Choice Magazine - Gosport & Lee on the Solent - March edition
GOSPORT & LEE ON THE SOLENT • DELIVERED MONTHLY
WHAT’S ON IN GOSPORT AND LEE
COUCH TO 5K ALL ABOUT DAFFS
STOKES BAY LITTER PICK LEMON DRIZZLE CAKE RECIPE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Mon - Sat: 8am-6pm • Sun: 10am-4pm
Stately Apartments by the SeaOne and Two Bedroom Apartments
Located in Alverstoke on the South Hampshire Coast, Royal Haslar is one of Britain’s landmark buildings.
Built in 1753, the Grade II-listed former naval hospital is part of the very fabric of our nation. Assured its place in history, it is now protected for the future. Reborn as a luxury waterfront residential village offering outstanding period architecture and well-appointed, modern apartments.
Welcome to Royal Haslar - your sanctuary by the sea. Call today and book a private viewing of the coastal and parkland show apartments.
For detailed floor plans, apartment specifications, video tours and to register for the Royal Haslar newsletter, with latest updates and local news, visit the website:
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HELLO!
Can we talk about running? I love a little shuffle along the beach. I’ve always run solo, (apart from that time I accidentally got caught up in a local triathlon!) to be honest I didn’t think I’d be able to talk, run and breathe all at the same time! But it is totally a thing. People do it. If you haven’t but would like to give it a go around like minded people then why not try the ‘Couch to 5K’ that the Gosport Runners are organising. Now is the perfect time to start with lighter mornings and evenings. All the details on page 18.
If you reckon a mile along the golden one at Stokes Bay is doable then get yourself signed up to the Gosport Golden Mile. 3 different races; children, wheelchair and adult. Date and all the details are on page 24.
The cheery daffs continue in abundance. There are a lot of different varieties of daffodils. Did you know all parts of the plant are at least slightly poisonous to humans? Me neither until I read Rita’s article all about the daffodil! Find it on page 14. You’ll find out about the history of the daffodil and about several you’ll find in Crescent Garden this spring. Find it on page 14.
My neighbours helped demolish last months cake recipe. Thankfully they gave it the thumbs up! I asked them for inspiration for this months
recipe, their favourites are lemon drizzle and Victoria sponge. Not wanting to take sides I’ve included a recipe that takes the best bits of both their favourites! It is for a lemon drizzle layer cake. Which means a delicious cake and happy neighbours! You’ll find the recipe on page 8.
Details of what’s on this month are inside. And a heads up of the plant sale that’s happening next month ;0)
Inside you’ll also find lovely local advertisers and businesses ready to help you, the gardening guide, great offers, sudoku, more great advertisers, local news and much more!
ARE YOU A LOCAL BUSINESS?
Let us pound the streets and get your advert through 11,000 homes a month and sent out to our growing number of subscribers too! Get in touch! Details below.
You spoke, I listened! Lot’s of you didn’t like the white text on coloured pages, so I’ve returned to black text on white pages. I hope you enjoy this months edition but any feedback is always welcome!
Wishing all our Mum readers and my lovely Mum a Happy Mother’s Day. Thinking of the lovely Mums that are no longer on this planet.
This is another great Anna Jones recipe. It’s a wonderful mix of both Victoria Sponge and Lemon Drizzle cake. You will need two 20cm round cake tins. If you’re not using vegan yoghurt you could use cream cheese or Greek yogurt. This is a photo of mine, I’d love to see yours! Email us! adverts@gosportchoice.com
To make this you’ll need:
• 350g plain or spelt flour
• 250g sugar (caster is best, granulated or light brown also work)
• 2 unwaxed lemons or limes, zested and juiced (about 8 tbsp)
For the yoghurt-jam filling
• 4 tbsp thick vegan yoghurt (or thick coconut or Greek yoghurt or cream cheese)
• 4 tbsp icing sugar
• 4 tbsp jam of your choice
For the drizzle syrup
• 2 tbsp sugar
Method
Grease both cake tins and line the base with discs of baking paper. If you don’t have baking paper, grease the tin, add a tablespoon of sugar, then tip the tin and shake it around to cover the surface, shaking off any excess.
Heat the oven to 180°C (160°C fan)/350°F/gas
4. In a large bowl, mix the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt with a whisk.
In another bowl, whisk the milk, oil and half the citrus juice. Add the wet ingredients to the dry and mix well with a wooden spoon.
