 The first memory I have was going with my dad when I was eight to a reserve game, but from 13 I've been coming regularly. It was my dad that got me into supporting Bournemouth and my mother also went and my aunt and my uncle, so it's quite a family thing. I don't think it's special about football, well, it's just brilliant as far as I'm concerned. I actually used to play in the old days. I always like football. I can't really explain why. It's just possibly in the blood from the family and it just helps me to unwind. I get really angry, so it gets rid of tension and stuff. So, yeah, that's been most of my life, I've been around football. I've been a Bournemouth supporter for a few years now. As a matter of fact, I was a baby in arms six months old when I was first born here. That was in 1930. Well, my earliest recollection really is when I was lucky enough to be on the books at Bournemouth. I knew I was never going to make the grade, but I took my little chest eight then and I've been a supporter ever since. People I've met coming over to Deancourt is, I've made so many friends among the supporters. When we go on trips it's more like a family outing and it is going away just on your own. The supporters make the game for me as much as the 22 men kicking their back or wind about. The comradeship within the club is the important thing. The people that I go to games with, that's just close friends. I met these people through coming to the football and they've been really supported of me through a bit of a difficult time. My late husband and I were married for 44 years and that was on 22nd of October. We met when he was playing cricket for British Aerospace and I was doing the scoring for the British Aerospace cricket team. We got together through that love of cricket. My friends came around for me after my husband died very well. He died on the Monday and on the Saturday. I went to an away game with the football and it's difficult to explain really but they felt like family and they were great, really great. I come in the store fairly frequently, mainly very often during the week. Through the years I've got to know most of them and we're on rather than Mr and Mrs. we're on first-hand relationships and we just get on. Let's talk about Harry, absolutely brilliant. I actually met him the first time and I can't actually remember when on an away trip and we sat next to each other and we chatted the whole way. I usually see him every week at away games now and we always chat, have a cuddle and chat about football. When we take over Warwick Services, there's a whole gang of us in Warwick Services and we have our own corner. It won't be tied to anybody if they do get there first. When we travel away, we're quite a close little group. Everybody knows everybody else. You feel you can go and speak to anybody and you get an honest appraisal from the supporters. The football club, to me, has meant company, making good friends, having a seat in a stand where we get the same people there every week and you get quite a relationship with them and it's the thing that kept me going really after I lost my wife. So that's made it really. People that I've met since supporting Bournemouth mean everything to me because they've actually got me through a really difficult time and they've been absolutely great and I really, really appreciate it and I don't know if I could have managed without them. I'm really, really grateful to them and the football club as well.