Author: natamagat

Random thoughts from a French incomer in rural England. Interested in the love/hate relationship between the English and the French (unavoidable), community matters (they affect us whatever nationality), tourism (my original career with an MA in Tourism albeit a French one), photography (images speak a thousand words, although only the good ones), and words (mostly English words with a few French ones thrown in) Pardon my Franglais if you will.

Le mariage royal au sein d’une famille anglaise

Comme trois millions d’être humains dans le monde, si l’on en croit la presse anglaise, j’ai regardé le mariage du Prince et de la Princesse à la télévision, chez des amis. Etre une Française en Angleterre a rendu l’expérience particulièrement intéressante. Les femmes romantiques ne peuvent s’empêcher d’admirer le rêve de l’ histoire d’amour parfaite, comme elles l’imaginaient enfants. Les cyniques commentent et s’amusent. La robe, superbe, l’abbaye, impressionnante, la pompe anglaise, unique.

Avec des amis dont les prénoms sont autant de rois et reines, d’Arthur à Victoria, de James à Richard, il est vrai que mon monde anglais est privilégié. Je ne savais pas jusque là à quel point certains sont royalistes. Regarder quelques moments, d’accord, mais regarder la journée entière, l’enregistrer et recommencer m’a paru quelque peu exagéré. Nous avons porté un toast aux nouveaux mariés que nous ne rencontrerons jamais avec du Champagne, des larmes ont discrètement embuées quelques yeux peu maquillés et quelques connaissances ont été reconnues dans la congrégation de Westminster.

Je n’avais aucune envie d’être dans l’abbaye, je ne les connais pas. Je n’aurais jamais passé plusieurs nuits à camper devant le Palais, l’Abbaye ou quelque part sur le chemin du cortège royal le coeur plein d’espoir. Ce n’est pas ma famille royale. Je n’étais pas une fillette anglaise lorsque Lady Di est devenue la femme la plus photographiée du monde. Comprendre l’intérêt et l’attachement d’un peuple à sa famille royale pour une femme qui a passé son enfance dans une république et sa vie adulte dans cette royauté est fascinant.

Les enfants montrent bien que les hommes viennent de Mars et les femmes de Vénus. Les garçons étaient bien plus intéressés par les jeux vidéos et parlaient bien trop fort au gout des filles. Prince William avait peut être un beau costume, ce n’était pas celui dans lequel il se roule dans la boue, ou plus exactement, co-pilote un hélicoptère et sauve quelques vies au passage.

Dans le camp des adultes, les hommes commentaient un peu trop fort au goût des femmes qui voulaient entendre les commentaires des présentateurs de la télévision. Une de mes amis avait imprimé l’ordre du jour. Elle savait à quelle heure les bagues allaient être échangées, le bisou sur le balcon offert aux photographes, qui mangeait dans quel palais ou quel hôtel.

Les hommes et les photographes ont préféré la petite balade en Aston Martin. Les pères fanas de voiture se disant que ce serait beau de voir leur fils au volant de leur décapotable. Il faut reconnaitre que la DB6 Volante de Prince Charles est superbe. Qui plus est elle a été convertie pour utiliser un bioconbustible (apparemment à partir de vin anglais, mais bon, ils ne font pas beaucoup de kilomètres au volant de leur propre voiture dans la famille royale).

Une fois le court bisou sur le balcon passé, pardon les deux bisous, nous étions enfin libres de commencer le barbecue. Les hommes devant le feu, les femmes préparant une belle table, les enfants dans le parc. La journée redevenait normale même si le sujet de conversation du jour était prévisible et que nappes, serviettes et assiettes étaient autant d’Union Jacks et que sur les murs, les drapeaux à l’effigie du couple royal nous regardaient d’un oeil vide.

