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BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Official naming ceremony for new RNLI Sennen Cove lifeboat
A formal naming ceremony for a new RNLI lifeboat is set to take place in Cornwall later. The class D lifeboat arrived at Sennen Cove RNLI lifeboat station in November to replace the Amy Brown which served the station since RNLI said the lifeboat was funded entirely by Geoffrey Bluff, who left half of his estate to benefit Sennen Cove RNLI after his death in 2018. It said the lifeboat was named Arangy, at Mr Bluff's request, in memory of his late wife Rita and himself. 'Extremely grateful' Neil Willis, volunteer lifeboat operations manager at Sennen Cove RNLI, said: "I think I speak for everyone connected with the station when I say we are very proud to receive this new D class lifeboat which will serve our volunteers extremely well over the next decade. "We are extremely grateful to Mr Geoffrey Bluff for his kindness in funding our new lifeboat."The RNLI said the naming ceremony would start at 15:00 BST in Sennen Cove Harbour and conclude with the volunteer crew launching the lifeboat.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
'Food demand in Cumbria is unprecedented'
A food redistribution charity says it is struggling to cope with demand for those who need help across Cumbria. Fareshare supplies millions of meals for communities across the country which are given out for free or at a reduced hundred tonnes (300,000kg) of surplus food was delivered across Cumbria last year, the charity Winter, a Fareshare coordinator, said help was needed to get more vans on the road to meet demand in the region. She said the need for free and heavily discounted food since the Covid-19 pandemic had been "unprecedented.""For Carlisle in particular, two vans come on a Wednesday because there's such a need here," she said."We would like to be able to put six more deliveries to the Carlisle area because we do have a few requests for that, but we don't have any space in our vans to achieve that at the moment." Fareshare redistributes to charities and community groups food that would otherwise go to waste. For Leanne Hackett, who has a five-year-old daughter, it makes a difference."I'm a single mum and I live on my own, it's just me and my daughter so it really does help," she said."You have just got to budget, I am quite good at budgeting anyway but you just cut back on things and get on with it." Diane Snedker is also a regular user and the food helps her offset the rising cost of said: "I come because it helps out, I know things are getting harder. "I live on my own but sometimes I have the grandkids so I have to feed them as well."The charity is appealing for help from local charities and businesses so they can get three vans on the road to reach more people who need them in Carlisle and Cumbria. Ms Winter said: "We need more charities to come on and we also need more food from the Cumbria area because we've had to reduce the amount of food that we give to each charity because supply isn't meeting demand anymore." Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
I clear filthy hoarders' homes… I found a missing cat's skeleton buried in clutter & was ATTACKED by 30 false widows
BEING attacked by a nest of false widow spiders isn't what most people expect from a shift at work but for Rob Nash it's just a normal day at the office. The home clearance boss, 40, has cleared out scores of filthy hoarder dens over the last eight years - and has the scars to prove it. 13 13 13 His work regularly brings him and his crew in touch with people in desperate need of help, and not just with emptying out their garden sheds. Rob and his team are brought in to deal with the worst cases of hoarding in his local area. He has seen it all from "300 to 400 bottles of urine" to "thousands of pounds worth of gold" squirrelled away under mounds of rubbish. Rob has seen whole flats covered in four feet of clutter and "rooms come alive" with 30 to 40 rats. Often, the work is thankless, hoarders find it extremely hard to part with their long-loved possessions and don't want Rob and his team to gut their dwellings. They are usually brought in on the request of family, friends or officials to get the job done. Coastal Clearance - Dorset Hampshire are sometimes called in on short notice when a hoarder is taken to hospital or into care with social services and housing associations ringing Rob and instructing him to get in and do what he has to do while the hoarder is gone. His team doesn't shy away from the work and neither does Rob who said: "I get stuck in, I love it, you never know what you're going to find." Rob said: "We've found people's relatives' ashes, one hoarder lost their cat and we found the skeleton buried under the rubbish." The work may seem grim and dangerous but Rob stays protected in a full hazmat suit and says he tries not to judge, enjoying being able to help people in need. He said: "It's hard not to feel for the person who lived there, even amidst the challenging circumstances of the clean-up. " It's a tough job, but we're here to restore these properties to a safe and habitable state and not judge these people who clearly need the help of someone like ourselves.' Aside from the grim and sometimes disgusting discoveries, the job can be seriously dangerous - a recent clear-out at a hoarder's home saw Rob attacked twice by swarms of insects. After disturbing a nest of what the waste management boss suspected were false widow spiders, Rob was set upon by the arachnids. A nasty bite on his right arm left him with a large infected wound and the very next day at the same property Rob was attacked by a swarm of wasps. 