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LETS Harvest Supper & Trading Day on Sunday 11th October 2009

Dorchester & South Dorset LETS
HARVEST SUPPER & TRADING DAY

Sunday 11th October, 12 noon – 5pm
Martinstown Village Hall

On Sunday 11th October, between 12.00noon and 5.00pm we are holding a Harvest Supper and Trading day at Martinstown Village Hall (DT2 9JU) which is in close proximity to both Dorchester and Weymouth. It will be an opportunity for members to network, socialise, and trade.

Sabine Bale is putting on a Textile Workshop for the day where you can try your hand at knitting, spinning, rag rug making, patchwork etc, or bring one of your own textile arts to share! For further information ring SABINE BALE on 01305 260318.

Please bring all your seasonal home grown / home made produce to trade (or to show) and there will be a competition for the best in each category! A children’s craft project will keep the little ones happy. We are also inviting Dorset Agenda 21 (da21) and Dorchester Transition Town members to join us, so there will be plenty of networking opportunities. If you wish, you can set up your own stall (at no charge), bring trading leaflets for display and/or take part in some shared stalls.

Also available: ALLERGY/SENSITIVITY TESTING by Anne Donelan
Have you every wondered if a food or drink you’re consuming might be causing minor unpleasant symptoms like tiredness, digestive problems, headaches, skin problems, nervousness … and maybe others.   If so, come and experience how we can test it with kinesiology.  Please bring a small sample of whatever you might suspect.  Food can be wrapped in a small amount of greaseproof paper and anything fluid  put in a small bottle.  Alternatives will be available in case your favourites turn out to be a problem!

We are also still looking for Helpers & Entertainers who will be paid Marts for their time. Could that be YOU?!

PRODUCE STALL (WIN A PRIZE!)
Home made / home grown produce
Categories: Fruit & Veg / Home Baking / Preserves
Competition judges will look for texture, colour, flavour, scent, taste and originality!

SHARED STALLS
CDs, DVDs & Videos / Arts & Crafts
Books & Magazines / Unwanted Gifts
Kid’s Stuff / Bric a Brac etc

GOOD QUALITY CLOTHES SALE
Bring and buy good quality clothing, linen etc
- take home a whole new wardrobe!

PROGRAMME OF EVENTS
10.00am – Arrivals & set-up
12.00pm – Open
Tea / Coffee / Snacks
Trading / Networking
Textile Workshop
Children’s Craft Table
Entertainment
2.30pm – Take down stalls
3.00pm – Shared Supper (all contribute a dish & bottle!)
5.00pm – Clear up & get out for 6.00pm

PARTNERS, FRIENDS, NEIGHBOURS AND CHILDREN WELCOME!

If you would like to provide some entertainment be a helper and/or trade please contact KATY MURRELL ASAP.

Entertainers and helpers will be paid Marts for their time!
ALL IDEAS WELCOME!

Email Katy at katy@dorchester-lets.co.uk or ring her on 01305 262253.

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LETS have a ‘Day of Kindness’ in Dorset!

I (i.e., your LETS Web Manager Anna Celeste Watson) have come across a fantastic event that unfortunately is nowhere near us in Dorset yet but so far only in Bromsgrove, Worcestershire BUT my father - Psychic Artist, Musician & TV Presenter Nick Ashron – is taking part and we would love to spread the word in the hope of encouraging Dorset locals from LETS and other community organisations to set up our own Day of Kindness maybe in Dorchester, Bridport, Weymouth or nearby…

Nick is delighted to be taking part in the annual Bromsgrove Day of Kindness organised by Phil Haynes. Nick will be performing music in the High Street along with other local performers, businesses, organisations, schools, churches, and people in general, who will all pull together to show good will and to offer themselves freely. The High Street will come alive with music, singing, dancing, stalls, street cleaning and people generally being kind! : )

Organiser Phil Haynes says: “Everyone actively involved in the Day of Kindness give themselves freely which is fantastic but an important part of the day is for everyone and anyone out there to acknowledge that this is the moment to consciously do something for someone else no matter how small.”

