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Join us for our Service for the Fifth Sunday of Lent. This week's service is from St. Leonard's Church in Hythe and is led by the Rev Michael Darkins.St Leonards has a famous ossuary which holds the remains of thousands of people from the 13th to the 15th centuries. St Leonard's Youth will also help lead some of our service today as we join them on their sailing weekend with the Morning Star Trust, a Christian sailing charity.Be sure to tune in and be part of this community of faith, connecting worshippers across England and beyond.
Sam Isherwood and Jill Upton chat with Nick Brown Nick Brown, 3rd generation winemaker at All Saints Wines and he reminds us of the sheer beauty and intrigue of fortified wines. @thewineshowaustralia @allsaintsestate
It's a Spooky Christmas special! This week's Cursed Objects is a little bit less Stuart Hall, and a little bit more Derek Acorah, with an episode recorded on location in St Leonards, from the musty heart of a crumbling royal seaside hotel, ft. spluttering pipes, ancient heaters that smell of burning dust, random insects, rotting sash windows, damp everywhere and a fascinating history. Queen Victoria herself signed the visitors' book, as Princess of Prussia, no less. Dan and Kasia lean into the weird muzak and faded 1920s glamour and ask, what the hell is going on on the 3rd floor? Could it be MURDER, or HAUNTING? What music do you imagine freemasons listening to? Will Kasia lick the Grade II listed staircase? Will Dan ride down the bannisters? What do Morrissey and Chris Rea have to do with all this? Theme music: Mr Beatnick Artwork: Archie Bashford
Today we're joined by one of the most famous Chefs in the country in Jackson Boxer, who now oversees an empire of successful restaurants including the multi-award winning Brunswick House and the previous 'Best New Restaurant of The Year' winner Orasay. Starting out as a kitchen kitchen porter for Margot Henderson at the bonny age of 16, Jackson Boxer was no stranger to kitchens by the time he opened Brunswick House with his brother Frank, aged just 24. Having experienced success alongside him the previous year with the opening of Franks Peckham, they decided to team up and turn an antiques showroom into what would soon become London's hottest restaurant. It hasn't all been plain sailing however, Jackson has been very vocal about his alcohol and drug addictions throughout his 20s and how that almost cost him his life and career. He also opens up about some past failed ventures including opening St Leonards with Vice Media in the same month they were going bankrupt and how messy that got. Plus shares his wisdom on the state of play of the industry currently and why it's never been tougher to be in hospitality although if you look hard enough there are always incredible opportunities to be had, reveals some secret Christmas dishes from the Boxer archive and much much more..... ------------ Order award winning meats direct to your door from Swaledale Butchers - https://swaledale.co.uk/ Head to www.delli.market and discover the thousands of creative products dropping daily and use the code GOTODELLI for 25% off everything from us. Check out Square's an all-in-one restaurant tech solution here - www.square.com Please subscribe and leave us a comment, and if you enjoy the podcast please listen to our audio only podcast that we bring out each Thursday whereby we interview the top chefs in the UK and beyond - https://link.chtbl.com/Vg8g3qpb Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter here - https://open.substack.com/pub/thegoto...
This week, we're diving into speech and language development with the incredible Jules Tushuizen, an experienced Speech Pathologist and Occupational Therapist.Jules shares her wealth of experience to help parents navigate their child's exciting and sometimes nerve-wracking journey through communication milestones. From first words to forming sentences, we cover it all—plus what to do if your little one seems a bit behind.In this episode, Jules shares:Key speech milestones to watch for at different ages.Practical tips to support your child's speech and language skills at home.Knowing when to seek professional support—and why early intervention matters.Where to get helpThe common language development myths (and why they may not be accurate!).Practical ‘do's and don't's' for parentsWhat to do if you think your child may be developmentally delayed or autistic.This conversation is packed with insights to empower you in supporting your child's communication journey. Tune in for a lively and informative chat that will leave you feeling informed and inspired!Jules Tushizien – Speech Pathologist, Grow & TellWith 16 years of professional experience, Jules Tushizien is a dedicated speech pathologist passionate about empowering families to understand and support their children's communication journey. Holding a Master of Speech and Language Pathology, a Master of Inclusive Education in Autism, and a Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics, English, and Sociology, Jules combines academic knowledge with hands-on expertise.Jules is the Founder of Grow & Tell Speech and OT, a thriving clinic in Rhodes established in 2019. Her career spans diverse roles, including positions at the OAC Head Office in St Leonards, SDN Head Office in Crows Nest, and the Portland Women and Children's Hospital in London. She has also contributed to the NHS in London and began her career at Blacktown Speech Pathology in 2008.Driven by a mission to help parents navigate early childhood communication challenges, Jules aims to ensure that families recognise and address speech and language delays early while continuing to cherish the joy of parenting during the foundational years.Ice Cream Hunt: A Fun, One-of-a-Kind Speech Sound Tracker for Kids 4–6 Years by Jules TushuizenIce Cream Hunt: A Fun, One-of-a-Kind Speech Sound Tracker for Kids 4–6 Years by Jules Tushuizen, combines a charming storybook with a practical tool for tracking speech sound development. Featuring fun rhymes, engaging illustrations, and a photocopiable checklist, it simplifies identifying milestones for parents and educators using research from the 2018 McLeod and Crowe study. Designed for ages 4–6, it's an empowering, easy-to-use resource that makes speech development fun for kids and stress-free for adults. Get yours here for only $14.99Grow & Tell Speech and Occupational TherapyPhone: 1300 848 795Email: info@Growandtelltherapy.com.auWebsite: www.growandtelltherapy.com.auFollow: Facebook or InstagramHandy Links
This XMTR (Transmitter) Radio Hour is a retrospective conversation about the inception and outcomes of sound art and sonic storytelling festivals Sono Electro and XMTR Audio Arts Festival that took place in St Leonards on Sea in September. James Wilkie from Sono Electro and Lucia Scazzocchio from XMTR talk to Isobel Anderson - host of Girls Twiddling Nobs, about how the worked together on the festival(s), the learnings from behind the scenes and their ambitions for the future - could St Leonards on Sea become a sonic destination? This is a candid conversation about collaboration, curation and working with and within an established creative community, with clips and and extracts from artists and performances featured at the festival. You can access the track list from this show and full audio works on xmtr.fm/festival. Tracklist: Anam Cara - Ear to the Ground - Dan 'you are tuning in to the Lido graveyard'Limbo Tapes - Radio Limbo Live at XMTR FestivalBlanc Sceol - Orbit Meditation Stellaria Media (Lucida Guy and Alice Armstrong) Blue HeartBen Philipps - Home SoundsBen Chennett - A Choir for Hastings and St LeonardsMarcia Farquar - The Lido Jem Finer - Pinball Machine Phil Smith - ZwischenzeitWill Gore + Esme Curtis - Invisible Cities, ArgiaEd Baxter + Anthony Moore - Life SentenceJem Finer - Pinball Machine Blanc Sceol - Orbit Meditation
Behold the first-ever Radio Limbo live show, recorded at XMTR festival in St. Leonard's-on-Sea. Host Limbo Pete guides the audience through selected gems from the Limbo archive. But as the show reaches the control room of Outpost 83, The Operator becomes intrigued by Pete's curious connections between the town's history and Limbo lore. Could the seaside town's saintly namesake hold a deeper, unsettling connection to Old Leonard's disappearance? ~ Discover more Radio Limbo shows ~ Listen to a brilliant variety of things at XMTR.FM ~ Support Limbo by becoming a Patron
Curious about why entry-level properties in Sydney's suburbs are behaving so unpredictably? Uncover the surprising trends and data-driven insights that could reshape your real estate decisions. In today's episode, we dissect the performance of entry-level properties in key areas like Manly, Dee Why, St Leonards, and Botany over the past year. Despite rising interest rates, some suburbs are defying expectations with growth, while others are facing more volatility. We'll share real-time data from RP Data to help first-time buyers and investors navigate this hot market.In the second half, we explore broader trends that have emerged post-covert, focusing on how cautious buyers are now gradually re-entering the market. Though some areas are still catching up to pre-covert values, the potential for capital growth is enticing. We'll discuss how interest rates and the possibility of rate cuts could impact your buying decisions. Whether you're a first-time buyer or an investor, this episode is packed with insights to guide you through Sydney's dynamic real estate landscape.
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Hugo and Ben welcome Josh Dickinson, co-founder and head chef at Bayte onto the episode. Bayte is a wonderful new farm to table restaurant with a seasonal menu that changes daily, supplied with the freshest ingredients by their own organic and regenerative farm, Goat Grid. It was set up in collaboration between Josh Dickinson and Lara Boglione, part of the Petersham Nurseries family. Josh's background is in British, French and Japanese cuisine, having trained at Le Cordon Bleu before working at Le Chateaubriand in Paris and l'Effervescence and Nihonryori RyuGin in Tokyo. He's spent the last decade travelling and cooking before setting up Goat Grid in 2020 and Bayte in 2023. On this episode we discuss: Josh's journey to becoming a chef Goat Grid and seasonality Bayte's menu and what it's like running a restaurant We also try three wines from Petersham Cellars: Parusso Barolo Azisa Zisola Il Pestifero Follow @The_Premier_Cru on socials to keep up to date with future episodes and behind the scenes snippets.
