Saturday 28 February 2009

New guide celebrates rejuvenated canals

A guide that celebrates a “new era of waterways” has been released. The authors claim that canal interest has reached an all-time peak, and their book aims to tap into this.

The authors, Phillippa Greenwood and Martine O’Callaghan, spotted a gap in the market for a guide covering more creative holidays. O’Callaghan said: “Investment in the inland waterways over the past few years has rejuvenated the canals and they now appeal to a broader spectrum of people.”

Half of Britain’s population is estimated to live within five minutes of an inland waterway and Cool Canals: Slow getaways and different days aims to inspire a new generation to explore them.

The book has proved popular with consumers, and two further canal titles are planned for 2010.

Originally published in Canal Business

Visit online www.canalbusiness.co.uk

UK's first hotel on water

Plans for the UK’s first floating hotel have been unveiled.

Premier Inn has announced details of the ‘flotel’, to be built in Hartlepool Marina. The project will be the first budget hotel to be purpose-built above water.

The hotel is designed to move with the tide and will be connected to the quayside via a pedestrian ramp and an external lift.

The design was chosen so visitors can stay as close to the Marina as possible.

Premier Inn has also announced plans to build beside the Walsall Canal. The new 120-bed hotel is due to be built as part of the town’s regeneration plans.

Adrian Andrew, Walsall Council’s portfolio holder for regeneration, said: “I think the new hotel is wonderful news and it shows the confidence that the business community has in Walsall.”

Originally published in Canal Business

Visit online www.canalbusiness.co.uk


Ads 'ruin' Venice

Venetian authorities have attracted criticism from locals and tourists for allowing advertisements hung on canal-side buildings.

A legal loophole allows scaffolding on public buildings to carry ads, The only condition is that Renata Codello, Venice’s architectural and cultural heritage chief, must ensure the advert does not “detract from the appearance or decorum of the building.”

Plakitiv Media, the main group handling the Venice ads, is currently paying €3.5m to restore the Correr Museum in St Mark’s Square.

The scaffolding is then being leased at €50,000 a month for companies such as Rolex to advertise. During the Venice Carnival in February, advertisers were paying a reported  €75,000 a month.

Tourist Harry Hahun said: “The adverts really detract from the sites we went to Venice to see. Having a huge Swatch poster beside the Grand Canal takes away some of the beauty.”

Original published in Canal Business

Visit the website www.canalbusiness.co.uk

Waterways Renaissance Awards 2009

The finalists for the 2009 Waterways Renaissance Awards have been announced.

Among the ten categories, and 28 nominees, is Irwell City Park. The £40m project aims to provide waterside spaces along an 8km stretch of the Manchester Ship Canal and River Irwell. It is hoped that the reinvestment will boast economic growth and inject life into the area.

Further nominees include the water rail way in Lincolnshire, the Animating the Canal venture in Clydebank, and the Bude Canal regeneration project. A Lancashire initiative to create heritage walks for visually impaired people has also been nominated.

One of last year’s winners, Hemlington Lake in Middlesbrough, has said that the winners can expect their profiles to be raised dramatically.

John Ferry, manager of Hemlington Lake, said: “We got a much wider audience and it has put us in good stead for the future. The award helped us increase our funding and we have now extended the lake.”

This year’s nominees were chosen by an independent assessment panel, comprising waterway, conservation and regeneration experts.

The winners will be announced at an awards ceremony on 31 March. 

Originally published in Canal Business. 

Visit the website www.canalbusiness.co.uk

Classrooms should adapt for dyslexics

Classrooms should adapt to self-esteem issues associated with dyslexia, it has been claimed.

Barry Whiting, chairman of the Norfolk and Norwich Dyslexia Association, said that teachers should recognise that spelling is no longer considered the main issue associated with dyslexia. The concern should be a focus to improve self-esteem of many dyslexic children.

Whiting said: “The saying goes, ‘At eight, spelling was murder but at 18, it was suicide’. That couldn’t be more right.”

Adult Dyslexia Training, a course that aims to raise awareness of dyslexia symptoms, has recently been aimed at teachers. It is thought that undiagnosed dyslexia will reduce self-esteem further.

