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Campaign to try alternative travel in Guernsey and Jersey
Campaign to try alternative travel in Guernsey and Jersey

BBC News

time20-05-2025

  • BBC News

Campaign to try alternative travel in Guernsey and Jersey

Islanders in Guernsey and Jersey are being urged to try alternative modes of transport, as part of a week-long Journeys Week - previously known as Alternative Transport Week is running this week and encourages people to leave their cars at home and use the bus, cycle or walk to work or part of the initiative by the Better Journeys Project new signs have been installed around St Peter Port and St Helier, to show how long it takes to walk or cycle from key locations into the town centre. The project first launched in 2021 and this year marks the first time the two islands have come together under one banner to promote sustainable travel. The project said signs were located along popular commuter routes and outside residential added that the focus is on "long-term behaviour change" and the positive impacts of "better travel habits".Rollo de Sausmarez, director of the Better Journeys project in Guernsey, said he hoped the signs prompted "more islanders to leave the car at home and take a better journey".Kate Huntington, Jersey director, added; "Whether it's a 10-minute bike ride or a 15-minute walk, these signs are a simple but effective way to show people that active travel is an option, not just during Better Journeys Week, but throughout the year." Schools have been encouraging parents to take their children to school actively. Vicki Charlesworth, the head teacher of Les Landes School in Jersey started the cycling crocodile scheme in 2021, which allows children a chance to travel to school actively but said students enjoy walking and cycling to school and that it helped set them up for a "successful day of learning". While Claire Giles the head teacher at St Martin's Primary School in Guernsey, said they had supported the project since it first started and that students "wanted to actively travel to school".She said the school was the first in the bailiwick to have a "school street" which sees the road running past its main entrance shut for half an hour before and after Giles said "95% of children come to school actively already" and that she has noticed a difference in students "physical and mental health".

Jersey school days under Nazi occupation relived
Jersey school days under Nazi occupation relived

BBC News

time06-05-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Jersey school days under Nazi occupation relived

School days under Nazi occupation relived 16 minutes ago Share Save Robert Hall BBC News, Jersey Share Save Rod Bryans François Le Maistre shared his memories of German soldiers hunting through houses looking for hidden radio sets - such as the one his family had Starting school at any time is a daunting experience but when François Le Maistre started he did so while his island home was occupied by the Nazis and he did not speak a word of English. Now 88 years old he returned to Les Landes School to share his experience with the current pupils. "Bouônjour. Coumme est qu'ous êtes? I'm sure all of you will understand that is Jèrriais. That's all I spoke. That was the only language I spoke when I came to this school in January 1944," he told pupils. "None of us who came from the country spoke any English. We we were like friends, all of us in school, because we were all, and had been, occupied by this time, for a long time." Mr Le Maistre told the pupils: "Mum and dad, they had a vegetable garden. They had chickens. They grew things like swedes and carrots and potatoes and peas and beans. "Now, the people in town had nothing, and for a great part of the war, a lot of the people in town were starving. "I remember, we had five Red Cross parcels and you know the thing that I liked the best was a tin called Klim... it's milk spelt backwards, isn't it, and it was dried milk and we loved it!" He said: "When the Germans first came, all the radios were taken away. "They went through houses, everybody's houses and your radio was confiscated. "Alongside our big farm kitchen, we had a big fire. On each side, we had two big armchairs. Those armchairs were stood on carpets. "Underneath the carpet on the right hand side of the fire was a small trapdoor, and that's where my parents hid the crystal [radio] set." Rod Bryans François Le Maistre alongside his cherished tin of Klim, powdered milk Mr Le Maistre said: "Towards the end of the war, after the D-Day landing, the Germans knew that things weren't going well for them in France. They were much more mellow. Much calmer. "From my memory I never had a German threatening any of us kids, they never stopped us, waylaid us, nothing like that, and in the 1950s they came back to kind of apologise for what they had been doing during the occupation." He said: "[On Liberation Day] there was a huge crowd of people, lots of kids of our age. It was the joy of the crowd, you felt uplifted. There were celebrations by the school too. "I'm going to be 88 this year. I lived through it all, and its a great privilege to still be here". 'How lucky we are' For the Les Landes pupils of 2025, hearing the wartime stories from a former pupil, and seeing the objects that were important to him when he was their age, was something they said they would not forget. Orla said: "We hear the stories about World War Two, but we don't hear from the people who have experienced it. So it's really nice that they're sharing that with us." Milly and Dillan said they would remember the occupation stories Dillan said: "I think it's really important. To know how lucky we are, and also so we can't make the same mistake again." Evie said: "I think it's amazing that we can still hear about these types of things…and when they're gone, we can pass them down more generations. So it will never be a story that's forgotten." Follow BBC Jersey on X and Facebook. Send your story ideas to

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