Tuesday, 28 July 2009

Oh, I Do Like To Be Beside The...

Once more unto the beach

Drum rolls may not have accompanied the opening of Blackpool’s latest ‘exciting’ new development, but one certainly hopes the stupendous event was met with an array of rolled eyes.

Talk about shifting sands, but the English seaside resort, famed for its Eiffelesque tower, its seafront entertainment, and, well, its beach has opened its latest must-have attraction for resort junkies – a brand new, er... beach.

Surely Blackpool already has a beach? Well, yes, but the apparatchiks heading up the urban regeneration company ReBlackpool, one of a plethora of quangos tasked with spending money ‘revitalising’ and ‘regenerating’ Britain’s towns and cities, clearly thought that nature’s sandy offering just wasn’t good enough.

The problem was tides. That dastardly natural phenomenon meant that Blackpool beach was inundated by the sea twice – twice! – a day. Something had to be done. Now, ReBlackpool must have done its homework, or at least heard about old King Canute, so they didn’t try that little number. If the sea can’t be kept at bay, then let’s take the beach from the sea.

So, the organisation spent £45,000 to create an artificial beach, 180 metres long, on St Chads headland. They shifted 5,000 tonnes of local sand from nature’s beach to the man-made imitation, so the existing sand can’t have been that bad.

Here’s how the organisation’s chief executive, Doug Garrett, enthused about the cloned beach: “This new beach will offer a unique opportunity to residents and visitors to enjoy the thrills and spills of beach volleyball, football and basketball regardless of whether the tide is in or out. We lose the beach twice every day because of the tides – but this beach on the prom will put an end to that and allow people to play sports or relax in the sand as and when they want to.”

Hurrah for human ingenuity, then, not to mention the largesse of quangocrats with a blank government chequebook to underwrite another meaningless gimmick – what would poor old Joe Public do without them!

So much for PR-newspeak, but surely one of the essentials of the beach resort experience are the tides? In any case, wouldn’t the money have been better spent on boosting the attractions and entertainment on the seafront; the traditional way of enjoying a resort while the tide is in? Perhaps such a question reveals just why this grizzled old hack isn’t a regeneration apparatchik with a small fortune to spend.

Still, at least the local feline population will be pleased with the new toilet facilities, then again perhaps not. The bill for the beach includes two machines intended to clean the sand on a daily basis. ReBlackpool has clearly thought of everything.

For those of a certain generation, they might recall Neil Kinnock’s unfortunate sandy fall from dignity when he stumbled on a beach in front of the nation’s TV news cameras. That was when he was the leader of the Labour Party back in the 1980s. One wonders if it was why ReBlackpool invited Glenys Kinnock to open the beach on the 9 July.

The Europe Minister was perhaps considered more likely to maintain her footing than her husband as she cut the ribbon.

Blackpool’s beach mk II is billed as a 24-hour-a-day attraction, and will be kept open for six weeks. The beach will be dismantled on the 17 August to make way for the beach volleyball CEV European Championship Tour and the English Masters tournament, which is being held on the promenade from 10-13 September.

When the sandy beach finally shuffles away, however, it might only be a temporary absence; the regeneration company says it will be assessing the beach to test the feasibility of rebuilding it on a permanent basis in the future. So, there is more to beach mkII than “fun, games and relaxation” – but also a serious measure to study the effects of “wind and traffic movements on the sand”. ReBlackpool also want to study how “the public interact with and use the beach”. So, they’re building sandcastles, then?

Quite why they couldn’t use nature’s offering to study how people “interact” with the sand is another matter. Oh yes, blast – those damnable tides might wash the clipboards away. Life is such a beach.

MC

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Category: NEWS

Sunday, 26 July 2009

Stony Offerings

Get stony in Limerick

As part of the preparations for the annual Cuisle – Limerick City International Poetry Festival – the editors of The Stony Thursday Book are calling for submissions from poets the world over.

