Daily Mail

full of good cheer

Pom-poms at the ready, retirement villages are geared up for sporty life

- JANE SLADE

NANCy Jordan had never done any exercise before buying her two-bedroom apartment last year at Audley St George’s Place in Edgbaston, Birmingham.

Now 86, the widowed and retired hotel owner is almost addicted to the gym. ‘I go to half-hour classes four days a week and I use the running and cycling machines,’ she says. ‘I feel much better for it even though I have asthma. It is also sociable and having the gym just down the corridor and a nice young instructor to help us makes it easier.’

No surprise, then, that retirement developmen­ts increasing­ly are advertisin­g themselves as being dynamic, rather than moribund.

For example, at Bishopstok­e Park village in Eastleigh, Hampshire, which has one-bedroom apartments from £345,000, cheerleadi­ng has been added to the fitness timetable.

‘ Our village’s cheerleadi­ng squad, the Bishopstok­e Belles, was formed last year when our walking football team played another local club,’ says Sandra McCoye, Anchor’s Bishopstok­e Park village manager.

‘With the help of our staff, the ladies coordinate­d their routine and practised regularly in the activities room in the weeks before the big game between the home team and Eastleigh FC. The Belles performed at half-time, which spurred our players on to win.

‘ The ladies are hoping for another match to be scheduled soon once the weather improves.’

Meanwhile, residents from three Churchill Retirement developmen­ts in Dorset teamed d up and recorded their r first single just before e Christmas — and at t Lifecare Residences’ ’ Grove Place in n Hampshire (one-beds from £295,000), owners are learning falconry and archery.

But what about mental fitness? A new study revealed e ealed that memory loss accelerate­s rapidly after retirement. After testing 3,400 retired civil servants, scientists discovered their shortterm recall declined 38 per cent faster than those still working.

The authors, from University College London and andKing’s King’s College London, concluded that the ‘use it or lose it’ message was vital if retirees wanted to maintain their mental faculties.

Lizzie Philpott, head of activities, at Richmond Villages’ Letcombe Regis has introduced creative

challenges to stimulate owners ( richmond-villages.com).

‘We’re a creative community,’ she says. ‘We host art weeks where our residents exhibit their work. Last year they did a wonderful iPad art piece and this year we’re thinking about a garden sculpture.’

A new addition to Renaissanc­e Villages’ Millbrook’s fitness menu is tai chi, which combines movement with meditation. ‘I think it is the mindfulnes­s aspect of tai chi which makes the difference with other types of exercise and has attracted older people,’ says Angus Clark, who teaches a 90-minute class at the Exeter village once a week. One and two-bedroom properties are priced p from £ 339,950, millbrookv­illage.co.uk. m

Tai chi has also been introduced i at PegasusLif­e’s Chapelwood developmen­t in Wilmslow in Cheshire ( one- bedroom flats from £360,450, pegasuslif­e.co.uk). p

‘One lady who suffered a stroke s last year has seen such a great improvemen­t in her mobility that she now does tai chi in the swimming pool,’ said communicat­ions manager Tajinder Leonard.

 ??  ?? In shape: Bishopstok­e Park and the Belles, right
In shape: Bishopstok­e Park and the Belles, right
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