After the excitement of our weekend in Leeds, it was back to
business on 20 January, when I went on an official visit to a joint meeting of
the Rotary Clubs of Coulsdon and
Coulsdon Manor, accompanied by the DG. It is helpful when clubs get together
for my official visits, particularly when they entail a bit of a journey.
Tonight’s journey was relatively straightforward, with the M25 and A23 behaving
themselves pretty well, and we arrived at the Coulsdon Manor Hotel and Golf Club in good time. The only thing that didn’t behave itself was our Sat Nav,
which told us we had arrived at our destination outside a modest semi detached house
about half a mile away, but using my highly developed sense of direction, I quickly found the Hotel
at only the third attempt. The Coulsdon Manor Hotel, which is the usual meeting
venue of Coulsdon Manor Rotary Club is, we were told, a commercial hotel, but
they certainly looked after us well tonight.
Coulsdon Manor Hotel
The President of the club, Michael Rowan, was waiting to
greet us, and to lead us on the circuitous route required for wheelchair access
to the venue. We often find that we are directed to hidden doors, and along
little-used corridors to avoid stairs where no ramp is available. I always find
it a little odd that some quite prestigious venues don’t think to invest in a
simple portable ramp, which would solve the problems of wheelchair users trying
to access the building. On arrival in the bar, I first of all met up with
members of Coulsdon Rotary Club who had all arrived half an hour early due to a
misunderstanding over the start time. Unfortunately their president was
indisposed, so he was represented by the President Elect, John Turner, who
immediately hit it off with the DG as he was a fellow dog owner and they spent
much of the evening having a canine
conflab.
The Hotel bar
I met an interesting chap from Coulsdon club, Arthur Davy
who told me how he had travelled the world going to Rotary Conventions, having
been to Australia, Canada, USA, Portugal (I went to that one) among others.
Like the DG and I, he was not intending to go to Sao Paulo for this year’s
convention, although for different reasons. In our case it is a matter of
accessibility. We doubted that we would find Brazil very accessible for us, and
the enormous cost of the trip could, we felt, be better spent at a more
accessible location. We had entertained an idea of coupling the Sao Paolo
Convention with an Amazon cruise but this wouldn’t work well either. Although
the cruise ships themselves were fully accessible, none of the places that they
stopped at were accessible, and furthermore would necessitate leaving the ship
by tender. This would have left us stuck on the ship and unable to partake of
any excursions. In a couple of years the
Convention will be in Atlanta. We have always found the USA to be very
wheelchair-friendly and consequently we
are hoping to go to that one.
During the excellent dinner of Roast Pork followed by Bread
& Butter pudding, I sat, naturally enough, next to Mike Rowan, with the DG on his other side,
and John Turner on her far side. Mike was very entertaining Company during the
meal, and our conversation covered a variety of vehicle-related topics,
including standards of driving, the latest
enhancements of modern cars (such as sideways parking, and devices to
keep you in your lane on a motorway) and advice from me on buying new cars
(consult What Car magazine first). Coulsdon Manor’s main activities during the
year are: organising a summer fair each year which is very popular locally,
Christmas collections, and various Youth activities, including Dictionaries to
schools and Young Chef. Mike said that he is often surprised to find charities
in Coulsdon that he didn’t know about. A good example was The Parrot Rescue
Centre, which is a local charity that was a beneficiary at the fair last
summer. ‘I had never heard of it’ he admitted, although he was now pleased to
have an opportunity to assist them through the Rotary Club.
Members take their seats for dinner
After dinner and before the DG’s speech, a new member was
inducted into the club. Gary Newell is a retired police officer, a specialist
in protection of VIPs, and we first heard a glowing proposal from his friend
and neighbour Roy Chamberlain, whereupon Mike Rowan undertook the induction
ceremony, to warm applause from all club members.
From left: proposer Roy Chamberlain, inductee Gary Newell and President Michael Rowan
The DG then took to the floor, and unlike previous visits I
have attended, she spoke for quite a while before inviting contributions from
the audience. She ranged across a number of topics including membership, women
in Rotary, and youth. At one point her speech was unfortunately interrupted by
a coughing fit, which probably went on for a couple of minutes before she
recovered. I’m not sure whether my thumping her on the back made any
difference, but it least gave me something to do. She caught the coughing bug
from me, as I had been plagued with it over Christmas and the New Year and it
was three weeks before I got rid of it. The DG had a flu jab in November, but
still caught this nasty virus, although I suspect it would have been worse if
she hadn’t had the jab.
Flu jab
Eventually she threw some questions out to the audience,
such as ‘Why did you join Rotary?’ to which the consensus response was along
the lines of ‘To make a difference in the local community’. Another question was ‘What makes a Good
Rotarian?’ (I had to ask this question for her, as she hadn’t completely
recovered from her coughing fit at this point). Answers from the audience
included ‘a friendly individual’, ‘someone with compassion and empathy’, and
‘someone prepared to do what they can’.
Words of wisdom from the DG
The next question proved more controversial (at last! I
thought, we need more controversy). The DG asked ‘What would the world be like
without Rotary?’ to which the expected response is ‘A poorer place’. However
one member passionately declared that ‘Rotary hasn’t got anything to offer me’
pointing out that, like many Rotarians, he does voluntary work for other
charities. His point, I think, was that everyone knows what these charities
stand for, but no-one outside Rotary knows what we are about. We hardly get any
recognition for our contribution towards
eradicating polio in the world, and, he said, ‘we have lost Shelterbox’. I was a bit puzzled by this comment as the
charity Shelterbox was launched by Rotarians and on its own website says ‘Rotarians are the cement that binds us
together’. The gentleman’s strongly felt beliefs certainly livened things up a
bit.
A Shelterbox and its contents
The meeting ended with
fulsome praise for the DG from President Mike Rowan. He said she had been like a breath of fresh air
in the District, and thanked her on behalf of both clubs for her visit. He
forgot to include me, despite my tips on new cars, but I’ll forgive him that
small oversight.
The DG flanked by Michael Rowan (left) and John Turner