Il ne faut pas penser pour autant que tous les Anglais adorent la famille royale. Beaucoup ont évité à tout prix toute idée de mariage. Des amis ont empruntés des chiens pour se perdre au milieu d’un bois le plus loin possible de la télévision et la radio. Certains pensent que les dépenses royales sont trop astronomiques par rapport à la valeur économiques qu’ils rapportent au pays au contraire de ce qui disent les médias qui, sans aucun doute, gagnent beaucoup d’argent grâce à la famille royale. Il est dans leur intérêt d’imprimer des pages de photos des familles royales pour faire rêver ceux qui n’auront jamais de telles robes, des voitures décapotables à la James Bond ou une église assez grande pour planter des arbres dans la nef.

Le jour du rêve est passé, nous revoilà dans la réalité anglaise journalière. Les drapeaux vont rentrer au placard, Prince Charles n’est toujours pas roi. Il y a beaucoup d’espoir placé sur les jeunes épaules du couple, beaucoup voient Prince William comme le seul qui pourra sauver la monarchie d’une désintegration inévitable. Bon courage. Ce n’est ni parti gagnée, ni balade dans le parc.

Arrêt patriotique prochain: les jeux olympiques. L’engouement est moins évident. De royalisme à autodérision, il n’y a qu’un pas anglais et ils font les deux à merveille.

Le mariage royal anglais vu de la campagne du Sud-Ouest

Le monde entier parle du mariage du Prince William et Kate Middleton. La robe, la pompe, les touristes, les millions de spectateurs, les milliers de livres dépensés et les millions de livres de revenus pour les compagnies anglaises qui ont su bien vite capitaliser sur l’événement.

Mais pour les Anglais dans le fin fond de la campagne du Dorset Occidental, ça change quoi cet événement? Tout dépend des Anglais. Tout d’abord, c’est un jour de congé. Bon début. D’autant que le premier lundi de Mai est toujours férié voici un second week-end de quatre jour, après Pâques. Employés ravis, employeurs un peu moins.

Les Britanniques sont assez fans de leurs drapeaux. Pluriel voulu, car j’entends par là les drapeaux anglais, écossais ou gallois. Nous disons peut être la reine d’Angleterre, même si elle est la couronne non seulement du Royaume Uni et du Commonwealth, mais le drapeau Britannique n’est devenu à la mode que récemment. Il est vrai que la folie du Union Jack avait déjà commencé avec les Jeux Olympiques de Londres 2012, mais le mariage royal a permis aux fabricants de tasses, assiettes, tapis, chaussures, lunettes de soleil, sacs, habits ou banderoles de s’en donner à coeur joie. Si les artistes et designers s’y sont mis et que le public suit en achetant des produits patriotiques, vous imaginez les enfants dans les écoles.

Mon fils de 10 ans a reçu une tasse commémorative (tasse de thé, pas de café bien sur). Non pas un cadeau de sa mère qui n’y aurait même pas pensé mais de l’association de parents d’élèves de son école. Tout d’abord, j’ai franchement trouvé cela très bizarre. Puis, ayant proposé de prendre des photos pour la postérité, je me suis mise au jeu. Tous vêtus en bleu, blanc, rouge (nous sommes au moins unis par nos couleurs patriotiques) ils ont mangé des gâteaux sur le gazon de leur cour de récréation, les petites de maternelle dans leurs belles robe du dimanche (pas d’uniforme de l’école pour l’occasion) me montrant la princesse sur leur tasse, avec des sourires épanouis. Elle casseront peut être la tasse, mais elles se souviendront de cette journée.

Ma campagne est bien rurale mais nous sommes tout de même au 21eme siècle et j’ai donc reçu des invitations facebook. La première, de notre cinéma local l’Electric Palace à Bridport qui va montrer l’événement sur le grand écran. Prosseco (le champagne est trop cher) et gâteaux sont de la partie, belles fripes et chapeaux sont en option, mais recommandés. J’ai décliné. La seconde a eu plus de commentaires mais comme toujours, ceux qui râlent parlent plus fort que ceux qui conforment. La  ‘diffusion alternative du mariage royal’ montrera les images mais sera commentée par des comédiens. J’avoue que je suis tentée.

