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Pictures: Cyclists turn out at Admirals Park in Chelmsford for Pedal for Js
MORE than 1,000 cyclists came out in force to raise funds for J's Hospice at the weekend for the fifth annual Pedal for J's ride.
Starting out from Admirals Park on Sunday, in Chelmsford, the charity ride saw everyone from the first-timers to seasoned riders kit out and get pedalling for the 15, 35 or 50-mile routes around the mid Essex countryside.
There on the day was 66-year-old Colin Madder-Smith from Tiptree.
He said: "I am doing this because I love cycling. The exercise is great and keeps off obesity, illness – it is just really good for you. "More and more people are taking it up as well. Of course, it is a top cause to be supporting as J's Hospice does great work caring for young adults."
Organisers are still totting up the fundraising total but it is expected to smash last year's record of £35,000.
Dave Sweet, 55, of Field Fare, Billericay, is relatively new to the sport.
He said: "I have only had my bike about ten weeks. I had been meaning to take it up for a while but ten weeks ago I finally bought the new bike and here I am now.
"I have been doing a lot of training over the last weeks, with 30-mile rides at the weekend. This is my first ever sporting event.
"My sport of choice is running, which I have been doing for a while longer. I have done marathons and other races, so I am quite healthy. I will be doing the 35-mile ride."
Also there on the day was 55-year-old Jacqueline Mills from Wickford.
She said: "I am here because I do a lot of cycling and it is one of the events on the calendar. I do quite a few in the year. I am doing a 100 mile ride later in the year and this is part of the training."
Jim Garratt, of Butterfield Road, Boreham, was getting back in the saddle after a winter away. The 23-year-old said: "I am doing the 50-mile ride today. This is my first time out on a ride since last summer. I only do a lot of riding during the warmer months, but practically none during the winter."
Riding alongside Jim was 46-year-old Keran Palmer, also from Boreham.
He said: "I am quite a regular cyclist. I do about 30 or 40 miles every weekend. Most our group here today is down from Boreham."
Maz Keenan, community events fundraiser for The J's, and the event co-ordinator, said: "It's amazing to see the commitment and dedication of some of the riders who have come along today."
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Five things Jamie Oliver and Carluccios will bring to the Chelmsford table
No pizza- both restaurant chains do not sell pizzas, instead focusing on more traditional Italian foods.Chips- Jamie's Italian offers three kind of chips on its menu. Their funky chips include fresh garlic and parsley, their posh chips come with truffle oil and parmesan chesse while their polenta ships are crispy fried with rosemary salt and parmesan chesse.Champagne- Carluccio's has a large focus on red and white wine, with some Spumanti on offer. Jamie's Italian stocks three Champagnes, with a bottle of Blanc de Blancs setting you back in the region of £90 to sample its "fruity aromas with a fresh minerally backbone".Pasta- Both chains have a focus on pasta, with both offering 13 different dishes on offer.Gluten free- While both chains have a gluten free menu, Carluccio's offers far more choice. Diners can expect a choice of five main courses, compared to two at Jamie's Italian.Choice- Although both restaurant chains have a similar ethos with reasonably-priced straightforward Italian cooking, they do vary in their approach. At Jamie's Italian, the concept's a bit different – there's no food store and it more a full-on restaurant rather than a restaurant/cafe/deli.
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Lionmede Bowls Club saved by building firm as arson probe continues
A BOWLS club ravaged by flames has been brought back from the brink by a generous donor.
MKM Building Supplies, of Montrose Road, has donated £500 in plumbing for a new demountable clubhouse at Lionmede Bowls Club in Springfield Road.
The temporary building – along with 14 ball pushers, 14 mats and six marker boards donated by other clubs – ensured Lionmede could continue playing.
At about 10pm on March 12, arsonists torched the clubhouse, destroying its store cupboard, kitchen and roof.
MKM branch director Allan Davis said: "When we read the news of the fire in the Chronicle we sympathised.
"How somebody can do that I don't know. The club has been there for a number of years and whoever has gone out and done this, it's disgusting."
After contacting the paper, Mr Davis and his team liaised with Chelmsford City Council, which owns the clubhouse, and members to find out what they could do to help save Lionmede's season.
"We volunteered because it's basically the MKM ethos," said Mr Davis, of Heycroft Way, Great Baddow. "We're a local merchant that loves to help the local community, serve the local community and employ locally, so anything like this we jump on.
"It's been very pleasant working with everyone to get the materials in the demountable, which was provided by the council."
Chairman Maurice Lauder, 88, of Springfield Park Avenue, was fighting back tears when he rushed to find the clubhouse, including vital bowls equipment, alight.
"After we were devastated by such villainy, the way the public has volunteered equipment is really heart-warming," he said.
