Lincolnshire Pride February 2023

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FRES H

OOK

H • THE NT O

LINCOLNSHIRE’S FINEST MAGAZINE

DELICIOUS DINING OUT AT MILLERS SATISFYING WINTER DINING AT THIS SUPER BAR AND RESTAURANT

£4.50

ENJOYING WINTER IN

Lincolnshire IDEAS FOR WALKS, DAYS OUT AND ADVENTURES IN MID-WINTER

ROMANTIC BREAKS ENJOY A ROMANTIC COUPLE’S GETAWAY FOR VALENTINE’S DAY

Good Spa Guide 2024 RELAX AND UNWIND IN LUXURY AND COMFORT THIS WINTER

FASHION & BEAUTY

LUXURY HOMES

LOCAL HISTORY

DRESSES FOR EVENING FUNCTIONS AND WINTER COSMETICS

THE LARGEST SELECTION OF LUXURY HOMES IN THE AREA

LINCOLNSHIRE’S NURSING PIONEER, DAME SARAH SMITH

M

NEW L

INGLE

OF LIN C ST BE

SHIRE EV LN

YS ER

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Welcome F

irstly, many thanks indeed for so many lovely comments on our fresh new magazine. Last month saw us relaunching the area’s finest magazine with a new look – and a new feel – designed to make the most of our vibrant photography and to ensure the text is more crisp and readable, even in the soft light of a sitting room in the evening. We’re touched that so many readers and advertisers have been in contact to offer us their congratulations and with the first edition of 2024 we’re really confident that we’ve a nice fresh canvas for presenting some really good local stories throughout the year.

Find us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/LincolnshirePride Find us on Instagram: @lincolnshirepride Download our App: Search for Pride Magazines in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.

A well-exercised cliché in the media at this time of year is the reporting of ‘the winter blues.’ Happily that’s not inexorable in Lincolnshire and we can find delight in every season as each unfolds its own treats. In winter that means long walks, crisp air, hearty dining and the chance to enjoy the natural world, from winter birds to snowdrops. In this spirit, you’ll find in this edition activities and inspiration for enjoying winter, plus our guide to the best spas for a bit of well-deserved pampering and you’ll join us as we visit Millers in Sleaford for some really satisfying winter dining. Elsewhere we’re looking around a very nice property with plenty of mod cons in North Lincolnshire, and we’ll meet some very cuddly friends as we go crackers for alpacas near Lincoln. Once again, many thanks for the feedback on our new look, new feel magazine, and our very best wishes for a wonderful month! Julian Wilkinson Publisher, Pride Magazines

February’s front cover is by photographer Dean Fisher (www.deansaerialphotography.co.uk) and shows Boston’s Maud Foster windmill. Explore twilight photography this month, our Winter in Lincolnshire feature will offer up a few ideas... and don’t forget to send us your best shots! We’re always looking for great images of the county so please feel free to email us your best photos of Lincolnshire to our editor via robin@pridemagazines.co.uk

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76 Contents 11

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FEBRUARY 2024

LUXURY HOMES Enjoy the largest selection of homes on the market in Lincolnshire and the surrounding area.

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NEWS ‘Good news’ stories from around Lincolnshire including news of musical madness in Lincoln.

Food & Drink

Valentine’s Day city breaks.

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WHAT’S ON Live music and theatre.

101 NATURE All about alpacas.

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A LINCOLNSHIRE WINTER Great activities and landscapes in Lincolnshire this month.

DINING OUT Superlative dining and a sweet treat or two as we enjoy a visit to Sleaford’s Millers. RECIPES & WINE A delicious crêpe cake for Shrove Tuesday and a trio of quality rosé wines.

106 ON THE FARM With Andrew Ward.

Highlights

TRAVEL Romance is in the air, with our suggestions for five

Homes & Gardens 76

WELCOME HOME A stunning modern property offering 7,000sq ft of space, yours for £1.25m.

GOOD SPA GUIDE Winter pampering, a mother’s day treat or a romantic Valentine’s Day together... whatever

Lifestyle 109

MOTORS Rolls­Royce’s Spectre.

the justification, the area’s best spas.

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FASHION & BEAUTY Pink dresses and warming cosmetics.

HISTORY The fascinating story of Lincolnshire nurse, Dame Sarah Smith.

126 WEDDINGS Sian & Tom’s special day.


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Delivered free of charge to high value homes in the county

FREE ONLINE

Pride Magazine is delivered free of charge, via Royal Mail, to high value homes in the county. Our circulation is to homes in the top three council tax bands, which are predominantly worth over £500,000. This guarantees the magazine has an affluent readership commensurate with our content. The magazine is also sold in leading newsagents and supermarkets and we also deliver the magazine to local businesses including selected hotels, restaurants, coffee shops, doctors, dentists, executive motor dealerships and golf clubs. This helps to ensure we have a continued presence, right across our catchment area. Our titles also have more social media fans than any other local magazine. In addition we have over 45,000 online visitors viewing our magazines free of charge, online, on their tablet, computer, laptop or mobile phone via our website, our app, and via the Readly and Issuu platforms. If your business would benefit from being showcased to the wealthiest people in the area, please call our friendly sales team on 01529 469977. Download Our App: Read our magazines on any device anywhere.

Read Pride Magazine free online at www.pridemagazines.co.uk or by downloading our free iOS and Android App to your device.

Legal Disclaimer By supplying editorial or advertising copy to Pride you accept in full the terms and conditions which can be found online at www.pridemagazines.co.uk. In the event of an advert or editorial being published incorrectly, where Pride Magazines Ltd admits fault, we will include an advert of equivalent size, or equivalent sized editorial, free of charge to be used in a future edition, at our discretion. This gesture is accepted as full compensation for the error(s) with no refunds available. Selected images in our content may be sourced from www.shutterstock.com.

Managing Director: Julian Wilkinson. Advertising Director: Zoie Wilkinson. General Manager: Matthew Deere. Executive Editor: Rob Davis. Sales Executives: Aisha Joyce, Gemma Mills, Yvette Curry. Accounts Department: Steve Parrish, Chloe Watson, Beth Freeman­Burdass, Mia Garner. Customer Care Manager: Mandy Bray. IT Manager: Ian Bagley. Web Developer: Joe Proctor.

Pride Magazines, Boston Enterprise Centre, Enterprise Way, Boston, Lincs PE21 7TW

Telephone: 01529 469977

www.pridemagazines.co.uk | sales@pridemagazines.co.uk

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LD

LD

SO

SO

OSGODBY

INGHAM

• Detached Georgian style Residence • Four Bedrooms • Three Reception Rooms • Sun Room• 5 Acre Paddock • 2 ½ Acre Paddock with Field Shelter • Equestrian Facilities

• Executive Residence • 1.8 Acre Gardens • Three Reception Rooms • Open-Plan Kitchen • Six Double Bedrooms • Double Garage • Outbuildings

GUIDE PRICE: £850,000

GUIDE PRICE: £775,000

LD

SO

LENTON

ALLINGTON

• Equestrian Holding • Two Reception Rooms • Kitchen & Utility • Four Bedrooms • Two Bathrooms • Outbuildings • Double Garage

• Detached Country Residence • Open Plan Kitchen • Lounge with Log Burner • Ground Floor Office • Four Double Bedrooms • Three Bathrooms • Double Garage

GUIDE PRICE: £575,000

GUIDE PRICE: £550,000 - £575,000


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Luxury Homes

Find Your Perfect Home The largest selection of luxury homes on the market in Lincolnshire and the surrounding area

Above: Sleaford Road in Branston, Grade II listed mid­18th century Palladian country home. On the market for £1.5m with By Design Lincoln, call 01522 412802 or see www.londondbs.com

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Robinswood Pilleys Lane, Boston Robinswood is situated upon a private and well established plot along the sought-after Pilleys Lane. Originally built by well-respected local builders Fred Peck, the property has been so tastefully extended and refurbished throughout in recent years that it is now an incredibly special and totally unique property indeed. Guide Pride: £699,000 Fairweather Estate Agents 22 Dolphin Lane, Boston, PE21 6EU. Call 01205 336122 or see www.fairweather-estateagents.co.uk


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Humberston Avenue Humberston, North East Lincolnshire Tucked away within its own spacious gardens and up a private driveway, this elegant home offers the discerning buyer an opportunity to acquire a spacious property in an enviable location within easy reach of convenient local transport links. Guide Pride: £1,600,000 Jackson, Green & Preston 19 West St. Marys Gate, Grimsby, DN31 1LE Call 01472 311 113 or see www.jacksongreenpreston.co.uk


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Sleaford Road Branston, Lincoln A truly unique opportunity to embrace refined country living within a stylish residence that seamlessly blends period allure with a wealth of character. Dating back to the mid-18th century, this impressive Grade II Listed country manor exudes elegance in the Palladian architectural style. Refurbished to showcase its original features, the property emanates a distinctive ambiance that is truly one-of-a-kind. Offers in Excess of: £1,500,000 By Design Lincoln Call 01522 412802 Email: lincoln@bydesignhomes.com or see www.londondbs.com


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Eastgate Uphill, Lincoln Occupying a fabulous position just steps from Lincoln Cathedral in the historic Bailgate area of Uphill Lincoln, 18 Eastgate is a most impressive Grade II-listed double-fronted Georgian property built in 1700. The house is notable for its slate roofs, handsome elevations in a mix of brick and stone, Venetian windows, original style fireplaces, stone floors and attractive cornices and moulding details. Guide Pride: £1,495,000 Savills - Lincoln Doddington Road, Lincoln, LN6 3SE. Call 01522 508908 or see www.savills.co.uk


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Braceborough Near Stamford In an idyllic, tranquil setting beside lakes and streams and sheltered by trees, the most spectacular equestrian property with approximately 60 acres is centred around the historic spa of Braceborough about 8 miles north of Stamford. The property comes with a one-bedroom annexe, a separate cottage and a groom’s apartment. The equestrian facilities include indoor and outdoor Olympic arenas, 16 loose boxes within the indoor school, a solarium, wash room and tack room. Offers in Region of: £2,500,000 Fine & Country The Old Jewellers, 30 High Street East Uppingham LE15 9PZ. Call 01780 750 200 or see www.fineandcountry.co.uk


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The Grange Barkston, Grantham A beautiful, substantial, unlisted, 18th century stone and brick Country House standing in delightful grounds approaching 3 acres, The Grange offers, over 3 floors; 6 reception rooms, including a spacious kitchen dining room, 9 bedrooms, extensive storage, a handy boot room, an integrated garage, and stunning gardens with an outdoor heated pool and a tennis court.

Guide Pride: £1,800,000 to £1,850,000 Fine and Country Central Lincolnshire and Grantham 55 High St, Navenby, Lincoln LN5 0DZ. Call 01522 287008 or see www.fineandcountry.com


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Westgate Louth This extremely handsome and spacious period property provides five bedrooms and an exceptional finish throughout. Located in a sought-after position, within 1 mile of the centre of historic Louth, the property is Grade II Listed and features highly attractive original details, combined with stylish modern fittings and sophisticated, elegant décor throughout its 4,500 square feet of accommodation. Guide Pride: £1,150,000 Savills - Lincoln Doddington Road, Lincoln, LN6 3SE. Call 01522 508908 or see www.savills.co.uk


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The Sessions House Court Spalding Grade II listed former courthouse designed and built in 1842 by architects Charles Kirk & Booth. Rooms: reception rooms currently arranged as dining kitchen, sitting room, and TV room. 1-7 bedrooms, former court room and magistrates’ retiring room, two towers. Guide Pride: £1,000,000 Unique Property Co 020 8187 4599 , www.uniquepropertycompany.co.uk.


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Deepdale Lane Nettleham, Lincoln A stunning executive stone-built residence constructed in 2019. Boasting five bedrooms, this detached property enjoys quality finishes including Oak doors throughout and underfloor heating to the whole of the ground floor. The accommodation is arranged over three floors with an impressive open plan kitchen/dining room with additional garden room, benefiting from electric Velux windows and floor to ceiling bifold doors which open out into the beautifully landscaped gardens. Guide Pride: £950,000 Mount & Minster Atton Place, 32 Eastgate, Lincoln, LN2 1QA 9QD Call 01522 716204 or see www.mountandminster.com.


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Barnwell Manor Barnwell, Peterborough Just across the border this attractive Grade II Listed manor house, positioned half a mile to the north of the rural village of Barnwell, Barnwell Manor offers a high degree of seclusion and sits within its extensive gardens and grounds of circa 27 acres. Offers in Excess of: £4,250,000 Savills 9 High Street, St. Martins, Stamford PE9 2LF. Call 01780 673865 or see www.savills.co.uk


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Spilsby Road, Horncastle

Offers Over £550,000

Weirs Lane, Butterwick

£550,000

Beautiful Bokhanger Lodge is on the close outskirts of Horncastle and has been an ideal property for the current owners and their young family growing up. With the schools, shops and restaurants all within walking distance it has been a happy and convenient home. When you step into the garden however, you can hardly imagine that you are so close to town, as a large lawn with beautifully established fruit and nut trees leads down to the river at the bottom of the garden – such a lovely spot. With four double bedrooms, two bathrooms and three reception rooms to include a large drawing room, new sunlounge and cosy snug, this interesting property is totally unique and has many period and character features as well as a superb cellar. Only moving because of an unexpected job relocation means that the new buyers will benefit from a new AGA, new sun-room extension and a brand new boiler and radiators fitted earlier this year.

