August 2015 Newsletter
Transcription
August 2015 Newsletter
News www.kingstonrotaryclub.org.uk 2598 Founded in 1922 Bulletin of the Rotary Club of Kingston upon Thames August 2015 Super heroes raising money for charity Kingston Rotary Club’s biggest event of the year, our annual Dragon Boat Challenge, has grown and grown until it has become, arguably, the biggest Dragon Boat event in the UK. We started 15 years ago with just 15 teams. This year we had 55, all of them racing for their chosen charities. Last year £70,000 was raised. This year we expect much more so every team is a winner! Thank you to all our super heroes who took part, organised or came as spectators. It was a lovely sunny day after early rain, a wonderful atmosphere and something to be justly proud of in our community. Let the pictures speak for themselves—is that our Pauline with one of her seven Born Too Soon Teams below! In this issue Club Visit to Warren House Visit to Guildford Club Community Dragon Boats Military Wives Choir Satro Business Game KidsOut summer draw District RIBI 2016 conference International Southborough School project Rotakids & End Polio Now Vision Aid Lend with care Diary and lunch meetings News from Kingston Riverside Club Inner Wheel News Kingston Rotary Club meets every Thursday at 12.45 to 2pm at the Antoinette Hotel, 26 Beaufort Road, Kingston upon Thames, KT1 2TQ Dragon Boat Challenge 2015 The Winners 1st: Ubunye Unity Men (above left) collecting for educational projects in South Africa. 2nd: Born Too Soon Team 6 (middle left) supporting the Neo-natal department in Kingston Hospital. 3rd: Rochills Rockets (bottom left) supporting Kingston Young Carers. Ladies: Ubunye Unity. Best headdress: Sick Children’s Trust Thankyou from President John Photos courtesy of Phillip Holt, Chris Burchell, Chris Frost and the Editor. Well done and thank you to Rotarian Simon Leo and his team for so ably coordinating a great club effort for Dragon Boats. For me the day worked so well through the unstinting and uncomplaining work of club members and club friends from the collection of equipment on Saturday through to Sunday’s early start and on to the clearing away in the evening. Dragon Boat Teams, stall holders and the public will have experienced a fun and happy day when everything happened entirely seamlessly. A big thank you to all who helped including our friends in Kingston Riverside, New Malden, and Surbiton Rotary Clubs, making it a truly Borough-wide Rotary event! You know who your Friends are! KidsOut 100 Club Linda & Kes Heffer (left) willingly acted as ‘waste operatives’ at Dragon Boats. The summer draw took place at our lunch meetings on 9th July. Well done to C Hard who came first and B Butcher who came second—both members of New Malden Rotary Club. The autumn draw will be held at Inner Wheel’s October meeting . Thank you to all our Friends who helped on the day Laurie Chandler Lend With Care: Alice Phiri, Petuake, Zambia Following a vote at Club lunch we have made our next entrepreneur loan, helped by a donation from one of our Club members. This is the entrepreneur we chose: Alice Phiri is 49 years old married with five children. Two of her children go to school. She runs a market stall selling tomatoes, oranges and dry fish. She started her business to be able to provide food for her children and to send her children to school. She is asking for a loan to grow her business capital so that she will be able to order more stocks of tomatoes, oranges and fish, she also wants to order items which are currently not on her stall like dried vegetables and ground nuts. She is happy that her business will expand once given this loan. She hopes to send all of her children to school and to help her husband at home. Alice needed £248.22 to complete her loan, through Kingston Rotary Club Alice is now fully funded. Pauline Colley The Power of Words With love and care, St John’s and King Athelstan Schools said goodbye to the children leaving this year and wished them well. Each child had something good told about themselves and had a clap from their peers, teachers and parents. An emotional and joyful time. We played our part by giving each child a dictionary and a reminder that words have the power to create love or hatred, happiness or fear, arguments and their resolution and to choose them carefully. Two lovely schools and sets of children. Well done Doreen for organising our part so well. John Cannon SATRO Junior Business Game Another Junior Business Game took place on Wednesday 8 th July at King Athelstan Junior School and this was a combined event for Year 6 children attending both King Athelstan and St John’s schools. The teams were made up of a mixture from both schools and the children very quickly made new friends. The object of the game is for each Team to become a Book Mark manufacturing business for the day, the children chose which role they wanted to play, so for example we had a Managing Director, Accountant, Sales Director, Quality Control Manager, Head of Marketing