Our second podcast of the series, discussing and comparing the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (DP) and Careers-related Programme (CP) in the Sixth Form at St Leonards. In this episode, Mr Ben Seymour is joined by Year 13 pupils Izzie, Katie and Elisenda, as they discuss the International Baccalaureate Programme, and the differences between the Diploma Programme and Careers-related Programme.
We are delighted to kick off our new 23/24 podcast series, discussing and comparing the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (DP) and Careers-related Programme (CP) in the Sixth Form at St Leonards. In this episode, Mr Ben Seymour is joined by Year 13 pupils Emil, Helena and Hector, to discuss time management and wellbeing in the Sixth Form.
Ricky in Runcorn and David in St Leonards go head to head for the smart speaker!
Small Biz Matters: People, Policy, Purpose ~ Episode #216 Broadcast date: 5th December 2023 Host: Alexi Boyd, Small Business Advocate & Policy Advisor Guest: Christine Pope - Director at Australian Traditional Medicine Society ATMS is uniquely positioned to advise Government on health, women, the economy and micro business. How do they juggle multiple policy areas and represent their small businesses? Women are core to the success of the Australian health economy and the same goes for traditional medicine. The vast majority of Australian Traditional Medicine Society members are women, micro business, working from home and juggling a family, their practice and continued education. So how does ATMS' leadership best represent their members when the policy areas in which they advocate cross over social, economic and small business issues? Plus, are cross jurisdictional – Federal, State and Local Government? This is an excellent example where an association uniquely intersect between policy and small business and we're keen to hear from Christine Pope, Director of Australian Traditional Medicine Society and (because she can) the Treasurer and Director of Council of Small Business Organisations Australia ... and she still runs her own practice online and in person. PEOPLE - Tell our listeners about the work of ATMS and how you advocate for your members? How can members of ATMS (and other similar orgs) become more involved in their industry association? What sort of influence can they have? POLICY - In a practical sense, what does an organisation like ATMS do to influence government policy? What areas of policy are you focused on right now? And who do you tend to speak with? PURPOSE - What inspired each if your to take on a role in advocacy for your industry? Why do you think ATMS is well placed to advise government on health? Christine Pope is an experienced Naturopath and Nutritionist based at Elemental Health St Ives. Christine is also an experienced trainer and presenter and was Head of Nutritional Medicine and Homeopathy at Nature Care College at St Leonards from 2012-2015. More recently she has founded her own training programs “Ageing Outrageously”. Christine has over twenty years experience in her earlier career in Risk Management and Venture capital. In 2016 Christine undertook training with Dr Dale Bredesen in his protocol for Reversing Alzheimers, a detailed protocol involving up to 36 points of intervention including diet, lifestyle, hormonal balance, exercise and detoxification. Subsequently her focus in clinic has been working on healthy ageing and reducing the impact of chronic disease. Christine is a director and treasurer of The Australian Traditional Medicine Society and the Council of Small Business Organisations of Australia. (COSBOA). The Australian Traditional-Medicine Society (ATMS) is Australia's largest national professional association of natural medicine practitioners. ATMS is a multi-modality association representing around 9,000 accredited practitioners and students throughout Australia. ATMS currently accredits 20 natural medicine modalities. ATMS promotes and represents accredited practitioners of natural medicine, who are encouraged to pursue the highest ideals of professionalism in their natural medicine practice and education. To find out more go to: https://www.atms.com.au/
St Leonards map producer/founder Melinda Clarke and Melbourne illustrator Deborah Young Monk discuss their collaborations across more than three decades, how to tell an artist they need to redraw three months of work, scouting territory by car, helicopter and hot air balloon, more than a week spent editing a 4x3 ft. map with a scalpel, selling maps door-to-door out of a suitcase, a very profitable shipping container full of puzzles, Melinda's break from the map business to run a fish farm, getting the next generation to make maps, and how “the beauty of the [1987 Melbourne map] project is we had no idea what we were doing.” See their maps at themelbournemap.com.au The Original Melbourne Map 1992 making-of TV segment Melbourne Map color print The Bellarine Map Portarlington Map Cooke & Calvert's 1880 map of Melbourne Lewis Brownlie Sean Rodwell Alex Pescud Adam Mattinson Anton Thomas Helen Potter & Mark Jackson Creffield Digital Print Need maps for your org's reports, decks, walls and events? The Map Consultancy makes real nice maps, real fast. See what good maps can do for you at themapconsultancy.com I have three words for you: Big. Glowing. Maps. Depending on how that makes you feel, you might like two more words: Radiant Maps. See ultra-detailed backlit maps at radiantmaps.co Time for some map gifts: get 15% off woven map blankets and backlit map decor with code 15OFF, everything ships free – https://www.etsy.com/shop/RadiantMaps?coupon=15OFF
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In this episode, I chat to Chris Young & Jake Alexander – the Co-Directors of the Hastings Comedy Festival. The Hastings Comedy Festival started in 2015. Based on an idea by friends Young and Alexander, numerous live comedy events take place over five days every Summer. Situated in the beautiful seaside area of Hastings and St Leonards, the festival proves more popular every year. I have been in attendance the last few years and the festival is now a fixture in my comedy calendar. I have watched many comedians at the festival including Helen Bauer, Tony Law, Barry Fearns, Lily Phillips, Elliot Steel and President Obonjo. The Hasting Comedy Festival 2023 takes place from Wednesday 14th June to Sunday 18th June, and I will be there for the full run. See website below for further information and tickets. Thank you so much for listening to my podcast, if you like what you hear, please subscribe and I hope you enjoy the interview. Hastings Comedy Festival Links: Facebook: www.facebook.com/hastingscomedy/ Twitter: www.twitter.com/Hastingscomedy Instagram: www.instagram.com/hastingscomedyfestival/ Website: www.hastingscomedyfestival.com
Tim crook, AKA Tim B'Vard is the founder of the Bavard Bar, which is described as 'A delightful blend of TED, comedy and radio 4 - sort of'!The Bavard Bars opened its doors in March 2017 and has grown in popularity exponentially. It 'happens' in the Towner gallery in Eastbourne on the 2nd Wednesday of each month; and in the Kino- Teatr in St Leonards on the 3rd Wednesday of every month...In this podcast Tim talks about his journey from Lawyer to his life now, on stage as a compere and comedian...He also tells us of his love of the outdoors and how it has always been linked to his deepest desire to know himself and to live fully in a way he recognised as a teenager...Here is the poem that Tim wrote at 16 years old, mentioned in the podcast The Hour Glass of LifeThe sand falls fast, in the hour glassFor the balding man about town.His youthful grin, his middle aged chin,Are replaced with a nod and a frown.He has searched for the meaning of life,In a video, TV and wife.He has climbed the rungs of success,And always gave of his best.But the sand falls faster now,And still he struggles on,Until his pills or his iron will,Or his Ford Cortina are gone.And what use is that video now,And by how much is he cleverer,Than the farmer's wife, the miner's sonOr death, the perfect leveller?You can find out more bout the Bavard Bar by clicking hereAnd on Twitter, instagram and Facebook he is@bavardbar
In this episode Gary Mansfield speaks to Elizabeth Power (@ElizabethPowerArt )Bursting with colour and energy, Elizabeth Power's paintings exude a warmth and vibrancy. Based in St Leonards on Sea, UK, Power's work has a colour palette rich in coral pinks, forest greens and cool blues.Drawing inspiration from colourists such as Matisse, Hockney, Milton Avery and Tal R, Power's loose and free abstraction takes this to the next level.Power co-founded the Babes In Arms Collective with fellow artist Annie Mackin, which champions artist mother's in the Hastings and St Leonard's area.For more information on the work of Elizabeth Power go tohttps://elizabeth-power.com/To Support this podcast from as little as £3 per month: www.patreon/ministryofartsFor full line up of confirmed artists go to https://www.ministryofarts.orgEmail: ministryofartsorg@gmail.comSocial Media: @ministryofartsorg Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
A man has been found guilty of murdering two women, including a mum from Kent who went missing just over a year ago. Alexandra Morgan from Sissinghurst was last seen on Remembrance Day 2021 - her remains were later found on a farm in East Sussex. The body of Leah Ware, who disappeared six month earlier, has never been found. Hear from our reporter who was in court to hear the verdicts come in. We've also spoken to the CPS and have audio of the time Mark Brown from St Leonards-on-Sea was arrested. Also in today's podcast, workers at the ambulance service covering Kent have voted to go on strike. You're being urged to make sure your children have had the flu vaccine amid a rise in the number of under 5s ending up in hospital... Nationally, more than 200 youngsters were admitted after suffering serious complications linked to the virus in the week to November, 20. A bus station in Maidstone's been left covered in mould just a year after a £1.5 million revamp. Water's leaking down the wall leaving an ugly mark next to The Mall - hear from bus passengers and what the council have to say. Parents are calling for plans for a 5G mast on school land in Westgate to be scrapped until proper research has been done on whether they affect our health. The 20 meter tall mast could be built on part of the playing field at St Saviours primary in Elm Grove.4 The KentOnline Podcast has been told more about a multi-million pound dance studios that's opened on an industrial estate in Ashford. The Jasmin Vardimon Company have already welcomed their first cohort of dancers before officially opening next week. And in sport, it's been a great day for Kent cricketer Zak Crawley. Find out how he got on as England start their first tour of Pakistan since 2005.
