Friday, 4 December 2009

We're in the Museums Journal!

Dr Jan Knight has a piece in the News section of the Museums Journal (November edition). Do take a look. It has been wonderful to have so much vocal support from the Museums Association itself and other heritage organisations in our fight to save the Pharmacy.

With so many big guns behind us perhaps Plymouth City Council can be persuaded to reconsider their claim for costs?

Happy Memories at Thornbury Villas

Our most recent remininscence session was very succesful with an overwhelmingly positive response from the lovely people who took part. Residents of Thornbury Villas spent an afternoon revisiting scents and smells and experiences evoked by items from the Trust's collection. One lady even knew Mr Parks himself when he ran the Chemists in Mutley Plain.

Very kindly they also took the time to complete some feedback forms afterwards - this is so helpful for us. It was wonderful to find that everyone had found the session either enjoyable or very enjoyable and our team both helpful and interesting. Encouragingly the majority also reported that conversations inspired by the session continued for quite some time afterwards. Eighty percent of participants also said they would be interested in joining more sessions in the future, so that will help to keep us nice and busy!

If you know of any organistaion that would like to arrange a similar Recall Reminiscence Session then please get in touch with our Volunteer Co-ordinator Carol Manktelow on 01752 263501.

Friday, 20 November 2009

Trust us to Complain for Britain!

The Plymouth Arts Centre are hosting a new project in January - the Complaints Choir of Britain. Suggestions for complaints are needed by next week. Well we haven't heard back from Plymouth City Council on our suggestions to resolve the legal costs from the Judicial Review. Perhaps they would listen to our pleas if they were sung out loud and proud? I shall get my skates on and draft a submission to the Choir.

We saved the Lodge Garden with paperwork but can we save the Pharmacy through the medium of song? Surely worth a try (we'd better start warming up!)

Photo courtesy the Plymouth Arts Centre. For more information on the project see http://www.plymouthartscentre.org/education/Choir.html

Friday, 13 November 2009

Help! Invasion of Pseodocorus Rex

Iris pseudocorus - appropriately sounding like a particularly ferocious dinosaur - has choked our pond. After drinking it dry over the summer and weaving their roots into an impenetrable carpet of doom, the Pond Flags are now immersed in a foot of rainwater. Resistance on our part apppears to be useless. When dry, the roots are as steel cables to all secateurs, hedge trimmers, pruning knives and other forms of cutlery. Wet they are worse.

What can we do? Fear waders and scythes may be our only hope. All advice gratefully received.

Friday, 6 November 2009

Away with the Fairies...

... at the bottom of our garden. We have had our plant detective hats on today, identifying a Mysterious Woody Shrub at the very back of our medicinal garden. We'd all thought it was some sort of box hedge but a chance sighting of some small purple berries made us think again.

The internet is brilliant for this sort of thing - particularly developing the lateral thinking skills needed to keep the results search in the hundreds rather than the thousands! So after experimenting with a few keywords we've finally got it, and what do you know, it's a form of honeysuckle, Lonicera pileata. Not too much embarrassment all round though as its common name is Box-leaved Honeysuckle so we weren't the first with this mistaken identity.

Step two is to discover what, if any, are its medicinal properties. Honeysuckles are members of the family Caprifoliaceae which makes them sound like they should be from Sicily. But in fact they are to be found all over the Northern hemisphere. The Japanese honeysuckle, Lonicera Japonica, is widely used in Chinese medicine and is mentioned by John Gerard, a master herbalist of the sixteenth century, who said that honeysuckle's "floures, be steeped in oile, and set in the Sun, are good to annoint the body that is bennumed, and growne very cold." In general there is a belief that Lonicera Japonica can be applied, in the form of a poultice, to treat skin infections; drunk in the form of leaf infusion, to assist asthmatics and soothe coughs; even the seeds have diuertic effects.

Sadly there seems to be no similar indications of efficacy for our poor Box-Leaved Honeysuckle, despite its Chinese origins. Mostly it is recommended as a simple and elegant groundcover. Cue more research ... surely we can find a greater purpose for our thriving specimen?

Photograph courtsey of www.paghat.com

Friday, 30 October 2009

Magnetic Personalities

Many artefacts do not make light work so, after hefting a box or two in preparation for another reminiscence event, I wondered what we might have on the shelves to soothe our aches and pains?

Obviously it would be a little unwise to take advantage of all the patent remedies on hand. They were largely produced in an earlier era when 'best before' dates had yet to make an appearance. But even so liniment, unlike fine wines, is unlikely to improve with age.

Some themes however are still with us; magnetic therapies continue to be routinely sold as cure-alls for all manner of unpleasant symptoms. Twas ever thus. Pictured here is a fine example from our own shelves of Magnetic Liniment that "draws out pain like lightning". I rather like the idea of a massive magnet held over my exposed knee and think a bit of lotion would have a far less bracing effect. Another case of nice packaging, shame about the science!

Friday, 16 October 2009

'An Evening in Paris' to 'Blitz those Nits'

In the last two months volunteers from the Park Pharmacy Trust have visited local residential homes and a club for senior citizens to provide Recall Reminiscence Sessions. By handing round and talking about a selection from the Trust's vast collection of artefacts, conversations are started and memories sparked in everyone who takes part.Objects include beauty products, advertisement boards, old remedies, traditional household products, and all sorts of other paraphenalia.

The wonderful discussions of the participants have included memories of a weekly dosage of syrup of figs and the painful removal of head lice - stories that have indeed borne out our motto 'no matter how bitter the pill the memories of it are sweet'! Don't worry, recollections of glass babies bottles, Amami setting lotion and the smell of Old Spice aftershave inspired a few fonder memories too.

Our volunteers hope to carry out many more recall sessions in the future. A grant currently allows us to provide these sessions at no cost; interested groups or homes should contact the Trust for more information. Elaine, our project coordinator, would also love to hear from anyone interested in helping to run a session.