Bring on the Mayhem. . .

Bring on the Mayhem. . .

In part three of my series of blogs about Adventure Sports Warwick, I review Mud and Mayhem.

MUD and Mayhem. It delivers what it promises. . . unless there’s a lack of rain of course, as was our experience.

So, while it was more mayhem than mud, this that was absolutely fine. After the recent rainy season, we were not about to complain about the welcome dry spell.

This fast and furious fun-fuelled package offers a triple adventure at Warwick’s very own outdoor activity centre when you are let loose on three of their most popular driving challenges –  in our case Rally Kart Driving, Quad Bikes and Hovercrafting.

The opportunity to get behind the controls of three very different – but equally challenging – vehicles, was too good to pass up – especially for the petrol heads in my family. It’s a great chance to get those competitive juices flowing too as they took their turns taking charge of each machine.

Rally karting, Mud and Mayhem, Adventure Sports Warwick
Daniel and Jon Chalmers with the rally kart.

Although I think it was more a case of the machine taking charge of the driver for Daniel’s first ‘spin’ around the Rally Karting track when he ended up beached on the tyre wall! A few minutes later and following a rescue tow from a 4×4, he was back on track.

These powerful two-seater karts are not for the faint-hearted with 930cc engines that provide serious acceleration. But, as we quickly learned, it’s not just about speed and those that patiently perfect their technique will be rewarded with some satisfying drifting manoeuvres on the bends to add to the exhilaration.

Talking of technique, it was then time to move on to the second challenge where they were invited to fly by the seat of their pants! Manoeuvring a single-seater hovercraft around a grass track is just as much fun as it sounds – but also a lot harder.

Adventure Sport Warwick, Mud and Mayhem, Hovercrafting

You’ll need a relatively decent level of fitness as well if you are going to avoid the aches and pains the next day. (My husband still maintains it was totally worth every twinge!) But, if you’re attentive to the instruction beforehand and throw yourself into it (quite literally) you’ll soon be gliding around with (relative) ease.

It’s a surreal sensation and a driving challenge unlike most others at the site, which is why it should definitely be a firm feature on your chosen Mud and Mayhem list. Big smiles all round said it all.

Quad bikes then beckoned and, following brief but detailed instructions and safety tips, they took to a very twisty 400 yard off-road circuit with cautious confidence. The undulating terrain, tight corners, slopes and slalom poles pitted both driver and machine to the ultimate driving test but they both relaxed into it very quickly and were soon in full control of the Honda Fourtrak 250cc quads.

The final combination of activities is decided by the Adventure Sports team to reflect the weather conditions or group size on the day but participants can express preferences in advance. Other activities might include:

Mud and Mayhem, Adventure Sport Warwick, Quad Circuit
Daniel on the quad biking circuit

4×4 Off Road Driving – Each guest is given expert tuition on how to drive and control an off-road-prepared Land Rover around a challenging course that incorporates steep hills, gravity-defying inclines and LOTS of mud!

Argo Cat 6×6 – Drivers of these six-wheel amphibious all-terrain vehicles are guided through a challenging course of woodland, hills, mud and water.

Reverse Steer Driving – You’re asked to drive a converted Kubota RTV through coloured flags but with a few challenges thrown in. Turn the steering wheel one way and vehicle goes the other. Then throw in a blindfold and the results are hilarious. – A particularly good one for spectators!

Powerturn Mayhem Vehicle – This twin-seater kart is powered by two engines – and driven by two drivers at a time. The drivers must co-operate to get round the track.

Whatever you end up doing, you’ll come away feeling wholly satisfied (if a little fatigued) with your experience. It’s lots of fun.

For further details on Mud and Mayhem as well as 50 other outdoor adventure activities can be found here

WHO IS IT FOR?

All participants must be aged 16 or over and a driving licence is not required.

Maximum weight is 18 stone and maximum height for the rally karting is six foot five inches due to difficulty getting into the roll cage.

Mud and Mayhem is particularly good for Stag and Hen Parties as well as corporate groups.

