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An invitation from Leeds Playhouse

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).
Premieres tonight (Friday 2nd Oct) at 7pm and then available for 48 hours
Headingley, Hyde Park and Woodhouse Food Bank Donation Drive




























Changes to bus services from 4th October 2020
Changes to bus services from 4th October 2020
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.
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.
‘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.
Black History Month 2020
Green Homes Grant Scheme is now open
The Green Homes Grant gives homeowners in England vouchers to help cover the cost of energy efficient improvements to their home – such as low carbon heating systems, insulation or double glazing to replace single glazing.
For most, the vouchers will be worth about two-thirds of the cost of the energy efficient improvements, up to a maximum of £5,000 per household. If you are a private tenant your landlord can apply.
However, if you’re on a low income or certain benefits, you can get vouchers of up to £10,000 to cover the entire cost of installing the measures. (Homeowners only)
Qualifying benefits: income-based/contribution-based jobseeker’s allowance, income-based/contribution-based employment and support allowance, income support, pension ‘guarantee’ credit, working tax credit, child tax credit, universal credit, disability living allowance, personal independence payment, attendance allowance, carer’s allowance, severe disablement allowance, industrial injuries disablement benefit and housing benefit.
Vouchers must be used to install at least one primary home insulation, (solid wall, under floor, cavity wall, loft, flat roof, room in roof), or low carbon heating measure.
If you install at least 1 of these, your voucher can also be used to help cover the cost of any of the following secondary measures: draught proofing, double/triple glazing (where replacing single glazed windows), secondary glazing (in addition to single glazing), external energy efficient doors (replacing single glazed or solid doors installed before 2002), heating controls or hot water tank thermostats and insulation. This can only be up to the same value as the primary measure.
All work must be completed within 6 months (by the end of March 2021) so if you want to take advantage of this scheme you need to do so as soon as possible.
There is now a Government website where you can find all the infomation and apply for a Green Homes Grant
Simple Energy Advice has lots of information as well as tools to help you check eligibility and find accredited tradespeople: www.simpleenergyadvice.org.uk Or you can call them on 0800 444202.
Alternatively, if you want to chat to Valerie about this – call 0748 3333 115 or email valerie@caringtogether.org.uk