etc with all the team being production staff. Book marks were designed, produced and sold and the winning team was the one that produced the most profit. The day was fast and furious (just like the real world) and hugely exciting – for the students and those mentoring adults who were there to advise the teams. I was the mentor for Team 6 and as it so happens we were the winning team, so I too had a winner’s certificate, very proud! Probably the best people to explain how much the students enjoyed the day are the students themselves and the following is a sample of some of their reviews: “I learnt about how a company works and about banking, money and filling in a cheque. I thought it was great fun.” “I learnt that if you want to work well as a business, you have to use teamwork and communication. Using a production line also helps to do things quicker.” “I learnt that you always get things done faster as a team. Never give up and believe, inspire and achieve!” Finally it was a case of stepping back in time for me as I am an old girl of King Athelstan’s. I mentioned to a little boy that when I entered the building it was a case of déjà vu and asked him if he knew what that meant, he replied “yes it means you have done something before” I explained that this was because I used to be a student at the school, he looked at the little boy next to him and said “how old is this school”? he then asked “is the Head Teacher the same”! Pauline Colley Connections near and far We now have connections with another overseas Rotary Club – the Rotary Club of Jalalabad. Southborough High School teachers, with help from us and the British Council, visited the MC Academy in Sylhet, Bangladesh to exchange ideas and develop art and media teaching in both countries. Through us making connections, Richard Crooks and Louis Botha of Southborough brought our greetings to members of the Jalalabad Club and discussed their work and Jalalabad’s ideas of Global Scholarships. Back in Southborough the pair created, with the boys, an international arts festival that Jeremy and Jackie attended. They visited our club and told us what a difference the trip had made to their thinking and how it had resulted in improvements to the quality of learning both in Kingston and in Sylhet. And the story continues With a commission from Doreen Johnston, our KidsOut coordinator, boys from Southborough have made a DVD of KidsOut. Louis Botha will be back in the autumn with the boys who made it. They will show us their work and tell us why such a commission is so important to them. Look out for that lunch; there will be a good story told. President John More Connections An email from former Kingston Rotarian, Nigel Horrocks Hélène, the daughter of the late Georges Hourtoule of the Rotary Club of Poissy has been in touch with my daughter Sarah for almost 40 years. They did an exchange when teenagers and have been visiting each other ever since. Recently Hélène visited Sarah and told her about her charity in India. Some of her people near Agra needed some spectacles so I was able to get the required spectacles from Vision Aid Overseas which have now been sent. This is a long term connection with the two clubs which has produced another useful contribution. Best wishes Nigel Horrocks www.sunrisefranceindia.com. RotaKids work hard for End Polio Now Working all day at the King Athelstan fair, RotaKids raised awareness of polio, sold crocuses, painted donors’ fingers purple and produced a giant purple crocus with the finger prints. Creating and running a busy, lively base, the children patrolled the other stalls with collection trays, found others to fill the whirlpool collector and told the story of Rotary’s campaign. Their confidence and skills were boosted along with the coffers. They raised £113.15. Well done RotaKids! President John South London Military Wives Choir President John recently visited the South London Military Wives Choir which is based in Kingston and handed over a cheque for £300. This will help with the hire of a rehearsal hall together with the hire of a pianist and choir master. Unlike other military choirs which are based in military barracks where halls are generally available, this choir has no such facility at The Kingston Keep so our help was greatly appreciated. The South London Military Choir (one of 76 other choirs across the country and abroad) was formed as a result of the success of the Christmas single Wherever You Are performed by the choirs of Plymouth and Chivenor Military Wives. The choir supports wives and families of serving members of the Armed Forces from Kingston, Putney, Twickenham and West Byfleet, especially vital during the festive period. Phillip Holt Weekly Host duties Due to the kindness of the hotel in preparing the room for us in advance, please note that we now only need three hosts on the weekly rota: the cash host and two others—one for the microphone and greeting our guests and one on general duties. This will start in September and we hope this will make the