. The train was fairly empty and we even had a whole carriage to ourselves. We all felt rather excited about this adventure as it was our first trip to London since the pandemic. Well I guess you might be asking, ‘How was the Queue?’ We didn’t go to London for ‘that’ queue, however we did see the queue of the queue of the queue and it was quite remarkable.

A street artist's tribute to the Queen
A street artist’s tribute to the Queen
Some areas were not crowded at all and we enjoyed lovely walks.
Some areas were not crowded at all and we enjoyed lovely walks.

[Read more…] about A Special Trip to London Before the Queen’s Funeral

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Tags: days out, family, London, looking back, memories, Queen Elizabeth II, reflections, remembrance, the royal funeral

Looking Back

September 23, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

  1. Image Credit: Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos

I suspect many of us will have been reflecting a lot over the last few weeks since Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth, died. Rightly so too I think. Momentous moments should make us take time out to reflect. You need time to process something. We are not automatons.

[Read more…] about Looking Back

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Tags: looking back, Queen Elizabeth II, reflections, remembrance, the royal funeral

Making Monarchs

September 18, 2022 By Mike Sedgwick 3 Comments

Civic and Army dignitaries arriving for the Proclamation in Winchester

The Accession Council

The most urgent matter after the death of a Monarch is a meeting of the Accession Council. When King George VI died, the council met the same day to decide that Elizabeth was the rightful heir to the throne. They adjourned and met again a couple of days later when Elizabeth had returned from Africa. At the second meeting, she was asked to take the Oath. Next came the Proclamation.

Beautiful flower tributes for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. at Winchester Cathedral.
Beautiful flower tributes for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.
at Winchester Cathedral.

For me, the Proclamation of Elizabeth as Queen was on a cold February day in 1952. It was an event presaging a brighter future. We assembled at school in Cheltenham while the mayor proclaimed the Queen in his broad rural Gloucester accent. He reminded us to sing ‘God save the QUEEN’, not King, and we became Elizabethans. Now we change back. I sang God save the King in Winchester on September 11th. We are now Caroleans.

St James Palace where the first Proclamation is read. (by Helloworld314 CC BY-SA 4.0)
St James Palace where the first Proclamation is read. (by Helloworld314 CC BY-SA 4.0)

1952

In those days, city centres were being cleared of rubble from the blitz and slowly rebuilt. Some foods, sugar especially, were rationed, and hardly anyone had a TV or a car. Some public buildings, like our school, had central heating but it didn’t work. Wartime identification cards were abolished that year.

In the arts, The Archers was already established, and The Mousetrap opened; both are still running. The church of Rome banned the works of André Gide (who died 1951), while the Soviet Union executed thirteen Jewish poets. The diary of Anne Frank was published. In the sciences, Alan Turing published an important paper on Morphogenesis and was arrested for indecency. Experiments showed DNA to be the material of genes, not protein, as previously thought. Understanding DNA is one of the great scientific advances of the Elizabethan age. Two animals were sighted for the last time before becoming extinct. Britain declared that it had the atomic bomb. That winter, we suffered the Great London Smog, which killed thousands.

Civic and Army dignitaries arriving for the Proclamation in Winchester
Civic and Army dignitaries arriving for the Proclamation in Winchester

Who shall be King?

[Read more…] about Making Monarchs

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Tags: community, education, history, memories, Queen Elizabeth II, school, science, storytelling

Chandler’s Ford – Community Food Larder is Open to All

September 17, 2022 By Janet Williams 1 Comment

Chandler's Ford Methodist Church running the Community Food Larder.

Did you know there is a Community Food Larder in Chandler’s Ford? It is located by the front door to the Hall of the Methodist Church facing Winchester Road. There are basic food and toiletries for anyone who just need a bit of help.

The cupboard is unlocked, and is open 24/7. If you need anything, or if you know of anyone who may need some help, please come to the larder and help yourself.

This morning I saw several church members fill up the larder, so I took a few photographs to show you what’s inside.

Food and toiletries
Food and toiletries
Chandler's Ford Community Larder - outside the Methodist Church.
Chandler’s Ford Community Larder – outside the Methodist Church.