Add the zest from the citrus fruit. Beat well, until the ingredients are thoroughly combined and the mixture is smooth.
Spoon the cake mix evenly between the lined tins, spread to level it out with the back of a spoon, and bake on the middle shelf of the oven for 30-40 minutes. Transfer to a rack and leave to cool completely before removing from the tin.
Meanwhile, make the drizzle syrup, combining three tablespoons of the remaining juice with the sugar, then carefully and evenly spoon it over the top of just one of the cakes – this will be the topping.
Once the cakes are cool, make the filling. Combine the yoghurt and icing sugar, and mix the jam with a tablespoon of lemon juice. Put the bottom cake on a plate, spread over the filling, dot with the jam, then make sandwich with the sugared cake on top.
Find out everything Anna Jones at: annajones.co.uk
Our seasonal flowers are available May to October, perfect for every occasion!
Weekly Bunches
Fresh, handpicked flowers to brighten your home. Buckets of stems for your DIY Wedding & Event florals Stunning, natural blooms for your special day.
HIDDEN TREASURES HIDDEN TREASURES
51-53 HIGH STREET LEE ON THE SOLENT
We urgently require your broken and unwanted gold, jewellery and antiques. Any amount, any condition- top CASH prices paid!
PRE 1947 COINS (SILVER) WANTED
WANTED gold - silver - jewellery of all kinds medals (any militaria) - cuff links - studs - tie pins pocket watches - wrist watches antiques - moorcroft - clarice cliff - old postcards
WANTED - rolex, breitling, omega etc
Please call in to see us. Monday - Saturday 10am-6pm. Alternatively, call to arrange a home appointment TELEPHONE: 023 9255 3428 MOBILE: 07767 304495
MARCH IN CRESCENT GARDEN
Daffodils are a real sign that spring is definitely underway; days are getting longer and maybe we’ll see a bit more of the sun.
The daffodils we know and love are in the genus Narcissus and all are characterised by the presence of six tepals (see previous article on crocus for definition) forming a perianth surrounding a trumpet shaped corona. Flowers are usually yellow or white; sometimes there is some orange in the flower especially in the corona. There are six pollen laden stamens inside the flower surrounding a three lobed stigma. Most Narcissi have a distinct perfume to attract pollinating insects.
The plant has a long history, being mentioned in Greek and Roman literature and on into Medieval and Renaissance times. These early writers were as much interested in its medicinal properties as in its botanical features. All parts of the plant are at least slightly poisonous to humans, but in small quantities they were used to treat various ailments in past times. In 1753 Linnaeus described it in his Species Plantarum, which put the plant in a more scientific context.
Daffodils are mainly native to the Mediterranean area with a particularly great diversity of species in Spain and Portugal. Introductions so ancient that they are considered native are found in Asia and in Northern Europe, including Britain. There are a large number of species and varieties of Narcissus and since they readily interbreed to produce ever more varieties and cultivars there are now thousands from which to choose. Every year nurseries will proudly introduce you to the latest daffodil! All the daffodils in Crescent garden, however, were introduced into Britain before 1850 like all the other plants in the garden to help maintain its Regency character.
Narcissus pseudonarcissus Lobularis or lent lily is as near native to Britain as any daffodil and is thought to be the one that inspired Wordsworth’s poem, when he saw ‘a host of golden daffodils’ in the Lake District. These are planted in random areas around the garden in true ’wild’ fashion.
Narcissus jonquilla, the Jonquil or rush daffodil is native to Spain and Portugal, but is now naturalised all over the world, having arrived in Britain in 1753. In France, since the eighteenth century it has been used in perfume making. It has narrow rush like leaves, hence its name from junquillo, Spanish for rush from the Latin juncus. It is planted in the garden around the roses in the circular basket in the western lawn.
Narcissus pachybolbus is a daffodil native to Morocco and introduced into England in 1846. It bears a cluster of fragrant small flowers with a white perianth and a small cup shaped bright orange corona. It is rare in the wild and has not done well in Crescent Garden where it was planted behind the fountain, so may not be easy to find.
Narcissus pseudonarcissus Obvallaris or Tenby Daffodil has a single flower per stem each with a flared bright yellow trumpet with slightly paler tepals round it. These, too, are planted randomly around the garden and were brought to Britain in 1796.
