I still find it hard to decide whether money is what is needed as actually so much of what we do relies on people choosing to invest their time and money can’t always change this. — Lucy Chandhial
what’s in it for “Brian from Bodmin”. — Andrew G Smith
I still find it hard to decide whether money is what is needed as actually so much of what we do relies on people choosing to invest their time and money can’t always change this. — Lucy Chandhial
If payment is available it can compete for earning time. With no payment it has to come out of leisure time. — John Harrison
Sorry to be cynical but I fear there might be quite a lot of BfBs around. — John Harrison
we still need ringers to be willing to teach new ringers, practice together to support those with less experience and offer training opportunities at a variety of levels in their leisure time (perhaps with a better concept of claiming expenses for travel) so we don’t get round the major stumbling block we have for new learners today. — Lucy Chandhial
We may want / need to persuade Brian from Bodmin ... That would be a very different internal publicity campaign but perhaps it is worth some energy / funding. — Lucy Chandhial
A lot of this will probably rely on local Associations and Guilds (or alternative local structures) to make it possible so it is questionable whether increased funding for central organisation is the key to delivering the support most ringers want locally. — Lucy Chandhial
it is hard now to show that extra expenditure would achieve this. — Paul Wotton
Today the Touring Tower is at Hurst Show in Berkshire and the Charmborough Ring is at Billingshurst Show in Sussex. All three mobile belfries will be used at about 30 events this year, and seen by hundreds, thousands and even tens of thousands of people at each event. We can show that when followed up effectively, they are not only an excellent PR tool, but also a good way of recruiting new ringers. — Roger Booth
We can show that when followed up effectively, they are not only an excellent PR tool, but also a good way of recruiting new ringers. — Roger Booth
Ringing needs a lot of investment for sure but the biggest need is people's time, not money. — John de Overa
Getting someone ringing properly takes a large amount of time for the tutors, the pupils and those around them providing support and a solid band. — John de Overa
we should try hard to obtain lottery funding for training the ringers in England (similar schemes may apply in Wales & Scotland?) — Ken Webb
That's just the sort of evidence I think the CCCBR needs to justify having more financial muscle. — Paul Wotton
So how do we set about getting more people's time? — John Harrison
One very under-used resource is the simulator — John Harrison
the application was about far more than just putting the bells back — Roger Booth
NHLF's mandatory requirement is to 'engage new audiences with heritage' and it's all the soft stuff that that helped us tick the boxes. — Roger Booth
without ART things would be even worse now. — Roger Booth
We need to be clear that the funding required is re people not hardware. — Ken Webb
You can't learn ropesight on a simulator — John de Overa
Your comments suggest a lot less agreement than the headline comment. — John Harrison
The core skills of a ringer are to be able to ring with a reliable rhythm — John Harrison
I suspect you can, but I have never used visuals with a simulator so it's academic — John Harrison
ringers (in general) like to do things the way they always have and don't like to spend money. — John Harrison
Simulators seem like a perfect fit for spending some of the cash mountains many BRFs are sitting on as they are an obvious "ringing infrastructure" item. — John de Overa
Your comments suggest a lot less agreement than the headline comment. --- John Harrison ---That's not the case, — John de Overa
I'm sure it's academic in your case because of your skill level, but for my level it certainly isn't. — John de Overa
Your subsequent comments make it clear that it is. — John Harrison
I agree with all the benefits you list — John de Overa
So often I see people just using simulators as a form of sound control — Roger Booth
towers where it relatively easy to pop upstairs and silence a bell — Roger Booth
The CCCBR launched a crowd funding campaign in 2022 for £30,000 towards the Touring Tower. To date only £20,953 has been raised. — Roger Booth
I still find it hard to decide whether money is what is needed as actually so much of what we do relies on people choosing to invest their time and money can’t always change this. — Lucy Chandhial
I think money is much less important than people. — John de Overa
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