Whiting added that every child should be treated on a separate basis. He said: “Teachers need to realise that dyslexia cannot be treated in just one way. There are different levels of the discibility and every child will progress at a different speed.”

Perceptual skills company, Visual Learning For Life, have devised a new online database that aims to treat each child in their own way. The internet database is claimed to be quick to identify each child’s specific area of difficulty.

Melanie Lambert, Visual Learning For Life director, said: “The website aims to provide stimulation at all levels in a variety of classrooms.”

Dyslexia affects 10 per cent of the population. 

A Life in the Day

Josh Sheard, student and bluegrass troubadour

Josh Sheard, 23, is one half of the band Spirit of John with Adam Richards.

I get out of bed at half six on a weekday, or about 11:40 on a weekend. 

Monday to Friday, I exit my bed via the left hand side while on my days of leisure; I usually leave towards the right. When my mobile phone alarm rings, I get up and have a coffee with lots of sugar.

I have to shower as soon as I wake because I can’t do anything until I’ve washed my filthy night-time body of grease. My Head & Shoulders shampoo also acts as shower gel because I’m too lazy to swap the bottle. I’ll have terrible skin when I’m older, but fantastic body hair.

For breakfast I have toast with marmalade, I never do cereal because I don’t rate milk - maybe I’m lactose intolerant or something. I usually have a banana because apples give me a headache.

If I’m gigging that night I usually practice on my own before going to Adam’s house. He always greats me with a coffee because he knows how to make a proper brew. After we left school, Adam and I sort of lost touch with each other. 

One day, soon after splitting up with my girlfriend, I got a call from him. I’d already agreed to my first live gig and we got talking about music. He was quite heavily into jazz but had just bought a cheap Chinese double bass. I played him Warlords and Boughs and he played me some of his stuff. We played the gig together and people responded really positively. We thought, “Right, this is it. We’re a band now.”

I like to practice in the bathroom. I go in there with an acoustic guitar and go through the set two or three times. I prefer the acoustics in the bathroom and I don’t have to sing as loud. Everything sounds better in the bathroom. 

"The animal in me just wants to have

 a 99p pint and get hammered"

For dinner I generally have soup. Heinz tomato soup is one of life’s perfect ingredients. Some tomato soup tastes like stomach bile, but theirs is just right.

I like to have some kind of sound around me all the time. I’ve just bought a new CD player and am rediscovering old CDs and hearing parts of the music I never knew existed. 

My grandma introduced me to a lot of music. She had a lot of Elvis, and the biggest country music collection I’ve ever seen, she had everything from Johnny Cash to Patsy Cline and Dolly Parton. It breaks my heart that she sold it all for £100 to a record collector.

I’ve been playing bluegrass stuff since I was about 14. Some of Spirit of John’s songs have been with me for years but I hadn’t done anything with them. Because of Adam’s musical background, he can pick up new stuff straight away, but it takes me a while to learn stuff. I’m a good pop songwriter but when it comes to the intricacies of a song, Adam’s your man.

I live about a 20-minute drive from Huddersfield University, where I’m studying industrial design. I always get there early and I like the routine. The nearest coffee shop knows my usual order of a regular latte and I always follow the same route.

I’m quite good at design; I think I have a natural feel for it. It’s a cringe-worthy phrase but I can think outside the box. I’ve entered a few competitions with my products and got credit for a hospital hand cleaner that could reduce MRSA and ecoli.

My life is juxtaposition, really. The music I play is very old sounding and rustic while the design stuff is really expensive and high technology. To do a degree that matched the band, I’d be doing fine art or something.

Uncle Ben’s bags of rice have become increasingly common at teatime. I like cooking but don’t have the time, money or ingredients available to actually get round to it. Uncle Ben’s are great, two minutes and you’re laughing. I only tend to give myself half an hour to eat, and then I have to get on with what I’m doing.

I tend to stay in during the first part of the week. My sister and me can never agree what to watch on TV and so we often fall out about it. If I’ve got the lounge to myself I put on a Sopranos or The Wire DVD. Broadcast television doesn’t grab me anymore. 