[Read more…] about Chandler’s Ford – Community Food Larder is Open to All

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Tags: Chandler's Ford, church, community, good neighbours, local interest, Methodist Church, news, Winchester Road

Hooks

September 16, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credit: Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos.

Hooks are wonderful. They lure you into reading until you reach The End. The nice thing is this applies just as much to non-fiction as it does to fiction. Why?

Because all forms of writing have to offer something of value to the reader to get them to read it. For non-fiction, it will be information of use to the reader (and I hope most of my CFT posts do that, it’s my aim). For fiction, that something of value will be an entertaining read, regardless of the genre being read.

[Read more…] about Hooks

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Ringing to commemerate Queen Elizabeth II

September 13, 2022 By chippy minton 4 Comments

On sombre occasions – such as Remembrance Sunday and funerals – church bells re rung “half-muffled”.  This means putting a leather cap – a bit like a small knee pad – over one side of the clapper to deaden the sound.  You get a loud “bong” from one side of the bell, followed by a softer rumble from the other. [Read more…] about Ringing to commemerate Queen Elizabeth II

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Tags: Queen Elizabeth II

Tributes to Queen Elizabeth II

September 12, 2022 By SO53 News 4 Comments

Chandler's Ford people lay flowers to pay tribute to to Queen Elizabeth II.

There are many ways to pay tribute to Queen Elizabeth II. In Chandler’s Ford, members of the public have laid flowers by a cross outside the St. Boniface Church on Hursley Road.

Chandler's Ford people lay flowers to pay tribute to to Queen Elizabeth II.
Chandler’s Ford people lay flowers to pay tribute to Queen Elizabeth II.

[Read more…] about Tributes to Queen Elizabeth II

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Tags: Chandler's Ford, Hampshire, history, Hursley Road, Romsey, St. Boniface Church, Winchester

Good Interviews

September 9, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credits:-
Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos, one taken from Pixabay directly. Screenshot taken by me, Allison Symes.

A useful skill for any writer is to develop interview techniques.

[Read more…] about Good Interviews

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Tags: am writing, author interviews, deadlines, engaging your audience, interviews, marketing, open questions, preparing for interviews

Old School Reports

September 3, 2022 By Mike Sedgwick 5 Comments

Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

All parents will have received a school report this summer depicting their offsprings’ achievements during the Summer term. From those achievements, they will extrapolate the next 10 years of the child’s life. My parents must have despaired when they received this report from the Spring Term of 1949 when I was 11 years old. How did it all turn out for me? The school reports I have seen in recent years are wordier and less direct.

Image by Simona from Pixabay
Image by Simona from Pixabay

Holy Scripture – Must put more energy into this important subject. The school was run by a religious fanatic, and we were forced to read and memorise parts of the bible. By this time, I would have read the Bible through once. In the next two years, we were forced to read it again. A few years later, I got a distinction in Divinity for GCSE. As a result, I am one of the best-informed atheists in the Christian religion. In recent years I have learned something about Buddhism also.

French – Tended to laziness. I tried but was it le, la or les: de, du or de la? I had a 33% chance of getting it right. When I needed to learn some French as an adult, I began to make progress only when I forgot all about school French. [Read more…] about Old School Reports

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September Gardening Tips by Wellie

September 3, 2022 By Wellie Leave a Comment

Some Broad beans and pea varieties (such as Aquadulce Claudia and Pea ‘Douce Provence’) can be sown now for an earlier crop next year, along with spring cabbages and spinach (which might need to be covered from frosts).
Onions and garlic can also be planted now for harvesting next year. There is still time to sow some salad crops such as winter lettuce mixes and mizuna, and why not put in a row or two of radishes as they are quick to mature.

Peas image by Blende 12 via Pixabay

[Read more…] about September Gardening Tips by Wellie

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Tags: Chandler’s Ford community, gardening, gardening tips, hobby, how-to, nature

Author Newsletters

September 2, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credit:    Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos.

Earlier this year, I set up an author newsletter. I’d been toying with the idea for a while. Why?

