10 Clillicmc Advert ixvr A- Times, April Ibth, lUO) H o o k e d o n f r e s h f i
Heaningbrook can supply the best from new premises in Barrow
THE world is vour oyster when it comes to the select ion of fish uvoihible from Hcaningln-mik Kish :md Game Supplier's new premises in Harrow. With a wide variety of
just moved to Unit II on Whailey Industrial Park from its trout farm in Newton, where it hits sold fish from its shop for the last nine years.
fresh and frozen fish, ranging from North Sea cod to Indonesian red snapper, this supplier will cater for every palate. The family business has
(pictured right) said the business has come on in leaps and bounds in recent years, especially on the catering side, with sup plies to hotels and restau rants increasing by the week. The new premises,
Owner Mr .John Wane
■lOtons of produce, will help to deal with this ever-increasing demand. In addition to this
equipped with a deep freeze capable of holding
it firmly believes in the product it is selling, so much so that it has always had the motto of "family fitness from fresh fish." This results in the
variety and health-giving qualities. He said: “There is so much variety as com pared to meat — every fish has a particular dis tinctive flavour.”
family eating fish several times a week for its sheer
freezer, there is a chill facility which currently has around half a ton of fresh fish passing through it in a week. As a family-run concern,
An advertising feature by Stewart Pimblev
rcturnin.it for the variety and value on offer. With over JO years in
with some unusual fishy requests. Once he had to supply London's Dorches ter Hotel with live sea urchins — apparently th e i r in s id e s a re a delicacy. If customers want to
the fish supply business. Mr Wane has had to deal
sample some of these fish from anv of the world's sea
allows Heaningbrook to offer a much wider variety of very competitively priced products by com* p a r i s o n to t h e supermarkets.
ordered. The buying flexibility
to the business, there is also a range of game, fresh in season and frozen
Apart from the fish side
I SPECIAL OFFER. LIMITED SUPPLY Fresh l * Scottish Salmon 1 -2 kilos weight ONLY £5 EACH; * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ***
SUPPLIERS OF QUALITY FISH 8 . GAME
From down right ordinary to exotic fish from around the world CUBAN CRAYFISH
SCOTCH SALMON
BLACK TIGER PRAWNS ICELANDIC HALIBUT FRESH PLAICE COD SWORDFISH
and of course our very own FRESH TROUT
MANY MORE TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION A full range of fresh fish on a daily basis
HEANINGBROOK#. WHOLESALE FISH &. GAME XUSsSUPPLIES
RIBBLE VALLEY ESTATES LTD WHALLEY
o w n e r s o f
INDUSTRIAL PARK wish John & Dominic at
H E A N IN G B R O O K T R O U T FA RM
every success with their new venture CLITHEROE ROAD,
BARROW, nr. CLITHEROE Tel: 0254 823918
C o o l w e l l Refrigeration & Air Conditioning
We are delighted to wish HEANINGBROOK TROUT FARM
Tel: 0772 651144 Fax: 0772 652025
all the best for the future
UNIT 33 ROMAN WAY LONGR1DGE ROAD
PRESTON PR25BD
I * . C . B i s h o p (Electrical) ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS & ENGINEERS
INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL & DOMESTIC INSTALLATIONS
Maintenance & Breakdown Service
We are pleased to have carried out all the ' electrical work at
HEANINGBROOK and wish John & Dominic continued success
Nations! Inspection Council for □ectifct! InsuSation Contracting
r a g K S S E B S APPROVED CONTRACTOR
BARKER TERRACE, WADDINGTON ROAD, CLITHEROE.