The Day of Kindness and interest in it has grown considerably in recent years and one of its aims is to spread nationally. This requires other like-minded people to take the time to do something, to realise that now is the opportunity to play a part in making a difference. There is no longer any need to wait for governmental changes to offer hope for a brand new day. The fact of the matter is that there never, ever was any need to wait and waiting was and still is a complete waste of our precious and relatively short time.

So, once again, this year the Day of Kindness happens in Bromsgrove, but they hope to make it happen all over the country and even all over the planet.

If you would like to help organise a Day of Kindness in Dorset or your own area please contact Phil Haynes on phil@dayofkindness.co.uk or call 07949 763027.

For more information visit www.dayofkindness.co.uk.

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Chris Slade on Albert Einstein and Honey Bees!

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Here is an article by our LETS Newsletter Editor and Beekeeper Chris Slade from your last newsletter…

Albert Einstein said…..
“If the bees disappeared off the surface of the globe then man would have only 4 years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man”

Which Albert Einstein was that?  It certainly wasn’t the famous theoretical physicist who devised his theory of relativity through what he described as a ‘thought experiment’.  He died in 1955 but the apocryphal saying first was mentioned in January 1994 when the Union Nationale d’Apiculture Francais (French Bee Farmers) were staging a protest at Brussels.

Bee that as it may, let’s follow the great Albert’s example and devise a thought experiment.  Imagine, if you will, a world where there are no honeybees or other Apis species.   What shall we call it?  How about ‘America’? 

a) Could pollination happen in America if there were no bees? b) Would the twin continents be devoid of plants, animals and man? c) How else would pollination happen? d) What plants could survive without bees aiding their sex lives? e) What animals would there be and, of course: f) How could man exist in these circumstances?

Answers: a) Yes; b) no; c) humming birds, butterflies, wind, other insects, self-pollination, tuberous reproduction; d) potatoes, maize, tobacco, tomatoes, Brazil nuts, vines, conifer forests, prairie grasslands, to name but a few e) buffalo by the million, sloth, cougar, bear of all sorts, fish, birds of all sorts, wolves, monkeys, caribou and countless others f) Eskimos even today live largely in a bee-free environment and always have done.  Other humans have done so too, spreading south after having crossed the land/ice bridge from Siberia thousands of years ago. It is true that, in the recent (last 500 years) past, migrants have put pressure on the environment, probably more so in the most recent 10% of that time than the remainder added together through use of agri-chemicals and other pollutants, but even so it is self evident that mankind can exist there, possibly with the assistance of the honeybees that they introduced. Now, whether civilisation will ever evolve there is an entirely different question.

So the alleged Einstein statement is completely ridiculous and poppycock!

By Chris Slade

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AU REVOIR PATSY

On 7th January our former Chairlady Patsy Freeman threw a small party to say ‘goodbye’ to her friends before departing for the South of France together with her dog Muppet. Naturally her friends included a number of LETS people. We were asked to bring a glass and something to put in it and also to be prepared to contribute to the entertainment.

Not everybody knew each other and so as an icebreaker Patsy stuck on each of our backs the name of a famous person, one of a pair; e.g., Laurel and Hardy. The idea was that we should discover the name on our own back by a process of elimination. It was unfortunate that my name was chosen from a Jane Austen book that I have never read!

Anna our webmistress was there, wearing her famous gorilla suit that is rapidly becoming her trademark. It is lovely and I want one like it! Mind you, I suppose mine would have to be a silver backed one. When the entertainment started some people read poignant passages from books they had read or written. I read my tragic poem ‘Stumped’ written in hospital after a sad loss. You’d never guess – some heartless people laughed! I was followed by Patsy’s financial advisor who had us all in stitches.

As LETS is international I expect Patsy will by now have found a local group, or perhaps founded one, maybe among a covey of ex-pats. I’m sure she will read this via the interweb, so, Patsy, we wish you well, and when you are fixed up for accommodation we will all come and visit you! One at a time or all at once?