Author newsletters are an excellent way to reach out to readers. They can give insights into the writing life as well as sharing hints and tips.

[Read more…] about Author Newsletters

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Tags: am writing, author newsletters, creative writing, engaging with readers, marketing, publicity, the writing life

Looking Back at Swanwick 2022

August 26, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credits:-
One image created in Book Brush using a photo from Swanwick taken by me, Allison Symes. The majority of the other photos were taken by me too but a big thank you must go to Jennifer C Wilson for taking the ones of my signing books (always a joy!) and where I’m about to lead a writing session. Many thanks also to Penny Blackburn for taking the shot of me reading at a previous Open Prose Mic Night at Swanwick. I’ve not changed much since!

It was fabulous to be back at the Swanwick Writers’ Summer School this year. I had to cancel and apply for a refund on my train tickets due to the strike but a dear friend, who is another Hampshire regular at this event, June Webber, provided transport and it was lovely travelling with her on the way up. Many thanks to my other half, Adrian, for being my chauffeur on the way home.

This year’s Swanwick was especially interesting because I went as a delegate and as someone taking part in various items including running a one hour workshop here for the first time.

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Taking Part

The first thing I took part in was a Lift Up Your Pens session which is a pre-breakfast series of short creative writing times where those leading it set writing exercises designed to get those creative muscles working. I shared some thoughts and set creative writing exercises based on three random generators I use regularly.

I also took part in a Lift Up Your Hearts which is a pre-breakfast series of short devotionals. How did that work out then given these were on at the same time each morning? Simple. The former I did on the Sunday, the latter on the Monday. I was only sorry we weren’t in the lovely chapel at The Hayes, Swanwick for the devotionals. The Hayes had more than one group in this time (and I suspect this policy has helped them keep going) but I hope we can get back to the chapel next year. It is very peaceful in there.

My theme here was on favourite words. I took just two from the Bible and picked a favourite hymn which has one particular line which always resonates with me (O Love That Wilt Not Let Me Go – and my favourite line from this is I trace the rainbow through the rain. Many hymns have wonderful poetic qualities to them and this one has especial meaning for me.  Note:  Do skip the advert as soon as you can on the clip but I thought this was a beautiful brass band arrangement of a fabulous hymn).

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My One Hour Workshop

I also ran a one hour session on Editing – The View From Both Sides of the Fence.

In 2020 as I awaited the publication of Tripping the Flash Fantastic, I was on both sides of the editing fence at the same time so my talk took in what an author can do to make the most of working with an editor. I also looked at what editors often see in submissions.

In the last couple of years I’ve also been a competition judge so I could also share common mistakes authors make here, again the idea being to get your manuscript in as near perfect a condition as possible before working with said editor.

The funny thing is I used to use Microsoft PowerPoint years ago and have come back to it again in recent times thanks to giving Zoom talks. PowerPoints are easy to share on screen and they are useful for workshops.

I was pleased (and relieved!) the workshop went well and I would like to do more of this kind of thing at Swanwick.

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Open Prose Mic Night

It was great fun to do all of this and I did take part in the Open Prose Mic Night again. Flash fiction works beautifully for this. You can’t be more than five minutes. What I did this year was pick a couple of pieces to hopefully make people laugh and ensure I came in at under the time allotted. That always goes down well with an audience – it is always fine to come in under time!

For the prose night, I picked my linked flash tales – Mishaps and Jumping Time from Tripping the Flash Fantastic this time. Pleased to say they did get laughs but then my hapless time travelling alien in these stories does have that coming. Honest!

Open Prose Mic Night Swanwick 2019 - image by Penny Blackburn
Open Prose Mic Night Swanwick 2019 – image by Penny Blackburn

Being a Delegate

It doesn’t matter if it is your first visit or your 50th, you will get a warm welcome here. Other writers understand the drive to write. They understand the hard work behind the scenes. They also appreciate the joys when things go well. And I have learned so much chatting with other authors over the years. It is also lovely to give back in sharing information I have discovered which I know will be useful to someone else.

