More sombre news on the High Street front this week as a further two stores look set to shut
– this time, though, in Shaftesbury. Shaftesbury has always been regarded as the toffee-nosed neighbour up the hill, and has traditionally hosted all the artisan shops and posh hotels (as befits its celebrity status, Gold Hill, the Abbey and all that), whilst Gillingham has traditionally been the poorer cousin, all pubs and trading estates.
Both closures are stores we’ve used. Parfitts, the shoe shop, was a fusty old place down at the bottom of the town, although they did stock a reasonable selection, including Hotter, which we like. Mind you, finding the sizes you wanted was always the luck of the draw, and they never seemed that keen to order in
. We’ve found some bargains there, but also had our disappointments. It's the last independent shoe shop for miles around; now we find we’re going to have to look at TOFS (The Original Factory Shop) which always seems to me to be 85% cheap trainers, or, Heaven forfend, Clarkes Shopping Village over at Street
.
Hine & Parsons was a good old-fashioned department store, a family owned business going for at least 70 years, and prominently situated opposite the Town Hall and Gold Hill itself. Furnishings, clothing, haberdashery, linens, drapery, kitchen knick-knacks, you name it – we’ve purchased all our table place-mats from there, amongst other things. There’s rumoured to be a ghost in the attic
, and an air-raid shelter in the cellar! The owners are finally retiring (the father is 89) and the store is up for sale as a going concern for £700,000 – not expensive in the scheme of things, but who’d want to take it on in the current climate?
All very unfortunate.
Another unfortunate thing this week when I found a business card had been pushed through the door, late one afternoon and under the cover of darkness. From the “Senior Negotiator” of a local estate agents, but handwritten on it was the cryptic message “Please phone re Mrs B”.
Now we know estate agents get up to all sorts of marketing tricks, and I don’t mind the flyers through the door or the letters saying “We’ve just sold one in your road and we’ve got lots of other interested buyers – would you like a free valuation?” or similar; they just go straight in the recycling bucket
. But this seemed more personalised and at a different level - and it just so happens that the previous occupant of the Nest was a Mrs B …..
So Ossie, having fretted about it for a bit, decided to phone them up.
“Can I speak to the Senior Negotiator, please?”
Bright young man: “Oh he’s out at the moment.”
“Is he now. When’s he due back?”
“Have you had a card through your letterbox?”
“Yes, what’s it about?”
“Well, we have a very interested customer who really wants …….”
“Stop right there! Is this a marketing ploy?”
“Well yes, but …..”
The rest of the conversation may be happily left to your imagination. Phrases such as “flagrant con-trick”, “despicable hook-in “and “cheap advertising ploy”. You can say a lot in a 40 second phone call!
Having made his point, the avian banged the phone down (well, thumbed the End Call button in practice
).
“Ossie, you keep going on like that, I’ll have to send you on an anger management course,” I laughed.
“%&£$”*@^$!” said the Ostrich.
To Saturday, and another short trip - to the Marnhull Rec, a ground last visited back in 2019. Approaching Marnhull from the north on the Sturminster Newton road, as you reach the 40 mph signs, you take the first turning right towards the village, which is the entertainingly-named Sodom Lane
. I’m not quite sure what they get up to there, but there is an old Free Chapel building at the top of the road. Turn right by the Chapel and almost immediately right again up a driveway and that takes you into the rec’s spacious car-park. All the usual village rec facilities are on site – a large village hall (already with a decorated Christmas tree in the balcony window
), a separate changing room block for team sports, tennis court, kiddies play area, skate park, and cricket pitch. And there’s also, for this area, the inevitable bucolic views across the Blackmore Vale towards Bulbarrow Hill, although lowering clouds and spitting rain made them not quite so attractive today.
There’s no football furniture and no cover around the soccer pitch, although at a pinch you could use a conveniently-located wooden shelter about 50 yards away from the action if it were inclement. The pitch itself slopes from side to side, and markedly so all along the near touch line, where 10 feet in, the ground level suddenly drops by a foot or so. Not quite an escarpment, but ….
The table-topping visitors Crossways Spitfires (Crossways is a village down Dorchester way) totally hyped themselves up before the kick off and swaggered up to the centre line like a tribe of Tyson Furys
. Unfortunately for them, bottom of the league Marnhull started like Real Madrid
and only reverted to being Marnhull after the first quarter-hour, by which time they were three up and it could easily have been more. Marnhull were direct and clinical, Crossways’ defence couldn’t get to grips with them; the first goal came on 4m with M.17 swivelling in the area and firing home from 10 yards; the second on 11m saw M.6 get the better of a one on one with the keeper and slide the ball past him. The third, a minute later, was from the penalty spot - one of those 50/50 challenges in the area where some referees might have waved play on, but this referee was being monitored today, so spot-kick it was.
There was a brief break in play as someone found some dog poo on the pitch
, an occupational hazard at village rec grounds, I’m afraid, So the Dog Poo Shovel had to be located and brought onto the field of play, and the referee, having completed collection duties, hared towards a startled Ostrich on the side-line!
“Don’t worry, I’m not going to hand it to you,
” he said, depositing the laden implement next to the bird, before resuming the match. I spent the rest of the match trying not to trip over it!
Anyway, once the Crossways manager had managed to calm his keeper down, who was threatening the defence in front of him with all sorts of retribution for the goals conceded
, the away side managed to pull themselves together and the remainder of the half saw them regularly pressing forward, but they didn’t look like they had much cutting edge up front, and the Marnhull keeper dealt efficiently with anything that looked threatening.
The second half started with Crossways pushing forward again, and they eventually got on the scoresheet on 63m with a penalty of their own; this one a bit iffy in my book
, but the referee clearly signalled a nudge in the back. Oh well, a deserved consolation goal, I thought – and boy, did I get that one wrong!
Five minutes later, a Marnhull defender slipped allowing C.22 a clear attempt at goal, which he converted. 3-2. The game was starting to get tetchy, Marnhull rather nervy, and the referee increasingly pedantic. An equaliser began to look inevitable, and on 74m, Crossways levelled the score when a C.8 shot was helped into the net by the home keeper, and Marnhull promptly lost a player to the sin-bin for words presumably of an impolite nature to the referee
. Then on 77m, C.8 tried a speculative 20 yarder - and the home keeper missed it. Ossie had to move with some alacrity to avoid being engulfed by the ensuing Crossways touchline celebrations!
Marnhull had a couple of chances to equalise in the closing few minutes, but Crossways cleared one off the line and the other sizzled across the goal with no attacker able to deflect it in.
As a masterclass in how to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory, this one will take some surpassing!
20/11/21: Dorset League Division 4
Marnhull 3 Crossways Spitfires 4No admission charge, and no refreshments available on-site (I did enquire!). Still, fear not, foodies, I did have with me a pack of Delicatessen brand Finest Quality Hot and Spicy Meatballs (produce of Germany), acquired from the town garage for the princely sum of £1 …..
Attendance: 19