Weirs Farm in Butterwick was totally re-built when it was extended by the previous owner and is filled with charming character features that reflect all of the qualities of the original farmhouse. The clear benefit to a new buyer of course is that all of the hard work behind the scenes has already been carried out and the fact that this spacious family home has three double bedrooms to the main house in addition to a one bedroom self-contained annexe in the garden. A large plot of just over one and a half acres with open country views provides a wealth of opportunity to the right buyer, along with several useful outbuildings to include a brick studio and a timber workshop.

Pilleys Lane, Boston

Wigtoft, Boston

Offers Over £699,000

Conveniently situated around the corner from Pilgrim Hospital, this superb executive detached property has been extended and totally renovated by the current owners to the highest standard. The bespoke walnut kitchen is fully integrated with Miele appliances and has a co-ordinating bar and larder in addition to a separate pantry. Two sets of triple bi-folding doors open fully to seamlessly blend the inside with the patio and garden areas, and there are four generous and beautifully appointed reception rooms. To the first floor there are four double bedrooms, again with bespoke bedroom furniture and two with en-suite facilities. Private and established gardens extend to the side and rear and there is a workshop attached to the rear of the double garage. The property is offered for sale with no onward chain.

£775,000

Llewelyn House in Wigtoft comprises a substantial and most beautifully renovated four bedroom period property with four reception rooms in addition to a completely separate detached three bedroom house referred to as ‘The annexe’ which has two reception rooms, a conservatory, a double garage and private garden. Situated upon a plot of approximately one acre, the owners have continued to improve both properties during their many years of ownership and some elements of their investment are immediately obvious such as new uPVC sash windows, oak doors and flooring and the new quality bathroom and en-suite shower room. The owners have also invested considerably in updating the electrics, heating and insulation throughout. These updates are paired with an attention to detail (for example detailed cornices and ceiling roses) that compliment the age and character of the properties. The grounds also include a large custom-built workshop with power, lighting and electric roller door. Measuring 15m x 6m, the workshop would serve a wide variety of uses, for example classic car storage/maintenance and offers the space for any number of hobbies and interests.


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01205 361694 www.poyntons.com

sales@poyntons.com

CHARTERED SURVEYORS & ESTATE AGENTS

GLENTHAM GRANGE Cross Lane | Glentham | Market Rasen | LN8 2AH

THE RETREAT PEASGATE LANE | TOYNTON ALL SAINTS | SPILSBY | LINCS | PE23 5RB

• Holiday Park Set in Approximately 10 acres • Sale Includes Large Well Appointed Five Bedroomed House • 2 Holiday Cottages, Site Shop, Inn and Modernised Facilities FOR SALE • 20 Licenced Pitches and Additional Lodge FREEHOLD WITH • Around 6,000sqft of Outbuildings with Substantial VACANT POSSESSION Stores and Workshops • Superb Opportunity to Buy Established Touring Park with Lakes in Landscaped Setting Subject To Contract

• Unique Opportunity to Acquire an Exceptional Private Woodland Site Extending to 1.2 acres • Permanently Sited Static Caravan with FOR SALE 3-4 Bedroom Accommodation • Planning Permission Granted for a FREEHOLD WITH Replacement Dwelling VACANT POSSESSION • 0.48 Hectares Woodland Site with Stocked 0.3 Acre Lake • Solar Array of 10 Panels Subject To Contract

£1.95 Million

DELAMERE MAIN ROAD | WRANGLE | BOSTON | LINCOLNSHIRE | PE22 9AN

£310,000

CHARTERED SURVEYORS • ESTATE AGENTS • COMMERCIAL

• Unique Opportunity to Acquire a Large Family Home • Set in Beautiful Mature Gardens with Private Patio • 5 Reception Rooms Comprising 3 Living Rooms, Large Sun Lounge and Dining Room • 5 Ground Floor Bedrooms with 1 First Floor Bedroom • Large Kitchen with Separate Utility Room, Double Garage

SOLD

OUR SOUTH STREET OFFICE

POYNTONS 24-28 SOUTH STREET PREMIER PROPERTY MARKETING & PROFESSIONAL SERVICES


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Local News Musical Madness in Lincoln for June 2024 Series of live music acts set for Lincoln Castle appearance this summer Lincoln Castle is set to become a superb live music venue this summer with some of the most venerable names in pop performing. Live at Lincoln Castle will take place from 15th - 30th June, with tickets on sale now and the following acts confirmed. 15th June: Crowded House 16th June: Jess Glynne 22nd June: Paloma Faith 28th June: Kaiser Chiefs 29th June: Madness 30th June: Gregory Porter For more information see www.lincolncastle.com or call 01522 782019.

Pilots & Medics’ Busiest Year Air Ambulance reports the busiest year on record... Last month saw the Lincs & Notts Air Ambulance reporting that 2023 was set to have been the team’s busiest year, matching the total number of missions in 2022 and responding to 1,617 emergencies. “The rising number of missions indicates the crucial role that LNAA plays in delivering life-saving care to those in need across both Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire,” says Karen Jobling, CEO. Grantham cyclist Mark knows first-hand the difference that the team of highly skilled doctors, paramedics and pilots can make. Mark suffered a traumatic brain injury and was left fighting for his life after being hit by a car and believes he would not have survived were it not for a rapid transfer to Nottingham’s Queen’s Medical Centre (QMC). The charity’s goal is to be by the side of more patients like Mark. Lincs & Notts Air Ambulance needs to raise £10m this year to operate 24-hours-a-day, seven days a week. The service receives no government or NHS funding, for details of ways to help including donations, legacies, supporting the charity’s shops and playing the service’s lottery, see www.ambucopter.org.uk.

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Send your press releases & business news to us via editor@pridemagazines.co.uk.

New wetland reserve for coast

Update for Sleaford landmark

Approval of plans sees green light for creation of new nature reserve at Sandilands, begins summer 2024

Who was Henry Handley? North Kesteven’s January improvements will reveal all about former MP

Permission for a new coastal reserve at Sandilands has been given, with work set to begin in late summer 2024. Landscape architect Influence and buildings architect Jonathan Hendry have worked with the National Trust to create a vision for the site, supported by the Connected Coastal Town Deal and with a

£2m investment from the Towns Fund. The work will bring Sandilands back to its natural roots with islands, reedbeds and ponds complete with walkways and boardwalks. There will be swathes of grasslands and plenty of sanddunes to encourage migratory birds to settle.

Improvements to the area around Sleaford’s Handley Monument which will better highlight its importance as a historic landmark will start in January 2024. North Kesteven District Council is using the UK Shared Prosperity Fund to make improvements which will highlight and reflect the character of the Grade II listed Handley Monument by uplighting it and improving the space around it. Image courtesy of Jonathan Hendry Architects, Louth.

Mayor’s charity danceathon Ian Lindley, Mayor of the Borough of North East Lincolnshire is dancing for two local charities Councillor Ian Lindley – Mayor of North East Lincolnshire – is looking to inject some funk into fundraising with a non-stop dance event. The danceathon, next month, will raise money for Sunflowers Children’s Action Group and The Pink Rose Suite Grimsby and the Sunflowers Children’s Action Group. The event will take place on 21st March at Grimsby Town Hall.

Improvements include new LED lighting for the monument, two new planters, an information board detailing the monument’s history and Henry Handley who it commemorates plus re-paving the area around the new planters, and giving the rest of the existing paving around the monument a good clean. Henry Handley served as MP for the area from 1832 to 1837. He is also known for his interest in agricultural improvements at the time, including acting as an advocate for steam power. After his death in 1846 more than £940 was raised by the public towards this monument in his name, and it was completed in 1852. Work is also underway to improve Monument Gardens, which are just across the road, next to Sleaford Museum on Southgate.

And Finally... Beavers are back in Lincolnshire thanks to efforts by Jack and Hannah Dale. Hannah is better known as the founding artist behind Wrendale Designs, but for the past four years she has transformed her 70-acre farm into a conservation environment. Two Eurasian beavers introduced to the site with support from The Beaver Trust, the species having been absent for over 400 years.

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Winter in Lincolnshire

A Lincolnshire

Winter A chill in the air and frost on the ground doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy the very best that Lincolnshire has to offer in terms of beautiful landscapes, expansive parkland, big skies and wonderful nature... Image: Belton House, Tim Laughton


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Winter in Lincolnshire

T

here’s really no such thing as bad weather... just the wrong sort of clothing. In winter your first instinct might be to throw a log on the fire, top your mug up with tea and settle in with a good book or the county’s finest magazine... we’d certainly endorse the latter. However, for the hardier among us, wrapping up warm and making sure you’ve a decent pair of walking books can yield significant rewards, with plenty to appeal in Lincolnshire when there’s a chill in the air and a sense of cabin fever in the house...

Exploring Lincolnshire’s Country Estates The triumvirate of stately homes in Lincolnshire is Belton, Belvoir and Burghley. We’ll add to these Gunby and Normanby, as well as Tattershall Castle. The stately home of Belton House reopens on 2nd March, but meanwhile the deer park and adventure playground remain open for visitors. 1,300 acres to amble around, and The Stables café is open from 9.30pm-4pm throughout Jan and Feb. Belvoir Castle will reopen early next month, shortly after its gardens reopen, but meanwhile its parkland, adventure playground and the adjacent Engine Yard remain open throughout January and February. The parkland of Burghley House and Orangery restaurant are open throughout the winter. Its adventure play area is also open during weekends and the formal gardens and the Elizabethan property itself each open on 17th March. Gunby Hall’s grounds remain opening from 10am-3pm, in January and February, with the property itself reopening on 10th February. Tattershall Castle and its grounds remain closed until 14th February, and whilst Normanby Hall’s parkland is open for visitors, the property reopens in March with the Rural Life museum closed until April. Beyond a healthy dose of fresh air, and a hot chocolate after a long walk, take along a camera to capture not just frozen ponds and winter trees, but also the deer which are native to the parkland of Belton House and Burghley House. It’s a great time to enjoy deer in the parkland because sensing winter the animals tend to slow down a little to conserve energy. They will probably remain closer to trees too, sheltering from the wind and eating bark from trees. The animals are usually solitary but may group together in winter to keep warm. They’re by no means tame, though, so remember to keep your distance and invest in a long lens for photos! See www.nationaltrust.org.uk, www.belvoircastle.com, www.burghley.co.uk, www.normanbyhall.co.uk.

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Photographing Lincoln The City of Lincoln is rather beautiful at any time of year but Uphill Lincoln including the Cathedral, Castle, and Steep Hill are particularly breathtaking in frost or snow. Photograph the east side of the building (e.g. the Chapter House) in the morning, and the west of the building (i.e.: the front) in the afternoon, but watch for low winter sun as Exchequer Gate Arch casts shadows over the Cathedral. If you’re hoping to get the whole of the building into a single portrait shot, be aware that you’ll need a very wide angle lens. Whilst in Lincoln, Brayford Pool is another great spot for photography, either towards the university or towards Brayford Wharf with the new pedestrian footbridge in the foreground and the Cathedral overhead. A shot, too, from Waterside South’s bridge will enable you to capture the Empowerment sculpture and High Bridge/The Glory Hole in the background... and it’ll put you within easy reach of Stokes High Bridge Cafe for nice hot cup of coffee afterwards!

Above: Roe deer at Belton House, enjoying the crisp winter air!


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Snow falling on Michaelgate, in Uphill Lincoln by Andrew Scott (andrewscottphotography.co.uk). See the photographer’s website for more images, prints from £6, canvases available : 40” x 30” £145.


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Enjoying The Lincolnshire Coast in Winter Lincolnshire is blessed with a wealth of landscapes from the expansive Fens – which covers 1,500 square miles in total, reaching from north of Boston right down into Cambridgeshire and Norfolk – to The Wolds, with its 215 square miles designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Another impressive landscape we enjoy, though, is the 50 mile stretch of coastline from the Humber Estuary to the marshlands of The Wash. The vast panoramas of sand dunes and mud flats are matched by Lincolnshire’s equally boundless skies.

These provide a wild and mindful backdrop for those keen on walking, photography or those who want to spot nature along the coast, and the landscape looks especially impressive in winter.

days a week, from 10am-3pm, which is good to know because as beautiful as the landscape is, it’s probably the most bracing area of Skegness with coastal winds that clear the head, but can also prove quite chilly, too!

Our recommendations include a visit to Gibraltar Point, one of the nearly 100 reserves currently under the custodianship of the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust.

Other recommendations include Lincoln’s Whisby Natural World Centre and the Water’s Edge and Far Ings reserves of Barton on Humber, created from former clay pits and together covering about 300 acres.

Covering 1,100 acres, winter brings wildfowl include brent geese, shelduck, wigeon and teal, with birds of prey including hen harrier, merlin and owls... and its café is open seven

RSPB-owned reserves include Frampton Marsh and Freiston Shore, and closer to Lincoln, the 200-acre Hartsholme country


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park is a convenient location for an outing with its reservoir and woodlands. A mention of Donna Nook reserve too, which comprises six miles of coastline between Grainthorpe and Saltfleet. In November and December the reserve is home to expectant grey seal mums giving birth to their pups. Too many people visit the reserve to see the youngsters, sometimes causing distress to the mothers. January and February are better months for those seeking a winter walks and seal spotting, but visitors should still keep their distance from the animals.