By Chris Slade

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LETS Members at Apple Day in Kingston Maurward

Article by Chris Slade

Was it just by coincidence that Kingston Maurward’s Apple Day fell this year upon St Crispin’s Day? I went to get a good lunch; to browse the stalls in the farmers’ market; to stock up with a winter’s worth of assorted squashes and to support my fellow beekeepers who were there in force.

Our Jenny was there of course, being a fellow beekeeper, but I met for the first time Eleanor Gallia of Nether Cerne Herbs and we soon fell to discussing matters of mutual interest as well as tasting a couple of her herbal brews.  She cleverly names them for the effect they are trying to achieve, substituting the suffix –tea for –ty. As an example, one containing senna pod, rowan berries and dandelion as a cure for constipation might be called Veloci-Tea.

Being a shy person I find it so much easier to trade with people after I’ve got to know them in some other way, and I am sure that Eleanor and I will very soon be trading away like good-uns.  So let this be a lesson for others: come along to LETS social gatherings and business meetings as a way of getting to know people to boost your confidence in trading with them.

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LETS Have a Compassionate Christmas

Article by Anna Celeste Watson with kind thanks to Sandra Hood.

With Christmas coming up many of us will be planning a special Christmas meal and in November we also celebrated Dorset Food Week and World Vegan Day. You can enjoy some great local food by taking advantage of all the produce and cooking offered on our LETS. Many of our members will be enjoying a vege feast this Christmas, and for those of us who do eat meat, there are many ways you can make your Christmas more compassionate such as checking if all your meat is free range and organic (including your stuffing and gravy), and that your Christmas Pudding and Mince Pies use free range eggs.

Sandra Hood offers Vegan Cooking on LETS and is planning some Cooking Workshops for 2009, so our Web Manager Anna Celeste Watson decided to ask Sandra some questions about veganism to show how everyone can take steps towards eating more compassionately and enjoying a healthier diet, especially as Sandra is also a professional Dietitian…

Anna: How would you define a ‘Vegan’?
Sandra: To me the vegan way of life is about compassion. How people approach a vegan diet is very individual and as someone once said “man does not live by food alone” and I believe that if people worry too much about being the perfect vegan, this can do more harm than good. To me, living the vegan life leads to freedom conscience and as Leslie Cross (one of the first vegan pioneers) once said ”veganism is merely an adjustment slipping you into a slightly more advantageous orbit”! 

Why are you vegan – for example for ethical reasons such as animal welfare, environmental issues, spiritual issues, and/or for health reasons such as a dairy intolerance?
I am vegan for compassionate reasons. The cruelty and exploitation of animals for food, clothing, health and entertainment is unnecessary.

How long have you been vegan and do you find it easy being vegan (for example, at home and also out and about)?
I have been vegan for over 30 years and I first became vegan in the 70’s. It was quite scary and people said I would be ill. It was quite difficult then but the Vegan Society was a great help and I was very fortunate to live near Eva Batt, author of the first Vegan cookbook and ‘The Vegan Shopper’ and I also became great friends with Arthur Ling, founder of Plamil Foods, the manufacturer of the first soya milk in the UK – wonderful inspiring people. I have some lovely memories of cooking with Eva. Generally, I do not find eating out enjoyable unless it is at the houses of friends and family. However, there is a lovely vegan restaurant ‘Wessex Tales’ in Boscombe that I treat myself to now and again.

Do you get a positive response if and when people discover you are vegan?
On the whole I do get a positive response. The majority of people care about animals and would prefer not to eat them but they switch off and kid themselves that the neat little package of food they buy from the supermarket isn’t an animal. Was it George Bernard Shaw who said that if slaughter houses had glass walls, few people would eat animals? Occasionally I am challenged but no one can argue with the fact that it is my belief, it is how I feel and I do not wish to cause suffering to animals.

