Solar Together – savings on solar panels and battery

I’ve just registered for Solar Together Cambridgeshire a new scheme for residents in partnership with Cambridgeshire County Council, offering high-quality solar panels and battery storage at a competitive price. 

If you’re a homeowner, there’s still time to register – the scheme closes at midnight on Monday 5 October. Taking part is free and there is no obligation to get an installation. We already have solar panels on our roof, but one of the options under this scheme is to get a storage battery installed and connected up to your existing panels.

Solar Together Cambridgeshire uses the power of group-buying to bring households together to get high-quality solar panels and battery storage at a competitive price. If you’re interested:

  1. Register before 6 October free of charge and without obligation. You will need to fill in details about your house and energy consumption. 
  2. An auction will be held on 6 October. Pre-vetted suppliers submit bids. The supplier who makes the best bid will win the auction.
  3. From 26 October you will receive a personal recommendation, based on your registration details.
  4. You decide if you want to continue. If you accept, the installer will take care of the installation.
  5. After the installation is completed, you will start saving money on your electricity bill by generating your own renewable energy. 

If you need more information there’s a frequently asked questions section on the Solar Together website, or you can get in touch with Solar Together via the contact form, or call 0800 048 8259 from 8:00AM to 5:00PM Monday to Friday.

Recent planning applications

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The following planning applications in the Sutton division have been published by East Cambridgeshire District Council.

20/00694/FUL
Little Downham
The Oaks 2J Tower Road Little Downham
Single storey garage.

20/01225/FUL
Little Downham
10 Orchard Estate Little Downham CB6 2TU
Single storey rear extension.

20/01228/AGN
Little Downham
Laurel Farm Main Drove Little Downham
Agricultural building for box potato store.

20/01235/FUL
Mepal
The Elms High Street Mepal
New bay window to front of property and single storey rear and side extensions.

Further information can be found on the district council’s planning pages. If you would like to respond formally to the council about any planning application, comments should be addressed to the district council and not to me.  Comments may be made

  • online using the council’s public access web page (the link above);
  • by email to plservices@eastcambs.gov.uk;
  • or by post to the Planning Department, The Grange, Nutholt Lane, Ely, CB7 4EE.

Film review: The Draughtsman’s Contract (Peter Greenaway, 1982)

The Rule Britannia Blogathon is an event celebrating British cinema, hosted by A Shroud of Thoughts. This post is part of the 7th Annual Rule, Britannia Blogathon—an annual celebration of British film-making hosted by A Shroud of Thoughts. For a complete list of participating bloggers, visit the link at the host site.

(Note: this review contains numerous spoilers throughout)

The film starts without visuals—the voice of a counter-tenor singing in a style that places us firmly in the seventeenth century, and accompanied by a keyboard instrument of the period. But there’s nothing entertaining or relaxing here—the singing voice is strident, harsh, and every note feels like a knife.

As soon as the characters appear on screen, with their absurdly exaggerated powdered wigs and extravagant costume, that seventeenth-century feel is confirmed. It’s a clearly upper-class dinner party gathering in a country house, indulging in a series of scatological anecdotes about themselves and their neighbours—in one case the punch-line being ‘a watery death’.

The Draughtsman's Contract (1982) directed by Peter Greenaway • Reviews,  film + cast • Letterboxd

We’re swiftly introduced to the Herbert family. Mrs Herbert is unhappily married to her unappealing husband who, we hear, is shortly to leave their house and gardens of Anstey, their lavish home in Wiltshire, for a fortnight away in Southampton. (The filming location is actually Groombridge Place in Kent.) Mrs Herbert is therefore to be left at home with her married daughter Mrs Talmann, along with her distant and arrogant Dutch husband Mr Talmann and his young nephew Augustus.

The year is 1694, six years after the accession to the British throne of William and Mary, and the Protestantism of the Low Countries, of which Mr Talmann is emblematic, is in the ascendant. We later learn that the reason his young nephew is living with him is that his father was killed in battle, and he was an ‘orphan’ because his mother is a Catholic and therefore an unsuitable parent. Political and religious micro-tensions run through the film, with reference to ‘Scottish sympathies’ and William III’s battles in Ireland four years earlier.