Walking in Lincolnshire Willow Tree Fen, Windmill Farm Nature Reserve, Spalding, PE11 3JH: Wetland nature reserve managed by the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust. Deeping Lakes Nature Reserve, PE6 8NP. Peaceful nature reserve with a series of lakes and wetland habitats. Winter brings a different aspect to the reserve, and you can explore the trails to observe wintering waterfowl and other bird species. Lincolnshire Wolds, Tetford: Winter walks in the Wolds provide stunning panoramic views, and the quiet countryside is perfect for a peaceful nature walk. Cogglesford Mill, Sleaford NG34 7EA: Walk along the Slea and visit Cogglesford Mill to discover the area’s industrial heritage.


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Winter in Lincolnshire

Snowdrops Across Lincolnshire George Harrison’s Here Comes The Sun includes the lyrics ‘it’s been a long, cold, lonely winter,’ and though it’s about spring generally – and Harrison’s malaise of winter 1969 with the pressures of fame and a recent temporary split from the band weighing heavily on his mind – the song, which appeared on the Abbey Road album, could easily have been a song celebrating snowdrops. The flower’s presence are supposed to appear from Candlemas Day, 2nd February, although they can appear in January or even December. If there’s a better inducement to get out and about this winter, we don’t know of one. The cheerful white flowers signify that we should just

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hang on, and that spring is just around the corner. There are 18 different species of galanthus, and more than 500 named varieties, according to Easton Walled Gardens, which is the best place to enjoy the flowers in Lincolnshire. Around 3,000 people each year visit Easton Walled Gardens to enjoy the spectacle of the snowdrop drifts in the 400-year old garden, restored by Ursula and Fred Cholmeley from 2001. Easton’s 2024 Snowdrop Season will start on Wednesday 14th February and the garden will be open from Wednesdays to Sundays 11am-4pm. Other Lincolnshire gardens offering the chance to enjoy the sight of

snowdrops and other spring bulbs include Doddington Hall, whose Spring Bulb Pageant starts from 4th February to 27th March with snowdrops, winter aconites, Cyclamen coum and Crocus tommasinianus. Market Rasen’s Brightwater Gardens is located close to the village of Saxby and over the past 17 years, more than 190,000 snowdrops, 45,000 crocus, winter irises, and a selection of other bulbs have been planted to create a quarter-mile winter walk leading through the garden and woodland. It’s open seven days, from Friday 16th February. www.visiteaston.co.uk www.doddingtonhall.com www.brightwatergardens.co.uk


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Spas & Spa Treatments

The Good Spa Guide 2024 This month, relax and unwind with a winter spa experience, enjoy a romantic Valentine’s Day together, or think ahead and plan a spa day for Mothering Sunday

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Spas & Spa Treatments

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fter a hectic festive season and with winter in full swing, now is the perfect time to take time out and go somewhere warm and uplifting to alleviate the winter blues, enjoying a treat to tide you over until the emergence of spring. Happily, there are plenty of treats and treatments at the area’s best spas, although one of the most appealing reasons to visit is the ability to just sit in a dressing gown, all day, either alone or with a friend or partner and just enjoy the novelty of silence. Here, we’ve compiled a guide to what we consider are the area’s best retreats for a bit of peace or for a treatment that promises wellness and the chance to alleviate stress. Enjoy every second!

The Grange, Pointon Our wellness journey begins in the village of Pointon, equidistant to Sleaford, Grantham and Bourne. Established in 2009 and created by Matt and Emma Craven, the place is smaller compared to somewhere like, say, Eden Hall or Ragdale Hall, but that’s not a bad thing. Taking about 20 guests at a time ensures it’s quieter, less ‘busy,’ with a cosier, more boutique feel. There are six treatment rooms and a 12-metre pool with waterfall and temperature experiences including a gem stone spa, herbal bath, aromatherapy and ice fountains. Treatments utilise Thalgo marine-based products and Pinks, an organic and vegan skincare range. There are nine body treatments and five face treatments, plus manicures and pedicures, whilst ‘Cream of the Crop’ treatments are designed to offer maximum relaxation. Half-day packages range from £65-£78/person and last four hours, whilst day packages range from £96, with eight hours of spa time. The spa’s flagship Ultimate Grange Indulgence experience includes lunch and three and a half hours of treatment time. The Grange Spa, Millthorpe Road, Pointon NG34 0NF. Call 01778 440511 or see www.thegrangespa.co.uk.

Simpsons Spa, Lincoln Based in Branston, just four miles from Lincoln, Simpsons Spa is the sister venue to the company’s nail and beauty salon on the city’s Guildhall Street and to its North Hykeham venue. Simpsons was established in 2004 and its spa, which opened a couple of years later, provides six treatments rooms, a pool, sauna and stream room. Visitors in the summer will also be able to take advantage of the spa’s al fresco hydrotherapy swim spa, hot tub and barrel sauna. Half-day packages from £55/person for a Garden Spa Taster session; £75/person for the three hour Simplicity Spa indoor experience and full day experiences start from £170 with seven hours of spa time and 75 minutes of treatments. Simpsons Spa, Branston, Lincoln, LN4 1PD. Call 01522 797 989 or see www.simpsonsbeauty.com. Right: The Grange Spa, Pointon

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Spas & Spa Treatments Left: Eden Hall, Newark. Below: Evergreen Spa, Kenwick Park.

Eden Hall, Newark

Evergreen Spa, Kenwick Park, Louth

The former country home of Robert Middleton, built in 1875, opened as a spa in 2000 under the name Eden Hall. The spa is set in 15 acres, and has 25 treatment rooms, plus a £4m spa garden which opened in May 2023 with a hydrotherapy infinity pool kept at a lovely 39°c, plus a fire pit and plenty of places to relax in the fresh air this summer.

The Kenwick Park country estate near Louth gained its brand new £5m spa in 2016. At its heart is a 20m x 8m heated swimming pool, plus internal spa pool and temperature experiences.

Coinciding with the opening of the spa garden is the new botanical brasserie, called The Vinery, but Eden Hall’s provision of food has always been very strong, with breakfasts and afternoon teas available plus the Shepherd’s Hut which offers Pimm’s and ice cream. The thermal spa suite includes a 25-metre Vitality Swimming Pool herbal caldarium, rose-infused steam room, sauna and salt inhalation room. Treatments are powered by Elemis and Voya. Spa days start at £119 with full spa access or £199/person (Serenity Spa Day) for a whole day with a 60-minute treatment plus a three course lunch. Eden Hall, Elston, Newark NG23 5PG. Call 01636 525555 or see www.baronseden.com.

The spa also has 10 treatment rooms including two twin rooms, and there’s a post-treatment relaxation room. No fewer than 35 treatments are available, not including 10 spa packages and a range of manicures, pedicures, brow and lash treatments. A Simply Spa package provides a whole day experience for £68/person, whilst the deluxe spa day at £119/person (weekday; £130/person weekend) includes 60 minute treatment time, with treatments using Elemis. The estate is renowned for its golf facilities as well as its dining, and in conjunction with the hotel, overnight packages are also available. Alternatively, stay in one of the hotel’s timber lodges, which are set in the estate’s lovely secluded woodland. Evergreen Spa, Kenwick Park, Louth LN11 8NR. Call 01507 608806 or see www.kenwick­park.co.uk.

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Spas & Spa Treatments

Old Rectory Spa, Lincoln Opening in 2014 and created by Katy and Jonny Statham, The Old Rectory Spa is located on the Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire border, offering an outdoor hot tub, hot-coal sauna, relaxation room and five treatment rooms. 10 massage treatments, eight facial options, plus holistic healthcare treatments including acupuncture, reiki and reflexology. Spa packages from £50/weekday with two hours spa time, to an Indulge package which includes nearly two hours of treatment time. Old Rectory Spa, Besthorpe Road, North Scarle, Lincoln LN6 9EZ Call 07929 208085 or see www.oldrectoryspa.com.

Le Sanctuaire, Lincoln The last place you’d expect a spa to be located is on Lincoln’s Steep Hill, given that the location is right in the city and given that 13th century buildings are tricky places in which to create an authentic spa experience... happily, owner Karen Cook was up for the challenge and opened the very successful Le Sanctuaire spa in 2014, bringing to the venture a total of 40 years experience in the industry. Spa garden with Canadian cedar wood hot tub, infra-red sauna, and rooftop relaxation lounge. Treatments facilitated by Guinot and Botanicals brands. Twilight package £79/person; top package is Le Sanctuaire Ultimate, £110/person including exfoliation and facial. Le Sanctuaire, Steep Hill, Lincoln LN2 1LT Call 07792 147 017 or see www.lesanctuaire.co.uk.

Laceby Manor, Grimsby Set in 150 acres in the Wolds, Laceby Manor comprises a spa, gym, 18-hole golf course, plus two restaurants and accommodation including lodges with sunken outdoor hot tubs and timber ‘pods.’

Above: Laceby Manor.

Forest Pines, Brigg Forest Pines was created in 1988, with a 27-hole championship golf course opening in 1996. The spa and golf resort offers an indoor pool, jacuzzi, sauna, steam room, gym and six treatment rooms with a range of treatments utilising Elemis. Simply Spa package £64/person, Ultimate package £184/Fri-Sat with 50 minutes of treatments. Forest Pines Hotel, Spa & Golf Resort, Brigg DN20 0AQ Call 01652 650770 or see www.forestpineshotel.co.uk.

The spa features an outdoor pool, indoor pool, rasul mud treatment, plus steam room, herbal sauna and hammam. Treatments use Voya, 111Skin and Tribe517 products, a Wellness Spa Day is an all-day experience including 50-minute treatment for £179/person, whilst a half-day Morning Escape is £85. Twilight packages from £65 include wood-fired pizzas in the oak room and spa relaxation until 8pm. NB: Prices correct at time of publication.

Belton Woods, Grantham

Laceby Manor, Barton Street, Laceby DN37 7LD Call 01472 873468 or see www.lacebymanor.co.uk.

Belton Woods Hotel, Spa & Golf Resort, Belton NG32 2LN Call 01476 514 325 or see www.beltonwoods.co.uk.

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A four-star 136-bed hotel with 36-hole golf complex, Belton Woods is set in 475 acres and also includes a spa with pool, sauna and steam room plus relaxation lounge. Treatments utilise Elemis products and include eight facials, and six body treatments plus a range of manicures and pedicures powered by Jessica products.


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History

Lincolnshire’s ‘Florence Nightingale,’ Dame

Sarah Smith Dame Sarah Smith was born near Boston in 1854, around the same time that Florence Nightingale was making a name for herself as ‘the lady with the lamp,’ helping injured soldiers during the Crimean War. The Nightingale Fund was set up in 1855 to facilitate the training of nurses, and with the establishment of nursing as a profession, Sarah Ann Swift established the College of Nursing in April 1916, later the Royal College of Nursing or RCN... Words: Rob Davis, Susan McGann.

D

ame Sarah Ann Smith was intensely private and she left instructions that nothing was to be written about her upon her death in 1937... it was, though. And with good reason. Born in 1854, Sarah entered the nursing profession around the same time that Florence Nightingale (having gained recognition as ‘the lady with the lamp’ during the Crimean War) set up her eponymous fund to help train more nurses.

This appointment began in 1900 and over the next decade, her approach to nursing would prove transformative. In addition to the care she gave her patients, Sarah brought to the role administrative skills, helping to create systems to allow her wards to work smoothly, and also used her (not inconsiderable) financial acumen to ensure resources were deployed in such a way as to benefit as many patients as possible.

Sarah’s work in the early days of the profession is the reason that today we are cared for by her contemporaries who, in addition to providing medical expertise, also offer compassion and provide dignity for those who are unwell.

It was, arguably, the first time that nursing had been seen as a career, and one that had great potential for women seeing a vocation which provided financial independence and the chance of career progression for life. Recognising the value of the role, Sarah also sought to improve the status and working conditions of her nurses.

Sarah was born on 22nd November 1954 at Blossom Hall in Kirton Skeldyke near Boston. She was the second of three children and attended Cowley School at Donington. After completing her education she left to train in nursing at the Dundee Royal Infirmary. The matron at the time was Rebecca Strong, who had organised the nursing team at the Infirmary into roughly the kind of hierarchy that you’ll find in today’s hospitals. Completing her training in 1880, Sarah became the sister in charge of a home for ‘incurables’ in Dundee and remained in post for six years before working in Liverpool at City Hospital North and at the London Fever Hospital. In 1889, Sarah also travelled to New York in order to study nursing practices in the US and worked in Constantinople and the British Seaman’s Hospital before returning to Britain to take up a position at Guy’s Hospital in London, within a year appointed Matron.

