West Yorkshire Trading Standards Scams and Fraud Online Workshop’ Monday 12th October 2020 @11am

Keep yourself up to date and safe with the latest from West Yorkshire Trading Standards. This session is open to everyone, members, neighbours, partners, friends, and volunteers. It will be an informative discussion about the latest scams and frauds with space for you to share your own experiences if you wish and to ask questions too. If you don’t have the technology yet would like to chat further about this subject then please call. If you would like to join us then email: lisa@caringtogether.org.uk or call 07436 530073and I can send you an invite nearer the time.

Beware of Covid-19 Scams | KNH

 

‘Monday Mind Workout’ – Monday 5th October 2020

Good morning,
Today’s ‘Monday Mind Workout’ is musical anagrams, good luck!
1. Acts                          
2. Vitae
3. Inane
4. Agrees                        
5. Bare Act
6. As Rebel Smiles
7. Think Legion
8. Meek as Skit
9. Flute Monthly
10. Glared Rims
11. Amigos Sins
12. Tap Preen
13. Gladly Sounds
14. Arts Expels Rights
15. Theatre Homh Oappen Oft
16. Clothe Pop Ruler
17. I Land Ad
18. Sise Wtor Ytsed
19. Rolver  i
20. Usof dnoic ums

October is Free Wills Month!

Dear all,

Below is some information on Will Month, if you wish to discuss things further then please do get in touch – we can’t offer advice but we can be a sounding board and it is confidential.  Call us on our mobile’s or leave a message on the answer machine 0113 243 0298: any one of us can help, warm regards Lisa, John and Valerie

Free Wills Month October 2020 is now live!

Some of the UK’s favourite charities have come together to sponsor Free Wills Month October 2020; giving you the chance to write or update your Will for FREE!

The solicitors have all taken steps to help keep you safe from coronavirus.

You could choose to help these fantastic charities continue to care for the sick and vulnerable, fund ground-breaking research and provide a wide range of vital public services by leaving a gift in your Will to one or more of the sponsoring charities. A gift in your Will costs nothing in your lifetime but your legacy can make a difference for generations to come.

What will your Legacy be?

Taking part in the campaign is simple:

  • Visit freewillsmonth.org.uk, enter your details and follow the instructions to select a convenient solicitor from the list provided.
  • Call the solicitor directly to make your appointment and remember to quote Free Wills Month.
  • Have your Will written in the standard way.

To make the Will writing process quicker, please take advantage of the free Will planner provided at freewillsmonth.org.uk. Complete the form and take it to your appointment for the solicitor’s attention.

The charities are paying for a limited number of Wills so all appointments are booked on a first come first served basis.

The beauty of leaving a legacy gift is that it costs you nothing now. You might be surprised how far a gift in your Will can go, even a small percentage of your estate could make a big difference.

Free Wills Month aims to cover all locations across the UK each year. If there are no participating solicitors in your area during October 2020, we may be in your area in the next campaign due March 2021.

There is no obligation to leave a gift in your Will when taking part in Free Wills Month. The campaign is intended for people aged 55 and over.

An invitation from Leeds Playhouse

Leeds Playhouse have offered some free tickets to see the dress rehearsal of Dr. Blood’s Old Travelling Show this Tuesday 6th Oct at 8.30pm!
There are a limited number of tickets available so this will be on a first come first served basis.
PLEASE NOTE: The rehearsals will be taking place outside and audience members will be standing.
Please let Valerie know if you would like tickets – valerie@caringtogether.org.uk or 07483333115.
The Playhouse will need details of your name and contact number for track and trace

Free Online Talks from British Library

 

The British Library is hosting a number of free online talks and the links for those coming up this week are below.  These are free but you would need to put in some details to register and book a place.

