Monday 28 February 2011

Final Tribute – Changing the guard at St Austell brewery


St Austell Brewery. (Photo by M. Muldowney)

There are not many places you can find equipment 100 years old and still being used on a daily basis, but there are a few. One of them is the St Austell Brewery.

I had initially contacted the Brewery for a photo project and I was invited down to meet head brewer Roger Ryman.

“You’ve contacted us at an exciting time, the brewery is about to undertake a major project. We’ll be decommissioning a lot of old equipment and replacing it with brand new kit.” Roger explained.

I was lucky enough to be given a tour of the brewery complex where I was shown the ‘Grist case’ – a beautifully designed and constructed piece of equipment made from copper. The function of this piece is that the crushed malt - the grist, is stored in a tank and then mixed with water. It is then poured out into one of the ‘Mash tuns’, both of which are several meters wide and constructed with cast Iron.

The malt is then boiled and mixed to extract the goodness, thus converting starches to fermentable sugars before the liquor (liquid) is drained and sent to the next stage of the brewing process. One of the mash tuns was actually constructed in 1893, and has been in continuous operation ever since. The other one was slightly younger, but close to 100 years old.

It shouldn’t be surprising that this equipment is still functioning despite being designed and constructed in the Victorian era. They made things to last. Because they did not have the modern computer technology that we take for granted it meant that designers and engineers could only make a best guess when planning a project, and thus when it came to design they tended to overestimate to be on the safe side.

I returned to the brewery at half past 5 in the morning a couple of days later to witness the last operation of the 1893 mash tun and grist case. It was quite a sombre moment, brewing is as much an art as it is science, and a lot of emotion clearly goes into the process. After it was fully loaded the process of boiling and separating began and lasted for about two hours before the cycle ended


Roger Ryman keeps a close eye on the malt. (Photo by M. Muldowney)

With the final mash finished and drained the enormous mash tun had to be cleared out. Husk is left over, several tonnes of it, and it must all be removed by hand. The head brewer himself decided he would 'shovel out' alone. There was quite a lot of emotion in the room, retiring a piece of equipment that had seen so much history.

I asked St Austell’s engineering and maintenance manager Clive Nichols his thoughts on the decommissioning. “Obviously these are remarkable pieces of equipment to have lasted so long and they could go on in operation for another ten years, but on the other hand, they could break down tomorrow, we just don’t know. If they went down and we were not prepared we could lose a month or more in down time and as a modern 21st century business that is just not an option, which is why we have decided to retire the kit and replace it now.”


Equipment in operation since the Victorian era. (Photo by M. Muldowney)

The new equipment is purpose built to the brewery’s specifications, looks remarkably similar to the old kit (at request of the brewery), and it was constructed in the UK, in Burton on Trent.

While the technology advances, the process remains the same and the natural instincts of the people who do the brewing will still be the most important asset to the company.

As the shut down on the decommissioned equipment is completed, head brewer Roger Ryman makes a request to his team. “Make sure you give it a good polish before it’s taken out. It’s important we treat this old kit with respect.”

I’d like to say a note of thanks to Mr Roger Ryman and everyone at the St Austell brewery for allowing access to their brewery for coverage of this piece. For more information please visit http://www.staustellbrewery.co.uk/

The Urban Infiltrators

Urban exploration is not a new concept. The first Infiltrations were performed by MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) students in the 1950’s who performed tunnelling explorations into the catacombs running underneath their campus.

Today Urban Exploration, often abbreviated to 'Urbex' and 'UE' has made the transition from cult hobby to mainstream movement thanks to a drop in the price of digital camera technology and blogging.

The website www.28dayslater.co.uk, named after Danny Boyles’ 2002 post-apocalyptic movie is a main hub for UK urban exploration, and boasts over 7000 active users posting reviews and pictures as well as conversation and networking. Arguably this takes the movement away from its guerrilla roots.

People call modern society a ‘Nanny state' because there are less opportunities to do something truly dangerous, something that really gives people a rush. Urban Exploration is also a chance for people to regress to childhood once again, something that professional photographer and digital artist Ed Brandon was keen to point out when he spoke to Navigator.

“Urbex is a way to regain the childlike wonder that’s missing from so much of adult life. Being somewhere you’re not supposed to be, creeping around in an immense old building, never knowing what you’re going to find."