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One of the earliest concerns that Sarah had was the lack of pensions for nurses and so she became involved in several schemes to offer financial relief in retirement for those in the profession, the most prominent one at the time being the Royal National Pension Fund for Nurses. In addition she established sports clubs, recreational facilities and a Past & Present Nurses League which – in addition to keeping nursing alumni in touch with one another – also facilitated professional development for the next generation of nurses. Sarah officially retired in 1909 but with the outbreak of the First World War she offered her services to voluntary services, including the British Red Cross Society and the St John Ambulance Association. She was soon appointed matron-in-chief of both organisations, jointly, becoming responsible for over 6,000 nurses. >>


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History

Dame Sarah said that she was happiest when she was organising and she never really retired from her work. In 1935, when she stepped back from the post of matron-in-chief of the British Red Cross, she was presented with a scroll acknowledging her years of service by the future George VI

>> Over 1,500 auxiliary hospitals were administrated by the British Red Cross alone and Sarah was part of the team responsible for overseeing the training of nurses, their deployment to hospitals both in Britain and overseas, and the establishment of hotels and hostels either as places of recuperation or as places for nurses to live as they worked nearby. Sarah’s diligence ensured that she was awarded the Royal Red Cross, first class, in 1916 and in 1919 she became grand dame of the Order of the British Empire. She was also made a Lady of Grace of the order of St John of Jerusalem. Prior to the war, Dame Sarah has supported the numerous fledgeling professional associations established to support the career, although she had not been actively involved in the campaign for a state registration of nurses. Her personality was one of duty, but she was shy and retiring, disliking publicity intensely and therefore always being reluctant to have an outward facing role as a campaigner or spokesperson for the profession. However, the inconsistent nature of training in the profession – especially during the chaos of a Britain at war – led Sarah to conclude that establishing such a scheme of registration and training would be prudent, though she advocated voluntary registration rather than state-mandated registration. Another nurse, Ethel Fenwick, had represented the Matron’s Council of Great Britain and Ireland and the International Council of Nurses in 1899. In 1902 she launched the Society for the Registration of Nurses, drafting the first bill for nurse regulation. In 1904, Ethel then founded the National Council of Nurses of Great Britain and Ireland to advocate for registration at international level. Registration did not necessarily mean training though, and so, separately Dame Sarah approached Arthur Stanley, chairman of the BRCS and treasurer of St Thomas's Hospital, to ask him to help organise a college of nursing. Stanley agreed, and they enlisted the support of Sir Cooper Perry, medical superintendent of Guy’s, and several matrons of leading London teaching hospitals. The founders of the college were more concerned with the standardisation of the training of nurses, with a uniform curriculum, examination, and a register of the names of those nurses that had passed the examination.

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In 1919 a Nurses’ Registration Act established three new statutory bodies which became responsible for the registration of trained nurses in England and Wales then Scotland and Ireland. The Nurses Registration Act was passed on 23rd December 1919. Ethel, then aged 62, watched it happen from the public gallery in the House of Commons. Fittingly, her name was the first to join the register, and she is still remembered as State Registered Nurse No. 1. No longer responsible for the registration of nurses, and with a membership of over 17,000, the College of Nursing was in a position to expand its role, responding to the educational needs of nurses and providing leadership to the new profession. The achievements of the college were recognised in 1928 when it was granted a royal charter. However, it was not until two years after the death of Swift that it was given permission to use the prefix ‘royal’ and officially became the Royal College of Nursing. Sarah participated in numerous committees and international conferences throughout the 1920s and played an important part in setting up the first public-health nursing course in London for the league. She also made significant contributions to developments that were taking place in nursing in Britain at the time, particularly in the care of the chronic sick and in prison nursing. Dame Sarah said that she was happiest when she was organising and she never really retired from her work. In 1935, when she stepped back from the post of matron-in-chief of the BRCS, and was presented with a scroll acknowledging her years of service by the future George VI. She remained a member of the council of the society and on several of its committees. She was also a member of the council of the College of Nursing from 1916 until her death, was twice elected its president, then a vice-president, and an honorary treasurer. Her last public appearance was at the coronation of George VI. She died a few weeks later, after a short illness, on 27 June 1937, at her London home, in Dorset Square, Marylebone. Swift was a very small, determined woman, little more than four feet 10 inches tall. Her whole life was devoted to nursing and her motivation was a genuine love of humanity. Although every compliment or tribute she received, she accepted only on behalf of the profession itself, the Lincolnshire nurse remains the founder of a professional body which, today, is a register of over 500,000 nurses, midwives, health care assistants and nursing students.


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What’s On From Sunday 4th February

Thursday 8th February

Spring Bulb Pageant at Doddington Hall

Lincolnshire Farming Conference Based at the Showground, and a key date in the farming calendar, the 2024 Lincolnshire Farming Conference features talks from a number of captivating speakers, case studies, and one to one sessions with experts.

Visit Doddington Hall for a spectacular pageant of spring bulbs, beginning in February with wonderful snowdrops and winter aconites, Cyclamen and Crocus tommasinianus, which continues through March and early April with drifts of Lent lilies and a unique collection of heritage daffodils, including rare Edwardian varieties. It’s an event which was started in the 1950s by present owner Claire Jarvis’s grandparents Ralph and Antonia Jarvis.

Lincolnshire Showground, LN2 2NA, tickets £15/adults, lincolnshireshowground.co.uk. Friday 23rd February

Gareth Gates in The Best of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons

£9.50/adults, garden. Doddington Hall, LN6 4RU. Call 01522 694308 or see www.doddingtonhall.com.

Tony Christie: A Life in Music Enjoy an audience with the legendary crooner in Scunthorpe as Tony Christie comes to Lincolnshire

Thursday 22nd February

Tony Christie: A Life in Music The legendary crooner continues to entertain audiences around the world, and this ‘an audience with’ style show promises some incredible showmanship, plus an unmistakable powerful vocal style that has truly captivated generation after generation, and a set list that packs a punch too! Plowright Theatre, DN15 6JT, tickets £30 (meet and greet also available) call 01724 296296 or see scunthorpetheatres.co.uk.

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With special guest Gareth Gates, this new show features all your favourite songs including Sherry, My Eyes Adored You, Big Girls Don’t Cry, Can’t Take My Eyes Off You, Walk Like A Man, and many more. Grimsby Auditorium, DN31 2BH, tickets £35, 7.30pm, call 0300 300 0035 or see www.grimsbyauditorium.org.uk

February/March

The Wisdom is in Your Feet Jo Cope combines her love of performance, leathercraft and fashion at The Hub in Sleaford, using shoes as a metaphor. The Hub, Sleaford NG34 7DW, call 01529 308 710, free entry.


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Send your press releases and events to us via editor@pridemagazines.co.uk

Wednesday 14th February

Thursday 22nd February

Snowdrops at Easton Walled Gardens

V-Bomber Deterrent

Visit Easton Walled Gardens as the first new growth of the year emerges and snowdrops open up across the 450 year old restored gardens, from 14th February right into March along with aconites and other spring flowers. Wednesday 21st February

Sounds Historical Sounds Historical are a group of musicians specialising in early music. Their repertoire spans the medieval era to the 18th century period, performing on an exciting array of period instruments including the Viol, Recorders, Theorbos, Baroque Flutes and many more.

The group also talks about their instruments, the composers and the historical context of the pieces within the programme. The group will perform as part of Grantham Music Club’s programme at ChristChurch.

The Courtyard Shop will be open and hot drinks, savoury snacks and cake will be available from The Applestore or The Coffee Room. Meet up with friends, relax and enjoy.

Part of Lincoln’s International Bomber Command Centre’s lecture and supper series. Much has been written about Britain’s V-bombers, but after a seven-year research project, military historian Dr Tony Redding has produced a book which aims to get to the truth. Here, he explains how the aircraft, flying from Lincolnshire bases, would help to avert the threat of WWIII and what a retaliatory strike might have looked like.

Snowdrop Season starts on Wednesday 14th February, Wednesdays to Sundays 11am­4pm. Call 01476 530063 or see www.visiteaston.co.uk.

From 6.30pm, with hot buffet supper prior to talk. International Bomber Command Centre, LN4 2HQ, call 01522 514755 or see www.internationalbcc.co.uk.

Looking Ahead: Luxmuralis

Tuesday 12th to Saturday 16th March

Light, sound and architecture combine to explore the world of science in a groundbreaking new installation

Science by Luxmuralis

installation which explores Chemistry and Biology to interpret artistically the scale of tiny molecules cells and DNA as well as exploring the history of science, the contributions of science to humanity, and offers a reflection upon famous scientists past and present.

Finken Street, NG31 6QZ, tickets £15/adult, from 7.30pm, call 01476 406158 or see guildhallartscentre.com

Following sell-out shows in February 2023, Luxmuralis is back with Science; an immersive show which is designed to enable people to explore and contemplate the contributions of science and human understanding to the physical world around us. The installation will see Lincoln Cathedral turned into a fully immersive light and sound-based modern art

Booking is essential and tickets are now on sale, time slots from 7.15pm to 9.30pm. £8/adult, £6/children, Lincoln Cathedral, LN2 1PX. Call 01522 561600 or see www.lincolncathedral.com.

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Advertise your business in the new look, new feel Pride ...it’s the area’s finest magazine! Lincolnshire Pride, Rutland Pride and Stamford Pride are delivered free of charge to high value homes in the county, which means we are the only county magazine which can guarantee a wealthy, discerning readership

Call our friendly advertising team now on 01529 469977 www.pridemagazines.co.uk


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Valentine Getaways

Romantic City

BREAKS This month we’re raising a glass to a city break and toasting five cities which are particularly nice in February for a romantic getaway

Paris

Venice

Where else to start but the destination often hailed as the City of Love? Paris remains an enchanting destination that effortlessly sets the stage for a romantic Valentine’s Day.

Venice, with its winding canals, historic architecture, and timeless

Begin your day with a leisurely stroll along the Seine River, hand in hand with your loved one. The riverbanks provide breathtaking views of the city and its landmarks, creating a perfect backdrop for whispered sweet nothings. Consider taking a scenic boat cruise on the Seine to admire Paris from a different perspective, especially as the city lights up in the evening. For a more intimate experience, head to Montmartre, a bohemian neighbourhood crowned by the iconic Sacré-Cœur Basilica. Wander through its cobblestone streets, explore art-filled squares, and perhaps hire a local artist to sketch a portrait of you and your partner. No romantic escapade in Paris is complete without a visit to the Eiffel Tower. Plan to ascend the tower just before sunset to witness the city bathed in the warm hues of twilight. The panoramic views from the top are simply breathtaking, offering an unforgettable experience.

charm, is an idyllic destination for a romantic Valentine’s Day. This enchanting city, known as the Queen of the Adriatic, offers a quintessential Venetian experience – a gondola ride through the labyrinthine canals. Drift beneath iconic bridges, past centuries-old buildings, while a gondolier serenades you, creating an intimate and memorable moment. A visit to St. Mark’s Square, affords the chance to admire the stunning architecture of St. Mark's Basilica and the Campanile, and then share a kiss beneath the famous Bell Tower for good luck. Take time to enjoy a coffee or gelato at one of the elegant cafes surrounding the square. For a more private escape, venture to the lesser-known districts like Dorsoduro or Cannaregio. Discover hidden courtyards, picturesque bridges, and quaint shops, creating a romantic atmosphere away from the bustling crowds.

London

Indulge in a delightful culinary adventure at one of Paris' charming bistros. French cuisine is renowned for its romantic association, and sharing a candlelit dinner with classic dishes like coq au vin or crème brûlée is an intimate way to celebrate love.

Start your London short break with a leisurely stroll through Hyde

Cap off the evening with a visit to a jazz club in Saint-Germaindes-Prés, where the soulful tunes will provide a melodic soundtrack to your romantic night. Or, simply take a moonlit stroll through the illuminated city, savouring the magic of Paris on Valentine's Day.

Next, visit Covent Garden, where you can explore the vibrant market,

Park, one of London’s iconic green spaces. The serene atmosphere, particularly around the Serpentine Lake, provides a perfect setting for a romantic morning. enjoy street performances, and indulge in delectable treats perhaps even visiting the Opera House which in February is home to Richard Jones’ performance of La Boheme.

>>

Opposite: The Eiffel Tower and the arching Pont d'Iéna Bridge at sunrise, by Naya Dadara.

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Top Left: Rialto Bridge and gondolas, Venice. Top Right: Blue Lagoon in Reykjavik. Above: London at twilight. Opposite Page: New York City panorama skyline at sunrise.

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Dine in style at one of London’s romantic restaurants and cap off your evening with a visit to the top of The Shard, Western Europe’s tallest building. The panoramic views of London's skyline at night create a dazzling spectacle, offering a breathtaking conclusion to a day filled with romantic moments in the heart of the British capital.

Reykjavik Reykjavik, the capital city of Iceland, may be known for its dramatic landscapes, but it also offers a unique and charming setting for a romantic Valentine’s Day. Embrace the magical ambiance of this northern city with these romantic activities. Start your day with a visit to the iconic Hallgrímskirkja, Reykjavik's striking church that dominates the skyline. Take an elevator to the top for panoramic views of the city and surrounding mountains, creating a picturesque backdrop for a memorable moment. Wander through the colourful streets of the city center, exploring cafes and boutiques. Stop by the Old Harbour, where you can enjoy a peaceful stroll along the waterfront, taking in the fresh sea breeze and the view of Mount Esja across the bay.

For a truly unique experience, consider a relaxing dip in the Blue Lagoon, a geothermal spa located just outside Reykjavik. Surrounded by lava fields, this otherworldly setting provides a tranquil and rejuvenating atmosphere. As evening approaches, head to Perlan, a glass dome situated on Öskjuhlíð hill. Enjoy a romantic dinner at Þúfa, the revolving restaurant inside Perlan, offering panoramic views of the city. The slowly changing scenery provides an intimate and enchanting setting for your Valentine's celebration. Chase the Northern Lights for a celestial display of colours in the night sky. Escape the city lights and head to darker areas just outside Reykjavik for a chance to witness the dancing auroras. Snuggle up under the celestial light show, creating a magical and romantic atmosphere.