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Twenty-third Sunday of Ordinary Time - Luke 14: 25-33 Patricia is a wife, mother and grandmother, and semi-retired teacher of French, Latin and Italian. Her lifelong interest in theology and spirituality finally led her to formal study and she graduated with a Masters in Theology in 2014. She belongs to the Grail, an international movement and community of women, founded in the Netherlands in 1921 by Jacques van Ginneken SJ. She currently serves on the National Leadership Team and is the co-ordinator of the International Spirituality Network. In 2016 she presented five lectures on Eco-theology and spirituality at the Grail summer school in Portugal. A parishioner for 38 years at St Leonards, Naremburn, Patricia has been involved in a variety of ministries over the years. She is currently a lector and EMC, and one of the church bell ringers. In 2018 she was asked to become her community's local animator for the Plenary Council, and since then has engaged herself wholeheartedly in the Plenary Council journey.
Loved telling this amazing old folktale and am really excited to share it with you. Please sit back and enjoy out time together at the time between Times. Email owenstaton@aol.com Twitter @owensgriffiths Patreon https://www.patreon.com/Owenstaton7 Take care my friends and see you soon Owen x
Simon and Richo hear from Nick about the exciting Museum release of the All Saints wines. These wines have been stored in the family cellars and are now being released with some good age and perfect cellaring conditions. It was great to hear some history about All Saints Estate and the castle built by Scottsmen to be just like at home. @allsaintsestate @danmurphys_richard @thewineshowaustralia
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A man accused of murdering a missing mum-of-two from Sissinghurst has been charged with another murder. Alexandra Morgan was last seen on Remembrance Sunday last year. Mark Brown, 40, from Squirrel Close in St Leonards on Sea in East Sussex has appeared in court today via video link. Also in today's podcast, startling new figures show Kent and Medway has the lowest ratio of GPs to patients in the country. There are just 39 GPs per 100-thousand patients in the county, that's compared to an average of 60 across England. Hear from an Ashford GP and a patient from Gravesend who went to extreme measures to make sure she was seen. A councillor from Sevenoaks is the new MP for Southend West. Anna Firth was the Conservative candidate in the by-election which was triggered following the death of Sir David Amess who was stabbed while meeting constituents last October. The KentOnline Podcast has been told climate change is having a ‘noticeable and real' impact on nature in the county - with spring bulbs blooming much earlier than normal. Hear from the boss of Hopes Grove Nurseries in Tenterden. Find out which luxury hotel in the county is going to be hosting a food a music festival this summer. And in sport, we catch up with the Gillingham captain ahead of their trip to Ipswich Town this weekend.
Rob has just played his 300th game with the Saints as well as being awarded Life Membership of the BPCA and his club.
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View our full collection of podcasts at our website: https://www.solgood.org/ or YouTube channel: www.solgood.org/subscribe
View our full collection of podcasts at our website: https://www.solgood.org/ or YouTube channel: www.solgood.org/subscribe
Martin Andrew in St Leonards joins Samuel Mann in Sawyers Bay and Mawera Karetai in Whakatāne. With a contribution from Tahu Mackenzie. This show was broadcast on OAR 105.4FM Dunedin - oar.org.nz
A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the disappearance of a mum-of-two who hasn't been seen since Remembrance Sunday. Alexandra Morgan was last seen at a petrol station near Cranbrook. A 40-year-old man from St Leonards-on-Sea has been arrested and officers are carrying out searches in three area. We have a statement from police. Also in today's podcast, hear from charities and MPs on the asylum crisis after 27 people died in the Channel. The men, women and children drowned when the small boat they were in capsized as it headed to the UK from France. A former care home in Gravesend has been turned into accommodation for homeless people this winter. The local cabinet member for housing has been telling us about the other work that will also be done there. Schools in Kent have been honoured for what they're doing to help the environment. We've been chatting to a teacher and pupils from Sir Roger Manwood's school about how they managed to change all 500 light bulbs to more energy efficient LED ones. And Chatham and Aylesford MP Tracey Crouch speaks about her fan led review into football governance.
My show is SO RANDOM! Find me THIS playlist anywhere else in the interwebbies! Didn't think you could! RANDOM! Variety! Unpredictable…that's what I want! The Music Authority LIVE STREAM Show & Podcast...listen, like, comment, download, share, repeat…heard daily on Listen Notes, Google Podcast Manager, Mixcloud, Player FM, Stitcher, Tune In, Podcast Addict, Cast Box, Radio Public, and Pocket Cast, and APPLE iTunes! MORNINGS IN CANADA! Hamilton Co-Op Radio! https://s1.citrus3.com:2000/public/HCRRadio Follow the show on TWITTER JimPrell@TMusicAuthority! Are you listening? How does and can one listen in? Let me list the ways...*Listen LIVE here - https://fastcast4u.com/player/jamprell/ *Podcast - https://themusicauthority.transistor.fm/ The Music Authority LIVE STREAM Show & Podcast! Special Recorded Network Shows, too! Different than my daily show! *Radio Candy Radio Monday Wednesday, & Friday 7PM ET, 4PM PT*Rockin' The KOR Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday at 7PM UK time, 2PM ET, 11AM PT www.koradio.rocks*Pop Radio UK Friday, Saturday, & Sunday 6PM UK, 1PM ET, 10AM PT!November 3, 2021, Wednesday, opening salvo…Orbis 2.0 - TMA SHOW OPEN THEMESaltCityChill - Some Never Learn [...And Another Thing]Abandoned Satellites - 05 Halfway Home [Room Enough for the Sun]The Beatersband Vintage PunkRock'n'Roll - 07 Do You Wanna DanceThe Vinylos - 02 Blackberry Way [Blow Me Up] (Clifford Records)@The Newds - 09 Through the Dark Side [Drawing A Line]Radio Days - Spinning Round The WorldJohnny Jetson – Rock 'n' Roll Girl@The Raves - 05 - I Can't Take Anymore [Past Perfect Tense Remastered] (koolkatmusik.com)@The Now Or Nevers - Don't Wanna LeaveMuck and the Mires - 04 Double White Line (@Kim Fowley Session) [Quarantine-Age Kicks] (Rum Bar Records)Richie Mayer - 02 You Don't Get Me High Anymore [The Inn of Temporary Happiness]Talulah Gosh – The Girl With The Strawberry Hair [Was It Just A Dream] (Damaged Goods Records)Michael Carpenter - 11 - Just Like You [Baby]@Sniff And The Tears - Drivers SeatHoneywagen - 06_On The Beach [Halfdog] (koolkatmusik.com)Propeller - 07 You Remind Me of You [Fall Off The World]jointpop - Give Me Life ( Give me Love ) [From Trinidad With Love]Dropkick - 148 - St Leonards' [Songs We Learned In Sundae School] (Ice Cream Man Power Pop and More)Black Light Medusa - 03 Brenda [The Demos -EP]
Hello, I'm Damien Pestell from Be Your Business and welcome to this episode of HIP Biz where I speak to business owners about how they have created a successful business they love, what matters most to them and what they have learnt on their journey so far. This week I speak with Olga Mamonova who owns and runs Kino Teatr, an arts venue in the heart of St Leonards with her husband Russell. The Kino opened its doors in 2014 but the building first opened as a cinema in 1913. Olga talks about rescuing this hidden gem when it was being used as storage space for a bathroom shop and how they got a lot of the kit for the cinema second hand an how the Kino has since developed into the cultural heartbeat of the town. I discover what life was like in 1970's Moscow in the Communist Soviet Union - Olga loved her life there and fondly remembers how the arts were easily accessible to her and her family. She attended music school with children from a wide variety of backgrounds and often went to shows at the Bolshoi Theatre for just £5! Her father was a novelist, translator and poet, he specialised in the connection between different cultures and had a passion for Japanese culture. He came from a poor background but raised Olga and her sister to have his values about culture being the most important thing in life. She grew up having a strong passion for her own and other cultures and pursued a career in the arts, working at a contemporary art gallery in Moscow where she met her husband Russell, an artist himself. Finally we talk about the importance of culture to a community, The importance of St Leonards culturally and what it was like starting an arts business not long after the biggest recession ever. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hastings-independent-press/message
Hello, I'm Damien from Beyourbusiness.co.uk and welcome to this episode of HIP Biz where I speak to business owners about how they have created a successful business they love, what matters most to them and what they have learnt on their journey so far. This week I speak to Hassan Gemei who owns Liban Coast a very successful Syrian restaurant with his wife Sennah. The restaurant was founded in 2013 from Sennah's love of cooking her native food and has grown organically from a market stall initially to an established and thriving restaurant on the St Leonards food scene. Hassan was born in Egypt to a multi-cultural family, his father was Egyptian and his mother Italian. By the time he was 5 he spoke 4 different languages and his early memories were shaped by very happy times in the kitchen with his Italian grandmother and regular community meals shared with family and friends. In this episode we talk about the culture shock of coming to the UK in the Sixties where he followed in his fathers footsteps to become an engineer. We talk about his relationship with his father and how he inspired him to explore throughout his career. I find out how Hassan turned a hobby into a business when he bought his local squash club, managing to persuade his local bank manager to lend him the money when his offer was unexpectedly accepted. We talk about how each new business venture wasn't about the money but the challenge and how he got a thrill from succeeding in new industries. So far Hassan has been an engineer, a software developer, a sports club owner, a commercial chef and run several import/export businesses. All of his businesses have been successful and he has sold most of them for a profit, he is a born entrepreneur. Hassan is a highly intelligent and caring man with a natural affinity for business, throughout our conversation he recalls clearly the people who he has met along his journey and ponders often on how and where they are now. Throughout his life he has trusted his intuition and followed his energy to create. I thoroughly enjoyed learning about his journey and I hope you enjoy this wonderful podcast! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hastings-independent-press/message
