Latest news with #DaveWalker


The Sun
01-07-2025
- The Sun
Woman ‘sexually assaulted' in wooded area of town on walk home
POLICE have launched an appeal for witnesses after a woman was sexually assaulted in a Derbyshire town. Officers said the incident happened in a wooded area close to Cantelupe Road, Ilkeston on Sunday when a man sexually assaulted a woman who was walking home. 1 Derbyshire Police said the woman managed to fight him off and run away. The man, aged in his mid-20s, is described as white, around 5ft 10in tall and of medium build. He was wearing a white Nike top with a small black tick on the front and had his nose pierced, wearing a gold ball stud. Inspector Dave Walker, who oversees policing in Erewash said: 'We know that reports of this nature will understandably cause concern amongst the local community and would like to reassure the public that we have a dedicated team of detectives working around the clock to find the person responsible. 'Ilkeston is a tight-knit community, and we have become aware of speculation about this being connected to another incident in the same area on 14 June. "We can confirm that these are not linked. A man was charged in connection with the earlier incident the following day and was remanded to prison on 16 June. 'We are very keen to speak with anyone who has information which may help with our enquiries into this incident.


The Herald Scotland
01-07-2025
- The Herald Scotland
I was utterly captivated by the Orcadian isle orcas spend Christmas
This Orcadian isle is an irresistible oasis that in recent years has bucked the struggling Scottish island trend and attracted a swathe of incomers every bit as overjoyed with their discovery as the wildlife. Straight off the ferry I meet my guide, fixer and man about town (or rather bijou island), Dave Walker, who is the cheery embodiment of modern Sanday. He engages me instantly with a huge smile - 'Welcome to Sanday, I hope you like it here.' Dave cannot stop smiling, probably because he knows by now that everyone likes it here. (Image: Dave Walker) How could you not fall for this Orcadian isle? Sanday may only measure 16 miles by six, but that is not the whole story with Orkney's third largest island. It is well named as it's blessed with the sort of starched white sand beaches that has tourist offices from overseas nicking images of Scottish beaches for their own tourist campaigns. Step forward Thailand. To be fair I don't think any of the cheery souls I encounter on Sanday would be remotely bothered if Bangkok were to front a new campaign with the sheer delights of Backaskaill Bay, Otterswick Bay, Doun Helzie or Whitemill Bay. There are plenty of beaches to go around here. Personally I reckon the Thais would plump for Tresness, which is perfectly framed by hulking sand dunes. Sanday is worth visiting just to gawp at the beaches and Dave is winningly patient as I lose my conversational thread every time we come across another sandy stunner. Beyond the beaches Sanday boasts real strength in depth. And indeed even on the beaches there is intrigue... At Lopness lies the wreck of B98, waylaid from the wartime shenanigans at Scapa Flow. This First World War German torpedo destroyer made a tardy arrival into Scapa Flow in June 1919 a day too late for the mass scuttling of the Imperial German Navy. So it fled north and ended up beached here. The canny locals have done a bit of a Whisky Galore job on her stripping her of anything of value, but this is the only wartime wreck you can survey beached on the surface in Orkney. B98 was joined last year by an unexpected new arrival from much more distant in our past. A wooden shipwreck was revealed by those bountiful local sands last year, an extremely rare Dutch vessel from the 1600s. I find her being painstakingly preserved in a specially built tank outside the Sanday Heritage Centre. The Centre's custodian Ruth Peace talks of her hopes that the vessel can be preserved for future generations and brought back to a state in which she can take pride of place at the museum. For now 'Sanday Through The Ages' compels, voyaging from the island's rich pre-history right up to those world wars and beyond, with many a shipwreck on the way. Impressively the burnt mound outside the museum was saved from the ravages of the sea and painstakingly rebuilt here, just one of the prehistoric sites that litter the island. I yomp out to one prehistoric gem with Francis Edwards, from the Sanday Business Forum, another local who continues to build my working theory that Sanday may have the friendliest islanders in the whole of the Northern Isles. And that is saying something in this life-affirming archipelago. We negotiate with the hulking local cows for access to Quoyness Chambered Cairn, a dramatic attraction set on a rugged stretch of coast. There is not a soul bar us in sight. Quoyness evokes Maeshowe as I crawl in the pitch dark down the tunnel entrance into the 4,000 year-old burial chamber. I'm eager to see as much of Sanday as humanely possible as this is clearly an island that keeps on giving. I snare an e-bike from next to the well-stocked island shop and head out into what feels like Camberwick Green and Trumpton crossed with a wildlife documentary. (Image: Quoyness Chambered Cairn) I arrange to meet Emma Neave Webb and Russell Neave, an experienced naturalist couple behind a business, Sanday Nature Tours, they promise me will be up and running in time for the summer holidays. They will be busy as Sanday offers myriad wild delights from otters, puffins and curlews, through to the winter hen harriers and the short-eared owl that swoops low over us as we talk. It's not just birds here, stresses Emma: 'Last year we saw about a dozen species of marine mammal, including those orcas who cruised in to celebrate Christmas. The walrus loved it here until a gull nipped him on the bum.' The local wildlife is booming. As are the islanders with the population rising up to around 500 after the wave of Covid-era new arrivals. At the heart of Sanday's success is Sanday Community Craft Hub. (Image: Tracy Ranger) Here I meet Tracy Ranger who tells me about the 70 or so local artisans who they work with. 'Until recently many of them just created things at home and no one saw them,' smiles Tracy. 'They can now bring them to a wider audience here. It's a space where the community can come together and spend time in our café too, meeting visitors as they go. Sanday is just a lovely island to live on and spend time in.' I leave Sanday already vowing to come back. I want to hear about the work of the new Men's Shed and the old church and store that the community has acquired. Judging by the people I meet, Sanday will have big plans for the latter two sites on an island that cheers us as much as does our marine mammal cousins. Where to stay ... Orkney Retreats The work that this company has done on Sanday is miraculous. Not content with renovating one rundown old property, they're now up to seven self-catering abodes and I'd wager on there being more to come. They had taken a collage of old farm houses and other sleeping buildings and breathed new life into them. They now have abodes to suit all sizes of group. Braeswick B&B This welcoming B&B makes for a good base with the highlight the shared guest space, with its floor to ceiling glass. As well as comfy seats they have a telescope so you can search the night skies here too. With so little light pollution that is a sublime experience on a clear night. Make sure to book a room with a sea view. Ayre's Rock This eclectic oasis in the north of Sanday boasts a campsite and a motorhome aire, as well as wooden camping pods and a wee cottage. They also have trim hostel. Claire and Phil (it's usually first name terms on Sanday) took over the site late last year and are powering on with it. Dogs welcome too. B&B available on request. Foodie Sanday ... 59 Degrees North Dynamic English owner Jon Chapman runs an inspiring set-up here. Yes he runs a design business as you can see by the striking efforts on site. But he also lays claim to serving the most northerly wood-fired pizzas in the British Isles. They are superb too – the blue cheese pizza finished with hot honey is sublime. The Craft Hub Savour comfort food safe in the knowledge that the money you're spending goes directly into Sanday's community. This cosy space is surrounded by art you can buy and you'll always meet members of the community here. Enjoy the likes of sweet potato and rosemary soup and a range of baked potatoes, sandwiches and toasties. They try to source as much as possible locally with Orcadian butter and cheese; Orkney-roasted coffee too. The cakes are handmade on Sanday. Norma's Cake Box You can pick up a sugary treat on Saturdays and Sundays from the eponymous lady's house – very Sanday. Just choose your homemade treat from the box and pay, then off you go to one of the glorious beaches to savour it like a labrador who has just been given a huge bone. Instructions online of how to navigate here from the doctor's surgery. Northlink Ferries ( sail to Orkney. Orkney Council Ferries sail to Sanday from Kirkwall. More information


