Please note that Blackwell Hollow will be closed between 9.30am and 3.00pm on Monday 11th May to allow urgent treeworks to be carried out. Diversions will be put in place

Eyesore site sold

COUNCILLORS have welcomed the sale of the town centre Caffyns site to Ability Contractors for a reported £1 million.

The building, dubbed the biggest eyesore in East Grinstead, has stood empty for four years after the original plans for its sale to Marks and Spencer fell victim to the recession.

News that it has finally changed hands, and work has already started on clearing the car park, has been welcomed by the Town Council – even though plans for its future redevelopment currently remain a mystery.

Its great news that there might be progress on getting a redevelopment for the site and we look forward to learning further details soon, said Council leader James Baldwin.

Cllr Bob Mainstone, who chairs the Councils Business Support Group, also welcomed the sale.

If the site is developed, and we get the new state-of-the-art toilet block opposite built by the end of the year, it will bring new life to the whole area, he said.

Check out Chequer Mead

TREFOIL Montessori Farm school presents King Arthur and the Dragon on 1 April at 4pm with an exciting and inventive performance by its irrepressible pupils.
Table reservations for a meal at Cuisine Studio on 01342 324860. Tickets 10/concessions – senior citizens £8, children £5.

ACOUSTIC SUSSEX presents a rescheduled performance by Cara Dillon on 8 April. Winner of best album for Hill of Thieves in the 2010 BBC folk awards, Irish songstress Cara is an emotive and captivating performer. Table reservations for a meal at Cuisine Studio on 01342 324860. Tickets £17.50.

WHITE MOUNTAIN promotions presents Perfect Alibi on 9 April with a tribute concert to Pink Floyd. Tickets £15/concessions £13.

LDN Wrestling is back on 13 April for a spectacular night of mayhem featuring all the top stars of the wrestling world. Tickets £12/concessions £10/family £36.

THE ROLLIN CLONES celebrate the greatest rock band of all time on 16 April. Table reservations for a meal at Cuisine Studio on 01342 324860. Tickets £14/concessions £13.

THE ROTARY CLUB of East Grinstead presents a charity Celebrity Gardeners Forum at 2pm on 17 April when Jim Buttress, retired from the royal parks, BBC reporter Jean Griffin and Peter Holman, a horticultural management consultant, will answer gardening questions from the audience. Tickets £10.

CHEQUER MEAD Lunchtime Concert series presents A Fish Out of Water on 19 April from 1.30pm 2.30pm. Shirley King, an actress with extensive experience in theatre, tv and film, and recording guitarist Rose Andresier, will perform a programme of poetry, prose and readings from Ted Hughes, John Betjeman and Charles Dickens, with musical works by Satie, Bach and Schubert. Table reservations for a meal at Cuisine Studio on 01342 324860. Tickets £4/£3.50 concessions/or £3 if buying three concerts in the series.

ARIEL YOUNG ACTORS presents Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat in two performances on 21 April at 2.30pm and 7.30pm with a cast of talented young actors from across their drama academies. Table reservations for a meal at Cuisine Studio 01342 324860. Tickets £10/£5 for Ariel students at the 2.30pm performance only.

CUISINE STUDIO presents Jazz Cafe on 27 April from 7pm. Relax and enjoy an evening of live jazz combined with the Studio’s bistro menu. Tickets £5: reserve a table in advance only on 01342 324860.

ACOUSTIC SUSSEX presents Mary Gautier on 28 April. An American singer/songwriter Mary sings beautifully crafted, funny, heartbreaking songs.
Table reservations for a meal at Cuisine Studio on 01342 324860. Tickets £15.

Last call for Charity Ball

MAYOR Stephen Barnett’s Charity Dinner Dance will take place at the Meridian Hall on 16 April, with dancing to A Bag Full of Hats.

Tickets for the black tie event cost £40 a head, and profits will be divided between the town museum and the work of the Blond McIndoe Research Foundation.

The menu for the evening is as follows:

Starter: Trio of Melon Balls with cassis syrup and fresh mint

Main course: Parma ham-wrapped chicken breast filled with cream cheese and sun-dried tomatoes, served with a white wine and shallot cream, Lyonnais potatoes and seasonal vegetables.

Vegetarian option: Goats cheese and roasted vegetable tart

Dessert: Chocolate truffle cake laced with Grand Marnier, or Eton Mess.

A selection of cheeses served with biscuits, celery, grapes and walnuts, coffee or tea.

To make a reservation, contact the Town Councils East Court offices on 01342 335055. Cheques should be made payable to "The Town Mayor’s Charity Fund".

Half term fun with pirates and parrots

CHILDREN’S author Geraldine Durrant, who is also the Town Council’s PRO, spread some half-term happiness at the town library with a reading of her two books based on the adventures of feisty heroine Pirate Gran.