Aus Music Month has come a few weeks early! Snark band-mates Stefan Sepulveda and Pat Lester join the show this week to pit Slowly Slowly 'St. Leonards' and Tiny Little Houses 'Idiot Proverbs' against each other. Two Melbourne bands with a strong following, and with good reason. Enjoy!Listen to Snark here: https://spoti.fi/3D5bclXBuy one of our Tote Bags here: www.recordroyale.com.au/shop
Mia Preston recently opened her latest business venture Pod Central, a Japanese style compact hotel in the heart of St Leonards. Pod central provides high quality overnight accommodation at a budget cost with energy saving technology making it a more sustainable hotel model. We discuss the process of starting the business and I find out about creating a startup with no expectations or attachment to outcome. Mia has had a fascinating career which has balanced her sharp intellect and keen thirst for understanding with a big heart and a desire to care for and help those who are less fortunate than her. Her career began with an engineering degree, she followed her love of making and building things. She discovered that she was the only female on the course and when she finished she became a design and technology teacher. She explains that she likes engineering because it combines science and art, and found that there is creativity in building a bridge or a road as well as rules. We also dig into the dogma of infrastructure and how things may appear that they change but in fact the bigger picture often remains the same. When she started to have a family she changed career direction to find something that could fit around the demands of a busy family life and so became a clinical aromatherapist which she enjoyed for many years, working with hospitals and also as a private therapist. We talk about what it was like to literally step into somebody else's shoes when Mia spent a day in a wheelchair, deprived of her senses in order to really understand the experiences of the people that she was caring for and how it helped to cultivate an increased sense of empathy. More recently she completed a Masters degree in Attachment Studies before embarking on her latest project, Pod central. I was fascinated to find out that we all have behavioural adaptations in our life which were developed in childhood and that these play out in our adult life whether we are aware of it or not and Mia shares how she explored this while completing her Masters in Attachment Studies. In this episode we talk about how she has an innate love of learning and enjoying new experiences but gets bored of sameness quickly and so has had a varied career. Finally exploring spirituality and how Mia coped with a 10-day vipassana (silent retreat) and confronting hidden parts of herself. It helped her to understand how she fitted in the world. Plus a lot more!! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hastings-independent-press/message
293 - Hopeful Bubbles - Susan Wardell in St Leonards joins Samuel Mann in Sawyers Bay with Mawera Karetai in Whakatāne. With a contribution from Tahu Mackenzie. This show was broadcast on OAR 105.4FM Dunedin - oar.org.nz
Police said Alan Slattery, 67, retired, of Stonehouse Drive, St Leonards, was given a six-year extended sentence when he appeared at Lewes Crown Court on Friday, July 16. Slattery entered three banks in Eastbourne and Hastings in the space of two weeks, and used written notes to ask the cashiers to hand over money, officers said. Find everything Tony P at https://www.tonyphenderson.com Music: Greg Klyma https://www.klyma.com I hate the news. Like, really hate the news. It's mostly just politics, and death, and scare tactics. So I decided to create my own news show - for people like me who hate the news - with nothing but funny and wacky stories from around the world. I call it Tony P. Oddcast. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tonypoddcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tonypoddcast/support
Alice Hull is the co-founder of 55 prints - Screen Printing based in St Leonards. We met in her studio amongst the printing equipment and smell of inks to speak about starting your own business & her journey so far. In this episode we talk about how she stumbled into screen printing and that initially she didn't really know what it was or why she was doing it. She has since found that she loves working with artists to bring their work to life and now has a creative outlet which she can really express herself through. Alice later found out that she also had a family link to the trade. Her grandad was Tristram Hull, who set up a famous screen printing studio in 1960's London which became a real hub for local and international artists. Screen printing is part art, part science and the skill of the printer is in getting the right balance between ink and mesh to achieve a product which meets the expectations of the client, they collaborate with artists on their work and are very much a part of the creative process. For more details see @55printson Facebook. Go to www.hastingsindependentpress.co.uk to find out where to pick up the latest copy of the community newspaper; to support our work as a Friend for the price of a coffee; to sign up to the newsletter; or to read any of the articles on the website. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hastings-independent-press/message
A voluntary poo patrol has scooped up kilograms of dog do from Dunedin's popular West Harbour walkway. A few weeks back we to spoke to Antonia Wood who lives with her family in St Leonards. They're regular users of the track. She'd had enough of scraping dog faeces off her young kids - their shoes, her shoes, and so on - so she actually highlighted every last doggy discard, to show how crappy the situation is. On the weekend Antonia and a group of Scoop the Poop volunteers literally took matters in their own gloved hands.
In news this week episode, Södra's second production facility for cross-laminated timber is scheduled for completion by mid-2022. The facility will be able to deliver framing materials for 4,000 homes per year, which is ten times the current output of Södra's existing facility at Värö. Three engineered timber office towers worth $173 million have been approved for a site in Sydney's Lower North Shore. The eight, 12- and 18-storey towers proposed by Arrow Capital Partners and designed by Fitzpatrick+partners will be built on the 7636sq m corner block at 29-57 Christie Street, St Leonards. BOSS (Building, Offsite, Sustainable, System) and it is a prefabricated construction solution using an engineered timber-based structure. It uses biobased materials for insulation, achieves Passive House certification, uses 100 per cent electric and renewable sources of energy and resilient materials. UK real estate firm Cromwell Property Group and Finnish real asset manager Dasos Capital have joined to launch a pan-European wooden building property fund. A former shopping center near downtown Los Angeles is getting a makeover thanks to an innovative new design that promises to take CLT building to brand new levels. Production by Deeelicious Beats Music "Game Play" by Quality QuestPodcast is a Mass Timber Construction Journal Production www.masstimberconstruction.com
One woman is highlighting, literally, with spray paint, the dog poo blight that is left on Dunedin's popular West Harbour walkway. Antonia Wood and and her family live in St Leonards and are regular users of the track. But she's had enough of scraping dog faeces off her young kids - their shoes, her shoes, the car and so on. She says it's a minefield of discarded droppings out there. So Antonia thought she'd take stock of what is a pretty crappy situation.
Explore returns with Lionel Birnie travelling to the south coast of England to meet photographer and journalist Roff Smith, whose lockdown project was published in the New York Times as A Cyclist on the English Landscape.The series of self-portraits feature Roff cycling in and around his adopted home town, St Leonards-on-Sea in Sussex. Roff is not used to staying in one place for long. Born in the US and having spent time working in Australia, his career as a photographer and writer for National Geographic has kept him almost permanently on the move – until the coronavirus crisis hit in spring 2020.While tethered to home, Roff started getting up before dawn to capture photographs of himself riding through the early morning light and found that each day gave him a different perspective on the familiar.To see more of Roff's work follow him on Instagram @roffsmith where he has published more of his self-portraits and his website The Art of the Ride.The Tour d'ÉcosseOn Thursday (June 3), Lionel and Simon Gill are setting off on the Tour d'Écosse, a 13-day, 1,300-kilometre ride from Gretna to Dingwall in Scotland, visiting each of the 42 Scottish football grounds on the way. Follow their adventures with nightly episodes of Explore and by following the (slow-moving) dot at thecyclingpodcast.comExplore by The Cycling Podcast is supported by Supersapiens and Science in Sport.Supersapiens is a continuous glucose monitoring system that helps you make the right fuelling choices. See supersapiens.com For 25% off all your SiS products, go to scienceinsport.com and enter the code SISCP25 at the checkout
Tiggi chats to long time residents of Rodney Stoke, Colin and Jo Symes. They relate wonderful stories from their past, including their participation in the “Maurice Symes Dance Band”. However, their life time passion has always been around the village Church of St Leonards and the community that surrounds it in Rodney Stoke, Somerset. Both […] The post 039 The Bells of St Leonards appeared first on Draycott Diaries Village Podcast.