As a qualified professional Dietitian at Dorchester Hospital by day, and a LETS member offering vegan cooking – what do you think are the health benefits and the pros and cons of a vegan diet? What about a vegetarian diet?
Working as a hospital dietitian, I keep my dietary preferences private. However, if someone does ask me, I would say I am vegan. Not so long ago, vegetables, grains, beans and fruit were only viewed as accompaniments to meals but now these foods are accepted as the most important part of our diet. More and more evidence highlights the benefits of a plant based diet and with the increasing burden of chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, obesity, high blood pressure and cancer, people should be working towards a plant based diet. Lots of studies corroborate this. I cannot see there being any cons to a vegan diet – lots of pros! However, with the increasing number of convenience vegan foods now available, it is possible to have a ‘junk food’ vegan diet with processed cereal, pastries, ready meals, biscuits, cakes and chocolates all readily available. Perhaps here I should stress that a reliable regular source of vitamin B12 is recommended. Few vegan foods contain this vitamin, so fortified non-dairy milks, fortified cereals and yeast extracts are needed and it is also sensible to consider taking a supplement. Recommendations are 3mcg per day from food or 10 mcg per day from a supplement. Vegetarian diets can be a useful step to veganism but reliance on too much dairy is not healthy.

What is your favourite food?
Gosh, my favourite food? There are so many! For a meal I think it has to be starting with a fruit salad, followed by some kind of nut roast with all the vegetables, finishing off with a yummy ‘cheese’ cake!

What do you enjoy most about cooking vegan food for LETS members?
The opportunity for me to experiment and share some of my favourite dishes and encourage people to try vegan foods.

Why do you celebrate World Vegan Day and help promote it, for example with your recent street stall in Dorchester?
I believe the vegan way of living has all the answers, for the animals, the environment and for man’s peace of mind.

Do you believe individuals can make a difference to either animals, the environment and/or other humans, if more people in the developed world ate less animal products and a more plant based diet, or were at least more discerning about how and where the animal products they do use (from meat and dairy foods, to leather and wool clothing, to general household products and cosmetics) were actually produced?
Absolutely. Just small steps. Even if someone stops eating battery eggs, what a huge difference that can have.

Many thanks to Sandra for her contribution and look out for announcements of her Vegan Cooking Workshops in 2009.

Visit Compassion in World Farming’s (CIWF) website on www.ciwf.org.uk for ideas on having a more compassionate Christmas free from factory-farmed animal products. Visit The Vegan Society website on www.vegansociety.com or the Vegetarian Society on www.vegsoc.org for resources on animal-free food and products.

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LETS Member Chris Slade talks about his more Organic Beekeeping methods

Our LETS Web Manager Anna Celeste Watson asked fellow member Chris Slade to share some insight into whether it is true that the Queen Bee in a hive is often killed after 6 months to make the hive more productive. As a Vegan, Anna aims not to use any animal products at all any more (including honey), but was very interested to hear that organic and more considerate beekeeping is about in Dorset and even offered by two LETS members including Chris plus Jenny Eddison, and to also find out that we depend quite a lot on these busy honeybees for our food (whatever our dietary requirements!), which is why it is important we take care of them!!!

Chris says, “Conventional beekeeping is that queens should be replaced after one or two years. I don’t practice conventional beekeeping. How can one select for longevity without letting queens live the length of their natural lives?  Sometimes, in the swarming season I manipulate a hive so that, in due course, the bees themselves supersede a queen with her daughter.
 
Conventional beekeeping is that the beekeeper robs the bees of as much honey as possible and then feeds the hive with gallons of sugar syrup. I haven’t fed my bees for years, but neither do I rob them excessively. I want to know that the honey I eat myself, give to my family or sell to customers is the natural product gathered by the bees and not recycled Tate & Lyles! Using cane or beet sugar at all only supports the agricultural monoculture of vast tracts of land that are doused with all sorts of noxious chemicals to kill off the pests that become pests only because of monoculture.
 
