Category Archives: Features

Peter Baker

imageCath Baker has asked Amovate to inform people that Pete’s funeral will be held on Monday 18th April at 10:30 am at the Chapel of Rest in Aljezur.

She has requested no flowers, but donations would be gratefully received for a charity to be decided.

Britons living abroad can Register to Vote

voteUKExpat Britons can register in the UK to be able to vote.  The voter registration process is simple, and the essential information needed is available online and with a referendum coming up, it is important that overseas voters are able to contribute to the decision making process.

If you have been living abroad for less than fifteen years, then you are eligible to register to vote.

For more information, please follow the link to this article in the Algarve Daily News:

http://www.algarvedailynews.com/news/7883-british-ambassador-visits-the-algarve-with-but-one-message

(photo courtesy of the Algarve Daily News)

Charity Walkers Donate 26 Wheelchairs To Portimao Hospital

By Matt D'Arcy

By Matt D’Arcy

(Remember, by clicking on each photo, it will present itself in a much larger format)

 

On Thursday 22nd October, Cath Baker presented Portimao Hospital with 26 new wheelchairs to be spread around the units of the hospital.

The donation valued at around €2,300 was the result of Cath’s Charity Bar Walk a month earlier by residents of Vale da Telha and the surrounding areas.

The walk—basically a 4km fancy dress pub crawl by just over 50 people from Arrifana to Vale da Telha—raised an awesome final total of €2,905.63.

Charity Bar Walk Wheelchair Presentation October 22 2015 (2)

(left to right) Helena Mendes (oncology head nurse), Arsénio Gregório (deputy nursing director), Cath Baker, Antonio Lopes (Vale da Telha volunteer), Luisa Arez (deputy clinical director representing the chief of all doctors in Centro Hospitalar do Algarve – Portimao, Faro, Lagos), Steve Scott, Antonina Ramalho (deputy head nurse, outpatients), Paula Costa (deputy A&E head nurse), Carlos Fonseca (deputy orthopaedic head nurse), Peter Johnson (Vale da Telha volunteer), Peter Baker

And Cath and husband Peter, who won the ladies’ and mens’ categories in the Fancy Dress contest after the walk again donned—along with fellow organiser Steve Scott—their costumes to make the presentation to hospital staff.

The money raised was used to buy 25 new wheelchairs from the UK, with two other people inspired by the walk also donating a 26th wheelchair, and a walking frame which will be used by the orthopaedics unit. The donation also included 50 hot/cold gel packs for pain relief.

The presentation took place outside the hospital’s main entrance and the wheelchairs were received by Dr. Luisa Arez, Deputy Clinical Director and nurse Arsénio Gregório, representing the Director of Nursing. Also present were representatives of the different units throughout the hospital that will benefit from the donation.

Charity Bar Walk Wheelchair PresentationCheque)

John Bergstrum Potter presents Amovate cheque for €250 to Cath Baker

Amovate’s retired President Peter Johnson and Vale da Telha resident Antonio (Tony) Lopes were also there, having helped with the transportation of the wheelchairs from Cath’s home in Vale da Telha down to the hospital in their own vehicles.

The fundraiser, backed as usual by Amovate whose President John Bergstrom-Potter also handed over a cheque for €250 from the association before the trip to Portimao Hospital, was Cath’s own brainchild.

Wheelchairs Lined Up For The Presentation

Wheelchairs Lined Up For The Presentation

She explained that it was inspired by the charity pub crawls which were so popular back in her native Lancashire. Four years ago another of her charity projects saw her raise the funds to buy nine new wheelchairs for the hospital’s orthopaedic department.

zWalkers Prepare To Set Off

Walkers Prepare To Set Off

This time a visit to the oncology clinic prompted the bar walk. Cath made the presentation again wearing the “half-man, half-woman” costume that won her the Best Fancy Dress Outfit (Ladies) award following the walk. She was accompanied by her husband Peter, aka the JCB digger and driver (winner of the male category) and fellow organiser Steve Scott, dressed in his “Not The Naked Chef” costume.

Cath explained: “On my visit there I saw one lady in a terrible state after chemotherapy. She could barely stand and there was no wheelchair to get her to her car. “It broke my heart and I just needed to do something.”  Cath, who was also assisted in setting up the walk by Brian Jutsum, went on: “The idea was to take a serious cause, like raising funds for the hospital, but to add the fun element of dropping off at nine selected bars, having a sup or two and enjoying a little craic and banter.

“The bar owners all happily joined in, agreeing to make donations for each drink sold. “One or two of the walkers, having taken on a little too much liquid refreshment along the way, were perhaps staggering a little at the finish.

“But at least they did so knowing that the money they have helped to raise will see some of the hospital’s infirm

Stamps On Every Wheelchair

Stamps On Every Wheelchair

patients get around a little easier thanks to the wheelchairs we have been able to provide. “That was well worth all the sore heads the following morning!”