Would you be willing to inspect the house of a convicted criminal? Have a one-on-one conversation with a parolee about their past trauma? In the sixth and final episode of Behind the Walls: Parole, crime author and former journalist Michael Duffy meets parole officers including Grace Wong, who has one of the most challenging jobs in corrections. “We do get a lot of clients who walk through the door with histories of childhood trauma, sexual abuse, exposure to violence at an early age and domestic violence,” Grace says. “I think a lot of the trauma that clients go through and their abuse history contributes to the reasons why they end up in our system. There are some really sad stories that walk through the door.” Behind the Walls is produced by Corrective Services NSW, part of the Department of Communities and Justice. If you like our show, please give us a rating or a review. Host: Michael DuffyTechnical Production and Design: Ben CorkWith thanks to the following guests: Don Sword, Clare McRae, Andy McClintock, Jessie Slattery-McDonald, Grace Wong and Ellen McCarroll.We are grateful for the assistance of staff at the State Parole Authority, Long Bay Correctional Complex, the Electronic and External Monitoring Group, the Terrorism, Sex and Violent Offenders Group, and Hornsby and St Leonards Community Corrections.For more stories on prison and parole:Like us on FacebookFollow us on Instagram, YouTube or TwitterListen on SimplecastContact us: podcast@justice.nsw.gov.au
Oh so much on the show this week!Bron, Anth and Rex are in the studio.Rex is hunting a new shipwreck - the wreck of the 17 ton ketch, Tommy Dodd lost off St Leonards in May 1877. He'll fill us in on the recent surveys and have located a small target... which may or may not be the site. Tune in to find out.Q: What do you get when you cross Russell Coight with AFL Essendon legend Terry Daniher? A: Goofy larrikin Barry Jeffrey that, with his mate Roy McCoy (picture Coight-meets-comedian Anthony ‘Lehmo’ Lehman), are the unwitting stars of new release ‘The Idiots Guide to Anglin and Danglin’. We’ll speak with author Drew Howell about the adventures of Barry and Roy through what is ultimately a satirical and amusing guide to fishing (which may have left Bron slightly traumatised).Anth is doing a regular slot this year about Climate Adaptations. He'll start with shellfish and surviving ocean acidification. We'll be joined by Dr Sue-Ann Watson, who is a Senior Research Fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University and Queensland Museum Senior Curator who knows a thing or two about the impacts and adaptations required for shellfish to deal with ocean acidification.Join us Sunday 9am live on air, online or via the poddie later...
The family of a Dartford woman who took her own life after suffering at the hands of her bullying boyfriend say she's been cheated of justice. Gemma Robinson was left with a fractured eye socket and covered in bruises after one attack. She died last summer, seven months before 34-year-old Joseph Falconer, who now lives in St Leonards, was locked up for the brutal attack, fraud and casing criminal damage. Hear from her sister and dad who spoke outside court. Also in today's podcast, it's Time To Talk day and we speak to a woman from Ramsgate who's struggled with lockdown along with the director of the Time to Change campaign.
In this special arts podcast from www.HastingsIndependentPress.co.uk Mia. L talks to the accomplished photographer and writer Ian Wood, about his exhibition Great Apes (17th of October-24th of December 2020), as featured at The Lucy Bell Gallery, in St Leonards-on-Sea. Ian Wood draws much of his inspiration from wildlife and the natural world, whilst also helping to raise essential funds, for a number of related charities, such as The Jane Goodall Institute. Widely published and highly regarded for his many creative endeavours, Ian also runs a series of holidays throughout the year, to various exotic locations, giving people the opportunity to experience animals, such as orangutans, in their own habitats, on a personal level. In addition to this, Ian Wood talks passionately about the destruction of the environment and how we can all play our part in conserving it, be that on a local or more global scale. You can find out more about Ian Wood's extensive body of work via his official website-www.agoodplace.co.uk See www.lucy-bell.com for information about forthcoming shows & events --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hastings-independent-press/message
Angela Brown and her sister Eliza and brother Nick run Brown Family Wines which owns All Saints Estate, St Leonards Estate, Mt Ophir Estate and a wine bar in Rutherglen. Forging a path started by their father Peter Brown who sadly passed away in 2005, the kids have done amazing things with the business. The All Saints castle was built in 1864 by two scotsmen and its really worth a visit for tastings and the restaurant. Angela and Simon tell the story. @allsaintsestate @rutherglen
The Rev David Pickersgill joins us to chat through his change of circumstances, after having three successful years in the town.
I'm working on a piece, based on a scrunched up old lady in a mask, who gets mown down by a cyclist. She's the last old lady in Mitte, Berlin, after Apple smash down the old folks home to build their fourth reich. Does it need more?Today, I'm sharing a recording with the Irish author, Rob Doyle, in preparation of us performing on Wednesday (flyer below). Also some photos.It's my absolute pleasure to be the guest of the legendary Danielle De Picciotto, host of the Blood of A Poet nights at the Volksbuhne, and artist, musician - she has an incredibly inspiring exhibition here at the Neurotitan Gallery, where I'm staying with Gil De Ray. Here I am spinning around it like Kylie. More pictures of the work on Cold Lips' Insta.Find Danielle however you like to find people, and listen to her music, particularly the recent Hackedepicciotto album that I'm very happy to make a tincy appearance on.This residency finds me centre stage of my Eurodream school days, in Mitte, where I saw the wall between East and West ideals getting bashed down on TV in 1989. Made me grow up an optimist, as acid-house unity accelerated Everywhere thereafter. Now my native land makes me feel sick, gut shuddering in this last summer of Europe. I refreshed myself in German lakes, and the C-generation (Covid - thanks Martyn Goodacre) - will not know Europe as I have. They will not know what democracy was, or a world not stressed by climate destruction. As artists are called ‘unviable' by the British government, it gives me great pleasure to become more of one.I cannot thank Danielle De Picciotto for the kindest love, and also husband, Alexander Hacke (of the seminal noise group, Einsturzende Neubauten, and former boyf to one of the worst role models a young girl could have, Cristiane F.) He and Gil De Ray have been bonding, and it's all very cute. Das residency is very 90s - I find different street art and graffiti or stickers each day - after the street tours start downstairs. I have explored the countryside, enjoyed a Fat White Family secret show, seen great art in organised pavilions, and received much love for the poetry book I pulled together to bring here, but also to finish a phase, as the recordings of some of that work are coming…my band with Gil, called Vagrant Lovers - they feature Danielle on violin, and the one and only Malik Crumpler Ameer in response to my words. The first tracks are Ghosts of St Leonards, and Temple. I'm sharing them on October 31, and November 5. My heart is drifting free, encapsulating a story here, more than writing it, sometimes it's about the detours. Winter will allow those words to freeze over the page, as I get my teeth into the new job as Managing Editor at Ambit. In the meantime - I hope you enjoy all this mail sends you. This photo is by Jason McGlade.For your reference, I'm including the intro to the podcast script below…And finally - thank you, to paying subscribers. Without you, I'd not have published Now Is Now, my poetry since 007, and more - it's great to have it stocked here at Neurotitan in Berlin, but also coming soon to Rough Trade in London. If you've not received your book, let me know - unless we've been in touch - and I'll be posting soon.My debut novel was supposed to be out this week, but Covid. And what is life but enjoying the detours? Stay strong, beautiful, and I will send fiction again soon, and recommendations for more. x ScriptINTRO:This is Kirsty Allison in Berlin, on a balcony in the east, looking down towards the spree river with Berghain between. I'm sitting with Rob Doyle, the author of my favourite book so far this year, Threshold. It's published in the UK and the US by Bloomsbury, so he takes throne as a leader in a new school of digital existentialist modernists, who take a post-millenial ego, and ask questions about the Author's physical space on the page.It's a very self-conscious play, to be so self-aware of one's musings as the main act of writing, that it becomes centre stage of a story, that riffs like Sun Ra between the realities of floating self-aware on a dinghy on a sea of cosmic pulp simulacras. The novel is always new, if it's doing it right - it's playing with something - doing something that's not been said before. So in a Covid world - as fire tornadoes burn increasing street miliitias, and power struggles can be witnessed in the death scroll - there's a new wave of The Author reflecting from a stage you recognise, as they explain What It All Means like academics, ingraining themselves to the page, channelling the white light, aware of the ironies of self from all sides of the prism. Certainly that's the stuff I've been reading of late. Some of the writers come out demonstrating their problems, and personal privileges, or lack of them - so to get to the end of the pages, still liking the writer - is enigmatic, and masterful.Rob Doyle is very tall, he appears at the door wearing a black polo neck and black pegs, looking total jazznik, because later tonight he'll be on stage with a strain of the Fat White Family in Neukolln, playing percussion at a reassuringly fun evening, where the super-spreading qualities of the flute can be ignored, as we travel in an alt reality, away from the claws that birthed us all. Ex pat life, where universal globalisms of Me Too, BLM, Terf-wars, squish in the Q-Anon malestrom of denial and manipulations of the maleducated grip for sense and logic mean the novel has not felt as relevant and required in counterculture in my lifetime.I remember Tessa Williams, one of my first editors, urgently passing me a copy of Trainspotting - its silver-skull cover becoming the book of the 90s. Heroin chic rose as Britpop banged the national drum, as a kind of distraction from the government reclaiming 'their' streets after the Neo-hippy threat of people raving their lives away, hugging in fields, and driving away in buses, like the ones pictured in the second Cold Lips book, Whos F****n Planet by Martyn Goodacre.Threshold updates that cover, with a hologram, in an era where the individual is manipulated into the spectrum of hashtag identity politics, and good/bad - like/dislike polarisations mean we are the product, smashed beneath a data-driven duvet in a privatised society. 