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Welcome to the March issue of Completely Bromsgrove

I must begin by saying how lovely it is that the days are starting to lengthen, the birds are in fine voice, and the daffodils are bursting into full bloom. It certainly feels like spring is just around the corner.

Here at Completely Bromsgrove, we like to champion our fantastic independent retailers, and this issue offers our readers the ideal opportunity to get out there and to see just how many there are.

Finding that unique gift for Mother’s Day on March 15th can be challenging, but this month’s features will help make that choice a little bit easier.

On pages 24 and 25 you will find some amazing artisan crafters at Jinney Ring Craft Centre. How about handmade chocolates from the Chocolate Deli, a beautiful handblown vase from Top Glass, an individually made piece of jewellery from Belinda Terry, or a membership to the newly opened Hanbury Health Hub.

Turn to page 26 where Butcher’s Block, located on the High Street, are offering delicious homemade pies, a beef wellington or locally sourced produce for

you to spoil mum at home.

Or, if you would prefer to treat Mum to a delicious afternoon tea, accompanied by a pianist, then book your table at Willow Tree Restaurant, located within Willowbrook Garden Centre.

While we are all very quick to say that there is nothing to tempt the consumer away from the internet, I strongly disagree. If you can get out and about, there are so many small independent retailers who really need your support.

So, I challenge our readers to treat mum with a distinctive gift bought locally and let’s be proud of what we do have, rather than focusing on what we don’t.

Remember folks, keep it local or else we will lose it!

Don’t forget, the clocks go forward on March 29th.

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A message from our MP Bradley Thomas

’m leaving no stone unturned in the fight to save our precious greenbelt. Once it’s gone, its gone.

As part of my ongoing campaign, I recently met with the Housing and Planning Minister. I was joined by the leader of Bromsgrove District Council, Councillor Karen May.

At the meeting with Matthew Pennycook, the Minister for Housing and Planning, I demanded the Government reverses the 85% increase in Bromsgrove and the Villages’ housing target as it is based on a flawed formula.

The formula fails to accurately measure local housing demand in Bromsgrove and the Villages, creating an incorrect housing need figure for the constituency.

The Government’s affordability ratio shows the relationship between local house prices and jobs available in that locality. However, this does not accurately reflect the reality of districts such as Bromsgrove, where many people commute into major cities where there are higher paying jobs, which puts upward pressure on house prices and makes the local income figure artificially low, both of which incorrectly drive up our housing allocation.

I’ve previously warned about the increase in the flawed affordability multiplier. My assessment shows that this will directly result in thousands more homes being built in quality greenbelt when there is not a sufficient local need for this. The effect of this change will in fact be to accelerate development in the very places that the greenbelt was established to protect.

As you know, Bromsgrove and the Villages is 89% greenbelt and 79% rural, but, at the same time as increasing our target, the Government has made the decision to reduce Birmingham’s target by 31%, despite the city having at least 140 hectares of brownfield land that could be built on.

This is unfair which is why, as part of my ongoing fight to save our greenbelt, I launched a Parliamentary petition, signed by more than 5,900 people, which demanded that the increase is reversed, in addition to the reversal of the reduction in Birmingham’s housing target to ensure the burden is shared in a fair and proportionate way and only allow new houses to be built when the accompanying infrastructure is provided.

In responding to my petition, the Government refused to reduce our housing target and to reverse the decrease in Birmingham’s housing target.

The meeting with the Minister was my latest attempt to get him to see sense. Having set out why the formula is flawed, I hoped that the Minister would see sense, but instead he continued to attempt to justify the Government’s decision.

I told him that my constituents aren’t NIMBYs. We all accept the need for new houses, but not on the scale the Government is imposing. I was elected with a mandate to fight to protect our greenbelt and that’s what I’ll continue to do.

Mwww.bromsgroverail.org.uk

Council urged to use tourism to grow local economy

arch brings the start of spring, when people venture out of hibernation after the cold, dark and rainy days of winter.

BARRUP has banged the drum for some time now about the promotion of Bromsgrove as a day and short stay visitor destination, and the benefits to the local economy which this would bring, particularly to the hospitality sector, and now is the time that the District Council should put effort, time and investment into doing this.

As far as BARRUP is aware, the council has neither a tourism strategy, a Tourist Information Centre, nor does it employ a dedicated tourism development officer, yet there is considerable potential to grow the local visitor economy using existing public transport links.

What can attract visitors to Bromsgrove? If they are walkers, then there are the various walks of different lengths along the Tardebigge Canal Flight, easily accessible via the integrated bus and rail services at the railway station, or via the town centre bus station, or by booking the county council’s on demand bus service. There is also John Corbett Way, the canal towpath linking Bromsgrove with Droitwich Spa and the Lickey Hills, the latter which can be accessed within a few minutes’ walk from Barnt Green station.

Alternatively, from the Town Centre Bus Station, it is only a ten minute walk into Sanders Park, from which visitors can choose one of the three different length Royal Hunters Walks into the surrounding countryside.

If they like history, then in the town centre there is the 13th century St John’s Church, with its newly renovated spire, The Norton Collection Museum, with many of the exhibits helping tell the story of Bromsgrove, and the start of the Housman Trail, Or they can travel the short journey to the award winning Avoncroft Museum, with its 18 acres of grounds and historical buildings and live events throughout the year.

Sports fans can visit the leisure centre, with its pool and climbing wall, or watch a game at Bromsgrove Sporting FC. A quarter of an hour walk from the railway station takes them to Bromsgrove Rugby Club or Bromsgrove Cricket Club.

If they like the arts, then there is the Bromsgrove Festival, which runs for four weeks in June and July, the Bromsgrove International Musicians Competition at Bromsgrove School, the rejuvenated Artrix with its wide range of entertainment, and a plethora of music and drama of all genres all year round in the town and district.

And who knows what will take place in the community space in Nailers Yard when it opens later this year.

Come on Bromsgrove District Council - make this the year in which you develop and implement a tourism strategy and help drive the local economy.

Additional funding secured for Nailers Yard

Bromsgrove District Council has been awarded additional funding for the Nailers Yard development.

The funding worth £2,2425,000 has been secured from the Enterprise Zone Regeneration Investment Fund (EZRIF) thanks to the transformative nature of the project taking place on the former Market Hall site in the town centre.

Leader of Bromsgrove District Council, Councillor Karen May said: “The Nailers Yard project and the opportunities it will bring for the residents, businesses, and visitors to the town are many.”

“More than £2 million in funding means that we are one step closer to opening the doors. I am increasingly looking forward to being able to welcome people from far and wide into this new space we’ve created for the benefit of the town, the night economy, and local business.”

