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Clitheroe Advertiser & Times, February 19th, 1998 7 Clitheroe 422324 (Editorial), 422323 (Advertising), Burnley 422331 (Classified) V ------- ------------------ f ________ ^ ' ------ Dave helps his company focus on abundant wildlife in quarry by Tim Procter


CASTLE CEMENT elec­ trician Dave Pomfret spends extra hours at work using a quite different skill - as a


photographer. The firm's clinker department


benefits from his working day expertise - but the company also uses his patient approach and technical grasp with the camera to excellent effect. Numerous pictures Mr Pom­


thousands of copies of a variety of company literature. They have been distributed widely all over the country and even abroad. Now the prizewinning amateur


audio-visual presentation, "A Living Environment". A tent used for outdoor jobs by


has a new and trickier task - recording the whole cement-mak­ ing process on film in a way it can be understood by general audi­


ences.Mr Pomfret has worked at


fret has taken of the extensive range of plants and wildlife in Lanehead Quarry are featured in


Castle Cement for more than 20 years, but took up photography seriously barely five years ago. He is a frequent prizewinner at Rib- blesdale Camera Club, where he is programme secretary, and has had other competition successes


Castle Cement’s electricians pro­ vided an excellent "hide" for the quarry shots of birds and rabbits featured by the company, though the easier-to-capture plants and flowers are just as important. Castle Cement takes its role as a protector of all wildlife very seri­ ously. But it also obtains the best advice to fulfil its responsibilities to archaelogy and geology. Mr Pomfret is pleased for the


as well. An excellent night


shot of the works won a major maga­ zine prize out of thousands of entries. And giant prints of some of his pic- torially striking and technically m a s t e r f u l views of the complex have pride of place in the entrance foyer at the R ib b lesd a le Works. Some of his wildlife shots have been made into an


opportunity to shoot any and every subject for the company — but is also keen to use his talents on imaginative pictures of as wide a range of subjects as possible.^ In recent years, he has twice


won the Ribblesdale Camera Club's top slide award, with trees in the quarry and then with a quite different double exposure of himself framed inside a golf ball with a trophy he won for the


sport, his second hobby. Mr Pomfret is a competition


golfer when he has time, but his versatile approach to the infinite possibilities of cameras and film comes first. He clearly has much more to achieve, both in general photography and at Castle Cement, showing the bright and responsible face of one of ^the area's key industries to a wider


world.


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