80% predictable, asking if that too is corrupted as any other statistic,the novel remains relatively data-proof, its nuance its strength, the unsearchable, between the lines facts being far truer than any single sentence or status update.OUTRO:Thanks for listening. I'm making this on Sunday 27 September in Berlin. The music is by Gil De Ray. We're on a residency in Mitte at the Neurotitan Gallery as guests of the wonderful artist Danielle De Picciotto - whom you can hear a past conversation with in the trenches of all your favourite podcast outlets, via Anchor, Spotify, iTunes, many more, and our own coldlips.co.uk. I also share these on kirstyallison.substack.com, where I gratefully send out thank yous of my new poetry book, Now Is Now, a collection since 007, to paying subscribers. On Wednesday here, Rob Doyle joins me, Kirsty Allison, to perform in the gallery, with the writer and songwriter Kieran Leonard, of Saint Leonard - for a night of Modern Poetry. There are currently some spaces remaining, it is limited, and doors will close at 7pm. If you're not in Berlin, we will be streaming on social from Cold Lips, Danielle De Picciotto's and Gallery 46's Facebook and Instagrams. Donations to artists are always appreciated. But likely you'll be listening to this after, and I hope you'll find a recording of this memorable occasion. The residency here has been wonderful - also come and support this space, Neurotitan - it's the last remanent of the joy of reunification between East and West Berlin. After the wall fell in 1989, the free-for-all of the former no-man's land in the area known as Mitte was attained by squatters in buildings such as Tascheles, now largely a hotel (a model for Shoreditch's site of Red Gallery, that I wrote a book for), and Tresor nightclub in a former bank vault. Without records of previous families, lost in the war and partitioning, everything could be re-written. Neurotitan created a gallery space, bar, and arts spaces which remain underground, showing the works of Genesis P. Orridge, most quality street artists, and radical contemporary artists. Danielle's show here is mainly work from the past 7 years - and I beg you to see it, buy it, support.And I know this is sounding like one long cultural shopping list, but Rob Doyle's book - Threshold, get it from an independent retailer, and keep an eye out for the forthcoming film version of his debut, This Is Ritual. To hear more, visit kirstyallison.substack.com
On the show this week, Thursday, 10 September, we welcome founder of CIS Greg Lindsay AO. From a backyard shed in Pennant Hills to shop-top above Uncle Pete's Toys in St Leonards and now Macquarie Street in Sydney's CBD, Greg built the CIS from a one-man operation into the self-sustaining institute it is today. His goal throughout was to "make the philosophic foundations of a free society once more a living intellectual issue," as Friedrich Hayek said we must. Join us live, to hear Greg's story and ask your own questions about how he turned a timeless idea into one of Australia's leading think tanks.
After watching friends succumb to poor health and cut down in the prime of their life. Dave Skattum knew he had to make some major changes in his life to see his dreams come true. After 10 years of grueling work, not only did he make some miraculous transformations, he also found his passion in life; To Help Men Take Steps Towards Good Health.This show promises to be a place that will encourage you to take steps towards good health. We do three things; 1. Provide cutting edge teaching on men’s health topics, 2. Interviews with men who have done it and 3. Interviews with major influencers and pros in the men’s health arena. All focused around helping men move closer to good health. Your Story – Real Life Stories About Taking Steps Towards Good Health with Stuart BaptistToday we talked about:1. A balanced mind and body2. Change is possible -no matter what.3. The path of least resistance is not always the best path4. There are no dead ends5. Learning to experience the joys of life.6. And More….About Stuart BaptistStuart was born in Greater London and graduated from Manchester University in 1995.After graduation, he worked in one of the largest teaching hospitals in Europe for 3 years as a rotational physiotherapist covering burns, plastic surgery, spinal injuries, amputees, cardiothoracic intensive care and orthopedics.With this wide experience, he then emigrated to Australia and travelled extensively, eventually settling in Newcastle at the John Hunter Hospital as the senior physiotherapist in Accident & Emergency.In 1999 Stuart relocated to Sydney where he worked as a senior physiotherapist in various practices across Sydney and as practice manager at a large multi-centered practice in St Leonards’.Stuart was the first physiotherapist to join Brad at Sydney Physiotherapy Solutions, 3 months after it was opened in 2007.Orthopedically, Stuart has developed a special interest and a reputation in hip and shoulder biomechanics over the years.Since 2009 he has been undertaking research through Sydney University looking at Men’s Health Physiotherapy, working to improve continence and erectile function of men suffering with prostate cancer. Currently he is looking to progress into full PhD specializing in using real time ultrasound to teach men how to more accurately isolate effective pelvic floor muscle control. His expertise extends to effective treatment of men with chronic pelvic pain, urinary and sexual dysfunction.Stuart has been an invited speaker at several national & international conferences. His lectures on effective pelvic muscle control have been widely acclaimed.Stuart states he is a full-time physio, part time researcher, and father to 4 young kids……this means that he gave up playing sports a while ago now and lives his sporting dreams vicariously through his children’s sporting achievements. About Dave Skattum:Dave Skattum is a family man, a health guru and an inspirational speaker. In his late 40s, some life-changing experiences created a starting gate for him to make drastic changes to improve his health. Since then he has taken off 70 pounds, participates in Triathlons and Ultra Trail running, and has weaned himself off junk food. He enjoys nutritious foods, has become accurate in his thinking, and has taken his spiritual life to a new level.When speaking to an audience about his experience in getting healthy, he brings excitement and hope. Dave is a Certified Nutritarian, a CPT, distinguished Toastmaster and a Certified Instructor with the Napoleon Hill Foundation.To get in touch with Dave, join the online forum and to order his book visit http://www.the4pillarsofmenshealth.com The 4 Pillars of Men’s Healthhttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/the-4-pillars-of-mens-health/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/dave-skattum-the-4-pillars-of-mens-health-your-story-real-life-stories-about-taking-steps-towards-good-health-with-stuart-baptist
After watching friends succumb to poor health and cut down in the prime of their life. Dave Skattum knew he had to make some major changes in his life to see his dreams come true. After 10 years of grueling work, not only did he make some miraculous transformations, he also found his passion in life; To Help Men Take Steps Towards Good Health.This show promises to be a place that will encourage you to take steps towards good health. We do three things; 1. Provide cutting edge teaching on men’s health topics, 2. Interviews with men who have done it and 3. Interviews with major influencers and pros in the men’s health arena. All focused around helping men move closer to good health. Your Story – Real Life Stories About Taking Steps Towards Good Health with Stuart BaptistToday we talked about:1. A balanced mind and body2. Change is possible -no matter what.3. The path of least resistance is not always the best path4. There are no dead ends5. Learning to experience the joys of life.6. And More….About Stuart BaptistStuart was born in Greater London and graduated from Manchester University in 1995.After graduation, he worked in one of the largest teaching hospitals in Europe for 3 years as a rotational physiotherapist covering burns, plastic surgery, spinal injuries, amputees, cardiothoracic intensive care and orthopedics.With this wide experience, he then emigrated to Australia and travelled extensively, eventually settling in Newcastle at the John Hunter Hospital as the senior physiotherapist in Accident & Emergency.In 1999 Stuart relocated to Sydney where he worked as a senior physiotherapist in various practices across Sydney and as practice manager at a large multi-centered practice in St Leonards’.Stuart was the first physiotherapist to join Brad at Sydney Physiotherapy Solutions, 3 months after it was opened in 2007.Orthopedically, Stuart has developed a special interest and a reputation in hip and shoulder biomechanics over the years.Since 2009 he has been undertaking research through Sydney University looking at Men’s Health Physiotherapy, working to improve continence and erectile function of men suffering with prostate cancer. Currently he is looking to progress into full PhD specializing in using real time ultrasound to teach men how to more accurately isolate effective pelvic floor muscle control. His expertise extends to effective treatment of men with chronic pelvic pain, urinary and sexual dysfunction.Stuart has been an invited speaker at several national & international conferences. His lectures on effective pelvic muscle control have been widely acclaimed.Stuart states he is a full-time physio, part time researcher, and father to 4 young kids……this means that he gave up playing sports a while ago now and lives his sporting dreams vicariously through his children’s sporting achievements. About Dave Skattum:Dave Skattum is a family man, a health guru and an inspirational speaker. In his late 40s, some life-changing experiences created a starting gate for him to make drastic changes to improve his health. Since then he has taken off 70 pounds, participates in Triathlons and Ultra Trail running, and has weaned himself off junk food. He enjoys nutritious foods, has become accurate in his thinking, and has taken his spiritual life to a new level.When speaking to an audience about his experience in getting healthy, he brings excitement and hope. Dave is a Certified Nutritarian, a CPT, distinguished Toastmaster and a Certified Instructor with the Napoleon Hill Foundation.To get in touch with Dave, join the online forum and to order his book visit http://www.the4pillarsofmenshealth.com The 4 Pillars of Men’s Healthhttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/the-4-pillars-of-mens-health/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/dave-skattum-the-4-pillars-of-mens-health-your-story-real-life-stories-about-taking-steps-towards-good-health-with-stuart-baptist