I’m trying to become a more rounded individual and read more. If I had more time, I’d just sit at my window all day and read. My friend has just given me the new Simon Felix novel so I’ll give that a go.

Thursday to Saturday I go out at night to see people. There’s a pub called The Grove in Huddersfield that sells ale from around the world and there’s a particularly nice Mongolian one. The atmosphere is really relaxed and I feel more comfortable there than a jakey pub in town. Then again, the animal in me just wants to go to Wetherspoons, have a 99p pint and get hammered.

We gig mostly at weekends. Quite a few people have heard of us now around Leeds. Through word of mouth we got on the cover of Sandman magazine. I don’t want to be this big rock band that tours the world playing stadiums, I’m happy with little venues where you can talk to people afterwards.

For 25 minutes you’ve entertained an audience and some people come up to us after really gushing. It leaves a little lump in your throat when people are that nice to you and makes it all worthwhile.

Our name, Spirit of John, comes from school. I don’t want to be a dickhead, but I don’t want to give away all the details from where it originates because that is between Adam and me. We weren’t the dead popular rugby-playing smart kids who went clubbing at 14. We thought we were above all that and created a world of our own. That’s where John came in.

I go to bed late. If I’m not gigging I get tired about half ten. I’m usually in bed just after midnight but stay awake thinking for hours. Mostly I think of how I really do need to improve my sleeping habits.

Monday 2 February 2009

The Essential Bruce Kent

Bruce Kent is a renowned political campaigner, best known as a protester for nuclear disarmament. He talks to Jamie Stuttard about his early influences and his first protest, aged 12.

Bruce Kent’s first rebellion came at the tender age of 12, when a teacher made an allegation that riled him.

“I remember the teacher telling the class that Catholics bought indulgences by putting money in statue’s mouths. I said, ‘Excuse me Sir, have you ever seen this stature?’ The man had to say no. I said, ‘Well then, you shouldn’t be making accusations that you can’t justify’.”

Kent was living in Canada at the time, having moved there aged 11 with his parents in 1940. He was a lone Catholic in the Protestant school and it was his first taste of being an outsider.

“I became very obstinate. I was obsessed that I had to win the Scripture Prize and determined not to let the majority drag me down.”

He still vividly remembers one teacher in particular from his time at the Canadian school where he remained for three years.

“I was particularly impressed by my English teacher, Hugh MacLennan. He swept me off my feet. He was secular and had no time for religion and all this, but he was highly practical and imaginative.”

MacLennan wrote the novel Barometer Rising in which the hero is unjustly blamed for a World War One military disaster in which the munitions ship, the Halifax, explodes in a collision. Reading it fuelled Kent’s sense of outrage at injustice and his determination to fight against it.

“I though MacLennan’s book was the bee’s knees.”

Aged 14, Kent returned to England and attended Stonyhurst College, a Jesuit school in Lancashire. The regime was tough but the boys were encouraged to believe they were superior.

“I hated my first year because there was no decent food after the war. We were constantly told that we were the leaders of the country and we believed it. Grammar schools were below us and comprehensives didn’t even exist.”

At Stonyhurst, corporal punishment became a regular part of daily life.

“We were allowed to beat other boys, can you imagine that? We, at the age of 17, had the authority to hit other boys.”

However, Kent does look back in Stonyhurst with many fond memories including playing his beloved rugby and cricket.

“Towards the end of school we had much more freedom. It was in many ways a very compassionate school and I eventually became deputy head boy.”

Away from the Catholic environment of Stonyhurst, Kent’s sense of being an outsider returned.

“Catholics were outsiders in this country and we were the victims of persecution. It has taught me to be independent of government and look with suspicion at what the government is doing.”

Challenging government was something he did often, when; from 1980 to 1985 he was general secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND).

And now, even at the age of almost 80, you can still see in Kent that indignant 12-year-old and hear his demand: “You shouldn’t be making accusations that you can’t justify.”

Canal vox pop

Following numerous reports of "towpath rage" along Regent's Canal...