
Duck or block your ears – cricket balls and church bells should be protected
So, no balls in Danbury nor bells in Mytholmroyd. Our councils are having a terrific summer of cancelling, banning and thwarting all things British, especially if they have a slight edge of eccentricity.
This week's victims are a cricket team in Essex and the bells of a church in West Yorkshire with, as usual, the actions of the council craven and bowing to the howls of the minority.
Danbury parish council didn't hesitate when word came from someone in the vicinity of the Dawson Memorial Field. This is a large patch of land in the village, which lies between Chelmsford and the coastal town of Maldon. There's a bowling green, tennis courts, a football pitch, a playground and a cricket wicket.
And it was on May 17 when the incident occurred. It is logged that someone was 'hit by a cricket ball on leg whilst unloading/loading his car'.
It was written up, not in the Danbury Cricket Club's scorebook, but in the incident log at the nearby leisure centre. A historical record detailing such instances as dog fouling and faulty locks in the lavatory facilities.
The incident took place at 1pm, 10 minutes before play began that day – thus it was a stray ball that travelled during the warm up. And anyone who knows anything about village cricket will understand this involves the informal throwing of balls around the ground for catching practice or some gentle bowling at the opening batsmen.
But as soon as Danbury's parish clerk, Michelle Harper, heard the news she acted with the steely force of Martin Brody in Jaws, the police chief who discovers evidence of a shark attack.
Except she exerts rather more power than Brody – he was unable, at first, to close the beaches. Ms Harper, however, achieved a suspension of the cricket as confirmed by council chairman, April Chapman this week, who reported that 'a subsequent meeting decided to suspend cricket for three weeks until we had a report from our health and safety advisors as to what mitigations could be taken.'
Play is still banned as I write. This weekend there is no leather bouncing off willow, no gentle ripples of applause, no frantic cries of 'yes', 'no', 'wait' or 'howzat'. And, worse, no cricket tea. Doubtless mitigation will suggest vast nets be purchased and installed to prevent further accidents and at a cost too vast for the club to muster…
And all this because one unfortunate person, having parked his car, forgot to keep their eyes peeled for airborne cricket balls in spite of the clearest of warning signs. That is, some 22 middle-aged men limping around a field in white trousers and shirts and with an assortment of funny hats.
The onus is on the car parker. Indeed, on many occasions when I've played cricket, it has been the aim of batters to attempt to hit sixes – not just for the runs, but in order to smash the windscreens of the flash idiots who have parked their expensive Land Rovers by the boundary.
Yet eschewing tradition and common sense, the council rules in favour of the not-terribly-injured party.
And while it's a limb in Essex, it's the ears of some locals in West Yorkshire. The bells of St Michael's church in Mytholmroyd have been stopped by order of Calderdale council, who has issued a noise abatement order silencing them until such a time as someone can figure out how to stop them chiming between 11pm and 7am.
The Victorian church installed its bells in 1875 when a new clock was unveiled. They were cast by Mears of London and commissioned after a huge fundraising effort to raise £650. On May 29 of that year, at precisely five minutes to six in the evening, one Mrs Ridehough set the clock in motion to the applause of the assembled fund-raising committee. And since that day, four quarter bells have chimed every 15 minutes with another bell tolling on the hour.
Until now. Until some whinger, in the birthplace of poet Ted Hughes, found sympathy in a council pen pusher who decided to silence them. The cost of installing a device to prevent the night-time bells will doubtless be prohibitive. While those who found the church chimes comforting, who revel in this mad little sound of England, have their sensibilities ignored.
Perhaps the complainers should find somewhere else to live, somewhere altogether more modern and, possibly, rather warmer than Mytholmroyd with its above average rainfall due to the precipitation-inducing Pennines. They could pop off to the Middle East with its gleaming buildings and sunshine. And, oh, the frightful din of the muezzins shrieking out their calls to prayer five times a day from dawn to dusk.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Person seriously injured after incident at Luton Airport's multi-storey car park
A person has been seriously injured after an incident involving a car at a multi-storey car park at Luton Airport, police have said. It is believed a car fell from a higher level of the car park, the BBC reported. Emergency services were called to the airport car park just before 11am GMT. Bedfordshire police said in a statement: 'Emergency services were called shortly before 11am to an incident involving a single vehicle at a multi-storey car park at London Luton Airport. 'Police, ambulance and fire crews attended the scene. One person has been taken to hospital with injuries which are thought to be serious.' Luton Airport has been contacted for comment.