New York The city that never sleeps offers a wealth of romantic activities, making it an ideal destination for an unforgettable Valentine's Day celebration. Start your day with a visit to Central Park, a romantic oasis in the heart of Manhattan. Take a leisurely stroll through the park’s

winding paths and enjoy the 843 acre urban park’s picturesque landscapes. Explore the enchanting streets of Greenwich Village, known for its charming cobblestone streets and historic brownstone buildings. Discover hidden gems, boutique shops, and intimate cafes, creating a romantic ambiance away from the bustling city. Consider a sunset cruise along the Hudson River for a romantic and scenic experience. Enjoy stunning views of the Statue of Liberty, the Manhattan skyline, and the twinkling lights of the city as the sun sets, casting a warm glow over the water. Dine at one of New York’s renowned romantic restaurants, whether it’s a candlelit dinner with a view of the skyline or a cosy spot in a historic neighbourhood. From upscale eateries to hidden gems, the city's diverse culinary scene ensures a romantic meal for every couple. Conclude your evening with a Broadway show or a visit to one of the city’s jazz clubs where a vibrant arts and entertainment scene in New York adds an extra layer of romance to your Valentine’s celebration. Our recommendations include Blue Note, or Village Vanguard.

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Dining Out

Millers in Sleaford This month we’re enjoying a visit to Millers, based in the centre of Sleaford. It’s an exceptional place, offering daytime dining, evening meals and delicious treats from ice cream and crêpes to chocolates Words & Images: Rob Davis.

I must admit to being a little biased when it comes to this month’s Dining Out recommendation. Born and raised in Boston, I moved to Sleaford back in 2008 and enjoy many things about the town, not least among which is its restaurant scene. Just a short walk from my home is Millers where, for disclosure’s sake, I’ve enjoyed many a great meal. The place bills itself as a bar and restaurant, but in fact offers a good deal more. From morning coffee or a drink in the evening to brunch, lighter lunches, or quality evening dining, there’s nothing that Millers doesn’t do well. Latterly the restaurant has created an ice cream parlour with crêperie and a chocolate shop on site too. Back in the 18th century, the building was on the wharf of the River Slea and serviced merchants trading commodities, from wool to grains to bottled water from the town’s Lee & Green. Some time later the place became a bar named O’Connells and in 2013 it was reinvented by Hannah & Robert Hodgson, who sought to provide high quality dining from the place instead. Left: Chicken and chorizo risotto served with rocket & pickled shallot, £14. Top: Oak smoked salmon with lemon & herb creme fraiche, pickled shallot, £8.

Above: Millers is based in Sleaford on what was once the wharf of the town’s Slea, used by merchants.

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Dining Out Millers Bar & Restaurant, in Sleaford STARTERS Oak-smoked salmon served with lemon & herb crème fraîche pickled shallot & brown seeded bread, £8. Thyme & rosemary Camembert served with garlic focaccia & red onion chutney, £11. MILLERS CLASSICS Pea, mint and spinach risotto served with crispy rocket, £14. Chicken and chorizo risotto served with rocket & pickled shallot, £14. Full rack of ribs topped with BBQ sauce & served with beer battered onion rings, dressed side salad, coleslaw & chips, £20. Hunters chicken with chargrilled chicken breast, bacon, BBQ sauce & cheese, served with salad, coleslaw & chips, £14. CHARGRILLED STEAKS

Two years ago, Anthony added an ice cream parlour and last year, a chocolatier too, both adjacent to Millers

Flat iron steak classically cut from the shoulder, delivers a very strong beef flavour, £12.

Hannah’s nephew Anthony Smith was Head Chef and in 2019 became the owner of Millers. Anthony has also taken over and

Sirloin steak, cut from the back muscle; very tender, £16.

refurbished Ewerby’s Finch Hatton Arms and added to Millers its adjacent ice cream shop – offering takeaway cones and crêpes – and its chocolate shop, which offers truffles with around 30 flavours and variations. He has also opened The Spire, a coffee shop based at Anwick Garden Centre with its range of homemade cakes, brunch and lunch options.

Fillet steak, cut from the lower middle back, the most tender of all the cuts, £25. All served with steak sauce of choice garlic mushroom & balsamic slow roasted tomato. DESSERTS Raspberry cheesecake waffle or crépe, with whipped cream cheese, crumbled digestives, fresh raspberries, £7.50. Banoffee waffle with caramel sauce, fresh banana, £7.50. NB: This is a sample menu, and featured dishes are subject to availability and change.

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Back to Millers though, and ordinarily I’d be sceptical of a place which professes to offer everything from drinks to morning coffee and brunch, scones and cakes (all baked in house), and lunchtime dining... as well as top quality evening dining, too. Somehow though, Millers does it all, and it does it well. Anthony, with chefs Richard & Bruce, utilise local suppliers like Wards of Ruskington and

Moorcroft, and they invest lots of effort in their dishes, even baking their own bread during evening service and creating their own mini focaccia. During the daytime there’s a choice of brunch options plus sandwiches and paninis as well as nine quality pub-restaurant inspired dishes, ‘Millers Classics,’ from fish ‘n’ chips to flat iron steak and sausage ‘n’ mash. Evening service sees a choice of five starters, 10 Classics (including a couple of risottos; haddock & chips; sausage & mash, ribs and a very good burger option) plus a steak menu. Millers was always a good bet for a steak, but such was its popularity with local diners that it naturally gained a reputation as the area’s most well-regarded steakhouse and has adopted that as its unique selling point. >>

Above: Sirloin steak, garlic mushroom & balsamic tomato, £16. Opposite: Strawberry cheesecake waffle, £7.50.


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Dining Out

Today there’s a choice of five chargrilled steaks plus gammon and pork chop options, with four sauces and accompaniments of garlic mushroom and balsamic slow-roasted tomato with decent chips: fluffy on the inside, crispy on the outside. It’s a clever menu which offers plenty of choice whilst still remaining efficient for the busy team in the kitchen. Desserts are a real treat too, with a dailychanging blackboard of puddings plus a selection of waffles and crêpes, all made in house. We also ought to mention the dedicated Sunday lunch menu too, which provides one, two or three courses for £14, £18 and £22 respectively, including roast beef and pork options. It’s one of the best Sunday lunches in the area, with satisfyingly large Yorkshire puddings, a glossy, rich gravy, and no effort spared.

A trip for Sunday lunch in January or February is easy to recommend, but with Valentine’s Day and Mothering Sunday approaching, look out for dedicated menus and consider the chocolate shop to treat mum to some luxury truffles too! Later in the year, Millers also has a lovely sunny garden at the rear of the restaurant and an additional terrace at the front of the restaurant, both ideal for enjoying a pre-dinner drink or an ice cream or waffle. A final word too for the team at front of house. The place feels genuinely friendly, nothing is too much trouble and the overall experience has always been lovely. There’s very enjoyable dining, with plenty of choice, in a great setting with lots of character. Millers is easy to recommend and somewhere you’ll enjoy returning to, time and again.

Millers Bar & Restaurant The Pitch: “Good, wholesome food made with quality ingredients that are ethically, responsibly and, where possible, locally sourced, served in pleasant surroundings.” Main Meals Served Wednesday – Saturday: 12pm – 3pm, 5pm – 9pm Sunday from 12pm – 4pm. Millers, Mill Court, Carre Street Sleaford NG34 7TW. Call 01529 414888 or see www.millerssleaford.com.

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Recipe

Tiramisu Crêpe Cake

with Mascarpone & Amaretto Preparation Time: 50 minutes plus chilling. CRÊPES: 250g all­purpose flour • 4 large eggs 500ml whole milk • 115g unsalted butter, melted • 55g sugar 5ml vanilla extract • Pinch of salt FILLING: 375g mascarpone cheese, softened • 240ml double cream 60g icing sugar • 5ml vanilla extract • 45ml amaretto liqueur SYRUP: 240ml strong brewed coffee, cooled 25g sugar • 30ml amaretto liqueur. GARNISH: Cocoa powder, for dusting • OPT: Chocolate shavings Amaretti biscuits, small meringues or piped filling.

Blend flour, eggs, milk, melted butter, sugar, vanilla extract, and a pinch of salt until smooth. Rest the batter in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes. Cook thin crêpes in a heated non-stick skillet. Set aside to cool. Whip the double cream until stiff peaks form. In another bowl, whisk mascarpone, powdered sugar, vanilla extract, and amaretto. Gently fold in the whipped cream. Mix the brewed coffee, sugar, and amaretto in a bowl. Set aside. Brush the crêpes with the coffee soaking

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syrup. Spread a thin layer of mascarpone filling over each crêpe. Stack the crêpes and filling, ending with a crepe on top. Cover and chill for at least four hours or overnight. Dust the top with cocoa powder and sprinkle chocolate shavings. To really elevate your cake to the next level, before dusting the top with cocoa, you can decorate with Amaretti biscuits or place mini-meringues across the top, or make extra filling to pipe over in concentric circles. Slice and serve chilled.


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SAN

PIETRO RESTAURANT • ROOMS

20 years of award winning fine dining

/SanPietroRestaurant @SanPietroNLincs

Whether you are visiting for a unique dining experience, a luxurious overnight stay or both, San Pietro truly is the perfect boutique destination. Taste of Excellence finalist and Food & Farming’s Restaurant of the Year - visit us soon and say ‘Salute’ to quality...

11 High Street East Scunthorpe North Lincolnshire DN15 6UH

01724 277774

sanpietro.uk.com


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Cook from scratch, eat better and save time! When we say it does it all... we mean it, and WE CAN PROVE it too, with a tailored, free, strictly no-obligation cooking experience... The kitchen appliance that renders

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e.g: Create five weekday meals in less

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ONLY available via an independent advisor. Call to book your own tailored, strictly no-obligation cooking experience, courtesy of local expert Sam Parker:

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REVOLUTIONISE THE WAY YOU PLAN MEALS, PREPARE, COOK & ENJOY FOOD, WITH THERMOMIX’S LATEST GENERATION TM6 ALL-IN-ONE KITCHEN ASSISTANT

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A true flagship Valpolicella that’s ideal for winter

A real treat for rum lovers, seven years in the making

From the prestigious La Groletta and Conca d’Oro crus, in the hilly Valpolicella Classica zone comes the Tommasi family’s Classic wine par excellence. Its elegance and structure, roundedness and complexity make this wine truly unique. Intense ruby red colour, the nose reveals intense and clean scents of very ripe black cherry, wild berries and spice, 15% ABV.

What’s better than a tot of rum on a cold winter evening? This! There’s rum, and then there’s 970 Madeira Wine Cask rum, aged for seven years in brandy casks. Glorious dry fruits aromas, intense and evolving on the palate with notes of salted caramel, candied orange and figs leaving a distinct and long aftertaste. £109.70 / 70cl / 53.9% ABV www.haroldandhansa.co.uk

The Wine Cellar Enjoy a night in front of the fire on February 14th with these delicious rosé options, or a first-class Valpolicella. We’ve a rum to warm your soul, and a ‘feel good’ option for those partaking in dry January too!

Rosés are Red: Valentine’s Day wines... From a winery owned by Brad Pitt (Miraval) comes Studio, a first­class rosé with grapefruit freshness. £18.99 / 75cl / 12.5% ABV www.selfridges.com. Produced by Lyme Bay in Devon, delicate fruit rosé bursting with red summer berries and a twist of orange. £19.99 / 75cl / 12% ABV www.lymebaywinery.co.uk. England’s most exclusive pink fizz with a strawberry and raspberry palate, fine mousse and lovely dryness. £43 / 75cl / 11.5% ABV www.balfourwinery.com.

£44.99 / 75cl tommasiwine.it or from Waitrose.

Feel good alcohol-free ‘spirit’ for a clear head Alcohol-free ‘spirit’ aims to release the ‘feel good’ GABA neurotransmitter in the brain Sentia is a new alcohol­free ‘spirit’ which its creator, Professor David Nutt, says replicates the positive effects of alcohol with none of the detrimental effects. The drink is said to activate the neutrotransmitter GABA (Gamma aminobutyric acid) which is known to induce a relaxing effect. Sweet, spicy and warm berry flavour; 0% ABV. £30.50 / 50cl sentiaspirits.com

Our featured wines are available from local independent wine merchants, supermarkets and online, prices are RRP and may vary.

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Welcome Home

The Laurels A stunning modern property in a semi-rural location, offering 7,000sq ft of accommodation plus space for outdoor entertaining. This month we’re enjoying a look around The Laurels in Humberston, currently on the market with Martin Maslin for £1.25m... Words: Rob Davis.

Back in ancient Rome, laurel wreathes were presented to the winning athletes competing in the Pythian games to honour Apollo, to whom the laurel was a sacred plant. Apollo was the god of everything from archery and music to healing, the sun, poetry and goodness knows what else. Hence the phrase to ‘rest on one’s laurels’ referring now to relying on previous successes at the expense of future achievements.

The current owners of The Laurels, though, have hardly rested on their proverbials, creating their rather impressive property at the end of Church Lane in Humberston.

for families and as it was only completed in 2020, it’s still pristine, offering modern, maintenance-free, accommodation with all of the comfort and none of the hassle.

