Apple Juice and More!
Tuesday 30 January 2018
Learn about The Random Apple Company, The Kitchen and Orchards at Swanscoe
http://swanscoe.co.uk/
Tuesday 30 January 2018
Learn about The Random Apple Company, The Kitchen and Orchards at Swanscoe
http://swanscoe.co.uk/
Tuesday 30 January 2018
Wild Food Cookery and Foraging with James Wood – Asian Foods
Become hands-on foragers and chefs for the day. To learn more and for similar courses during the rest of the year go to
http://www.totallywilduk.co.uk/courses/our-courses/#/all
Friday 24th November 2017
Winners of the Marketing Cheshire Annual Awards 2017 announced
The winners of the 13th Marketing Cheshire Annual Tourism Awards were announced last night (23rd November 2017) at a glamourous awards ceremony at Chester Racecourse.
The Awards, attended by nearly 300 tourism representatives, celebrate excellence and outstanding achievement by local businesses and individuals representing the great variety of businesses that contribute to Cheshire’s visitor economy, which was worth £3.3 billion and employed over 42,000 people in 2016.
This year’s winners included Chester’s new multi million pound theatre, cinema and library, Storyhouse, which won Large Visitor Attraction of the Year, Carden Park, which was named Hotel of the Year, and Stage 3 Tour of Britain, which won the award for Best Tourism Marketing Project for its achievements in attracting over 300,000 spectators along the route in East Cheshire, the highest number for the tour.
Some of the winners will now go on to represent Cheshire at the national VisitEngland Awards for Excellence in 2018.
Katrina Michel, Chief Executive of Marketing Cheshire, said: “Cheshire’s tourism industry really is going from strength to strength and this has been one of our most competitive years yet, reflecting our unique products and the high quality of our tourism offer across the board.
“Cheshire is home to a growing number of globally recognised tourism brands and a significant group of world class tourism professionals. These awards are a true celebration of the quality of our tourism offer and talent of the people that are working hard to make Cheshire a leading national and international visitor destination.”
This year’s awards were sponsored by South and West Cheshire College, Shopper Anonymous, Prestige, Spiral, Hipswing and the University of Chester.
Issued by Marketing Cheshire
For further information, please contact:
Sarah Harvey, Marketing Cheshire
07894 687 077
s.harvey@marketingcheshire.co.uk
Marketing Cheshire Tourism Awards 2017 Winners:
Self Catering Provider and Self Catering Property of the Year
Winner – Kerridge End Holiday Cottages
Latest Cinemac Listings – Macclesfield Cinema
Cinemac
Heritage Centre,
Roe Street,
Macclesfield,
SK11 6UT.
Enquiries: 07871 422937
Bookings can be made at www.cinemac.org.uk following the movietickets link in the ”advance bookings” section.
Ticket Prices for FILMS
Tuesdays to Saturdays
£6.50 (waged)
£5.50 (seniors, students, JSA and disability benefit)
£5.00 (children under 15) ]
Groups of 4 or more before 6pm: £5.00 each
Sundays & Mondays: £3.50 each for everyone
Free admission for disabled carers and children in arms.
for LIVE & ENCORE Events by Satellite
Full price (centre seats): £15.00
Concessions (centre seats): £13.00
Restricted view (side seats): £10.00
By Ian Brammer
Kerridge End Holiday Cottages
Lyn and Ivor Williams came to Rainow from the North East in 1997 and bought Kerridge End House as their family home. Along with the large 1837 house came a coach house, a cottage and a stable, which the couple set about transforming into top quality self- catering cottages, largely using local tradesmen and suppliers. The first opened for business in 2005 and was soon followed by two more.
The Five Star cottages have won Cheshire and Peak District awards ranging from Best New Entrant in 2006, through a range of sustainability and environmental awards to last year’s success in gaining Cheshire’s first Green Tourism Gold Award. Lyn and Ivor are proud of their most recent accolade – Enjoy England’s Gold Award for exceptional quality of accommodation and service in 2012. Ivor sees “providing a whole experience rather than just a cottage” as the basis of their success and distinguishing what they offer from the mass of self-catering accommodation is an essential element in their business plan. Their website shows this by setting out not merely the full views of every aspect of all the cottages (not many others offer so much) but also identifying fifteen reasons to choose Kerridge End.”We want to provide visitors not just with the kind of place that we would be happy to stay in ourselves but one where we would actually aspire to live ourselves” they say.
Lyn and Ivor have been particularly pleased by recent articles in the national press, (The Guardian and the Daily Mirror in September) including one by a wheel-chair bound freelance journalist who visited a cottage earlier in the year. Their delight in the extensive coverage came not just because of high praise for the cottages but because the attraction of the Rainow area itself was recognised. The Mirror journalist ended his article “we knew we’d found the pot of gold at the end of the Rainow!”
Article from Raven Magazine number 20 available here: http://www.rainow.com/library/The%20Raven%2020.pdf
Join local company, XYZ walking holidays for a free guided tour of the Goyt valley and Erwood Hall
This year sees the return of the Barnaby festival in Macclesfield. Local music, arts and festival.
