Caring Together will be hosting a Cancer Awareness session in partnership with the Leeds Cancer Awareness Project on Monday 12nd Nov 2020 @ 11am. This will be online and offers you a chance to chat about signs and symptoms of cancer. They will also discuss self-checking and ways to reduce cancer risk. All very informative and open to all; members, family, friends, neighbours and volunteers. If you would like to join us then please email: lisa@caringtogether.org.uk or call: 07436 530073 – if you don’t have the technology yet would like to chat further about this subject then please call.
Shared Moments: ‘Trains’ written by Maureen Kershaw
Day 158 – My escapades with air travel didn’t take long so here we are at Trains. Trains were always a fascination of mine from a very early age. Having a family car there was never the need to travel by train, but I was always nattering Mum and Dad to take me for a train ride. Living near the Leeds to Harrogate line, there were trains up and down many times a day. On a morning I would awaken to the sound of shunting at the goods yard, but the real yearning was for passenger trains. At 11.30am each day when playing out in the street or on Burley Park any of my fellow train loving chums and I would run to the wall by the ‘little bridge’. The ‘tooting’ would herald the arrival of the mighty ‘double header’ – two steam engines pulling the maroon liveried coaches on its daily journey to Newcastle. We would wave to the engine drivers and behind them, the passengers sitting at their tables on the ‘big train’. If out for a run in the car east of Leeds, we would stop at Church Fenton and watch the trains from the bridge above but Harrogate was just the best as one could go onto the platforms and if lucky would see the ‘Pullman’ parked up. To this day I’ve never experienced Pullman travel but I loved the brown and cream carriages with their curtains tied back, the tables laid with crisp white damask cloths and the table lamps with decorative shades. In those days – the 1950s – there were three classes of travel – apart from the Pullman; first class – No!, 2nd – where Dad and I would travel, and even 3rd class!
At the time Leeds had another Station besides the ‘City’ – that of the ‘Central’ on Wellington Street. The City Station was always my favourite though with its large concourse and booking hall, thankfully saved from being used an indoor car park and restored to its former glory. Where now stand the variety of eateries, then were small doorways where one would enter the particular platform needed. There were machines for platform tickets, I think it was only an old penny or maybe 2d to purchase a ticket. Also one of those machines with which to print a metal strip with your name on – or whatever one required. A red machine if I remember correctly with a sort of clockface dial but with the alphabet. One turned the handle round and then activated the machine to print. Trainspotters would buy a platform ticket, armed with their pencils and notepads and if lucky a camera, together with meals of the day as the ticket covered all day. Mainly though the ticket would enable one to bid farewell to someone taking a journey. I can remember both a joyous and sad occasion when platform tickets were purchased for a send off, even boarding until the announcement came that the train was about to depart.
I boarded a Glasgow train with Mum & Dad to send off my Sister and her family who were bound for a cruise. An educational cruise on an ex-troop ship, the “Dunera” sailing to the Med. from Greenock, the Port of Glasgow. Only a handful of general passengers taking the cruise besides the schoolchildren, the youngest passenger being my eighteen month old nephew.The crew eventually found a small enough lifejacket for John and spoiled him rotten! The sad occasion was in 1966 when I was leaving for Norway to stay with a family of Norwegian friends. Mum and Dad bought their platform tickets to bid me “Bon Voyage” on the Boat Train to Newcastle and I sat in the compartment with a couple from Ormskirk, a place I hadn’t heard of at the time but always connected with the couple when mentioned since. I say sad as Dad was dying from bowel cancer, there being no treatment then and as the train slowly pulled away we waved to each other, I was feeling upset but Dad was crying as he felt he wouldn’t see me again. He passed away shortly after I returned home.
BUT – back to trains and Boat Trains, yes they were something special in days gone by. My train to Newcastle went directly to the Tyne Commission Quay from where the ‘Fred Olsen’ ships sailed to Oslo but my travelling companions were heading for Bergen with a crossing on Bergen Line’s “Venus”. Nowadays there are no Boat Trains; if sailing from Newcastle or Hull it is a standard train with a connection to the Docks by double decker bus. As a child though listening to my Grandma speaking of her family travelling overseas from Hampshire and Surrey, their journeys always started with a Boat Train to Southampton or Tilbury Docks.
Prior to Dr Beeching closing hundreds of stations throughout the Country, so many places could be reached by steam train and I suppose the early days of ‘diesel’. Arthington, Otley, Wetherby…. but also Kirkstall. Visiting my paternal Grandma for Sunday lunch, we would catch a bus to town, take the train to Kirkstall and walk the short distance to Broadlea Crescent, returning on the 77 bus back to Burley. It all seemed so simple then – well it was. Public transport by Leeds City Transport, Sammy Ledgards Et al, with conductors to assist and calm any nonsense on board and trains run by ‘British Rail’ with their Guards and Controller lookalikes! The good old days of steam, diesels, reliable times and straightforward ticketing – ‘British Rail’!
More to follow……
Thank you Maureen for sharing your heartfelt personal moments, until next time…

Picture from https://www.pinterest.co.uk/
“Thank You Leeds”
We thought we’d share with you a letter we received from the leaders of key health and care organisations in Leeds.