The Sun
33 minutes ago
- The Sun
Car plunges from multi-storey car park at Luton Airport with one raced to hospital and holidaymakers diverted
A CAR is understood to have fallen from a multi-storey car park at Luton Airport. Emergency services raced to this scene this morning, as one man was left with "serious" injuries. 1 Police confirmed that the incident occurred just before 11am and that only one vehicle was involved. They also confirmed that ambulance and fire crews raced to the scene at car park 1. In a statement, a spokesperson for Bedfordshire Police said: "Emergency services were called shortly before 11am to an incident involving a single vehicle at a multi-storey car park at London Luton Airport. "Police, ambulance and fire crews are on scene. One person has been taken to hospital with injuries which are thought to be serious. "Anyone who witnessed the incident is asked to contact police via our website or on 101, quoting the reference 121 of 15 June." A spokesperson for Luton Airport has confirmed that arriving vehicles are having to be diverted following the incident. The spokesperson said: 'Emergency services were called shortly before 11am following a single vehicle incident at multi-storey car park 1. " Following the incident, one person has been taken to hospital for further assessment. "Airport staff are managing the exit of departing vehicles. "Arriving vehicles are being redirected to the airport's mid-stay car park until further notice. "There is no disruption to wider airport operations.' Like us on Facebook at @TheSun.


BBC News
36 minutes ago
- BBC News
Community calls for justice eight years on from Grenfell fire
Survivors and bereaved relatives of the Grenfell Tower blaze have demanded justice following the eighth anniversary of the 2017 tragedy. The blaze left 72 people dead, including 18 children, and is still being investigated by the Metropolitan a few months' time, work will begin to take down the 23-storey walked in silence through west London on Saturday evening before hearing the names of the dead and speeches by campaigners, as the tower loomed over them. London monuments were lit up including the BT Tower and London Eye and the Crystal Palace transmitting station. In Greater Manchester Salford Civic Centre was lit are concerns no-one has yet been prosecuted. Grenfell United vice chairman, Karim Mussilhy, lost his uncle in the inferno. He told the crowd: "Eight years have passed, eight years since the fire - lit by negligence, greed and institutional failure - tore through our homes, our families and our hearts."And still no justice has come. The truth is, there's almost nothing new to say because nothing has changed."As we stand here eight years on, the only decision this government has made is to tear down the tower - our home."He branded the disaster a "forgotten scandal". "The tower has stood not just as a reminder of what happened, but of what must change - a symbol and a truth in the face of denial, of dignity in the face of power, of our resistance, of our 72 loved ones who can't fight for their own justice."And now they want it gone, out of sight out of mind, a clear skyline and a forgotten scandal."There were cries of "shame" and "justice" from the final Grenfell Tower Inquiry report, published in September, concluded victims, bereaved and survivors were "badly failed" through incompetence, dishonesty and Sunday Kensington and Bayswater MP, Joe Powell, told the BBC's Inspirit with Jumoké Fashola: "The one thing I think everybody would agree on is that there should be criminal accountability. "And of course we can't pre-judge how far up the food chain it will go, in terms of companies that were found culpable in the inquiry report, but that is the expectation."Leader of Kensington and Chelsea council Labour group, Kasim Ali, said he lived 500 metres (about 1,600ft) from the tower and saw "horrifying" things. He said: "My fear is that people's lives have been taken for granted and no-one cared about, let's say, communities who lived in a council-owned property, who lived in social housing. "There is stigma around it and I think they have been ignored."He said he wanted the legacy of Grenfell to be housing fit for human habitation, adding: "What we are seeking... is justice. Who is responsible for what happened to 72 members of our community that we have lost?" News of the government's demolition decision this year was met with criticism from some bereaved and survivors of the 2017 fire who expressed upset and shock, saying they felt they had not had their views considered before the decision was Prime Minister and Housing Secretary, Angela Rayner, later said she knew meeting those most closely affected was going to be "really difficult" and that there was "not a consensus" among everyone over what should happen to the Saturday, placards read, "This much evidence still no charges" and "Tories have blood on their hands. Justice for Grenfell".Large green papier-mache hearts were held aloft, had words including "hope", "integrity", "enough is enough" and "justice" written on Tower Memorial Commission has been consulting on plans for a permanent memorial of the tower, with recommendations including a "sacred space", designed to be a "peaceful place for remembering and reflecting".It is expected a planning application for it could be submitted in late 2026.