The EZRIF support will allow the council to progress essential activity required to complete the project. The money is part of a wider £20 million commitment made by the Greater Birmingham and Solihull Local Enterprise Partnership (GBSLEP) in 2014 to support the eight local authorities included in their area. The EZRIF programme and commitments were honoured when the GBSLEP was transferred to Birmingham City Council in 2023.

The original funding for the Levelling Up programme was £16.103 million, made up of the Levelling Up Fund (Government grant) and £1.6 million of funds from the council to be spent on three projects including Nailers Yard. Some additional funding of £1.08 million had been awarded and secured to Levelling Up projects in Bromsgrove since the original budget.

Nailers Yard will transform the long-vacant former Market Hall site into a mixed-use commercial, cultural, and community hub. The space will include modern high-quality office space, flexible community space, pedestrianfriendly public realm, and a programme of cultural, creative, and community-focused uses.

Scheduled for completion in May, the project is a central part of the council’s wider regeneration programme for the town centre. To find out more, visit: www.bromsgrove.gov.uk/council/strategy/ former-market-hall-site-redevelopment

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New partnership that reduces waste and boosts charity support

Apioneering reuse initiative at the Redditch Household Recycling Centre has achieved remarkable success over the past six months, diverting valuable items from landfill while generating essential funds for local charities.

The project, delivered through a collaboration between Worcestershire County Council, Severn Waste Services, Primrose Hospice and Family Support Centre, and Age UK North Worcestershire, has already made a significant positive impact.

As part of the scheme, a dedicated reuse container has been installed at the recycling centre, giving residents a convenient way to donate goodquality items they no longer need. Instead of being thrown away, these donations are collected, sorted, and sold in charity shops operated by Primrose Hospice and Age UK North Worcestershire. Every sale directly supports local people and vital community services.

Councillor Ian Cresswell, cabinet member for the environment at Worcestershire County Council, said: “ We are delighted that this partnership is working so well, and the volume of materials being reused is testament to the scheme’s success. As a result, we now have reuse containers at nine of our household recycling centres, all supporting local charities and helping to divert materials out of the waste stream and into charity shops.”

“We are thrilled with the success of this project,” said Amanda Allan CEO of Age UK North Worcestershire, “Not only are we reducing waste and promoting sustainability, but we’re also raising money to provide our important local services and make a real difference for our community.”

Ian McRoy, retail manager at Primrose Hospice, said: “We really appreciate the support from the council and Severn Waste Services to make this collaboration possible.”

Michael Hornby, senior operations manager at Severn Waste Services, who are the contractor for Worcestershire County Council, added: “We are delighted to work with our valued partners to ensure the success of this initiative. Together we are making significant changes in how pre-loved items can be reused and given a new lease of life while raising vital funds for our partners and reducing the impact on landfill use.”

This initiative not only reduces waste and supports Worcestershire’s commitment to sustainability but also offers residents a simple and meaningful way to give back to their community.

For more information on the locations of the reuse containers visit www.letswasteless.com

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Over £5k in fines as council cracks down on fly tippers

Bromsgrove District Council is reinforcing its zero-tolerance stance on fly tipping after £5,390 in fines were given to individuals last year.

Last year was the first year of targeted enforcement activity supported by Worcestershire Regulatory Services (WRS) in the district, and it saw 33 Fixed Penalty Notices (FPNs) issued between December 2024 and November 2025.

Local patrols, intelligence from the community, and investigative expertise by WRS – including in vehicle tracing, evidence analysis, and witness liaison – helped the council identify offenders and take action.

Cllr Peter Whittaker, Portfolio Holder for Environmental Services, said: “Bromsgrove District residents are rightly fed up with environmental crime, which is why we beefed up enforcement including by bringing in WRS.

“With specialist intelligence and investigative support, we are better placed than ever to hold unscrupulous people to account. People need to know that if they dump waste on the public here, they can expect to be found, and face penalties all the way up to prosecution.”

One example on the Alvechurch Highway saw evidence in dumped mattresses, plywood and bin bags lead investigators to a homeowner who had paid someone with a van to remove items from their garden - without checking for a waste carrier’s licence or getting a receipt. These breaches of their legal duty of care saw them pay an FPN of £160.

Always check a waste carrier is on the Environment Agency’s public license register before you use them, to avoid falling foul of unlicensed ‘man with a van’ scams. You could end up fined if your waste is fly tipped and you failed to use a licensed carrier or keep a receipt.

To report fly tipping on public land to the council, and help provide information that can help catch fly tippers, visit www.bromsgrove.gov.uk/flytip

You can also report information about a suspected environmental crime to WRS investigators on 01905 822799 or www.worcsregservices.gov.uk/allservices/enviro-crime

Enforcement action against enviro-crime, like this illegally dumped waste on the Alvechurch Highway, led to 33 FPNs being issued last year.

Spires on show

We reported in the February issue that the Spire Project at St John’s had concluded, but we couldn’t resist the opportunity to share this wonderful photograph of the new spire top, the High Street and green fields beyond.

If readers look at the spire on a sunny day, it is clear to make out the newly restored top 2.5 metres as the stonework is crisp and red, carved in Locharbriggs sandstone, the closest match available. It is also possible to see the many areas on the top of the tower parapet where crumbling sandstone has been replaced with newly carved stone.

On the ground, to the south of the tower, the removed, Victorian spire apex has been rebuilt as a legacy for the Spire Project, and all the many people who, over many centuries, have given their time and skills to build and restore Bromsgrove’s magnificent Grade I Listed building.

The Spire Project at St John’s was made possible thanks to The National Lottery Heritage Fund and many generous supporters. Find out more on the Friends website www. stjohnsfriends.co.uk

The removed Spire top rebuilt as a legacy

Bromsgrove Flower Club welcome Jayne Pugh to their next meeting at All Saints Church Hall, Burcot Lane, Bromsgrove on Thursday, March 19th at 1.30pm.

Jayne produces beautiful displays with an emphasis on natural and simple.

You will be offered complimentary refreshments on arrival and can buy raffle tickets to win one of Jayne’s lovely arrangements. We also run a sweepstake and have a great bring and buy stall. It’s a win-win afternoon.

Come along to All Saints Church Hall, Burcot Lane, Bromsgrove, and meet new friends. Entry is £5 for members and £10 for visitors. We look forward to seeing you.

Renovating your kitchen with confidence

F or many people, a new kitchen is about more than updating cupboards or worktops. It’s about creating a space that works better for everyday life, whether that’s busy mornings, relaxed evenings, or hosting friends and family. With the right planning and support, a kitchen renovation should be a genuinely positive experience.