rota easier for everyone. Editor Making a difference Keith Waller and I recently visited our ‘Mother’ Club, Guildford Rotary Club to attend a lunch where Past RIBI and RI President John Kenny was speaking, following his retirement as Chairman of the Rotary Foundation Trustees. Past President John explained how important it was for the work of Foundation to continue, especially with regards to End Polio Now which is now so very close to achieving its objective. Club members will recall that John and his wife June were RI representatives at Keith’s District Conference in 2010 and gave an excellent speech, which included the Starfish story that I have never forgotten. It epitomises what we do in Rotary all the time “Good morning! May I ask what it is that you are doing?” The young boy paused, looked up, and replied “Throwing starfish into the ocean. The tide has washed them up onto the beach and they can’t return to the sea by themselves,” the youth replied. “When the sun gets high, they will die, unless I throw them back into the water.” The old man replied, “But there must be tens of thousands of starfish on this beach. I’m afraid you won’t really be able to make much of a difference.” The boy bent down, picked up yet another starfish and threw it as far as he could into the ocean. Then he turned, smiled and said, “It made a difference to that one!” Paul Hickson Once upon a time, there was an old man who used to go to the ocean to do his writing. He had a habit of walking on the beach every morning before he began his work. Early one morning, he was walking along the shore after a big storm had passed and found the vast beach littered with starfish as far as the eye could see, stretching in both directions. Off in the distance, the old man noticed a small boy approaching. As the boy walked, he paused every so often and as he grew closer, the man could see that he was occasionally bending down to pick up an object and throw it into the sea. The boy came closer still and the man called out, Hidden Gem Right on our doorstep in Kingston but tucked away in a private road, historic Warren House, now a conference centre, has a fascinating history of famous owners and distinguished guests since the 1860s. But more than that, the grounds are associated with the famous Veitch family whose Coombe Wood Nursery collected and marketed important new species of plants from all over the world. To celebrate this 150 year connection, Warren House has created a new garden containing many of the plants once researched by the Veitch family including the rare Davidia involucrata (Dove tree) pictured on the left. Twenty-nine of us enjoyed a most informative talk by owner’s daughter and house historian Vicky Good and distinguished garden designer Andrew Fisher Tomlin and some of us enjoyed a delicious meal afterwards. A most enjoyable visit. Anne Inner Wheel District Handover It was a great honour for me to attend the Inner Wheel District 14 Assembly on 10 th July at Chertsey Halls, as President John’s representative, to witness the handover of the District Chairmanship to Liz Davis. Elizabeth Davis is a member of Kingston upon Thames Inner Wheel Club so I was particularly delighted to give her, and the assembled 100 plus Inner Wheel members from all over the District, our greetings and best wishes for a successful year— along with a bouquet of flowers! Although I didn’t have time to circulate to any great degree, it was good to meet again many people I knew already as well as others who were new to me, giving me a great opportunity for future fellowship. Thank you, especially, to Bobby Child, who with her untiring energy got me there and back in one piece, and to the ladies of Kingston's Inner Wheel who made me—the only male there— so welcome. Phillip Holt District 1145 Conference 2nd - 4th October 2015, Bournemouth Come to Bournemouth for the first conference of the new District of RIBI: it would be great to have a presence matching the high membership of our club. The draft programme includes speakers from a variety of backgrounds which should be both stimulating and inspirational. The programme will include the Mayor, the Inner Wheel District Chair, one or two club projects and the coffee breaks of course!. The usual Golf Competition will be held on the Thursday which, with the amalgamation of the two Districts, should make for a much larger and more interesting competition. There will be a formal dinner and dance on the Saturday evening. This will be the first District Conference of the new enlarged District 1145 and it is hoped as many members as possible will attend to make it a success. Registration (cost £40) is open at http://www.rotary-ribi.org/districts/homepage.php?DistrictNo=1145 Speakers to date Friday - Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe. The Commissioner of the Met Police - Robyn Christopher Chief Technologist of @AbiltyNet Saturday - Col Mark Raynor of the Army Benevolent Fund - Ravi Singh - Sikh of the Year working in Iraq and Syria - David McAuley