Heptonstall Festival

A new date has been set for the Heptonstall Festival, which has moved from its regular July slot to Saturday, September 21.

This is partly due to the problems with the road around the village. Organisers hoped that Lee Wood Road would be open by the time of the festival, so that the road through the village could be closed to traffic as it was for last year’s very successful event.

However, it now looks likely that Lee Wood Road may be closed for many months, so organisers have decided to go ahead with the festival even if traffic is still using the main road through the village.

It is hoped that artists from the Handmade Parade will work with children from Heptonstall School to create artwork which will be carried through the village and displayed in the old church.

Cross Inn: Community Asset?

Customers at the Cross Inn have been considering applying for the historic pub to be listed as a Community Asset by Calderdale Council.

Sarah Manfredi, local school governor and council officer, explained would give the community the “right to bid” if the pub was put on the market, and an extra six months to raise the money.

She said: ” It does not mean that he/she has to accept the bid, but it does delay any sale by six months and gives the community the chance to put the money together to try to buy it themselves.

“If an owner is thinking about selling something rather than running it as a successful business, this kind of impediment to selling might make them think again.

“It might also be something a planning committee could take into account when considering change of use.”

Applying for registration has to be done by a community group or parish council – not by an individual. The group would then have to explain why this asset is important to the community.

Full details are here: http://www.calderdale.gov.uk/community/advice/community-rights/bid.html .

If anyone would like to take this forward, Sarah can email them a simple form to fill in.

Cantorelli Concert

A concert of choral music will be held at Heptonstall Parish Church on Saturday, 27 April, to raise money for church funds.

The singers include Darryl Dumigan, Angela Jarman, Alice Barford, Sue Pemsel, Jan Burgess, Peter Tillotson, Philip Thomasand Simon Hicks.

The will sing music by composers including Giovanni Gabrielli, William Byrd, Benjamin Britten and Ola Gjeilo. Tickets cost £8, concessions £5, students £1. Performance starts at 7.30pm.

For more information, call 01422 844627.

Disco Inferno

Show us your groovy moves at the Heptonstall Bowling Club on Saturday, April 20, at an event to raise funds for the Heptonstall Festival.  DJ “Tall Paul” will be spinning the platters from the 60s to the noughties, so throw some shapes and help support the event of the summer.

Tickets are £3.50, starts from 8pm to late.

HeLP – Churchyard Planting 5 May 2013

Volunteers will be tidying and planting in the St Thomas’ churchyard on May 5, between 11am and 1pm. All are welcome to get involved. The 24 March event did not happen due to the extreme weather.

Future of the Cross: Public Meeting

The landlords of the Cross, Owen and Lisa, say they have been given less than two weeks’ notice to quit but wish to continue.
Many local people want to see the Cross continue unchanged, and are supporting them. There is a public meeting on Wednesday at 8pm at the Cross, all are welcome to attend.
For more information, see the group’s facebook page.

Chapel Memories and Keepsakes Day

Heptonstall Methodist Church nativityDo you have memories, photographs or souvenirs of the Heptonstall Methodist Octagonal Chapel or Sunday School?

Did you go on Sunday School picnics, attend weddings or take part in pantomimes or nativities?

Perhaps you went on the Whit Walks and joined in the Methodist teas or Christmas fairs. Maybe you even signed the pledge!

The Chapel will be 250 years old next year, and we are hoping to collect memories and pictures of the Chapel and Sunday School.

Please come along to the Sunday School on Sunday, April 7, between noon and 4pm and tell us your stories. Pictures or other souvenirs will be photographed there and then, so you don’t have to part with them.

If you’d like to join in but can’t come on the day, please call Amy on 01422 843619.

Heptonstall Fell Race results

Results are now in, and the honours board looks as follows:

Senior men

1 Adam Osborne
2 Spencer Ryley
3 Dave Kirkham

Veteran men over 40

1 Jason Hemsley
2 Colin Walker
3 Charlie McInstosh

Veteran men over 50

1 Keiran Horrigan
2 Jonathan Emberton
3 Thornton Taylor

Veteran men over 60

1 Ben Grant

Veteran men over 70

1 Malcolm Coles

Mens team

1 Wharfedale Harriers 2nd, 3rd, 5th (Spencer Ryley, Dave Kirkham, Gareth Hird)

2 Calder Valley 7th, 11th, 14th (Tim Black, Kevin Hoult, Ian Symington)

3 Pudsey and Bramley 9th, 13th, 16th (Harry Dalby, Colin Walker, Charlie McInstosh)

 