Kitchens bring together a number of different elements. Design, cabinetry, appliances, electrics, plumbing and finishing details all need to work together seamlessly. When this is approached as one carefully planned project, rather than a series of separate tasks, the process tends to feel clear and well organised from the outset, significantly reducing stress and responsibility for homeowners.

This is where good project management makes a real difference. A structured approach means timelines are realistic, materials are organised in advance, and each stage of the work follows on logically from the last, providing reassurance and clarity throughout the project.

The design stage plays a particularly important role in achieving a successful outcome. Working with a specialist kitchen designer with years of experience ensures the space is thought through properly before any decisions are finalised. An experienced designer looks beyond how a kitchen appears on a plan, focusing on how it will function in everyday use: how people move through the space, where storage will be most effective, and how the layout supports daily routines.

That experience also helps avoid common design flaws. Details such as door clearances, appliance spacing, awkward corners or underused areas can easily be missed without specialist knowledge. A

trusted and knowledgeable kitchen designer knows how to maximise every part of the room, even in challenging or awkward spaces, ensuring nothing is wasted and the finished kitchen feels practical, balanced and comfortable to use. Resolving these details early also helps the installation itself run more smoothly.

Clear communication throughout the project is another key factor. Knowing what to expect, when work will take place, and who to speak to if questions arise helps clients feel informed and involved. Regular updates and having a single point of contact can make the whole experience feel straightforward and well managed.

This approach reflects how AK Fitted Interiors manages every project, from initial plans through to installation. By overseeing every stage, the focus is on providing a clear, well-managed process and a finished kitchen that fits seamlessly into everyday life. Examples of recent work can be seen on the Project Gallery page of their website.

Visit AK Fitted Interiors’ two storey kitchen and bedroom showroom for further inspiration. You can find us at Saxon Business Park, Hanbury Road, Stoke Prior B60 4AD. We are open from Monday to Saturday from 10am to 5pm. Call 01527 835924 or visit www.akfittedinteriors.co.uk

Tackle routine tasks to prepare for spring sunshine

March is here and the evenings are getting lighter, so take a walk around the garden and enjoy looking at the flowering bulbs.

Rhubarb will be growing now and will be enjoying the sunnier days so check out recipes for this lovely early fruit.

Weave early clematis plants into arches or trellis to get the most out of them and tidy the borders ready for spring bedding.

Herbs will be showing themselves so watch out for borage, which is the earliest of the herbs and is a great early meal for the bees. The caterpillars of the scarlet tiger moth and the painted lady butterfly love borage so if the leaves disappear it’s because they are feasting on them. Don’t worry about the plant as it is very hardy. It will recover quickly and you will be helping the local wildlife.

Frogspawn will be aplenty by now. Frogs and toads don’t mind where they lay their spawn so don’t be too quick to empty out old bowls or even plastic bags before checking.

The birds will be singing their little hearts out now in the hope of attracting partners so clean out any bird boxes that you may have in the garden in readiness for spring.

Time to start clearing the piles of leaves that have accumulated over the winter. Don’t do it too soon as it means some creatures will have to find themselves

new homes before the spring but moving the leaves will give bulbs a chance of warmth.

Clean the garden furniture too so that when the first proper sunshine arrives it will be ready to sit on straight away and your first barbecue won’t be delayed by boring jobs.

The dreaded slugs and snails may be showing themselves so it’s time to clean out your slug traps, buy the cheapest supermarket beer you can find and get your traps out at the ready. Empty the traps regularly and if you find any slug eggs scoop them up and put them on the bird table as a welcome snack.

If you buy milk in two or four pint containers they can be cut in half and make great mini greenhouses for seedlings. Half fill with compost, put seeds in and then pop the top back on.

Save your cardboard egg boxes to ‘chit’ your potatoes in. They can then go into the compost bin as they breakdown really well.

Now you will be ready to enjoy the spring sunshine that is just around the corner.

Happy gardening everyone.

Rhubarb growing
Blue Tit in bird box

A host of wild daffodils

TAs I came into work this morning, I passed a verge full of bright yellow heads nodding in the wake of the cars. What a welcome sight after so much rain and many dreary days; the arrival of spring is, hopefully, just around the corner. Mid-February seems early for these blooms to be showing but, as with many garden flowers, different cultivars flower at different times.

The daffs on the verge were a garden variety –tall stems with bright yellow flowers. Our native wild daffodils Narcissus pseudonarcissus have delicate little flowers and provide a nice early source of pollen for bees and other insects that brave an early start. Wild daffodils are found in a few Worcestershire locations, particularly in meadows down in the southwest corner of our county. In fact, if you travel a little further you’ll find a 10 mile Daffodil Way that threads a lemony route in northwest Gloucestershire.

The bigger and more colourful cultivated varieties have normally been bred to be just that – big, colourful and showy. This cultivation has been done by human hand so the need for them to produce pollen and nectar to attract insects has gradually disappeared. Sadly, this means that many cultivated varieties of daffodil (and of other flowers too) have little or nothing to offer our wildlife. So not only does that patch of attractive-looking flowers hold nothing for a visiting bumblebee that’s just woken from her winter slumber but it also causes the bee to waste energy flying to it in the first place.

The Daffodil Society was established in 1898, holding annual shows in Birmingham’s Botanical Gardens that stimulated experimentation with creating more and more different varieties. It turns out that the UK’s climate is perfect for these yellow dancers and we’re now the world’s largest producer of cultivated daffodils. The Royal Horticultural Society is trying to trace some particularly rare varieties so it’s worth searching for their Daffodil Diaries project if you’re a keen gardener that would like to get involved.

If you’ve got a garden or volunteer for your local greenspace, why not give wild daffs and their pollinator friends a helping hand by planting wild daffodils. Bulbs are available but double check to make sure that they’ve come from sustainable sources and haven’t been dug up from the wild. It’s also a good idea to ask whether they’ve been treated with neonicotinoids and choose a different supplier if they have.

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he nodding heads of daffodils – wild and cultivated - brighten our days as they dance in the breeze.

Brook works aim to reduce flood risk

At the end of 2025, the North Worcestershire Water Management team at Bromsgrove District Council arranged for some much-needed maintenance of the Spadesbourne Brook where Blackmore Lane meets Shenstone Close and School Drive.

Between the pedestrian bridge and a low brick-arch bridge, the channel has historically been artificially widened, which causes water to slow and sediment to be deposited which in turn traps litter and other debris.

This open section of channel has no registered owner, so the water management team stepped in to arrange the removal of debris and de-silting to restore the full capacity of the channel.

The owners of the brick arch culvert immediately downstream worked with the team to have the culvert cleared of excess sediment and debris too, helping to restore the proper flow of water.