Ceci étant dit, j’ai été invitée à une Garden Party. Un barbecue quoi. Email à tous les invités, chacun emmène quelque chose. Vues les réponses, mes amis anglais sont plus royalistes que je ne l’imaginais. Mon amie Victoria (j’aurais du m’en douter vu son nom) a dévalisé les magasins. Assiettes, serviettes, nappes, drapeaux, banderoles et autres gadgets pour les enfants. Les Union Jack vont nous sortir par les oreilles.

Quelque part, je ne crois pas que je pourrai regarder la version alternative. Mais bon, j’adore une bonne petite fête et je ne doute pas qu’on va bien s’amuser. C’est une excuse comme toute autre, même si particulièrement anglaise. Depuis plus de vingt ans que j’habite en Angleterre je n’ai rien connu de tel. C’est sur qu’il y a plein d’Anglais qui ne sont pas intéressés, certains passent même le weekend à l’étranger sans télé, internet ou radio. Je crois que ce n’est qu’une bonne excuse pour être le râleur cool du coin. Il n’y a pas que les Français qui aiment râler.

Guillaume et Catherine sont jeunes, ils se marient, j’espère qu’ils seront heureux. Rendront-ils la monarchie un peu plus populaire? Dieu seul sait.

Dieu et mon droit.

Royal Wedding excitement

It is really fascinating for a Royalty-less French person to observe the mania that is, the Royal Wedding. I can’t imagine we’d be so excited about our very own Monsieur Sarkozy getting married. Wait there, he did get married, some say so he could visit the Queen of England and the Commonwealth but it wasn’t quite the same, was it? I know -and keep forgetting- that William is not King yet but it feels to me like the King is getting married. It should be a Princely Wedding.

Since the announcement, it has been a divided nation commenting on how much money is being spent, what the dress will look like, whether a Royal Invite might land through the letterbox -highly unlikely as it is- or whether it’s just a big waste of time for the country.

Some companies wasted no time in capitalising on the marketing potential. Mugs galore, including one with Prince Harry which clearly shows English humour knows no bound (except for the Royal Family who have not given their Royal Seal of Approval). I have never seen so many British flags on plates, carpets, murals and anything else you can think about. In fairness, the blue, white and red mania (in crosses you understand, vertical lines graphically boring as they are, are unlikely to decorate anybody’s homes) started even before the announcement of the Big Day, thanks to the Olympics and all that. But let’s not talk about that.

Which camp do I belong to? Well, I am torn. On the one hand, I can’t say I feel any particular affinity with the Royal Family. I’ve been brought up in a Republic, nothing can change that. I did ‘meet’ the Queen when my father in law was building carriage driving obstacles in Windsor in the 80’s. All I could think about was ‘why is she walking around looking like a grandma with a scarf, rather than a Queen with a crown on her head’. Of course she was at home in her extensive garden and I know now that the scarf is her headgear of choice for a relaxed walk about. I promptly felt a fraud for not being able to fully appreciate the full extent of my privilege, especially being foreign and all that. Many a royalist would have cherished that moment. I suppose I do now.

As for tourism, there is no doubt that the eyes of the world will be turned to London on Friday 29th April 2011 and let’s face it, the British do know how to do pomp and patriotism, if flag waving is anything to go by. I even had an invite, via Facebook. Almost as good as the real thing: our very own local cinema in Bridport -the Electric Palace- is showing the event on the big screen so people can dress up, wedding hat and all, gather with like minded people under bunting, nibble on cakes whilst sipping Prosecco.