Tel: 0200 22789 / 25058 Fax: 0200 24720
0 2 0 0
22323 TOWNSON
(KudBROS Services) LTD H't- wish IJeanin^brook continued success
rM!\ i n
Pcndle Training EjUU, Chatburn, T Clltheroe, lancashlre BB7 4JY
II can inch rook includes plaice fillets, lemon sole, whitebait, frogs' lejrs. prawns and shark and swordfish steaks, to name but a few. Once customers tret a bite of the fish, they keep
with which type of fish to choose and often prefer to stick to cod and haddock, but this can be quickly overcome with advice from any of Heaniiighniuk's staff: "We try to give cus tomers a lot of advice on
cookin.tr. recipes and pre paring the different types of fish." The ranee available at
Many people are baffled
ments on a regular basis in this newspaper, so readers should look out for the special offer logo.
throujrhout the year. p
Hcnnin.irbrook plans to
teurs currently supplied through the capable skills of Dominic Mimic." says the firm. “This includes our latest addition of Vivior tanks to handle live shellfish."
tinue to maintain and expand our range and ser vices to the many excel lent hotel and restaura
"We will, of course, con lace special announce i l l 'I •.-"it. j Letters Giving me the hump
FURTHER to your article on the Roches ter humps, there are a number of points I would like to raise, being the “particular f a r in e r w ho has
U &
offer, a visit to lleatiing- brook Kish and Game Sup pliers will certainly prove that there is plenty more fish in the sea. Heaningbrunk is open
Judging by what is on
from Monday to Saturday, between !l a. ill. and li p.m.. at Unit 11, Whailey Industrial Hark. Clitheroe Hoad, Whailey. Kor further information
contact I lea n in it brook (lliVI .sjjp.s).
SlTR s aw s WORLD REALLY IS YOUR OYSTER
and Game Suppliers. In our picture, Mr Blanc is fishing out fresh shellfish from the new Viviers tank.
KKKSH Scotch salmon, one of many products on sale, reaches the Barrow prem ises in ice to maintain its freshness. Customers can expect fresh fish every time they visit Heaningbrook Fish
able from Heaningbrook. Customers wanting to order these fish and shellfish from other parts of
the world can always expect a speedy and efficient delivery service. Heaningbrook prides itself on its service and the fact that it has the reputa tion of providing some of the freshest and best value fish in the North West.
Advertising
Co-ordinated by
CHRIS MONK
Quality Frozen Fish Merchants. Import - Export
HEANINGBROOK WHOLESALE every success in their new premises.
S E A F O O D S YJe are delighted lo wish
Boith Ayrshire, Scotland KA15 1LW. Tel: 0505 502176 Fax: 0505 502G12
Willowyard Industrial Estate
AUCKLAND RD FISH DOCKS GRIMSBY
Sth HUMBERSIDE ENGLAND DN31 3RP
Tel: 0472 250244 Fax: 0472 250219
CONGRATULATIONS!! To
HEANINGBROOK R Q y A L S T A R
WHOLESALE from
NORTRADE FOODS LTD. Tel: 0 5 8 0 752878 -
G e b r . H a k v o o r t b . v . freth end deepfroxen fiahproducts
IM
elephone: Cllthcroe (0200) 41542 Fm: (0200) 41314
P . V . S . S E R V IC E S L TD Refrigeration Engineers.
Service, Maintenance S Repairs We wish
every success in their new premises
John & Dominic
51 BELGRAVEST, NELSON. BB9 9HS Tel: 0282 695231 or 0282 695233
‘ cpfPRODUCTS '^INTERNATIONAL
11»'
frozen speciality seafood wish
Suppliers of all types of
the best of luck in their new venture
HEANINGBROOK WHOLESALE
OCEAN HOUSE, WHOLESALE MARKETS
PRECINCT, PEILSIIORE ST, BIRMINGHAM, 115 6UU. Tel: 021 622 5111 Fax: 021 622 6123
SEAFOOD IMPORTERS ( i DISTRIBUTORS
We a re p le a s e d with our long association with Jo h n Blanc at
HEANINGBROOK WHOLESALE a s suppliers to them ot a variety of frozen
seafood and shellfish products. We wish them continued su c c e s s (or the future.
C. M. Roach & Co Ltd 74/76 English Street, Hull HU3 2DT.
T e le p h o n e :(0482) 24511 & 27414 Fax: (0482) 20554
FINANCIAL ADVISORS TO HEANINGBROOK TROUT FARM . . ' AND WISHING THEM FUTURE SUCCESS':
. V A R L E Y
E D M O N D S O N C h a r t e r e d A c c o u n t a n t s
24 Wellington Street (St Johns) Blackburn Lancashire BB1 8AF-
Telephone 0254 59421
cdl^ode. in DIzcfinujUz.s. - DJiaditlonoL tEs iuics .
