The QT

Monday 21 October 2024
21/10/2024

Author name: Tony Henderson

No time to waste in rubbish quest

Walks along the beach galvanised Jackie Sewell into making it her business to launch a war on waste. Jackie, who had run her own interior design business for 30 years, found herself picking up rubbish โ€” especially plastics โ€” while walking the dog on beaches near her home in Tynemouth. She says:โ€ It showed me …

Kittiwake Hotels open for business

Two new Tyneside hotels are now open for business โ€“ but it will be several weeks before they expect to welcome their first guests. The โ€˜hotelsโ€™ have been erected on top of the towers at the Gateshead side of the Tyne Bridge. It is hoped they will provide nesting ledges for kittiwakes when they return …

Funding for community heritage projects

The untold stories of Newcastleโ€™s drag scene is one of six North East projects awarded grants under a scheme which seeks to celebrate the regionโ€™s diverse local heritage. The ventures chosen by Historic England as part of its Everyday Heritage programme to explore working class history have collectively been awarded more than ยฃ80,000 to dig …

Northumberland chicks spread their wings

The French Connection has delivered news of a Northumberland osprey in its wintering grounds in Senegal in Africa more than 3,000 miles from the Kielder Forest nest where the bird hatched. French ornithologist Jean-Marie Dupart was surveying ospreys in the Saloum Delta national park, which has many miles of unspoilt waterways. He came across and …

Heroines of the shipyards

The shipyards of the North East were a vital front line in the First World War as they battled to replace the heavy losses caused by U-boats of vessels carrying crucial supplies. But with so many shipyard workers fighting in the armed forces, women stepped forward to fill the gaps and tackle the many jobs …

Turner-nominated artist turns her attention to Belsay

For artist and photographer Ingrid Pollard, it was a year spent in โ€˜wonderlandโ€™. Ingrid, appointed as English Heritageโ€™s first visual art fellow, was presented with the opportunity of a year-long fellowship at Belsay Hall in Northumberland. Spread out before her was a medieval castle and an impressive 20 acres of gardens, including the locationโ€™s atmospheric …

Lift off for space weather watcher

The weather โ€“ whatโ€™s forecast and what actually arrives –  is a daily topic and a longtime conversation-maker. But Northumbria University scientist  Dr Andy Smith has his sights trained rather higher –  on the weather in outer space. With society increasingly dependent on technology, activity such as solar eruptions has the potential to cause serious disruption …

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