DALESMAN DECEMBER 2011 – Christmas in Yorkshire

CHRISTMAS TREE IN APPLETON WISKE

APPLETON WISKE CHRISTMAS TREE

Yorkshire is famous for its celebrations of Christmas, and in the December 2011 issue of Dalesman there’s no shortage of people to be found celebrating it – ranging from traditional candle makers, to the folk checking on Santa’s progress in the Space Age.

Last year, we had a lot of snow, and I was glad that for one story, I had only to walk around the corner, to meet friends and neighbours round the Christmas tree in my own village.

But usually, I have to travel to meet people for Dalesman, and when there’s snow around, it’s nice to know that people would help me if I got stuck.  So one chilly morning, I went to meet Swaledale Mountain Rescue Team on a training exercise.

They were practicing for an underground rescue.  As the rescuers squeezed into the dark underground space, I realised what a comfort it must be when this team turns up to a real accident.

They produced a stretcher and strapped in the chap impersonating an injured party, carefully wrapping him in blankets, and even supplying some glasses to protect his eyes from falling debris.

They explained that their plan is always to hand the casualty over to the Ambulance Service at the nearest point the Ambulance can reach.  They are not there instead of professionals – they simply volunteer to help people in the difficult areas that a normal ambulance can’t reach.

But sometimes it can take a long time to reach an ambulance, and some volunteers have trained in high level ‘casualty care’, learning the skills of a paramedic, to try to stabilise injuries, and in worst cases, keep people alive, until the professionals can reach them.

These skills came in handy a few years ago, when an Army helicopter crashed – just where the team happened to be training.  The speed of the care they were able to give is believed to have saved lives, and served to cement an already good relationship with the Army.

The team numbers around forty fully trained members, with a maximum of twelve trainees.  Controller Paul Denning explains: “We generally want about 20 to 25 people to an incident.  It can take 8 to carry a stretcher – and if it’s a long way, we need two lots of people to take it in turns.  Then we need a casualty carer, drivers, a navigator, someone on radio communications – it soon gets to needing 20 people.  That’s why we want so many people on call, as not everyone can just leave work.  We work on the basis that about half of our people can respond to any one incident,

They also frequently work with colleagues in neighbouring teams such as Wharfedale, Cleveland, and Kirby Stephen.  A common task is helping the Police to search for vulnerable people who have gone missing.

On training exercises, volunteer ‘casualties’ spend hours lying still, waiting to be found, then carried over a series of obstacles.  Helen says, “It can get quite cold as a casualty – you have to watch for hypothermia.”  Husband Tim is the training officer, and spends his time thinking up scenarios to test skills not just in practical matters like how to strap a patient to a stretcher, but also in leadership, communications, and teamwork.

Surprisingly, their work is not part of the state funded Emergency Services, and they have to fundraise to buy their equipment.  Funds are also needed for vehicles, fuel, radios, rescue gear such as ropes, which wear out, and medical equipment which gets used up.  Paul says, “It costs around £30,000 a year to run the team.  And we’ve just bought 2 new vehicles, that cost £95,000 for both.  We got a grant towards them, and we did 5 years of saving and fundraising.

Paul advises careful planning; tell someone where you’re going and when you expect to return; take food; warm, waterproof clothing; compass; map; and torch – even in summer, as the weather can change.  The torch, he says, also helps them to see where you are.

But things can go wrong for even the best prepared walker, and Paul says, “When we’re not training, most of us are out on the hills at weekends.  It’s nice to know that if we got into trouble, someone would come.”

Learn more about Swaledale Mountain Rescue at http://www.swaledalemrt.org.uk/Index.asp

Lovely though the mountain rescue volunteers were, I was reluctant to become one of their rescues if I could avoid it.  So when  the day came for my visit to RAF Fylingdales, and the snow was deep, I had to postpone my visit, as the road was, I was told, impassable..

But the work of Fylingdales went on uniterrupted: they know they get severe weather, and a core team of staff lives on site to keep things running.

By the time I could get there, the snow had been replaced by thick fog.  The big radar array, the SSPAR, loomed like a black pyramid in the fog.

I couldn’t see much in the fog, but the motto of Fylingdales translates as ‘We ar watching’ – and they’d seen me coming.   But the Military Policeman who approached me was friendly – and invited me in to lunch.

The rest of the day was full of contrasts: the space-age technology looked like the set from a movie – James Bond, perhaps, or Star Treck.  But while minding their equipment, the staff are also minding the wildlife that thrives in the peaceful seclusion of the perimeter fence.

