Leave our flowers alone! Flowers stolen from Melbourne Ave flowerbed

We managed to find some money from the SoundBite Festival budget to re-plant this flowerbed in Melbourne Ave to brighten up the area. All was well for a few weeks but one plant was stolen last week and then more plants have been stolen two nights in a row this week. Lots of people have said how much they enjoy the splash of colour and sit down for a few minutes to enjoy the flowers.

To try to deter further plants thefts I’ve put up this notice in the flowerbed:

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 We hope you like these flowers but please leave them here for others to enjoy as well

The plants in this flowerbed have been paid for by local residents and we hope you enjoy this splash of colour that brightens up the street. Our thanks to Jeff’s Flowers for doing the planting and looking after the flowerbed for all of us to enjoy. Lots of people have told us how much better the street looks with this colourful flowerbed.

Sadly, we have had some plants stolen over the last few days. These plants don’t belong to Ealing Council but to the local residents. If many more get stolen all that will be left to look at will be a bare patch of earth.

And be aware that there is a CCTV camera right next to this flowerbed!

 

Join in Ealing Fire Station’s 80th birthday celebration on Saturday 12noon -3pm

Ealing fire station is celebrating its 80th birthday on Saturday! Everyone is invited to come and celebrate with firefighters on the station’s forecourt, where a vintage fire engine will be on display along with some memorabilia from the station’s long history. Firefighters will also be on hand to give out fire safety advice and rumour has it there may also be some cake…!

The anniversary celebrations take place on Sat 12 Oct from 12-3pm at the fire station, which is at 60-64 Uxbridge Road, W13 8RA. All ages welcome.

Thanks to Leila Molaei for this information

What’s on at the Ealing Autumn Festival

The Ealing Autumn Festival is a celebration of arts, culture and heritage in venues across Ealing.

This year, in celebration of Benjamin Britten’s centenary, the Festival is giving Ealing its first ever opera to be staged as the composer intended – Noye’s Fludde. Visitors can look forward to over 30 events in 12 venues – including 2 first performances and a world premiere – at Ealing’s biggest autumn arts festival.

11th October
The Russian chamber choir Voskresenije arrives from St Petersburg. They meet The Addison Singers 7.30pm at St Peter’s Church, Ealing for an open rehearsal of their joint programme of folksongs and sacred music for 12 October.

12th October
Voskresenije and The Addison Singers are joined by Matthew Barley “the world’s most adventurous cellist”. Together, they tell The Story of a Suite: how Britten composed his Suite for Cello No3 for his Russian friend Rostropovich. Voskresenije sing Russian folksongs and sacred music that are the musical basis of the piece. Matthew Barley shows how Britten intertwined these themes and then plays the whole work. It is an absolute masterpiece. Listen up GCSE Music students and cellists! This is very much for you with variation and ground bass explained. Group bookings and study packs available on request: info@ealingautumnfestival.co.uk

12th October
A rare screening of Elegy of Life bio-documentary about Rostropovich by the internationally acclaimed Russian director, Alexander Sokurov.

12th October
Morning walk, meet 10am at Ealing Broadway Station or 10.50am at Greenford Bridge for the Guided Walk Fludde! A history of local flooding featuring the River Brent. The walk finishes at St Mellitus Church in time for the film and the concert.

12th October
Children can go to Ealing Central Library to make animal masks to wear for the opera Noye’s Fludde due to be performed on 26-27 October.

12th October
The Ealing Youth Orchestra invites you to its family concert to Meet the Orchestra. You hear the full range of the instruments of the orchestra in Britten’s brilliant Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra. Then you have a chance to get closer up and find out how they really work.

13th October
A wonderful, madcap community day at Hanwell Community Centre for the launch of Hanwell Big Local with Hanwell Heritage & Local History Society and the Ealing Autumn Festival. This is local friendship writ large! The Cuckoo Estate, part of Hanwell Bog Local, was built in the !930s so roll up for exhibitions, art and craft activities, guided tours, talks and music of the ‘30s together with short films by Britten and Auden and, of course, Charlie Chaplin!

13th October
University of West London brings us back to the present with new music by UWL composer, David Osbon. The two pianists of Duo Ludus Tonalis fly in fresh from Italy specially to play his Prometheus Dance and other works.

14th October
The Cruel Sea. Why this film? It depicts the Battle of the Atlantic of WW2. Britten returned to the UK in 1942, making the crossing when the Battle was at its height. Nothing describes the terrifying backdrop to his voyage better than this Ealing Studios classic.

16th October
Two British pianists playing music by Britten and British friends and colleagues. World premieres by pianist David Wordsworth feature alongside light-hearted dance styles in Palm Court and Jamaican Rumba. Perfect for lunch-time digestion!

17th October
Dr Irving Finkel, the British Museum’s expert on cuneiform clay tablets, talks about the famous Flood Tablet. Dating from the 7th Century BC, it is an Assyrian account of the Great Flood, even older than the biblical story of Noah and the Ark. Boring? Not a bit – Dr Finkel will have you on the edge of your seat!

18th October
Owen Wingrave. Commissioned from Britten by the BBC as a television opera, it tells the tragic tale of a young pacifist in conflict with his family. Curiously, Britten never bought his own television set. The evening is hosted in a private residence for a truly authentic viewing.

19th October
David Blackwell’s heritage talk and exhibition with fascinating images of Ealing under water. The West London Sinfonia gives an orchestral concert 7.30pm at St Barnabas Church with music by Britten and his friend Shostakovich. They both admired the music of Mahler: his beautiful Blumine reminds us of this.