During Mr Herbert’s absence, mother and daughter decide to commission one of the guests, the draughtsman Mr Neville, to produce twelve drawings of the house and gardens as a gift for Mr Herbert on his return. The contract for this work is drawn up by the family’s lawyer Mr Noyes, in the presence of Mr Neville and Mrs Herbert, and the surprising terms include not just the fee of £8 per drawing, but the condition that Mrs Herbert will ‘agree to met Mr Neville in private to comply with his requests concerning his pleasure’.

Drawing quickly gets under way, with the voice of the narrator stepping in to list each drawing and Mr Neville’s instructions regarding the hours of work, and the presence or absence of people, livestock, and inanimate objects. (The narratorial list is a favourite device of Peter Greenaway, and can be seen in some of his early short films.) Throughout the remainder of the film, views of the house and gardens will be seen though the frame on a stand which Mr Neville sets up in each location. But what—or who—is really being ‘framed’?

The Draughtsman's Contract – simplysourdust

Mr Neville’s drawings proceed, and we see them being drawn. Peter Greenaway started out as an artist, so the drawings are indeed his, as are the hands we see producing the sketches. The colour scheme of the film sets the black and white of the characters’ costumes and wigs against the bright green of the expansive gardens. The marvellous musical score by Michael Nyman, deconstructing themes by seventeenth-century English composer Henry Purcell, is perfect.

Mr Neville is in the ascendant, ordering members of the household about, and roughly and unkindly taking advantage of Mrs Herbert’s obligation to ‘comply with his requests concerning his pleasure’. We hear snippets of conversation, from which we learn that the impotent Mr Talmann expects his son (when and if he and his wife ever have one) to inherit Anstey. Mrs Herbert is for some reason eager to know which road her husband will return on from Southampton, and whether he had taken his French boots. Mr Neville has produced one drawing with Mr Talmann standing in the foreground, but without a face—the face of Mr Herbert will be superimposed when he returns, says Mr Neville, to which the cryptic response is ‘if he returns’.

To add to the growing sense that all is not what it seems, a naked man coloured to look like a statue is seen mysteriously creeping around the property—on the roof, in place of an obelisk, or pressed up against a wall. (The longer, four-hour, first cut of the film apparently makes it clearer what role this character plays). A ladder has been placed against one wall of the house where it has no place to be, and various items of clothing and linen have been disposed around the grounds.

Mrs Herbert is increasingly unhappy with the terms of her agreement with Mr Neville and tells him that the contract is void. Mr Neville makes the obvious response that just as it takes two people to make a contract, it takes two to undo it. While Mr Neville yet again takes his pleasure of Mrs Herbert, he asks her what will happen if there is no male heir to Anstey, to which she replies that she ‘do[es] not like to think of it’. The property was originally hers, and it’s 1694, the year of the Married Women’s Property Act which would entitle her or her daughter to Anstey in their own right, but, she tells Mr Neville, Mr Herbert does not support the idea of married women owning property.

The feeling of unease continues to spread. Mrs Herbert was, we learn, originally promised to the family lawyer, Mr Noyes, who might well have reason to wish Mr Herbert dead. There is some discussion about whether the body will be found that inhabited the clothes strewn around the grounds, or whether they will lead to a corpse. Is Mr Herbert in Southampton after all? And, Mrs Talmann tells Mr Neville, ‘perhaps you have taken a great deal on trust’.

The Draughtsman's Contract (1982)

The pivotal conversation between Mrs Talmann and Mr Neville turns the story significantly at this point. In a mirror image of Mr Neville’s contract with Mrs Herbert, Mr Neville is now contracted to Mrs Talmann for the remaining six drawings, and to comply with her requests concerning her pleasure. He completes his task and leaves Anstey.

But Mr Herbert’s horse has been found riderless on the road to Southampton, and it’s not too long before a body is dredged from the water on the one side of the house Mr Neville had omitted from his schedule of drawings. Mr Noyes is concerned that he will be framed for the murder of Mr Herbert, and offers Mrs Herbert to trade the contracts—the evidence of her infidelity—for the drawings. Mr and Mrs Talmann have a heated argument in which she upbraids him for his impotence, and he retaliates with comments about her infidelity with Mr Neville.

