- One lap of the track (400 metres) For children and families, starting at 9:30am
- Four laps of the track (1.6km or 1 mile) For all participants, starting at 10am
- Twelve laps of the track (4.8km or 3 miles) For all participants, also starting at 10am
Family Fun Day and CRY Fun Run come to Grimsby
Lincoln to welcome world class artists for 10 nights of live music
Hands-on heritage event brings old-school craft to life in Cleethorpes
Locals will get a chance to try their hand at traditional trades as King’s Hall in Cleethorpes plays host to a free heritage and construction skills event on Saturday, 15 June 2024.
The event will transform the venue’s garden area into a working showcase of craft and construction, with local businesses and specialist teams offering live demonstrations and inviting visitors to try their hand at the activities themselves. Brickwork, plastering, roofing, stonemasonry, scaffolding, and carpentry are all on the line-up.
Among the highlights will be the Lincoln Cathedral Works Department, presenting stonemasonry, carpentry, and leadwork while discussing careers in heritage restoration. Local firms such as Ashbourne Roofing, Cyden Homes, PMC Scaffolding, and heritage stonemason Paul Booth will also be in attendance to share trade insights.
Inside the hall, organisations including The National Lottery Heritage Fund, Heritage Lincolnshire, and Historic England will be on hand to discuss funding, conservation projects, and support available for maintaining historic properties, particularly those built before 1919.
The event is part of the Townscape Heritage Project and aims to connect young people, career changers, and curious locals with skilled trades that have shaped the borough’s character. A schools-only preview will take place the day before, with around 300 pupils expected.
The public event will run from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on Saturday. Entry is free.
Image source: North East Lincolnshire CouncilUK moves to expand seabed trawling ban as global ocean protection effort builds
The UK Government is proposing to extend a ban on bottom trawling across a broader stretch of English waters, potentially tripling the area currently protected from the destructive fishing practice.
Bottom trawling, which involves dragging heavy nets across the seabed, has long been criticised for damaging fragile marine habitats and indiscriminately catching marine life. The expansion would increase the ban from 18,000km² to 48,000km² across designated Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). The proposal is now open for a 12-week consultation with the fishing and marine sectors, closing in early September.
If implemented, the plan would protect 41 of England’s 181 Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), aiming to safeguard sensitive seabed ecosystems and rare marine species. The move follows recent warnings from environmental groups and members of Parliament, who have called for stronger safeguards against seabed exploitation, including dredging and mineral extraction.
The announcement coincides with the start of the UN Ocean Conference in Nice, where world leaders are being urged to ratify the High Seas Treaty. The treaty, which aims to protect 30% of international waters by 2030, has been ratified by 47 countries so far. The UK has yet to sign.
At the summit, concerns were also raised about deep-sea mining. France and Costa Rica have called for a global moratorium, urging caution until more is known about the environmental risks of harvesting critical minerals from the ocean floor. A growing consensus is emerging among scientists regarding the need to pause exploration efforts while further research is conducted.
The expanded trawling ban, if enacted, would represent a major step in the UK’s marine conservation efforts and align with broader global moves to preserve ocean biodiversity.
Image credit: Stock.adobe.com/Steven F GranvilleCollege receives £600k to train skilled agri-food workforce
North East Lincolnshire wants your say on learning for grown-ups
Whether you’re curious about pottery, upskilling for work, or thinking of a career switch, North East Lincolnshire wants to know how you’d prefer to hear about adult learning opportunities.
An online survey is open to locals aged 19 and over, asking how people usually find out about short courses, workshops, and training programmes, and what might get them to sign up. With many options available for free or at a subsidised rate, the Council is keen to remove the biggest barrier: a lack of awareness.
It’s part of a wider push to refresh how adult education is promoted in the borough. The feedback will help the Council and local providers tailor future campaigns, from online ads to posters in town, so more people know what’s available.
The survey is open until Friday, 18 July and takes just a few minutes to complete. Those who would rather share their thoughts in person can visit Freshney Place (outside Bakers and Baristas) on Wednesday, 18 June, where the Adult Learning Team will be available from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm. Paper copies are also available on request.
Image credit: Stock.adobe.com/Jacob LundFunding secured for Lincoln Arts Centre VE and VJ Day commemoration project
Lincoln Arts Centre has secured £15,000 to deliver a new VE and VJ Day community commemoration project called Our Freedom: Then and Now.
Lincs & Notts Air Ambulance to save more lives than ever with second helicopter
Families invited to join the Big Butterfly Count
- Get ready with the FREE Big Butterfly Count app or by downloading Butterfly Conservation’s FREE butterfly ID chart
- Join in between July 18 and August 10
- Add your counts via the website or app