Category Archives: Paull

What’s On? – Sat 26th May 2012

LOTS OF STUFF going on today across Holderness – and temperatures are set to soar again. A great day to be out and about! These are just some events taking place today:

  • A Parish History Day is taking place in Thorngumbald from 10am – 4pm at the Village Hall.
  • A Craft Fair takes place at Hedon Methodist Church from 9:30am – 12:30pm.
  • At South Holderness Cricket Club on Middle Lane, Hedon – with perfect spectators weather today – the An XI team take on Skidby at 2pm. v Skidby.

And if you want to finish off your sun-soaked Saturday with a bit of Entertainment, then Becky Brown is performing at the Humber Tavern in Paull and the Little Kings play at the Hare and Hounds in Burstwick.

Check out – and add your own public events – to our What’s On? guide. Have fun!

Wednesday Writings – Lost Hope

Lost Hope by Lorraine Ellis (Flo)

Disillusioned,
Dejected,
Detached from his past.
Alone,
Lost,
In a City so vast.
Dismal streets like he thought like so many before.
Where paved with gold.
A future secure.
A place of his own,
Where he could lay roots.
Rest his head,
Lay down his boots.
But here he exists in this squalid hell.
A prison cell,
A Pent house lost.
Walls close around him,
Black mildew,
Reeking of poverty.
The clock on the wall ticks
‘Let go, let go.
No one will know.
Nameless,
Faceless,
Lost,
Another John Doe…

Inert,
Silent,
An empty shell
An open door,

Bright light,
Beckoning,
A heavenly glow
Caressed in warmth,
He followed the light
He is now at peace…

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 A rather dark and yet moving piece of prose from Lorraine Ellis who is one of our regular creative Wednesday Writers.

Why not have a go at writing a short-story or poem? If you want to submit something for Wednesday Writings then e-mail it to hedonblog@gmx.com – and please put WEDNESDAY WRITINGS in the subject line.

Wednesday Writings – Life Goes On

Life Goes On – by Lorraine Florence Ellis (Flo)

The jokes were lewd, the laughter raucous, cigarette smoke hung in smoggy tendrils. Jack stared into his pint glass, his shoulders were hunched his breathing laboured.
He glanced around the crowded pub which had been his local for as long as he could remember.

He had seen many changes over the years, heard the voices of various publicans calling out last orders; and he’d watched countless barmaids pulling him his thick black stout. And then there was Candy the ‘lady’ of the night.
The first to go had been the piano which had been replaced by the jukebox.
The days of the pinball machines were also long gone, the pool table now taking pride of place in the middle of the tap room.

The girls giggle and simper in the corner and watch as the men nonchalantly balance the cue across the green felt.

Yes he had seen it all but they had always been by his side.
He recalled the first one, Bella how he had loved her and he remembered all too well the tragic road accident; so young, so young to die.
And then there was Susie, his sweet little Susie. He had felt a twinge of guilt at first, and yet he knew that Bella would’ never have wanted him to be unhappy.
Lastly there was Jenny. He had always thought that he would end his days with Jenny but sadly this was not to be. “Life goes on,” or so they keep telling him. But had the grieving period been long enough…
However he knew he wasn’t getting any younger, knew he didn’t have a lot of time left.
So why shouldn’t he? why shouldn’t he let the young lass by his side make his last few years a little more pleasurable.

He walked over to the bar. “Yes it’s a deal I’ll have her,” he said to the man in the corner.
“Well as long as she isn’t too much for you mate she’s a frisky young thing.”
“I’ll manage,” grinned the old man bending down and filling up the clean ashtray with stout for the puppy by his side.

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Inspired by Lorraine’s short story? Did you fall for the misdirection!?

 Why not have a go at writing a short-story or poem? If you want to submit something for Wednesday Writings then e-mail it to hedonblog@gmx.com – and please put WEDNESDAY WRITINGS in the subject line.

Community Fund – Yorkshire Water Waste Water Treatment Works

GRANTS from £100 – £5,000 will be made available for community projects under Yorkshire Water’s proposed new Community Fund being established to benefit Hedon, Preston, Paull and the Marfleet area of East Hull.

The first meeting to discuss the new Community Fund and establish the decision-making Committee took place last night at the Saltend Waste Water Treatment Works. While the fine details of the criteria are still being considered, the outline of the new funding stream has been agreed:

  • £50,000 will be dispensed in grants over two years – £25,000 per year (running from April – March each year).
  • Minimum grant £100 – Maximum grant £5,000.
  • Organisations will be encouraged to apply for projects that can demonstrate that they benefit people living in the following post code areas – HU9 5, HU9 4, HU12 8, HU12 9, HU11 4.
  • Grants will not be given for salaries or ongoing running costs of a project.
  • Parish and Town Councils will be excluded from applying.
  • Projects must be able to demonstrate some long-lasting benefit to communities i.e. applications for one-off events would not be supported.
  • For those groups asking for larger grants, then preference will be given to projects that also bring in additional funding from other sources. 
  • Funding ’rounds’ will be established with clear deadlines for when applications should be submitted. Each round will be 6-weeks long during which groups will be invited to make applications.

The meeting facilitated by the Yorkshire Water Community Engagement Team, was attended by Councillors from East Riding Council (South West Holderness Ward), Hedon Town Council, Preston Parish Council and Paull Parish Council. Councillors from the Hull City Council (Marfleet Ward) had been invited but did not attend. These Councillors will form the main membership of the decision-making Committee. East Riding Councillor Mike Bryan was elected its Chair. 

The Committee will meet again on the 28th May to consider the details of the criteria which will determine how applications are assessed and the guidance that will be given to those applying for funding.