Narcissus Sulphur Phoenix is a very old double daffodil whose flowers look like a ruffled bunch of feathers in shades of lemon and butter yellow. It is a sturdy plant whose blooms are weatherproof. It arrived in Britain before 1820.
I hope you have daffodils in your own garden to enjoy, but if not come and enjoy those in Crescent Garden.
Ideal for front gardens as statement pieces, or for smaller rear gardens where you want the sound of water without the footprint that a pond requires. There are a multitude of fountain designs to choose from and the configurations are endless. These are also really good for attracting birds to drink and wash.
ECOSYSTEM POND
PONDL
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Ideal for people wanting to enjoy it as a fishpond, and/or to use it as a recreation pond if the space allows, where your family sit and relax in the summer, but still enjoy the visual of a beautiful natural looking pond all year round. This is the oppos swimming pool which remains a covered over rectangle for most of the year with our English weather! Using the Ecosystem basis for natural chemical free filtration, underwater jets and larger wetland filtration systems can be incorporated to ensure and circulation. Waterfalls, streams and decorative fountainscape elements can be incorporated into the pond to suit your s ultimate outdoor living lifestyle.
I can also create and incorporate Rainwater Harvesting systems to use with any of the water features mentioned. All ponds and water features will periodically lose water due to evaporation, splash and wind. Manual top up is the simplest solution but requires regular checking for levels. Creating an underground water reservoir from collected rainwater for your feature to draw upon is the most environmentally friendly way
Contact Craig to arrange a consultation and design visit: 07787 562490
All other landscaping, pond cleaning and garden maintenance also carried out.
LESS WATERFALL
people wanting the impressive visual and sound of a waterfall am, but without the want for fish or pond maintenance. Using n water reservoir to give the illusion of disappearing water, the then pumped back up to the start of the waterfall to recirculate.
All water features can be enhanced with lighting to ensure 24 hour enjoyment of them.
y and friends can swim or site to a standard garden m Pond philosophy as the the highest water quality space and budget, for the
COUCH TO 5K WITH GOSPORT ROAD RUNNERS
Gosport Road Runners are hosting a Couch to 5k Beginners course starting on Tuesday 4th March.
Sessions will be at 7pm on a Tuesday & Thursday at Gosport & Fareham Rugby Club, Dolphin Crescent and will be led by England Athletics qualified Run Leaders.
Taking up running can seem like a scary prospect, especially if you feel out of shape or unfit however this course will help you gradually work up towards running 5km.
Couch to 5k is a running plan designed for absolute beginners. Starting with a mix of walking and running intervals you will slowly build up your fitness and stamina so that by the end you can run a full 5k.
Probably the biggest challenge a new runner faces is not knowing how or where to start. Often when trying to get into exercise, we can overdo it, feel defeated and give up when we’re just getting started.
Couch to 5k is for everyone. Whether you’ve never run before or you just want to get more active, Couch to 5k is a free and easy way of getting fitter and healthier.
There are plenty of benefits from getting into running. For starters, it’s an easy way of improving your physical health.
Running requires little equipment, but a good pair of running shoes that suit your foot type may help improve comfort.
Running regularly will improve the health of your heart and lungs. It can also help you lose weight, especially if combined with a healthy diet.
There are also mental benefits of running. Taking on the challenge of Couch to 5km can help boost your confidence and self-belief, as you prove to yourself that you can set yourself a target and achieve a goal.
Running regularly can also be a great stress reliever and has even been shown to combat depression.
Quote from Kirsten Bradley (Member of Gosport Road Runners).
“I started running at a beginners course many years ago, from running a first mile to running many fun races and long distance, you can make it what you want. The best thing is you make so many great friends while getting fit at the same time. Really pleased to share this lovely course starting very soon. Freedom is in your feet.”
For more information see our website: gosportroadrunners.org.uk or Facebook page Gosport Road Runners Beginners.