Having said that, I also had another Facebook invitation: The Alternative Royal Wedding Broadcast, commented by comedians. If the Facebook comments from the invite are anything to go by, there are a fair few people that will switch on that Channel to make the Westminster Watch a little bit more bearable…

Back in the real world, my 10 year old son was given a commemorative mug by his Parents Teachers Association. Pupils dressed in blue, white and red and had tea on the lawn; well squash and cakes in the playground. I must say, it was really lovely, the little ones were very excited, especially the girls, pointing at the princess on their mug as little girls in pretty dresses do.

And yes, I am going to celebrate. My family has been invited to a real friend’s house: parents, kids and dogs, Pimm’s, cakes, barbecue… The recent sunshine and ensuing euphoria makes us forget we live in England so we’ll just ignore the weather forecast: showers. I think it will be an eye opener for this French woman and I might even get a bit excited. Well, I do love a good party, Royal Wedding or otherwise.

New studio for Hatha Yoga classes in Beaminster, West Dorset

May 2013 update: Tamara now teaches yoga from different locations, find her details at the bottom of the post.

When I moved to Beaminster three years ago, could I find a Yoga class in town? No. Disappointing. A few weeks back, I heard a new Yoga teacher had moved into Beaminster and she even had her own studio. Things were looking up.

Clean yoga studio

I’ve only been to three classes but I’m very glad Tamara moved to Beaminster, Yoga studio and all. First and foremost, I rather like the fact that Samhita Studio’s wooden floor is clean. Believe me, it’s not a given. I’ve been distracted by a fair few fluff balls and leftover crumbs in town halls or gyms over the years. The only distractions here are Buddhas, candles (and radiators!).

My last Yoga stint was a year of expensive Bikram back in London some years ago. A large hot room stuffed with lots of sweaty bodies. I’m after something more gentle these days. I want to relax and get rid of my back ache that has built up with so many years of sitting in front of a computer screen. Walking in our beautiful countryside is great but it doesn’t improve my posture.

Hatha Yoga

If Hatha Yoga is going to prepare my body and mind for meditation, as it’s supposed to, I want to be comfortable. So cotton mats on top of rubber mats get my vote: no slipping and no sticking. Then there’s the cushion on every mat. I can get my spine in the right place and meditate to my heart’s content.

Tamara even hands us a super soft blanket for the headstand. It’s all about being peaceful and at ease and I must say, by the end of the session, I feel totally relaxed and content.

Headstand did I say?

Yep. Never thought I could do it but today, I am confident I shall. I managed to get my knees on my elbows this week and Tamara assures me that’s the hardest bit. I can’t say it feels entirely natural, but somehow I felt safe. It’s a weird yet great feeling to get so close to standing upside down. I’m sure my brain can do with a bit of extra irrigation every so often.

Sun salute

I’ve always liked the sun salute but have never been able to achieve it as the seamlessly gracious series of postures that it is. I’m positive I’ll know it from beginning to end quite soon, right breathing and all. Tamara is quite methodical in her teaching. For each exercise – which she explains one step at a time, she makes sure we always breathe in the right place, explains the benefits of each pause and she keeps an eye on us, to make sure we get it right.

Tamara’s voice is deep and calm. The studio is peaceful and each session is inspiring and different. Apart from learning the basis of meditation, one of my favourite bits is the relaxation at the end. Tamara wraps us up in blankets so we are snug as a bug in a rug and her smooth voice takes us through an inspiring story or the benefits of Yoga.

My mind did wander off here and there, then I came back to reality. Relaxed. Can’t wait for next week when I shall push myself a bit further…

Namaste.

Tamara: 07754 628 449

A French view on town criers

Since moving to West Dorset this Frenchie hears “Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!” at many local events of note (and I must say I couldn’t believe my ears that you should use old French, again).

I assumed that town criers had just never disappeared in England. A bit of research when I posted my photo of David Craner, our local loud voice, proved I was wrong.

Ancient and Honourable

The first thing I came across on the net was the ahgtc (Ancient and Honourable Guild of Town criers). They have a website where I was hoping to find out how many town criers there are and a bit of history.

