06/04 – Firstly, many thanks to all for your kind wishes for Master O and DiL. I’m pleased to say the caesarean went smoothly and we now have our first grandson, 6 lbs 9 at birth. Babe and Mom are doing fine; both are back home, and we’re hoping to visit them shortly. After a number of inconclusive indicative votes, they eventually decided to call him Henry – which has absolutely no connection to anything as far as I can see!
On Tuesday last, a Wessex Water van hared into our road, did a quick circuit and disappeared – but not before laying a series of road cones outside our house.
Considering we’re at the far end of a cul-de-sac, this did seem slightly odd. Researching their website, I found an airy comment that there would be Unspecified Work between Wednesday and Friday, sorry for any disruption and all that. Well at the moment, we have Richard the Painter doing his thing in our garage, and as we can only get one vehicle on the drive, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday was spent playing ducks and drakes with our respective cars. And needless to say, neither hide nor hair of anybody from Wessex Water.
The cones are still there today. Come Monday, I may have to take a leaf out of Tom’s book. Tom was a very pleasant and unassuming young lad I worked with back in the 1970’s in Birmingham. Legend has it that one evening, following an extended pub crawl in his home town of Aldridge, wandering round the town centre, he espied a line of 6 yellow police road cones. Being of tidy but slightly befuzzled mind, he decided this couldn’t be right that they were just sitting there, so he collected them up, took them into the local police station, and handed them in to the desk sergeant saying “I think you must have lost these …..”
They did let him out. Eventually.
So to Saturday, and the moral is never leave home without an Alternative Plan – or three! Staying fairly local, I meandered through the Blackmore Vale to Stalbridge FC for some Dorset League action, and on arrival found the ground curiously deserted apart from a couple of guys working on the adjacent cricket pitch.
“Football match on today?” I enquired.
“There should be …. It’s on the website.”
“I know,” I said, “and it was still showing as on when I looked a couple of hours ago.”
“But there’s no-one here yet – a bit strange”
It was still an hour before kick-off, but faint alarm bells started sounding, which got louder when I noticed the nets hadn’t been raised on the goals. One of the cricket guys knew the soccer club’s manager and texted him.
“It’s off,” came the verdict, “the opposition couldn’t raise a team”
I thanked him, and raced back in the direction of Marnhull.
Marnhull is a rather strange place. It lies half-way between Gillingham and Sturminster Newton, and originally was a collection of small hamlets that, over time, have been joined together by ribbon development to form the straggliest village imaginable. I’ve never been able to find a centre to the village, but on the main road, it does have an excellent pub (Sunday Carvery recommended) called “The Crown Inn”. Now every other pub in Dorset (for marketing purposes!) makes some claim or other of a connection to Thomas Hardy
, but the Crown has a good provenance. The village of Marlott in the classic tale “Tess of the D’Urbavilles” is definitely thought to be based on Marnhull, and the Crown, which is a very old coaching inn, is reputed to be the original “Pure Drop Inn” in that book. There’s at least two other Dorset pubs I know of claiming to be the Pure Drop Inn, mind you ….
Turning off the main road just past the pub, I dropped down to the Recreation Ground, passing on my right Sodom Lane, one of the more desirable streets but with probably the least desirable name.
Glowering over the entrance is the Primitive Methodist Church (dated 1893)
and you do wonder what those Methodists got up to in those days! The Recreation Ground has a children’s play area, the traditional two hard tennis courts, cricket and soccer pitches, and the village hall cum changing rooms. The soccer pitch has a somewhat pronounced side-to-side slope.
Because North Dorset District Council failed to meet its Government-imposed New Housing targets, builders are currently able to propose just about any new green-belt development scheme and get it nodded through planning despite what the locals think. Marnhull currently has a population of around 2,000, and the new estates already in the pipeline look set to increase this by 40-50%, very rapidly – to say the residents are unhappy would be putting it mildly. But – as we have also found out in Gillingham – there’s virtually nothing that can be done about it. Judging from social media, expect an interesting backlash in the May local elections ….
The game was a classic relegation battle, and the result did neither side any favours. End to end stuff, but neither keeper was particularly tested. Marnhull did get the ball in the net in a goalless first half but it was disallowed. The Marnhull attacker was fouled outside the area, appealed to the referee, but then got up and somehow in the confusion put the ball in the net.
“Foul back there,” intoned the referee.
“WHAT?
I scored! What about advantage?”
“You asked for the foul. I blew for it. You then put the ball in the net. No goal. Foul back there!”
By gum that produced a fair old amount of chuntering …
Just when things looked like meandering down to a –0-0 draw, Marnhull’s no.12 launched a frantic long range cross into the area, and no.10 met it with a glorious diving header – 1-0 on 74m! That really woke Corfe Mullen up, and the lead only lasted 3 minutes, Marnhull’s no.2 inadvertently heading a corner into his own net for the equaliser.
Quite a decent game in hindsight, played at an attractive venue with open views across to Hunger Hill and the Shaftesbury ridge, but there was also a cold south-easterly wind blowing today, and I was grateful to scurry back to the car and get the heater on ……
Dorset League Division 3 (Step 11): Marnhull 1 Corfe Mullen United Reserves 1
Admission: free, no programme
Refreshments: A delicious wedge of Cornish Yarg with Nettles* from the village deli, for which I was stung £3.65.
Attendance: 8
* Ever inquisitive, Ossie did some Wiki research on this:
Cornish Yarg is a semi-hard cow's milk cheese made in Cornwall, United Kingdom. Before being left to mature, this cheese is wrapped in nettle leaves to form an edible, though mouldy, rind. The texture varies from creamy and soft immediately under the nettle coating to a Caerphilly cheese-like crumbly texture in the middle.
Despite its historic connotations, Cornish Yarg is actually the product of the British cheesemaking renaissance in the 1980s, while its roots are inspired by traditional British Territorial cheeses.
The cheese is produced at Lynher Dairies Cheese Company on Pengreep Farm near Truro, by Catherine Mead, Dane Hopkins, and team. "Yarg" is simply "Gray" spelt backwards. It is named after Alan and Jenny Gray, enterprising farmers who found a 1615 recipe by Gervase Markham for a nettle-wrapped semi-hard cheese in their attic. The original recipe is thought to date back to the 13th century.
So now you know!
It does have a rather subtle flavour ….