I sell my honey. Currently I have some honeycomb from Kingcombe where virtually everything is organic and also a few pounds of runny honey from the same place.  I have a few pounds from a new apiary on Portland where, again, conventional agriculture is miniscule and the flora is terrific.  The bulk of my honey this year is sitting in my sun lounge waiting for me to get around to extracting it.  It comes from an organic orchard at Halstock.
 
As a vegan you [Anna] depend on the activities of pollinating insects, mainly honeybees for much of the food you eat. They say one mouthful in 3 for omnivores, but it must be much more for you.  OK you could live for a long time on bread, potatoes and cornflakes, but you’d get awfully bored!  Short of vitamins and minerals too.
 
I’m collaborating with an American in writing a book on beekeeping and am trying as much as possible to mellow the US industrial approach. Bisi of North Dorset LETS is into the Slow Food thing and also wants me to help her with a pamphlet describing my methods: Beekeeping as if the Bees Mattered.”

Food for thought there then (hehe!) from Chris, and look out for his book in the future…

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Dorset Strategic Partnership – by Chris Slade

Back in June I took time off work go to Sturminster Newton to attend the Dorset Strategic Partnership annual conference that uses the slogan ‘Working Together for Dorset’.  Besides the great and the good, there were representatives of all sorts of community organisations including our LETS (i.e., me Chris Slade).

For me the most valuable part of the day was the networking with all sorts of people, most of whom I hadn’t met before, including Bisi who, as a result of our meeting then, has contributed so helpfully to our September 2008 Members Newsletter.

This conference is a great opportunity to promote the idea of LETS among the very people who would be most supportive, not only as potential members, but also as potential sources of grants!

I have put it into the heads of the organisers that next year there should be a LETS stall so we can tell people all about our Local Exchange Trading System. If we are to do this we need to get together with other Dorset LETS groups and work jointly on that occasion.  If we are the ‘social entrepreneurs’ that Cllr. David Fox says we are then we can do it!

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Our New Take on LETS – by Patsy Freeman (Group Co-Ordinator)

Here is a summary of the LETS scheme according to James Taris author of ’The LETSaholic Twist’ (published 2005). 

His key feature is that LETS is a self-help scheme involving an exchange of favours…

  1. LETS stands for Local Exchange Trading System.  It is a voluntary self-help group of people in a community who all agree to exchange goods and services without the need for cash.
  2. A LETS group are like-minded people who give their time and experience to help their fellow members in times of need and also feel welcomed to ask for favours.
  3. LETS offers a way of improving your life-style without the need to spend money.
  4. The trading currency is a made-up name.  Ours is known as ‘MARTS’.  It is important to think of marts as favours rather than a cash equivalent.  Thus marts represent a value of appreciation by the member who has been assisted. 
  5. The LETS group’s function is to act as a bookkeeper for their members activities – keeping a record of these ‘favours’ and putting the members’ accounts into debit or credit accordingly.  These credits have no value and cannot be exchanged for cash.  There are no penalties for going into debit.  Indeed this may be necessary in times of need.  The long term aim is to come back into zero balance.
  6. It is important that members begin trading with one another, preferably upon joining.  You don’t have to wait for someone to ask you for a favour first, although some prefer to.  LETS is all about trading, trading , trading!!!
  7. Taris advocates monthly meetings as the ideal frequency.  (Our own monthly group combines a ‘pot-luck’ supper in a member’s home with the business meeting).
  8. Members can learn new skills in the core group or as a casual helper and earn five marts per hour in the process.  Skills include recording and typing minutes of meetings, organising the newsletter, contributing features to it, writing press releases for the local newspaper,  contacting new members, organising social events, book-keeping, producing the directory and website management. 
  9. In order to be a truly effective LETS group Taris advocates a 100% non-cash environment.  The only exception is when there is a cost of materials or ingredients involved.  These then become the responsibility of the member receiving the service. The LETS scheme should not be viewed as a way to make money.
  10. LETS groups help to build community between its members and forge new friendships.

If you have any comments or feedback on these guidelines please submit there here!