This article was originally published on the Mirror website and this can be found here: http://www.mirror.co.uk/lifestyle/travel/british-breaks/weekend-break-in-the-peak-district-what-1292541
Matt Padmore is learning to love what home has to offer after a stroke left him in a wheelchair
Grassroots: Kerridge End is set in the lush English countryside
Before I became disabled a few years ago, I loved to travel the world – Vietnam, Russia, Bali and Australia are just a few of the places I visited. I even lived in Japan for a bit.
After my stroke, things got a lot trickier. I now need help with everyday tasks – even a flight of stairs or a narrow door can pose a major problem for me.
It’s not easy to jet around the world in a wheelchair. It’s not impossible, of course, but it is much harder work and it can be incredibly expensive.
As a result, I’m learning to love things closer to home.
Which is why I was cautiously excited about the chance to visit Kerridge End Holiday Cottages, at Rainow in the Cheshire Peak District.
Usually, finding suitable accommodation is easy enough. But getting somewhere with a bit of character is often a much bigger ask.
We fell on our feet with Kerridge End. A group of three stone outbuildings connected to a main house, they were built in 1837, are Grade II-listed and have been sympathetically converted into luxurious, comfortable self-catering five-star accommodation.
We stayed in The Hayloft, all exposed beams and interestingly shaped windows. Everything was set perfectly for a wheelchair user.
There was a wet room with a shower chair, a waterproof wheelchair and a wheelchair-height work surface in the kitchen. There was even a lower level clothes rail in the wardrobe. The attention to detail was faultless.
From the homemade jam and scones waiting for us when we arrived to the iPad in the lounge that helped us to research the local area, owners Ivor and Lynn seem to have thought of just about everything under the sun.
Jill Jennings Travel feature: Interior of the cottage – Wet room
Modern: Wet room with shower
Rainow is a charming village surrounded by the majesty of the Peak District.
It’s supposedly home to two members of New Order and a Stone Rose – although they must have been keeping a low profile that weekend, as there was no sign of them in any of the pubs we stopped in “just in case”.
It was easy to see why this village would appeal to Mancunian rock royalty.
It’s got a feeling of isolation even though it’s only three miles from Macclesfield and 17 from Manchester.
Higgledy-piggledy old stone houses nestle in the shadow of the hills. It must make for a tranquil getaway.
The next morning brought a different kind of stargazing as we headed to nearby Jodrell Bank, home to the Lovell Telescope, the third largest steerable dish telescope in the world at 250ft.
It was the venue for the Stargazing Live programme on BBC2, presented by comedian Dara O’ Briain and Professor Brian Cox.
Looming futuristically over the Cheshire countryside, the telescope must have been an extraordinary sight for locals when it opened back in 1955.
Jodrell Bank isn’t just about admiring a big satellite dish, though.
There’s also a Planet Pavilion and a Space Pavilion, where you can learn about the wonders of the universe (and everything is completely wheelchair-friendly, of course).
We worked through the interactive displays and film shows and left with our heads full of orreries and azimuths.
To be honest, we were at times a little blinded by some of the science, but the Whispering Dishes demonstrated really clearly what was going on.
These are two satellite dishes separated by a couple of hundred feet. You whisper into the centre of one of them and your friend, stationed in front of the other one but at the same time well out of earshot, should be able to hear you as clear as a bell.
It’s an eerie phenomenon that perfectly illustrates what is happening on a much larger scale with the huge telescope behind you.
Having fed our minds, it was time to feed our bellies, so we headed up to The Cat and Fiddle pub. It’s the country’s second highest at 1,690ft and it doesn’t look an inch under that. Snowy hillsides surrounded us as happy-go-lucky snowboarders strapped their helmets on outside.
We stayed nice and warm, enjoying a hearty lunch of braised pork belly for me and fish pie for my friends. All this was washed down with pints of Build A Rocket Boys, a local beer made for the band Elbow.
The Cat and Fiddle’s stunning location makes it something of a mecca for walking fanatics. But we were more than happy just to drive up the A357. It’s supposed to be Britain’s most dangerous road, with frequent crashes. But the magnificent views along the way easily made it worth the supposed risk.
We finished eating just in time to head back to Kerridge End and start thinking about making dinner in the immaculately appointed kitchen.
The Peak District is not Kyoto or Ho Chi Minh City, as we all know. But sometimes, what you really need is right on your doorstep.
As we relaxed over wine and risotto a few hours later, we knew we’d found the pot of gold at the end of the Rainow.
Get there
Premier Cottages has 1,000 4* and 5* self-catering cottages in England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, the Isles of Scilly and the Channel Islands.
A week at The Hayloft in the 5* Kerridge End Holiday Cottages costs from £710 in October. www.premiercottages.co.uk, 01625 424 220.
Virgin Trains run from London Euston to Macclesfield with advance fares £11.50. www.virgintrains.co.uk.
Macclesfield is 2hrs 50mins by car from Peterborough and 1hr 15mins from Bradford.
Tourism: www.discovercheshirepeakdistrict.co.uk.
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