Victoria House 34 Wellgate, Cllthsroe. Lancashire BB7 2DP
Telephone 0200 23581
Investment business by the Institute of Chartered Accountants In England and Wales.
Registered to carry out audit work and authorised to carry on a s-5*w 33S PORT.EXPORT
We are delighted to supply HEANINGBROOK
and wish John & Dominic every success in their new premises
Zuidoostrak 2 - 8321 M A Urk, Holland • Telephone 05277-1800 ■ Telex 42888 ■ Fax 05277-1378
It is designed to store live shellfish in a salt water environment. Placed in front of the tank are several of the more exotic shellfish avail
the fact that the first hump cannot be avoided and that driving refuse trucks and North West Wa t e r ta n k e r s e tc . through the car park is a far greater hazard than
Borough Council lias writ ten to us saying that farm vehicles and any other vehicles to which the humps are a hazard, including RVBC refuse trucks , should drive through the car park. This instruction ignores
expressed concern.” firstly, Kibble Valley
saying that we had two humps 011 our drive which were three to three-and-a- lialf inches high and that many vehicles had bot tomed on them, so we had removed one hump and reduced the height of the other to two inches.
I wrote to the council
was pleased to inform us that, in parts, the R o chester humps were only three inches, but in parts four to four-and-a-half inches high. It supplied a lovely polaroid photograph of two engineers measur ing a hump at four inches.
UVBC replied saying it
turers of the humps, say that the maximum height should be 75mm or 2.9 inches for cars ami wagons and odium for cars alone.
Jessups, the manufac
The AA says that the maximum safe height for humps is 75mm and that the design and height is specified in the Road Traf fic Regulations. However, because this is an una dopted road, the Road Traffic Regulations do not apply. The AA legal depart
ment has advised that anyone suffering damage to their car can sue the council, as can anyone whose car touches the humps, causing longer- term damage or wear. The depar tment has also advised that an action for public nuisance can be
the humps please give me their name and address and details of the car etc., so that our joint action can he prepared?
saga is that, at Easter, Coun. Tony Jackson, Mayor of the Ribble Val ley, came to meet us to explain why there wasn’t a problem. So with me and Andrew Morrison, in his new Audi SO, he drove over a hump and banged tile bottom of the car very hard.
The amusing side to the
brought against the coun cil for creating an unnatu ral hazard, which causes loss or prospective loss. Would any car owner whose car has hit anv of
received a letter from KVIJC saying that the humps will remain as they are.
Since then we have
A. TAYLOR, I’arsonagc Kami, Rihchcstcr.
Chaos reigns over old mart site
AS A Clitberonian by choice of some 2(> years, I feel I must stick my pennyworth in with regard to the auction mart debacle (and believe me when I say it is a debacle). Never have I seen such
coming and going, yes-ing and no-ing, in my life and that's been a long one. Ever since the first
paragraph was written about what was to he done with the site, there has been nothing but chaos with regard to what is host and what is not for the folk of Clitheroe. Wondrous things were
housing for the lower income wage earners (who are plentiful in the area without their own house). Some say, put a big top on the land: after all, it has become one big circus act. Well, what do I think?