Mood Food: with Jack Monroe and Kimberley Wilson Sat 3 Oct 2020, 15:00 – 16:00 https://www.bl.uk/events/mood-food-jack-monroe-and-kimberley-wilson

River Cottage: More Taste, Less Waste: 2020.  Sat 3 Oct 2020, 17:15 – 18:15 https://www.bl.uk/events/river-cottage-more-taste-less-waste-2020

Cookery Book Collections  (featuring the collections from Leeds Library and Special collections from University of Leeds),  Tue 6 Oct 2020, 17:00 – 18:00  https://www.bl.uk/events/cookery-book-collections

Feeding Our Children, How our relationship with food is forged in early life, Fri 9 Oct 2020, 19:30 – 20:45 https://www.bl.uk/events/feeding-our-children-october-2020

There are also some talks on the British Library site that have a fee to attend.  There are also lots of free resources – articles, online exhibitions etc and you can find it all here: https://www.bl.uk/discover-and-learn

The Shows Must Go On – Michael Ball Past & Present

This weekend The Shows Must Go On celebrates Michael Ball’s legendary career on the West End stage and the full performance of his Past & Present show live from the Royal Albert Hall.

Join Michael Ball as he belts show-stopping hits from the musicals including Gethsemane (Jesus Christ Superstar), Empty Chairs At Empty Tables (Les Miserables) and Love Changes Everything (Aspects of Love).

Watch on YouTube

Premieres tonight (Friday 2nd Oct) at 7pm and then available for 48 hours

Headingley, Hyde Park and Woodhouse Food Bank Donation Drive

The Councillors from the Headingley & Hyde Park and Little London & Woodhouse wards are teaming up for a Food Bank Donation Drive on Sun 4th and Mon 5th October. All items donated will go to Rainbow Junktion to help people in the local area.
A message from the councillors:
🌈Rainbow Junktionhave been doing a phenomenal job for our community in keeping people fed during the Covid-19 crisis.
🥫 They rely on donations, and we have been overwhelmed by the response to the last food bank donation drives, but sadly the longer the crisis goes on the more help people need.
📦 We are teaming up to make this our biggest collection yet. 18 donation points around Headingley, Hyde Park and Woodhouse!
🕗 You will be able to drop donations off between 5pm-8pm THIS Sunday, and 9am-2pm THIS Monday.
👍🏾 If you’re financially stable and doing a shop for yourself between now and then, please consider spending a few quid on a few items to donate – or alternatively go through your cupboards and see if there’s anything you’d like to donate there!
🗺 Donation locations, which will all have a box outside to put donations in will be at;
🏠 73 Alma Road
🏡 13 Ash Grove
🏠 13 Ashwood Villas
🏡 14 Balbec Avenue
🏠 7 Beulah View
🏠 5 Blenheim Square
🏫 The Cardigan Centre
🏠 40 Eltham Drive
🏘 4 Granby Road
🏠 80 Hartley Avenue
🏘 50 Kings Road
🏠 30 Langdale Avenue
🏠 Leeds Grand Mosque
🏠 17a Moorland Avenue
🏡 20 Newport View
🏡 7 Orville Gardens
🏠 24 School View
🏠 5 Walkers Mount
🕑 At 2pm on Monday we will be going round and collecting all donations and taking them across to Rainbow Junktion. Huge thanks to those who have offered to host a donation station!
🤳🏾 Please promote this to your friends and neighbours!
Best wishes
Cllrs Akhtar, Brooks, Garthwaite, Marshall-Katung, Pryor & Walshaw

Changes to bus services from 4th October 2020

Changes to bus services from 4th October 2020 

image.png

First and Arriva are changing bus services in Leeds from Sunday 4th October due to the reopening of The Headrow in the city centre. Specific changes that will affect Leeds 16 are that the number 1 bus will terminate at Lawnswood and a new service the number 8 will service Lawnswood to Holt Park.

