Site problems resolved

Some time ago this site was attacked and malware was inserted into some of the files on the site.  Fortunately no-one seems to have suffered as a result of this attack.  

Some Internet services blocked access to the site and, after cleaning up the damage done it has taken some time to work out how to remove the warnings.  This has now been done which means that The Brierley Hill Blog will be back in business.

Over the next few weeks you should see some changes and some tidying up.  Looking forward to blogging on my favourite town again.

 

Keep Warm and Well This Winter

Now winter is upon us make sure you are prepared for the cold weather by following our 10 steps to keep warm and well:
1. Keep Your Home Warm – your main living room should 18-21°C, and the rest of the house at least 16°C.

2. Save money on you energy bills – replace old light bulbs with energy saving ones, don’t leave appliances on standby and have a shower instead of a bath.

3. Wear the right clothes – several thin layers, a hat, a scarf, a good winter coat with a hood, and shoes with good grips are all essential winter wear!

4. Eat well to stay warm and healthy – a balanced diet will help you keep warm, boost your immune system, fight off colds and make you feel more energetic.

5. Keep moving – try not to sit still for more than 1 hour at a time. Get up and walk around, make a hot drink and spread housework throughout the day.

6. Get a free seasonal flu jab – flu is much more serious than a cold; it often leads to a hospital stay and can be fatal. Contact your GP to make an appointment.

7. Look out for your neighbours – check up on friends, relatives and neighbours who may not be able to get out and about.

8. Be prepared – make sure you have enough of your prescription medicines in case you can’t get out in bad weather.

9. See your GP or Pharmacist as soon as you feel unwell – if you can’t wait to see the doctor, you can get advice and free treatment for minor health conditions from your local pharmacist.

10. Take care when going outdoors – icy pavements and roads can be very slippery so take extra care if you go out. Check the forecast with The Met Office www.metoffice.gov.uk or call 0870 900 0100.

If you need help to keep your home warm this winter contact Dudley’s Winter Warmth Hub on 01384 815117. They can offer free, practical, hands-on support and expert advice including help with accessing benefits, switching to the cheapest energy tariff, energy efficiency advice, small scale home improvements and emergency measures such as free heaters, blankets and hot water bottles.

Christmas magic at Dudley Zoological Gardens

 

 

 

 

 

At Dudley Zoological Gardens there’s Christmas magic in the air . . .
Our Winter Wonderland package, which runs form December 5 to Christmas Eve, includes a magical train ride past the world’s rarest animals as you head to visit Santa in his Jack and the Beanstalk-themed grotto set within the walls of 11th century Dudley Castle. After receiving a special gift from Santa it’s off to our fun-filled Glow in the Dark Christmas Show before taking in a tour of the site.
The festive package includes admission to DZG and a chance to see favourite species and find out what they’re up to this Christmas. You’ll also meet Santa’s reindeer as they prepare for their busiest night of the year! If you’re stuck for ideas for presents why not treat your family and friends to Keeper for a Day or Little Zoo Keeper experiences, shadowing DZG keepers as they go about their daily duties caring for some of the most exotic and endangered creatures on the planet. What about adopting a Sumatran tiger or Rothschild giraffe? Or maybe a cheeky lemur or cute Humboldt penguin? We’ve nigh on 200 species to choose from and all adoptions help fund vital conservation programmes right here at DZG. How cool is that – ‘owning’ your own Asiatic lion or hairy scary tarantula without any vets fees! There’s also a range of Close Encounters where you get to feed red pandas, sealions or meet our orangutans!

DZG membership makes another excellent gift that all the family can enjoy and offers unlimited accessto the zoo AND castle! And our 2013 calendar is full of favourite images throughout the year and makes a great stocking filler.
There’s something for everyone at Dudley Zoological Gardens, Castle Hill, Dudley– visit www.dudleyzoo.org.uk to find out more.

Brierley Hill Lights Switch-On

Winter Fair at Insight House

Shoppers enjoyed festive fun in Brierley Hill on Saturday 24 November when the town centre held its Christmas light switch on event.

The event ran from 1.30 to 4.30pm, and was delivered in conjunction with Birch-Bastock, which manages the Concord Market.

It included a number of free festive events, entertainment and activities for all the family and the Mayor of Dudley sang a festive favourite.

Shoppers took advantage of a winter fair at the former labour club building INSIGHT House on Pearson Street. Stalls sold fantastic Christmas crafts and gifts and people were able to get information and advice from community organisations and services.

