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Opening day glamour at Royal Ascot — and other news in pictures

Opening day glamour at Royal Ascot — and other news in pictures

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Neil Duncan with his award-winning roses in Appleshaw, Hampshire, where he grows 120 varieties across three allotment plots. Britain's national rose champion has warned that drought and hosepipe bans could put his prized blooms at risk

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Leeds children's centres reviewed as council seeks savings
Leeds children's centres reviewed as council seeks savings

BBC News

time26 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Leeds children's centres reviewed as council seeks savings

Families are to be consulted on a shake-up of children's centres which could see services run with fewer buildings and City Council said it could save £2.45m after launching a review of the future of 56 centres, with a consultation expected to be confirmed include a workforce reorganisation, more sharing of buildings and some services being offered job cuts or centre closures have been announced, but a council report said it was "inevitable that there could be fewer overall posts on the revised structure". Children's centres in Leeds were established in the early 2000s as part of the national Sure Start initiative to support young children and their centres aimed to provide a range of services including early education, childcare, health services and family support, particularly targeting disadvantaged areas, to promote better outcomes for children under five. A report to senior councillors said Leeds had more children's centres than any other said: "Leeds remains an outlier with 56 children's centres, compared to Liverpool with 23 and Birmingham with 22."A decline in birth rates means fewer families are expected to use the services in report also highlighted national data which "indicates that by 2017, 16 local authorities had closed 50% or more of their centres, accounting for 55% of the total closures nationally".It said the number of centres had been "steadily declining ever since". 'Absolutely critical role' Last month a report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies said Sure Start centres had a "remarkably long-lasting" positive impact on the health and education outcomes of children who had access to a centre in their early said they "benefitted a range of groups, but particularly children from disadvantaged areas, the health outcomes of boys in adolescence, and both the educational and behavioural outcomes of children from non-white ethnic backgrounds".Neil Leitch, chief executive of the Early Years Alliance, said: "This research reinforces what those of us in the early years have long known: that children's centres play an absolutely critical role in improving children's life chances, especially those from more disadvantaged backgrounds." Currently in Leeds, 40 centres are run by the council and 16 are operated under agreements with of the 56 centres are divided into 18 "delivery groups", each with a single team of staff covering three or four the new proposals that would be reorganised into seven groups, each covering a wider geographical centre staff currently employed by schools and academies would be transferred to council contracts which would allow "all employees to form part of the review."Formal proposals for the centres are expected to be presented to senior councillors in the autumn. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Chuffed shopper shares £9.99 buy she got for 50p to brighten up her garden but is quickly warned it could die ‘in weeks'
Chuffed shopper shares £9.99 buy she got for 50p to brighten up her garden but is quickly warned it could die ‘in weeks'

The Sun

time27 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Chuffed shopper shares £9.99 buy she got for 50p to brighten up her garden but is quickly warned it could die ‘in weeks'

A CHUFFED shopper who couldn't resist boasting about the £9.99 Home Bargains buy she got for 50p has been warned her delight may be short-lived. Kellie was in the store at the Bentley Bridge retail park in Wolverhampton when she came across some cute little box bushes, which had been slashed to just 50p each. 3 3 3 Thrilled, she picked up four, and took to the Extreme Couponing and Bargains UK group on Facebook to share her epic find. "My little bargain small bushes reduced to 50p each from £9.99," she wrote alongside pictures of the plants. "A few left in the store by the tills." She added that she'd trimmed the bushes and planted them, so "hopefully they will grow". However, the comments section was quickly inundated with other green-fingered shoppers issuing Kellie a warning about the little bushes. " Caterpillars! We had to rip out all of ours this year from the garden as the little b**gers got to ours!" one wrote. "Bushes that had been growing for more than 10 years gone in weeks as they destroyed them. "They are unfortunately ruining all of these bushes - just be aware!!" "Mine too, hundreds of the bleddy things at the all they could eat buffet!" another agreed. "20 plus years and all gone in couple of weeks!" Watch the moment home owner walks over their new-build's lawn and shows how landscaping turned it into a water bed "I bought two from Home Bargains last year," a third wrote. "Within 2 weeks they were dead along with so many others I had. "Check for caterpillars!" "I had well established bushes like these," someone else sighed. "All got eaten within weeks by a caterpillar. Tried to grow back, got eaten again. Common garden pests Common pests in the garden don't need to be a cause for alarm. If you can identify them, you can work on getting rid of them and preventing them from returning. Aphids (Greenfly, Blackfly) Aphids are extremely common and can impact plant growth. They have tiny soft pear-shaped bodies, and are usually green or black. You may spot them clustered on the stem of soft shoots – look under leaves in particular – or may find a sticky substance on your plants that gives away aphids have been there sucking at the sap. Whitefly These small white-winged insects are related to aphids, at just 1 or 2 mm in length, and look very much like white moths as adults. They can be found on the underside of leaves, preferring younger, fresher leaves. They fly in clusters when you disturb them. Their lifecycle is only three weeks long, which means an infestation can occur very rapidly. Slugs An unmissable, squashy-looking body plus small sensory tentacles on its head. Slugs move along on one muscular foot. They range in scale from surprisingly small to terrifyingly large; limax cinereoniger species can grow comfortably beyond 20 cm in length. Cabbage Moth Caterpillar Cabbage moth caterpillars happily make their way into the heart of the vegetables, The caterpillars are distinguished in shades of yellow or browny green with no hair. Mealy Bug Mealybugs are tiny oval-shaped insects that have a white, powdery wax coating. There are several different species, many of which have what looks like legs coming from their sides and back end. In their earliest stage of life, it's entirely possible to mistake them for fungus and not recognise them as insects at all. "You'll need to treat these regularly." "Check for caterpillars!" another warned. "I've got box bushes in my garden and this year the moth caterpillars have ravaged them!" someone else said. "They go brown and have what looks like cobwebs on. "I picked them off by hand and sprayed the bush with washing up liquid/water." "I have them all around my front garden but all huge now," Kellie replied. "Been in 10 years - more like hedges now lol - but never heard of that. "I will be keeping the new ones in pots, thank you!"

