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Latest on plans for Farnham

North Farnham Voice – Farnham Infrastructure Plan Update

The draft Optimised Infrastructure Plan was issued for public consultation on the February 15 and the consultation finishes on March 14 so there isn’t much time.  So the consultation is really short.

Copies of the document can be found via the links below and comments can be made via the virtual consultation website:  https://farnhaminfrastructure.commonplace.is/overview.

There are some set questions against each of the summary pages for the different areas of the town but there is also a comments section that can be used for each area.  

There are also three virtual meetings being planned by the team running the programme which residents can participate in. 

Thursday, March 4, 6.30pm: Local Liaison Forum  
Monday, March 8, 6.30pm: Local Liaison Forum
Wednesday, March 10, 6.30pm: Businesses in Farnham.

You can register to attend via the link below: 
https://www.farnham.gov.uk/town-council/llf

There have been a couple of Zoom meetings of members of the North Farnham Voice Group and some useful exchanges on the North Farnham Voice Facebook page which have identified that the key concern from a North Farnham perspective is that there is no defined link between options to pedestrianise the town centre, which would close off the A325 and A287 through the town centre, and how the displaced traffic would be mitigated. 

The areas of highest impact will be in North Farnham. There are also concerns about the combined impact of displaced traffic and the significant additional housing development planned in the towns around Farnham.  The map below summarises the concern.

There are also issues raised at the North Farnham Local Liaison Forum meeting on January 6, such as rejecting the idea of no right turn from the Upper Hale Road on to Alma Lane, which are still in the proposals and need to be commented on again. There are also some proposals that have been well received by those involved in the North Farnham Voice group and others that lack clarity or have had a mixed response. 

The second issue of the North Farnham Voice leaflet has been prepared and is being distributed, and you can download a copy here.

Please spread the word about this consultation. There is still an opportunity to influence what is studied in the next phase that is what this consultation is for. If people say nothing, then those running the Farnham Infrastructure Programme will assume all is well and that the proposals are supported. Please do engage in this consultation as the outcome of this Infrastructure Programme will have an impact on Farnham for decades to come. 

There is lots of discussion on the North Farnham Voice Facebook page if you wish to share thoughts and ideas with the local community you are welcome to join – https://www.facebook.com/groups/northfarnhamvoice

Catherine Powell – Founder of North Farnham Voice

Help Us make Mothering Sunday special

Mothering Sunday is on March 14 and we will be holding special services in church and online. What’s more, we need your help.

If there is a new baby in the family who was born during the pandemic, we’d love to include a picture in our online service. Please do send a picture of your little one to Alan Crawley.

Also, could you video your young children recording a message saying ‘I love you Mummy’ or something similar? Again, we’d love to put that in the online service so please send your video to Alan.

The service will be here on March 14.

We will also be holding services in church with daffodils for mothers and other special people, and lots to get all ages involved.

We have taken precautions to keep our churches Covid-secure (please follow the guidelines) and we welcome you all to the services which will be at St John’s, Hale, at 9.30am, St George’s, Badshot Lea, at 10am, and St Mark’s, Upper Hale, at 11am.

Your March Magazine is here

The March issue of the parish magazine is out with plenty to read inside: Lent, Easter, Mothering Sunday, school news, our new florist who moves into St Mark’s at the start of the month, exciting news about the Kitty Milroy murals and Emily the organ, prayer, news from the parish and the local MP, the Church Cat and lots more.

You can find the magazine below. But if you would like a paper copy, please let us know by emailing Anne Young: ah_young33@hotmail.com

The cover price of the magazine is £10 for the year which pays for the editorial costs. We would be grateful if those accessing it online would pay £1 an issue. You can pay by clicking on the button below:

The magazine is available here:

Last call for the Farnham Lockdown Poetry Festival

Have you written your poem for the Farnham Lockdown Poetry Festival? Entries should be in by the end of tomorrow.

Send your poems about being in lockdown – whatever you feel, whatever your experience – to Lesley Crawley either by email or to her at The Rectory, 25 Upper Hale Road, Farnham GU9 0NX.

Adults and children alike are welcome to send in their poems on the theme of lockdown. The Mayor has offered a prize for the best adult and best child one but don’t worry if you don’t think you are the world’s greatest poet – just give it a go!

If you want some ideas, listen to this lockdown poem by Harry Baker:

Or this poem by Jim Carruth

the long bench

For the times ahead
when we will be

as if at either end
of the long bench

where distance kept
is love’s measure

and death dances
the space between

when words alone
are not enough

and queued memories
reach out to touch

let longing be a store
of nut and seed

that grows each day
in strange hibernation

readying for its end –
the sharing of the feast.

