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19
Jan

Cereals Show 13-14th June 2012

Our next show will be Cereals Show on the 13-14th June 2012 Bootby Graffoe, Lincolnshire

19
Jan

Successful Show

This was the first time DeVille & Lear had exhibited at the Lamma Show and felt it was very successful.

See below for image of our stand

7
Jan

We Will Be At The Lamma Show (18th-19th January 2012)

Come and Vist Us At The Lamma show, We Will Be On Stand 510 (indoor)

LAMMA 2012
Wednesday & Thursday 18th – 19th January 2012
Newark and Nottinghamshire Showground, Winthorpe Newark. Nottinghamshire

23
Dec

We Are Delighted With The Building

We are delighted with the way the building structure has been delivered, erected and the quality of the finish, the school staff has also passed comment on the fact there has been very little intrusive noise. They seemed to have expected an enormous clatter every thing has gone exceptionally well and Brian and Peter have been brilliant, well beyond what passes today as the call of duty.

So thanks to everyone for their part in the job.

Yours Sincerely

Alan & Ron (Steel Services)

29
Nov

The Life Of Our Steel Framed Buildings



24
Sep

Construction in the woods

This shows the construction of a forestry management building in Staffordshire

20110924-105507 PM.jpg

16
Sep

Sheep Stolen From Field

Source: © FARMERS GUARDIAN
UP to 1,500 sheep have been stolen from a field in Lincolnshire, police have said.

Officers investigating the theft of a flock of sheep from Stenigot have released further information about the number of animals taken during the incident.

The lambs and adult sheep were stolen from a 40 acre field adjacent to Welles Dale Road at Stenigot between 6pm on Saturday, September 10, and the following morning.

DC Nick Jones, from Louth CID, said: “It now transpires that there were acutally 579 ewes and 901 lambs in the field when the theft took place. This is clearly a very organised crime that would have involved a number of people and the use of two three-tier articulated transporters.

“One line of enquiry is that the sheep may have been stolen to be processed through unlicensed abbatoirs and the meat sold via non-legitimate outlets. Clearly, there are health implications should this be the case and all efforts are being made to trace the sheep as quickly as possible”.

4
Sep

THE Royal Show could be revived in 2013

THE Royal Show could be revived in 2013 under plans being drawn up by the company in charge of events at Stoneleigh Park.

 

The Royal Show apparently closed its doors for the last time in 2009, ending a 160-year tradition.

The Royal Agricultural Society of England (RASE) made the decision to close it after a period of declining popularity and financial losses, exacerbated by a run of bad luck in the form of bad weather and animal disease restrictions.

The show may yet go on, however, according to Ian Pegler, the former Little Chef chief executive, who recently took the helm at the rebranded Stoneleigh Events.

Mission

He is on a mission to revive the flagging Stoneleigh Park showground in Warwickshire and said this could include bringing the Royal Show back from the dead.

“We are looking at the possibility. The premise is that we own the brand, which is a brand everybody knows,” he told Farmers Guardian.

“As we are turning around Stoneleigh Events, we would be mad not to try and resurrect that brand, but obviously not as it was because that format failed.

“It needs to be smaller, slicker and brought up-to-date, but still with those core bits that are synonymous with the Royal Show.”

He said this would mean retaining livestock competitions at the event, albeit possibly on a smaller scale.

“The Royal Show without livestock would not be the Royal Show at all,” he said.

He wants to add a new dimension about food provenance and quality which covers the journey ‘from producer to end user’.

Mr Pegler, who has worked with chef Heston-Blumenthal before, said he would be interested in working with celebrity chefs to help get the positive messages about food across to people attending the show.

He has already sounded out possible sponsors and has had positive feedback from at least one industry trade body, which is keen to get involved. “There are an awful lot of people saying we should bring it back,” said Mr Pegler.

The earliest possible date for its return would be August 2013, he added.

Stoneleigh Events was formed recently after the decision was made to ‘divorce’ RASE’s trading arm from the charity. It is still a wholly-owned subsidiary of RASE but now has autonomy to run the commercial side of the events business.

 

23
Aug

Hauliers ordered to pay £100k after tipping waste at farm

Source: © FARMERS GUARDIAN please contact 01772 799445.
A GROUP of hauliers and the director of a skip hire company have been ordered to pay almost £100,000 in fines and costs for illegally tipping thousands of tonnes of waste at a farm near Helston in Cornwall.

Truro Crown Court heard the offenders had dumped around 9,000 tonnes of construction and demolition waste at Trenoweth Farm, Gweek.

In addition to fines and costs, they were ordered to pay back profits they had made from their criminal activities under the Proceeds of Crime Act.

Michael Leah, received a 12 month prison sentence suspended for two years and was ordered to pay £50,000 under Proceeds of Crime plus £4,000 costs.

At the time of the offences, Leah was director of a haulage and skip hire company and operated a licensed Waste Transfer Station at Ludgvan near Penzance. Waste was taken to the transfer station for sorting before being sent off for recycling, reuse or disposal.

An investigation by the Environment Agency revealed that during 2007 and 2008 Leah had illegally dumped waste, including asbestos, at three separate sites including two farms and a residential property at St Ives.

The sites included Boswens Farm, Newbridge, St Just where a landowner asked Leah to provide hardcore to improve an old farm track. Work was stopped after Agency officers became concerned at the type of waste being imported to the site. Samples taken from the track included ‘significant amounts’ of asbestos and other unsuitable waste material.

Leah said he had only deposited three lorry loads of subsoil at Trenoweth Farm, but was unable to verify this by supplying the relevant waste transfer notes.

The court heard his company, Leah Ltd, has gone into liquidation. His site manager, Mark Outram from Penzance was ordered to carry out 250 hours unpaid community work and pay £3,000 costs.

Five companies; Broad and Sons, Manaccan, Truro; Maen Karne Aggregates, Truro; St Pirrans Trucks, Camborne; Harts Haulage Ltd, Redruth and Michael Mudge Ltd, Praze, Camborne were also involved in offences at the farm and had earlier pleaded guilty to illegally depositing and disposing of controlled waste. They were all ordered to pay £2,000 costs.

14
Aug

Deville & Lear Constructing Steel Framed Building