Happy New Year!

A very Happy New Year to everyone – may it be a good one for you!  Here are a few dates to put in your shiny new 2015 diary.

We love puddings!

We love puddings!

The first big FVA event in 2015 will be the much-anticipated Fearnan Pudding Night on Saturday 21st February at 6pm in the village hall. It’s a great celebration of home-made puddings from warm winter puddings just out the oven, through to elegant desserts to make your mouth water. Last year we had a record 31 different puds, all baked by our volunteers.  Will the record be broken this year? Come along and find out; there’s something for everyone, including gluten-free and even low calorie puddings (well, sort of), fantastic live music, and all you can eat for £7 pp (half price for school age children).

The FVA AGM will be held on 14th March at 4.30pm in the village hall, and Coffee Mornings will start again on Tuesday 17th March at 10.30am.

But there’s lots happening in the village hall between then and now:images

Tai Chi starts on Wednesday 14th January at 2pm. The cost is £5 per class.  Just turn up on the day, or contact Karen on 830548 for more info.

thThe Fearnan Book Club will meet for the first time on Tuesday 13th January at 7pm for a general chat about books and a reading list for the club. Again, please just turn up, or contact Graham on graham_liney@icloud.com, or on 830727. Jason is keen to start a Chess Group, so please contact him on the same phone number if you would be interested in joining.

imagesIf you’re feeling creative, the Fearnan Art Club meets weekly in the hall on a Monday from 1pm – 3pm (2 – 4pm in the summer).

images-2And there’s an open invitation to everyone to come and play Carpet Bowls on Monday evenings from 8 – 10pm. Contact Angela on 830619, or a.kininmonth@talk21.com, if you would like more information.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

December Update

This month we cover a seasonal event in the village, the ancient art of Tai Chi and some cutting edge broadband technology. Not a bad mix!

images-1The Christmas decorations came out for the first time this year at the beginning of December to decorate the village hall for the Mulled Wine and Mince Pies event. Along with some Christmas music, this all helped to set the atmosphere for an enjoyable and relaxed event.

IMG_9731Peter, proving that he has a steady hand, served the mulled wine, while Sue and Julia looked after the eats.

The event was well attended, and thanks to everyone’s generosity, we will be able to make a significant donation to the hall funds.

Happy, smiley people.

Happy, smiley people.

Julia, sporting some seasonal earings.

Julia, sporting some seasonal earrings.

Many thanks to everyone who helped set up the hall before the event and to clear up afterwards.

Tai Chi: The Hall Committee is keen to encourage new activities in the village hall and a number of people have expressed interest in joining a Tai Chi class. Originally developed as a martial art in 13th-century China, Tai Chi is practised today around the world as a health-promoting exercise. Studies have shown that it can help people of all ages to improve balance and general mobility, increase muscle strength in the legs and reduce stress.

Tai Chi classes will start in the hall on the 14th and 28th January at 2pm, weather permitting, and the cost per class will be £5.  If you’re interested, or would like to find out more, please contact Karen on 830548, or info@abs-scotland.co.uk.

Broadband: As we all know only too well, broadband provision is poor and very slow in Fearnan and although the Digital Scotland project is bringing an improved service to many parts of rural Scotland, we are not likely to benefit from this in the Loch Tay area. However, another possibility is being actively explored, and Loch Tay Internet is a project of the Ardeonaig and Ardtalnaig Community Association.

At a recent meeting at the Big Shed, the project managers explained that, through the project, High Speed Broadband will be brought to the lochside by radio waves, rather than through the normal phone lines. Starting in Spring 2015, the original signal will come from Pitlochry and then be relayed by microwave technology to Ardeonaig and Ardtalnaig.  Each property on the system will have a small aerial attached to a high point on the building to receive the signal.  Initially, the signal will be beamed to Lawers and can then be sent criss-crossing across the loch as often as required. It is described as ‘line of sight provision’ and requires a clear view of the loch without too many trees, or a high point on the building that will provide this.

There is a one-off set up cost and then monthly costs.  The proposed set up cost is £149.99 and a 2MB facility would typically cost £14.99 per month thereafter, with options for faster speeds up to a maximum download speed of 50MB. The company provides all the necessary hardware.  The initial contract can be as short as 12 months, with no exit fee.