In rainy season, quads, Argo Cat and 4×4 are particularly good options.

PRICE

The Mud and Mayhem package costs £70 per person.

REVIEWS YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

https://www.adventuresport.co.uk/off-road-targets

https://www.adventuresport.co.uk/karting

Best feet forward for 100km fundraising challenge

Best feet forward for 100km fundraising challenge

AN epic fundraiser will be no walk in the park for Warwick man Lee Moore who joins colleagues on the 100km Thames Path Challenge on Saturday. (September 7th)

Lee, 22, has spent the last few weeks in training for the London trek, which he’ll be joined on by seven colleagues from consultancy and technology group REPL, based in Henley-in-Arden.


 

They will be among 3,000 people taking on the 24-hour route from Putney Bridge to Henley-on-Thames, from 7am.

Also part of his team of fundraisers from the Warwick office are Antony Kaplan and Diana Washington.

Thames Path Challenge, Molly Olly's Wishes
REPL Fundraisers Lucy Breedon-Sharp; Elysha-Cookson; Lee-Moore and Antony-Kaplan.

They are all raising money for Warwick’s Molly Olly’s Wishes and CALM, a charity which works to reduce suicide rates which are the leading cause of death in men under 45 in the UK.

REPL, which has sites throughout the world, has been supporting Molly Olly’s for several years.

The charity was established in 2011 following the death of Rachel and Tim Ollerenshaw’s eight-year-old daughter Molly from a rare kidney cancer.

It works to support children with terminal or life-limiting illnesses and their families and help with their emotional wellbeing as well as grant wishes and donate therapeutic toys and books to both children directly and to hospitals throughout the UK.

Mascot of the charity is a therapeutic toy lion called Olly The Brave who has his own Hickman line and a detachable mane which helps to explain and normalise the effects of chemotherapy. These form part of an Olly The Brave pack that has now been handed out to more than 40 hospitals, along with a book from the charity’s exclusive Olly The Brave series.

Molly Ollerenshaw just a few weeks before she passed away, aged eight.

Further information about Molly Olly’s Wishes or how to donate can be found at: www.mollyolly.co.uk

Lee, an environment manager at REPL, said: “I’m very excited and slightly nervous as the challenge approaches around the corner. As a team we have put in a lot of training hours through all sorts of conditions from 30-degree heat over the bank holiday weekend to a wet Sunday afternoon in Milton Keynes.

“At the end of the day our main goal here was to raise money and awareness of two charities which make everyday differences to people’s lives and of course it will be a bonus if we all make it to the finish line! Which of course we will!

“I am now focusing on my food intake and getting a good night’s sleep for the big day!”

The Thames Path Challenge

The team are £2,000 towards their fundraising target of £5,000. Sponsor them at: https://www.justgiving.com/companyteams/REPLTPC

Film lecturer switches focus to dream business

Film lecturer switches focus to dream business

FORMER film lecturer and TV cameraman Daniel Beckett is completely rewriting the script for an exciting new sequel to his life story.

Daniel, from Kineton, is closing the door on the classroom after 11 years teaching Film and Television at Warwickshire College, to launch his new business – as a gin distiller.

Pinnock Gin

And Warwickshire drinkers are quickly acquiring a taste for his hand-crafted Pinnock Dry Gin which has already earned awards and is stocked in more than 35 outlets throughout the county – including a Michelin-starred restaurant.

But it’s been a meticulous route to reinvention for Daniel who admits the professional transition has been a long time coming.

“After university, it was always my ambition to write and direct an independent feature film. I also got into TV and worked on Hollyoaks in the camera department,” he said.

“I began teaching film at my old college, which was fulfilling for a long time, but with greater pressures across the teaching sector, it made me realise that now was as good a time as any to start thinking about doing something else, such as setting up a business.

“I wanted to do something creative as well as have more or less full autonomy over what goes on and how the whole business runs. With the many skills I’d gained from TV and teaching, I wanted to create something that I could realistically make a career out of. I love the fact that I’m seeing the whole process through from beginning to end.”