At the Moor Centre there was stage entertainment from 1.30pm with performances from Wordsley School, The Bridgnorth Ukulele Band and Brierley Hill Music Theatre. Music and live entertainment also take place across the High Street, in the markets and in Asda throughout the day.

Staff from Dudley Council’s Active Travel team were on hand with advice and information about getting around Brierley Hill on foot, by bike and public transport. They handed out free backpacks, reflective stickers and information packs.

The Mayor of Dudley councillor Melvyn Mottram and Shane Birch-Bastock from Concord Market switched on the lights and Christmas tree at 4.30pm.

Black Country Bugle | News | ‘All the nice young teachers

Advanced Search Wednesday 25 July 2012

HomeNewsSportBugle ShopReader Holidays Published: 17/05/2012 10:57

‘All the nice young teachers Gavin Jones

Young Bill Buckley. Like many of his generation, Bill Buckley of Pensnett has a wealth of powerful memories of a childhood spent in the shadow of the Second World War. And while many of us express the intention of committing our recollections to paper or to tape for the benefit of our descendants, not all of us get around to it. Bill however, recently took the bull by the horns, setting himself up with a camcorder and pouring out his thoughts on those formative years just up the road from where he lives now. The results have been edited down and put onto a DVD, which Bill has been kind enough to let the Bugle have a good look at. And so impressed were we, we asked Bill if he’d allow us to reproduce some of his memories in our pages, and we’re pleased to bring them to you now, with his blessing. Bill kicks things off in late 1939, with the long-dreaded but inevitable announcement that this country had declared war on Hitler’s Germany … “‘Will Dad have to go to war Mom? How about me?’ I asked. “‘It’ll all be over by Christmas,’ my Dad said. ‘We’ve got the best forces in the world.’ “They soon began to organise the LDV (Local Defence Volunteers, the original name for the Home Guard). And it was quite comical, they were doing drill with broomsticks. We were expecting bombers, so we had blackouts; no lights and heavy duty curtains. And there were sticky brown paper crosses on the window panes. There were Air Raid Wardens, messengers — kids on bikes — and the Auxiliary Fire Service. “Everywhere you went, people were digging up signposts, so that if the parachutists came, they wouldn’t have a clue where they were going. ‘How about you Dad?’ I asked him. ‘You’re a lorry driver, how are you going to get on with no signs?’ ‘Doh worry abaht it,’ he said. ‘Ah’ve bin at this job that long I know this country like the back o’ me ‘ond.’ “Things changed very quickly at school. They were all nice, young teachers we had there, and they all disappeared one by one to join the forces. We were left being taught by very old teachers, brought back out of retirement. “Everyone had an Identity Card; I remember my number even now. And Ration Books and gas masks, you had to carry them everywhere you went. They came in three different sizes, small, medium and large. Mine was one of the medium, and you put it in a cardboard box with a bit of string round it, and everywhere you went you had to carry this gas mask with you. “Young men seemed to disappear very quickly, joining the forces; and so were the young women, a lot were called up to go to different factories making aircraft and armaments. Some even went to work on farms; the Land Army Girls. There were a few who were seconded down the mines, the Bevin Boys. “Food wasn’t too bad at the beginning of the war. But once the surplus had gone we started to get into trouble. Everyone was asked to start growing vegetables in their gardens and allotments. We were still getting a lot coming in by sea at the start of the war, but as it progressed a lot of the convoys, a lot of the ships got sunk, and food became very very short. Docks “Fortunately, sometimes I had to go with Dad to Liverpool docks, to collect sugar or flour, and it seemed unusual that every time he went, one of the bags had split open, and he’d came back with several bags of sugar or flour. Very useful. “I used to go with him in the summer holidays. He drove an old Guy wagon, made in Wolverhampton, and the engine was inside the cab with a huge cowling over it. When I went with him in the winter, that’s where I sat; it was lovely and warm. There were two main runs — one to Malvern, which I knew every inch of the way, and one to Coventry, which I remember from the ’40s. The one time we went to Coventry it was just a huge ball of fire. There was a horrible smell, very acrid.” Despite its heavy industry, the Black Country had come off nowhere near as badly as Coventry. The most tangible problem for its citizens was the scarcity of food and other basic necessities. “There were queues every Saturday,” says Bill, “and the three of us lads had to go with Mother down to Brierley Hill town, and each stand in different queues to keep a place for her. When she came to take our place we’d disappear into the next queue. We’d get a penny a week each for doing this. I’d spend mine round the