Senior women

1 Liza Barry
2 Rachel Pilling
3 Anna Kelly

Veteran women over 40

1 Anna Kelly
2 Kate Mansell
3 Jackie Scarf

Veteran women over 50

1 Anna Kelly
2 Jackie Scarf
3 Kath Brierley

Womens team

1 Calder Valley 4th, 5th, 7th (Kate Mansell, Jackie Scarf, Helen Buchan)

All-time records

Senior men

Ben Mounsey 1:55:49 (2011)

Veteran men over 40

Richard Pattinson 1:59:48 (2011)

Veteran men over 50

Chris Davies 2:10:58 (2012)

Veteran men over 60

Ben Grant 2:29:46 (2013)

Veteran men over 70

Malcolm Coles 3:07:10 (2013)

Senior women

Helen Fines 2:18:05 (2011)

Veteran women over 40

Sally Malir 2:36:46 (2011)

Veteran women over 50

Anna Kelly 2:44:16 (2013)

Many congratulations to everyone who took part. Full listings are on the Fell Race website.

Village of the Damned: latest

Heptonstall can be seen on screen in new BBC Three drama, “In the Flesh”, a zombie drama about a world where Partially Deceased Syndrome is rife.

Shooting was done on Townfield Lane last year and the results are now being shown, with undead hero Kieran returning to his home in the fictional village of Roarton.

 

There’s another chance to catch episode 1 tonight at 11pm, or catch up on the iplayer 

 

What do you think? Leave your comments below.

Heptonstall’s Got Talent

Everyone’s good at something, and now’s your chance to show the world (or at least this corner of it) at the annual talent show at Heptonstall Bowling Club.

Ruth Hardy, organiser, said: “Yes – it’s back! Come and join in the biggest event of the year – Heptonstall’s Got Talent.
We need you to share your amazing talent – whatever it is!”

The event will happen at 7pm on Saturday, May 18, so you’ve got plenty of time to dust off your dancing shoes and rehearse your favourite songs.

If you think you’re the best thing since Beyonce, or if you just want to give your neighbours something to smile about, get in touch with Ruth on her Facebook page.

Be My Baby

Heptonstall Methodist Church nativity group

If you want to prepare your baby for stardom, a leading role is available in the Heptonstall Methodists’ traditional nativity service.

A baby is needed to play the part of Baby Jesus on Sunday 23 December at 10.45am. Willing candidates can be held by Mary or can chill out in their car seat next to the manger, depending on the parents’ preference.

Any other children who would like to join in as angels, shepherds etc are very welcome to attend.

Rehearsals are being held at 10am on Saturday 15 December and Saturday 22 December at the Octagonal Chapel. Anyone interested can contact Margaret on 01422 842550 or just turn up to a rehearsal.

Townfield Zombies: the latest

Jacky Kelly, who witnessed the zombie drama unfold on Townfield Lane, has written this piece exclusively for heptonstall.org. Scroll down for more from the BBC:

The filming took place at the house next door – Friday morning dawned very very cold and windy – and we woke to find an encampment in front of our house. Our neighbour took himself off elsewhere. A few miserable looking, puffa- jacketed, woolly hatted, gloved young men wandered around clearly not enjoying our Heptonstall weather. Blowing their noses and clapping their hands together to keep warm. Their ranks steadily swelled over the next hour, adding a variety of trucks, trolleys and technical equipment.

They proceeded to transform our neighbour’s house into a far more sinister abode, with boarded up windows and a forlorn look. They unloaded a strange assortment of random furniture and carted it all into the house. More and more of them appeared, bringing more and more equipment. And chairs – they made themselves at home, but all looked so very, pointedly, cold.

When scenes were being shot I couldn’t help feeling sorry for the actors – they had to wear ‘normal’ clothing in the bitter cold, but quickly wrapped up in their down gilets once their scene was over.

We tried not to stand staring out of our window, but we did. We were entertained just to watch the numbers of people involved in a drama production.