BBC News
10-03-2025
- Business
- BBC News
Stockport Market: Revamp of town has given market a boost
Market traders have said the wider regeneration of their town is having a positive impact on their businesses. Stallholders at Stockport Market said it was busier than ever over the last 18 said the revival of the nearby Underbanks area of the town, where many food and drink businesses are based, was also helping. Stockport Council said the number of visitors to the market was now higher than before the pandemic thanks to regular monthly events. The historic market is said to trace its origins back more than 1,000 years to the late Anglo-Saxon Dave Walker, 59, said: "Trade is very good for us, it's a fantastic place and there are more and more people coming."There are more than 30 independent traders working on the market, which opens on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays. Butcher Scott Donnelley, 47, added: "You get people just coming here for a chat. "It's a good place, there are a lot of good people. "It's a very homely place, there's a really nice feel. "Every week I've noticed that it gets busier." Traders have raised concerns over the market's opening hours and the fact it is shut on Biegaj, 33, who works at Polish bakery Sticky Fingers, said: "Every day that we are open is better for all the traders, it's more chances to sell."But we do manage to sell nearly all of the stock most days."The bakery is also set to open a new site in Underbanks, with the market stall proving so popular."We're very busy most of the time, the only issue is we only have space for four little tables and it's often not enough for our customers," Ms Biegaj added: "But the people in Stockport are very supportive, they want to support local traders, there's a good community. "They could go anywhere but they choose here for the quality and the atmosphere." New flats are being built in the town as well as a new transport interchange and Viaduct Park, as part of Stockport's leader Mark Hunter said Stockport Market, which was named Britain's Best Small Indoor Market in 2023, is at the "heart of our plans"He said that "at a time when markets elsewhere are closing, Stockport's is thriving".Mr Hunter added: "It's a place full of history, character, and community spirit, and we know just how much it means to the people of Stockport." Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.