Ed's website devotes a lot of its space to Urban Exploration and his facebook page has reached over 2000 subscribers since it went live six months ago.


Published courtesy of Ed Brandon (Click to enlarge)

Ed Broke into Urbex in 2007 after coming across it online. “After seeing shots of Cane Hill Asylum on the web I just had to explore something like that for myself, I couldn’t believe that something so mysterious, so immense was hidden just behind a tree line in suburban Britain.”

Buildings such as the Cane Hill Asylum exist all over the UK, Post industrialism and several economic downturns in the 20th Century led to buildings being abandoned intact and many remain furnished.

A few months later and 200 miles from Cane Hill, Ed found himself on business in Lincoln and decided to take his interest further and mount his first exploration. Finding an abandoned mansion online was the easy part, the next thing was to actually find the location.

“I asked the driver of a cab I was in if he knew the place, he said he’d never heard of it in the 20 years he had been working in the area. In the end we found the gates and I climbed out, jumped the fence and made my way up the over grown pathway towards the hall passing an old lodge which itself was interesting with its intact stove, peeling floral wallpaper and crumbling staircase. A little further on I found the hall, and while there was not much left of it what remained was captivating overgrown with vines, trees growing up through once grand hallways, fireplaces protruding out over non-existent floors, beautiful and amazing.” From that point on Ed was hooked.

There are of course dangers to Urban Exploration, many of the buildings contain chemicals, dust, vermin, and on top of that, many of these buildings are close to collapse.

There is also the question of legality. Trespass is a somewhat minor offence and prosecutions for it are usually rare but a minority of people have, on occasion decided to cause damage to a building, or take something from a site. This has led to the golden rule of UE: - ‘Take only photographs, leave only footprints’.


Published courtesy of Ed Brandon (Click to enlarge)

Documenting what is left is a task Ed is taking on professionally with two upcoming projects. “The golden age for Urban Exploration is already beginning to come to a close” he says. “But I am looking get my first book published (entitled ‘Behind the High Walls’) as well as a history of the old county Asylums, these asylums will be sorely missed. They’re just immense playgrounds of possibility.”

Ed Brandon is based in Peterborough UK and uses a Nikon D700 camera with a Nikon 24-70mm f/2.8 Sigma 12-24mm f/3.5 lens. For more information please check his website out at www.anotherstateofmind.zenfolio.com and on Facebook by searching for 'Another state of mind Urban Exploration.'

Tuesday 22 February 2011

The Libyan Spring

Disturbing reports of violence are emerging from Libya, the latest in a string of Arab states to see a popular rising of the population. Libya has been ruled by Muammar al-Gaddafi, known commonly in the west as Colonel Gaddafi since he led an overthrow of the Libyan monarchy in 1969.


Gadaffi - Fighting back (Free Image)

The Libyan people's rise against Gaddafi’s 42 year rule comes on the back of popular revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt - revolutions which have led to the ending of the regimes in both of those countries.

Much of Libya is reported to now be outside the control of the regime, rioting and protests have been reported in the capital.

The protests began on February 15 with a small demonstration in Libya’s second city of Benghazi. The government cracked down severely on the demonstrators. Two days later the Libyan opposition called for a “Day of rage” across the country.

The Day of rage turned into a day of carnage when the regime deployed helicopter gunships, elite troops, sniper teams and allegedly foreign mercenaries against its own people. The use of live ammunition including rocket attacks caused an estimated 150 deaths, a figure reported to be “conservative” by Benghazi residents interviewed by Al Jazeera.

In the following days protests have escalated spreading across the entire country and into the capital, Tripoli. Despite reporting restrictions by the Libyan regime, which are far more excessive than those during the recent Egyptian revolution, reports state that the violence being displayed by the regime have intensified and those loyalists to Gaddafi are essentially waging a war against their own people.


Libya's day of rage (From Dailymail.co.uk)

While The United Kingdom has been swift to condemn the Libyan regime for its use of violence, there is the matter of weapons and equipment supplied by this country possibly being used by Gadaffi's troops.

After Libya accepted responsibility for the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, an atrocity which claimed the lives of 270 people, former Prime Minister Tony Blair flew to Libya to “reset” relations with the country. In return for a normalisation of diplomatic and trade ties with the West, Gaddafi formally gave up the pursuit of weapons of mass destruction.