It was fascinating to see a scene being shot of a solitary person walking up to the house – on the telly she will probably look so alone. But in front of her were about ten people doing all manner of things – camera, sound, big white board being held up to reflect big bright light being held by another, and the girl whose sole purpose appeared to be to work the clapperboard numbering the takes – of which there were many. Several stops for discussions, presumably about the nuances of the scene, then it would be done yet again. In addition another ten or fifteen folk milled about, or sat in their chairs, or huddled together under a large black curtain, viewing the action on a monitor.

Out in the back garden something strange was hanging on the washing line. And there was an intensely bright light shining, and a large white screen. It did make it look as if it were far pleasanter weather…

Our dog had a barking fiesta for much of the day – wonder if they captured his yap…

Then, when ‘wrapping up’, how rapidly everything was packed away, house returned to normal, and off they went, leaving us two welcome bottles of wine for our ‘patience’. It was fun! It’ll be fascinating to see the finished result.

BBC Three reveals more about the drama, starring Ricky Tomlinson, due to screen in the Spring:

In the Flesh, by new writer Dominic Mitchell, is the story of teenager Kieren Walker and his reintegration back into both the local community and the heart of his family. After his death four years ago, his friends and family thought they’d never see Kieren again. But then, shortly after his funeral, thousands of the dead were re-animated in one freak night; and now, after months of re-habilitation and medication, the zombies are gradually being returned to their homes.

With its central themes of redemption, forgiveness, acceptance, denial, and the very essence of what it means to be alive or dead, In The Flesh is a complex but tender look at what happens when families get a second chance at mending their past and working together towards an unpredictable future.

Director Jonny Campbell says: “From the moment I read the opening scene I was hooked.  Dominic is an utterly fearless and instinctive young writer with an uncanny ability to tell a great story full of humour and humanity in a most original way.  An elusive and rare combination in TV drama. What’s most exciting about In the Flesh is that it challenges our pre-conceptions about the standard zombie genre and in so doing almost certainly creates a new one.”

Writer Dominic Mitchell says: “When I took part in the fantastic BBC Writersroom Northern Voices scheme, never in my wildest dreams did I imagine that my drama about the medicated undead would be produced, let alone with such an incredibly talented cast and crew attached.”

Actor Luke Newberry says: “I am really excited to be playing Kieren who is an amazingly complex character. He is on an unthinkable rollercoaster of a journey, one in which he has been given a second chance at life and he has to come to terms with how to deal with that. The characters may look like zombies but this is a very human story about people trying to survive.”

Zombie Drama on Townfield Lane

New BBC Three drama “In The Flesh” is being filmed on Friday in Townfield Lane, following the struggles of a “partially deceased” 17-year-old who is returning to a village that rejected him.

Heptonstall’s living residents are asked to park considerately while the undead are amongst us between 7.30am and 6pm on 26 October, though most BBC vehicles will be in the school car park.

Unit manager Kayleigh Cruickshank said one large lorry would be in the school car park, so it would be helpful if residents parked away from the school entrances, to allow it to turn in and out. Residents on Townfield Lane are also asked to park elsewhere for the day.

The filming will be in a private garden on Townfield Lane in the morning, then inside a house in the afternoon. The results are likely to be screened in the Spring.

New writer Dominic Mitchell’s first TV commission was developed by the BBC Drama Production team in Salford and discovered through ‘Northern Voices’, a BBC Writersroom competition.

His script begins after the Zombie Uprising has been quelled by the Human Volunteer Force and life is starting to return to normal. Any surviving zombies have been captured, medicated, held in an NHS holding facility in Norfolk and are being slowly re-integrated back into society, with the help of contact lenses and cover up mousse. The story follows teenager Kieran Walker, who committed suicide after his friend died in Afghanistan.

TV Wise site said the series had booked a slew of guest stars for its first season. Susan Twist, Matthew Walker, Karen Henthorn, Amy-Joyce Hastings, Julien Ball and newcomer Stephen Thompson have all booked guest spots.

Big Night Out at Heptonstall School

Dig out those dancing shoes – Heptonstall School is hosting a Big Night Out with Phoenix Ceilidh Band on Friday, November 9.

Everyone’s welcome to have a nosey in the new Heptonstall School hall at this family friendly event. Bridestones Brewery will be supplying hand-pulled beer for a fully stocked bar.

Tickets are available in advance only from the school and Tony’s Post office, priced at £20 for a family of up to 2 adults and 3 children, £8 adults, £6 OAPs and £4 children.

The event is to raise funds for the school’s Parents and Friends Association and the Out of School Club.