Co-Arts Editor Mia .L talks to acclaimed photographer Syd Shelton, about his work and involvment in the ‘Rock Against Racism' movement of the late 1970's-early 80's, as well as his subsequent career in the years that followed,to the present day, amidst the uncertainty of lockdown and Covid-19. A selection of Syd Shelton's work is currently featured in the ‘Days of Rock ' exhibition, at The Lucy Bell Gallery,in St Leonards.The show runs until the 29th of August 2020. Please refer to the gallery website for further details-www.lucy-bell.comYou can view more of Syd Shelton's work via his official website-www.sydshelton.net --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hastings-independent-press/message
It seems fitting to have as my first guest for this podcast series, a friend who, when asked to describe herself with one word, choose the word Dilettante. She was the best friend of performance artist Leigh Bowery, as well as being the subject of a few Lucian Freud paintings, the most famous being BENEFITS SUPERVISOR SLEEPING, which, when sold in 2015, was the most expensive painting ever sold by a then living artist. She has become an artist in her own right, designed prints for Fendi Menswear, and written a biography about Leigh Bowery. So today we find ourselves in St Leonards on Sea, in the UK for a nice informal conversation with today's guest, Sue Tilley. Follow Sue Tilley on Instagram for more updates about her work: @suetilley1 Leigh Bowery: The Life and Times of an Icon, 1999 by Sue Tilley https://www.amazon.com/Leigh-Bowery-Life-Times-Icon/dp/0340693118 Music: 'Thursday' by @gulasound Edit: @sscsierra
Episode 9 - Legacy Welcome to the Still Magic Podcast, your one-click audio stop for all things gin be it gin making, gin production, gin distilling, gin manufacturing, gin commercialising, gin tasting, gin drinking, gin steeping and everything else in between. This is a story of Australian produce worth sharing. Today we take a trip to Australia’s most populated city, and travel to the suburb of St Leonards, located at the southern end of Sydney’s north shore. And it is there that we chat with Georgia Conn and Kyle Ford. Partners in business and the game of life, each will share their insights concerning their interest in gin, it's place in Australia’s craft gin movement and their decision to take on that most noble of challenges; to take a gin concept and turn that into a commercial reality. Hailing from Victoria, Georgia's family moved north to New South Wales, settling in Berowra, where Georgia spent her formative years with her younger sister and brother. Sport and a vast array of 'when-I-grow-up' interest ranging from acting to building – complete with a tool belt as a birthday present – punctuated 10 year old Georgia’s ambitions. Finally, it’s now hammer time for Georgia Conn. A former defence serviceman with the Australian Air Force, Kyle’s hometown is Gloucester, located in rural New South Wales, approximately 3 hours drive north of Sydney. Kyle cites his cousin’s career in the navy, as influencing a decision to craft his secondary education toward the military. His near 10 years of serving his country, comprised a vast array of career highlights, culminating in a raft of practical skills, and enduring mateship. Though from contrasting backgrounds, both Georgia and Kyle shared a love of travel; an outlet that each of them pursued with great gusto before they first met. And so it was, at an unremarkable transport stop in Prague, where Georgia and her younger sister had run to meet a bus. Seated and breathless, they were somewhat annoyed to see, that despite running as if their lives were at stake, they were going nowhere fast for around 20 minutes. Turns out they were awaiting a wayward passenger to fulfil boarding formalities – a happy go lucky “boy from the bush” named Kyle Ford – before they could set off. This chance encounter triggered off a series of European adventures together, a return to Australia, and a 2 year odyssey to find ‘it’. This search would manifest itself as Finders Distillery. Their story is proof positive that energy, desire, enthusiasm and a willingness to learn will get you there. This is Georgia and Kyle's story https://www.findersdistillery.com/ Be bold. Enjoy yourselves. Let's create the next gin narrative. Still Magic paperback, digital and audio copies available from your favourite online stores https://www.amazon.com/Still-Magic-distillers-guide-beginners-ebook/dp/B07QZ4VFRV/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=still+magic&qid=1596545333&sr=8-1 Narrator: Marcel Thompson @stillmagicway Editor:@alexipigot
In need of some time out? Yoga teacher Julie Gurr offers you ten minutes of deep relaxation to help your mindfulness during this pandemic. Julie teaches Scaravelli-inspired yoga in St Leonards and has a special interest in yoga for menopause. See her website for more info juliegurryoga.co.uk --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hastings-independent-press/message
43 - Compositional Bubbles - Andrew Perkins in St Leonards joins Samuel Mann in Sawyers Bay Dunedin and Mawera Karetai in Whakatane with contributions from Tahu Mackenzie and Liesel Mitchell This show was broadcast on OAR 105.4FM Dunedin - oar.org.nz
“St Leonards (or St Leonards-on-Sea) is a town in East Sussex, on the south coast of the UK. The beaches in this area are stabilised with groynes – low walls […]
Now the situation was totally different; we were fighting the wind which was now right in our face as we began to tack, that is proceed from side to side in zig zags to allow the wind to still propel us in the general if a trifle vague direction we wished to go.The tide was also against us and that rolling swell that had carried us down the coast in grand style was now also in our face; literally. Large globs of wave top carried by that stiff breeze regularly traveled the full length of the boat and managed to find every small passageway in our clothing to dribble down inside our necks after liberally soaking face and head.Additional to this was the fact that the boat was crossing the face of the swell or large waves as we tacked from side to side.
On January 12th 1920, Florence Nightingale Shore boarded a train to take her to the seaside resort of St Leonards in Hastings in Sussex. This was a journey many people took every day but today this one would be different. When the train pulled in at Bexhill a couple of hours later other passengers would realise Florence wasn't reading or sleeping, she was unconscious. She had been beaten around the head with the blunt object. Who would want to murder a celebrated war time nurse who had only lived to help others? Important information provided by: https://www.findmypast.co.uk/http://ealingnewsextra.co.uk/history/truth-of-murder/https://www.nursingtimes.net/news/community-news/nurses-book-sparks-new-nightingale-murder-mystery-drama-21-12-2018/https://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/9416866.strange-case-of-the-murdered-york-nurse/https://www.pressreader.com/uk/scottish-daily-mail/20181214/282260961555309 Further reading: https://www.amazon.com/Nightingale-Shore-Murder-Death-Heroine/dp/192663585XIf you want to support the show on Patreon here is the link and thank you!https://www.patreon.com/theunseenpodMusic by: www.dl-sounds.com (http://www.dl-sounds.com/)Follow us on social media:Twitter- @theunseenpodFacebook- The Unseen PodcastUpdate Description (https://audioboom.com/posts/7470348-laurence-winstanley/edit)
A man's been jailed for life after being found guilty of murdering his wife who disappeared from their home near Deal more than 20 years ago. Debbie Griggs was pregnant with her fourth child when she went missing from Walmer in 1999. Her husband Andrew, who's now 57 and lives in St Leonards in Dorset, has now been told he'll serve a minimum of 20 years behind bars. www.kentonline.co.uk
Andrew Clarke is chef-director at the St Leonards and Brunswick House restaurants in London. The food he creates are delectable pieces of art. After an abrupt social media ‘hiatus' at the beginning of the year Andrew, took some time to focus on his restaurants and gather some introspective. He has come back online and in life, fighting - being the latest recipient and winner of the “Innovation Award” at The Craft Guild of Chefs Awards this year and a nominee of the Estrella Damm National Restaurant of the year awards. A self proclaimed 'reluctant' chef, Andrew shares how a pivotal life-changing incident lead him on a journey through mental illness that taught him how to deal with and succeed despite such setbacks. It's no wonder that he is also the founder of a very successful "Pilot Light campaign" which was born out of his direct experience devoted to combatting the stigma surrounding mental health in hospitality specifically and having a profound impact. You don't want to miss this episode – to get in to the mind of a determined person who not only creates some of the UK's most beautiful and innovative dishes, but also has a passion to help others who struggle with the ever increasing pressures of todays society through his own experience. I hope that you can apply some of his wisdom to your life, career and doing what you love!