And, he recalls, it was his association with the TV industry that led him down this new path.’

“My wife is a producer in television and about five years ago she was talking to one of the actresses on the set of the BBC show Doctors about how she and I were trying to get into shape for our wedding. She was advised we should start drinking gin and slimline tonic as an alternative alcoholic drink. I quickly got a taste for G&Ts. Then over time we started to build more of an appreciation for the craft element of it as well. “

“I suppose the eureka moment came when I read an article in The Guardian in 2017 about small-batch distillers and the fact you could actually make gin on a small scale again now.

Pinnock Gin

For the next year the entrepreneur had been busy researching the industry he knew nothing about and, after successfully applying for all the necessary licences, today proudly produces 20cl and 50cl bottles of Pinnock Gin from a 40-litre copper still in his small cottage kitchen which has been transformed into a pint-sized distillery and bottling plant.

“It’s literally, a cottage industry!” he said.

Originally from Leamington and now living in Kineton, Daniel, 38, was keen to celebrate his Warwickshire roots by being able to demonstrate a strong local provenance for his product.

The 11 botanicals used in Pinnock Warwickshire Dry gin include Cotswold Lavender from Snowshill, near Broadway, quince from Alscot Park near Stratford and honey from Red Road Nursery pick your own farm in Little Kineton.

Daniel said: “Quince was an obvious choice as we are in such an historical part of the country. Quince was regarded as the fruit of love by William Shakespeare and in the Tudor period it was one of the main ingredients in a lot of the food. It also adds a unique fruitiness to the gin. The honey adds a hint of sweetness.”

“I was quite keen to keep things as traditional as possible and use a recipe from around that period. I found a recipe book that had been republished from 1636 – so based all my botanicals from that period as well.”

He added: “The history of the area plays a big part in the branding too. We are close to the scene of the first pitched battle of the Civil War in 1642 and when I was doing my research I discovered Charles I was actually the first monarch to bring in taxation on alcohol in the 1630s when many people were distilling in their kitchens.”

In a nod to those historical links, it’s fitting then that the first business to stock Pinnock was The Castle in Edgehill.

Daniel said: “It’s very much in line with our branding. They’re very proud of it there.”

Pinnock – which Daniel says is best described as a ‘smooth gin,’ has also earned pride of place on the drinks menu at, among others, The RSC Rooftop Restaurant in Stratford, Mallory Court Hotel in Leamington and the Michelin-Starred The Cross in Kenilworth.

Daniel Beckett, Pinnock Gin

And it’s already caught the attention of the connoisseurs, winning three awards – a Silver Medal in the ‘Contemporary Styles’ gin category and a Silver Medal in the ‘Gin & Double Dutch Tonic’ competition with the IWSC (International Wine and Spirits Competition) as well as a Great Taste award with The Guild of Fine Food.

Daniel said: “I knew it was a good product, but we are a tiny producer, only producing a few thousand bottles a year, so to be getting international award recognition in our first year is a great boost.”

But settling on those winning botanicals and flavour combinations was a process which could not be rushed. In fact it took six months to finesse.

“As a self-taught distiller, I’d made about 30 gins before I found the one I liked, including some pretty lousy ones! There were a couple of rules I set myself from the outset. As well as containing at least three-local botanicals, I wanted it to be a sippable gin, something you could drink neat. In my opinion if you can drink something and enjoy it on its own then it’s a good gin.”

Daniel Beckett, Pinnock Gin

Pinnock Distillery is now becoming a more familiar brand in the area and feedback from customers to his stall on festival days is so far positive. So does the entrepreneur yet dare to dream big?

“Soon I’ll be exploring wider export opportunities and potentially expanding operations into larger premises, as demand continues to grow.”

“Further down the line, I would eventually also like to offer the visitor experience which is becoming a popular thing to do.”

As for the short-term future, there’s hushed talk of a new product in the testing stages – “We’re looking at developing some fruit gins, which are very popular. I want to develop a new recipe with our local fruit suppliers, which we’ll be releasing very soon!”

Visit his website at: https://www.pinnockdistillery.com