Georges

‘I visited bleakest UK town with more St George’s flags than people for one highlight’

With one of the worst pub food experiences, a deserted high street and a pint-glass littered river front – there is only one thing going for this Essex town.

Driving out of the sun-dappled bucolic roads of Highgate, a sense of stillness and dread descended on our A12 approach to Burnham-on-Crouch.

Drizzle spat onto the window as the windscreen wipers failed to fully clear the smudgy stain obscuring our first St George’s flag sighting on turning into Maldon – arguably patient zero of the recent redecorating of the country.

“Oh my God, look at the price of petrol”, my friend and driver Pierre shouted, veering off the road.

At a truly shocking £1.289 a litre – this was easily the highlight of the trip.

Trudging out of our faded periwinkle Nisan Micra in the co-operative car park, it seemed we had injected the only shade of colour into the bleakest town in the UK, reports The Express.

The sky was white-grey, the community boards bleached into oblivion, and the streets were desolate, and strangely perfumed with what smelled like incense.

Along the so-called high street we stumbled upon our first stop, the Essex & Herts Air Ambulance charity shop. A man in a fitted leather jacket best left in the early naughties made a B-line for the front desk and asked the cashier if they “had any war records.”

This would have seemed odd if it weren’t for what sounded like a 1940s factory choir blasting through the sound system. Lined by pebble dash magnolia homes, the high street was thronged with bloated Land Rover Discoveries, surprisingly well polished against the cracking paint of the houses behind them.

Walking on, we got chatting to a man on a stall outside a barber shop. He said he commuted from London to the family business. When asked what he thought of Burnham-on-Crouch, namely the amount of St George’s flags, he said only “I try to stay out of politics.”

Next on the charity shop roster was the Helen Rollason Cancer Charity. A volunteer came bustling out of the back shouting to her second that she needed back up because “there are quite a few customers out here.” There were a total of four of us in the shop.

It was a surprise some wares had made it past the screening process onto the shop floor. Specifically, one doll dressed as a Native American had made it to the shelves and it looked old enough to pre-date the toy industry’s push for better representation of the global population. The book shelves were almost-exclusively stocked with war books, with Allan Bullock’s questionably named ‘Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives’.

Considering the St George’s flag to actual human being ratio, the town’s war memorial was surprisingly sparse following the recent 80th VJ day. There was just one kitchen-clock sized wreath next to the monument, yet every chiropodist, beauty salon, hairdresser and corner shop was adorned with either a Union Jack or a St George’s flag.

Walking along the promenade, it was clear the River Crouch itself was Burnham’s best chance at making a convincing postcard. However, considering the dregs of the September sunshine, it more closely resembled a milieu for a disgruntled Brit-slop ITV detective to look out on whilst toiling over his case.

Then was our lunch. With a couple of suspicious looks up and down, and the smell of a carpeted woody interior- the pub seemed nice enough. I ordered the cranberry and brie toastie, and Pierre ordered a tuna melt with chips to share.

I became nervous when I heard the (deathly quiet) table next to us complain about something in their food. Then, Pierre pulled a food-covered hair from his toastie, before, astoundingly, ploughing on.

This was handled with an apology and we were offered a free pudding – which we declined – and they ended up taking our lime soda and pint off the bill.

After lunch I proposed a tea stop at The Cabin Dairy. This was the town’s one saving grace. The interior resembled the height of neo-Victorian maximalism of 2009, with the shelves looking like a jumbled raid of TK Maxx’s knick-knack section.

The staff were warm, and the scone was delicious, soft and straight out of the oven.

I was surprised to be so happy to fork out any more money in what I had decided was indeed the bleakest town in the UK. If you do find yourself near Burnham – don’t go if you can help it – but know that the Cabin Dairy is there to mop up the emotional drainage of your, hopefully brief, stay.

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Liv Tchine: England Roses netball star on Super League, Lionesses, Red Roses and St George’s Park

Liv Tchine’s first impression was “wow”.

Her second was “can I stay here forever?”.

Her third was “one day this will be all ours”.

Netball’s kingdom is modest, but prolific England goal shooter Tchine and her team-mates recently had a glimpse of a top-tier sporting promised land.

These are the Roses players targeting Commonwealth Games gold at Glasgow 2026 and World Cup glory in 2027.

They are at the vanguard of the sport’s professional era, the elite of the three million people who play netball in England at least once a year. Most players are women, but men play too.

Tchine and co draw inspiration from the Euros-winning Lionesses and World Cup-winning Red Roses, rather than lament encroachment on netball’s legacy territory.

Netball Super League is newly professional but funds are tight, similar to football’s Women’s Super League in the mid-2010s.

Players hear of rewards that could be theirs one day. Often those rewards feel a million miles away, yet not always.

For Tchine, a standout in the London Pulse side who swept to their first Super League title this year, the “wow” moment came at the Lionesses’ luxury hangout.

St George’s Park lies in Derbyshire countryside, tucked out of sight. An understated private drive off a hedge-lined B road is a portal to a world beyond the dreams of most sportspeople.