STEM MAD 2019 - St Leonards PS Glen Waverley with Ralph Barba on LIVE FM
In this episode we will be discussing university applications and in particular the UCAS process. Mr Durward is joined by Mrs Pemberton-Hislop, Mr Seymour and former St Leonards student Lauren Sandeman. Lauren is currently working in the St Andrews University admissions team and has experience of applying to Uni and also overseeing the process for others.
The final season of Yes Chef episode two is here already, but don't fear, we've got a goodie for you. He's one of the pair behind St Leonards and Chef Director at Brunswick House, Andrew Clarke. Food wasn't Andrew Clarke's first love, with a career in music first carved out ahead of him, although he's done alright having had stints at Marco Pierre White, St John, Wild Honey, Arbutus, The Square, Anchor & Hope, Salt Yard and is a prominent name at Meatopia.Besides being a chef Andrew heads up Pilot Light, an initiative that works to improve mental health in the restaurant industry. So let's go tackle cooking, guitars, mental health and pig's blood. Bon App. Follow the gang on the gram below:@fleurdelysldn@londontheinside@ben_loti @propernorthernjordanLike what you hear, well subscribe to our channel in your favourite podcast app and stay tuned for more.Listen on Spotify or iTunes now. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It is D-Day for Israel Folau and Rugby Australia - but what will his future entail? Folau arrived for the hearing in St Leonards on Sydney's North Shorearlier today, with the hearing expected to take all day and possibly drag into tomorrow. Rugby Australia (RA) announced its intent to terminate Folau's employment over a breach of contract claim following an April 10 Instagram post that RA claims is a "high level" breach of the sport's "inclusiveness" commitment as outlined in the players' code of conduct, agreed to by the players' union and RA officials in the collective bargaining agreement.According to a dramatic report in The Daily Telegraph on Saturday, the future of rugby in Australia could be decided if Folau is successful in his challenge of RA's move to rip up his contract.Israel Folau arrives at Rugby HQ for a Code of Conduct hearing... it's expected to go all day and possibly into tomorrow. @9NewsSyd @9NewsAUS pic.twitter.com/dT9kpPjQO9— Lizzie Pearl (@lizziepearl) May 3, 2019The report claims Rugby Australia is privately bracing for a $12 million financial loss for the upcoming season — pushing the code to the brink of collapsing.RA would face "financial ruin" if it is forced to face a projected $8 million loss and pay out the full $4 million owed to Folau in his long-term contract.According to The Australian, the legal fees and costs associated with fighting Folau in a conduct hearing and expected follow-up legal challenges through the courts will also cost RA at least $100,000.A full $12 million hit would leave RA "on the precipice of insolvency," according to The Daily Telegraph's Jamie Pandaram.To discuss Israel Folau, his comments and his future, The Weekend Collective were joined by Michelle Langstone to talk this and all the other issues of this week.
Ocean Grove Property News - 3 Minute 'Real Estate News Vignettes'
Hugh outlines the weekend activities and two Sneak Peeks in today’s episode. With the upcoming Yellow Gums auctions not that far away, it was worth reminding listeners what is on offer and how it will be sold. A property form St Leonards is announced today while their was one clear stand out from Open-for-Inspections. So listen in and find out: 1. SNEAK PEEKS: Two Revealed 2. YELLOW GUMS: Upcoming Auction 3. HOT: What Property Stood Out at Opens Property of the Week * 1 Maldon Place, Ocean Grove * https://www.hayden.com.au/4803809/ To get ahead of the action, call or click below. * CALL ON 5255 1000 * http://www.haydenoceangrove.com.au Never Miss a Show: * Download SPOTIFY * Search “ocean grove real estate” * Subscribe
Andy Durward sits down with Dawn Pemberton-Hislop (Deputy Head Academic) and Paula Prudencio-Aponte (BTEC Business teacher) to discuss the BTEC courses offered at St Leonards. Also joining the conversation are Tom Glen and Matthew Forrest, two Y12 pupils who are currently on the BTEC Business course, sharing their experiences.
Whilst at Walmgate Bar we discuss the gallows of St Leonards, the unsolved murder of Norma Dale, and some suitably themed pubs.
Antonia Quirke visits the house that Richard Burton bought for Elizabeth Taylor in a fishing village in Mexico, that's now a deluxe hotel. When the lovers conducted their affair out in the open in Puerto Vallarta, the paparazzi soon followed, and eventually the the small town was transformed into a tourist mecca. Director Ceyda Torun explains how she invented new technology to follow a herd of cats through the streets of Istanbul for her documentary Kedi. Antonia visits St Leonards, where King Harold's consort Edith Swan Neck is memorialised with a delapidated public sculpture. There she meets film-maker Andrew Kotting, who is trying to restore Edith's memory with a new documentary Edith Walks, in which he and five friends hike 108 miles from Waltham Abbey to the South East coast as an act of pilgrimage.
Menopause - Health & Wellbeing Podcast #8 with guest Laura Burton Laura Burton from Burton Health is back and this time we're talking about menopause. We discuss the symptoms and stages of menopause, helpful foods and nutrients for soothing menopausal symptoms and reducing the conditions associated with this time. Apologies the sound quality isn't the best in this episode (especially at the start, it does get better after a few minutes!) but I wanted to share the video anyway and not let the quest for perfection get in the way of me delivering this information to you. Laura is a clinical naturopath practicing in St Leonards and Dural. Her key areas of interest are female hormone disorders, digestive health, stress & adrenal fatigue. Through her clinical experience Laura has identified the prevalence of stress in our everyday lives and sees it as the most common cause or exacerbating factor of her patients health conditions. Laura believes that we need to get back to basics and work on our ability to release and manage stress in order to prevent and treat disease. Last year Laura set herself the mission to reach beyond the walls of her clinics and send her de-stress message out to Australian and New Zealand households through the Burton Health Tea Club. Each month she sends love letters and tea packages to her members to inject joy and excitement into their days and to remind them to slow down, relax and reconnect while sipping on a cup of organic herbal tea. You can connect with Laura via her website www.burtonhealth.com.au, on Facebook, Twitter or on Instagram. If you’ve got something nice to say about the podcasts please leave a review, but I’m also keen for any feedback if you want to comment below! Menopause - Podcast #9 Podcast Breakdown 0:00 Intro, and what we've been getting up to 1:59 How Laura became interested in helping women with menopause 3:49 The common feeling of being alone in your symptoms when going through menopause 4:29 Symptoms of menopause 6:28 Understanding the different stages of menopause and knowing what stage you're in: Pre/Peri-menopause, Post-menopause 7:44 Menstrual migraines in menopause 8:20 Surgically induced menopause 9:04 Chemically induced menopause 9:15 How long does menopause last for? 10:03 Is it menopause or PMS? 10:46 Hot flushes 12:56 Helpful foods and nutrients for menopause, as well as a few lifestyle tips 17:55 Bone health, osteoporosis and osteopenia. (Book mentioned was Strong Women, Strong Bones http://amzn.to/1IQ3Z8k) 19:24 Weight gain in menopause 21:57 Inflammation often increased in menopausal women, leading to more aches and pains 23:23 Soy 26:00 Xeno-oestrogens, and is high or low oestrogen the problem? 28:56 Q1: Could the role of the liver be explained and what are the benefits of supporting liver function in menopause? 29:41 Oestrogen forms and metabolism 32:45 Keeping inflammation under control 33:30 Common retail menopause supplements: Red clover, Black cohosh, Wild Yam cream. 39:24 Our favourite menopause herbs
Former Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown talks to Matt Elton about his new book on French resistance fighters who took on the Nazis during the Second World War. Meanwhile, Kathryn Ferry takes a trip to Hastings and St Leonards, in the company of Charlotte Hodgman, to explore Britain's interwar holiday boom. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.