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The best way to tell us is through the contact form here

Wednesday, 15 November 2017

Parents & Friends of Holywell School - Annual Twinning Quiz Night



Saturday 3rd February at 7:30pm

In the School Hall

Tables of 6/8 persons - £4 per person

Raffle and prizes

To book a table


Telephone: 01634 231585 

Please bring your own food and drink

Ray Kemsley
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Parents & Friends of Holywell School Christmas Fayre 2017

Parents & Friends of Holywell School are looking for donations for the main prize draw and also cakes for their cake stall which can be dropped off at the school on the morning of Friday the 8th of December.

Thank you


Katie Chantler
Parents & Friends of Holywell School
Email: enquiries@pfhs.co.uk
Website: www.pfhs.co.uk
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Monday, 13 November 2017

Burglary - Newington



Hartlip, Newington & Upchurch Ward

Crime Number: XY/059251/17

Between 8:50am and 11:00am on Saturday 11th of November, a burglary took place in Wickham Close, Newington.

If you have any information that could help investigators please contact Kent Police on telephone number 101 and quote the relevant crime number above.

For more information on crime prevention visit: www.kent.police.uk

Kent Community Messaging
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November News from Upchurch Horticultural Society - From the Potting Shed



Sponsored by Upchurch River Valley Golf Club - www.rivervalleygolf.co.uk

November is not the end of the gardening season, there are still jobs to be done, but personally I spend little time in the garden until things dry out a bit. The one thing that will get me outside though, is to rake leaves off the lawn before the grass starts to die off. Also November is the best month for planting tulip bulbs and winter vegetables need looking after. However I much prefer to light the fire and look through the seed catalogues and start planning the next year.

My borders are looking very green and I want to get more colour into them next year, so I am looking for long flowering perennials to grow from seed. The fuchsia and phlox provide good colour but the other perennials finish up too quickly so it’s time for change. Rudbeckia, Echinacea and Coreopsis are top of the list but it will take a bit more planning. Also taken by the bold Australian daisies which come in a number of varieties and colours. Whatever the final choice they will need to be drought resistant as the weather this June and early July emptied the water butts.


My runner bean support frame was looking a bit old this year and sure enough it collapsed under the weight of a bumper crop, so I picked what I had, put the whole lot in the compost and cut the frame up for fire wood. Next year I will go for a frame made from 8’ sturdy bamboo poles with an apex and 10 strings up each side. One of the big successes this year was “Cobra” climbing beans which produced a massive crop of long French green beans, so there will be 10 plants up one side of the frame and 10 “Scarlet Emperor” runner beans up the other side. The trench is already dug and filling up with garden and kitchen compost. I will empty a compost bin into it in April, rake over the top soil and erect the frame ready for planting in May. “Rocket” will definitely be the early potato of choice next year. They are the earliest of the earlies and produce a good crop of scab free white tubers with a decent flavour. They also produced second prize at the October show so the decision is made. The other discovery this year is that “Oarsman” leeks knock the spots of the autumn giants I have been growing for years. I ordered them by mistake only to find that they are longer, thicker and can produce a much better blanch length.... plus first prize!! Everything else will be the same in the veggie patch next year with the exception of the “Aperitif” tomatoes which were a total failure. These are a new hybrid and touted by the seed producers as the sweetest tomato. However, hormonal damage and blight finished them off before I could pick any.

So my mind is nearly made up about the seed order but I will wait awhile before placing it. Then the seeds will go in a large glass jar with a screw top to keep them dry, but not the leeks. Remember that it is 40 weeks from sow to show so they will be sown in December. For those of you who like to grow giant onions, they should get under way in December as well.

Also next year I will be more ruthless with my apples. The young Braeburn produced a mass of blossom this year and thousands of small fruits. I thinned out 95% of them but still ended up with a lot of small apples. I will thin them out by July after the “June Drop” to give them time to grow to size by the end of October.

Make the most of the winter months to work out your plans for next year....remember that gardening is meant to be fun, if it’s not you are doing it wrong. Time to put another log on the fire and while I’m up I will get a “frosty” from the fridge...... I do enjoy gardening!!

We are always looking for new members and try to encourage a fun attitude towards friendly competition. So if you want to grow your own fruit, vegetables and flowers or even enter any of the 3 shows we hold each year, then please get in touch, we would be happy to hear from you.

If you are interested in becoming a new member, (all ages are welcome), please contact Rosey on: 01634 377812 (evenings) or Email: rosemary@ringwoodaccounting.co.uk

Sean Barry - Upchurch Horticultural Society
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Saturday, 11 November 2017

Latest POLICE.UK Crime Data for the Area - September 2017

Hartlip, Newington and Upchurch

Here is a brief summary of the crime information for the past 2 months:
August 2017September 2017
All crime4532
Anti-social behaviour108
Bicycle theft00
Burglary31
Criminal damage and arson135
Drugs00
Other crime03
Other theft22
Possession of weapons10
Public order12
Robbery00
Shoplifting10
Theft from the person00
Vehicle crime32
Violence and sexual offences119
Please visit: www.police.uk for more information including outcomes for these crimes and contact information for your local policing team.

Lower Halstow and Iwade


Here is a brief summary of the crime information for the past 2 months:
August 2017September 2017
All crime3441
Anti-social behaviour1015
Bicycle theft01
Burglary14
Criminal damage and arson13
Drugs00
Other crime00
Other theft10
Possession of weapons00
Public order33
Robbery00
Shoplifting00
Theft from the person00
Vehicle crime61
Violence and sexual offences1214
Please visit: www.police.uk for more information including outcomes for these crimes and contact information for your local policing team.

Upchurch Matters
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New Armistice Day - Remembrance Sunday Memorial


Click picture to enlarge.


A surprise new Armistice Day - Remembrance Sunday Memorial to the villagers who lost their lives during the WW1 and WW2 conflicts appeared yesterday, wrapped around the Upchurch village sign.

Friends and family gathered on the corner of Horsham Lane yesterday evening, Friday the 11th of November to see the new Memorial fitted by father and son, Peter and Paul Boakes and staff from Boakes Joinery.

Each of the 39 poppies has on it one name of the deceased and the conflict in which they died.

The plaque reads:

“A TRIBUTE TO

The Brave Souls from Upchurch

That made the Ultimate Sacrifice”

In addition, a single memorial poppy to George Willson Sellen who died during The Boer War has been added to the bus shelter.



Click picture to enlarge.





Upchurch Matters
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