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My Fantasy LETS Day – by Adebisi Adekunle (Bisi)

My fantasy LETS day is a day in which I do not lift a finger on my smallholding but lounge about like a drape, enjoying myself. It goes something like this… Hand over my latest tax return to a responsible adult and immediately reward myself with a half hour precision reflexology session for being so efficient. As it is a special offer, it would be rude to resist a subtle energy balancing massage as well, which of course means I make it back home just in time to hand over the dog for that long promised extra long walk. 6 beefy volunteers arrive to deal with the tree stump graveyard and give the stingers as good as they deserve. As I step out to supervise briefly, someone starts on my housework so finally, I can get to the last cardboard box left over from moving in nearly two years ago next month. Hark, a gentle bell calls me to delivery of a serious lunch – home made bread and beetroot soup, with Indian banquet to follow, as a sort of private function for me and my dog Daisy, a miniature tan and white Jack Russell who has now been returned to me clean, sane and pedicured. After lunch someone makes the washing up disappear and I get a foot massage, while having sophisticated French conversation…

The serious point is please use LETS resources as often as possible. As the phrase goes, use it or lose it! LETS currency exchanges are far more valuable the monetary equivalent in pounds and pence. They represent a unit of community action, knowledge sharing and human companionship beyond measure. If you use a business directory and part with money outside the LETS system, consult the LETS directory of services and do so regularly!

And don’t forget, there may be other useful services in other groups in your county. Get in touch with other local groups in your county and ask for a copy of their directory as well. You may be pleasantly surprised!

What is your fantasy LETS day?…

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LETS Get Together – by Adebisi Adekunle (Bisi)

I (Bisi) of North Dorset LETS first came across a Local Exchange Trading System (LETS) in May 2004 in Hampshire where I was living as an agricultural apprentice on an organic smallholding just outside Broughton. I was looking for ways and means to eke out my living and make the most of my resources, perhaps in a ‘barter’ type scheme 

I found the LETSLINKUK website http://www.letslinkuk.org, which apparently acts as an umbrella organisation through voluntary membership by individual 300 individual LETS schemes around the country. Most schemes registered are established under the democratic and co-operative LETS model developed in 1991 by LETSLINK UK. Unfortunately, research started September 2003 to establish the current state of LETS in the UK and identify the needs of LETS organisers appears to have stalled due to lack of funding. Consequently, the organisation is able only to provide limited support to registered schemes and those wanting to start a new LETS group. 

There were 15 groups in Hampshire, but trying to find, then contact my local group was like an initiation into the black arts….. As an uninitiated member of the public, it was very difficult to find a way in. Volunteers run local schemes and some are more, um, professional than others. I soon gave up (no response to emails or phone calls, try here, try there etc), but the idea of joining stayed with me.  In fact, the national network of local LETS groups is very impressive and, judging by my current group, the LETS groups are hubs of highly skilled and creative individuals. It is an incredible resource and a powerful demonstration of people doing it for themselves. 

In 2006, I moved to North Dorset and joined my current LETS group, though, not through any public access route! As a direct result of working and living as a smallholder, I met individuals involved in the local group who kindly took me under their wing and allowing me to pick their brains on anything from hedge laying (Peter Rutter – local hedge layer of 50 years standing), to where and how to find grant funding (Joan Timms – font of all knowledge). One simply cannot buy that sort of practical help and interest. 

In practice, the ‘committed’ nature of community actions can result in ‘inward facing’ local groups with closed shop style practices. This strikes me as tantamount to always preaching to the converted and that can only lead to shrinking membership within local static groups.

In a period of increasing community awareness, I think we are missing a trick. Related initiatives such as Timebanks, Freecycle, Commercial Barter, Fairtrade Campaigns, and Community Networks of all kinds, attest to the continuing interest of people in making things happen in their community. 

LETS is a powerful model for community action. Membership of a local scheme can be of enormous practical help, a friend to financial distress, a tonic to the dazed and confused. I consult my directory of services regularly, certainly before I part with hard earned cash outside the system – payment in ‘stags’ seems less painful than payment in pounds and pence. I could easily use a LETS service everyday (aka ‘My fantasy LETS day’!).

