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Paul Bigland

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Paul Bigland

Tag Archives: Sowerby Bridge

“Gee but it’s great to be back home”…

06 Sunday Sep 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Customs, Festivals, Norland scarecrow festival, Rushbearing, Sowerby Bridge, Travel

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Norland scarecrow festival, Rushbearing, Sowerby Bridge, Travel

– as the words of the old Simon & Garfunkel song go! It’s a busy weekend too with two important local events happening. First is Sowerby Bridge rushbearing. We joined the celebrations yesterday & I’ll write about it at greater length (along with adding lots of pictures) this evening. It’s a great event that draws people of all ages & background. In the meantime, here’s a shot of the rushcart being hauled up the hill from the Navigation pub;

DG224152

Rushbearing continues today but we’re off to another event – the Norland scarecrow festival. You can read all about it here.

See you later!

UPDATE

Well it’s slightly later than I’d hoped but here’s a look at both events. As usual, rushbearing was an excellent event that the rain Gods smiled upon & left alone! What I particularly like about it is the way it attracts a cross-section of people (of all ages) from far and wide. It’s a great example of how traditions are kept alive through continuity & by involving the young, not excluding them. Many of the troupes of entertainers had very young members as part of their group. Youngsters are actively encouraged to take part & do so with gusto!

Still being in your pram is no barrier to taking part in rushbearing!

Still being in your pram is no barrier to taking part in rushbearing!

Something you soon notice about rushbearing is how many folk sport the bespoke leather badges that show their annual attendance. Straw hats, waistcoats & shawls are festooned with them.

DG224320. Rush bearing 2015. Sowerby Bridge. 5.9.15

It’s an event that clearly brings a community together. I’ve met folks who plan their annual holidays around the event & even fly back from far-flung lands in order to attend.

Needless to say, the local pubs do a roaring trade during rushbearing. Pulling the cart o’er hill & dale is thirsty work, so cart pullers & other participants carry their own tankards clipped to their belts.

DG121998. Rushbearing 2012. Sowerby Bridge. 1.9.12.

Of course, Sowerby Bridge is blessed with a great variety of pubs, bars & restaurants, so no-one goes thirsty (or hungry) for long.

Here’s a few more pictures that I hope will give you a flavour of this years event.

Sometimes, something stronger than beer is called for..

Sometimes, something stronger than beer is called for..

400 Roses are regulars at Rushbearing. They combine UK-style folk dancing with more exotic tribal belly dance moves. When designing their costumes they decided to use an abundance of red and white silk roses appropriate to their Yorkshire & Lancashire origins, hence their name.

400 Roses are regulars at Rushbearing. They combine UK-style folk dancing with more exotic tribal belly dance moves. When designing their costumes they decided to use an abundance of red and white silk roses appropriate to their Yorkshire & Lancashire origins, hence their name.

On the Sunday we walked across the valley & up to Norland to sample the delights of the annual scarecrow festival. This years theme was songs, which taxed both designers and the audience. Some of the designs were technically brilliant, others cryptic & some just plain strange! Either way, they attracted thousands of visitors who (hopefully) managed to raise a lot of money for charity. Here’s a look at a few of the entries.

This must have been the most intricate as it featured some intricate mechanical engineering to animate the mermaid & the fish - much to the delight of  kids (large and small)!

This must have been the most intricate as it featured some intricate mechanical engineering to animate the mermaid & the fish – much to the delight of kids (large and small)!

A good effort but we still can't work out what the song was...

A good effort but we still can’t work out what the song was…

- the views & weather were just as good...

– the views & weather were just as good…

This was our favourite because of its scale, inventiveness & style. I really like the dog jumping for the frisbee!

This was our favourite because of its scale, inventiveness & style. I really like the dog jumping for the frisbee!

This week I’m swapping PPE for a suit.

01 Tuesday Sep 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Network Rail, Rushbearing, Sowerby Bridge, Travel, Work

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Network Rail, Rushbearing, Sowerby Bridge, Travel, Work

After another rare night at home I’m on the road again, only this week I’m swapping my PPE for a suit.