This vital work will help to improve the conveyance of water through the brook, which should help to address flood risk both locally and in the wider area.

Tutnall tything walk

Start and Finish - Tardebigge Inn, Hewell Lane, B97 6QL

No map has been found to delineate the original tything boundary and many of the public rights of way have also been lost, so this route remains an approximation. Terrain – Generally easy under foot, though likely to be muddy in places after wet weather and some stretches of non-pavemented lanes.

We recommend downloading the What Three Words app. Introductory notes to these tything walks can be found in the June 2025 issue, or at: Completely Bromsgrove June ‘25 issue 73 issuu by completelybromsgrove - Issuu

From the Tardebigge’s main car park, turn left. Using the right hand pavement, proceed past Hewell Grange gatehouse, crossing to the left hand pavement upon reaching the Barns Retail Park. Turn right at the next junction, signed H&W Shooting Ground. (Part way along this lane steps lead down to the canal to view the tunnel entrance. )

Continue to a T-junction. Turn left, then immediately right, down Wharf Lane. Reaching a staggered crossroads, turn right, following a gentle upward gradient for some distance. Just before it drops again take the bridleway on the left Pass the farm buildings, almost reaching the top yard before turning left to a bridleway. Reaching a field, turn right and skirt round to pass in front of a house. At the lane, turn left. Returning to the

staggered junction, turn right, signed Tutnall and Bromsgrove.

At Broad Green crossroads, turn right, then at the ‘Road Narrows’ sign take the gap at the side of the double gate. Beyond is a stile and another beyond that. Aim for the far left corner of the next field and climb the next stile onto a broad track, turning right to keep to the track as it runs parallel to the lane. Keep left, past the house and after the track feeds into the lane, bend right then left, under a bridge, and turn right at the T-junction. As the right hand pavement ends, cross over to take the marked bridleway. After descending to a lane, turn left.

Proceed to reach London Lane. This quiet road rises fairly steeply to cross a canal bridge, then continues to rise before levelling out approaching a T-junction. Turn left onto High House Lane. Continue. Opposite a large, green, metal gate on the left, find a gate in the right hand hedge.

These fields may be crop-filled. Be prepared to skirt around the field edge if appropriate. Proceed forward to the second of two oak trees in the open field. Turn 90° right to a stile and boardwalk in the field elbow. Head for the wide gap in the hedge on the opposite side of the field. Do likewise in the next field. Breaching the gap, turn 45° left, heading past an oak tree and towards a low barn. Meeting the hedge, straddle the double stile, then skirt the metal fence ahead and pass through a gate onto a drive. At the end, turn left. Passing the dilapilated walled prison garden, reach a T-junction. Turn right and return to the pub car park.

4 5 6 by Neil Beaumont

Tardebigge Inn
Views across to the church

The Jinney Ring is

A treasure trove of independent artisan creators, offering the discerning shopper a wealth of uniquely crafted gifts and more!

Lots of handmade Chocolate gifts for Mothers day and hand moulded Easter eggs . Everything we mould is made with Callebaut chocolate which does not contain palm oil. Thank you for supporting local.

Open daily at the Jinney Ring centre. For all our relevant news, and to keep up to date follow us on facebook

Chocolate Deli has been established at the Jinney Ring Craft Centre for nearly 20 years.

Since the announcement of changes happening at the Jinney Ring, we are frequently asked what are your plans for the future?

We aim to continue making chocolates at our shop, and remaining open everyday.

Looking forwards and thinking positively we are in the process of setting up the long overdue online shop, hopefully this will be functional early 2026.

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still going strong!

W

ith occasions such as Mother’s Day on March 15th and Easter from April 3rd to 6th looming, why not pay a visit to pick up that special purchase. Meeting the makers in person will add to the glow of giving family or friends a distinctive and highly individual gift.

Mother’s Day?

Look no further as here at Top Glass we have a vast range of individually crafted gifts for that special someone!

Pop along to our unit located in the front car park and see our glass blowers at work! Easter is also early this year, and we also have some great creations to celebrate Easter! We can’t wait to see you!

Top Glass has been based at the Jinney Ring for over 20 years, and continues to blow glass from their unit for the foreseeable future 7 days a week!

Their glass work that they create makes an ideal Easter

Belinda Terry Jewellery & Designer , still trading at the Jinney Ring Craft Centre after nearly 40 years and has no plans to move.

Belinda hand makes individual designs in silver and gold, combined with semi-precious stones and freshwater pearls.

Come and see us for mother’s day for your special gifts. Our new opening hours are Thursday-Saturday, 10.30-4.30 To keep up to date with all our news follow us on Facebook or instagram, or call us 01527 821610 Are you looking for that unique gift for

or Mothers Day present. For that “hard-to-buy-for” friend or family member, how about buying them a glass blowing experience, that certainly would be a present to remember!

High Street butchers have eyes on the pies

After the successful Christmas raffle to raise funds for a new oven, Butcher’s Block now have a new industrial cooker.

The cost of living crisis not only took a huge impact on personal finances, but costs for the High Street-based business went through the roof.

Lilith Sheppard said: “We inherited our oven when we bought the business and never expected our cooked side to be so successful. However, our old oven was struggling to cope and was in desperate need of an upgrade.”

“After winning a national pie award last year, the demand for our pies went crazy. Without the help of the

community, we wouldn’t have been able to keep up with demand. We can’t thank everyone enough for pulling together to help us.”

Not only can they now match increased demand, Butcher’s Block have also been able to launch a monthly pie ‘n’ mash night at The Neighbourhood in Rubery on top of their monthly roast pop up.

The oven is a game changer for this independent business, and they are looking to offer their inclusive and homemade pies on a commercial level.

For more updates, follow them on Facebook @butchersblockbromsgrove

Treat your Mum to something delicious this Mother’s Day

Sometimes the simplest gestures show the biggest love. Why not show the mother gure in your life some appreciation by cooking them a delicious meal. Whether it’s a traditional beef wellington, a steak dinner or simply tasty pie and mash, we have lots to show her that you care.

If you really want to pull out all the stops, book in for our Mothers Day roast at The Neighbourhood in Rubery, where we do all the hard work for you.

Keep following @ butchersblockbromsgrove for all our tasty options and indulgent o erings.

Help protect the future of hospices

Primrose Hospice & Family Support Centre in Bromsgrove are encouraging their community to consider leaving a gift in their will to help protect the future of hospice care.

Hospice care is vital. Last year alone, UK hospices supported 310,000 people with life-limiting illnesses, and demand for palliative care is expected to rise by 25% by 2048.

Yet Hospice UK say that 59% of people don’t realise hospice services are free, and Primrose Hospice must raise £1.95 million every year, with only 14.6% funded by the government.