Picture by Ksenia Makagonov on Unsplash

Ash Wednesday during lockdown

Wednesday (17th) is Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent, though for most of us it has felt like Lent for a long time.

On Ash Wednesday many Christians go to church and have a mark of ashes placed on their foreheads as a symbol of repentance and following God. This year there are still services but there are differences as we will be following Covid guidelines.

There will be a service at St Mark’s at 12pm and St John’s at 7.30pm and there will also be a service here online and on Facebook and YouTube from 9am. You will need to bring your own ash suitable to place on your forehead and if you need advice on how to make it, watch this video here, courtesy of St Nics, Durham:

Who’s for pancakes with a twist?

Lesley Shatwell writes:

I am sad that this year we won’t be able to enjoy “Pancakes and Temptation” at St Mark’s and a bit nervous that we might just have to make do with the temptation and a lot of wistful thinking. This reminded me that I have never tried the recipes which my great-grandmother Mary Louise had written out into her cookery book.

Mary Louise (pictured above) was the daughter of a vet and she married a man who had inherited a few smallholdings in East Devon. They rented a large house on the banks of the River Exe at Lympstone, which was the childhood home of my Grannie. I am not sure whether Mary Louise would have made these pancakes herself, because according to the 1911 census, they had two general servants living with them.

The cookery book must have been started in the 1890s/1900s with the lavish food available at the time, but towards the end of the book there are recipes suggesting “How to eke out butter” using cornflour and milk. The book ends in 1919. The pancake recipes are from a far more extravagant time. And just in case all the pancakes prove too much, I include Mr Broom’s recipe for Indigestion Powders – but please, please, please don’t try that one at home as I do not want to be held responsible for you trying to obtain the required morphine.

Apple Pancakes  

Peel, core and mince half a pound of soft-fleshed apples.
Put these into a basin with ½ lb self rising flour.
Mix to a batter with 1 duck or 2 hens’ eggs; flavour with almonds, and add one oz of sugar.
Fry with lard.
Dust sugar over when they are cooked, roll up and serve with quarter lemon.    

Chocolate Pancakes

Make a strong cupful of Fry’s concentrated essence of cocoa,
flavour it with Vanilla.
Beat up three eggs, and when the cocoa is cool, use it with the eggs in making a batter with flour that has been browned in the oven.
Fry in lard.
Spread greengage jam over and serve.

Empress Eugenie Pancakes

They consist entirely of farina, mostly cornflour or potato fecula (a thickening starch).
Four tablespoonfuls to two of sugar and 8 eggs
quarter of a pint of new milk,
a small glass of cognac.
Fry in clarified butter,
and drop in candied violets and orange-flower (?*) in equal quantities.
These delicious bonnes-bouches are crisp and have a peculiarly pleasant taste.  They are served on separate plates, and must not be covered down or placed over each other when serving.

*  I think this must be orange flower essence, as that is an ingredient used in Napoleonic recipes.

Orange Pancakes

Two tablespoons of farola (A free-flowing cream coloured fine granular powder milled from durum wheat).
Beat up an egg with a cupful of new milk and a teaspoonful of sugar.
Make the farola into a batter.
Fry in boiling lard.
This will make 3 pancakes.
Into the centre of each drop a thin ring off a small fine rinded orange.
Just before tossing dust the orange with a little farola;
this will prevent it adhering to the pan.

Prince George of Wales’s Pancake


which is compounded of one tablespoonful of cornflour and two of the finest white flour,
a teaspoonful of baking powder,
and one of fine white sugar.
Mix well.
Beat up 2 large eggs
add sufficient cream or milk to make the flour into a thick butter;
add a glass of maraschino or sweet white wine:
put into a small omelette-pan one oz of butter.
When it leaves off frothing and turns a pale golden colour,
pour in a teaspoonful of the batter,
scatter over the top mixed angelica and pistachio nuts.
Turn; cook very lightly on the decorated side;
dust with fine castor sugar, and serve.

The Victoria Regina Pancakes

are exquisite.

Put into a basin 4 oz fine flour,
1 oz ground almond flour,
2 oz of fine castor sugar,
a saltspoonful of cinnamon (or mixed spice);
mix well together,
form into a batter, with 3 eggs beaten up with a quarter of a pint of cream, and if more liquid is needed add new milk.
The quantity will depend on the size of the eggs.
When well mixed add a glass of brandy.
Fry in butter.
Drop in slices of dried
apricot, cherries, angelica and shred almonds, or desiccated coconut that has been steeped in the brandy.
Try to arrange these in a pattern.
The angelica can be stamped with a crown shaped vegetable cutter.
Cook well on the underside,
and to a delicate tint on the upper.