19th October
The Bridge Quartet and their String-plicity project for players of any age new to playing chamber music: three workshops and an informal concert culminating in their own String Quartet Concert. This is a highly imaginative way to introduce ensemble playing which engages with visual art as well as music. Look out for the art workshop and the exhibition Landscapes and Seascapes.

20th October
A highly distinguished musical line-up of David Osbon’s friends and family gather at the Vestry Hall, UWL to celebrate his 50th birthday with world premiere of his Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano. All welcome to join the birthday party!

21th October
Pitshanger Pictures at their home in St Barnabas Church host a screening of Nocturne, created by Tony Palmer for Britten’s centenary. Tony introduces the film himself – a rare opportunity for insights direct from the director. Pitshanger Pictures is also hosting Whisky Galore! on 25 October. This Ealing Studios comedy tells the tale of a coastal community taking possession of a precious, ship-wrecked cargo!

22th October
Margaret Morrell of Da Rocha Pastorale once again stages our favourite Coffee-time Concert, light-hearted and informal, 11.30am at Ealing Abbey’s Parish Centre.

26th – 27th October
The grand finale of the Festival is on 26 October (7pm) and 27 October (3pm) at St John’s Church, Southall with two performances of Noye’s Fludde. Fully staged with Ark and animals in costume, bugles and bells and rainbow, sun, moon and stars, it is a magical and inspirational experience for everyone to remember long after the festival itself has come to an end.

For more about the festival visit their website

Visit the West Ealing craft market tomorrow for some locally made treats

Craft Market Family Day 2012

Next to the newly opened Morrisons on the corner of the Uxbridge Road and St James Ave, the West Ealing craft market is open for business tomorrow from 10am – 3pm.  If you’re doing your Saturday morning shopping just take a walk up to St James Ave and come and see what we have to tempt you with:

  • Knitted kids clothes
  • Sock Monkey
  • Cushions
  • Cards
  • Scarves
  • Abundance apple juice
  • Vegan cakes and sweets
  • Jewellery and gemstones
  • Sweets
  • Relishes

 

 

 

 

New season West Ealing Abundance apple juice available from Saturday’s craft market

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It’s juicylicious!  It’s this season’s first consignment of local apple juice (with a pinch of pear).  It’s on sale at our Abundance stall at Saturday’s craft fair in St James Ave 10am – 3pm. All the fruit is local with some from our Walmer Gardens orchard and others from trees in local back gardens. It’s pure juice with no added sugar or preservatives. It’s £2.80 a bottle (75cl) or three for £7.50.  Also available will be the last few bottles of our elderflower cordial.  So come along on Saturday and stock up whilst you can.

Work starts again on new hotel in West Ealing

After weeks of inactivity work has started again on the new hotel at the corner of Melbourne Ave and the Uxbridge Road. Scaffolding is starting to go up. The delay has been down to the developers needing to carry out a detailed structural survey for Holiday Inn Express who are going to operate this hotel.  There will also be some changes to the plans with two more storeys at the front (Uxbridge Road) end to increase the number of rooms. I don’t know what the likely completion date will be but I can’t see Tony Luckhurst being back before Christmas.

The new Morrisons Local in West Ealing opens on Thursday

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The old Blockbusters stood empty and forelorn for some months and then work on the new Morrisons Local started and  it’s progressed very quickly and will open at 9am on Thursday.  On the corner of St James Ave and the Uxbridge Road this supermarket should bring some much-needed footfall down this end of the high street and, hopefully, benefit the nearby shops.

What next for The Grosvenor – pub or housing?

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The agent’s board is up on The Grosvenor pub. Tucked away in the dense pattern of residential streets, this pub is in need of some serious tlc if it to have any chance of surviving. Can it be revived and become a key part of the local community? The Forester has been transformed under new ownership. It was absolutely jam-packed a couple of weekends ago for the YUMW13 event, so it can be done with passion and imagination.

I know the monthly w7edge music nights bring plenty of people in to The Grosvenor and there is a big catchment area for it with very few other pubs in easy walking distance. If you have about £850,00 to spare it can be all yours then comes the cost of completely revamping it. I guess the question is whether someone sees it has potential as a business or whether its true value lies in its potential as a site for new homes.

 

 

 

Do we need so many betting shops in West Ealing? Time to say no.

I asked this exact same question the last time there was an application for a new betting shop – Betfred on the ground floor of where the new hotel is supposed to be going. Yet, here we are again with William Hill wanting to open a new betting shop at 70 Broadway:

 

I missed this licence application and the closing date for objections has passed but just how many betting shops do we need in West Ealing?  Can we keep leaving it to market forces to determine what happens in our high street or should local residents have a say?

There is an opportunity to have your say about betting shops and other forms of gambling by completing the Council’s online survey as part of its consultation on its gambling policy. Some of the questions are about clustering of betting shops so directly relevant to West Ealing. The online survey closes on September 27th so not much time left to complete it. You can find it here.

I don’t know how much effect these surveys have but if we don’t say anything then silence will be taken as consent to what’s happening. I for one think we should restrict betting shops and other similar establishments, especially those with ‘fruit machines’ and fixed odds betting terminals which are a major route in to problem gambling.  You can find out more about all the issues around gambling at the GamCare website.

 

From fag-butt filled to flower-filled: a Melbourne Ave flowerbed transformed

We set ourselves the challenge of transforming the fag-butt filled empty flowerbed at the top of Melbourne Ave for the SoundBite Festival. Here’s the before:

 

and here’s the after:

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Particular thanks to Dean at the nearby flowerstall for all his hard work and let’s hope we can keep it looking this lovely from now on as it really does cheer up everyone who sees it.