Across the country, hospices want to reach everyone who needs them, but financial pressures are holding many back. People like Jack Taft, who received support from Primrose before and after his wife Amara, died in 2024, understand just how essential these services are.

Jack said: “The best thing I ever did was take up grief counselling. After the initial support fades, you’re still in the grip of grief - you need someone who can help you process it.”

Through real stories like Jack’s, the This is Hospice Care campaign shows how hospices provide comfort, create moments, and support whole families - and how leaving a gift in your will can help ensure this care is there for future generations.

From pain management to birthday celebrations and bereavement counselling, legacy gifts keep these services going.

Gabrielle Grubb, fundraising manager at Primrose Hospice, added: “At Primrose, we’re here for - and powered by - our community. Legacy gifts ensure vital support is there not only for those receiving care, but for the people around them too.”

Find out more about supporting Primrose Hospice through a gift in your will at https:// primrosehospice.org/leaving-a-gift-in-your-will/

Health is meant to be a notrelationship, an issue

For most of our lives, we’re taught to define health simply as the absence of disease. If nothing is “wrong,” we assume we’re healthy. Yet so many people wake up exhausted, overwhelmed, inflamed, anxious, or disconnected while still being told they’re “fine.” Somewhere along the way, we narrowed health down to the physical body and forgot the bigger picture.

True health lives at the intersection of our biology, environment, and inner world. What exists in one part of us exists in the whole. What we think about, we repeatedly attract. And what we breathe, eat, drink, and absorb, both physically and emotionally, quietly shapes our wellbeing every single day.

Listen to the language we use without thinking: Broke, sick to death, hate my job, dread going to work. These words aren’t harmless. They create a constant field of stress and negativity that our nervous system and cells must live in. Add to that the pollution in our air, food, water, and screens, and it becomes easy to see how the body can struggle to keep up, long before symptoms appear.

Illness rarely arrives suddenly. It often begins at the top of the mountain — in our energy, thoughts, stress patterns, and unresolved emotions — before slowly manifesting at the base in the physical body. This is why redefining health matters. It’s not just about avoiding illness, but about how well we’re functioning, adapting, recovering, and living each day.

money worries, conflict, power struggles. The upper centres — breath, expression, love, protection — are meant to restore balance, yet they’re frequently neglected. Modern life encourages sabotage: no time for movement, poor sleep, convenience foods, telling ourselves stories about why we can’t. Over time, stress becomes chronic. Survival instincts stay switched on. Panic rises. Digestion suffers. Responsibility weighs heavily. Jealousy, envy, and unresolved emotion quietly show up as physical discomfort. This is where cellular support becomes essential. Our cells are constantly adapting to stress, toxins, and emotional load. Supporting them at the most fundamental level, where communication, repair, and resilience occur, allows the body to do what it was designed to do: restore balance.

When we look at the self — self-esteem, selfempowerment, and our inner dialogue — we see how deeply our inner world creates our outer world. Fear-based habits, inherited beliefs, constant exposure to alarming news, and unconscious archetypal patterns all place demands on the body’s stress response. The lower physical centres of the body are often burdened with survival themes:

Redox signalling technology works at this foundational level, supporting cellular health so your body can better respond to both physical and energetic stressors. It doesn’t replace conscious living but powerfully supports it. Because when your cells communicate clearly, your body remembers how to heal, adapt, and thrive and health becomes a lived experience, not just the absence of disease. Find out more by contacting me on colette@need4change.com

We offer anti wrinkle injections, dermal fillers, dissolver, polynucleotides and skin boosters all carried out by Nurse Prescriber Alex. We believe in enhancing a patients natural features safely, using only premium products from reputable sources.

We combine clinical excellence with an artistic approach in a beautiful, relaxed setting, all backed up by aftercare guidance and ongoing support.

Address: George Davis Hairdressing 12 St Johns St., Bromsgrove, B618QY

We are a nurse led medical aesthetics company. We are also Save Face accredited. This means we have been independently assessed against a robust set of standards. Save Face is a professional standards authority accredited register and is recognised by the government, the department of health and NHS England.

Contact: email:info@dollaesthetics.co.uk website:www.dollaesthetics.uk | instagram: doll_aesthetics Bookings are taken via our booking system on our website

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Chance to view Earth’s evil, inhospitable twin

Last month there was a brief opportunity to view the sun-scorched planet Mercury. Despite being the closest planet to the Sun, it is not the hottest. That accolade belongs to the planet, Venus, which is now becoming prominent in the western sky after sunset.

Second in distance from the Sun, Venus is the brightest planet in the sky, alternating between an evening and morning object. During spring and early summer, it will be an unmistakable object in the evening sky.

A similar size to the Earth, when viewed from space these neighbours can resemble twin worlds, but these “twins” are nonidentical. While Earth has a temperate climate and an abundance of life, Venus is probably the most inhospitable planet in our solar system.

The atmosphere, made mainly of carbon dioxide and at 90 times the pressure than on Earth, traps heat causing a runaway greenhouse effect, with surface temperatures reaching 475ºC. Hurricane force winds circle the planet and the clouds on Venus, which make it so bright, are composed of sulphuric acid. Indeed, so extreme is Venus that none of the early Russian Venera probes survived more than two hours on its surface. It is easy to see why Venus is sometimes referred to as Earth’s evil twin.

Although surface features can never be seen, being closer to the sun than the Earth, Venus exhibits phases which can be seen with a small telescope. Venus is currently on the far side of its orbit and appears as a small gibbous disk. As Venus catches up with Earth, the phase will

reduce, eventually becoming a crescent, but at the same time increasing its apparent size.

On March 20th, in the western sky around 7.30pm, Venus and a thin crescent Moon will be a stunning site and a great photo opportunity. If you miss it there will be other opportunities with the Moon and other objects during the months ahead, with the highlight being a triple (Moon, Venus and Jupiter) event in June.

If you do get to see Venus, consider what is beneath those brilliant white clouds and how fortunate we are that the Earth didn’t succumb to the same fate as its evil twin.

At Bromsgrove Astronomical Society’s next meeting on Monday, March 16th, Professor Boris Gaensicke is presenting a talk on “How the worlds will end – white dwarfs with evolved planetary systems.” When stars like our Sun age, they eventually shrink into white dwarf stars. When they do, what becomes of their planets?

Visitors are always welcome, so if you would like to learn more about astronomy, you can find more details at www.broms-astro.org.uk

Image: NASA

Celebrating Bromsgrove’s rail heritage

Lying on a natural route between Birmingham and Bristol, it was inevitable that the railway boom of the 1830s would come to Bromsgrove at some stage. After considering various options, the Birmingham & Gloucester Railway eventually settled on a plan by Captain William Moorsom for a direct route that skirted around Worcester, Droitwich and Bromsgrove.