‘Latest news’ section was not quite what I had in mind. The fact that town criers can rent their loud services to private firms to advertise their wares or events in a theatrical way was not spelt out anywhere that I could find.

Instead, this is what I found:
19th February 2011
John Thomas had died.
8th January 2011
Eric Watsham has died.
And so it continued.

I suppose the Guild is there mainly for their members so to honour their lost friends is fair enough, even admirable. The poem that accompanies the obituaries is very touching. The Guild also claims to help with the marketing of Town Criers but I must say that they do not seem to be doing this in a traditional 21st century way. Then again, what did I expect?

In fact, the most informative website I could find is our own David Craner (for Crewkerne and Beaminster) the first town crier I ever came across. There are 220 town criers in Britain mainly representing towns and cities (although sometimes Lords of the Manor as well).

When I last spoke to David he explained that he hoped to go to France to promote the art of ‘crieur public’. I understand he has been approved by the twinning associations so he is a step closer to getting there. Town criers may have spread William the Conqueror’s laws and news after 1066, they have pretty much disappeared in France.

There is a small revival but they are mainly volunteers in city centres, spreading private love messages, recipes (this is France!) and community events that locals ‘post’ in their box or cage, found in the local convenience store or café. Some have links to tourist offices but unlike in this country, they are not linked to civil events and Councils.

It is interesting that daily newspapers (and literacy) should have been the reason for the disappearance of town criers. A revival in town criers cannot be linked to the drop in sales of newspapers but nonetheless, I can’t help but smile at old fashioned ways coming back to entertain us and local papers struggling to find ways to inform us.

I wonder, should newspapers employ town criers to read excerpts of their news and entice people to buy the papers?

Can you hear it? “Read all about it!”

For a history of town criers, you can visit David Craner’s website:
http://www.davidcranertowncrier.co.uk/History.html

Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!

Oyez! Oyez! Les Anglais ont 220 crieurs publics

et ils commencent souvent leur harangue par ces mots, parvenus en Angleterre par le biais de notre cher Guillaume le Conquérant en 1066.

La renaissance des crieurs

Tout comme en France les crieurs publics avaient disparus avec l’arrivée des journaux. Dans les années 80, il y a eu en Grande-Bretagne un engouement pour les films d’époque et une certaine nostalgie pour le bon vieux temps, alors que le pays se transformait sous la main forte de la dame de fer.

Ceci étant dit, les Anglais adorent se déguiser. Point. Toute excuse pour se parer de costumes d’époque, même si l’audience n’est que de quelques dizaines de villageois, est bonne. Les crieurs n’ont peut être pas d’énormes chapeaux en fourrure comme les Gardes Royaux (heureusement pour les ours) mais ils ont un tricorne et s’habillent de façon à ce qu’on les remarque.

Qui dit crieur dit ville

Au début 2011, la Grande-Bretagne compte 220 crieurs publics. Ils sont en fait des ‘crieurs de ville’ et ne peuvent s’appeler town criers que ceux qui sont reconnus par leur mairie. Ils appartiennent à l’Ancienne et Honorable Guilde des Crieurs de Ville. Certains crient pour plusieurs villes. La plupart crient en privé aussi, pour arrondir les fins de mois. En fait, ils sont souvent volontaires, à la retraite et ce sont les événements privés qui leur permettent de continuer à crier.

Notre crieur local, David Craner (town crier pour Beaminster et Crewkerne), dont la voix porte fort loin, essaie de trouver des sponsors pour venir présenter ce ‘métier’ quelque peu bizarre et pourtant si vieux à nos petits écoliers par le biais de l’association de jumelage.

Crierons nous plus en France?

Moi je dis bravo. Dans notre monde ou les ordinateurs envahissent notre vie sociale sans que nous nous en rendions compte, requinquer une tradition de recevoir des nouvelles de vive voix me plait bien.

Fast-food a fait naître slow-food, peut être que les crieurs publics, éteints par les journaux, vont faire renaitre les nouvelles. ‘Live’, pour de vrai.

Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!

Voulez vous visiter le Dorset?

If a French persons wants to visit Dorset and speaks English, they’ll be fine when they try and find information on the net. Just about. But what if a French traveller prefers to search for his holiday on the net in French? After all, it’s pretty likely. He may write ‘visiter dorset’ on google.fr. He’ll find this site (Pardon my Franglais) in 5th place before visit-dorset and dorset-newforest.

South East equals South West?
When I searched ‘visiter angleterre dorset’ dorset-newforest came first, tripAdvsior second, South-East Visit England third. I know, non sensical: South-East is not a typing error on my part. Pardon my Franglais comes 8th. Destination Dorset is not on the first page. I didn’t bother with the second page, most Google searchers don’t.

Attitude problem?
To think that Pardon my Franglais has been created for my random ramblings, does not get updated regularly, does not get many hits yet gets views from French people searching for a holiday in Dorset (and how to eat cheese in England) confirms something I already knew. English speaking people have a language attitude problem. I should know, I’ve lived here for over 20 years now.

English, the only language in the world?
If England is finally going to invest time, money and effort into tourism to show the rest of the world what a beautiful country this is (and what an outstanding county Dorset is), it may be time you lovely Brits realised that not everybody speaks English.
You can convince yourself (and many French speaking people) that your language is the first in the world. After all, Americans have done a good job of imposing their cinema even in France or insisting on international meetings begin held in English (how fair would you find them in French?) but that does not mean that they (and you) have succeeded in killing the other main languages altogether.

Who is losing out?
Is it not a shame to miss out on a huge market of French speaking (and Spanish speaking) potential customers? The only time British people speak to me in French is when they’ve had a few drinks. The other thing that often comes up after a few pints is how the British had a great empire (unlike the French of course). Living in the past does not always help the future.

Welcome, bienvenue, willkomen, blablabla
When will tourism professionals realise that languages are an important part of a service like hospitality and tourism? From the web searches of potential clients to the welcome of the staff. How nice is it when you travel and the waiter greets you in English? Do you take that for granted?
I am yet to go to a restaurant in England with my French speaking father and get any help from a waiter in translating a menu for him. I find my dictionary heavy in my handbag and waiting for my phone to connect and give me the answer really frustrating.
When in France, if I have to translate for my husband, there’s a good chance I’ll get some help if I get stuck, sometimes without asking.
When in Morocco, they’ll try in both languages, for good measure.

Food for French thoughts.

How reliable is TripAdvisor?

I read with interest a review for the Wild Garlic restaurant in Beaminster on Trip Advisor from georgeporgepuddingpie. George could be a woman called Georgina but as the ‘reviewer’ did not leave a real name, I’ll assume it is a male George and call him ‘he’ to ponder on the veracity of his claims.

I swear it’s true, or is it?

George claims to be a local who parked behind the restaurant and heard what can only be Mat (Follas, BBC Masterchef winner, who runs the Wild Garlic) swear and bad mouth his staff.

You can’t really park directly behind the Wild Garlic. There is a private parking area but it stands closer to the Pizza place. Was it Mat he heard? Did he really hear anybody swear?

He saw “one of the men in chefs white buying pastry from the Coop”. Did they have Wild Garlic written on their whites? Was this man in whites working for the chippie, the Pizza place or the Chinese? Was he buying a bit of pastry for his wife before the rush of evening service?

Does family man = children’s menu?

To say Mat was a family man, I was shocked not to see a childrens menu“. What did he expect? Fish and chips, sausage and chips or burger and chips?

Of course georgeporgepuddingpie is totally entitled to dislike the Wild Garlic or any other establishment. He can have a problem with Mat and his Kiwi ways -supporting the wrong rugby team and all that. After all, Mat is somewhat famous and we know that celebrity status can bring positive and negative consequences in its wake.