IN THE GARDEN
• Start cutting your lawn
• Remove old hydrangea flower stalks above a pair of buds
• Pick off any developing seedheads on daffodils and other spring bulbs, but leave the foliage to die back naturally
• Repair fences and outdoor buildings
• Hoe borders now to reduce weeding later
• Scarify or rake the lawn
• Apply residual weedkillers to paths
• Sow annual flower seeds
• Plant summer-flowering bulbs
• Lift & divide clumps of snowdrops while in leaf
• Trim winter flowering heathers
• Protect tender new shoots from slug attack with copper ring barriers
• Lightly trim winter-flowering heathers
• Prune winter-flowering jasmine
• Cut down old growth of perennials and grasses left over winter
• Order and plant bare root roses
• Split polyanthus after flowering
• Lift and divide summer-flowering perennials
GREENHOUSE
• Sow celeriac, celery, lettuces and parsley indoors to transplant out later
• Sow tomatoes, chillies, sweet peppers and aubergines, courgettes, leeks, peas, beetroot and cucumbers in pots indoors
• Sow dwarf French beans in a large pot for early crop
• Take cuttings from dahlias to raise new plants
VEG PLOT
• Plant out onion sets and shallots
• Sow parsnips once the soil starts to warm up
• Plant out asparagus crowns
• Plant out early potatoes
• Sow broad beans direct outside
• Make the first outdoor sowings of hardy veg, such as spinach, covering with cloches/fleece
• Hoe veg beds as soon as the weather starts to warm up
GOSPORT GOLDEN MILE IS BACK
This Easter Monday, 21st April, Stokes Bay Promenade will be alive first thing to hundreds of runners setting off on a one mile run between the Gosport & Fareham Inshore Rescue Service HQ (Gafirs) and the Bayside Cabin.
The event is being jointly organised by Gosport Rotary Club and the Absolute 545 RunClub to revive a popular event which at one time attracted top international runners.
This year, the focus is on a community event with a children’s race at 8.30am, followed by a wheelchair event, and then the adult’s race at 9am. Proceeds will be donated to Gafirs, whose crew will be turning out in force in the morning to support the runners.
Every runner will wear a bib with a timing chip to ensure their time is accurate from the moment they set off to the finish line.
Memorable Gosport Golden Mile medals will be presented to each finisher, along with an array of prizes courtesy of sponsors Blayde Security,
Sunrise Chimney Sweeps, ARH Air Conditioning, Loxton IT Solutions and Alexandra Sports.
It promises to be a fun, family event open to everyone who fancies a one-mile Easter run along the prom.
Organisers expect the Gosport Golden Mile to attract club runners from across Hampshire, as well as new runners looking to get into the sport. Local schools are promoting the Gosport Golden Mile, while several disabled clubs have been invited to put forward wheelchair entries.
To take part, log onto: bit.ly/GoldenMile2025
For more info email: peekay63@hotmail.co.uk
SHORE LEAVE HASLAR MEMORIAL GARDEN OPEN DAY
Haslar Road, Gosport Wednesday 12th March 11am1pm. Free entry, donations gratefully accepted. Crafts, plants, produce for sale. Homemade cake and drinks. Walk around the peaceful garden. Please park in main Haslar site. Free entry. Donations gratefully received.
CATS PROTECTION GOSPORT EASTER FAYRE
Saturday 29th March 1.30-3pm
St Mary's Parish Hall, Alverstoke. Variety of stalls including cat-themed goods, tombola and refreshments.
LEE PLAYERS VARIETY SHOW
Friday 21st & Saturday 22nd March 7pm for 7.30pm Crofton Hall Theatre, Crofton Community Centre, Lee Tickets, £10, from 01329 662128 or on the door on the night. Seating at tables. Bring your own refreshments.
SPITHEAD ARTS - ARTS APPRECIATION
SOCIETY LECTURE - FABER AND FABER: ITS HISTORY AND DESIGNS
Bay House School, Gosport. Tuesday 25th March 7pm. Visitors are welcome to attend at a cost of £7 per lecture or £1.00 for students. More details at spitheadarts.co.uk
ANCHORED IN GOSPORT-BESPOKE MARKET
Saturday 29th March 10am-4pm High Street, Gosport
Live entertainment, food and drink and bespoke traders.
FRIENDS OF STANLEY PARK
Litter pick first Sunday of the month 10-11am
Meet in The Alverbank Hotel car park. We provide pickers, bags, gloves and smiles!