Meanwhile Mr Neville has returned and offers to undertake a thirteenth drawing, of the south aspect of the house where the body was found in the water. While seated there in the dark of the evening, his drawing complete and about to eat a pineapple, he is approached and surrounded by Mr Talmann, Mr Noyes, and others, all masked, who beat him to the ground, burn out his eyes with their torches, club him to death, and tip him in the water. The killers departed, the naked statue appears, and takes a large bite out of the pineapple.

This is one of Greenaway’s finest films, a superb and artful twist on the English country house murder mystery with stunning visuals and musical score. The cutting of the footage to one and three quarter hours from its original four means that a number of loose ends aren’t tied up, which lends even more of a sense of intrigue.

Cast

  • Anthony Higgins as Mr Neville
  • Janet Suzman as Mrs Herbert
  • Anne-Louise Lambert as Mrs Talmann
  • Hugh Fraser as Mr Talmann
  • Neil Cunningham as Mr Noyes
  • Dave Hill as Mr Herbert
  • David Gant as Mr Seymour
  • David and Tony Meyer as The Poulencs
  • Suzan Crowley as Mrs Pierpont
  • Lynda la Plante as Mrs Clement
  • Michael Feast as The Statue

Recent planning applications

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The following planning applications in the Sutton division have been published by East Cambridgeshire District Council.

20/00909/FUL
Little Downham
88 Cannon Street Little Downham CB6 2SS
Single storey rear extension.

20/01144/FUL
Little Downham
Land adjacent 2A Black Bank Road Little Downham
To erect 2 industrial units to let – Class B1/B2 light industrial.

20/01199/FUL
Little Downham
7 and 9 Main Street Pymoor CB6 2ED
Proposed two storey rear extension and alterations to 7-9 Main Street, including new access and parking area.

20/01134/FUL
Mepal
The Granary Whitegate Farm Witcham Road Mepal
Construction of two detached single storey dwellings previously part of application 19/01634/OUT.

20/00988/FUL
Mepal
2 Laurel Close Mepal CB6 2BN
Infill porch extension.

20/01122/FUL
Sutton
6 Eastwood Close Sutton CB6 2RH
Porch extension.

20/00992/FUL
Sutton
2 Sutton Park Sutton CB6 2RP
Single storey rear extension and first floor extension above existing garage.

20/01169/RMM
Sutton
Land to the rear of Garden Close Sutton CB6 2RF
Reserved matters for outline planning application 17/01445/OUM for erection of up to 53 houses to include public open space and details relating to access.

20/01152/FUL
Witchford
27 Granary End Witchford CB6 2XF
Two storey rear extension.

Further information can be found on the district council’s planning pages. If you would like to respond formally to the council about any planning application, comments should be addressed to the district council and not to me.  Comments may be made

  • online using the council’s public access web page (the link above);
  • by email to plservices@eastcambs.gov.uk;
  • or by post to the Planning Department, The Grange, Nutholt Lane, Ely, CB7 4EE.

Mobile COVID testing in Ely 10 and 13 September

Mobile COVID testing is coming to Ely tomorrow (Thursday 10 September) and Sunday 13 September to make it as easy as possible to get tested if you have coronavirus symptoms.

Pre-booked tests will be carried out at The Hive Leisure Centre, A10, Ely on both the above dates from 10:00AM to 3:00PM.

Book online on the NHS website or by phone on 119.

Get tested if you have

  • a high temperature
  • a new, continuous cough, or
  • loss or change to your sense of smell or taste.

Recent planning applications

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The following planning applications in the Sutton division have been published by East Cambridgeshire District Council.

20/01119/FUL
Little Downham
1 Townsend Little Downham CB6 2TA
Single storey rear extension – conservatory.

20/01120/FUL
Little Downham
1A Townsend Little Downham CB6 2TA
Single storey rear extension.

20/01130/FUL
Mepal
Low Bank Farm Low Bank Mepal
Agricultural store.