Local groups are distinctive and rooted in the community – this is a strength. However there are weaknesses in operating practice, which could and should be addressed, LETS style, from the ground up! 

The continuing interest of people in making things happen in their community is an opportunity for local groups to reach out to new members to strengthen numbers and develop the organisation. In my view, it is critical to develop the organisation in order to address current and future economic and political threats to influence how our communities function in practice. I hear Gordon Brown is looking for new schemes to tax…

I think it is crucial that local groups recognise each other, communicate and network with each other to share information and services and identify common issues. For example, there are 6 local LETS groups in Dorset: Dorchester & South Dorset LETS, North Dorset LETS (x2), Sherborne Barter, South West Dorset LETS, Wessex LETS. 

Here are my suggestions for coordinators of local LETS groups in Dorset:

  1. Form an email group with other local LETS coordinators in the same county
  2. Establish a start position with a brief report to capture LETS services available in Dorset (membership numbers, levels of activity / events, documentation available, etc)
  3. Ask membership to local identify issues for further discussion. For example:
    · Would a simple and standard method of profiling local LETS groups give wider public access?
    · Working with LETSLINKUK Intro Pack for local group £5, Group Affiliation £25 
  4. Groups get together and introduce themselves. How about Shaftesbury & Gillingham meets Dorchester!

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Vitamins Weigh Heavy – by Chris Slade

Tuesday 20th May dawned cool and bright. I made my bedside cuppa and took it to the bathroom for my morning routine. I hopped on the scales and was pleased to note that my weight continued steadily at its lowest level so far for the year, thanks to a hectic lifestyle punctuated by Tesco Value frozen meals (5 for £4) of which the nutritionists probably wouldn’t approve! I ironed a shirt and selected a clean pair of trousers in which the creases run more or less parallel and vertical; dressing with unusual care for this was to be an important occasion – the first meeting of the new LETS Core Group and I wanted to dress smartly for Jenny, our hostess.

In my eagerness, I arrived early and found that I wasn’t the only one.  There were a few new faces: Patsy, our new coordinator; Pam from Oz who has no job on the Core Group but who had come along for the craic; and our new Web Mistress, Anna Celeste, who single-handedly halves the average age and doubles the pulchritude.  Her youth, by contrast with the remainder of us, who are way past our first flush, is a reminder that we ought to recruit another generation before we fade away.

We stooged around chatting in Jenny’s garden, admired her fluffy ducklings and marvelled at her large weeping willow tree that has engulfed a metal pipe that protrudes each side of the trunk. I plaited a yard of the living twigs and maybe Jenny will be able to make an interesting walking stick from them in years to come when they have fused together.

We debated whether to eat in the garden in the evening sunshine but calculated that we would very soon be in the shade so, numbers by now complete, we trooped into Jenny’s kitchen where snugly we sat, knee to knee around her table. One of her cats joined in and demanded attention. 

The first bottle of wine was opened and poured. The feast was prepared. We had all brought something to share and it was all tasty and delicious stuff that one wouldn’t come across every day (well, I know that I don’t eat that well except on these occasions). There was very fresh salad reinforced with leaves of mint freshly plucked minutes earlier from Jenny’s garden; a beanfeast; a selection of hummusses (hummae?  Hummii?) and we all delved in. It was all highly nutritious (it had to be with Ann Donelan supervising). Then came a fresh fruit salad and dollops of cream.  Vitamins were coming out of our ears by this time.

My contribution, a selection of decadent chocolate was kept for the meeting itself. I had previously consulted Patsy who expressed a preference for Green and Black’s dark variety. She cornered the ginger flavoured one. I think I preferred the cherry, but the plain was good too.

The meeting started.  Patsy decided that, as coordinator, she ought to be Chairperson, citing one James Taris who has written a book on LETS as authority.  Nobody dared argue with somebody who was so clearly on a chocolate high and this was fine as she made a good job of it. This James Taris is becoming frequently quoted and people seem to think that we ought to attune our way of doing things according to his recommendations.  I haven’t read him and so have asked Patsy to do a summary which may be elsewhere in this Newsletter, so we can all know where we’re going wrong and what we are doing right.