The place is just a five minute drive from Grimsby, about 25 minutes from Louth and only a couple of miles from the Cleethorpes coastline with its country park and RSPB nature reserve. It’s situated in a semi-rural location which offers plenty of space

Being a modern property doesn’t just mean low-maintenance, either. The house also benefits from up-todate technology with discreet implementation. Its private driveway and gates have a camera-based access system via your mobile phone.

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Welcome Home The house has been created in rural blend brickwork, with stone lintels and sills... High-speed internet is hard-wired throughout the house and there’s provision for the distribution of audio and video throughout the house for multi-room home entertainment. The property’s power sockets have USB connections too, so that no gadget will ever go uncharged. Arranged over three floors, there’s also underfloor heating throughout and the house has three reception rooms plus five bedrooms, six if you’re willing to sacrifice the space currently used as a gymnasium. Created in rural blend brickwork and featuring limestone lintels and sills, the property’s entrance is flanked by doric pillars leading to a spacious entrance hall with its porcelain floors, sweeping staircase and galleried landing. To the left is the formal sitting room and to the right a study. At the rear of the house is the large, practical and very beautiful open plan living space. Extending to about 33ft, the space comprises a kitchen with dedicated pantry, plus a family room and casual dining area and sliding doors which open out onto the property’s terrace. A separate dining room in the west wing of the property provides a space for formal dining that can be opened up or separated from the kitchen for dinner parties. The formal dining room, sitting room and the living area of the open plan reception rooms also feature electric living flame fires (with Class 1 chimneys, enabling a real coal fire if the next owner prefers) and the latter feature recessed spaces for TVs measuring up to 80 inches, and air conditioning keeps the entire open plan living kitchen space nice and cool.

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The kitchen features two-tone painted solid timber cabinetry and solid stone surfaces and splashbacks... And then, there’s the kitchen itself. The owners wisely enlisted the help of Richard Sutton Interiors of Grimsby to help create the space, with twotone painted solid timber cabinetry and quartz/marble work surfaces and splashbacks. There’s a large island with sink unit and in a recess, with timber lintel and antique effected mirrored splashback, a gas burner hob with Smeg pyrolytic oven for family roasts. Integrated elsewhere in the kitchen are two further ovens with ‘hide and slide’ doors plus full-height Caple fridge, freezer and wine cooler. All of the cupboards feature walnut interiors, whilst the hidden walk-in pantry has a second fridge with sink and quartz worktops. Richard Sutton’s penchant for creating bespoke cabinetry is also evident in the illuminated media unit in the living area. Meanwhile there’s more bespoke cabinetry in the dressing room and a bespoke double vanity unit in the master bedroom’s en suite. The master bedroom has dual sinks, walk-in digital shower and water proof TV which doubles as a mirror, as well as a balcony overlooking the garden and pool. The two guest suites also features an en suite and walk-in dressing room, whilst the second floor has two further bedrooms both with en suites and the space which is currently set aside for storage or use as a gym.

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Welcome Home

The Laurels is situated on a nice

in porcelain tiles and outdoor living

development of five properties and

space and changing rooms/outdoor

comprises about a third of an acre

shower, plus a kitchen area with

of grounds, which we think is a

dedicated bar and lounge.

‘Goldilocks’ amount; not too large, not too small, providing sufficient space without leaving its next owners a slave to the lawnmower all summer. The

grounds

are

equally

A large separate garage has electric, insulated doors and underfloor heating with room for three vehicles, a des res for classic cars... although if your

low-

mode of transportation is a bit more

maintenance which means you’ll need

modern, three-phase electricity also

to find something to occupy your

provides the option of EV charging.

weekends or down time in the summer. Happily, there’s a 13 metre heated swimming pool with hasslefree automated filtration and chlorine systems to keep it clean and fresh.

Elsewhere, it’s dusk to dawn lighting, palms and low-maintenance planting,

The Laurels, Humberston Provenance: Completed in 2020 and offering around 7,000sq ft of space. Rooms: Three reception rooms currently arranged as living kitchen with dining area, formal dining room, lounge. Five/Six bedrooms with five en suites and dressing room to master.

which means the next custodians can

Guide Price: £1,250,000

simply move into The Laurels, and

Find Out More: Martin Maslin Estate Agents, Grimsby DN31 1NB, call 01472 311000 or see www.1thelaurels.com.

enjoy a lifestyle property which is

Once out of the pool, there’s plenty of

seriously well thought-out, luxurious

terrace space, beautifully landscaped

and offers plenty of space.


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Peter Jackson Cabinet Makers Ltd Devereux Way, Horncastle LN9 6AU

Tel: 01507 527113 W: www.peterjacksoncabinets.co.uk E: info@peterjacksoncabinets.co.uk

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Interiors

Cushion the Blow

Cast off the winter blues, but not the shade itself as we suggest cushions to cuddle all winter long from leading names in interior design...

Above: William Yeoward blue fabric and cushion from Spring 2024 collection, www.williamyeoward.com. Left: Woodbridge, Marlow and Ely fabrics from Jane Churchill, www.janechurchill.com.

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Evora by Clarke & Clarke, new for Spring 2024, www.clarke­clarke.sandersondesigngroup.com.


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Top Left: Countess, Zoffany’s Darnley fabric collection, sandersondesigngroup.com. Top Right: Northwood Collection, Clarke & Clarke, sandersondesigngroup.com. Bottom Left: Autumn 2023 cushion collection, William Yeoward, williamyeoward.com. Bottom Right: Designers’ Guild Brera Corso, www.designersguild.com.

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KITCHENS • BEDROOMS • BOOT ROOMS • STUDIES INDIVIDUALLY MADE FREE STANDING FURNITURE

Call 07534 808903 richwood-cabinetmakers@hotmail.com BRING RICHWOOD INTO THE HEART OF YOUR HOME

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Luxury at Home with Cooks & Company’s

Sub-Zero & Wolf Not all appliances are created equally. Sub-Zero and Wolf are considered to be, respectively, the world’s best refrigeration and cooking products. It’s a flagship brand for Cooks & Company, based in Newark and offering premium appliances and bespoke interiors

N

obody ever regrets buying quality. That’s why Sub-Zero and Wolf have retained its reputation as the manufacturer of the world’s best refrigeration and cooking appliances. Each one has a life span in excess of 20 years and each remains technically superior to anything else on the market, which should come as little surprise given that the company has nearly 80 years of experience invested in the innovation and refining of its products. The company was founded in 1945 by engineer Westye Bakke who is credited with creating the first freestanding freezer, the original fridge/freezer and the first integrated fridge too.

Cooling Appliances Not all appliances are created equally, and whilst a couple of the more obvious points of difference for Sub-Zero are the size and capacity of its cooling appliances plus the products’ purposeful, industrial style, there are also a number of other technologies which also make SubZero refrigeration superior. The brand’s fridge/freezers comprise two completely separate systems, each with its own airflow profile and each with its own purification system. This ensures that rather than ‘sharing’ conditions, refrigeration and freezing conditions are separated and individually optimised to remain, respectively, cool and moist or cold and dry. Above: The brands’ Knightsbridge studio.

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Homes

The appliances also have NASA-derived air purification technologies which removes ethylene – the ‘food spoiling gas’ – and odours, which help to prevent tainting of different foods and also ensures that food remains fresher for up to 30% longer compared to conventional refrigeration. Other technologies include LED lighting, a wealth of energyefficiency features plus nano-coated hydrophobic glass shelves which resist spillages and moisture build-up. Each configuration of cooling appliances is modular, enabling you to tailor the size and design of refrigeration, freezer module, and wine coolers with over and under, side-by-side and French door configurations plus under-counter options.

Cooking Appliances The sister brand of Sub-Zero is Wolf, a range of stainless-steel cooking appliances that offer highly configurable, restaurant-quality control and consistency for your cooking, whether your preference is towards gas burner or induction hobs and across gas, dual-fuel, steam, convection and microwave-based appliances. The availability of freestanding or integrated cooking appliances plus grill, teppanyaki, and steamer worktop modules, plus integrated coffee machines, warmer drawers and a range of kitchen ventilation systems ensure you can configure a Wolf cooking environment to suit your space and preferences, benefiting from industrially-inspired design and peerless professional quality.

Complementing Your Kitchen Sub-Zero and Wolf has also created a range of countertop appliances from kettles to filter coffee machines to toasters, blenders and stand mixers plus knife sets and professional cookware with the same build quality and design as its refrigeration and cooking appliances. The newest addition to the company’s ranges are outdoor kitchen grills, refrigeration and outdoor warming appliances designed to ensure you derive professional cooking results from your terrace.

Cooks & Company The Sub-Zero and Wolf family comprises Classic, Designer and Integrated refrigeration lines as well as built-in and freestanding cooking ranges, ensuring they’re highly configurable and tailored to your preferences.

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Witnessing the appliances would ordinarily require a trip to the brand’s newly-refurbished flagship Knightsbridge studio, which opened last year with a professional-grade theatre kitchen, set amongst a bank of 10 iconic Sub-Zero and Wolf stainless steel appliances. Thankfully though, you can see the range of appliances closer to home, in the Sub-Zero and Wolf studio at Newark’s Cooks & Company. Established over 50 years ago and with over 20,000sq ft space, the Brunel Drive company absolutely specialises in quality appliances from the world’s best brands. In addition, Cooks & Company provide a turnkey interiors service, creating beautiful kitchens, reception rooms, bars, studies and bedrooms with client-led design and full project management of cabinetry by Charles Yorke plus a range of bespoke furniture and accessories too. A visit to Cooks & Company is a must in order to see the impressive brands available, and how each one can be used to create both beautiful looking and highly functional spaces in your home, revolutionising your appreciation of cooking with every single meal. Find Out More: Based near Newark, Cooks & Company specialises in creating luxury kitchens, bespoke furniture, and interiors. Adjacent to the company’s exquisite interiors studio is a showroom displaying luxury­brand appliances. You can find the team at Cooks House on Newark’s Brunel Drive, NG24 2FB. Call 01636 593910 or see www.cooksandcompany.co.uk.


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Gardens

Mindful

SPACES Lincolnshire landscaper Joe Cheetham of Zenscape is aiming to improve our outdoor spaces one mindful project at a time, with expert design and construction...

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ou may not have heard much about Zenscape, so it may be a shock to know that one way or another they’ve been operating here in and around Lincoln for almost 10 years. This landscaping business started life as Zen Garden and Paving services, but have since moved into much more ambitious work.

Joe Cheetham, the owner, developed a real passion for both the soft and the hard elements of gardening many years ago, and has now honed his skills to be able to handle virtually any garden redesign you can throw at him, no matter the size or complexity. Their credentials can be aptly reinforced by the fact that they were given the great accolade of being invited to assist with the development and construction of a prestigious garden at this year’s Chelsea Flower show – the Brewer Dolphin garden. Joe works with a team of experts, as well as carefully selected and trusted associates for more specialised work; he is also passionate about education and giving youngsters a

chance to discover the beauty of working with nature, and has run several apprenticeship schemes over the years. Projects start with design, and Zenscape is fortunate in being able to work with some of the best in the country. The most tangible elements of his work are the paving, lighting, water features or buildings, and he works very closely with major suppliers, ensuring he is up-to-date with their offerings – as well as the design and development of new materials. Zenscape is on Marshalls’ Register approved list, and won three of their major awards over the last couple of years. Joe’s passion really has developed – and is constantly developing – to handle all types of material to be found in a project: materials both traditional and conventional, as well as materials somewhat avant garde and innovative. A garden redesign is limited, he says, only by the physical dimensions of the space and the client’s budget. He relishes the opportunity of working with clients, and is

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Gardens

able to transform their ideas into works of art and peace that will give joy and tranquility to their owners for many years. Joe feels passionately that the garden should be a haven of peace, as well as a space to enjoy. Indeed, “nature’s healing by design” is the company’s strapline, and this zen-like approach is at the very heart of what they do - the most visible element being the Zen in the company name…

clients, and allowing them to create social environments for happiness.”

Joe’s interest in nature, the outdoors and the peace and harmony that can be experienced all stem from his personal experiences some years ago. “Nature saved me,” he says. “It made me realise that even in dark times there is something beautiful, peaceful, fulfilling in what you get from being at one with nature. And that’s why I am so passionate today, wanting to share that experience with my

Joe and his growing team have regular ‘toolbox talks’, where they discuss new pieces of equipment and new techniques. They also have full health and safety training, and ensure they update themselves to maintain new British Standards; this requires an everincreasing knowledge of soil types, construction techniques and sundry other elements that you will never have even

Joe’s interest is in nature, the outdoors and the peace and harmony that can be experienced with good design

considered! And of course, for their own and their client’s protection, they are fully insured. Modern materials make the impossible much easier to deliver than was the case even just a few years ago, and it is a constant race to keep up with the latest techniques, equipment and materials – from an ever-growing number of different sources, here and abroad. Trends come and go, but water and light will always add value and interest to a garden; the secret sometimes is knowing what won’t work, as much as what will work – and this is the expertise that Joe delivers. Their website profiles some of their recent projects, but as Joe says, every project is different – what worked for one client just won’t work for another.

Find Out More: Find Out More: Joe Cheetham is the founder of Zenscape, creating landscapes with peace, wellbeing and serene spaces at their heart. For a free, no­obligation consultation call 01522 708555 or see www.zenscape.ltd.

