New Care Segment on 105.5

New Care Segment on 105.5

New Care Segment on 105.5. Leading care services podcast You Care, I Care expands into a prime slot at local community radio station, SWINDON 105.5. In so doing it’s bringing awareness of the demands of the social care system.

Janet Shreeve, founder of Shreeve Care Services, is a care consultant with over twenty-years’ experience within the care industry. Janet started her podcast You Care, I Care in 2023. She did it to delve into the state of the social care system with Janet welcoming guests as they share their stories of the system in the UK.

With the topics of the You Care, I Care podcast being uber relevant, Swindon’s 105.5 radio asked Janet to bring her successful format to their air waves.

‘It is a real pleasure to welcome Janet Shreeve and her new programme to SWINDON 105.5. The subject of care is important to discuss, question and to promote good and helpful practices. Janet’s new monthly programme You Care, I Care will help address related issues and highlight local services’ says Shirley Ludford, station manager and trainer.  

New Care Segment on 105.5 - Janet Shreeve and Shirley Ludford at Swindon 105.5
New Care Segment on 105.5 – Janet Shreeve and Shirley Ludford at Swindon 105.5

Ethos

‘An ethos of SWINDON 105.5 is to broadcast programmes not heard elsewhere in the region. And this show adds to our unique programming.’

You Care, I Care, hosted by Janet Shreeve premiered at 11am on Tuesday 16th September on Swindon 105.5. The show aims to encourage discussion and visibility around the importance of social care.

Aside from hosting this care show, Janet is sponsoring ‘Girls About Town’. That show plays on Wednesdays 10am to 12-noon on SWINDON 105.5, discussing topics from a female perspective.

‘I’m honoured that Shirley has asked me to take my podcast onto Swindon’s local radio. I know how important information and awareness of social care is to the public. So I’m excited to bring that to Swindon 105.5’s listeners,’ said Janet Shreeve. ‘To support “Girls About Town”, a broadcast I adore, is a fantastic opportunity.’

‘I started my podcast and now my radio show to make the social care system more approachable. To be a person people can speak and engage with and know they are getting the support they need through my experiences within the care system.’

‘It’s about bringing care to the forefront of people’s minds. And I’m honoured to be a trusted person to go to for advice and support,’ concluded Janet.

The initial broadcast launched on Tuesday 16th September 2026, You Care, I Care will continue monthly on the third Tuesday of each month. The first broadcast is available for download now.

To tune in and learn more about Shreeve Care Services, visit: https://shreevecareservices.co.uk/

Do also see:


Historic Walled Garden Welcomes Visitors

Historic Walled Garden Welcomes Visitors

Historic Walled Garden Welcomes Visitors. Wiltshire’s Grade II-listed Bothy Gardens has launched its 2025 corporate season in style. They welcomed The National Trust, Europe’s largest conservation charity, for a day of training and team building inside its historic walled garden.

Owners Jules Gilleland and Mark Wheeler have poured their energy and imagination into reviving this once-forgotten Georgian walled garden. This horticultural heaven lies on the edge of the Burderop estate, at Chiseldon near Swindon.

Since taking it on in 2021, they’ve transformed the site into a living laboratory of creativity, conservation, and curiosity. There’s:

  • a restored Victorian greenhouse
  • rare plant nurseries
  • a garden library
  • and the historic Efford sand bed system, an ingenious Victorian irrigation method. In it, layers of sand and gravel allow water to rise evenly through the soil by capillary action. That keeps the beds moist and productive without overwatering.
Historic Walled Garden Welcomes Visitors - Mark Wheeler taking gardeners from The National Trust around Bothy Gardens recently.
Historic Walled Garden Welcomes Visitors – Mark Wheeler taking gardeners from The National Trust around Bothy Gardens recently.

Making use of a special space

Using this unique space, the training day with the National Trust combined workshops and garden tours, with sessions on climate resilience, soil regeneration, conservation and horticultural successes.

Among the speakers was Sheila Das, Head of Gardens and Parks, alongside other National Trust specialists. In the afternoon, Mark led a tour of the garden, showing how history and innovation combine at this unique site.

‘Hosting the National Trust felt like the perfect way to start our season,’ said Jules. “For us, it’s about more than growing plants, it’s about growing ideas, skills, and connections.’