Celebrations at Heptonstall School

Heptonstall school celebrated the handover of the new building extension with a week of events including a visit from history re-enactment group the Sealed Knot.

David Burnop from the Pace Egg Society visited Class 3 on Tuesday. The children in the class had spent the previous day making props – swords, shields and crowns.

Classes One and Two had a visit from a “Grandma” on Wednesday. Suzie from the theatre company “Tempus Fugit” was, in
turn, a granny form the 1940’s, 1950’s and 1960’s. The children dressed up and learnt songs from yesteryear.

On Friday the Hepton Singers came into Class 4 for a singing workshop. The children then performed their pieces at an assembly at the end of the day, attended by members of Calderdale Council who had made the build possible.

proposals for wind turbines

Proposals for two 24m high wind turbines on Cross Hill, above Heptonstall School, have attracted a great deal of controversy.

The wind turbines would be sited on fields behind the covered reservoir, between the school and Drapers Corner.

At time of writing, Calderdale Council’s website was showing 145 comments, of which 142 were objecting. Most residents writing on the site were objecting on grounds of noise or the way they would alter the landscape.

For full details of the proposed wind turbines, and an opportunity to make your own comments, see the Calderdale Council planning listing. The deadline for comments is Friday, 27 July.

Jubilee Party at Heptonstall School

By Rosie, Class Three

Class three made some games like Crown Hoopla , Pin the Crown on the queen and so on. Every child brought in picnic food with an extra piece of food for the adults. The hall was crowded. Class Four did a treasure hunt. Everyone wore red, white and blue. The school was decorated with bunting that the children made. Class Three did a show with a hip hop dance with “whatever” faces and music.

.

Hello…Goodbye!

Heptonstall School is saying goodbye to Hamish Heald, pictured in the new library with pupil Rosie Davies. Mr Heald has been assisting Peter Jenel teaching Class Four.

He has got a new job at a Halifax school, but will still be going on the bi-annual school holiday after the half term. You may still see him around the village as he lives in Slack Bottom, and is planning on popping back to see the school’s production of Oliver! later in the term.

And pupils have said hello to Cara Warmby, a newly qualified teacher from Huddersfield. She is teaching Class Three during Laura Robertshaw’s maternity leave.

Jubilee celebrations at school

A Great British Breakfast event was held at Heptonstall School today (Wednesday 30 May), organised by Heptonstall Out of School Club staff Karen Mills, Becky Dewis and Alan Goldstraw.

This raised more than £100 for club funds. The club has also been running a “Crown Your Bear” art club event every evening this week, where children have turned their teddies into royalty by making their own velvet capes and sparkly crowns. Many thanks to Chrissie from Hat Therapy for her help with this.

Tomorrow the school is holding a Jubilee picnic from 12.30pm. A street party will also be held on Hepton Drive on bank holiday Monday.

Ron Mitchell, watercolourist

Lumb Bank

Artist painting mainly landscapes in watercolour, many of which are inspired by the local Pennine area. Ron occasionally exhibits as part of the Hebden Bridge wide Open Studios tour.

Address : 1, Waterloo House,

Slack Top,

Heptonstall,

Hebden Bridge.

HX7 7HA

Telephone: 01422 844097

Hebble Hole

Shoreline Trees

Rowena Beaty: Sculptures in Stone

I work from my garden studio, and carve figurative sculptures in stone, mostly inspired by the human form. I use a variety of types of stone, usually local gritstone, or Lincolnshire limestones.

Address : Waterloo House, Slack Top, Heptonstall, Hebden Bridge.   HX7 7HA

Email: rowenabeaty@googlemail.com

Telephone: 01422 842853

All pictures courtesy of Rowena Beaty.

Nicola Wheeler, costumier

Wedding dress by Nicola Wheeler

Nicola Wheeler specialises in creating vintage inspired outfits for all occasions, including weddings, handfastings and civil ceremonies.

She was wardrobe mistress for Glyndebourne Opera, and has produced historically accurate costumes for many film companies and museums including the dresses worn by actresses at Shibden Hall, Halifax.

You can see more of her designs at her website at www.vintagewedding.org.uk

She works from her studio at the Mechanics Institute, 7 Church Street,
Heptonstall, which features in the annual Open Studios event.

Telephone: 01422 843407

Fax: 01422 845070

Email: nicola@vintagewedding.org.uk