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Nature

All About

ALPACAS

From South America to Lincolnshire, quirky alpacas are adorable, friendly and available for a trekking adventure right here in the county


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Nature

O

ver the past 30 years, it seems that alpacas have really managed to pull the wool over our eyes... well not wool, per se; it’s more correctly referred to as fibre. Still, the point stands that since about 1996, the British population of alpacas has increased significantly, to around 40,000 – possibly a third more than that, but those are the animals registered with the British Alpaca Society. In our neck of the woods, alpacas can be found in Newark, Louth, Alford, Lincoln, Boston and Spalding, as well as at visitor attractions like Wragby’s Rand Farm Park. “A typical member of the British Alpaca Society has a few acres, and might keep 20 breeding females,” says Duncan Puller, CEO of the British Alpaca Society. “There are 20 halter shows and six fleece shows in the UK, and the largest annual show is in Telford next month, from the 22nd March. We’re expecting 600 alpacas to turn up.” Alpacas originate from the Altiplano of west-central south America, and Peru, Chile and Bolivia where the elevation is around 4,000m above sea level. A pack animal, they were bred to travel up and down the Andes for 10-12 miles a day, with about 25kg on their backs. They tend to weigh about 60kg-90kg and measure a metre up to the withers, or shoulders. When Spain invaded Peru in 1532 there were about 10m indigenous Andeans, that number falling by 90% within 50 years. Sadly the conquistadors didn’t really appreciated the merits of the alpaca and preferred sheep, so for the next five centuries or so alpacas became a bit more of a subsistence animal for the indigenous people remaining in the Andes. >>

The two breeds of alpaca you’ll see in Lincolnshire are the huacaya (pronounced wa­ky­ya) and the suri, pictured here.

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Nature

Back in 2017, Lincolnshire’s Sam Hukins met a couple of alpacas and was instantly drawn to their unusual looks and calm personality

>> In post WWII Britain, textile mills were established in Arequipa and efforts were made to bring the alpaca population back to its pre-conquest numbers. Political uncertainty in Peru carried on until the 1990 Peruvian general election which saw Alberto Fujimori turn the country into a more liberal nation one which interacted more with the rest of the world, facilitating the export of alpacas to the USA, Australia and Europe. Today it’s thought there are 17 alpaca breeding countries including Britain, with 1,500 members registered with the British Alpaca Society and about two thirds of all alpacas in the country registered with the society. It’s possible to rear alpacas for meat, but that’s uncommon in Britain... much more

Back in 2017, Sam Hukins met a couple of alpacas and was instantly drawn to their unusual looks and calm personality. A secondary school teacher at the time, Sam founded her own herd in 2019 and now offers alpaca experiences from her farm in Beesby near Alford which, being located in an area of outstanding natural beauty and close to the coast, is a pretty good location to embark on an alpaca adventure. Sam now has an 11-strong herd comprising both huacaya and suri, offering alpaca trekking from £35 for a two-hour experience. Many breeders of alpacas have enjoyed a similar introduction to the animals and alpaca farms such as J&J Alpacas in Newark have shops which sell knitwear like hats and scarves or balls of wool for keen knitters.

coveted is their fibre – we’re not supposed to call it wool! The two breeds of alpaca most prevalent are the huacaya (pronounced waky-ya) and the suri. The former looks like it has dreadlocks, making it look an awful lot like a teddy bear with a tight, crimped wave of fur The suri, meanwhile, has a silky fibre which lays flatter to the animal’s body and is akin to silk. Each animal can yield about 3kg of fibre which falls a little short of the fleece that a commercial breed of sheep bred for wool production can muster. However, its fleece is particularly fine, about 30 microns for a younger alpaca – which gives the softness of merino or cashmere – as opposed to sheep wool which can be up to 60 microns. Where the alpaca is popular, though, is in the arena of alpaca trekking, which a number of local breeders are offering to the public... and there’s even a National Alpaca Farm Day in Britain, held in September.

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Above: Alpaca fibre is as soft as merino or cashmere, ideal for winter!

So, if you’re looking for a winter adventure, and you’re keen to make a very cuddly new friend, it’s worth getting to know an alpaca. Quirky, adorable, but placid and fascinating too, alpaca trekking is a must-do activity no matter where you are in Lincolnshire. Big Sky Alpacas, The Cottage, Fen Lane, Beesby, Lincolnshire LN13 0JQ. Call 07944 103496 or see www.bigskyalpacas.co.uk J & J Alpacas, Meadow Farm, Clensey Lane, Dry Doddington, Newark Notts NG23 5HT Call 01636 626 990 or see www.visitalpacas.co.uk. Rand Farm Park, Rand, Lincoln, LN8 5NJ. Call 01673 858 904 or see www.randfarmpark.com.


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Designed by us Built by us

The very best for your garden

• Tree Surgery & Felling

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Summer Houses & Garden Rooms • Timber Cabins • Workshops & Studios Playhouses • Pet Houses • Arbours • Garden Bars • Sheds & Storage DELIVERED AND INSTALLED IN YOUR GARDEN Visit our purpose-built Show Village near Spalding & Kings Lynn, with over 45 buildings on display. Monday-Friday 9am3.30pm. Weekend viewing by appointment.

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Farming & Nature

On the Farm

This month we’re discovering has-beans in Holbeach, taking a tour of John Deere in Germany and we wonder why Channel Four has a beef with British livestock Image: Supreme Champion at the 2023 Lincolnshire Show.

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It certainly has ‘bean’ an interesting month here, and for that matter elsewhere, because I’ve been travelling around a fair bit lately and among the shortest of my journeys has been a visit to Holbeach, and specifically to the development kitchens of the Princes Group, which manufactures food under well-known British brands such as Crosse & Blackwell, Branston and Batchelors. The visit was an exciting one, anticipated for well over a year. Throughout 2023 we worked with the University of Warwick’s Crop Centre and with Professor Eric Holub to grow the first crop of blonde haricot beans (varieties Godiva, Capulet and Olivia) with a view to being able to produce a commercial crop suitable for making into baked beans. It’s thought that the British public get through two million tins of baked beans each day, and the haricot bean crops used to manufacture them are grown overseas because of their specific climate and soil requirements. The university’s work to create new varieties, though, has meant we’ve been able to grow our first crop development batch of beans right here in Lincolnshire. Our visit to the factory allowed us to witness the initial trial harvest of beans being combined with tomato sauce, sugar and

spices, then canned and steamed to create the first ever Lincolnshire-grown baked beans. The next step is to create a larger test batch – somewhere in the region of 3,000 cans – and if successful, farmers in the UK and right here in Lincolnshire could soon be growing baked beans on home soils, helping food security, reducing food miles and supporting local agriculture. I enjoyed another visit recently too, this time to Germany and to the factory of John Deere courtesy of our local dealer Farol, based in Newark. We’ve come to rely on our John Deere RX8 as a capable workhorse, with tracks that are less prone to soil compaction and ideal for the shallower cultivation that we advocate; we haven’t ‘ploughed’ since about 2012, preferring to use our Sleafordmade Simba Solo and Unipress, ideal for the heavier clay soils around Lincolnshire. We visited the company’s Mannheim factory where 3,300 people help to produce 40,000 tractors a year, exported along the Rhine to the ports of Rotterdam or Antwerp to find homes all over the world. In the entrance to the factory stands the two millionth tractor to roll off the production lines. Next was a trip to Zweibrücken, about 60 miles down the road, where John Deere’s combines are made.

Greater Lincolnshire is responsible for 10.7% of the total agricultural output of England, which means Lincolnshire’s total agricultural industry is worth £1,838,000,000 to the UK economy...

Above: In the can, Andrew proudly presents Lincolnshire’s first home­grown baked beans!

Sadly I was prevented from filming due to the commercial sensitivity of each factory’s operations, but it was impressive to see such bright, clean, efficient and well-organised manufacturing facilities... so pristine are the machines as they roll off the production lines it (almost) seems a shame to take them into a muddy field! The company was happy to talk about their engineering, proven since 1837, but also keen to show us their latest technology, including their latest See & Spray technology which uses cameras and artificial intelligence to spot weeds, differentiate them from a crop and then selectively target a weed with sprays. The firm’s HarvestLab 3000 technology is also pioneering, and measures a crop as it’s passing through a combine, for example, to measure values like moisture and protein, taking 4,000 measurement a second using near infrared spectrometry to offer a realtime evaluation of a crop and make a map to determine the better yielding areas of a field. Finally, much criticism has been levelled at a recent TV documentary, The Big British Beef Battle, which aired on 1st December. The NFU says that many farming systems discussed apply to international farming, not to the raising of livestock in the UK. The NFU has sent a letter of complaint about the programme, which is little surprise. As the September 2023 edition of Lincolnshire Pride points out, Lincolnshire produces over £37m of the UK’s beef cattle and greater Lincolnshire is responsible for over 10% of the total agricultural output of England, worth about 1.8bn to the UK economy... arable and livestock farming is essential both to the country’s food security and to its economy, not to mention the fact that our livestock welfare standards are among the most stringent in the world.

Watch Wardy’s Waffle: Our farming correspondent Andrew Ward farms 1,600 acres in Lincolnshire, growing wheat, barley, oil seed rape, sugar beet, beans and oats. Andrews has his own YouTube channel, Wardy’s Waffle, which is enjoyed by over 13,000 subscribers. Watch his updates Wednesday evenings from 7pm and Sunday mornings at 8am. Search YouTube for @WardysWaffleAndrewWard.

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EV CHARGING MADE EASY Electric vehicle charging points for your home or office with 0% finance available CHOICE OF CHARGER MANUFACTURERS

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Motors

A Spark of

Interest Even Rolls-Royce isn’t immune from the inexorable rise of electrification, so what does the first fully-electric car from the world’s most famous brand look like, and how does it perform? Words: Rob Davis.


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Motors

In 1906, just after Henry Royce met Charles Rolls, the two embarked on a mission to make ‘the best cars in the world.’ Their early 10hp30hp models sold for between £395 and £890, the equivalent of between £50,000 and £100,000 in 2024. Today’s latest Rolls-Royce will set customers back three times the equivalent of an Edwardian flagship motor in today’s money at £332,000, even after an adjustment to 21st century inflation. This is the new Rolls-Royce Spectre, and it’s the luxury carmaker’s first all-electric model. Even by the company’s standards, the press pack about the car is bombastic: ‘monumental technical undertaking,’ ‘epochal technological and intellectual shift,’ and ‘an entirely new class of motor car, ultra-luxury, contemporary yet timeless,’ etc. Rolls-Royce’s difficulty is that having positioned itself as the maker of the best cars in the world, it’s no longer just challenged by a handful of mechanics and a few small engineering firms as it was back in the Edwardian era, but by a modern car industry with a working knowledge of 21st century engineering, electronics, physics, manufacturing and marketing. We’d contend that it was much easier to produce an impressive car in 1906, because today, for a third of the price of a Rolls-Royce Spectre, you can choose a Range Rover which will impress off-road, (an all-electric model will soon be released) or a Mercedes S-Class if you want the latest technology, a Tesla S if you want a electric vehicle which will sprint to 60mph in less than three seconds, or a Porsche Taycan if you want an electric vehicle with the same performance as a Tesla but which also offers best-in-class handling and a sporty feel. Granted, none of the above have a Spirit of Ecstasy on the bonnet, but they won’t prove an embarrassment on your driveway, either, and at a third of the price they make a fraction of the conspicuous statement about your wealth. Speaking of the figurine, a brand new version was made for the Spectre, with 830 hours of design modelling and wind testing invested in making the little statue more aerodynamic. 830 hours. Just on what is essentially just a bonnet emblem... More fundamentally, the Spectre is a two-door vehicle, with four seats and a boot of 380 litres (for context that’s about the same as a Ford Focus, and probably the only thing the two have in common). At 5,475mm, the Spectre is 40cm longer than a standard wheelbase Range Rover, 20cm longer than a long-wheelbase version and even longer than Land Rover’s Defender 130.

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The Spectre has two electric motors, with the majority of the power channeled through the rear wheels. A front motor provides extra power and the total output is 584hp or 900Nm torque. Again, for context, a Range Rover with the firm’s P550e plug-in hybrid engine and motor combination generates 550hp and 800Nm. The latter weighs in at 2,810kg, whilst the Spectre tips the scales at 2,890kg. An entirely electric Range Rover, incidentally, will also debut in mid-2024. All its tech makes the Spectre a very heavy vehicle, considering it lacks the internal combustion engine, gearbox and off-road kit that a Range Rover has to carry around with it. The key reason, perhaps, is that Spectre is fitted with batteries totalling over 700kg. Having these not only helps the Rolls-Royce to achieve a very useable 329 miles of range between charges, but also helps with acoustic insulation. The batteries are also built into an aluminium spaceframe which is 30% stiffer than cars from Rolls-Royce’s Ghost, from which Spectre borrowed its sophisticated Planar Suspension. The result is a car more firmly planted on the road, which is also quieter, without compromising performance.

Rolls­Royce Spectre in Morganite commissioned paint. Spirit of Ecstasy on the bonnet can be illuminated or uplit as an option.