They hosted the day in Thomas’ Tunnel. That’s a new 25m polytunnel within the walled garden named in honour of Mark’s father. Once, this walled garden relied on coal-fired furnaces and bothy boys. They slept beside them to keep peaches and pineapples warm. Today, the garden is again a hive of activity, this time buzzing with conservation, collaboration, and creativity.

Historic walled gardens can be up to 5°c warmer than the surrounding environment. Thus they create microclimates. In such environments, Victorians cultivated exotic fruits such as figs, apricots, and even pineapples, right here in Wiltshire.

Bothy Gardens is a passion and vocation for me and Jules. To see the beautiful gardens used for so many different events is astounding. Whether we host a volunteer day, a community open day or a corporate event, seeing the place come to life is exhilarating. It feels like we’re honouring the history of the space,’ concluded Mark.

With a 60-person classroom now in planning, Bothy Gardens’ Living Lab programme is open for bookings. Thus offering businesses the chance to connect with nature, history, and each other in one of Wiltshire’s most unusual event spaces.

For more information or to book a Living Lab experience, visit: www.bothygardens.com/the-living-lab


See also:

And … as we’ve mentioned the National Trust:

Technology Business Supporting Best Mates

Technology Business Supporting Best Mates

Technology Business Supporting Best Mates. Calne-based Black Nova Designs, a well-known provider of web design, hosting, and IT, uses their birthday celebration to forefront mental health charity, Best Mates.

In a recent interview, Black Nova Designs’ founder, Kyle Holmes opened up his own mental health struggles. And about what lay behind the decision to raise money for Swindon-based charity Best Mates, at their 10th birthday bash.

Best Mates is a mental health and community charity. It supports people when they’re in a crisis through practical support and by providing a ‘mate’ for them to talk to. And all in confidence.

In a recent interview between Black Nova Designs and Best Mates, Kyle Holmes shared the effect of mental health on men.

‘Throughout the first twenty-three years of my life I didn’t have anyone to turn to. Someone who, when I was in trouble, would support me or just take me on a walk. That’s the great thing that Best Mates does. They provide that voice for people. A voice that listens.’

‘A lot of people don’t know where to turn to – I didn’t. If our birthday bash can give people a place to go and we can raise money for a charity that can literally save someone’s life, I couldn’t think of a better way to celebrate it.’

Technology Business Supporting Best Mates - Kyle of Black Nova and Jeff from Best Mates
Technology Business Supporting Best Mates – Kyle of Black Nova and Jeff from Best Mates

Supporting Best Mates

Black Nova Designs’ birthday event will support Best Mates with a raffle and fundraising effort. They’re encouraging guests to donate as much as they can for the charity’s life-saving work.

Jeff Tucker, co-founder of Best Mates, said:

‘We want to hold people’s hands, and we want to make a difference. Through what Black Nova Designs are doing for us; we can focus on helping people in their dark times. We can’t thank them enough for using their birthday bash to platform Best Mates.’

Black Nova Designs’ ’10th Birthday Bash’ is on Saturday 18th October. It’s at the National Self Build and Renovation Centre (NSBRC) in Swindon from 7pm to 11pm.

The event is ‘dress to impress’ themed. It’s an evening of celebration, networking, and entertainment while raising much needed funds and awareness of mental health support.

With tickets starting at £75 each, attendees are guaranteed an evening of celebration and joy all whilst saving lives with Best Mates. Booking ends on September 30. To book, visit: https://events.blacknovadesigns.co.uk/



Swindon Artist Leslie Cole

Swindon Artist Leslie Cole

Swindon Artist Leslie Cole.

I don’t use Twitter (it’s still Twitter to me) much these days – it’s all rather grim. But there’s a couple of local folk I follow on there so I pop on from time to time to engage with them. In a recent chat with them, the topic of Swindon in 50 Artists arose. I posited that, were one to write such a thing (and no I’m not), the challenge would lie not finding 50 artists, but in stopping at 50. One member of the conversation disputed that there’d be so many. So, in the space of three tweets, and off the top of my head, I came up with close to twenty-five. My point was made.