Give the chef a chance

The thing is, if the food was cold, why did our anonymous reviewer not send it back? If the mash was unseasoned, did he tell the chef? Why do English people often sit there, say nothing and pay the bill? Why do they not give the business a chance to make amends when there is a problem with the product or the service?

To write an anonymous review on Trip Advisor about a local restaurant is not only cowardly, it sends a very negative message to the world about the local town. If we’ve eaten there, said our bit to the owner and nothing’s changed, then yes, we should review what we thought was a problem for all to see. I bet georgeporgepuddingpie does not run a B&B or a shop.

Are you being serious?

Thankfully for the Wild Garlic, Beaminster and the area, any foodie reading georgeporgepuddingpie’s review is unlikely to take it seriously. As with many Trip Advisor’s reviews with titles like “DISGUSTING !!!” and only one entry from the ‘reviewer’, it doesn’t take much imagination to read between the lines: “I have a hidden agenda”. Whatever that may be.

User generated content websites and personal grudges

The problem is, not everybody knows how to use a ‘user-generated content website’. If there is only one review and no profile, how do you know that the reviewer likes the same things you do? All the same, these often personal grudges are there for all to see, leaving a doubt in the reader’s mind.

The consequences can be very negative for a business; which is exactly what these ‘reviewers’ are looking for. I cannot help but wonder whether the Georges of this world run a business themselves or are always Perfect. Should have called himself Peter.

Is this the way forward for English hotel rating?

There are talks at the moment that the government is thinking about getting rid of the star rating from Visit Britain. The likes of TripAdvisor could replace this costly system.

This little example should be food for thought.

A West Dorset Tweetup

West Dorset and Tweetup could be seen as an anachronism. I’ve had a few bewildered looks when I said I was going for my first tweetup. What on earth is it anyway? Well it’s a meetup for tweeters. Simples.

“What is the agenda?” asked @LisaTandem. Good question, although I hadn’t given it much thought. I just wanted to put a real face to people I had met via Twitter; so when @tim_harrap (also known as @BritishCheese) suggested a West Dorset tweetup I tweeted great idea.

The Wild Garlic seemed the obvious place to meet since @matkiwi is a tweeter of note in the foodie twitter world and his restaurant in Beaminster was a nice and convenient venue.

He joined in the twitter spirit:
“Nice idea, coffee on me, all welcome”

So it continued with:
West Dorset tweetup Saturday 11/12 10.30, Wild Garlic in Beaminster. Coffee on @matkiwi (thanks Mat!) @tim_harrap will be there. Who else?

And ended up with @tim_harrap, @MrCliveC, @matkiwi, @natamagat (that’s me!) and @tim_harraps’ oh (other half) discussing the twittersphere over a coffee. Don’t be fooled in thinking that there are only four people tweeting in West Dorset though. There are in fact dozens of us.

Children’s plays and hangovers got in the way, many were working on Saturday morning and the rest were obviously Christmas shopping. And many more don’t follow @tim_harrap or @natamagat so had no idea this West Dorset tweetup was happening.

We all had interesting stories to tell. It would be wrong of me to divulge @MrCliveC’s thoughts on the place of the police in the 21st century. Being the Police Federation Chair for Dorset he needs to handle his 140 characters carefully despite tweeting in a personal capacity. Or indeed what @matkiwi might have to say about intense farming. He is of course against it, I hasten to add, but he had some interesting comments on how the press handle it.

@BritishCheese gave some great examples on how twitter can be used in a large company and introduced me to twitterfall. I added my bit on why journalists have not become lazy as is often perceived but rather pushed in a corner they did not choose.

We all agreed that we look for the people behind the tweets. Corporate marketing and old fashioned PR still have a long way to go in their understanding and use of social media marketing in many companies.

As for our tweetup, I’d say it was a success. We met the real people behind the @names and I’m looking forward to meeting more West Dorset tweeters at the next one. Suggestions welcome.

twitpic taken by @tim_harrap