“Just imagine netball having this kind of facility. Do you know how sick that would be?”

That was Tchine on an Instagram video diary, reacting to visiting the Football Association’s state-of-the-art national team training centre for the first time. The gym, the recovery rooms, the green, green grass of England’s home.

England’s netballers spent a training block there, before autumn series against Jamaica and New Zealand.

“I was like, if we could just stay here forever, I would happily move,” Tchine tells BBC Sport.

“So, so good. We were there for 10 days. The facilities were, honestly, so amazing.

“The whole time we were there I was just like, one day netball could definitely have something like this.”

The second season since Super League’s relaunch is coming, with 2026 fixtures announced this week., external

Pulse are in “the best position we’ve ever been in”, Tchine says.

The league is growing. Average attendances climbed by 42% in 2025, having been about 1,500 previously. In comparison, the first Women’s Super League football season – following a 2014 reboot – had average crowds of 728 (from 562 in 2013).

Women’s football crowds in the tens of thousands are now almost commonplace, but that didn’t happen overnight.

Tchine, a 24-year-old south Londoner, admired portraits of England footballers – men and women – lining St George’s Park’s corridors.

“I definitely hope that if I’m still playing in 10 years we’ll be at the same level as the Lionesses and the Red Roses,” she says.

“They were both absolutely incredible this summer – going out there, doing their job and coming out with wins was amazing. It’s really good to see women’s sport hitting levels that it’s never been at in the past.

“I want to be able to go out with the Roses and use that momentum to try and get our gold medal.”

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Helen George’s life from BBC romance, painful condition and ‘deep-rooted’ fear

Call the Midwife star Helen George has been a firm favourite on the BBC show for her role as Nurse Trixie Franklin, but what is known of her life away from the cameras?

Since her debut on Call the Midwife in 2012, Helen George has become popular with fans of the show for her portrayal of Trixie Aylward (formally Franklin).

Audiences have followed her character’s intense journeys, from conquering alcoholism to embarking on a new chapter when she married Matthew Aylward (Olly Rix) and embraced stepmotherhood.

In a switch from her traditional BBC role, fans are now getting to see a different side to Helen as she dives into the reality TV world with ITV’s Shark! Celebrity Infested Waters.

With the BBC actress stepping out of her nurse’s uniform, curiosity about her personal life has piqued. We’re exploring Helen’s life behind the cameras.

BBC romance

Helen George
Helen George met Jack on the set of Call the Midwife(Image: GETTY)

Helen met fellow actor Jack Ashton, known as Reverend Tom Hereward on Call the Midwife, in 2015.

Their paths may have been tumultuous on television, yet off-set, a real-life love story was blossoming between the two.

Love struck for the pair in 2016 during the shooting of the series’ Christmas Special in the picturesque landscape of South Africa, reports the Express.

The couple soon welcomed their baby girl, Wren, into the world in 2017, followed by the birth of their second daughter, Lark, four years later in 2021.

Regrettably, after seven years, the duo parted ways in 2023. They shared in a poignant statement at the time: “Some months ago, we separated. Our two beautiful girls remain the focus, and I respectfully ask for privacy for this next chapter.”

Deep-rooted fear

Helen George in water
The actress developed her fear when she was a child(Image: ITV)

Fans of Call the Midwife are in for a treat as they get to see Helen George in a fresh light, as she joins the star-studded line-up of ITV’s Shark! Celebrity Infested Waters.

However, participating in the series was far from a walk in the park for the 41-year-old actress, who had to confront one of her deepest fears.

Helen suffers with aquaphobia, an extreme and irrational fear of water, which she developed following a harrowing incident at a swimming party when she was a child.

In her own words, she said: “I was terrified of putting my head underwater. I have a real deep-rooted fear. I used to love the water when I was really young, but I went to a swimming party when I was six.

She continued: “They put those weird Nineties foam mats down. They’re massive yoga mats, really. “I just remember this moment of being stuck underneath one and not being able to get out. There was that fear of being trapped.”

Painful condition

Helen George, her ex partner and their daughter
Helen opened up about her condition after an episode of Call the Midwife(Image: GETTY)

Interestingly, Helen’s personal health journey has also mirrored some storylines in Call the Midwife. During both her pregnancies, she suffered from intrahepatic cholestasis (ICP), a condition characterised by intense itching and leading to the premature birth of her two children.

Sharing her experience on social media, Helen expressed gratitude towards the medical team at Guys and St Thomas who assisted her during childbirth.

Reflecting on her challenging pregnancy experience, she shared her ordeal on Instagram, saying: “I started getting the itch a lot earlier with this pregnancy, and it was infuriating. I tried everything, creams, baths all of it and nothing would work.”

She continued to describe the relentless discomfort: “I would scratch all day and all night, normally on my hands, shoulders, feet but that quickly increased to just bl**dy everywhere. I was put onto medication (Urso) at around 30 wks.

“I have to say this pregnancy was so uncomfortable and painful. I thought the second would be easier but it really wasn’t. Spreading the word about this sometimes fatal condition is really important to me. I was over the moon that Call the Midwife tackled the subject last night.”

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