As well as going to the Open Prose Mic Night, I went and listened to the poetry equivalent which was wonderful. I took part in a literary quiz as part of the Prosecco Queens. No prizes for guessing the origin of that name! Am pleased to say my team won!

I love listening to the after dinner speakers too as, regardless of what part of the writing world they come from, they inevitably share something which will either be useful information or a word of encouragement. It is good to know that successful authors do know the length of time it can take to break through.

I loved the courses and workshops I went to and learned so much from them. These ranged from Creative Non-Fiction led by Simon Whaley to How to Write a How To Book by Bettina von Cossel.

Plus it was a joy to meet up in person with Val Penny, who I interviewed for CFT last week, and enjoy her Promoting Your Work workshop. There is always plenty to learn there as there is about the world of Social Media for Writers which was led by Jennifer C Wilson.

Val Penny at her workshop Promoting Your Work – it is a joy to be a delegate as well as as speaker at Swanwick and everyone feels that
Jennifer C Wilson about to share her excellent workshop on historical fiction

The World of Writing

What is lovely about Swanwick is getting to immerse myself totally in the world of writing for six days and in lovely surroundings with wonderful company. One of the big advantages to any kind of networking is you are talking to writers who understand the drive to write. They know the ups and downs of the writing life. And I’ve learned lots of useful information over many years chatting with a writer over a cuppa. What’s not to like there?

No one writer can ever know it all. I’ve also found the writing community to be so generous and supportive with useful tips and information. It is also lovely to be able to give back on that. I am a firm believer in the what goes around comes around principle (and in the pay it back, pay it forward school of thought too).

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The Joy of Swanwick

One of the things I love about Swanwick is you don’t have to decide on what course or workshop you want to do in advance. Okay, it is fabulous fun going through the programme and highlighting possibilities. We all do! But you can leave deciding until the day of the course or workshop itself.

Swanwick offers a range of one hour workshops but also four part specialist courses, separately shorter two part courses, and a range of evening entertainment including quizzes, which are always a good laugh. Do writers dread doing the literary quiz? Oh yes. It quickly shows up what you have read and what you haven’t! Also everyone pays visits to the Book Room (whether or not they have books on sale there. Many of us do and it is a thrill to see mine out there).

If you pick a four part specialist course and you find it is not quite for you, then move on and pick another one. You don’t have to see that first course through. Same goes for the workshops. You also decide how many of these you want to go to. If, for example, you want an afternoon off to work on your own project, that’s fine too.

The accommodation is lovely and the food… well let’s just say you’re not going to go hungry here. I suspect the diet for all of us starts again on the Saturday after we’ve got home again!

Naturally after dinner there are guest speakers and these are a joy to listen to because you’re listening to people who were once new writers and hearing how they got their breakthrough, I find, is enormously encouraging.

The best gossip? Naturally that’s to be found at the table where you’re sat for dinner as you chat with friends and those who have become firm friends on meeting for the first time at Swanwick. There is a Facebook group and many of us keep in contact throughout the year on that. Social media does have its uses and here it is very sociable indeed!

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Coming Home

It is always a wrench to leave Swanwick but we all go home inspired and enthused. That matters. The writer is so often alone at their desk. It is too easy to become discouraged. A little encouragement goes a long way here. Inspiration strikes too and writers can always find a use for that!

Related Posts:-

Swanwick 2021

Swanwick Writers’ Summer School

Travelling Workshops

Val Penny: The Hunter Wilson Series and Blog Tours

Read interviews with Chandler’s Ford writer Allison Symes: Part 1 and Part 2.

Read blog posts by Allison Symes published on Chandler’s Ford Today.

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Tags: Allison Symes, am reading, am writing, books, creative writing, fiction, flash fiction, Jennifer C Wilson, networking, non-fiction, Open Prose Mic Night, Swanwick Writers' Summer School, Val Penny, writing courses, writing workshops

Val Penny: The Hunter Wilson Series and Blog Tours

August 19, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credits:- 
Many thanks to Val Penny for supplying author pictures and book cover shots. Other images were created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos or were directly from Pixabay. Photo of Val Penny taken at the Swanwick Writers’ Summer School taken by me, Allison Symes.

