The Daily Telegraph

Devastatin­g flood was the making of a champion shop

The best village shop award has been won by a business that was nearly drowned at birth, finds Joe Shute

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On the evening of December 23, 2013, Michelle Firminger headed out from her village shop and Post Office to run a few errands ahead of the busiest day of the year. Like much of the country it had been raining in Ponsanooth, Cornwall, for three days solid. But the shop – which she had only bought a few months previously - was secure and her three-bed house above it snug and warm.

“I came back at about 10pm and people were standing in the road outside,” recalls the 37-year-old. “They just told me not to look – and that everything would be alright.”

In her brief absence, floodwater had gushed down the steep hills that surround her shop and seeped up through the drains, turning the courtyard into a “swimming pool”. Because of the pressure of the water, at first she couldn’t even make it in through the front or back door. When she did, it was to encounter a scene of devastatio­n: four feet of sewage leaching out in every direction.

At this point, other businesses may have folded. Her stock was ruined, her home destroyed while her health was still precarious, following a gall bladder operation which had left her in hospital for the previous two months. Yet from the sodden chaos has emerged an incredible story of community solidarity, as the entire village rallied around to rebuild Michelle’s shop and staff it as volunteers. Yesterday it won the best village shop in the Countrysid­e Alliance Awards, a category supported by The Daily Telegraph.

The judges praised Michelle (who moved from Newbury after falling in love with Cornwall and runs the business with her partner Ben) for succeeding in the face of overwhelmi­ng odds and turning it into a place of “brightness and cheer and a hub for people to meet each other”. In doing so, they said, she has not just transforme­d the shop but the entire village.

When The Telegraph visited last week, the business was doing a roaring trade: tickets for a local dance were on sale, while the smell of home-baked Cornish pasties wafted down the aisles laden with local produce.

When she woke up in a neighbour’s spare bedroom on Christmas Eve 2013, such a rebirth seemed impossible – but when she stepped outside the clean-up operation was already underway.

Villagers had booked a skip and were pressure-washing the exterior of the shop, brushing away sewage, as well as meticulous­ly recording the waterlogge­d contents inside.

“The next day I was invited to seven Christmas lunches,” Michelle says. “I ended up having three because I felt too bad saying no.”

By December 27 the owners of the village pub, The Stag Hunt Inn, had allowed volunteers to sell milk, bread, eggs and newspapers on Michelle’s behalf from a back room. In February, Jeff and Glenys Powell erected a shed on their drive to provide a temporary home for the shop. In April, this was joined by a portable Post Office.

Finally, on a Tuesday morning in November, 11 months after the flood, the shop reopened. On the wall was a mural bearing the handprints of everybody who helped with the clean-up. Its signs were hand-painted by an elderly local woman, who has recently passed away.

Michelle is renowned for her work in the community. Last year for the Queen’s 90th birthday celebratio­ns she helped arrange a celebratio­n lunch of 470 people on the playing field, making it the largest street party in Cornwall to mark the day.

Aside from shop duties, on any given day, she can find herself looking after stray dogs, jumpstarti­ng cars with flat batteries, and checking on the more elderly residents.

Customer and volunteer Sandy Whyte, 74, tells me how she has even arranged for him to have his house refurbishe­d. “She is like a daughter to me,” he says.

“We have older people coming in who might not even necessaril­y buy something each time but they but just want to have a chat,” explains Michelle. “The shop has become almost the first port of call for people that want help and support.”

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 ??  ?? Michelle Firminger and Ben Carter outside Ponsanooth Village Stores near Truro
Michelle Firminger and Ben Carter outside Ponsanooth Village Stores near Truro

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