Mr Broom’s Indigestion powders

Bismuth 100 grs
Bicarb Soda  100 grs
Ginger  30 grs
Morphia  1 gr
10 powders
Taken in skim milk immediately before meals.


DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME!
(anyway, it is difficult and illegal to obtain the required morphia)

Contemplative prayer during Lent

Join us online during Lent for a quiet prayer session on Thursday evenings at 8.30pm.

The pattern will be some reflective liturgy, two short sessions of silent, meditative prayer, followed by liturgy based on Compline.

The first session will be on Thursday, February 18 and the session will be available via Zoom and please email Stella Wiseman if you would like to be sent the link.

If you are uncertain about getting in to Zoom calls you can have a practice run on February 16 at 8.45pm. Please contact Alan Crawley about this.

Second Sunday before Lent – 7th February

Today we are celebrating the second Sunday before Lent. Below are the services.  First here are the notices:

Notices

Giving
Please Give to our Ministry This church relies on donations to provide care and support to everyone in this community. Now more than ever, please consider giving generously to support our mission and ministry by clicking the button above. Thank you for your support.
Lockdown Poems
We would love to hear your lockdown poems and to use them in our services. Some examples can be found here – https://badshotleaandhale.org/2021/01/14/lockdown-poems/  Please get writing and tell us how the lockdown has felt for you!

Services

All-Age:
More Traditional:

Space2Breathe

If you and your family need a bit of a breathing space in lockdown, we may be able to help.

St George’s Church has joined up with Hale Community Centre and Space2Grow in central Farnham and all three are opening our doors to families who need to get out of the home and into a different space.

From Monday, February 8, families will be able to book a session in any of the three and allow their children to play or do schoolwork there with support from a volunteer who can also be a listening ear for parents. They can do so by emailing space2breathefarnham@gmail.com

The scheme has been developed in response to the growing mental health pressures that families are facing during lockdown. Many parents are struggling with working from home while trying to home-school several children, look after pre-schoolers, and run their households.

“The pressure on families is immense and we know that it is having a serious effect on mental health across the ages,” said Norma Corkish, chair of trustees for Hale Community Centre.

“Parents are getting to the end of what they can manage to juggle and many children are feeling frustrated and are struggling to do all the school work which schools are legally obliged to set. As one parent said ‘I am going a bit stir crazy being at home on my own’.

“Offering safe spaces where parents can bring their children is a practical step towards helping the families. Children can have some freedom to run round and play, engage with another adult, go for a walk, get some support with home schooling or whatever will help give a period of brief respite from the stresses of the current restrictions. And the parents can have another adult to talk to.” 

The spaces will have some teaching aids such as flip charts but families will need to bring their own toys and school resources.

The scheme is offering morning and afternoon sessions and the organisers hope to be able to increase the number of them if there are enough volunteers. Volunteers are needed to spend an hour either in the morning or afternoon with a family in the spaces and be willing to go for walks with the families. The organisers would also like to hear from any students who could spare some time to be an extra pair of hands. Anyone who can help should contact Cathy Burroughs at the Hale Community Centre on 07471 180958 or halecommunitycentre@gmail.com

Children’s Mental Health Week

This week is Children’s Mental Health Week and it can’t come soon enough. All around us young people are struggling – lockdown, home-schooling, missing friends and family, anxiety, exam pressure, no space of their own. Some have added pressures – they may have parents or siblings working on the frontline, they may have lost someone during the pandemic, be ill or have a friend or family member who is ill. Some are living in homes where they do not feel safe.

There are lots of resources to help, particularly on the website www.childrensmentalhealthweek.org.uk/ This year the theme is Express Yourself. Finding creative ways of expression can be a huge boost to mental health. Art, craft, music, poetry, photography and drama are great ways of expressing our feelings and can make us feel better. There are ideas on the mental health week website, and some  free virtual sessions led by experts and familiar faces across acting, art, content creation, dance and writing. 

We are running a lockdown poetry festival so why not have a go at expressing your feelings in poetry – and encourage your children to do too.

If you need further help there are people out there to offer it. Don’t struggle on your own. Childline can be a great source of support for young people – 0800 1111 – and we have a list of numbers in the poster below.

Please do feel free to contact the clergy – revd.alan@badshotleaandhale.org
revd.lesley@badshotleaandhale.org
01252 820537.

And in an emergency, call 999.