The line between Birmingham and Gloucester was completed in 1841, to the ‘narrow gauge’ of 4 foot 8½ inches. In 1845 the line was acquired by the Midland Railway Company and the section from Gloucester to Bristol, which had been on a wider gauge, was re-laid.

The line passed one mile to the east of the town and involved a 1 in 37 climb up the Lickey Hills. Trains were met by a horse-drawn omnibus service that ran to the Golden Cross Hotel. The station was approached via a winding narrow road, now known as Old Station Road, until a new road was constructed direct from the High Street to the railway station in 1865. Victorian villas and the suburb of Aston Fields soon grew up along this ‘New Road’.

In November 1840, two railway workers, Thomas Scaife and Joseph Rutherford, were killed when an engine called Surprise blew up at Bromsgrove Station. The subsequent enquiry led to improved safety standards for all British-made locomotives.

engines used to push heavy trains up the Lickey were proving not up to the job. The Midland Railway commissioned a new engine which entered service in January 1920. Known as Big Bertha, it travelled up and down the incline for the next 36 years.

The Midland Railways’ works at Bromsgrove was an important facility for building and repairing railway wagons. The Wagon Works remained a major employer until its closure in 1964.

In 1940, the Deritend Stamping Co. established a shadow factory alongside the railway to produce parts for military vehicles. This was taken over by John Garrington & Sons of Darlaston, a major supplier of parts to the motor industry. At its height, the factory had more than 3,000 employees. It closed in 2002.

The Midland Railway employed powerful American locos to haul trains up the Lickey Incline. A maintenance depot to service these engines was established at Aston Fields in 1841, overseen by a talented young engineer called James Edward McConnell. He was soon promoted to locomotive superintendent and went on to become one of the founders of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. By the time of World War One the banking

A long-awaited new station, with passenger lifts and longer platforms, opened on July 12th 2016. In 2018, new electrified trains began running and today the station has regular connections into Birmingham, Worcester and elsewhere.

Local rail enthusiast David Waldren will be offering insights into Bromsgrove’s railway history at the Bromsgrove Society’s meeting on Tuesday, March 17th at the Methodist Centre, Stratford Road. The story of Big Bertha is profiled in the latest issue of The Bromsgrove Rousler, available via the society’s website. by Mike Sharpe

Railwaymens graves
Former Bromsgrove station

Garden scheme looking grand at 99 not out

We’re not talking cricket, but gardens, and specifically The National Garden Scheme which is looking forward to scoring a century in 2027.

Meanwhile there are some great gardens within easy striking distance of Bromsgrove worth visiting in this, the 99th year of the scheme raising money to support good causes.

The scheme started when the Queen’s Nursing Institute, which has its origins in district nursing in the second half of the 19th century, started to run out of funds in 1926. A lady called Miss Elsie Wagg, (pictured above) who sat on the QNI council, came up with the idea of raising money through the nation’s interest in gardening and a year later the first private gardens opened raising a staggering £8,191 at a shilling a head admission fee.

These were not the average domestic garden, but were the grounds of such places as Blenheim Palace, home of the Duke of Marlborough, and Sandringham, courtesy of King George V. One of those original gardens was Spetchley Park in Worcestershire, the home of the Berkeley family, which still opens every year for the NGS.

Although there are still many grand houses opening their grounds for the NGS, these days the majority are smaller gardens created and tended by keen amateur gardeners who are keen to share their love of all things horticultural with visitors, while raising money for charity at the same time. In 2025 the National Garden Scheme across England and Wales gave away a record £3.875 million to organisations like Macmillan Cancer Support, Marie Curie, Parkinson’s UK and a host of other charities. There are two gardens open in the Bromsgrove

area, the first of which is 2 Brookwood Drive in Barnt Green, which will be open on Sunday, May 24th from 10am until 4pm. This is a multi-themed mature garden with numerous water features and colourful borders. There’s a formal white garden, a wildlife pond and a cutting garden surrounded by large rhododendrons which give a colourful display in late spring. There are also large trees under planted with shade loving plants and sunnier areas to accommodate colour-themed perennials. There’s even an enchanted child’s garden and play area.

The other garden, Oak Tree House on the Birmingham Road in Marlbrook, doesn’t have a single day opening but is open “by arrangement” , between May and July, for groups of at least six people, meaning potential visitors can contact the owners to arrange a mutually convenient date for a visit.

Oak Tree House is a plantswoman’s cottage style garden overflowing with plants, pots and interesting artifacts. There is a secluded patio with plants and shrubs for spring interest, including azaleas, rhododendrons and acers, with a small pond and waterfall. Further up the garden is a wildlife pond and there are also water features, a small alpine area and a rear open vista. Some of the owner’s own artwork is on display in the conservatory and visitors also have access to a neighbouring garden.

There are numerous other gardens open around Worcestershire, including two in Droitwich. All the information can be found in the NGS county leaflets available in most garden centres, or at www.ngs.org.uk

Calling all creatives with passion for storytelling

Rediscover North East Worcestershire has announced that submissions are now open for three exciting projects.

Wagons Roll, Awe and Wander, and Gateway to Nature make up the Sharing Stories element of Sharing Stories, Shaping Futures, working closely with young people to help shape futures.

Each project is specifically designed to be suited to a branch of the arts:

• Wagons Roll: Performing arts

• Gateway to Nature: Visual arts

• Awe and Wander: Digital Arts

Bromsgrove District Council’s cabinet member for health and wellbeing, leisure and culture, Councillor Shirley Webb, said: “Giving local young people the chance to work alongside established arts professionals and help shape something fresh and exciting. Bromsgrove’s heritage is wonderfully diverse, and the Sharing Stories projects will allow us to do exactly that.”

The successful applicants will work with ReNEW from May 2026 until September 2027: creating tangible outcomes, delivering skills workshops for young people, contributing to the development of apprentices, and practising co-creation with a dedicated group of young people.

ReNEW’s core aims are to develop young creatives into confident industry professionals, build the resilience of the local cultural sector, and bolster

connection in local communities through the power of the arts.

Wagons Roll celebrates local people through performing arts, inspired by the rich heritage, stories, and legacy of the Showmen of Bromsgrove, whose vibrant fairground traditions have shaped local culture since the late nineteenth century. This strand will pay tribute to the spirit, artistry, and resilience of the Showman community and celebrate the importance of this legacy.

