Another dreary, overcast day! First up was a visit by my old friend and work colleague from BBC Radio Solent Tris Pascoe. He wanted to interview me for a piece he was putting together on community hospitals, a subject close to my heart. He'd been down to the that beacon of care, Swanage Hospital, yesterday to chat to the Matron. Then it was down to Weymouth for one of my regular surgeries. As always, the case-load was mixed and in one case quite extraordinary. Back up to Dorchester afterwards to attend the launch of a new service in Dorchester. The charity STARS - Sexual Trauma & Recovery Service - is due to open a new branch in Dorchester to cater for those who need help from the west of the county. They are already established in Poole. Service Manager Helen Stevens gave a sobering insight into what they have to deal with and why. It's perhaps a reflection on modern society that more and more cases are coming to the fore. Some have been hidden for years. And it's not just the young who are affected, we were told. There were many attendees, including Martyn Underhill, Dorset's Police & Crime Commissioner. He has played a significant role in this charity. The author Freddie Forsyth and I have been corrresponding about the disappearance of Captain Robert Nairac MC, a Grenadier Guards officer who was murdered by the IRA during the Troubles. His body has never been found and one man thought he had found the grave after his dogs - a special breed that finds bodies - showed a distinct interest in a patch of woodland in Ireland. Sadly, having written to the organisation that searches for missing people in NI, both Freddie and I feel it was a false lead and we've had to back down. I wonder if Captain Nairac will ever be found. Finally, we leave the EU tomorrow at 2300. An historic moment for our great country.