The first round of the new Community Fund is not likely to be open for applications until June 2012. However, groups that already have an idea for a project can send a brief outline as an expression an interest, to Dafydd Williams from Yorkshire Water’s Community Engagement Team at e-mail: dafydd.williams@yorkshirewater.co.uk and further information and application packs can be sent out when available if applicable.

Wednesday Writings – 1971: January in June

1971: January in June by Lorraine Florence Ellis (Flo)

She was poised at the ‘cosmetics counter’ filing her pillar-boxed red nails. Two black eyes looked up at me, lashes blinking like a flurry of spiders above cheeks the colour of over-ripe pumpkins.
“Can I help you love,” she asked in a shrill piercing voice which seemed to suit her appearance. She was tall however her hairstyle made her appear taller, she wore her fair hair swept up high on the top of her head in one of the old played-out beehive styles, it was straw blonde a deep contrast to her ebony eyebrows. I discovered her name was June, but she didn’t resemble the month in any way she reminded me of early January and the discarded gaudy baubles, tinsel and gift wrap paper which grace our dustbins at that time of year, a sad remnant of Christmas past.
Her legs tottered to the front of the stall, long legs with small feet encased in shiny black patent leather. On her arm she swung her money bag it was sharp plastic like her voice like her face. She demonstrated her new line in perfume, spraying fragrant clouds into the atmosphere and it mingled with her own smell off coffee and hair lacquer. I quickly made my purchase; her hands were all finger nails as she scratched my change into my palm.
I moved away from the stall clutching my new cosmetics, wondering how I was going to get them past my Father’s eye as I stole out of the house that evening. It seemed the biggest dilemma in my world.
Continue reading

Yorkshire Water announces £50,000 Community Fund

YORKSHIRE WATER have today announced that a £50,000 Community Fund will be put in place to compensate for the problem odours that have impacted on residents during the last few years from the Waste Water Treatment Works at Saltend.

Richard Sears, Community Engagement Manager for Yorkshire Water, said: “We know that for some years the local community put up with intermittent odours from the site and we recognise that this was clearly unacceptable. Since last summer, we’ve done a huge amount of work to reduce odours at the site, including installing a state-of-the-art odour control unit which we believe will significantly help to reduce any excessive odours from the site.

“We want to be a good neighbour and this trust fund underlines our commitment to working alongside the local community and doing what we can to give something back through this £50,000 cash fund.”

A local panel is being set up which will have the final say on projects and causes that will benefit from the Community Fund. It is understood that local councillors from South West Holderness and East Hull will make up the majority of the 10-strong panel who will be meeting on the 30th April to determine ground-rules for how the fund will be operated and criteria for bidding for a share of the cash.

For the complete press release from Yorkshire Water see the article Community Fund to say ‘Sorry’ on HU12 Online.

Wednesday Writings – Mood Changes

Mood Changes – By Jo Gardner

Head in turmoil
Every-thing is black
Need a release
Found a blade
Blood oozes
Sense of relief

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Out of the blue
The laughter of child
Mellows the mood
From black to gold
Despair and hope so closely linked
Nothing beats the laughter of child

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Inspired!? If you want to submit something for Wednesday Writings then e-mail it to hedonblog@gmx.com – and please put WEDNESDAY WRITINGS in the subject line (we get lots of e-mails everyday and this makes it easier to spot).

Wednesday Writings – Washing Day

Washing Day - Lorraine Florence Ellis (Flo)

Monday is washing day. She will never forget Mondays and the endless lines of billowing washing stretching the full length of the terrace. The gossip and chit-chat beneath the tall slanting clothes props and the shouts of laughter from the turban headed woman.

The washing hung out the woman sit on the donkey stoned steps daring the rain to fall.

Monday is also the day the rent man calls, it is often a race for some of the women to quickly hang their washing out before the clock strikes one. They then retreat into their sculleries and sit there silently until the sharp raps can no longer be heard on their battered front doors; the only entrance into their two to four roomed dwellings; that often house up to ten people. Then the rain pours and whoever is in a position to pay the rent also retrieves the damp sodden washing of the lines. Arguments and trivial quarrels are overlooked and wet clothes are still brought in regardless. She recalled the time she had been a newcomer to the terrace. Some time had elapsed before she had gained the trust of its inhabitants. Until one penniless Monday her washing was bundled up and dropped in her passage. She remembered how good it felt to become accepted.

Over the years she often wondered to herself why they did not change washing day to Tuesday but Monday is washday and always will be. Tuesday the house is full of steam and drying washing, pulleys stretch from wall to wall in the small humid room. However on a good Tuesday irons are heated on the small stoves, and the dry pressed clothes are put away forgotten until the following Monday.
“Yes Monday will always be will always be washday.”

She liked it here looking out of her window she could almost hear the little children playing in the terrace; their laughter echoing in her ears. She could see the washing lines and visualize them heavy with washing, nappies swaying like white flags of peace. She knew it would not be long before the men would be home. Then the woman would abandon their places on the doorstep, all would be silent whilst meals were prepared.

Yes she liked it here it was better than that place high in the sky where there were no neighbours, no washing line’s and no friends; where the children never laughed and the rent man never visited.
She noticed that the rain had begun to fall so she ventured outside to reach for the washing line.
“Come along love” said a voice. “You’re getting soaked to the skin.”
She felt an arm around her small frame as she was gently ushered back indoors.

She returned to her seat by the window, once again lost in her memories. She turned to the Matron and smiled.
“It’s Monday,” she said with a quiver in her voice.
“It’s Monday again, washing day …..”

Inspired!? If you want to submit something for Wednesday Writings then e-mail it to hedonblog@gmx.com – and please put WEDNESDAY WRITINGS in the subject line (we get lots of e-mails everyday and this makes it easier to spot).