CEO of The Trussell Trust Sunday - David Crossweiler CEO of @Where Ever The Need - Rtn Dave King of Hearing Link - Jan Meek - Adventurer, Traveller & Mum A number of rooms have been booked at the Royal Bath Hotel, a few minutes from the conference venue, at a cost of £100 per room (£90 single) per night. Please contact Ramesh Kapadia if you are able to attend or need any other information. VP Ramesh Kapadia Successful fundraising! Our Concert in aid of ShelterBox in July was hugely entertaining. Our musicians, Eszther Schütz and Anna Cassú Serra, were absolutely delightful and played beautifully. It was a lovely way to spend a summer’s evening ~ and I’m pleased to say we raised £335 for ShelterBox, a great result. We hope they might come again next year! We have also had a superb High Tea Party at Dorly’s and raised a significant amount towards our Mary Preston Holiday Guest sponsorship; and yet again, the sun shone for us. And by the time you read this some of us will have enjoyed a Pizza evening together. As you will all know, our President’s Garden Party is on Saturday, the 22nd August at Pat Wingett’s house ~ 2.30 for 3 p.m. This is always a wonderful event with tea and scones, a Raffle, a Silent Auction and some Home Produce for sale ~ all the profit will go to our President’s Charity, which as you all ALSO know, is Momentum; we had a very moving talk and videos from the charity at our July meeting. You are all invited for the 22nd, so do please join us ~ just let one of us know you’re coming so Liz will bring youth, enthusiasm and her own inimitable we can make sure we have enough scones (but please style to the job, which will hopefully encourage others to come forward. She is being supported by Denise de la bring your own garden chairs). Perrelle of Banstead Club in what is a “job-share” – Our September Meeting is on Tuesday the 8th Septem- potentially a way forward for all sorts of “jobs” in Inner ber, when we will be presenting a cheque to last year’s Wheel at all levels. President’s charity, BagBooks, and our speaker will be Harvey Howlett. The title of his talk is intriguing: “From And as for me, well, after my own stint as District Chairthe Bible to Mills & Boon ~ How we Read What we man, followed last year by being District Membership Read”. Come along and hear him ~ you are very Officer – and including lots of conversations with Paul welcome; you just need to book in with Betty Griggs Hickson at various airports, etc., I seem to have developed quite an interest in membership (and that applies to (details in your Directory). Rotary as well as Inner Wheel), so I have volunteered to In Kingston Inner Wheel, we are definitely doing our bit sit on our National Membership & Development Comfor the bigger organisation. Our new District Chairman is mittee as an “ordinary” member, i.e. one from the ranks! our own Liz Davis, who stepped up at the last minute I’ll let you know how I get on. because we were, again, struggling to find a Chairman for this year. We will try not to make a habit of it (as I Yours in friendship, Bobby Child did exactly the same myself two years ago), but we know New Beginnings Many more activities are being planned and all members are encouraged to put forward their own ideas on what they would like to organise, or suggest projects that may benefit from the assistance of the Club. For more information, please e-mail us at kingstonriversiderotary@gmail.com. The provisional Kingston Riverside Rotary Club, set up earlier this year, meets on the 2nd Sunday and 4th Wednesday of every month, at the Bishop Pub located on the Riverside Walk in Kingston KT1 1PY. We currently have 12 members and will need 20 Alison Webb to become Chartered. Following the same principle of ‘service above self’, the aim of this particular Club is to attract people who may have expressed an interest in joining Rotary but felt that attendance at weekly meetings was not viable, due to work or family commitments. By holding our Sunday meetings at 10.30 am and Wednesday meetings at 6.30 pm, it is hoped that this will widen the opportunity of attracting new members to an organisation which offers the ability to participate in fundraising projects, help the local community, whilst at the same time forming friendships through social events. Meetings on a Sunday are primarily to discuss Club business, whilst those on a Wednesday are mainly for review and up-date purposes, so are generally quite brief. Despite being only several months old, the Club has met the Mayor and Mayoress at the Born Too Soon Graduation Party and, disguised as Mickey Mouse, helped to entertain the children; we have taken part in the 25th celebration of Kids Out, dressed as various characters and greeted the many hundreds of children and adults arriving at Chessington World of Adventures; and we helped in various ways at the Dragon Boat event, by setting up gazebos, rowing, and helping in the Membership tent, whilst at the same time raising over £200.00 on a tombola for the Born Too Soon Charity.