Patsy was amused at my plea that we change only one thing at a time!  My reasoning is that people generally don’t like change, especially of long established ways.  Anyway, nothing drastic is happening for the moment. When more people are familiar with what Taris says, accelerated change might be more appropriate. 

Don has left the Core Group and so we needed somebody to take the Minutes.  As she was the only person present without a job Pam was co-opted.  Jenny’s neighbour and our new Marts Accountant, the vivacious Sue, popped in for a while and the opportunity was taken to evict the cat.

The business part of the evening continued for a couple of hours and so it was after 11pm that we left.  Some were wilting.  I was ready for my bed.

Next morning I followed my usual routine and was horrified to find that I had gained 2 pounds!  All those blasted Vitamins!  I shan’t have any more of those in a hurry – back to the tried and tested Tesco Value for me!

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Your Articles here please!

Please post your own articles about anything to do with LETS or issues that you think Dorchester and South Dorset locals will be interested in. If you want them to appear in our printed Newsletter please contact us.

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Beltane – by Donn Watts

It seems that there are two themes running through the celebration of Beltane, one is the end of the Winter season, and the other – the celebration of the fecundity and burgeoning of Spring.

Beltane marks the halfway between the Spring Equinox and Summer Soltice – and the time of turning sheep, cows and other livestock out to pasture. Also known as May Eve and May Day, it is a festival that marks the return of Summer with the lighting of fires, where people could burn their Winter bedding and floor coverings, ready to be replaced afresh – so no more washing!!!

It is also said to celebrate the height of Spring and the flowering of life. The Goddess manifests as the May Queen and Flora. The God emerges as the May King and Jack in the Green. The Maypole Dance represents their unity, with the pole itself being the God and the ribbons encompass it, the colours are the Rainbow spectrum.

Beltane is a festival of flowers, purification, fertility, sensuality, union and delight. WOW!

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Candlemass (and the Pagan Calendar) – by Don Watts

Candlemass is the Christianized name for a holiday which falls between the Winter Solstice and the Spring Equinoz. The Pagan calander has four such festivals falling between the solstices and the equinoxes. The older Pagan names for the one which falls on February 1st/2nd were Imbolc and Oimelag.

Imbolc literally means ‘in the belly’ (of the Mother). For in the womb of Mother Earth, hidden from our mundane sight but sensed by a keener vision, there are stirrings - the seed that was planted in her womb – for she is pregnant with the Summer. The alternative name of Oimelag means ‘milk of ewes’ – for it is also lambing season. So the Pagans saw this as the beginning of Spring – the fire of Spring is lit in secret whilst the Winter still rules the earth above.

The holiday is also called Brigit’s Day, in honour of the great Irish Goddess Brigit. At her shrine, the ancient Irish capital of Kildare, a group of 19 priestesses (no men allowed!) kept a perpetual flame burning in her honour. She was considered a goddess of fire, patroness of smithcraft, poetry and healing (especially the healing touch of midwifery). This tripartite symbolism was occasionally expressed by saying that Brigit had two sisters, also named Brigit. Incedentally, another form of the name Brigit is Bride, and thus She bestows her special patronage on any woman about to be married or handfasted, the woman being called ‘bride’ in her honour.

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‘New Beginnings’ – A Poem by Chris Slade

New Beginnings
By Chris Slade

I had a message from the lovely Kate
That at the New Year Party at her home
In order properly to mark the date
She’d like me to compose a sonnet poem.

So many of her friends are in the LETS
And pay with Marts for things that they get done -
It doesn’t matter if they build up debts:
It means another’s credit has begun.

We wonder what will happen in this year
And hope it brings prosperity and mirth
With no more war or pestilence or fear
‘Cos soon there’ll be a most important birth.
Not long after the New Year has begun
Our Kate will very shortly be a Gran!

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