"While there is a lot of villainy out there, there are also a lot of damned nice people too.
"Due to the generosity of the whole community I was pretty much overwhelmed.
"We are very grateful to MKM and, yes, I believe they have saved our season.
"The materials are essential because we have got to have somewhere we can make people drinks, if possible somewhere to wash cups and saucers, and a loo, which is essential as well if you have 20 or 30 people playing at one time."
Council parks and heritage services manager Paul van Damme said extensive planning was under way to unveil a new clubhouse by spring 2015.
He added: "We are very grateful to MKM Construction for their help in assisting us to get Lionmede Bowls Club back on their feet after the recent fire."
Anyone with information regarding the cause of the fire should contact police on 101.
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Gang of bikers terrorise horses and riders at High Easter
A GANG of motorcyclists terrorised horses and their riders after being told they were using the bridleways illegally before sabotaging the charity event by removing route markers.
Up to 20 "intimidating" bikers revved their engines and spun their wheels at some of the horse-riders after being told not to use the countryside pathways for their motorcycles.
Organiser Victoria Raven told the Chronicle: "The issues came with coming across the bikers on the bridlepath when they were told they were not allowed to be there and that they must stick to byways.
"We gave them directions but they weren't overly impressed, spinning their wheels and revving their engines, which was dangerous and intimidating."
She later started receiving calls from some of the 230 people on the sponsored ride saying they were lost on the route around High Easter.
"Someone had pulled the ribbons off the trees, deliberately ripped them off and thrown them in the hedge, basically sabotaging the ride, which had taken people a long time to organise," added Victoria, whose event raised cash for the Essex air ambulance.
"Quite a few riders were upset about it – it's a family day."
While the ribbon-removal was a nuisance in between points which were stewarded, it was the aggressive attitude of the bikers, who did not have number plates, which concerned Victoria most.
"There's an enormous risk to horses and livestock," she said.
"It could startle them to run into something like barbed wire. We had one elderly lady in her 70s nearly fall off."
Ms Raven did contact police a few days after the event on Sunday, April 13, but has not been able to trace the bikers.
Urging consideration for fellow users of the countryside, the 32-year-old finance manager from Old Harlow said: "In the large majority of cases bikers pass horses quietly, but this kind of thing gives bikers a bad name as a nuisance."
If you have any information contact the police on 101.
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Essex Travel (May 2)
Contamination fears over Jehovah's Witnesses move to Temple Farm
THE charity director trying to relocate a devout Christian sect's UK headquarters to Essex says contamination of the land could thwart their move.
Jehovah's Witnesses have agreed to buy Temple Farm, a car repair and breakers' yard at the junction of Stock Road and Ship Road, near West Hanningfield, pending planning permission.
It would become a 50-acre home to 800 followers with a printing room producing up to 184,000 Christian magazines an hour.
Yet ahead of a series of public consultations this month, International Bible Students Association director Paul Gillies, 59, says the move hinges on an ecological report on the site.
He said: "The results of the contamination study are a major factor. We don't expect a clean site but we do expect, and are prepared for, a reasonable amount of contamination, what with the battery acid that would have spilled out of car batteries, and we expect to spend some money on decontaminating the site."
In January, Michael Bowers of ABS Skips was fined £6,000 for operating three illegal waste sites at Temple Farm, which Wharf Land Investments tried to convert into a business park in 2008.
He was also ordered to pay the Environment Agency £2,000 for dumping metals and car batteries since September 2012. The previous owner, the late Jim Small, was also ordered to pay £45,000 by magistrates for running an illegal waste site there in 2007.
"If we found something totally alarming then we would have to think again, but so far that's not been the case and we're not worried by the levels we've seen so far," said Mr Gillies.
The IBSA, a charity used by Witnesses to distribute their literature, will answer questions at three public consultations this month alongside architects, traffic engineers and consultants.
"Nothing is set in stone yet," added Mr Gillies, who hopes to submit a planning application by late summer. "We would appreciate their input and observations. With a site that size, local people might want to know how it's going to impact on their community."
West Hanningfield parish councillor Thelma Alexandra, who has visited the IBSA's current home in Mill Hill, north London, said: "The place at Mill Hill is absolutely out of this world. It is clean, quiet, everything is done nicely; it really shocked me, even the factory part where they print all the books, you could have eaten your food off the floor. The way the place is run is absolutely lovely, so it's got to be better than what we have now."
But Mill Hill is too expensive to run, which is why they are seeking to move to Chelmsford.
Stock Parish Council vice-chairman John Millernas said: "The only thing our parish council is concerned about is an increase in traffic coming through Stock, it can get very congested.
"But anything has to be better than what is there at the moment without a doubt. It was well contaminated and with the amount of engines leaking oil into the mud, it was absolute murder."