It is hoped that that facility can be extended to other communities around the lochside, such as ours, and if you would like to register your interest or discuss it further, the contact names are:

Phil Simpson at the Ardeonaig and Ardtalnaig Community Association (phil.simpson@abernethy.org.uk), and David Tomlinson at  David.Tomlinson@abinternet.co.uk.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Talking about Fearnan – A Visit from Annabelle

In a recent article in the “Talking about Fearnan” series, brief mention was made of the Tinkers who used to travel around the Fearnan area. This week we are delighted to publish another contribution from Alistair Barnett, writing from his home in Victoria, in which he paints a more detailed picture of the itinerant families and characters who were once so much a part of rural life.

Alistair’s memoir, Fearnan…a Refuge in the Storm was one of the most popular articles we have published on the web site.

******

Thistle Cottage: A Visit from Annabelle:

“The tinkers maybe have been unwashed rouges and vagabonds

but I miss them sorely.” (S.P.B Mais)

It’s an unusually grey autumn day here in Victoria and just after breakfast I reached for a book, any book that might lift the gloom on such a day. There it was: The Happiest Days of My Life, by SPB Mais, a prolific author and well-known broadcaster, particularly during WW2.

The delightfully eccentric Mr. Mais wrote the book in the spring of 1953 — the year of the Queen’s Coronation — at Fortingall Hotel. It was also the year I was privileged to work for the celebrated owner and gastronomic genius at the hotel, William (Bill) Heptinstall.

It was April, and I vividly recall the rotund Mr. Mais sweltering, red-cheeked under a deerstalker hat, Sherlock Holmes’ coat and seven waistcoats, each one a different bright colour, pressing on wearily toward the hotel, having spent the day hiking through Fearnan and around Glen Lyon gathering material for his book.

It became a ritual for me to watch for him from the front steps of the hotel every afternoon and, as he passed the last thatched cottage with his family straggling behind, he’d wave and his inimitable broadcasters’ voice would resonate throughout the village:  “My Pimms Alastair, where is my Pimms please?”  We had always to have cucumber and fresh mint on hand to garnish his favourite cooler. He was also known to frequently make a stopover at the Tigh-an-Loan Hotel for refreshment, after which he’d enjoy standing on the hotel pier watching Lucy Butters’ three white ducks bobbing about on a stormy loch.

Whilst thumbing through his book for the zillionth time this morning, I came across a passage in which S.P.B. (Stuart. Petre. Brodie.) expresses his disappointment at the disappearance of the local tinkers. (With respect for today’s “political correctness” now known as “Travelers.)” He writes :

”…In the old days there was always a camp of tinkers here, one of whom, a drunken old reprobate, used to parade up and down outside the hotel playing the pipes until he had collected enough money to slake – or partially slake – an almost insatiable thirst. The tinkers maybe have been unwashed rouges and vagabonds but I miss them sorely. Where are they now? All dressed up and washed by a robotic Welfare State? Perhaps. Less happy? Without a shadow of doubt. Let those whose heritage is nomadic remain nomads, say I. What matters a poached salmon here and there?”  [1]

The passage brings back memories of days when I’d spend time with the tinkers on the shore between the school at Fearnan and Corriegorm. I remember as a very young boy trauchling home from the school; there was a grassy plateau on the loch shore where the tinkers pitched canvas tents over arched hazel branches while they prepared to spend a few days in the area selling assorted wares to the villagers out of old worn suitcases.

The “wares” consisted mostly of reels of thread, buttons and sewing needles and assorted combs and the like. Nowadays it would be considered silly but, in those dark days of war, a visit from anyone outside the village was an event and, to my eight-year-old eyes, when a tinker’s case was opened at the door, it was an ecstatic glimpse into Aladdin’s cave filled with an array of colourful treasures.

When a tinker knocked on the door of Thistle Cottage I would feverishly tug mother’s apron and whisper, “ask if she has any sweetie coupons.” It wasn’t unusual to exchange a tin can of brewed tea or some eggs for coupons. But I knew better than to ask when it was Nancy McGregor at the door, because Nancy was a tinker who seemed to be nursing a new baby every time she showed up. I soon learned as her brood grew, so did their appetite for sweets. She never did part with any of her coupons.

But I loved when Annabelle came hobbling round with the help of an old knobby walking stick. “Annie” was ancient, all wrapped up in a tattered tartan blanket with only her brown wrinkly face and some wisps of white hair showing. We could always rely on Annie to offer her sweetie coupons in exchange for some treat. Frail and exhausted she would collapse onto a chair inside the entrance where she would remain until mother brought her a cup of tea

Annabelle reminded me of a kindly old witchy character from one of my storybooks. I couldn’t take my eyes off her. Every time before she tottered off, she would struggle to her feet, reach down and with a toothless smile, pat my head.