Further information can be found on the district council’s planning pages. If you would like to respond formally to the council about any planning application, comments should be addressed to the district council and not to me.  Comments may be made

  • online using the council’s public access web page (the link above);
  • by email to plservices@eastcambs.gov.uk;
  • or by post to the Planning Department, The Grange, Nutholt Lane, Ely, CB7 4EE.

Know your numbers week

Do you know what your blood pressure is? Have you heard about BMI? Why is it important to know these numbers?

‘Know Your Numbers’ week runs from 7 to 13 September this year. To look after our health, here are some numbers we need to be aware of.

Blood pressure: high blood pressure put a strain on our arteries and organs, which increases our risk of developing serious problems such as heart attacks and strokes. Ideally the blood pressure for an adult should be kept below 120/80mmHg and generally no more than 140/90 mmHg. To learn more, the NHS website has information about blood pressure test and the British Heart Foundation explains the risks of high blood pressure and how to keep your blood pressure under control.

Cholesterol levels: cholesterol is a fatty substance found in our blood. We need it to stay healthy, but too much of it also increases our risk of heart and circulatory diseases. According to the NHS, the healthy level of our total cholesterol should be 5 or below, with various types of cholesterol, good or bad, being kept at different levels. The BHF website also provides detailed information about the causes, symptoms and treatments of high cholesterol and how to lower the cholesterol levels.

Blood sugar levels: high blood sugar levels can make us ill. And regularly having high blood sugar levels for long periods of time can result in permanent damage to parts of our body such as the eyes, nerves, kidneys and blood vessels. You might have heard about a test for the HbA1c level, which is a test for the average blood sugar level, and the fact that the target blood sugar levels differ for everyone. While a normal HbA1c target is below 42mmol/mol for a healthy adult, the HbA1c level for people with diabetes to aim for is below 48 mmol/mol. The NHS website gives more information about high blood sugar. Please visit Diabetes UK website to find out if you’re at risk of type 2 diabetes, how to reduce your risk and how to look after yourself if you have diabetes.

BMI and waist size: body mass index (BMI) is a measure that uses our height and weight to work out if our weight is healthy. For most adults, an ideal BMI is in the 18.5 to 24.9 range. Use the BMI calculator provided by the NHS website to check if you have a healthy weight. You can also use it to check your child’s BMI. Maintaining a healthy weight have great health benefit. The NHS also suggests that regardless of your height or BMI, you should try to lose weight if your waist is:

  • 94cm (37in) or more for men
  • 80cm (31.5in) or more for women

If you like to find resources and support in keeping a healthy weight, visit NHS One You website. Or join the NHS CPCCG to take on the BMI challenge on www.bmicandoit.co.uk and make healthy changes.

NHS Health Check: would you like to find out your numbers? Ask your GP for advice. If you are aged between 40-74 you may be entitled to a free NHS Health Check. To find out whether you are eligible, talk to your doctor or go to www.nhs.uk/conditions/nhs-health-check/

In Cambridgeshire the free NHS Health Check is also delivered by Everyone Health and they have resumed face-to-face appointments at their community clinics. Visit Be Well Cambridgeshire for information or contact Everyone Health on 0333 005 0093.

Welcome back to school pack

Cambridgeshire County Council has produced a guide to support parents and young people as they transition back into formal education.

It includes answers to some of the common questions parents ask every year, such as transport, attendance, and free school meals.

The guide also covers the Test & Trace process, and the expectation on parents to help protect school staff; and gives some ideas on how to help their child fall back into a school routine.

The guide is online at https://www.cambslearntogether.co.uk/asset-library/Welcome-Back-to-School.pdf

Sutton Timebank COVID volunteers commended

Volunteers with Sutton Timebank are among the first to be formally recognised for their contribution to the community during COVID in a new monthly Commendation Scheme.

The scheme has been established by the Chairman of Cambridgeshire County Council to recognise the hard work and commitment of members of the community who have volunteered their services during the pandemic.

Sutton Timebank and the other nominees will receive a special certificate and their details will be published in an online roll of honour on the council website.

I nominated Sutton Timebank for the enormous contribution it has made to our community, and details of this and the other nominations to date are at https://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/council/county-councillors/chairman-of-the-council/chairmans-commendation-scheme

More nominations will be made over at least the next six months.