Gateway to Nature invites local people to share their stories and experiences of connection with the local environment, enabling the successful visual arts provider/s to support creative activity that will inform the future identity of the National Trust’s proposed ‘8 Hills’ Regional Park.

Awe and Wander is designed to connect local communities with green spaces, focusing on underrepresented neighbourhoods. The project will use digital creativity, storytelling, and participatory activity to position local people to experience local nature in ways that are accessible, meaningful, and engaging.

For more details, visit www.bromsgrove.gov.uk/ SharingStoriesTenders

Events at Feckenham Village Hall in March

THE MIDLAND SINFONIA

“Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed…” Saturday 7th March at 7.30pm

A concert showcasing works by composers who have mixed old musical ideas with new. A veritable cornucopia of styles through the ages.

The programme includes Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No 5, Greig: Holberg Suite, John Denver: Annie’s Song and Rutter: Antique and Folksong Suites.

Just Some Theatre Company in EYES

DOWN

Sunday 22nd March at 7.30pm

For one night only, Feckenham Village Hall will be transformed into a glitzy but very run-down old bingo club! Step into The Stairway To Heaven Social Club for a night of suspense, laughs and high-stakes bingo like you’ve never experienced before. Eyes Down is the comedy thriller that’s guaranteed to have you on the edge of your seat – and in on the action!

The evening starts off with everyone’s favourite game – bingo. But things take a thrilling turn when a body is discovered and suddenly, it’s not just about winning the novelty Toblerone... it’s about uncovering a killer!

The Midland Sinfonia is a professional orchestra dedicated to bringing top class music to the heart of the country.

Tickets are on sale at The Village Shop and you can also book online at www.feckhall.org

This is a professional show coming to Feckenham as part of the Live & Local programme. Supported by Arts Council England, Worcestershire County Council and Redditch Borough Council.

Tickets are on sale at The Village Shop and The Rose & Crown. You can also book by phone on 0333 666 3366 or online at www.feckhall.org

Tourette’s campaigner and Lottery winner

Film lovers have two cracking movies to look forward to at the FeckenOdeon Cinema Society in Feckenham in March.

Saturday, 28th March at 7.30pm

THE BALAD OF WALLIS ISLAND (12A)

The Ballad of Wallis Island follows Charles (Tim Key), an eccentric lottery winner who lives alone on a remote island who dreams of getting his favourite musicians (Tom Basden and Carey Mulligan) back together.

His fantasy quickly turns into reality when the bandmates and former lovers accept his invitation to play a private show at his home on Wallis Island. Old tensions resurface as Charles tries desperately to salvage his dream gig. (UK 2025)

Friday, 13th March at 8pm

I SWEAR (15)

I Swear is the powerful true-life story of Tourette’s Syndrome campaigner John Davidson, in a funny, moving and life affirming account of his life, from adolescence to adulthood.

The film delivers hilarious and poignant details, exploring Tourette’s, a condition that remains largely undiagnosed and misunderstood. John finds inspiration in the kindness of others to discover his true purpose in life. (UK 2025)

Tickets for all FeckenOdeon films can be booked online through feckenodeon.co.uk , by phone on 0333 666 3366 or in person at The Rose & Crown and The Village Shop in Feckenham. The FeckenOdeon is Feckenham’s community cinema based at Feckenham Village Hall, High Street, Feckenham. B96 6HN

H ost families are needed for French students, coach driver and teachers who are visiting the Midlands Monday 16th March - Friday 20th March and/or Monday 13th AprilThursday 16th April (Arrive evening, depart early morning). (other dates also available)

Your hospitality will be financially rewarded Students are out all day You need to be within commutable driving distance of LONGBRIDGE or BROMSGROVE . A great way to share language, food and culture!

No need to speak French Please call/text: 07702 504495 (preferred) or Email: l.mistry@aol.co.uk (check your spam folder for my reply)

Queen of English theatre

Returning to cinemas for the first time in over a decade, Helen Mirren plays Queen Elizabeth II in the Olivier and Tony award-winning National Theatre Live hit production THE AUDIENCE , being screened by Bromsgrove Arts on March 1st.

For 60 years, Queen Elizabeth II met with each of her 12 prime ministers in a private weekly meeting. This meeting is known as The Audience. From Winston Churchill to Margaret Thatcher and David Cameron, the Queen advised her prime ministers on matters both public and personal. Through these private audiences, we see glimpses of the woman behind the crown and witness the moments that shaped a monarch.

Shakespeare’s OTHELLO , which is being screened on March 4 and 18 and April 5 rages to life like never before in a compelling’ new production starring David Harewood, Toby Jones OBE, Caitlin FitzGerald, Vinette Robinson and Luke Treadaway. Filmed live at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in London, this epic story of manipulation, jealousy and toxic masculinity explores the darker side of power, rage and desire.

In JAMES ACASTER: CINEMAGOERS WELCOME on March 7th, the comedian unleashes his infectious energy as he explores his love/hate relationship with stand up, while welcoming a heckle or two. Filmed in Truro, Dublin and Northampton, we see how this experiment panned out in front of three very different audiences.

addresses her public

From Everlock Productions, on March 15th the feature length documentary ‘OUR PLANET, THE PEOPLE, MY BLOOD’ will be having one of it’s first public UK screenings at Bromsgrove Arts on 15th March 2026. After the screening there will be Q&A session with some veterans that appear in the documentary.

After 3 years of filming, Director, Daniel Everitt-Lock is proud to present this global expos? of the effects of nuclear weapons testing.

Alan Owen, a descendant of an Atomic Soldier, has fought tirelessly for the rights of those affected by Nuclear Weapons Testing around the world. Through global first hand accounts, we follow Alan on his journey, as he takes on the UK’s Ministry of Defence, in a landmark legal battle that seeks recognition and compensation for millions.

The film was recently sponsored by Sir John Hayes, CBE MP, and Rebecca Long Bailey MP, for a special parliamentary screening on the 13th January, that saw the UK’s Atomic Test Veterans, who are the main subject of the documentary, gain cross party recognition and support from multiple MP’s.

Sir John Hayes said: “This outstanding film chronicles a decades-long campaign for the recognition of those who witnessed the first nuclear tests. Recognition must go beyond a medal, it must include acceptance of the

effects of radiation on them and their descendants. The work addressed in this film will, in the end, deliver what these people deserve: justice.”

The film took Daniel and his team 3 years to complete, travelling over 100,000 miles across the USA, UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. They interviewed over 50 people with first hand accounts of the effects of nuclear weapons testing. Though most testing ceased in 1996, Trump and other have condoned a restart to testing.

Ralph Fiennes is Dr Henry Guthrie in THE CHORAL , which is being screened on March 25th. It’s 1916 and as war rages on the Western Front, the choral society in Ramsden, Yorkshire has lost most of its men to the army.