13 13 13 Even with "taped up trousers" and hazmat protection, the insects found a way in and left Rob injured enough to force him to take time off work while he healed up. He said: "It's healing slowly after being given antibiotics but it was bloody painful and I had to have a few days off as I can't lift anything." Vermin pose the biggest threat to Rob's team, with rats being the most hated among his staff. The critters can give a nasty bite, wreak havoc on homes and even damage cars. Rob said: "We see rats and mice all the time, when I first started out I was working out of a little van and a rat had got into the roof lining in the back and worked his way into the cab, it ended up scrapping my van. "There was a hoarder's place we did and we just started on the room and it just came alive, must have been 20-30 rats in that room." He added: "I don't mind the rats and mice, maybe now I'll care more about spiders though" Rob's job is certainly not for the faint-hearted. 13 13 Hoarders store bizarre collections of items so, aside from the threat posed by vicious insects and troublesome rats, Rob's team has to contend with biohazards. He adds: "It's definitely becoming more common for us to deal with hoarder properties, and it's not an easy job. 'Grim' is a pretty accurate description sometimes. "We've encountered everything imaginable: rats, mice, insects, human waste, needles, rotting food and not forgetting spiders, the list goes on. "It's not just the volume of stuff, but the state it's in. "We did another one that was a two bedroom flat, it was four foot deep throughout the whole place and you couldn't see the floor at all." Other, less extreme jobs the firm undertakes make for easier work but in recent years Rob feels he has encountered more hoarders than usual. Word of mouth is everything for his small business and some posts on social media have seen business boom. Sharing before and after snaps of his work online and always making sure not to judge the vulnerable hoarders Rob's company has become a go-to for the challenging job. He manages to keep busy six days a week, often working upwards of six jobs a day. The team averages 1-2 hoarder's homes a month with these jobs posing the biggest challenges but Rob takes a stoic approach to the work, simply saying: "We get in there we clean everything out." The job brings him into contact with people who usually don't want his help, with their problem developing over time hoarders end up overly attached to their collected rubbish. It can build slowly, beginning with a reluctance to throw away worthless but treasured items developing into a refusal to throw anything away at all in extreme cases. It results in cluttered, filthy and unhygienic dwellings with serious cases eventually requiring outside intervention, Rob has seen a case where an individual was "going to the toilet in carrier bags and just tying it up and throwing it in rooms.' Hoarders will rarely ask for help to clear their dwellings with Rob's team usually called in by social services, housing associations or concerned family members. Often, the team will have to come to properties when the hoarder is away. Rob said: 'The smell and the amount of stuff they have, just general rubbish where they don't want to go to the dust bin, they get embarrassed and don't even want to open the front door. 'It is hard if they're there, a lot of the jobs recently it's taken months to get in there, but we might get in if they are taken to hospital. 'The housing association might say 'they've been taken in you should get in and do what you have to do.' "Each and every job is different, there's never two similar jobs, ever. 'It's usually family that intervene or social or someone. "We seem to be doing a lot more with social or housing getting involved." What is a hoarder & is it a medical condition? According to the NHS, Hoarding is a mental health problem that involves storing an 'excessive' number of items in an unmanageable way. Newspapers, clothes, junk mail, bills, containers, and household supplies are among the variety of items kept. The disorder can impact a person's everyday life by putting a strain on relationships when someone else tries to clear the clutter and also makes it difficult to move around the house. The condition causes unhygienic living conditions, fire risks, and trip hazards. Hoarding is often associated with other mental health conditions including severe depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia. A GP can recommend the best treatment, which may include therapy or antidepressants. 13 13 13