Micro Brewery Visit

Saturday 10 October 2015 saw a visit of seventeen consisting of ten members, wives and friends visit the Andwell Brewing Company which is based in Andwell Lane in Andwell near Hook.

It was eight years ago to the day that this micro brewery made its first pint of real ale and since that time has established a reputation for consistently producing beers of the highest quality. It brews five varieties of ale and has won awards in each of the last six years.

The tour was led by Adam Komrower, whose brainchild the brewery was when he achieved his ambition of wanting to be in a manufacturing business. Taking the group through the selection of the ingredients of malted barley, yeast, hops and water the tour lasted one and half hours. We saw all the Bavarian Brewery Technology equipment that produces his range of beers in this 20 barrel brew plant.

The shop sells all the varieties of beers produced on site including versions bottled in an adjacent business. And all on the visit received an Andwell pint glass and several tasters which surprised many of the ladies who had not really previously tried beers.

 

Big Blast at Probus Club

Geoff 2+Twine2

Bramley resident, church warden and member of the parochial church council, Geoff Twine, gave an illustrated talk to the Probus Club of Basingstoke, of which he has been a member for many years, about two years of his life spent in charge of the world’s biggest bomb disposal task. Flight Sergeant Twine, an armourer by trade, had been based at the Bicester RAF Explosives Ordnance Disposals unit when he was given the responsibility for the Llanberis slate quarry project.

Pre-war had seen these disused slate quarries in North Wales, as the main RAF Bomb Storage Unit. They had been converted into huge underground bomb stores and during the war there was considerable activity in despatching all types of ordnance to the airfields throughout the country. Post war the area had been used as a disposal area where Bomber Command despatched thousands of tons of obsolescent and deteriorating stocks of explosives to be made safe or destroyed. It was decided to maintain the area as a storage depot for the bombs probably on the basis that there was nowhere else more suitable. When the RAF moved out in 1956 they attempted to destroy the explosives. Fires burned for days and explosions rocked the area.

The area is a nightmare of crags and quarries linked by tunnels and high mounds of dumped slate fragments. There were quarries 900 feet deep and others with lakes 60 feet deep containing 20 million gallons of water. It was one vast booby trap to the unwary. 10 foot barbed wire fences eventually erected around the site failed to prevent trespassers resulting in some injuries. In view of the upcoming investiture of Prince Charles as the Prince of Wales at nearby Caernarvon castle and the deteriorating situation in Northern Ireland it was decided, a quarter of a century after the end of the war that something needed to be done.

Because of the nature of the site men had to be trained in mountaineering and abseiling as this was the main method of gaining access to the now seriously decaying devices down the sides of the quarries. As they crawled along narrow ledges, some of them hundreds of feet above the bottom of the pits, they used all their skills and iron nerves they possessed to turn any bombs or explosives they found into harmless objects. The passage of time and rock falls meant that bombs were found on ledges or crevices and many now lay exposed on the quarry floors. Divers searched the lakes and discovered considerable numbers of ordnance that although being underwater still had the capability to explode. The lakes were drained before work could be started and the pumps kept going as there was a natural inflow from streams of 170,000 gallons a day.

In a Daily Mirror article published on 5th September 1973 Geoff Twine is quoted “We know what we’re handling and what it is likely to do. On a job like this we’re writing the book as we go…there’s no precedent.” And testament to the high professionalism of Geoff and his small team there was not one fatality during the years it took to make the quarries safe at what had been described as the biggest time bomb in the world.