I’m not going to list all 25, fear not. But I will give you, and these are in no particular order, your starter for 10. They are:

  1. Tim Carroll
  2. Ken White
  3. Harold Dearden – deceased
  4. Frank Quinton – deceased
  5. David Bent
  6. Leslie Cole – deceased
  7. Peter Waldron – deceased
  8. Henry Orlik
  9. John Webb – deceased
  10. Caroline Day

But it’s Leslie Cole I want to focus on here, being as how Museum and Art Swindon currently have on a Leslie Cole exhibition: Leslie Cole: Recording ConflictFind out more about it here – but better still go and see it.

First – an observation

Before I get on with talking about Cole, an observation. Over the years, Swindon art college has been a darn good breeding ground of successful artistic talent. Through its doors have passed, that I know of, Peter Waldron (Swindon-born, 1941), Ken White, Leslie Cole and Henry Orlik.  I mean, one world-class artist passing through would be quite something. But four? That’s surely quite something else entirely?

Now, I can’t comment on the merits or otherwise of the current art departments. But it’s safe to say there once was a time when Swindon’s school of art had scale in its ambition. And out of that ambition came the artists mentioned here. Amongst many I daresay. 

Anyway! Back to R Leslie.

Leslie Cole and his war artistry

There’s a reason for MAS naming the exhibition Leslie Cole: Recording Conflict. While other artists used the war as their subject matter, Cole (born 1910) became an official war artist. One of only thirty in the country, this is something to celebrate I feel.

From Swindon art college, Cole progressed to London’s Royal College of Art gaining a diploma in mural decoration, fabric printing and lithography before going into teaching art at Hull’s art college in 1937. Then, in 1939, came the Second World War. 

With the outbreak of war, Sir Kenneth Clark, then director of Great Britain’s National Gallery, launched a scheme to get the nation’s artists involved in the war effort. The War Artist’s Advisory Committee (WAAC) resulted and started recruiting. In 1940 a willing and able Cole applied, without success, for enlistment. So, instead, he followed fellow students into the RAF, though the start of the war saw him discharged on health grounds. 

Yet the RAF’s loss became the art world’s gain. Cole now made a second attempt to become a war artist. This time the examples he submitted of his figurative lithographs, reflecting both Swindon and Hull’s war situations found favour with the committee. The work he sent to them included a 1941 painting showing a team assembling a landing craft – the setting for which must have been the Swindon Works? He also painted women working on aircraft wings – most likely at a factory in the Swindon area. It’s interesting to observe that Cole’s pre-war paintings and drawings featured railway workers in Swindon – one of which is a lithograph of furnace workers in 1939. 

Swindon Artist Leslie Cole - painting by Leslie Cole, manufacturing 250Ib bombs, GWR Yard, Swindon
Swindon Artist Leslie Cole – painting by Leslie Cole, manufacturing 250Ib bombs, GWR Yard, Swindon
Description of Leslie Cole painting
Description of Leslie Cole painting

Recognition

With his talents now recognised, he gained acceptance as a salaried worker with the commissioned rank of Captain (honorary) in the Royal Marines. He obtained permission to record the war effort at home and the damage Britain sustained from enemy action.

In his determination to witness the events of WWII and to use his paintings to record them, Cole covered the theatres of war. 

Cole’s first posting was to Malta. Here he recorded the island’s siege coming to an end. He covered too, the Allie’s invasion of Italy, fighting in Greece, the defence of Gibraltar and, following D-Day in 1944, the Normandy offensive. Later he visited Burma and Singapore. 

Credited with an unflinching approach* to his subject matter, Cole became one of four official artists selected to attend the first liberation of a major Nazi concentration camp. The images he produced are explicit and chilling. He captured in every detail the hellish conditions he saw – including the deaths of those for whom the Allied liberation was a fraction too late.

A second commission with the Royal Marines command in Cairo came in 1944 followed by a transfer to the War Office.

Post war, Cole continued painting and teaching – though there’s some evidence to suggest that he struggled with his wartime experiences. A struggle that led him to drink heavily leading to a slow decline and an early death in 1976 aged only sixty-six. Yet, during the 1950s he produced some brilliant work and two paintings from that era, both showing pub scenes turned up on the Antiques Roadshow when it visited Bodnant Garden, North Wales.

*Visit the exhibition at MAS and you’ll see eyeball-searing examples of his unflinching approach.