The wheelchairs, all of which have been stamped “Donated by Vale da Telha Charity Bar Walkers”, were shipped from the UK by Algarve

Wheelchairs Delivered By Algarve Removals Staff To Charity Bar Walk Organisers Cath Baker, Steve Scott & Brian Jutsum

Wheelchairs Delivered By Algarve Removals Staff To Charity Bar Walk Organisers Cath Baker, Steve Scott & Brian Jutsum

Removals who waived their €700 fee.

 

Cath declared: “Because of their fantastic generosity we now have €736.34 left over, which will be used to buy other equipment for the oncology unit. I have already bought a camera they asked for, and I will talk to the unit administrators to ascertain what else they need from the extra cash”.

 

The Digital Camera For Oncology Unit

The Digital Camera For Oncology Unit

 

Hot & Cold Pain Relief Gel Packs

Hot & Cold Pain Relief Gel Packs

Four of the wheelchairs, 20 gel packs and the digital camera were immediately earmarked for the oncology unit which first triggered the charity walk.

And following discussions with the hospital authorities 10 wheelchairs, a walker and 30 bags of gel will go to orthopaedics, six wheelchairs to Accident & Emergency and the final six to the outpatients unit.

A hospital spokesman told us: “We are overwhelmed by the generosity shown by Mrs Baker and the people of the Vale da Telha area. We were suffering from a serious shortage of wheelchairs and this amazing donation will benefit every unit in the hospital”. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Traps for Wild Boar

3.1.2014-snare-by-VDT-Lake-300x225An Amovate member has informed us that they have reason to believe that there may be some illegal wild boar traps around the lake area, particularly in the forest area behind Sector E.

We understand that these traps are illegal, and if discovered it would be useful to take a photograph in situ, and inform the GNR.

Please be careful when walking your dogs around this area.

Drilling For Oil In Aljezur

FrackingBREAKING NEWS!

Drilling For Oil In Aljezur

José de Sousa Cintra, the businessman who created Vale da Telha through his Somundi development company, now plans on drilling for oil in this area. Alarming news!

 

 

From The Algarve Daily News:

MapPortfuel, owned by local millionaire businessman José de Sousa Cintra, (pictured below), has obtained the concession to drill for oil in the Algarve near Aljezur in the west and Tavira to the east – within the brown blocs marked on the adjoining map.

Portfuel announced the concession today and will be at first using traditional well drilling to see if and where oil reserves lie.

José de Sousa Cintra, a former chairman of Sporting, signed the deal for ‘prospecting, exploration, development and production of oil.’

The National Authority for the Fuel Market, Paulo Carmona said that the concession agreements, research, development and production of oil in the areas designated for Aljezur and Tavira are only for land based activities using ‘traditional drilling methods’ for a period of four years.

Of enormous concern to the Algarve’s environmental lobby, there is no requirement for an environmental impact study for these planned drilling activities despite a 100% likelihood that the environment will be impacted.

There will have to be a study if there is any later exploration or drilling using ‘unconventional methods’ such as hydraulic fracturing (fracking) for shale gas.

Sousa Cintra

José de Sousa Cintra

Such environmental studies are paid for by the proposer and in the case of fracking it is unlikely that there will be a sensible scientific study of the impact fracking will have on the Algarve’s underground water supply systems, property values and the affect of the activity on tourism nor the long term result of the injection of toxic chemicals into the subterranean Algarve.

Paul Carmona sagely noted that Portfuel Oil and Gas Portugal has shown interest in land drilling “because it believes that it is possible to find oil,” noting that these will be the first oil test drilling activities for both locations.

In an unsuccessful attempt to downplay the serious nature of the new land based concession areas that cover most of the Algarve, Carmona said that since 1981 there have been 27 test wells drilled at a costs to the industry of about €1 billion in attempts to find oil.

“All holes were abandoned because they were dry or because the amount of oil found was insufficient to justify the investment,” said Carmona, adding helpfully that drilling holes in the Algarve helps us to have a deeper knowledge of the territory.

Also since 1981 the Algarve has developed into one of the Europe’s most attractive tourist areas with property prices second only to Lisbon.

How Algarve homeowners will react to oil drilling on their doorstep, whether relatively unregulated test drilling or full fracking activity, can only be guessed at.

The offshore oil and gas drilling is going ahead with plans to turn the Algarve’s near offshore into a large industrial zone but there has been an underwhelming response to anti-oil petitions despite the broad impact such activity inevitably will have on the region.

Currently, several companies, such as Repsol and Partex, have permission from the government to search for oil and natural gas in the Algarve, but only in offshore blocs.

With the anti-oil fight now coming onshore and threatening people’s homes and land, protests may attract more interest from those that may be adversely affected financially.

http://www.algarvedailynews.com/news/6774-onshore-oil-drilling-concession-signed-for-tavira-and-lagos-blocs