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Motors

As well as all-wheel drive via the two motors, the car also has four-wheel steering to help to mitigate its turning circle and to make it more nimble on its enormous 23-inch wheels Whilst nobody purchases a Rolls-Royce in order to drive like a thug, the Spectre’s 60mph time of 4.4 seconds is impressive for a car approaching three tonnes. The car’s top speed is ‘limited’ to 155mph and all of that performance is accessed via a single-speed automatic. Speaking of speed, charging is also rapid, if you’ve access to a DC charger; 34 minutes for a 10%-80% charge, or an extra 100km in nine minutes. As well as all-wheel drive via its two motors, the car also has four-wheel steering to help mitigate its turning circle and to make it more nimble on its 23-inch wheels. Like other electric vehicles, the Spectre can provide ‘single pedal’ driving with brake energy recuperation when you lift off the throttle. It’s accessed via the ‘B’ setting on the gearbox, but there’s a conventional ‘D’ mode. Adaptive cruise control is standard, as is active lane guidance, providing a degree of semi-autonomous driving. Whilst you’re cruising, the company says that an ‘orchestra of systems’ are conspiring to create a ‘magic carpet ride,’ with the car automatically decoupling its anti-roll bars to allow each wheel to act independently, thus mitigating undulations and uneven road surfaces. During cornering, over 20 different steering, braking, power delivery and suspension parameters are automatically considered and the car’s ride is adjusted automatically. Inside, fit and finish is commensurate with the car’s marque and price. So much sound deadening material has been used that Spectre is, in fact, too quiet. Rolls-Royce has actually had to pipe some outdoor sound into the car to prevent it feeling too eerie.

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The Spectre’s doors are 1.5m in length and pressing the brake pedal when you get into the car closes the driver’s door automatically. Once inside, you’ll be seeing stars. On the doors and fascia are 10,000 individually-lit lights creating a sort of twinkle effect. The roof can be specified with these starlights too. It’s worth noting that the car’s £332,000 cost is before bespoke hides, wood, leather and other materials, some more dubious than others; I’m not keen on the purple or green leather seen in some press images. Rolls-Royce’s aim is for every single Spectre to be unique. Despite the car’s eye-watering price there’s already an 18-month waiting list. That’s more than likely because of the time it takes to customise one, rather than the sheer number of orders. Still, it’s testimony to the fact that even in a new electric era, there’s still demand for a modern, powerful and ultra-luxurious car from Rolls-Royce.

The Details

Rolls-Royce Spectre Price: £332,000. Powertrain: 102kWh battery powering two motors. Total output 584hp, 900Nm torque. Top speed 155mph, 0­60mph 4.4 seconds. Range 329 miles (WLTP). Equipment: LED starlight Pantheon grill, starlight interior and doors, starlight headlining. Leather, 23­inch wheels. Electrically operated automatic soft­close doors. Heated, air conditioned, massage seats. 360° camera, adaptive cruise, lambswool footmats.


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Fashion

In The

Pink Feminine fuchsia, playful pink, always cheerful and warm, this month we’ve Valentine’s dinner-friendly dresses all guaranteed to flatter Beaded detail jersey mini dress, £244.50, www.karenmillencom.


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Embellished matte jersey dress, £485, www.michaelkors.co.uk.

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Buckle­trim jersey cocktail dress, £319, www.ralphlauren.co.uk.

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Top Left: Pink dress with sleeves, £289, www.josephribkoff.com. Top Right: Lolaone shoulder ‘bodycon’ dress, £158, www.reiss.com. Above Left: Zayyla sequin mini­dress, £250, www.tedbaker.com. Above Right: Halley stretch crepe dress, £1,150, www.suzannah.com.

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Cosmetics

Warm Up Your Winter A range of cosmetics designed to sooth aching muscles and warm up your winter, all with a touch of luxury for a true sense of indulgence

The classic Dior fragrance Quite why anyone thought ‘poison’ was a good name for a perfume eludes us, but 2025 will see the 40th anniversary of the fragrance. Rich, spicy, floral and ambery notes with sensual accords of honey and musk, Poison remains a classic, charismatic and unforgettable fragrance. £82, 50ml www.dior.com.

Magnetic purple eye colour Brand new purple eye colour from Yves Saint Laurent, designed to take your eyeshadow look to the next level with our highly pigmented, magnetic purple seen here, £27, 1g, www.johnlewis.com.

Three in one lip colour By Terry presents its unique hybrid 3­in1 lipstick, pencil and lip colour system, long­wearing, matte finish and deployed from a convenient click pen. 14 shades available, £27, 1.5g, www.byterry.com.

Premier Cru Eye Cream A luxurious and effective way to mitigate eight effects of ageing, including crow’s feet, lip lines, and dark circles. 97% natural origin ingredients, fragrance­free and vegan, £51, 15ml, uk.caudalie.com.

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For an anti-ageing moisturiser put your trust in Caudelíe Established in 1995 in Paris, Caudelie takes its inspiration from a term more commonly used in oenology, utilising grapes in its products. This flagship moisturiser is 97% natural and helps to smooth fine lines and wrinkles, age spots and help skin elasticity. £92, 50ml, uk.caudalie.com.

De-stress this winter with Aromatherapy Associates A brand well­known to spa­goers and utilising aromatherapy to best effect. This is a godsend for anyone whose job requires them to be on their feet all day. This blend stars soothing lavender and energising rosemary, with warming ginger & black pepper. £55 / 55ml johnlewis.com.

All our beauty products are available from local independent stockists unless otherwise stated, note that prices stated are RRP and may vary.


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Collingham Dental Practice

Smiles Better

TEETH WHITENING WHITE FILLINGS

Start your journey with a healthy smile, at a practice which provides the highest standard of dentistry for the whole family. Now welcoming new patients...

VENEERS

HIGH ST, COLLINGHAM, NEWARK NG23 7LB

HYGIENE SERVICES

01636 893477 | www.collinghamdental.co.uk

DENTURES

COSMETIC CROWNS BRIDGES


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Health

Rediscover Your

SMILE A great looking smile can improve the way you look, but more importantly, it can provide lots of self-confidence. A consultation this month with Grantham’s Dental Health Centre will start you on the journey to a brand new smile, giving you a spring in your step this season Words: Rob Davis. We’ve all met people who take proper pride in their work; real, profound pleasure. Well, Colin Sutton of Grantham’s Dental Health Centre is just such a person, and one of the best rewards in his role is his ability to watch his patients walk out of the door with a new-found confidence and an enthusiasm for their smile. It’s an especially joyful experience when patients previously reported a phobia of the dentist or that they’ve avoided a regular check-up because the thought of being in the chair elicits a shudder of discomfort. If the latter sounds like you, you’re overdue to discover new dentistry; patient-centred, pain-free and with new treatment options designed to make achieving a healthy smile easier, quicker and more reliably than ever. Central to the Dental Health Centre’s ethos is ensuring patients feel comfortable and happy enough in the chair to return for regular check-ups and appointments with the hygienist, ensuring a healthy base for any future elective work.

A modern practice has an array of treatments available to patients, and whilst they’re truly transformative, it’s a good idea to have some advice from somebody who truly understands the implications of each option, and what patients can expect from them. For that reason, the Dental Health Centre has a treatment coordinator to provide a relaxed, patient-centric consultation.

A truly patient-centric experience is central to the Dental Health Centre’s ethos... This means anyone considering treatments like implants, crowns, veneers or whitening can make an informed decision and remain really enfranchised in their health. Patients can talk through their aims and any concerns, and they can be guided towards appropriate treatments with a relaxed and pressure-free consultation.

Colin and his team his team have a special interest in the latest cosmetic dentistry treatments, such as permanent crowns, veneers or onlays created on the same-day with Cerec, which takes a 3D image of your teeth then utilises a milling machine to custom-make a quality restoration which is a sub-millimetre-perfect replacement. Another treatment is Invisalign, which utilises incremental aligners to gradually ‘train’ your teeth into position, enabling the adjustment of overcrowding, widely-spaced teeth of other issues previously corrected using braces... and Invisalign, as its name suggests, remains inconspicuous all through your treatment. For the last 23 years, Colin has provided implants, using the latest techniques, to ensure a natural look and feel, plus long lasting durability. For multiple missing teeth All-on-4 immediate implantation is a highly effective treatment which can prove really transformative in terms of appearance and confidence... ensuring that anyone can enjoy a new smile and a confident outlook in 2024.

Find Out More: The Dental Health Centre & Implant Centre is based on Avenue Road, Grantham, NG31 6TA. Call 01476 594480 or see www.dentalhealthcentre.co.uk to enquire about the practice’s range of treatments.

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Purveyors of Luxury Eyewear Since 1979

REYKJAVIK EYES, a collection in stock now.

43/44 Wrawby Street, Brigg, North Lincolnshire DN20 8BS Tel: 01652 653595. Web: www.obriensopticians.co.uk Call for an appointment or pop in to view our latest designer eyewear.

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Providing evidence-based treatment for women during the Perimenopause, Menopause and beyond through holistic therapy, hormone replacement therapy guidance, nutrition, and lifestyle changes with a friendly personal approach.

30 MINUTES • £230

0 .5 ML L I P F I L L E R • 45 MINUTES • FROM £150 1 ML L I P F I L L E R • 45 MINUTES • FROM £200 PRESCRI P T I O N S KI NC A R E C O NS U LTAT I O N 3 0 M I NUTES AND OVER • £30, CONSULTATIO N F EE R E D E EM A B L E A G A I N S T C O S T O F O B A G I S K I N C A RE P RO D U C TS

Call for an appointment on 07720 345236 or find us on Facebook or Instagram @sandlandtayloraesthetics

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Reclaim control of your hormones and health by starting the New Year feeling empowered to make positive changes. I am here to help you navigate and make sense of your symptoms with personalised advice. Please visit www.lincolnshiremenopauseclinic.co.uk to book your free non obligation telephone consultation.


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Weddings

Sian & Tom Having met at 16 and having become engaged in 2021, this month’s couple, Sian & Tom Lomas, enjoyed a beautiful rustic wedding in Woodhall Spa... Images: Jessy Jones Photography, 07947 514456, www.jessyjonesphotography.co.uk.

Friends and family, local suppliers and a desire to host a beautiful wedding with a clean, rustic style. Sian and Tom had a good idea about how they wanted their wedding to look, all they needed was the perfect venue... and happily, they found just that in Woodhall Spa’s Abbey Farm Weddings. “We both come from Boston and though we went to different schools, we met at 16, introduced by mutual friends,” says Sian.

“We moved in together at 21 and though we intend to marry there was always plenty of other things to do! In 2021 Covid looked like it was finally easing and so, with Tom’s birthday coming up, we treated ourselves to a weekend in London.” “On our way to the restaurant we were near the Tower of London when Tom proposed. I was genuinely surprised as I really wasn’t expecting it, but I was thrilled and of course I said yes immediately.”

The couple were looking for a blank canvas for their wedding and fell in love with the clean, neat, rustic elegance of Abbey Farm. After setting a date in July 2023, Sian began looking for a wedding dress and though initially keen on a more fitted dress, she opted for an A-line gown designed by Maggie Sottero at Wellingore Hall’s Belle & Bouquet. Tom and the groomsmen found their blue tailored suits designed by Cavani at Boston’s Coneys.

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Weddings

“We’d hope that everyone creates the wedding of their dreams but ours was really perfect...!” Both Sian and Tom were lucky to have many good recommendations from friends, not least among which was photographer Jessy Jones, who also took their engagement shoot photos. Fun to work with, and taking stunning images, Jessy is one of our favourites too, as is makeup artist Kizzy of Beautyfy and Halo Hair Design. The couple had a sage and blue colour theme in mind, against a backdrop of pure white, as reflected in the traditionally iced three-tier cake created by H&R Bakery and the floristry created by Flower by Maxine, based in Coningsby, with white roses and Eucalyptus. “The bridal party stayed at Woodhall Spa’s Petwood Hotel the night before,” says Sian.

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“The groomsmen also set off from the hotel, and we had a couple of vintage Volkswagen campers which we think looked lovely in the photos, too!” “The wedding breakfast was lovely too; we chose The Black Peppermint Company to create a three course dinner including sausage ‘n’ mash, with an assiette of desserts.” “We also asked singer Matty Haynes to perform at the reception, and then had a DJ, Mark Lancaster, for the evening. The weather was perfect and we loved all of our suppliers.” “We’d hope that everyone creates the wedding of their dreams but ours was perfect, surrounded by family and friends. It was a really lovely day and we’re so thankful for everyone who was there enjoying it all with us!”

Local Suppliers Venue: Abbey Farm Weddings, abbeyfarmweddings.co.uk. Preparations: Petwood Hotel, www.petwood.co.uk. Wedding Dress: Belle & Bouquet, belleandbouquet.co.uk. Bridal Hair: Bridget Manning. Bridemaids’ Hair: www.halohairdesignz.co.uk. Makeup Artist: Kizzy Stanney, @Beautyfytherapies. Catering: Black Peppermint, www.blackpeppermint.com. Floristry: Flower By Maxine, Tattershall, 01526 342591. Wedding Cake: H&R Bakery, www.handrbakery.co.uk. Entertainment: Matty Haynes, Mark Lancaster. Photography: www.jessyjonesphotography.co.uk. Videography: www.lincolnshirevideography.com.


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WE’LL HELP YOU CELEBRATE THE IMPORTANT MOMENTS IN YOUR LIFE Pride Magazine is available to read, for free, on your phone or tablet Enjoy the area’s finest magazines, using our App, free to download now!

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The Directory To advertise here call our friendly team on 01529 469977.

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Lincs Pride FEBRUARY 259.qxp_Layout 1 03/01/2024 16:09 Page 131


Lincs Pride FEBRUARY 259.qxp_Layout 1 03/01/2024 16:09 Page 132


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