more shops, with total dis regard for the old estab lished traders; others wanted a better deal for the market traders. Others wanted more
Valley or is it used mainly by locals from Clitheroe and villages in a three-mile radius? If this is the ease, then
promised and, from all accounts, hundreds of thousands of pounds spent on lining the pockets of outsiders and for what, may I ask? A deflated bal loon is the answer, it seems. Now the debate is,
what you are saying; from my standpoint it’s laugh able and somewhat funny to read ami hear what’s going on and I am sure other people fuel the same. We have people with
should housing be built on the site? Others argue what about the poor motorists and the possible hardship that they may have to hear with the extra 50 or HID yards they have to walk to the shops. Come on, folks, listen to
cars demanding more and more car parks so they are right on the doorstep for the shops. Others (mainly outside planners) wanted
right on top of the shops? One only has to look at all the other towns in the area to see that there is not one which provides direct access to all the shops and that people would cover more walking miles out of town than they would in Clitheroe. After all, from one end to the other end of the shop ping area is not more than 500 to SOI) yards. It does
interesting indeed to find out if it is, in fact, being used by mainly people from outside the Kibble
hazardous waste has been burned at Clitheroe for IS months and, lo ensure a balanced view of this pro posal, I personally visited Clitheroe recently to see the situation first hand. I must say, what a plea
AS a resident of Stamford, near the Castle Cement works at Ketton, in Leicestershire, I was concerned at the proposal of Castle Cement to burn hazardous waste at Ketton works in June this year. 1 understood this same ful environment.
kind of survey on who actually uses the present ear park? It would he
people good to walk, you know. Has anyone done any
of a car park, do we really need a great big chunk of land that’s full on certain days of the week and mainly empty the rest of the week? Does one need lo he
After all, I have poked fun at most of the things men tioned, so I must have some sensible suggestions. I have, so here goes, for better or for worse, as they say. firstly, oil the question
there is surely a strong ease to support a far bet ter bus service in the area to cater for these midweek shoppers and thus keep the present increased car p o l lu t a n t s o u t of Clitheroe. With regard to the increase in shops, one only has to look round the town at all the empty shops to come to the conclusion that an increase in shops is not desirable. Do not for get that empty simps in the town have been a problem since I can remember and are not a new thing (if the rates and rents for these properties were sensible, then there would he fewer empty places). On the su b je c t of
is the best thing that has been mooted. The present structure and layout have been the same for the last 26 yea rs and may lie longer, so a completely new revamp is well in order. The imagination runs
revamping the present market, this, to my mind,
weather. Now that would he something, don’t von'
could he a totally indoor market or maybe a semi- covered/open one or maybe one with an all- weather covering, with mini-trees and gardens in t among the stalls, hut
otally immune to tile
ing problem. Kor main years now I have beer bringing up the subject o: sensible priced housing foi the younger generation o: Clitheroe, but to no avail We constantly see mort and more housing for out siders at unrealistic price; which are totally out o reach of the normal wagt earner. Any form of housing fm
think? Now we have the hous
Clitheroe 2232b (Editorial), 22323 (Advertising). Burnley 422331 (Classified)
wild on the possibilities of how this can lie done. It
nyworth. or should it be. poundsworth? Will an\ good come from it all? 1 hope so, for tile good ol t 'lilheroe, if nothing else.
desired, accommodate tin motorist at a far bettei area than the auction marl site, which can give mud easier access, and that i; the now defunct Castli Castings site which, i: used right, can also pro vide more low cost hous ing, as well as a ear park. Well, that's my pen
COjN'CKKNKJ) CLITIIERONIAN.
B l ig h te d v a l ley E x p l a n a t i o n
IN view of the concern expressed recently and, in my opinion, quite justifiably, about the
sure it was to be again in the beautiful Ribble Valley — too many years since my last visit — but, alas, 1 had no idea of the dra matic change I was to see. How sad and disturbing
it was to see the valley despoiled by industry ami the multicoloured chimney emissions spewing from Castle Cement. I was amazed at the
pollution can be allowed to happen in the first place and why those in local authority can be allowed to accept such apparent pollution and condone its continuation. Surely someone must be
answerable, or does no one care; if not, for what reasons? My sympathy truly goes
travelling the area, talking to residents and hill farm ers, how I feel your valley has been blighted. It appears to me as an indus trial obscenity in a beauti-
Policy on its head
for cement was low and it had only one kiln in pro duction. It stated that this decision would not result in a great increase in road haulage in this area. At the present time
NOT very long ago Castle Cement made a policy decision not to use rail ways when transporting its products from the Clitheroe site. At the time the demand
Castle Cement has two, and often three, kilns in production. This has
greatly increased its production. It has increased to such
an e x t e n t th a t Mr Roberts, the works man ager, told me that clinker produced at Clitheroe was being sent for processing to other Castle Cement factories. How is this clinker tran
sported? It is transported by road! So much for its assurances!
