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Oxfordshire wildlife park nominated for family experience

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The attraction in the Burford area is one of 10 finalists in the Muddy Stilettos Awards.

The wildlife park joins Blenheim Palace, Bletchley Park ,Chiltern Open Air Museum, and Millets farm centre in the local awards.

Also nominated are the Oxford Museum of Natural History, Oxford Castle and Prison, The Story Museum, Waddesdon Manor and Xscape in Milton Keynes.

White Rhino calf Mo with mum Ruby a few hours after birth at Cotswold Wildlife Park.White Rhino calf Mo with mum Ruby a few hours after birth at Cotswold Wildlife Park. (Image: Rory Carnegie / Cotswold Wildlif / SWNS)

Cotswold Wildlife Park and Gardens was named ‘Best Attraction in the Cotswolds’ and ‘Best Family Attraction in the Cotswolds’ in The Cotswold Awards 2025.

In recent years the park was crowned ‘Best Zoo in the UK’ for two years in a row, and named ‘Best Family Attraction’ at both the Muddy Stilettos Awards and Little Ankle Biters’ Awards.

READ MORE: Bin collection changes this bank holiday weekend in Oxfordshire

It was also voted ‘Best Animal Attraction’ in the Red Kite Days Oxfordshire Awards in 2023.

The public online voting will close on Tuesday, May 26.

Cotswold Wildlife ParkCotswold Wildlife Park (Image: Cotswold Wildlife Park)

The awards have introduce new lifestyle categories like best afternoon tea, fashion and interiors, artisan food and drink producer, best-loved local pub and wellness breaks.

Cotswold Wildlife Park & Gardens is home to more than 1,500 animals from 250 different species, making it one of the largest zoological collections in the United Kingdom.

Other attractions at the Park include a narrow gauge railway and the Skymaze adventure playground.

The Park, which opened in 1970, is set in 160 acres of landscaped parkland and gardens and it welcomed over 460,000 visitors in 2022.





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Oxford News

Oxford to screen Gentle, Angry Women film this weekend

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Gentle, Angry Women, directed by Barbara Santi, tells the story of three young women retracing the historic march to Greenham Common – 40 years after the first Women’s Peace Protests.

It will be screened at The Ultimate Picture Palace in Oxford on Sunday, May 24, at 5pm.

The documentary is the latest release from award-winning Cornish production company Awen Productions and is part of the film’s 2026 UK tour, with stops including Gloucester, Cardiff, Bristol, Reading, and Cornwall.

The screening will be followed by a Q&A session with peace activists Marie Walsh, Nuala Young, and Di McDonald.

The event is being held to mark International Women’s Day for Peace and Disarmament and will celebrate women’s global leadership in advocating for peace and disarmament.

Barbara Santi, director of Gentle, Angry Women, said: “I belong to the generation that should have inherited and passed on these stories, yet failed to do so.

“I’m working to repair that broken chain of women’s collective memory.

“Every woman deserves to know her own history – yet an entire generation has been robbed of the knowledge that thousands of women once lived for years in makeshift camps, facing arrest and ridicule to prevent nuclear war.”

Ms Santi said the film’s message is especially timely in light of current global events.

She said: “In a time when young people are grappling with climate crisis, global conflicts, and technological isolation, they need to see how previous generations of ‘gentle, angry women’ faced seemingly impossible odds and refused to give up.”

The Greenham Common protest lasted 19 years and became one of the largest women’s movements in British history, although many – including the film’s protagonists – were unaware of it.

The documentary follows 19-year-old Evie from Cornwall, and her friends Xanthe, 17, and Poppy, 16, on a 110-mile march to Greenham Common to rediscover its legacy.

Along their journey, the trio meet women who spent years living at the peace camp and share intergenerational conversations on activism and the state of the world today.

The young women highlight contemporary issues, including climate change, women’s rights, Black Lives Matter, and animal activism.

She said: “The film champions small acts of defiance and community building as powerful forms of resistance.”

Audience members have described the film as ‘a really humbling story of collective women’s activism’ and ‘powerful, poetic, and unapologetically bold’.

Tickets and more information are available at the Folklife Films website.





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Olives on sale at market is our camera club winner

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That was their latest weekly theme and they posted plenty of photos of market stalls in Oxford, including those in the Covered Market and at Gloucester Green and Broad Street.

Some photographers also sent in photos of markets from outside the county and beyond.

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Gloucester Green and the Covered Market offer plenty of good opportunities for colourful photos as there are often food stalls open, while Broad Street hosts a popular market over the festive period.

It was tricky to choose a winner for photo of the week, but Georgina Elliott-Dew was selected for an eye-catching selection of photos, including the one above of a market trader selling olives.

Ann Faulkner’s snap of Applegate market in Covent Garden also stood out.

A market at Covent Garden (Image: Ann Faulkner)

Camera club members have drawn up their own list of weekly themes and the next one is ‘Oxfordshire stone’.





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Aylesbury prison absconder wanted in public appeal

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John Baker, 44, left the facility of HMP Springhill, an open prison near Grendon Underwood, without permission.

The incident took place at about 7pm on Saturday, May 23.

He is 5ft 9ins tall, of medium build, and has links to Northwood, near Watford.

Detective sergeant Jon Muldoon said: “We are appealing for the help of the public to trace John Baker, who is unlawfully at large after escaping from HMP Springhill.

“If you see Baker, do not approach him and call 999 instead.”





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