The Choral’s ambitious committee, determined to press ahead, decides to recruit local young males to swell their ranks. They must also engage a new chorus master, and despite their suspicions that he has something to hide, their best bet seems to be Dr Guthrie, who is driven, uncompromising, and recently returned from a career in Germany.

As conscription papers start to arrive, the whole community discovers that the best response to the chaos that is laying waste to their lives is to make music together.

Bromsgrove Arts, the home of Fairfield Flicks and Fairfield Music, is located at Fairfield Village Hall (B61 9LZ).

Free parking and a licenced bar. For information and advanced tickets for all events visit www.bromsgrovearts.org.uk

Choral concert programme offers vibrancy and variety

Barnt Green Choral has announced an exciting and ambitious 2026-27 concert programme, offering outstanding music, community spirit, and unforgettable live performances. The rich and varied selection will include a much-loved contemporary classic, modern jazz, a dramatic operatic requiem, and the most famous Baroque oratorio ever written.

The choir is currently preparing for its next concert, The Armed Man: A Mass for Peace by Karl Jenkins, to be performed at Artrix, Bromsgrove on Saturday, March 28th. Written as a reflection on the destructiveness of war and a call for peace, this powerful and evocative work has become one of the most popular choral works of modern times. Tickets are available from boxoffice@ artrixbromsgrove.co.uk

In June 2026, the choir will turn to modern jazz with a performance of Zimbe! by Alexander L’Estrange. First premiered in 2008, when it rocked the singing world, Zimbe! combines energetic African traditional songs with contemporary syncopated jazz. Designed as music for the community, combining both child and adult voices, the performance will feature a massed choir comprising Barnt Green Choral and 60 children from two local school choirs.

The festive season will see the choir present its traditional Carol Concert and Memorial Service which are always cherished parts of the Christmas calendar. Then, in March 2027, Barnt Green Choral will perform Verdi’s monumental Requiem.

Renowned for its operatic intensity, dramatic contrasts, and powerful choruses, the requiem never fails to thrill performers and audiences alike and is recognised as a major cornerstone of the choral repertoire.

The season will conclude in June 2027 with highlights from Handel’s Messiah, one of the most enduring masterpieces of English Baroque music. The performance will take place at St John’s Church, Bromsgrove, in collaboration with St John’s Church Choir.

Peter Bould, chair of Barnt Green Choral, said:

“We are going to have a really exciting and thrilling time rehearsing and performing this legendary music. We will also be working with other local choirs to present the very best of choral singing to the Bromsgrove community.

“Anyone who would like to join us for this challenging but rewarding programme will be most welcome. There is no need to be able to read music or to have vast experience. All you need is a strong inner desire to sing, and you will find it both enjoyable and highly rewarding.”

Reveal your creative side at FestivalBromsgrove 2026

The organisers of this year’s Bromsgrove Festival, which showcases the district’s talents and events, have issued an open call for residents to get involved.

Running from June 20th to July 19th, the festival will feature a wide range of events including music of many genres, drama, arts, dance, crafts and walks, all with the aim of being more diverse and inclusive.

Bromsgrove Festival has been running since 1960, with a multitude of performers and genres over the years. In 2014 the festival underwent a rebrand with the “try something new” motto to encourage people to have a go or attend an event that they wouldn’t normally be interested in.

Bob Bignell, who chaired the festival for the last seven years, stepped down in October but remains an advisory trustee. With big boots to fill, Claire Allington, a trustee for the past two years, has stepped into the chair role. Claire is very excited for this year’s festival and is hopeful that new groups and organisations will host events.

If you are hosting an event between June 20th to July 19th, you can be part of the festival. Your event will be included for FREE in the what’s on brochure with 7,000 copies distributed around the district and featured on the website and social media.

Forms can also be accessed via the website www.bromsgrovefestival.co.uk , on socials @ Bromsgrovefestival or email info@bromsgrovefestival. co.uk

The closing date for proformas is March 31st, 2026. For more information, use the email address above.

by Syd Taylor

New faces shine in solid month for Sporting

Bromsgrove Sporting enjoyed a fine end to January, as they beat Barwell 1-0 in their first home game of 2026, before recording a hard fought 2-2 draw at in-form Stamford.

The Rouslers began February with another fine result - a 1-1 draw at Leiston, where they showed more battling qualities to claim a valuable point in Suffolk and make it three matches unbeaten.

Midfielder Billy Shaw scored the winner in the Barwell match, strikers Tyrone Lewthwaite and Luke Benbow both bagged at Stamford, while defender Luke Softley netted a header versus Leiston.

More new faces have been added to the squad, including the versatile Niall Flint, who has made a solid start at Sporting - he began the season with fellow Southern League Central side, Worcester City.

Defender Archie Duerden has signed after being released from Aston Villa’s youth set-up, while Akai Bonnick, Max Asante-Boakye and Ellis Litherland have all joined on loan. Akai is an energetic midfielder from Forest Green Rovers, Max is a defender who comes from Sheffield United’s academy and Ellis was brought in as cover for goalkeeper Rory Brown, after he sustained an injury. The Huddersfield Town 21-year-old made an instant impact, picking up the player of the match accolade at Leiston, following a sensational display on debut.

filled with very impressive performances.

Before the victory over Barwell, defender and club captain Aaron Roberts was given a framed shirt to celebrate him reaching the incredible milestone of 350 appearances for the club, which he did at the start of the new year. Vice chairman Graham Scott was on hand to present Aaron with the specially made Bromsgrove strip.

Away from the footballing side of things, the final Friday of January saw the triumphant launch of the Red Hyena Comedy Club at the UK Electrical Stadium. Empty seats were extremely few and far between, as 50 people attended the evening filled with laughs, smiles and good times. Further Red Hyena nights have been confirmed too, with these also taking place on the last Friday of every month.

Meanwhile, Sporting will be hosting a charity match to raise funds for Primrose Hospice, in memory of Bromsgrove Rovers legend Mark Crisp, who sadly passed away in October 2024. Many of Mark’s former teammates will form an old Rovers team to play a Birmingham City All Stars side.

Another loanee who has well and truly hit the ground running at Sporting is George Wynnethe Birmingham City U21s midfielder was voted January player of the month, in what was a month

For more details on this match, as well as all the latest news and updates from Sporting, including from its Ladies, U21s, and Youth sides, visit bromsgrovesporting.co.uk by Max Banner

Aaron Roberts with vice chairman Graham Scott getting his framed shirt for 350 appearances
Photos by Chris Jepson
George Wynne battles for the ball versus Barwell
Celebrations versus Barwell

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