Isn’t it remarkable that such a simple kind act is remembered with fondness over a lifetime?

It was later, when we moved briefly to Balnearn, I would have to pass the tinkers’ camp. I say, “have to” because initially these travelers and their dogs terrified me and I would run as fast as I could in the hopes they wouldn’t notice me passing along the road. Often they would spot me when the dogs barked and they’d call out and wave for me to climb down the slope to their smoke-shrouded encampment.

Eventually, once I realized they were friendly and had no intention of running off with me, I’d venture down the embankment to the loch. I’d pat the Shetland ponies tethered nearby and the tinkers would sit me down by the open wood-fire and demonstrate how they wove a whole range of willow baskets. Once completed the baskets would be dipped halfway into a cauldron of either boiled brambles or raspberries and emerge with the lower half tinted a brilliant blue or red. Ingenious.

It was autumn. I ran down the hill from Balnearn on my way to school. I trudged along the road eager to wave to my friends. I stopped and looked over the bank to the grassy plateau below; only a ring of charred stones remained. As if by magic everyone had disappeared.

I never knew where they went and I missed them.

******

Thank you for accompanying me on my little jaunt down Memory Lane. I hope Fearnan is bathed in all its brilliant and sunny autumn glory.

Note: Two books I’ve read (for those interested in the lives of long ago tinkers): Red Rowan & Wild Honey and The Yellow on the Broom – both written by real-life “Traveler” Betsy Whyte.

[1] Quotes from “Happiest Days” printed with permission from the Mais family.

Thank YOU, Alistair, for sharing your memories with us!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 4 Comments

Fearnan Book Club

th At the recent meeting about the village hall, a proposal was made for a Book Club in Fearnan.

The idea would be for the club to have an initial meeting to agree a list of books and then to meet a couple of times a month in the hall. Graham Liney is keen to find out how much interest there might be in this suggestion and would like to try to have the initial meeting before Christmas so that club members can add the books to their Christmas list.th-2

If you would like to join the group, or find out more, then please contact Graham as soon as possible on 830727, or graham_liney@icloud.com

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Fearnan Service of Remembrance

IMG_9609Last Sunday, on a bright November morning, a group of around 50 people gathered at the Fearnan War Memorial for a short Service of Remembrance.

The group included current and former residents of the village, along with others who have family connections with Fearnan and had travelled especially for the event.

IMG_9616

Following the service and the Two Minute Silence, wreaths were laid at the Memorial by Ian McGregor and Ian Marshall.

Fearnan Memorial commemorates 8 men from the village who lost their lives in the Great War and, in this centenary year, they were very much in our thoughts.

Over the last few months, we have been trying to find out more about these local men, and are pleased to have been able to trace photographs of all but one of them. Six of the photos, which have been featured on this blog in the past, have been framed:

IMG_9638

Clockwise from top left: Driver John Laughlan Fraser, Royal Artillery; Private Malcolm Fraser, Scots Greys; Private Duncan Fraser, Scots Guards; Private Hugh Cowan, Royal Scots Fusiliers; Private Peter Matheson, Black Watch; Corporal Duncan Matheson, Highland Light Infantry.

Private James Dewar

Private James Dewar

Missing from this picture are Private James Dewar, Scots Guards and Private Duncan McPhail, also of the Scots Guards. For a long time we were unable to trace any information about them but, very shortly before the Service of Remembrance,  the Local and Family History Unit in Perth and Kinross Council identified James Dewar as the son of Mrs and the late Peter Dewar, who lived at Drummond Cottage, Keltneyburn.

They also found a photograph of Private Dewar.

After the service, everyone walked up the hill (or took advantage of a lift!) to the village hall where Fearnan Village Association served home-made soup, rolls and tea.

IMG_9625Two special guests were Suzie Mills and her mother Lindsay, who had travelled from Hamilton to join us.  Suzie is the great, great-niece of the Matheson brothers who are commemorated on the memorial, and had got in touch with us after finding the Fearnan blog on the internet.

The Matheson’s family home was Rock Cottage, and Christopher Rowley – also a former resident of Rock Cottage – had a long chat with them about the cottage and what it would have been like when their family lived there. Suzie and Lindsay are pictured above.