The next issue of the journal is to be published as part of Cuisle in October and the deadline for receiving poetry submissions is 10 August 2009. The festival will run from the 14th to the 17 October 2009.

This year’s edition of The Stony Thursday Book will be edited by Ciaron O’Driscoll who was born in Co. Kilkenny in 1943 and who lives in Limerick. He published eight books of poetry and has won a number of awards for his work, among them the Patrick & Katherine Kavanagh Fellowship in Poetry. In 2007, he was elected to Aosdána.

The Stony Thursday Book is said to be one of the longest-running literary journals in Ireland and celebrated its 30th anniversary edition in 2005. The journal was founded by Limerick poets John Liddy and Jim Burke in 1975. Since then it has also been edited by Mark Whelan, Kevin Byrne, Partrick Bourke and Knute Skinner and Thomas McCarthy.

To submit to the latest issue, send no more than six poems by post to: The Stony Thursday Book, The Arts Service, Limerick City Council, City Hall, Merchant’s Quay, Limerick. Ireland. Or by email to artsoffice@limerickcity.ie (mark in the subject line for The Stony Thursday Book). Each page of the submission must bear the author’s name and address.

Cuisle 2009 is the 12th festival in Limerick, celebrating local, national and international excellence in poetry, the organisers say. Over the four days of the event, poets from all over the world will visit the city, and there will be a host of book readings, discussions groups, and workshops with leading poets.

MC


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Category: SUBMISSIONS

Friday, 24 July 2009

Reading With Fire

Yorkshire Monkey gets the verse

One of Barnsley’s oldest established country pubs is hoping that a regular fireside gathering of poets and poetry will entice a few extra punters out for a pint.

The Monkey, formerly known as the Eastfield Inn, on Hollingmoor Lane, Thurgoland, is running The Poetry Fireside Hour on the last Wednesday of every month. The sessions are free, and anyone who wants to attend to just listen, or take part, are advised to arrive by 8.45pm. The poetry runs from 9pm to 10pm.

“Local poets and lovers of the word are encouraged to leave the TV and computers to gather round the pub fireside and read their own poems or a favourite rhyme, song, lyric, monologue and so on,” a spokesperson said.

“The emphasis will not be on performance just a casual and comfortable read round in the cosy sofas around the welcoming fire. The evening will be hosted by local celebrity and published poet Granville Danny Clarke.”

Clarke gained his local celebrity status through his musical career with the Foggy Dew-O and art expert role on Channel 4’s ‘Watercolour Challenge’.

MC

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Category: NEWS

Thursday, 16 July 2009

A Little Something From The Day Job

Gordon’s last stand

After the turmoil of the last two months, Gordon Brown has come out fighting to build Britain’s future, with a programme that ‘green lights’ some long-cherished elements of the housing wish list, but is this the last stand of a punch-drunk PM or a concerted no-holds barred campaign to finally make a real difference? Mark Cantrell reports


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Category: JOURNALISM

Saturday, 4 July 2009

Taste The Space

Blood sample free to taste

A free sample of Isolation Space, featuring the story One For The Road, is available to download or read online at Scribd, adding a new blood-curdling twist to vampire fiction.

The full paperback anthology features 20 short stories by UK author Mark Cantrell. The full collection presents a thrilling mix of science fiction, horror, fantasy and satire, including a number tales that take new blood to the vampiric theme.

Jim Palmer, editor of the literary magazine Writers’ Muse, said: “[I]f you’re a science fiction fanatic and hanker for the ‘Golden Age’, then you can do no better than to get hold of a copy of this book. The pieces I read took me back to the wonder I felt when I first discovered science fiction and horror. And I loved it!”

Isolation Space (ISBN: 978-1-4092-7030-0) is available from Lulu or ordered through good bookshops priced £9.99. Read the sample at Scribd, or visit Lulu to order a copy of the complete anthology.

MC

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Category: PLUGGED

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