Crime & Safety
Jeremy Clarkson catches trespassers at Cotswolds farm touching animals
He runs Diddly Squat Farm on the outskirts of Chipping Norton, where he lives and films the hit Prime Video series charting his life as a farmer.
The land, farm shop and restaurant have become a major visitor draw in the Cotswolds, bringing fans from across the country to what is otherwise a quiet rural area.
Mr Clarkson took to X, formerly Twitter, after confronting people who had gone onto his land without permission and were handling his livestock.
READ MORE: Jeremy Clarkson sends message to pilot after Spitfire circles his house
I caught one in our cow shed the other day. Trying to stroke the calves.
— Jeremy Clarkson (@JeremyClarkson) April 24, 2026
In his post, he wrote: “I caught one in our cow shed the other day. Trying to stroke the calves.”
This was in response to a post by Dr Nick Wilson, which said: “F*****g walkers.
“Can’t shut a simple gate, ewes and lambs all over the spring barley. If you can’t follow the Countryside Code, then keep away.”
The post had a photograph attached, which showed the animals in several fields with the gate left wide open.
READ MORE: Jeremy Clarkson reignites council row with new farm planning bid
Mr Clarkson will be returning to screens this summer with the release of Clarkson’s Farm series five on Prime Video.
The first few episodes will come out on Wednesday, June 3, before the others drop in the following weeks.
Speaking on the series, a spokesperson from Amazon said: “Amid a government budget that sends the UK farming community into uproar, Jeremy decides some big changes are needed to make the farm run more smoothly.
“But while the farm tries to go high-tech, resulting in Kaleb’s first-ever trip abroad, even bigger developments are heading for Diddly Squat that are going to prove much more of a challenge.”
Crime & Safety
Band The Dreaming Spires release album about ‘normal town’ of Didcot
And now, Didcot.
The often-overlooked South Oxfordshire railway town may not seem an obvious choice for a musical tribute – but to one of the county’s best-loved bands, that’s the whole point. Having found sweet inspiration in New York, California and Memphis, country-rock band The Dreaming Spires have focussed their attention closer to home, with an album all about Didcot and its modest charms.
The album ‘Normal Town’ is the band’s third – and their first new music in nearly a decade. And it finds the five-piece of brothers Robin and Joe Bennett, Jamie Dawson, Tom Collison and Nick Fowler at the top of their creative game.
While the project is deliciously out of step with their sun-kissed Americana roots, it all makes perfect sense for a band, almost all of whom were brought up within sight of Didcot Power Station – Robin and Joe in Steventon, Nick near Abingdon, and Jamie in the town itself.
So when it came to writing an album about the most typical and average of towns, there was only one option.
“It is Didcot’s normality that makes it so special,” says Robin, who as well as being an acclaimed singer-songwriter is also a member of South Oxfordshire District Council – the town’s local authority.
He and Joe were also the founders of two of the county’s best music festivals – rock, pop and dance weekender Truck Festival at Steventon, and its more gentle offspring Wood at Braziers Park.
Robin recalls: “Some years ago, I read a story about a search for the place in Britain which most represented people’s viewpoints and political opinions – and it came out that the most ‘normal’ town was Didcot. I liked that and it triggered the idea of an album.
“At the same time, it was named as a Garden Town. That was before I was elected as a councillor and I had no idea I’d play a role in that. But I have always lived close to the town and have found it an interesting place in how much it was changing.
“It is the setting for so many people’s lives – including my friends and mine – and I have always loved its links to the railway which created it. I grew up next to the line in Steventon and was born in Paddington, so have never been far from the railway.”
It is all something of a departure for a band which, like its predecessor Goldrush, seemed rooted in Americana – shimmering 1960s West Coast pop, Southern soul, harmony-rich folk, and jangly country-rock.
Their engaging tunes sit somewhere between Big Star, Gram Parsons, Teenage Fanclub and The Byrds with nods to everyone from Tom Petty to The Kinks. And their sound has admirers including St Etienne’s Sarah Cracknell, with whom the Bennetts have collaborated and performed live, and legendary broadcaster and country music lover ‘Whispering’ Bob Harris, who also hails from Robin and Joe’s stomping ground of Steventon.
Yet, while this album is different, it all makes sense. It is the sound of a band confidently cutting loose, playing on their formidable intelligence to pursue new ideas and explore fresh territory – even if it is right on their doorstep.
“Our first album was all about travelling the world and the people we met in New York,” says Robin. “It was exciting. But in many ways writing about our own environment is harder to do.
“But lots of people know Didcot or live in places like it. And the beauty of normality is that it is relatable.”
The album is conceptual and thought provoking but also fun. The band delight in celebrating the prosaic, the commonplace and everyday. Yet they never forget what they are here for – stirring our hearts and souls with beautiful songs.
It may be clever and richly observational but it is deeply sincere – and, crucially, respectful.
“We were really worried about it being perceived as a joke,” says Robin.
“But it is coming from a place of self-mockery. Most of the jobs I have had have been at Milton Park, near the town.
“People may think South Oxfordshire is all like something from Midsomer Murders, but that’s a fiction. Although that element still exists, it is not what life is like for most people.
“While we are not painting a rose-tinted vision of Didcot, it is a bit of a celebration.”
This Sunday, The Dreaming Spires play songs from the album in a show at the Bullingdon on the city’s Cowley Road. The gig is their first in town since their celebrated New Year’s Eve show at The Rusty Bicycle.
It is not the first outing for the album though. In suitable style, they launched it at a show in the heart of Didcot, at the town’s Cornerstone arts centre.
To Robin’s delight, art for the album is by Shaun Belcher who is also from Didcot.