Through the Fearnan blog, we have also been able to put Suzie in touch with another member of her extended family – another descendent of the Mathesons – who had got in touch with us after reading about our research into the men on the memorial. We wrote about this in January this year – read the entry here

IMG_9636Of considerable interest to those attending the event in the hall was the collection of World War One Memorabilia kindly lent for display in the hall last Sunday by Linda and Alistair.

A collection for Help for Heroes made just under £100 – thank you to everyone for your generosity.

And finally, a date for your diary – we will be serving Mulled Wine and Mince Pies in the village hall on Saturday 6th December at 3.30pm. All welcome!

 

 

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Talking about Fearnan – The Horn Carver

Cameron Thomson (Picture by Polly Pullar)

Cameron
(Picture by Polly Pullar)

Countryman, mole catcher, gardener, fencer, school bus driver, fiddle-maker – but perhaps Cameron Thomson is best known as the Horn Carver at Lawers. This month we talked to Cameron for our occasional series Talking About Fearnan.

Cameron was born and brought up on a farm in Aberdeenshire and came to the Fearnan area in the early 1960’s, via the Kindrogan estate at Kirkmichael, where he worked as a handyman and gardener.

From boyhood, he had always enjoyed carving and making things, often getting into trouble from his mother for making a mess by whittling the sticks in the log basket by the fire.

Inviting

Around the time that he came to Fearnan, he decided that he wanted to make more of his hobby, and have a proper workshop along with a showroom from which to sell his horn carvings. The Old Toll House at Lawers, which was lying vacant and semi-derelict, was ideally placed on the lochside road so he approached its owner. The deal he struck with the farmer was a price of £10, plus annual farm work. This proved to be a real bargain, as the farmer moved away after the first year and so the second part of the contract was cancelled!

Cameron set about renovating the Toll House. It was full of hay and slag, and was home to rats and some chickens. Unbeknownst to Cameron, there were some other, more transient residents. The cottage, in its derelict state, had long been providing a sleeping place for the Tinkers, or Travellers, who moved around Highland Perthshire plying their trade as tinsmiths. For nearly a year after its purchase, weary figures would turn up around dusk expecting a good night’s sleep in the hay – only to find they were out of luck and had to continue on their way.

Whilst Cameron was very proud of his renovations, the Tinkers were less impressed. One of them curtly informed him that he had “ruined the place”!

Busy in the workshop

Busy in the workshop

Cameron’s late wife, Martha, had been concerned about this new venture. It was a big undertaking, how would he keep it stocked? And who would come to buy? However, all doubts started to fade after the first day’s trading, when they realised they had taken the equivalent of a week’s wages across the counter in a single day.

 

Cameron Thomson at work 1It was visitors to the area, rather than locals, that were his main customers and they came to buy crooks, horn buttons, egg and porridge spoons, shoehorns, buckles, lamps, crooks, whistles and more, all carved from antlers, sheep or cow horn. Over the years, his work has featured almost every bird and animal from Scotland. Although the main tourism season was the busiest time, visitors to the shop would often order something specific to be made, and these orders kept him going up to Christmas.

Cameron is particularly adept at carving crooks from ram’s horns, which he would combine with hazel shafts gathered in the woods around Loch Tay. Over the years he has received a number of special commissions for his crooks, including one for the Bishop of Sudan and one made for a former Prime minister of Australia who was visiting Castle Menzies.

Cameron-Horse234His skill in carving is not confined to horn. A fiddle player himself, he has made more than 20 beautiful fiddles and of all the things he has made, he is particularly proud of a model of a horse and cart carved from a single piece of wood.

As befits a fiddle maker, Cameron has always had many strings to his bow. One important role was to be the driver of the school bus for a period of some 27 years, starting early in the morning to bring the older children from along the lochside into Fearnan, where they were able to pick up a bus to the secondary school in Aberfeldy; then collecting and taking the wee ones to Fearnan Primary School. He remembers some of the bad winters, when the snow fell heavily and the snowplough piled big heaps on the verges, making the road to Lawers more like a bob sleigh run.

It has to be said that not everyone was overly pleased to see the school bus approaching! More than one child boarded the bus in trepidation at the prospect of his or her first day at school. In one extreme case, after all methods of persuasion had been tried, the child in question had to be left behind, screaming and kicking in the middle of the road. The bus had to leave so that the rest of the pupils got to school on time.

Cameron thoroughly enjoyed his role driving the school bus; he knew all of the children’s names and would hear their news and stories of what had happened in school that day. His favourite time of year was always the period leading up to Christmas when the children were learning Christmas Carols in class. On those wintry afternoons, as it wove its way along the side of the loch, the bus would be filled with the sound of their young voices, practising their newly learned Carols.