How I unlearned the internalised prejudice I had as a Black woman – one braid at a time
How I unlearned the internalised prejudice I had as a Black woman – one braid at a time

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

How I unlearned the internalised prejudice I had as a Black woman – one braid at a time

At the start of 2023, a couple of months after a trip to Jamaica with friends, where we spoke extensively about our hair, I made my first new year resolution in more than a decade. I was going to try a wider variety of hairstyles. For most of my 20s, I had two styles: long, dark, medium-sized box braids (where hair is divided into square sections, and each is then braided into a single plait) or, very occasionally, a weave. Now, I decided, I would switch things up – whether trying a new colour, length or type of braid. This may not seem groundbreaking but for me it genuinely was. It was never just about hair, it ran deeper than that. I had come to realise that my own understanding of stereotypes about Black women had been learned from years of experiencing microaggressions: from comments on how good my English was, despite being British, or being followed around supermarkets by security guards – as well as seeing how women who looked like me were portrayed on TV. Without my knowing, on some level, I had become increasingly conscious of the 'vibe' I was giving off, before I even spoke. This, in turn, had influenced my hair, dress sense, and, at times, my very behaviour. I wanted to break free from internalised prejudices I didn't even realise I had. Growing up in the UK, my hair was my way of trying to minimise false assumptions about me based solely on the colour of my skin. Throughout my 20s, the styles I went for were 'safe', nothing that could be misconstrued as conforming to some sort of stereotype, such as being 'messy', unkempt, or even unclean. Society is already unfairly rigged against Black women: more than two in three Black professionals have experienced racial prejudice at work, and Black women are considered the least desirable on dating apps. Why give society another excuse to treat me unfairly? Emma Dabiri, an Irish academic and author of the 2019 book Don't Touch My Hair, also feels a shift in how others engage with her when she wears different styles. With straight-back cornrows, she is 'treated more aggressively by people,' she says. But beyond hostility alone, 'the difference in how I'm treated when I have my afro v goddess braids, a style which is long and conforms to established notions of femininity, is night and day,' too, she adds. Goddess braids see strands of hair added to plaits to create a long wavy flowing effect. Natural black hair 'generally grows up rather than down,' she says, which doesn't fit into 'a western construction of femininity that has now been spread all over the world.' The natural hair movement, which saw Black women embrace their hair texture rather than straightening it, originated in the US during the 1960s. At the time, the movement centred on wearing an afro and was on a small scale, often limited to homemade hair products. It had a resurgence in the early 00s, though, thanks to technological advancements and to an extent, social media, and online tutorials. At the same time, there was an increasing awareness of the dangers of products that were once widely recommended which have been linked to severe health problems. For better or worse, new products appeared on the market which seemed to reflect not simply an acceptance of Black hair, but an embrace. Many women used this as an opportunity to embrace new styles. In 2009, Solange Knowles, did the Big Chop, a term used in Black communities to define a dramatic haircut one does to get rid of chemically processed or damaged hair. She has since become known for platinum blonde braids and a full head of beads. But, in turn, this embrace of textured hair came with unwanted comments, touching and judgment, perfectly exemplified by Knowles's subsequent song Don't Touch My Hair in 2016. Indeed, 93% of Black people in the UK have faced microaggressions related to their afro hair, according to a 2023 study. However, Dabiri says: 'We're seeing a shift back towards hairstyles that conform to Eurocentric beauty standards.' According to St Clair Detrick-Jules, author of My Beautiful Black Hair, which features more than 100 first-person accounts from Black women on their hair, texturism – discrimination against someone based on their hair texture often under the premise that hair that more closely resembles a white person's is more desirable – is a prevailing issue in Black communities. 