Whilst most of you were relaxing over the bank holiday I spent several days at Stafford where I was working on the Staffs Alliance resignalling project. This involved closing the West Coast Main Line from Friday night until early this morning. The work wasn’t just at Stafford but commissioning the new signalling in the area was the major focus. Unless you’ve been involved in one of these schemes it’s unlikely you’ll appreciate the complexity & difficulty of organising them. There are so many different skill sets to co-ordinate and the failure of any of them can delay or even stop the whole job. Add in the fact you have several different shifts working around the clock & the planning needs to be almost military in its co-ordination.

As it was, the ‘Orange Army’ got the job done & the railway reopened on time. Casualties were confined to the two old signal boxes which were decommissioned as Stafford is now controlled from Rugby ROC.

This week the focus of my work shifts somewhat. Right now I’m enjoying the chance to sip coffee & watch the world go by on a Grand Central service to London, where I’ll be spending another night in a hotel before a job at the Strand Palace hotel. I’m not sure what I’m doing after that as an early morning email means I might have to go up to Birmingham to do a quick job there before heading up to Darlington ready for the official opening of Hitachi’s new train building factory at Newton Aycliffe on Thursday. I’m told that’s going to be a major event, although I don’t know the full details yet…

After that, I actually get to go home – and have a weekend off! It’s the annual Sowerby Bridge rushbearing festival which is a fabulous event. For two days teams of people push and pull the rushcart around various churches and hostelries in the area. They’re accompanied by various morris dancers, mummers & minstrels. It’s thirsty work too, after all – the area’s not exactly flat! If you’ve never been come down and take a look. I’m sure you’ll have have a cracking day out as Sowerby has plenty of great places to eat & drink.

Here’s a link to details of the event. I’ll add some pictures from previous years later today when I have a bit more time.

See you there!

Whatever happened to…

29 Friday May 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Nostalgia, Pubs, Sowerby Bridge

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Nostalgia, pubs, Sowerby Bridge

– those fantastic pub Landlords & Landladies that used to make some alehouses such a pleasure to visit?

I’m old enough to remember the days when a pub was known by the character of the person who ran it – those individual Landlords or Landladies who made a pub their own. In those days the licensees name above the door actually meant something. I can still remember the name of the Landlady of the first pub I drank in as a teenager nearly 40 years ago – Grace Kathleen Taylor. She was replaced by a real character called Monica Brownlee. Anyone who drank in the Old Ship in Southport back in the 1980s couldn’t fail to remember Monica with her cheroots, her leather pants & those snappy one-liners delivered in an Irish brogue! Those were the days…

Nowadays you’d be hard pressed to even know who the licensees of many pubs are. Their territory’s no longer marked with their names above the door & for better or worse, many of them leave the running of the pub to bar staff & rarely grace the customers with their presence. Not that some of them have any presence to be honest…

I mention this because tonight I ventured into a pub that we used to frequent & found it a shadow of its former self. A few years ago this pub in Sowerby Bridge was a vibrant community pub. Owned by the Ossett Brewery, the place was run by landlady Linda who employed a great bunch of bar staff. That said, Linda was behind the bar herself most nights. You knew it was her establishment & she knew her regulars & what they drank – which was always a sign of a good pub.

Sadly, Linda & her partner Rob moved on & were replaced by a chap who only lasted a year or so at most. I hadn’t been in for a while but I’d bumped into some of the old regulars who told me the pub had been taken over by another new manager & it had gone downhill. The prices had gone up & the atmosphere had gone down. Last night I popped in & saw why. One harassed barman was trying to serve several people all on his own. Of the ‘landlady’ there was no sign (apparently, she hadn’t been seen all night). Finally, after the rush had died down, a young lady in slippers & semi-pajamas drifted downstairs. Without a word to anyone (including the barman) or even acknowledging their presence she emptied some bags of change into the till before disappearing back upstairs like a wraith.

Needless to say, I won’t be calling in again. If Ossett wonder why the takings at one of their pubs has taken a dive, perhaps they should look at the quality of their staff training & recruitment.

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