It was a sad day, in March 1968, when the falling roll meant that Fearnan School had to close. However, in his speech marking the last day, the minister quipped that it was thanks to the efforts of the (many) McLarens that the school had managed to keep going for as long as it did!

After this, Cameron continued driving the school bus for the few remaining pupils, but took them to Kenmore Primary instead.

Still busy

Still busy making crooks (Picture by Polly Pullar)

Cameron will be 90 next year but is still very active, and despite having cut back a bit, he continues to help maintain 4 gardens and undertakes a whole range of handyman projects.

He still catches moles, but not as many as in the days when he was contracted by the Ministry of Agriculture to trap moles on some 1100 acres of farmland round the loch.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

Improved Emergency Support in Fearnan

Fearnan has just taken delivery of its own Public Access Defibrillator. A defibrillator is used to administer an electric shock to a person who is having a cardiac arrest and Fearnan’s defibrillator is designed to allow non-medical personnel to use it and save lives.

Pat Menzies (First Responders Team) and Graham Liney (Hall Committee) with the Defibrillator

Pat Menzies (First Responders Team) and Graham Liney (Hall Committee) with the Defibrillator

The defibrillator is located at the village hall and can be used by any member of the public. A computer inside the defibrillator analyses the patient’s heart rhythm and determines if a shock is required to save the victim. If a shock is required, the defibrillator uses voice instructions and visual prompts to guide the user through the process of saving the person’s life.

There are 2 defibrillators in this area which were funded by wind farm money. The other one is located at Highland Safaris and more are planned for the future.

It is now widely recognised that lives can be saved if communities have the right equipment and people with basic life-saving skills on the spot. This is particularly important in rural communities, and this development means that Fearnan is now benefitting from both the availability of a defibrillator as well as the Community First Responders Scheme.

A Community First Responder is a member of the public who volunteers to help their community by responding to medical emergencies while the ambulance is on its way.

A training exercise for some of the First Responders

A training exercise for some of the First Responders

They are trained by the Scottish Ambulance Service in a wide range of emergency skills, and use equipment such as automatic external defibrillators and oxygen therapy.  They are able to provide an early intervention in situations such as a stroke, cardiac arrest or asthma attack and provide life saving treatment to people who are critically ill within the community, in the minutes prior to the arrival of an ambulance.

There are two First Responder teams on Loch Tayside, identified as North and South Loch Tay to the Ambulance Service. Fearnan is covered by the North Team (LT2 ) who take turns on a rota to respond to calls. Once a member of the public has called an ambulance, the Ambulance Control Centre will identify incidents that are appropriate for a First Responder to attend, and then contact the ‘on-call’ First Responder. Our First Responders are:

Pat Menzies, Caroline Pearce, Julie Riddell, Gordon Meek, Gavin Dot, Liz Stott, James Stott, and Ewan Weir.

More volunteers are being sought for the scheme, and if you are interested and have the time and energy, then please contact Ewan Weir on 830213.

The defibrillators and First Responders are important developments for our community, and will provide support in the minutes before an ambulance arrives. Anyone experiencing a medical emergency should still dial 999 to call out an ambulance, which will be despatched by the Ambulance Control Centre.

Next time you’re passing the village hall, please check out the defibrillator – it’s on the wall by the door. There will be leaflet drop about it round the village and a training session held locally.

Fearnan Service of Remembrance

The Remembrance Service will be held at the War Memorial on Sunday 9th November, followed by home made soup and a roll in the village hall.  Please gather at the War Memorial at 10.50am.  If you would like a lift from the village hall car park to the memorial, please be in the car park for 10.40 am

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | Leave a comment

October Update

Tall Tales at the Coffee Morning!

IMG_9521Around 20 folk dropped in to the October Coffee Morning this week.

Neil and Victor

Neil and Victor

They included former Fearnan resident Victor Logan, who was staying in the village for a few days.

Victor was well known for his amazing memory and ability to entertain gatherings with his stories in verse. He didn’t let us down this time and, before leaving, he recited the tale of Sam the Plumber, of his sad demise, and the curious circumstances of the empty coffin!

A salutary tale for any funeral cortege that might be tempted to stop off at the pub on the way to the burial!

348974Your Village Hall Needs You!