It is a pleasure to welcome back Scottish crime writer, Val Penny, to Chandler’s Ford Today. The latest book in her Hunter Wilson series, Hunter’s Chase, is out on 20th August. (This will be the day after the Swanwick Writers’ Summer School finishes this year, which is where I first met Val).

Val Penny about to share excellent advice on Promoting Your Work at the Swanwick Writers’ Summer School.

So I thought I’d chat to Val about the joys and trials of writing a continuing series with the same lead character and about blog tours – what they are, how can you organise them, and so on.

So with no further ado, it’s over to Val. Welcome back to Chandler’s Ford Today, Val!

[Read more…] about Val Penny: The Hunter Wilson Series and Blog Tours

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Tags: am reading. writing community, am writing, blog tours, crime fiction, crime writer, marketing, The Edinburgh mysteries, The Hunter Wilson series, Val Penny, writer

Short Form Writing

August 12, 2022 By Allison Symes 2 Comments

Image Credit:    Most images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos, some directly from Pixabay.

I hadn’t set out to become a short form writer. I hadn’t heard of flash fiction when I started writing seriously for publication. The writing journey can be an odd one, taking you on all manner of twists and turns. Some turn out to be useful.

My first thought on knowing I wanted to write was to write novels. Now this does seem like I was trying to run before I could walk, but many people do this, they love the long form of writing and stay there.

[Read more…] about Short Form Writing

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Tags: am reading, am writing, creative writing, creativity, flash fiction, long fiction, novels, short fiction, short stories

Photography on the Isle of Wight

August 6, 2022 By Mike Sedgwick Leave a Comment

We like to think of the Isle of Wight as quaintly fifty years behind the times, but one hundred and fifty years ago, Hester Fuller, William Thackeray’s granddaughter, declared Freshwater was equivalent to the Golden Age of Athens under Pericles. The analogy does not hold up as Pericles was involved in the Peloponnesian Wars, whereas Freshwater’s Golden Age was roughly coterminous with Queen Victoria’s reign, the period known as Pax Brittanica.

Julia Margaret Cameron
Julia Margaret Cameron

Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879) was the facilitator of the Freshwater intellectual powerhouse. Her house, Dimbola, became the site of an artistic Salon from 1860 onwards. Alfred Tennyson, the poet laureate, lived nearby at Farringford and was a regular visitor, as was G F Watts, the artist with his child bride, Ellen Terry, actress. Members of the pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood – Dante Gabriel Rossetti, John Everett Millais and William Holman Hunt were also visitors. [Read more…] about Photography on the Isle of Wight

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Tags: arts, history, museum, storytelling

Quizzes and Word Games

August 5, 2022 By Allison Symes 1 Comment

I have a soft spot for quizzes and word games. I’m sure a lot of writers do. Words are our stock in trade after all. Games like this help increase vocabulary and they can be good for maintaining a reasonable level of mental capacity.

 

[Read more…] about Quizzes and Word Games

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Tags: am reading, am writing, concentration, improving vocabulary, quizzes, Scrabble, Swanwick Writers' Summer School, word games

August Gardening Tips by Wellie

August 3, 2022 By Wellie 1 Comment

Watering is key this month, particularly container-grown plants and border plantings not yet established. Keep Camellias and Rhododendrons well-watered now to ensure good flower bud formation next spring. Top up ponds and bird baths regularly. Stake tall or top-heavy dahlias and lilies to prevent wind and rain damage.

child watering plants - image by vikvarga from Pixabay
child watering plants – image by vikvarga from Pixabay

Regular feeding and dead heading keeps the garden looking its best until autumn, dead-head lilies for a better flower display next year. Dead-head annual bedding plants and perennials to encourage them to flower into the autumn and stop them self-seeding, but it’s a good idea to leave some to form seedheads, providing a nutritious food source for birds. [Read more…] about August Gardening Tips by Wellie

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Tags: Chandler’s Ford community, gardening, gardening tips, hobby, how-to, nature
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