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Thursday, August 23, 2018

Fletton Quays.

New and Old.  Fletton Quays and Historic Buildings .

The derelic site on the South bank of the Nene in Peterborough is undergoing a drastic transformation. It's has been part of the Councils plan for some time now but our Council always takes time to bring plans to fruition.
A Computerised view of Fletton Quays
The former warehouse size buildings, housing B&Q and Matalan stores have been demolished. As has Aqua House at the entrance to the site. The old Whitworth Mill and the railway shed at the bottom of the site are being renovated, transformed and repurposed. New council offices, a hotel, a multistory car park, retail and leisure facitites are also planned.

Whitworth mill before its Renovation
Weston Homes is  the company building  the super modern apartments on the riverside Quays as well as restoring and renovating The Gables on Thorpe Road, and a short row of Victorian houses used by the NHS on Thorpe Road. To restore these Important historical buildings requires a considerable amount  work in planning, surveying and liaising with local city planners, English Heritage and many other Bodies before any work can begin. The aim is to remove all or most of 20th century add-on buildings and repair the scaring these later extensions leave on the building and to sympathetically repair and conserve as much of the fabric of the original building as possible, Where this is not possible, work to make the building as user friendly for modern living as possible, the building work must reflect the present day level of architecture in the  buildings life as has happened in the buildings past lifetime. The cost of these  renovations are far greater than any new build, so Westons offset these often massive cost by sympathetically planning new build apartments and houses on the Historic buildings site.

The Gables before transformation
The Gables began its time line in 1895 as a home for a wealthy local Coal Merchant  J. H. Beeby. Designed by the architect John Alfred Gotch, the red brick building was in a Tudor/Jacobean style. In 1933, J. H. Beeby’s widow sold it to George Ralph Baker, a director of the engineering firm of Baker Perkins. By 1947 the house had been transferred to the ownership of the newly created NHS and used as one of the two Maternity Units in the City. In 1970 when a new purpose maternity unit was opened it was then used for psychiatric care. Many building were added to the old house during its years in the NHS ownership. The house eventually became obsolete when the new City hospital was built in Bretton and has stood empty and neglected for the last decade.
The Gables transformation almost complete.

The Heatwave Cools at Last.

Well, the weather’s changed thank goodness. I think. I didn’t cope well with the heatwave of the last few weeks. Another effect of the aging process as in my younger days I use to adore the hot sun.  My arthritic joints are another anathema. Most people with arthritis love the hot weather. My joints prefer cool dry weather. 

Most mornings have found me in swimming in the lido.  As the high summer heatwave has dissipated and more normal cooler weather set in the Lido queues and crowds have opted for other school holiday pursuit.  Families and children still arrive but the regular swimmers have enjoyed a quite few days. 
in the Heatwave, families poured in to enjoy the Lido

The cooler weather has meant Space. No weaving around the person stroking powerfully towards you. They didn’t see you, their swimming line has been invaded by teenagers jumping and diving in from the sides.  No sudden stopping as children stray across your swimming path. No batting a beach ball, that's just hit you on the head, away, back to the laughing children next to you. If you're a strong swimmer you opt for the lanes and swim clockwise or anti-clockwise in rhythm with the other strong swimmers. Les active swimmers, like me, try to swim their lengths around the hoards of fair weather swimmers and the kids just having fun. 

welcome clouds
Fewer suntanned bodies in the water and more rain and cloudier skies have cooled the water slightly and the regulars all breath a sigh of relief. There’s space. Space to swim, to lose yourself in a mindful swim, then, lengths completed, to flip over, relax and float with the liquid silk waters washing around you is pure bliss. To lie there and watch the clouds float across the blue of the sky, or just shut your eyes and feel the gentle movement of the water around you. 

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

That's a Shameful way to Treat the Aged.

There has been an increasing number of reports over the last few years about how the elderly are treated. Especially in Care Homes. I know these reports are sensationalised for the Media, but as a person of a certain age this still worries and concerns me. I dread the day my husband and son begin to struggle to care for my needs. I'd hate to have to rely on strangers to care for personal care. This looms terrifyingly closer as the years pass more rapidly than I'd like. I struggle to keep my mobility as arthritis continues to ravage joints. My only form of exercise I can continue to do with relative ease is swimming. Luckily I enjoy this and find it therapeutic not a chore to be endured.

The reports coming from Doncaster about the allegedly appalling treatment of elderly dementia residents and their family being given a measly 30 minutes to find a new care home beggars belief. Having had to find suitable care homes for my Step Sister in Law after she had a devastating paralysing stroke and my elderly, doubly incontinent, increasing frail, nonverbal, prone to choking Parent I know what a traumatic time consuming thankless job this is. There was no way could I have ever managed to choose a care home from a list presented to me by a stressed Social Worker as those Doncaster relatives had to. 

I looked at numerous Care Homes on the internet and at their Care Quality Commission reports. Made umpteen telephone calls and appointments to view Homes and discuss my relative's needs. I discussed with other immediate family my findings and recommendations. Then when you've chosen a home there are other formalities to go through such as the financial situation and the Manager of your chosen home has to be assured she has the staff and equipment to care for your relative before she/he accepts your vulnerable much-loved relative.

The Media reports state that many of the staff were crying, the residents were crying and relatives were crying. The place was in chaos. Medical records weren't sent with the resident. Their placements hadn't considered whether they had the facilities to care for the resident's needs, That a shambles. Whatever evidence the Council had for shutting the home, previously inspected and rated as Good, at such short notice, there must have been a better way of handling it. Heads should roll for this unforgivable treatment of such vulnerable people.