,4
J. V. HOYLE, Moorland Crescent, C|itheroc.
extent of the valley and surrounding area that the ch imney em is s io n s covered. Standing on the moor side, near Chatburn, the stench from the chim ney was indeed awful. After spending all day
turbid thoughts and trepi dation. Our local authority cer
to you sufferers in the valley. My return home was one riddled with doubt and
tainly has some hard" ques tions to answer.
PAULJOHNSON, Stamford.
obscenity, hut one can only guess at what those fumes contain. What ill- health legacy are all of you in the area inheriting? I truly wonder how tiiis
It is not only a visible
parking facilities in Clitheroe, I was dismayed, on Wednesday last week, to find the Chester Avenue car park completely closed, due to a “few" civic cars being parked there.
our suffering public ser vants could have found a more convenient space on their vast reserved area of the main car park at the council offices?
Surely, just for one day,
public and, in particular, visitors, he inconven ienced — that seems to be their aim.
But, no, let the general
people are driven to other tow n s to do th e i r shopping? Explanation, please.
Is it any wonder that
3IRS M. BANKS, lfi Hinder Close, Waddington. Editor’s note: After check ing with Ribble Valley Council's Planning and Development Department, it was found that the cat- park had been closed
because it was being resurfaced.
"The closure and the mayoral event were not connected. The car park was closed because we were in the process of resurfacing it.”
Mr Graham dagger said:
been postponed until last week, due to poor weather conditions.
The resurfacing had
a meeting of Lancashire's civic leaders, had been parked on the cordoned-off site after being told to by the chief executive’s department. However, last week, neither depart ment knew about the other’s plans for the cat- park, hence the confusion. The car park has been
Mayoral cars, attending
resurfaced and is now open.
Is council capable of handling greater responsibilities?
KOLLO WING J o hn Knapp’s letter about the possible destruction of a stone trough in Uimington v i l la g e , a p p a r e n t ly through the failure of the council to enforce a plan ning requirement, I would like, purely personally, to
relate this to the broader issue of the "management” of the Ribble Valley and the fu tu re of local government. Those who have jumped
on the CARVE band wagon should ask them selves whether the current administration is capable of h an d l in g g r e a te r
years, most notably the tennis courts at Edisford, do cast some doubt on its ability to manage a rural environment. Perhaps an authority with a greater urban presence would he more interested in preser ving tlie countryside?
responsibilities. This minor local incident and others over recent
reminds me that, several weeks ago, I did call in at the council’s technical department (while visiting the planning department to look at yet more plans to destroy some open
As 1 write this letter, it
g ro u n d ) t o enq u i r e whether anything could be done about the garish and
badly-made signs at the entrance to the Edisford
ring me back and I would have thought that now, of all times, there would be some effort at customer service. Fortunately, the excellent refuse collection
swimming pool. Nobody has bothered to
service remains as good as ever.
TREVOR MARKLEW, Sandilands Farm, Itimington.
Skirl of pipes and swirl of kilts
CALLING all Scottish dancing enthusiasts! Next month sees the inaugural meeting of the Ribble Valley branch of the
both qualified teachers of Scottish dancing. Initially for adults, the group is open to beginners and experienced dancers alike. The meeting will start at 7-30 p.m. and further details are available from the Morrises (0254 88496).
Royal Scottish Country Dancing Association. The meeting, on May Gth, will be held in the Christchurch Hall, Longridge. The group is being formed by Ribchester couple Ken and Lavinia Morris,
the lower income brackel is. of course, welcomed hut I feel that the presenl position that is now planned is the wrong loca tion. I suggest putting an\ housing into the area thal now contains the presenl market (covered and out door), then putting tin new revamped market ii the area where the tern purary car park is, with ; smaller area given up fui residents’ and markel holders’ parking, with am r e in a i li in g a r e a : landscaped. We can, if it is alsi
m m m x
•Y'-Jk'':;.
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