There are a huge number of organisations across the city working to support the people of Leeds, and especially over this year when support has been needed more than ever and at Caring Together we have been very grateful for all the other local and citywide organisations who have helped our members when they have needed it
Thank you Leeds
Poetry Corner: ‘Time’ written by Erin Friedrichs
“What time Is it?” they want to know, and then they go away.
It’s time for bed, it’s time for work, or time to feed the fishes,
It’s time to take your medicine, or wash and dry the dishes.
Time in seconds, time in hours, so many freckles past a hair,
depending on the zone, or whether daylights savings there.
Time is measured many ways from minutes to months,
Time is what keeps everything from happening at once!
A time to live, a time to die, a time for having fun,
Clocks and calenders alike, all scheduled by the sun.
Intervals that can’t be hurried, will not be denied,
a season that we know that’s coming, as surely as the tide.
If there ever comes a time when time will be no more,
I wonder how we’ll know to quit, or when it was before.
Do we hurry? Do we loaf? It depends upon the time…
Had we started earlier, we’d be finished with this rhyme.
Source: https://www familyfriendpoems com/poem/time-8
Laser Light City – lighting up the sky in Leeds Oct 22 – 24
In 2020 Light Night Leeds is taking to the skies! Laser Light City, designed by BAFTA award-winning artist Seb Lee-Delisle, is a one-of-a-kind interactive laser show coming to the Leeds skyline on the nights of 22nd, 23rd and 24th October. The lights can be enjoyed either in person, at home, or via the online live stream, and seen for miles.

There are going to be seven different sites around the city and 24 powerful lasers mounted on roofs, or in some cases, projecting out of windows, just filling the skies with laser beams. And if you have a smartphone you could even get a chance to control the lights via a link on the website.
You can find all the details and how to take part here https://whatson.leeds.gov.uk/lightnight/all-events/laser-light-city and there will be a link on this site when the event starts to take you to the livestream
This spectacular display is the first of a series of events through Autumn and Winter
Laser Light City can be enjoyed by all ages and from wherever you are. The lasers can be seen from anywhere in the greater Leeds area; it’s best if you have a direct view of the city but you will also see them across the sky from your gardens and windows. If you need a closer view, you can watch the livestream of the lasers on the website.
Multiple sites, Leeds City Centre
Thursday 22 to Saturday 24 October
6pm to 11pm
- Parkinson Building, University of Leeds
- Merrion House (supported by Leeds City Council)
- Platform Building (supported by Reed Smith)
- Victoria Leeds Car Park (supported by Victoria Leeds)
- Wellington Place (supported by Wellington Place)
- Bridgewater Place (supported by CEG:Temple)
- The Majestic (supported by C4)
If you are seeing the lasers in person please make sure you observe social distancing and do not gather in groups with anyone outside your household. If you are at home and watching via the livestream please be aware there maybe a few seconds delay between using the controls and seeing the result, depending on the strength of your internet connection. We recommend operating the interface with your smart phone and watching the livestream on your computer.
Monday Mind Workout’ answers for Monday 19th October 2020
‘Monday Mind Workout’ Monday 19th October 2020
Caring Together Annual General Meeting
Our Annual General Meeting is this Friday – 23rd October – at 11am and this year it will be a virtual one using the Zoom platform.
We’ll be presenting our Annual Report and Accounts, telling you about what has been going on at Caring Together and our plans for the future.
We hope to see as many of you as possible there. Please let us know if you would like to attend and we will make sure you have the details to join the Zoom meeting.
We will have printed copies of our Annual Report available after the meeting for anyone who would like one.
TODAY – York Literature Festival – free events online
Very short notice but it’s only just come to my attention. York Literature festival has a day of free online events from11am and throughout the day
From the festival website – “There is no denying that 2020 has been a tough year for everyone. So it is with great pleasure that we are bringing you a day of online events on Saturday 17th October, in association with MyVLF and Arts Council England.
Every event on the day will be FREE. All you need to do is to register with MyVLF before the events (also free) and then visit the website in time on the day. The great thing is that after you have joined the MyVLF community you can engage with the other literary events on their website as well. If you can not join us on the day, the events will still be on the MyVLF website for you to enjoy!”
See the York Literature Festival website
Or Go straight to MyVLF
Poetry, literature and history are on the agenda for the York Literature Festival
12pm: Young, Black & British, Join Jeffrey Boakye and Okey Nzelu as they talk about race, religion and a lot more
2pm: Locating York in Literature with Dr Robert O’Connor and Drs Zoë Enstone and Adam James Smith.
4pm: Suzannah Lipscomb, historian and presenter, shares the voices of sixteenth century women and the realities of their lives.
5pm: Poetry with Andrew McMillan & Joshua Judson. Join them for readings from their latest collections.
Charing Cross
The work on Caring Togethers planned move to our new base in Charing Cross has started. There are still a few weeks of work before completion, but we thought that we would give you a flavour of where we are at, just so that we can have a ‘before and after’ snapshot as the work progresses. As you can see, it is still a building site at present. We will keep you up to date with developments.



