Soltalk September 2017 | Page 26

Jottings News from the UK and around the World . . . the wild, the wacky, the wonderful, the weird and the downright infuriating Silly Season Journalists sometimes refer to high summer as the “silly season” when real news has gone off for its summer holiday and silly stories are left to make headlines. This summer has been no exception ... Council Capers What do chickens have that sheep don’t? We ask only because the 29th World Hen Racing Championships went ahead as planned last month in Derbyshire, but two traditional summer sheep races were cancelled. The hen race is held at the Barley Mow pub in Bonsall where “highly trained” chickens vie to discover which is fastest. People apparently “flock” (get it?) to the village to witness the spectacle. Landlady Colette Dewhurst said the event is “quintessentially English,” but added, “Sometimes the chickens don’t bloody move. They’ll peck the ground, have a mud bath, go to the toilet or just sit there.” This year’s outright winner was Jack Allsop, aged nine, who took first and second place with his hens called Cooked It and Plucked It. However, two councils cancelled their traditional sheep races this summer in which the sheep would have run along a course with a jockey (a stuffed toy) strapped to their backs. 24 Moffat in Scotland and Wooditton in Cambridgeshire have both bowed to on- line petitions which decided the event was “cruel” and “terrifying” for the animals. Besides which, one read, “no- one asked the sheep.” The petition against the event in Moffat (population about 2,500) carried 80,000 signatures, while in Wooditton (population about 1,900) it was supported by 40,000 signatures. Talking of cruelty to animals (which we weren’t), Suffolk County Council has reacted to complaints about a temporary road sign warning motorists that the safety reflectors which mark road lanes had been dug up. It read, “Warning –