My pitch

2 min read

Co-op Food, Market Street, Hebden Bridge Tuesday-Saturday 8am-2pm, Sunday 11-2pm

Interview: Lynne Greenwood Photo: Exposure Photo Agency

MARK DRANSFIELD, 59

I started selling the Big Issue 10 years ago, first in Leeds where I live, but I have been here since 2018. As soon as they asked me if I would like a pitch in Hebden Bridge, I said yes straight away and I was there the next day. I’d only been through the town before but everyone said they were nice people there and they are.

But what I didn’t know was that I’d be sharing a pitch with a family of geese! They live in the grounds of the church opposite, but at least two of them – Mr and Mrs – head across the road regularly to the Co-op car park. They’re usually here when I arrive but if not, I reprimand them for being late!

A couple of months ago all seven of them were here and I walked them across the zebra crossing to be safe and a guy took a picture of us on his mobile – apparently it received more than 1,000 hits on his social media. The geese know me now because I look after them and I can get really close to them without them hissing at me.

Before I sold The Big Issue, I sold the Yorkshire Evening Post in Leeds for 12 years until they told me one Christmas Eve that I’d be finished the following March. Another of the lads at the EP had started selling The Big Issue so I went for an interview and after three months was given a pitch in Leeds city centre outside Marks & Spencer.

I didn’t know too much about how it would work then but I was used to being a street man. Then I was allocated a pitch outside Morrisons at Rothwell, a half-hour cycle journey for me from where I live in Beeston, but after two Christmases there that’s when they asked me if I wanted to go to Hebden Bridge.

It’s a much longer journey, it takes me around two hours if everything goes smoothly. I leave home at 6am for a 20-minute walk into Leeds to the bus station, then a bus to Halifax and another to Hebden. The last one should only tak