'Even within the natural hair movement, within our own community, people with looser curl patterns are considered more beautiful, attractive, or professional,' she says. Dabiri agrees: 'We have to develop a genuine love for Black hair that is not long, that is not curly, that is tightly coiled.' As a child, my mother embraced my natural hair and encouraged me to try a variety of looks. That all came to a halt in my teens when hairdressers began refusing to do my hair because it was 'too afro-y' and, therefore, in their eyes, too difficult to manage. This is all the more eye-opening when you consider that I grew up in east London, a place seemingly known for its diversity. I remember a white male teacher calling me into his office to explain why he thought my hairstyle wasn't nice. Hair mishaps are a rite of passage for most teenagers – but a bun with a fringe is hardly a reason to be taken aside. Yet even to this day, Black girls are still more likely to be sent home for 'inappropriate' hair. On some level, I must have internalised what he said though; relaxing my hair and putting it into 'neat' braids became my go-to style for years. For me it wasn't until 2019, when I saw a video of Dabiri in a style known as Fulani braids, a mixture of cornrows and single plaits, which she wore with brown and blond hair extensions, that things changed. In the video, she explained the term 'blackfishing' for i-D magazine. Mesmerised by the mixture of natural and gold colours, I did the same to my own hair. That same year, Dabiri released Don't Touch My Hair, a series of essays on Black women and hair. In it, she wrote: 'In our desire to see our own beauty acknowledged, we forget that the beauty regime is an oppressive construct designed to keep women in a state of heightened insecurity.' Six years later, Dabiri says: 'When I wrote that book, I felt very optimistic about many things. It was just a different era and I'm glad I wrote it then.' Detrick-Jules says 'representation really does matter, and there have been positive changes,' pointing out two notable examples of women in the public eye wearing their natural hair: Michelle Obama, who 'started embracing more Afrocentric hairstyles' after leaving the White House, and Viola Davis in the American legal drama How to Get Away with Murder, where her character, 'takes her wig off and reveals her natural hair.' 'It's not that I think celebrities are superior, but they have such a huge impact on how we, especially as women, perceive ourselves and our beauty,' she adds. The fact that a new crop of hair brands by and for Black women, which includes Cécred by Beyoncé and Pattern Beauty by Tracee Ellis Ross, have made it into the mass market is not insignificant. Looking back, my copying Dabiri's hairstyle is a prime example. My hairstyle had been intransigent for years. All it took was for someone I admire, and who looked like me, to push me in a new direction. 'It just goes to show that you never know what will influence someone,' Dabiri says. 'It's important for people to see somebody like them in the mainstream with cornrows or even a big 'fro.' Detrick-Jules adds: 'We also see it on an everyday level. The more you see your Black female teachers with natural hair, for example, it has a positive upward spiral – a domino effect.' Community helps too. Charlotte Mensah, founder of the award-winning salon Hair Lounge on Portobello Road, west London, remembers the joy she felt on seeing a Black female employee at Google 'confidently wearing a beautiful full head of auburn faux locs,' a dreadlock-style look which involves blending synthetic hair extensions with natural hair and which felt happily unexpected in this setting. 'Few things have made me smile as much this year,' says Mensah. 'A style that might once have been dismissed as ostentatious was being worn proudly at one of the largest corporations in the world.' When I was a teenager, it was hard to find extensions that properly emulated the look of natural hair let alone salons that catered to it. But during the pandemic, when I was thrust into doing my own hair again, I realised things had changed. I even tried a wig for the first time. Clients at A-list Lace Hair, a shop in West Kensington founded in 2009, include Naomi Campbell, Knowles – and now me. The brown wavy mid-length wig allowed me to put my hair in a protective style underneath (a technique used to shield hair from environmental and styling stress). 'Over the past 15 years, I've seen a remarkable shift in how our clients view wigs,' says founder Antonia Okonma Shittu. 'What once may have been seen as a necessity for managing afro-textured hair, or adhering to professional standards, has evolved into an empowering form of artistry.' Wigs, she says, 'are deeply emotive for many Black women because they represent more than just a styling choice – they're tools of self-expression, reinvention, and empowerment.' As I gained confidence in my ability to look after my natural hair, and grew out the chemically altered parts, I then began wearing afro-textured hair extensions by Ruka Hair. The hair looked so close to my own that it essentially enhanced my afro, adding length rather than truncating it 'Growing up and navigating the beauty industry as a Black woman, I constantly felt excluded,' says one of the founders, Tendai Moyo, who knew something had to change when she realised that this wasn't just her struggle 'but a universal pain point for Black women.' Reflecting on how I styled and treated my hair all these years has allowed me to unlearn a lifetime of being told that my Blackness made me less beautiful, less equipped for the job, less worthy of a Tinder match. I still love my braids – my weaves, too. Funnily enough, when I recently got my hair done (the style you see in this piece), I went for the braids that started it all, but now they take on a new meaning for me, one that doesn't include beauty standards designed for me to fail.

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