"I was delighted to be invited to take part in Pirate Pandemonium," said Geraldine, who took along her parrot. "I remember when my own children were small how grateful I was to the wonderful local library in California which used put on something different every day during the school holidays.

"East Grinstead’s librarians do a great job in encouraging children to come in and enjoy books, and it was lovely to meet all the children and parents who took part."

Roy’s Top Tips for garden glory

PENSIONER Roy Elliott’s stunning front garden earned him the prize for the “most colourful” in town last summer when he filled it with a riot of seasonal blooms from pavement to roof level.

With his wife suffering from ill-health, 79-year-old Roy says he probably won’t have the same time to devote to his garden this year, and will just have to “do his best”.

But with him out of the running, the man who has scooped the top garden prize for the past three years running hopes other gardeners will now take up the challenge.

“When I started I didn’t have much experience, but I had worked as a decorator all my life and I loved colour.

“So when we moved here from Forest Row seven years ago I bought myself a small greenhouse and looked forward to spending some time outdoors.”

But Roy’s ambitions, like his garden, just grew and before he knew it he had transformed his Tudor Close home into a showstopper which has strangers knocking on his door to congratulate him on the pleasure he gives to neighbours and passersby throughout the summer months.

He demolished the existing front garden, and replaced it will stone walls and troughs, pillars and planters – when he ran out of room at ground level he headed for the sky, covering his flat garage room in a glorious array of bizzie lizzies, petunias and begonias, and hanging flower-baskets by the bedroom windows.

“The only place I didn’t decorate was the roof,” he laughed.

Roy buys most of his plants as tiny plugs and grows them on, which is an economic way to raise the hundreds he needs each year.

And he has made his garden as maintenance free as possible, using slate and pebbles to provide texture and interest around his planters, rather than grass.

Even so, Roy spends around two hours a day caring for his glorious garden.

“I use a watering can, not a hose, because that can damage the flowers, and while I water I keep an eye on how everything is doing, and check to see whether the plants need deadheading.”

Working outside with the sun on his back is one of Roy’s greatest pleasures – and he advises anyone keen to emulate his success to get out and get growing.

“It’s a marvellous and fulfilling hobby, and my wife and I both enjoy the garden very much,” he said, “so if you are at all interested now is just the right time of year to get stuck in.”

Meridian FM marks first birthday

MERIDIAN FM, East Grinstead’s own radio station, has celebrated its first birthday as a full-time channel.

Launching the community-based station on 1 March 2010 in the middle of a recession was a tough call, admitted manager Pru Oliver.

But the experience of the past 12 months has also been a rewarding one which now sees 22,000 listeners regularly tuning in on the internet alone.

The station, which is run by a team of volunteers, features music, local news and interviews.

“Our mantra is Your Radio, Your Station. We are here to support the business and social life of the community, and to make a positive difference to life in East Grinstead and its surrounding villages,” said Pru.

New ideas in the pipeline in the coming months are a food festival and the Meridian Awards, to “celebrate the best the town has to offer”.

“We are striving the whole time to improve the content and quality of our service, and to give a greater voice and support to the community as a whole.”

Community Play Reunion

THERE will be a reunion at the Meridian Hall at 7.30pm on 5 April for anyone involved with the Community Play last December.

The evening will feature a Pot Luck Supper, so guests are asked to bring along a dish to share, and drinks of their choice.

This will be an opportunity to meet old friends and consider whether to be involved in future community plays organised by the Claque Theatre Group under director Jon Oram.

A DVD of the play, which will be a lasting souvenir of the historic production, will also be available on the night.

Policing in East Grinstead

SUSSEX Police has pledged to protect or improve its frontline services despite the financial challenges imposed by budget cuts.

In a report to East Grinstead Town Council Chief Inspector Edward De La Rue said this could not be achieved by working in the same way with less money and fewer people but would require the police to look at different ways to eliminate waste and reduce bureaucracy.

One way this is being done is by merging two police divisions (North Downs which covers Mid Sussex, Horsham and Crawley, and West Downs) to form one division covering the whole of West Sussex from April this year. This will save 800,000 in management costs and make it easier for the police to work more closely with its community partners.

It will also see the introduction of a new policing model.

Local Neighbourhood Policing Teams (NPT) will continue to provide community policing, but other officers will be divided into two teams.

Neighbourhood Response Team (NRT) officers will continue to patrol and attend emergency calls but will now hand over further investigations and prisoners to a new Response Investigation Team (RIT), freeing them up to get back out on the street.

This approach has already been tried successfully in Brighton and Hove, where it has been found that response officers have had much less paperwork to complete so they can get back onto the streets more quickly after answering a call.

Response times have fallen, and the average time it takes to investigate a crime has fallen from 44 days to 16.