Having completed a search through the internet articles it seems the Doncaster City Council Social Care policy for the elderly has been in total disarray now for several years. Reports of threatened closures have been happening now since 2014. That seems quite sufficient time to get your policies and commitments in an acceptable position. Going from crisis to crisis speaks of poor leadership and management.

Maybe there should be thoughts given to a radical new Countrywide policy that removes profit-making from elderly care.  After all, if the St Johns  Ambulance Association can run 'Not for Profit' Care Homes then why can't all Care Homes be run on a similar model.  

Saturday, August 11, 2018

Departed Swimmers

Memories recovered.

Last week, a few of the regular Lido swimmers were interview  by Keely Mills, Peterborough’s Poet, and the Lido’s Poet in Residence. She is producing a series of programs for BBC Cambridgeshire. One of the questions  our interviewer asked us was ‘Who could we remember from the past who is no longer swimming’. We all responded in unison ‘Walter’. 
The Interview with Keely
Walter was not a born and bred Peterborian. He came Peterborough after escapeing from  Latvia as a 14 year old during the war. He was an eccentric. A body building, strong man and a Lifeguard at the Lido for many years. He taught many of the young tearaway teenagers to swim. Most of his zany antics were done for charity. Most were reported in the local press and some made the BBC television. So over the years Walter became a local celebrity. 

Later thinking about this question I realised, No, Walter wasn’t the only Lido swimmer who is no longer with us who we remember fondly. There were actually quite a few.

There was Marion and Ken, Great Cathedral supporters and organisers. Their exodus from Peterborough was to move North to be closer to family. Marion, a retired school teacher, organised our impromptus lunch time picnics. Before the advent of Vivacity there wes no morning coffee to be had at the pool. The Cafe had closed years before. So we’d walk into the City and have coffee and toast at the little Sundays cafe off Cathedral Square. Often she would organise a lunch at her home in Stanground. When they moved Jeanne and I decided we should keep the lunches going as well as organising the Christmas dinner outing.
Maggie, John, Marian & Ken
Then there was Dot, a strong willed octogenarian, who raced up to the lido on her mobility scooter. Dot believed her scooter gave her the right of way and heaven help you if you got in her way! She started swimming in the Lido back in 1965. As she reached her 80’s she didn’t actually swim much but she got in the water whatever the weather and temperature and ‘pedalled’ her way to the deep end where she would pedal back and forth to exercise he damaged legs. Once out she would shower then one of us, would  dash out of the pool to help her to get dried and dressed. Later when she could no longer manage the pool we would arrange a gathering for a little lunch or tea, first at her home then later in her care Home until she died.
John, Marian & Dot.
Russel was another swimmer He was well known at the Lido from a young 9 year old lad until his eighties. He was a great one for chatting to the Ladies. He could swim the length of the pool underwater. If he was behind you, you just knew at any moment if you looked down there he would be overtaking you by swimming under you. He arrived on his bike one morning to be told it was closed It was June 8th 1940 and a pavilion had been the target of a Luftwaffe bomb. After his wife died he spent more and more time at the pool. He was always at our picnics, and lunches. A mild stroke slowed him for a while but not for long he fought his way back to health but was banned from any more underwater swimming. A couple of years later we began to notice his health deteriorating. Janet began to look out and care for him more and more. Two weeks after a diagnosis of Motor Neurone disease he sadly died. 
iris ,Russel Coe and John Reynolds
Big Russel  or Russel Hunter Rowe was another keen Lido swimmer for over 15  years who became ill and left us. The wooden bench outside the mens changing area where they would sit and dry off, was loosing its personalities. The Ladies the table at other end of the pool had christened the Bench ‘The Last of the Summer Wine Bench’ after the long running television program. Its still there today  and still used as a drying perch for those not so agile swimmers.

Most recently there was Chris, a tall good looking fit 60plus year old, With a head of silver curly hair he was to be seen swimming his 32 length, mile most mornings. Then at the end of a Lido season s few years ago we heard he’d been diagnosed with cancer.  The disease progressed so quickly and  he died at the new Year. Chris’s sudden demise shocked us all badly.
A  Lido End of Season Picnic.



The Stash Stack

My winter knitting was supposed to be about reducing my ever increasing yarn stash. It started well. I duly wound skeins of beautiful yarn unto neat manageable cakes of yarn. Then the dilemma began. I searched through my patterns I search Ravelary, I searched Patternfish. Frustration set in. So many garment I want to knit. The problem was I couldn't match what I wanted to knit with yarn I had. A couple of shawls later I was only two balls of stash  down. This wasn't working. 




Then a trip to the Oundle Farmers Market found me in the Oundle Yarn shop, Oundle in Stitches, http://www.oundleinstitches.co.uk  Just browsing though wasn't I? Er no! A big bag of Rico Essentials Cotton Glitze DK. Well it was almost half price. I couldn't leave it. Could I? So now what to do with it? A quick search online for crochet patterns and a root through the needle draw for long abandoned hooks. After a quick tutorial on the difference between UK and US crochet stitches and I was away. Soon the Lost in Time shawl was growing. I'd forgotten how much I use to love crocheting. 



Shawl finished and folded and stacked away. I dipped into the Deramores website. Bad move. Jacket pattern and yarn ordered.
Three different sizes of a jackets later ....

and two sizes of yet another jacket...Not sure if I'll ever reduce this Yarn stash. Still tryingthough!


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