market, buying last week’s comic. Last week’s was only a halfpenny. I would also do errands to earn another half a penny, so that I could go to the pictures on Saturday afternoon. Gene Autrey, Roy Rogers; it was absolutely great. And they’d always leave you on a cliffhanger so you’d got to go next week to see what happened. “Of course we had no television, but we had plenty of games to play. Football and cricket out in the street; a rope over the arms of the gas lamp post to make a swing. “There was Kick the Can, Hide and Seek, marbles, cigarette cards and jacks. And we could go for lovely walks; bird nesting in the summer, and swimming in the canal. It didn’t matter how cold the water was, we’d swim up by Round Oak Steelworks; they used canal water to cool down their hot rollers, and pumped the warm water back into the canal. It was so warm there was steam coming off it, it was great. “But then there was Cowboys and Indians, and ours were the best armed in the country — because not too far from our houses were the railway sidings. They would leave wagons there overnight; locked up, obviously. But the father of one of my mates had a huge bunch of keys, so one night, off we went with them, and eventually we found a key that opened one of the cars. It was packed with rifles; 303s. “Wa hey! We’d landed on our feet! So off we went with a rifle apiece. It was a good job we’d got no ammo, or there’d have been none of us left. We played with them for a few months, but word got out that it had been noted that some rifles were missing, and they were going to come round searching everybody till they found them. So one dark night, we all went down to the big pool at the bottom of the street — very deep it was too — and every one of us threw our rifles into the pool. “Mind you, I was always getting into trouble. Anything that happened, people would say ‘do you remember who did it, Mrs Darby?’ or whoever it might have been, and the lady would say ‘no, but one of them had bright red hair.’ And the police would say, ‘oh we know who that is, it’s Billy Buck’. So I was often in trouble. But I never twitted on any of my mates. Bombing “The bombing started in 1940. I remember the wailing sirens. And I remember digging out a hole for our Air Raid shelter, which was ruddy hard work. We had to go down eight or nine feet. Dad put a couple of benches in there, and a little camp bed, and it really wasn’t too bad. We spent many nights in there; as soon as the bombs started to fall, Dad had to dash out as he was an ARP man. There were magnesium bombs, incendiaries, which you couldn’t put out with water — it would just bubble up and scald you — you had to tip a bucket of sand over them. “The first bomb in our area came at the beginning of 1940. It flattened one of the cottages at the bottom of Cochrane Road; it used to be called The Croft, two or three hundred yards from our house. The railway ran along the bottom of our houses, and the German aircraft used to follow the line to try to hit Round Oak Steelworks. The nearest one to land near us was only a couple of houses away. We were all in the shelter, we heard it and felt it, all the trembling. But the only damage it did to our house was to blow all the windows in. And Dad kept pigeons. My job before going to school in a morning was to clean them out and help feed them. But the blast of the bomb killed them all, and I threw my hands up in the air and shouted ‘Thank you Hitler, you’ve done me a good turn!’ We had two or three good dinners out of the pigeon pies that mother baked. So there’s always a silver lining. “The next morning, all the local kids had to take buckets and collect all the shrapnel from our Anti-Aircraft guns, and put it in a pile at the end of the street. It was collected every so often, so the metal could be reused for more armaments. All the railings had been taken away and melted down; even the little railings that ran around the graves.” Given the family home’s proximity to the railway line, the Buckleys and their neighbours were almost literally in the firing line, and so, like many a child in wartime, young Bill was evacuated to somewhere safer. But it was far from the idyllic rural life he’d been hoping for … “I was evacuated to Malvern,” Bill recalls, “but I had to stay with a horrible farmer. He got us up at six in the morning and made us wash in cold water and then work till it was time for school. I wasn’t having that, so I ran away, and it took me three days to get home. The weather was nice and sunny, but it was an awful experience really. On the way home I stole milk off front steps and drank it behind hedges. I pulled carrots up out of fields, and ate apples from trees. Oh my little feet. They were ready to drop off by the time I got home. Search “They knew I was missing from the farm, and everyone had been out looking for me, the police and Air Raid Wardens. So when I turned up, Mother came rushing out to me and gathered me up in her arms. Then paled me with a boiler stick, which was her favourite weapon. It put lumps on my head. “But after that she loved me up and said how she’d missed me, and thanked God I was safe. She promised never to send me away again.”

