28/01 – following last weekend’s weather-related problems, it’s remained very cold down here in the Vale, and it was no surprise that Tuesday evening’s game at Gillingham Town was postponed. Still, one bonus has been the sighting of a small number of redwings, a thrush-like bird and winter migrant, grubbing around under the trees at the entrance to our country park, and much more spectacularly on Thursday morning, a snowy-white heron-like bird flapped languorously over the road in front of the car as I drove back home from the town and flopped down on the banks of the River Stour.
I had a vague inkling that this could have been an egret, and duly confirmed it via the excellent RSBP website. Apparently they established themselves along the south coast in the late 1980’s and first bred in this country in 1996 in Dorset. There are a few hundred breeding pairs in the country, some around Poole Harbour, but in the winter, according to the website, there’s an influx of visitors from the continent, where of course it has also been extremely cold of late, and then you do see them further inland (we’re around 35 miles from the coast). They’re slowly spreading north, year by year, so keep your eyes open!
On Friday, however, the temperature rose a bit and today dawned reasonably bright and sunny, so it was off in a northerly direction this week, to Bremhill View, home of the Lilywhites - a rather strange nickname as Wiltshire club Calne Town play in black and white stripes.
The easiest way to get there seemed to be to head up to Melksham and turn right, but first one has to navigate Trowbridge, the centre of which gets pretty congested. However, there is a relief route that avoids the town, signposted off the A361 in Southwick, and as you turn to follow this deviation, there your problems begin …….
Firstly, that signpost pointing you eastwards at Southwick is about the only signpost on the whole damn route. In fact, the next most noticeable directional sign is a finger-post pointing down a minor road off to the right that says (I kid you not):
“Scotland
Ireland”
…. two local hamlets, but not entirely a confidence booster that you’re going in the right direction.
Carry on, and you will inexorably finish up where you do not want to be, which is either (a) on the outskirts of Westbury, where there is a roundabout conveniently placed to enable you to conduct a U-turn and go back the way you were coming from (I wasn’t the only car doing this today!!
), or (b) totally lost in the middle of the voluminous White Horse Business Park. On this occasion, I excelled myself by managing to achieve both options (a) and (b). I don’t know about “Lost in Translation” starring Bill Murray and Scarlett Johannsson, they should remake it and call it “Lost in Trowbridge”
. And anyone managing to transverse that relief road, without deviation or repetition as they say in “Just a Minute”, deserves a Duke Of Edinburgh’s Award Badge as an absolute minimum.
I eventually pulled up in the car-park at Calne Town around 1:30 to find the turnstile already manned. There’s the “Bremhill View Social Club” next to the ground which I assumed was the football clubhouse, but the chap on the gate said, no, it’s not, the council have reclaimed it from the football club, so they use the other club 50 yards up the road. This turned out to be the “North Star Club” and I was warmly welcomed outside the entrance before being ushered in to find a packed throng in the bar. It thought it was pretty thriving, despite no BT Sport soccer on the widescreen, and it was only after poking round the room for a bit and alighting on a table of free refreshments and printed sheets that I suddenly realised I’d gate-crashed a wake!
Now the Ostrich is an Honourable Bird, and not even he would help himself to such free largesse in the circumstances, but he did grab a “programme” before sidling back out the door – where it had inconveniently started raining! Ossie then blagged his way into the members-only Bremhill View Social Club and perched on a stool to watch Wolves managing to thwart Liverpool in the early televised FA Cup game.
Calne Town are one off the bottom of the table and were today hosting the third placed club Cheddar, alias The Cheesemen
. I may have over-panicked about teams from this league being relegated down into County Leagues, as scuttlebutt apparently is that there are no teams in a position to come up; none have the relevant ground grading. So there could well be no teams being relegated at all. A pretty even game ensued, Calne taking the lead on 18m with a tap-in from a right wing cross, and holding off Cheddar until the 71m when a home defender got a foot to a cross and unfortunately diverted it away from his keeper and just inside the post. The game finished in a welter of bookings as both teams tired on a pretty heavy, muddy pitch, but it was an entertaining affair, nevertheless; plenty of chances and goalmouth action. The only other noteworthy item to report was the sighting of the First Ice-Cream Van of the Year, passing outside the ground after 84m!
Western League Division 1 (Level 6): Calne Town 1 Cheddar 1
Admission £3, excellent programme £1, raffle £1, cream of vegetable cuppa-soup and pasty from the hatch £2.50, J2O in the club £1.60, canvas Calne Town FC tote bag £2.50
, attendance 54.