STOKES BAY LITTER PICK
10am 29th March. Meet by the Splash Park. All equipment provided. Organised by Friends of Stokes Bay. friendsofstokesbay.co.uk
MENOPAUSE TOGETHER GOSPORT
Every first Saturday of the month 10am-12noon Methodist Church, Soke Road, Gosport & Every third Wednesday of the month 6-7.30pm at Lee Hub 14 High St, Lee-on-the-Solent PO13 9BZ
A local support group for others struggling with this journey of menopause. Find our group and page on Facebook - Menopause Together Gosport
CHARITY PLANT SALE
Saturday 26th April 9.30am-4pm
Held at 66 Catisfield Road, PO15 5LY
Plant donations appreciated. Proceeds go to Hampshire & IOW Air Ambulance.
GOSPORT JAZZ CLUB - MARCH
Rugby Club, Dolphin Cres, Gos, PO12 2HE 12th Enrico Tomasso, Nat Gonella Night. 26th The Big Easy 8-10.30pm M £10 G £12 - gosportjazz.org.uk
CROFTON PROBUS CLUB
Meet for a monthly social lunch at Lee-on-the-Solent Golf Club. Followed by a presentation of interest by a member or an invited guest. For retired and Semi-retired professional/businessmen. If you miss the camaraderie and social connection of the workplace come along to a trial meeting before joining? New members welcome. 07508711299 or email: morton.wouter@gmail.com
LE CERCLE FRANÇAIS DE GOSPORT
Thursday 13th March 7:30pm Bay House School
‘Soirée Fables et Poésie’ (evening of fables and poetry). Members will be invited to bring any favourite ‘fable or poetry’ to share with ‘Le Cercle’.
Meetings take place at 7:30. Please note that this and future meetings will be held at Court Barn Conservative Club – Court Barn Lane, Broom Way, and not at Bay House School. New members will be most welcome – telephone Martin Lazell on 01329 314750 for more details.
W L S
Do you have important legal documents in place to protect your interests and make life easier for you and your family, whatever the future brings?
If you have received a diagnosis of dementia, or are concerned about becoming ill and unable to cope with paying your bills, wouldn’t it be helpful for a family member to be able to step in and deal with your finances? If your family member needed to make decisions for you, instead of just acting on your instructions, they would need your formal written authority to do this.
Formal authority can be given by creating a Lasting Power of Attorney. This document will allow your family member to take over managing your money, either temporarily or long term.
You can also create a Lasting Power of Attorney which allows your family member to make decisions for you about medical treatment, if you are unable for any reason to make your own decisions. This is not the same as an Advance Decision, which is a document which sets out your decision to refuse medical treatment in the future, under specific conditions.
If you are caring for an elderly relative, or are likely to be doing so in the future, a Lasting Power of Attorney will mean that you can provide the support your relative needs and access services on their behalf, without the difficulties, stress and resistance you would otherwise encounter.
Having a Will gives you peace of mind that your money, property and personal possessions will be going to the people you have chosen to benefit. An out of date Will can cause problems within the family or mean that a chosen beneficiary receives nothing.
If you have any unanswered questions about Wills or Lasting Powers of Attorney, Christine will be pleased to help, so do please get in touch for a free, no obligation, chat.
Call Christine Davies Solicitor on 07860 772274 or email: christine@winterbornelegal.co.uk
Christine is a Fully Accredited Member of Solicitors for the Elderly and a Dementia Friend. Christine will visit you in your own home and aims to provide a warm personal touch to every meeting.
Christine Davies Solicitor
ST MARK’S CHURCHYARD AN
OCCASIONAL ACCOUNT OF SOME OF OUR INCUMBENTS
Our ongoing research continues to yield new details for individual graves, as we work towards an updated edition of our current book (available from the Friends or in Alverstoke Post Office), which is an exciting prospect for the Friends of St Mark’s. As we cannot include the histories of all those buried here, we thought we would write about one or two on a regular basis. If you have any family connections to St Mark’s and/or can provide further information, please get in touch. Volunteers can be found maintaining the churchyard 10am-12noon on Thursday mornings, and often on Sunday afternoons, if you would like to pop in. The researchers can often be found amongst the graves consulting their notes and taking photographs too!
Grave SR22 – William Carter [1859 - 1865]
Originally, we only had a death record for William, which unusually does not show a birth date, and we have the Sexton’s Record, giving the position of his grave. But recent research has discovered quite a sad story. William John Carter was christened in Alverstoke on 1859. His parents were John Carter, born in Stubbington in 1832 and Sarah Margaret Burchitt, born in 1834 in Sarisbury Green.