Dirty money, Blair and Gaddafi(Image from mypetgoat.co.uk)
The economic packages between the UK and Libya, which gave BP oil exploration rights in the country, also included the sale of water cannon, crowd control equipment, helicopter parts, sniper rifles and military computers. In addition to the millions in military sales at least 150 British companies, including British Airways, HSBC and Marks & Spencer, now do business in Libya.

With his country in uproar and the world united in condemnation, Gaddafi appeared on state television on February 21 to quash the rumours that he had fled the country for Venezuela. With his regime seemingly now doomed Gadaffi was quoted as aiming to “fight to the last bullet” and as a result the Libyan revolution looks set to be far bloodier than anything yet seen.

Sunday 6 February 2011

News article February 9th 2011: English Defence League homecoming ends peacefully

English Defence League - "The homecoming"

The English Defence League made their long awaited return to Luton town this weekend for their biggest rally to date. The Bedfordshire town, 35 miles north of the capital has one of the largest Muslim populations in the UK.

The EDL claimed they were bringing “Tens of thousands” of their supporters to the rally, which they called their “Homecoming”. Counter groups such as Unite against fascism (UAF) and Hope not hate suggested they would also bring “several thousand” supporters.

As the day approached rumours flew across the internet. “Every Antifacist in Europe will be there mark my words” claimed one internet forum. Local residents feared a repeat of the Bradford riots ten years ago, riots which were sparked by a confrontation between the Anti-Nazi league and the BNP.

The local authorities took the possibility seriously enough to contact the Home office and ask Theresa May, the Home Secretary to ban the EDL from Luton, but rather than ban the organisation from the town entirely the EDL were banned from marching through. The democratic right to stage a static protest meant the authorities were now powerless.

An alleged “assassination attempt” on EDL number 2, Kevin Carroll stoked the fires further. Carroll claiming he had been coerced out of his home by a “Asian in his mid 20′s wielding a shotgun” the town went into a state of lockdown with police helicopters flying overhead through the night. Luton was a town gripped by a state of high tension.

The day before the protest EDL leader Stephen Yaxley, who goes by the name “Tommy Robinson” appeared on Sky News brandishing an Osman warning from the police. (An Osman warning is an official warning issued to an individual by the police advising them that they are at serious risk of being killed by someone who appears to have the capability to make good their threat). He claimed that his life was in danger, and that he had been advised to leave Luton for duration.

Dawn broke on what should have been a busy day for Luton’s shopping area with armed police already patrolling the streets. Luton resident James told the Navigator, “I came back through the town centre at 6:30 on my way home from work. There were C019 (armed police) everywhere, a lot of the shops and buildings including the library and the blood bank have been boarded up”

An Esso garage in Luton boarded up before the EDL event

2000 police officers from 14 forces were on hand later that morning to deal with the demonstrators, and the counter demonstrators. UAF members broke off from the main crowd and blocked the main train station in an attempt to stop EDL members from reaching their muster point at Charlie Brown’s night club.

In the end the demonstration perhaps thankfully did not live up to the hype. EDL numbers were nowhere near the estimates that their leadership predicted. The EDL official facebook page claimed 6500 of their members were present, but the police dispute that number putting it closer to 2000. The counter demonstration numbered at less than 1000, most of whom left early.

Perhaps the most important absence of the day was that of the Muslim youth. Who, to their credit did not march in their own counter demonstration, staying away from the town centre.

While Luton will breath a sigh of relief the residents of the town will count the cost of the days events economically. The cost of policing will run to £800’000, and the entire town will have lost a Saturday’s trade. Every bar and pub in the town was also shut, meaning that hard pressed publicans have also lost a days takings.

The EDL and the UAF have left, and Luton has paid the cost for their right to free speech. February 5th was a good day because the feared spark in community relations did not happen, there were sporadic skirmishes with the UAF and the police, but nothing that couldn’t be contained.

The EDL is growing larger with every protest and shows no signs of slowing down. Taking that trend into perspective with a lot of unemployed young men, and a resurgence in Muslim fundamentalism in the middle east that threatens to spread, a government that today decided to take a harder ine on immigration and Islam and what we have is a tinderbox on our streets that could well explode one day if cool heads and common sense do not prevail.