 

For full details of changes https://www.firstgroup.com/leeds/news-and-service-updates/planned-changes/sunday-4th-october-service-updates

 

International Day of Older People (IDOP) is today and is celebrated annually in Leeds

“This year’s theme is Age Proud: time to feel good about ageing

This theme is about celebrating ageing and challenging the perception of older age and turning the perceived negatives into positives. It is about raising awareness of the diversity of activity for older people adults across Leeds and supporting the ambition for Leeds to be the Best City to Grow Old In”

COVID-19 has really affected everyone and feeling good about ageing can be harder to imagine as it has had a huge detrimental impact on our wellbeing due to lockdown and shielding. It does feel more important than ever in light of this that we continue to celebrate IDOP in whatever ways we can that are safe and practical. As we didn’t know what the situation was going to be due to COVID-19 in October we looked at offering an online option this time in place of our usual celebrations and gathering together.Last year a large group of us were at the Vue Cinema in Leeds followed by a cuppa and discussion about the film and others we would like to watch.

For safety reasons we have not been able to host another film afternoon in person this year, yet we have been able to resume them online. The last one went well, so for October we have another film evening planned that includes sharing our early evening meal together (virtually) from the comfort of your own home. It is a secret cinema yet we hope you will enjoy the choice (from one of our members), and if not you we would love your suggestions for further film evenings. And there may be a treat delivered beforehand if you let us know you are joining us.

Early Evening Meal and Film (Virtually)  – Wednesday 7th October 2020 @ 5pm

Please email: lisa@caringtogether.org.uk or call on 07436 530073 if you wish to discuss/ or join us.

ps. If you don’t have zoom I can go through this with you, we may also be able to supply some devices for you if lacking IT devices is a problem (limited numbers on these). We are not the experts and tend to help and share our knowledge with each other and as such we do the best we can given the situation.

 

Cinema and Movie time flat icons with ... | Stock vector | Colourbox

 

 

‘Pre lockdown2 story’ written by Oliver Cross

Dear all

Last week, thinking it time to return to action, we took a ground-breaking trip to the Humber estuary. Almost immediately, the Prime Minister told us that the policy on breaking ground had been revised and we had better get back behind the barricades, or at least the facemasks.

We had been on a guided tour of Spurn Head, a narrow spit of land extending about three-and-a-half miles on the northern side of the Humber estuary. Both my partner Lynne and I share the belief that, as members of an island nation, we need regular trips to the seaside, where, as a bonus, fish and chips always taste better. It’s our heritage.

Not that Spurn Head has a chip shop. It has a cafe and visitor centre run by the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, a disused Victorian lighthouse, a working lifeboat station and lots of curious ruins from the First World War, when big gun emplacements, barracks and searchlights were installed to protect the vital Humber shipping lanes and then left to rot. What’s protecting Humber shipping now, I don’t know.

The ruins are now covered in low-growing scrub, the sandy land not being stable or fertile enough to support decent-sized trees. It’s an edgy, changeable place, suspended between the estuary and the North Sea and in 2013, when a tidal surge tore a huge gap in the spit, its southern tip became an island overnight, only accessible to walkers or specialist vehicles at low tide.

In our case, the specialist vehicle was a former Dutch army truck seating, according to current rules, nine on what the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust called a safari, although the largest wild beast we were likely to see was a rabbit.

Even when we climbed the many, many steps to the top of the Spurn Point lighthouse, where we might have seen many seabirds and marine creatures, the chief sight of interest turned out to be Grimsby.

And much as we admire the sea, we were in danger of overdosing on it. Estuary on one side, open sea on the other and both ready to engulf us during high tides. The flatlands of East Yorkshire and Lincolnshire don’t rise much above the sea level and the broad horizons and unconfined sea breezes all around us felt nothing at all like being locked down in Leeds, which, in retrospect, was the point of the outing.

Incidentally, among our safari group was an energetic boy, aged three or four, who charged around with great aplomb, occasionally barging into other people, as children must.

His mother, in apology, said that her boy had actually won a school merit award for his social-distancing abilities. This is how things have changed so suddenly and utterly; six months ago social distancing was an unfamiliar phrase to most grown-ups, now it’s an essential skill for children who have yet to master shoelace-tying.

Thank you Oliver, until next time…