Social networking links

LINKS

News Sport What’s On About Us

NEWS HEADLINES The undermining of our Black Country abodes The tireless bird with an industrious nature Fond forties memories of Heath Hayes Brotherhood Club Next train due at Windmill End Behind the scenes of a West Bromwich cinema in the nineteen-fifties Reunion call for Oldbury Road pupils of 1953 Black Country farm boy at Abbey Road School Front page Lovelies at the Windsor Theatre, Bearwood Lights, camera, action when the BBC came to George Salter School Wolverhampton lad whose life was cut short in the Thirties NATIONAL NEWS Olympic sporting action under way Bid to rescue quarry plunge boy Power cable tragedy runner hailed Dozens stranded as cable car breaks Gay marriage ‘right thing to do’ NATIONAL SPORT Kallis to miss ODIs against England Drinkhall handed favourable draw Pearce will not make Bale complaint Webb misses marathon Papachristou removed from Greece team

Privacy PolicyTerms and ConditionsCompany InformationAdvertise With Us Staffordshire Newspapers Ltd © 2012 SEO Agency

Diamond Jubilee activities in libraries

There’s a whole host of free activities for youngsters at borough libraries to celebrate the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee.

At Brierley Hill Library on Thursday 7 June from 11am – 12pm children can have fun making a crown and sceptre.

Stourbridge Library has prince and princess stories and Jubilee crafts on Friday 8 June from 2.15pm – 3.15pm. There will be also tea and cakes for adults, upstairs in the adult library during the afternoon on Saturday 2 June. Staff will be dressed in patriotic colours to get visitors in a patriotic mood.

To find out more about library services go to www.dudley.gov.uk/libraries

FTW Aiming for the Top

Dubbed by the media as the UK’s number 1 new boy band, FTW have injected personality back into pop since exploding onto the scene in 2011.

Having spent the last year touring the UK with a string of promotional dates appearing alongside artists such as The Saturdays, Example, Alexandra Burke, McFly plus former X Factor winners and finalists, FTW are now preparing to take the music industry by storm, having released their debut single ‘Loveshot’ on 1st April.

With radio roadshows, festivals and live PA’s at some of the country’s top venues under their belt, demand for FTW is very high. International bookings, sponsorship endorsements and national media interest means there’s only one boy band you need to remember in 2012.

FTW treated fans to a free gig at the Merry Hill Centre in Brierley Hill on Friday 13 April.

You can follow FTW on Twitter:
@FTWBackstage
@FTWcallum
@FTWjake
@FTWkyle
@FTWtom

www.ftwofficial.com

DOWNLOAD LOVESHOT NOW!!! http://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/loveshot/id515572110?i=515572113

STOURBRIDGE PARTY IN THE PARK

MAYDAY, BANK HOLIDAY MONDAY, MAY 7TH 2012
11AM UNTIL 5-30PM

pre-event tickets available now!!!

Call 911 ..there’s a party in Mary Stevens Park!

One of the biggest boy bands of the 90’s will headline this year’s Stourbridge Party in the Park, which will be held on Bank holiday Monday May 7th 2012 at Mary Stevens Park, Stourbridge.

911 shot to fame with their top debut single ‘Don’t make me wait’, which was followed by a further 9 top 10 singles including their number 1 single ‘A little bit more’.

The fun packed family day will also see live performances from a host of local, national and international artists, Popular Dutch pop star dubbed ‘the new justin bieber’, Casper will be flying in especially for the event for his first UK appearance and the soulful Aaron Paul, ex lead singer from Simon Cowell’s 90’s boy band ‘World’s Apart’ is over from the U.S promoting his new single ‘Searching’.

Arena entertainment comes in the form of history re-enactor groups with their spectacular military displays through the ages and NSW championship wrestling featuring ‘Britain’s biggest biceps’ Tiny Iron. Dance groups and Zumba displays also entertain.

Gates open at 11am and with over 20 quality live musical acts and plenty to entertain the children it promises to be a great family day out. We have kept the ticket price as low as possible at £3 to ensure this an affordable day out for the entire family, we are also very pleased to be supporting Help for Heroes at this and all future events.

Popular childrens TV characters Roary the Racing car with Big Chris and Peppa Pig will be available for meet and greet at various intervals throughout the day. There will also be a fun fair, craft and market stalls and an array of delicious food outlets.

For more details visit: http://www.sbevents.co.uk/