The horrors of war and its effect on Leslie Cole
The horrors of war and its effect on Leslie Cole

Where to find Cole’s works

The Swindon collection holds – not necessarily a comprehensive list:

  • Leslie Cole: A self-portrait
  • Mary: Young girl with a doll – one my faves is this one
  • Seated figure – the artist’s wife, Brenda Cole
  • Boy with a bird
  • Blind Woman
  • Shove half-penny

    London’s Imperial War museum holds twenty-five of his works, many of them painted during his Maltese sojurn. There’s a further seventy in private collections and five are in the government art collection. Further, the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich holds three and there’s one at the British Council.

The alternative history of Leslie Cole

Now we come to something that has nothing to do with Cole’s art and everything to do with salacious gossip – and who doesn’t enjoy a bit of that? It’s the somewhat surprising story of Leslie Cole’s marriage.

Some years before Cole married his bride in August 1938, she was the star witness in a sex scandal in which one Harold Davidson, the Rector of Stiffkey (apt place name), a sleepy Norfolk coastal village, stood accused of immorality. The Bishop of Norfolk accused him of liaison with prostitutes in London’s Soho – behaviour for which he was found guilty and subsequently defrocked.

Brenda Harvey – real name Barbara Price – instigated the trial by sending the Bishop a fourteen-page letter full of ‘helpful’ detail. She gave evidence for three days then quietly disappeared – to resurface as Brenda Harvey when she met and married our man Cole. 

As for the transgressing rector, he came to a suitably sticky end. Sounding like a stanza from Stanley Holloway’s The Lion and Albertthe poor unfortunate suffered a fatal mauling by a lion in a Skegness fairground.


See also: https://artuk.org/discover/stories/remembering-leslie-cole-the-extraordinary-career-of-a-forgotten-war-artist




Swindon Care Show Revamped

Swindon Care Show Revamped

Swindon Care Show Revamped. Three entrepreneurs have come together to re-launch The Care Show (Swindon). And to take it into the future as a regular annual event to showcase the best services in social care and wellbeing.

Hannah Edwards, Kevin Griffiths and Janet Shreeve, all have their own businesses. Further they all have an interest in, and knowledge of, the confusing sector of social care.

They know too that many people will need care in their lives. And that there are many ethical providers of care and wellbeing services in Swindon, Wiltshire and the South West. But this show will also introduce other care services around general health and wellbeing. Something that’s becoming more and more popular for everyone in all walks of life.

Swindon Care Show Revamped - from left to right: Kevin Griffiths, Hannah Edwards, Janet Shreeve.
Swindon Care Show Revamped – from left to right: Kevin Griffiths, Hannah Edwards, Janet Shreeve.

Experienced in care

Before I ran my own administration and social media company, I worked as a carer for several years,’ said Hannah Edwards, who lives in Swindon.

Working as carer means I saw the good, the bad and the ugly. For me, I loved my job. I loved working getting to know wonderful individuals who needed professional support to maintain their dignity and independence. I was proud to be a person who could help them live their best lives. Taking over this event is simply a natural step for me.’

Alongside her is Kevin Griffiths, who lives in Malmesbury, and has a background in food, hospitality and event management.

‘I’d come to a period of change in my life,’ he said. ‘This opportunity came to build something from the ground up which will make a difference to people. It will highlight the amazing care and wellbeing services that we have in the community and beyond.

For too long, too many have viewed social care and wellbeing have as second class services. When in fact they’re of the utmost importance for us all.’

The third director of The Care Show is social care expert and professional care adviser Janet Shreeve, who has worked in the sector for over twenty years. ‘To have an event which is open to relevant businesses in all aspects of care and wellbeing and also for potential clients interested in all these services and products is wonderful. I’m proud to be supporting this event and to be part of the management team,’ Janet said.

Beginnings

It, the Care Show, that is, began earlier this year. But the original founder had to step away and was looking for someone to take on the concept.

The Care Show (Swindon) takes place on Thursday January 29 2026. It will be at the Doubletree Hilton hotel at Junction 16. The headline sponsor for this show is SWITCH (Swindon and Wiltshire Innovative Technology Care Hub).

The show is free to attend though it’s asked that you register to attend.

Who is the show for?

Anyone can attend. So if you work in the care or wellbeing sectors then this is for you. But also, if you want to find out more about what’s on offer in the world of social care and wellbeing in Swindon, Wiltshire and beyond.