“He is someone I have known since I first got into playing music,” he says.
Intent on dispelling myths about the town, Robin is keen to point out its own musical heritage – with Radiohead’s OK Computer being partially recorded on a fruit farm near Harwell; 60s psychedelic rock act Traffic recording near the town, and The Who’s guitarist Pete Townsend getting married at Didcot Register Office.
“It’s got a lot going for it,” he says. “So many people have known it and recall it with reminiscence. People can be quite cynical but there’s lots of energy going in to make it a great place to live.”
He adds: “It is a slight departure from what people know about us, and due to the way it was recorded in our houses it has a more intimate sound.”
And while it revels in the town’s heritage, it is also reflective with songs like ‘Normalisation’, ‘21st Century Light Industrial’ and the title track ‘Normal Town’ – a reference to its reputation as ‘the most normal town in England’.
It doesn’t shy away from less savoury episodes such as the tragedy of its power station boiler room collapse 10 years ago, and touches on crime and politics.
The album was mastered by Tony Poole, known for his work with Starry Eyed & Laughing and alongside Robin and Danny Wilson – of Danny and the Champions fame – in the trio Bennett Wilson Poole.
And it is going down well, says Robin, proudly.
“The gigs have been joyous,” he smiles. “And it is great to play as a five-piece.
“Many people will relate to this album. When you get really specific it becomes really general in a weird way!”
- The Dreaming Spires play the Bullingdon, Cowley Road, Oxford, on Sunday, April 26
- Tickets from wegottickets.com
Crime & Safety
Thames Water probe as Oxfordshire village stream turns brown
The Environment Agency has confirmed it is investigating a “potential pollution incident” in Church Hanborough near Witney and has asked anyone with any information to get in touch.
A spokesperson said: “We received a number of reports of a potential pollution incident near the Church Hanborough area, and our officers attended the site.
READ MORE: Thames Water sorry after poo leaked into Oxfordshire home
“We cannot comment further as this is an ongoing investigation. We will not hesitate to take enforcement action if appropriate.
“Anyone who witnesses pollution or an environmental incident is encouraged to report it to our 24-hour incident hotline on 0800 80 70 60.”
The waterway – which has a public footpath going across it – was first reported to be polluted in early April when the Evenlode Catchment Partnership attended the site.
The area is next to the Church Hanborough Sewage Treatment Works, which has discharged untreated sewage for over 2,100 hours across the past six months, though not in April.
The Partnership reported high levels of coliform bacteria, at least 17 times above the quantity deemed acceptable, which they said indicated a pollution incident.
The campaigners’ project manager Ann Berkeley said: “We should not have to accept this level of dangerous faecal contamination of our rivers from Thames Water.
The pollution incident at a Church Hanborough stream is being investigated by the Environment Agency (Image: Evenlode Catchment Partnership)
“And this right by a heavily used footpath.
“It is time for the real Chris Weston [chief executive of Thames Water] to stand up and take control of this public health emergency.”
Following this, parts of the Hanborough Stream – which feeds into the Evenlode – began to turn brown, after which Thames Water sent a team.
A spokesperson said: “We are aware of an incident on the watercourse near Church Hanborough and on 10 April reported this to the Environment Agency as we take these matters extremely seriously.
Members of the Evenlode Catchment Partnership hand a cheque to a cut-out of Thames Water Chris Weston (Image: ECP)
“Our teams deployed containment booms along the watercourse to limit the impact to the watercourse.”
A member of the ECP who was at the stream, described a “disgusting pile of dirty foam, a filthy river and even more foam”.
He added: “Thames Water who say all sewage spills are unacceptable to us is expecting me to walk my little dog across that filthy river. I don’t think so.”
The group was keen to stress that this comes from treated not untreated sewage, and suggested that nocardia bacteria gatherings had formed.
READ MORE: Watch as Oxfordshire group return £136K to Thames Water
Nocardia thrives in environments rich in organic matter and it can be dangerous to human health, causing a serious, slow-developing infection known as nocardiosis.
Thames Water did not confirm whether they felt the path by the stream remained safe.
Meanwhile the Partnership urged for a move to public ownership of water and asked members of the public to sign an online petition on this subject, launched by fellow campaigners Windrush Against Sewage Pollution.
This comes after a month ago the Evenlode group handed back money given to them by Thames Water citing a “betrayal of trust”.
Crime & Safety
Cherwell care resident shares secrets after 101st birthday
Edwina Fran ‘Judy’ Stokes, who celebrated her birthday at Featherton House care home.
She was born on April 8, 1925, in Pembrokeshire and has lived a life of service and resilience.
Hilda Sanyika, registered manager at Featherton House, said: “Judy has lived an incredible life and has given so much to others through her work and volunteering.
“She is always full of warmth and humour, and it is a privilege for everyone here to be part of her story.
“We were delighted to celebrate her 101st birthday with her and her family.”
Ms Stokes began volunteering for the British Red Cross at 16, supporting care efforts at Gosport War Memorial Hospital.
By 19, she was a full-time aid detachment member working alongside Sir Harold Gillies, a pioneer in plastic surgery, caring for wounded servicemen during the Second World War.
After the war, she retrained as a dental nurse and worked in Fareham and travelled to Harley Street in London.
She married William Stokes in 1953, shortly before he was posted to Singapore with the Royal Navy.
Despite her professional commitments, Ms Stokes dedicated 65 years to the British Red Cross, earning the Badge of Honour for her service.
She contributed by teaching first aid, supporting blood donor sessions, and volunteering at the Red Cross Museum in Winchester.
She moved to Featherton House in January 2023 to be closer to family.
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