The 1861 Census shows them living at an intriguing address, 6 Palestine Place, Clay Hall, which was diagonally opposite the Fighting Cocks Pub, along from Haslar Cemetery. They had three children, the youngest being William aged 1. By the 1871 Census John and Sarah were living at 4 Charlie Row, Alverstoke with just their two daughters, since William had sadly died in 1865. He was buried in St Mark’s churchyard, when he was only five years old.
On the 1881 Census Sarah was listed as a patient in the Royal Naval Hospital, Haslar, made possible by her husband John working as a Store Foreman of the Hospital. She died here in 1882. John remarried in 1890. His second wife was a widow, also working in Haslar Hospital. John died in Alverstoke in 1908 and his wife lived on until 1935.
Grave 132 – Maurice Stedman [1834– 1914] and his wives
Mary Ann Carter [1829 - 1871] and Mary Ann Scott [1845 – 1934]
Maurice was born in 1834 in Cranleigh, Surrey into a family of agricultural labourers, but lived for most of his life in Alverstoke. In 1859 he married Mary Ann Carter, who was born in Titchfield and worked as a servant at Court Barn, for a farmer called James Whittam and his sisters. In 1856 she had given birth to a
daughter, Amelia Ann Carter. After Mary Ann married Maurice, Amelia became known as Amelia Stedman. On the 1861 Census they were also living in 6 Palestine Place, Alverstoke, so Mary Ann was possibly a relative of William Carter (above). By 1871 they had moved to 4 Haslar View and Mary Ann died shortly afterwards, leaving Maurice with four young children.
He then married Mary Ann Scott in 1873 and in the 1881 Census they were still living at 4 Haslar View with five children and two step-children. By 1891 they had moved to 5 Coastguard Cottages, with Maurice described as a Foreman of Labourers at RN Hospital Haslar. When Maurice died in 1914 his address was shown as 28 Monckton Terrace. Mary Ann lived until 1934, but we have not yet discovered where she was living at the time of her death. Maurice’s son Thomas is buried in Grave 124 with his wife.
St Mark’s Churchyard, St Mark’s Road, Alverstoke, Gosport.
Thursday mornings and Sunday afternoons continue to be the time that volunteers come and help. The work of weeding, strimming, cutting back, treefelling, planting and general maintenance continues….
REVERSE PARK
Sat 7th & Sun 8th June 1-5pm
Adult - £10, accompanied children free Price covers both days
ADVANCE TICKETS
from Alverstoke Post Office, Alverstoke Village Hardware and Queen’s Parade News, Privett Road
TICKETS ON THE DAY
From 12.00 at the Parish Centre, Green Road, PO122ET and participating gardens
Sponsors
All proceeds to Alverstoke Parish Centre Regeneration Project
Registered Charity Name - St Mary’s Alverstoke PCC No. 1130178
With 3 sites in the local area, all of our Garages are high ranking members of ‘The Good Garage Scheme’ and ‘Checkatrade’. Our Garages provide onsite MOT testing. Mon - Fri: 8.30 - 5.30 Sat: 8.30 - 12.30
All Makes and Models catered for.
0333 3585 999
Solent Airport MOTs, Unit il1-3, Illustrious Daedalus Park, Daedalus Drive, Lee on the Solent PO13 9FX (Stubbington Motors is now at Solent Airport MOTS) Elkins Motors, 99b Mays Lane, Stubbington PO14 2ED Locks Heath Garage, 212 Hunts Pond Road, Locks Heath PO14 4PG
HVR CUSTOMS
Specialists in VW’s, we also cover many other makes and models in the full or part conversion of camper vans, kombi vans and caddy’s. We manufacture and design custom built camper interiors for Volkswagens and other makes.
Full & Part Conversions
VW Transporters, Campers, Kombi’s and Caddy’s
0333 3585 999 (Option 3)
HVR Customs, Unit il3-4, Illustrious Daedalus Park, Daedalus Drive, Lee on the Solent PO13 9FX
CARS AND VANS ALWAYS IN STOCK FOR SALE!
Specialising in transporters and small low mileage cars. (The cars are ideal for first time drivers.)