And Santa?  They post Santa’s movements on a dedicated website, following his moves from the North Pole.  See http://www.noradsanta.org/

From the Space Age, I moved to a tradition that’s probably as old as humanity: making candles to light the dark.  Candles are still popular at Christmas – after all, it’s a festival held at the darkest time of the year.

It was a pleasure to meet Mick and Jennie White and their apprentice Jane Nicholas.

Mick and Jennie came to Wensley in the 1970s to built a candle making workshop in the old mill.  Since then, they’ve become part of the fabric of the Dale, combining their business with a philosophy of trying to make people’s lives better in whatever way they can.

The result is a warm-hearted workplace, full of laughter, colour, and the warm, joyous light of the candles.

For more information about White Rose Candles, see http://www.yorkshirenet.co.uk/craftgde/whiterosecandles/

Like the Whites, many people in Appleton Wiske contribute their time and energy to making life better for their neighbours.  The people who volunteer to organise a the  Christmas Tree are providing a beacon of light and welcome in the bleak, chilly days of midwinter.

When we gather around the tree in the chill night air, our songs rising into the black emptiness of the winter sky, I feel the fellowship, not only with neighbours, but with generations before me who have bravely sung into the darkness – sung of their faith that the light will return.

CAROL SINGING ROUND THE TREE IN APPLETON WISKE

CAROL SINGING ROUND THE TREE IN APPLETON WISKE

THE YORK WAITS – THE BAND THAT PLAYED FOR 500 YEARS

I met the York Waits – aka William Marshall, Roger Richardson, Tim Bayley and John Peel -when they were leading the procession for the York Mystery Plays.  They had with them an impressive selection of instruments, including woodwind, brass, drums, and bagpipes.  Despite having no modern amplifiers, they made a powerful sound, performing to a considerable crowd.

All four of Waits confessed to an enthusiasm for Tudor music, for it trademark mingling harmonies and melodies.

They wore carefully-researched and reconstructed uniforms of red wool, with ‘Breughel boots’ – Mediaeval leather shoes.

Today’s mega bands would envy the longevity of the Waits as a band.  Player John Peel says, “They played for the best part of 500 years.”

Today, the band plays mainly 16th century music, which they have researched comprehensively.  One of their main instruments is the shawm, a reeded wooden wind instrument reminiscent of the oboe.

The Mystery Plays are a series of plays illustrating stories from the Bible.  They are ‘Mystery’ plays because they are performed by members of York’s Guilds – initiates into the ‘mysteries’ of their particular trade.  Each Guild acted out a story, using a wagon as a stage.  The wagons were pulled around the city, and the plays performed again at multiple stops.

The Mystery Plays were performed in Mediaeval times every summer on Corpus Christi day, but were, like many popular customs, suppressed by the Reformation.

They were revived for the Festival of Britain in 1951, and are now staged every four years.  They are a major spectacle, and involve Guilds that have survived for centuries.

Read the full article, in print only, in Dalesman Magazine, December 2010,  www.dalesman.co.uk

York waits  http://www.whitecottagewebsites.co.uk/york/cds.html

YORK WAITS THE TUDOR BAND

YORK WAITS, YORK'S TUDOR BAND

A Yorkshire Christmas

CHRISTMAS TREE OUTSIDE APPLETON WISKE POST OFFICE

CHRISTMAS TREE OUTSIDE THE POST OFFICE

The Christmas Dalesmans are out, and this year’s issue contains another bumper crop of Yorkshire Christmases past and present.

This year, I saw how Christmas was celebrated by everyone, from the poorest pauper in the workhouse, to fortunate modern children, decorating gingerbread houses with lots of sweets.  I heard the York Waits play music that echoes through the years, from times when the only winter comfort was the enormous Yule log burning on the fire.  And over at Nunnington Hall, staff re-create the special events when villagers were invited into the luxurious Hall for Christmas celebrations.

As I write, we are again deep in snow, and it’s easy to see why Christmas is such an important festival in Yorkshire.  The turning of the year, and the prospect of summer again, is the hope that keeps us going.

As the drifts deepen, it’s best to stay at home and keep warm.  But those of us who can do this are indebted to the people who work extra hard to maintain our essential services through the bad weather.

Think of the people working in jobs such as milk collections, road gritters, food and fuel deliveries, and medical services.  They have been working extra hard, taking the time and trouble to battle through bad weather to take care of the rest of us.

So I hope that they will get a thoroughly deserved Christmas break and a good dinner.  Merry Christmas to all – especially those valiant essential workers.