It’s times like Tuesday’s Coffee Morning – enjoying the chance to meet for coffee, chat with friends and renew old acquaintances – that the importance of having our own venue in the village becomes really clear. The village hall is a huge asset for the community, and Karen Bennett has asked us to pass on this important message:

Over the last couple of years, many of the long-standing committee members have stepped down from the Hall Committee and we have experienced a decline in user groups. McLean Hall needs new ideas and committee members to move the Hall forward and encourage new user groups.

At the moment, we have the Art Club on a Monday afternoon and Carpet Bowls on a Monday night (new members always welcome!), and the FVA Coffee Mornings, Pudding Nights etc.

The question is – what would you like to see at the Hall – Tai Chi? Zumba? A Craft Club? The Hall is one of the village’s best assets and it needs the input and help of the village to survive.

IMG_0286There will be an informal open afternoon on Sat 1st November at 2pm. Come along and learn more about the history of the Hall, or tell us your ideas over a cup of tea and cake.

If you are unable to attend and wish to put forward an idea – or better still, get involved – please call Karen on 830548.

Sadly, we are also losing our Caretaker, Elizabeth. If anyone is interested in taking on this role, please contact Karen on the above number.

 

And finally…………..The Fish Man!

If you enjoy a nice piece of fresh fish for your tea, then you could be in luck! The Fish Man comes through Fearnan on a Friday between 2.30 and 3pm to call on a couple of customers, but would be willing to stop off in the Hall car park for a short while if there is sufficient demand. He has a range of fresh fish in the van, but if you are looking for something special or specific, it can be ordered in advance. If you think this is a service you might like to use, please let Karen know on 830548.

 

The next event in the FVA calendar is the Service of Remembrance at the War Memorial at 11.00 am on Sunday 9th November. We will be serving soup and a roll in the Hall afterwards and will have a small display of WW1 memorabilia. Transport will be provided from the Hall car park to the War Memorial – more details nearer the time.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

September Update

IMG_9471Autumn is creeping in, the colours of the leaves are starting to change and there’s an excellent crop of brambles ripening alongside the paths .

After a break for the summer, the FVA Coffee Mornings resumed this month with a well-attended and very sociable event last Tuesday.

There was a seasonal touch to the goodies on offer, with plum and ginger cake and late-harvest strawberry jam in addition to scones, fresh warm pancakes, chocolate cake and savouries.

As well as many of our regulars, we were pleased to welcome a group of hungry walkers who had already been out on Drummond Hill.

The group meets regularly and had planned this particular walk to coincide with the Coffee Morning which provided the opportunity to enjoy a coffee and some home baking at the end of their walk.

Some members of the walking group

Some members of the walking group

A copy of the Fearnan School photo from the early 1950’s that was featured in a recent post was also on display to see if anyone could supply the two names that are still missing.  We now have names for all the children except the first names of the two Gray brothers.  Can anyone help with this?

Fearnan School Pupils, Early 1950's

Fearnan School Pupils, early 1950’s

Back row, left to right: Elizabeth Robertson, Iain Grindlay, Elizabeth Grindlay, Elizabeth Campbell (now McLaren), Isabel McLaren, Iain Barnett, ? Gray, Douglas Grindlay, Archie McLaren.

Front row, left to right: Isabel Robertson, Chick McLaren, Elizabeth Dick, Davy Campbell, Cathy McDougall, ? Gray, Cathy Dorward, Teddy Dorward, Ally Grindlay.

Teacher: Miss Maynard

Very few of the children are still in the area but Elizabeth McLaren (back row, fourth from left) is one of the exceptions. She was at the coffee morning and enjoyed seeing the photo again after so many years.

We’d love to hear from anyone who can tell us what happened to any of these children or where they are now.  Even better, we’d love to hear from some of the children themselves if they happen to be readers of this blog!

The next Coffee Morning is on Tuesday 14th October at 10.30 in the village hall.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Noticeboard

A couple of requests for information/help have come into the Fearnan blog this week, and details are below.

Rose wrote:

Does anyone have photos of the adventure playground the Engineers sub-unit from the University of London Officer Training Corps built at the back of the village hall in July 1989?”

If you can help, or know who might have photos, please reply to arielaria@hotmail.com

Carol wrote:

“I own a holiday rental property in Fearnan and am looking for someone to take on the management of the bookings for the house (which would also mean finding a cleaner and managing the laundry, changeovers, etc). If I can’t find anyone to do this, I will manage the bookings myself but would need a very reliable cleaner who would be willing to change beds, co-ordinate with a laundry, etc.“

If you know someone who would be interested in this opportunity, please reply to carol.scambler@virgin.net

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment