Get in touch ...

Know of something happening in
Llangollen?
Tweet
us on
@llanblogger

E-mail your contributions to: llanblogger@gmail.com

We are on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/llanbloggercouk/139122552895186



Saturday, April 13, 2019

Cittaslow hosts series of networking events



* Discussions between groups at the Cittaslow meeting.

Over 25 town clubs and organisations attended a recent series of networking meetings organised by the Cittaslow Committee of the Town Council. 

The three meetings were based around Cittaslow principles and brought together groups involved in environment, food & farming, tourism, culture and heritage; and community and social inclusion.

The purpose of the meetings was to bring like-minded groups together to explore the potential for strengthening links and communication between them, and to test interest in Cittaslow Llangollen providing a role as an “umbrella organisation” for groups in the town and valley.

Councillor Austin Cheminais, Deputy Chair of the Cittaslow Committee, said: “I am delighted to have heard so much support for the Cittaslow principles and for the idea of the Cittaslow Committee continuing to support town groups in their work, as well as helping them working more closely together and with the Town Council.  

"It was fantastic to hear the buzz in the room as the various groups got talking with each other.

“We are still in the early stages of working out what might be feasible and sustainable ways of working together, but it is great to have got the conversations started.”

Councillor Melvyn Mile, a member of the Cittaslow Committee and also a county councillor, said: "I was impressed by the turnout across all three sessions. The process of inviting all the different groups, societies, charities and other interested parties together and getting them talking to each other has been a major achievement. Let's look to build on this momentum and look at what can be achieved by working together."

The Cittaslow Committee says it will look at the ideas discussed in the sessions over the coming weeks and propose some ideas to the groups on how greater collaboration might work in practice. 

Llangollen became a designated Cittaslow town in 2013 after a substantial effort from a large group of councillors and local volunteers to secure the designation, and has remained a member of the international network. 

Cittaslow promotes a way of life for market towns that is environmentally sustainable and supportive of local community groups and businesses. 

The Cittaslow Committee currently consists of nominated town councillors - Sheena Grindley, Tony Baker, Austin Cheminais, Robyn Lovelock and Melvyn Mile - plus co-opted members Mair Davies and Lesley Richards.

* Organisations that sent representatives included Ysgol Dinas Bran, Friends of the Earth Llangollen, Matt’s Food Bank, the Llangollen & Dee Valley Good Grub Club, the Llangollen Community Garden, the Llangollen Tidy Town team, the Llangollen Civic Society, Llangollen Museum, Llangollen Railway, Llangollen International Eisteddfod, Dee Valley Active, Rural Futures, Plastic Free Llangollen, the Clwydian Range & Dee Valley Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), Llangollen Citizens Advice Bureau, Vale of Clwyd MIND, Ymestyn Befriending Service, Llangollen Refugee Support, City Church Llangollen, St Collen’s Church, Ysgol y Gwernant, South Denbighshire Community Partnership and the Llangollen Health Centre.

Friday, April 12, 2019

Jobs safe at Moreton Park, reports Star


The Shropshire Star is reporting that 53 jobs at Moreton Park garden centre in Chirk are safe after its owners, Wyevale, were taken over by another company.

* For the full story, see: https://www.shropshirestar.com/news/local-hubs/oswestry/chirk/2019/04/11/100-jobs-safe-after-garden-centre-takeovers/

Stunning images feature in Pavilion art exhibition


* Punk Notes by Des Jones.


Over 60 striking images feature in the latest exhibition at the Pavilion by Llangollen Artists.

A total of seven artists with a hugely varied range of styles are taking part in the free-to-view show which lasts until June 14.

Amongst the exhibits by Des Jones are a couple of pictures executed in printers ink of musicians, the most notable of which to some will be the one entitled Punk Notes which depicts a guitarist in an all-action pose.

An appropriately haunting image of an Old Ghost House is part of the eclectic display by Carys Haf  Roberts. There’s a definite otherworldliness to this atmospheric mixed media offering which leaves one wondering exactly where the house is located.

Raising the mood significantly is the adjacent work of  Philip Charles Parker, all are brilliantly observed and vividly coloured, none more so than the jocular oil on canvas creation entitled Won’t You Pour Me a Cuban Breeze, Gretchan?   

Outstanding colours coupled with draughtsman-like precision also abound in the pictures of Jenny Saltmarsh. A good example of her style and a real eye-catcher is the study of motorbike race ace Joey Dunlop scorching around the track.

Landscapes but far from traditional ones feature in the thoughtful work of Richard Buxton, including the acrylic on canvas piece Landscape With Ravens. Its presentation is simple but extremely effective.

Tellingly evocative of the subject is the oil rendering Ready, one of the collection displayed by Louise Edwards, which shows a First World War soldier posing with his mates for a picture presumably ready to go “over the top”. On his face is a gritty smile perhaps because he’s aware what his fate might be.

A particularly stunning landscape of Dinas Bran Castle and the hills surrounding it is one of the memorable offerings from photographic artist Simon Collinge.             


* Old Ghost House by Carys Haf Roberts. 


* Won't You Pour Me a Cuban Breeze, Gretchen by Philip Charles Parker.


* Joey Dunlop by Jenny Saltmarsh. 


* Landscape With Ravens by Richard Buxton.


* Ready by Louise Edwards.



* A photographic study of Castell Dinas Bran area by Simon Collinge.

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Convoy heads through Glyndyfrdwy


llanblogger reader George Jones took this picture of the latest windmill farm load leaving the Tollgate lay-by on Tuesday.

He says two base units formed the police-escorted convoy through to Llidiart y Parc lay-by with eastbound A5 traffic being held back to allow movement through Glyndyfrdwy.

This is an on-going operation until July 31.

Meantime, he says the Ruabon roundabout four-way traffic lights and A539 is a route to avoid as work proceeds in connection with a new superstore on land near the junction.

Llan's Oggie Shop enjoys real taste of success



* Llangollen Oggie Shop owner Ross Anderson with local suppliers oggie baker Pauline Jones, left, and Lorraine Hughes, of Megan’s Kitchen.

It’s oggie, oggie, oggie for a former financial services specialist who has swapped the world of insurance for sausage rolls and pastries – by running a pie shop and delicatessen.
And the big seller for Ross Anderson and his wife Tracey, who are celebrating five years at the Llangollen Oggie Shop and Deli on the town’s High Street, is the traditional Welsh delicacy that’s believed to outdate the Cornish pasty.
They can sell hundreds in a day at the height of the summer season when tourists flock to the town.
Since opening Ross, from Llangollen, has seen the business almost double its turnover and he bases its success on a commitment to local produce and the oggie, made by local baker Pauline Jones, is just one example.
Legend has it the oggie was first served to the 12th century builders of St David’s Cathedral in Pembrokeshire – 600 years before the pasty appeared – but Ross gets his fresh every day from Pauline.
He said: “I was a financial services broker for 20 years but it was very stressful and I fancied a change and when this opportunity came up I took it and it’s been very positive.
“Ironically my very first job was in the food sector - as a fish fryer at Harry Ramsden’s in Manchester and I stayed there for two years and Tracey’s parents had kept a couple of pubs in Llangollen, The Grapes and the Prince of Wales.
“It’s been a good move to open the Oggie Shop but it has been a learning curve as well.
“Our shop was originally an open market site underneath the town hall assembly rooms when they were built in 1867, becoming a shop in 1885 and since then it’s been a grocer’s so we’re continuing a tradition and from the start we’ve decided to stock as much local produce as possible.
“As well as Pauline’s oggies we have other pies and pastries while the Welsh cakes and bara brith are made across the road at Megan’s Kitchen as well as other pastries and pies and we stock other Denbighshire products such as Chilly Cow ice cream from the Vale of Clwyd.”


The Llangollen Oggie Shop’s commitment to locally-sourced products has worked well for them and is the kind of unique shopping offer that has seen them featured in Denbighshire County Council’s #lovelivelocal campaign which promotes the lively and high quality food and drink offer on the county’s high streets.
This is being featured on a series of videos on social media in the run-up to Easter as the campaign highlights what the county has to offer shoppers and encourages people to support local independent businesses by using the hashtag on Twitter and Facebook to share good experiences they’ve had as well as promote products and services locally they have ‘loved’.
Ross now employs Tracey and one other full-time staffer along with four part-timers and he said: “In the quiet months we can run the shop with just a couple of us but we scale up in the summer and basically we will stay open as long as there are people about.
“I had never really thought about being in the food business but I came across the fact that the shop, known as Bailey’s Delicatessen, was for sale in a commercial agency and I knew it and felt it had a lot of potential and the location was really good.
“Food is a happy business and I wanted to get the shop attached to the town and the community and establish it as a Llangollen entity. I’m a big believer in presenting yourself well and we aim to establish a rapport with the customer so that they return.
“The five years have just passed so quickly and we have doubled turnover. On a good day in the summer we can take 30 times more than we might on a rotten January day but in the recent spell of warm February weather we took a record amount for an off-season weekend due to such a high level of visitors to the town.
“It can mean some long days but I do feel I’m still in the honeymoon stage - even after five years it hasn’t worn off yet.
“We do get lots of local customers and we do try and look after them and we gets lots of outdoor sports enthusiasts because Llangollen is something of a mecca for them.
“And we’re always on the look out for new products sourced locally and luckily there seen to be more and more becoming available and we believe it’s great for visitors to experience a taste of the area they are visiting and maybe take some home with them as well.
“Llangollen is a great and thriving place for a food and drink business. We hold a celebrated Food festival every October at the international pavilion site, which is currently listed in The Telegraph’s top 10 UK food events.
“I can be found there running around organising the music stages over that weekend.
“The town itself boasts real quality restaurant offerings showcasing local produce, like The Corn Mill and The Three Eagles. And alongside ourselves we have great specialist food shops promoting local produce like Porters Delicatessen, Zingiber and The Phoenix.”
* Denbighshire County Council’s #LoveLiveLocal 2019 campaign to promote the county’s rich and varied food and drink offer uses the hashtag #LoveLiveLocal across all social networking platforms to encourage shoppers to visit its towns.
* For more on #lovelivelocal go to as well as on Facebook and Twitter.

No record breaker but a beautiful handler



* The ToyotaYaris.

Toyota Yaris road test by Steve Rogers

If we are to believe what we hear nearly all of us will be driving hybrid or electric within 10 years.

Volvo is really going for it saying every new car from 2019 will be electrified.

The numbers of hybrid and electric cars has certainly shifted up a gear in the last 12 months with just about every manufacturer offering something in the alternative fuel line.

Toyota was one of the pioneers and has several hybrids in its line up but do they really come up with the goods on economy?

It depends on whether your driving needs match those of a hybrid car, there is such a thing as a hybrid driver. Let's looks at a couple of examples. 

The Toyota driver who delivered the Yaris hybrid had a traffic free early morning 180 mile motorway dash and managed 36.4mpg - it said so on the dashboard computer. The clear message is if you spend your time charging along motorways don't buy a hybrid.

Example two: I took the Yaris on a 12 mile drive made up of four miles down hill, seven miles on dual carriageway doing about 55mph and a mile in a 30mph zone powered purely by the electric motor. Result: 89.8mpg, and I am sure I could have cracked 90mpg if I had gone another few hundred yards on electric power.

That shows what is possible but will be a rare event. What you can expect from the Yaris hybrid if its journeys are in and around town, A roads, or sticking to around 60mph on motorways is pretty impressive if my 62.4mpg after a week and nearly 500 miles is anything to go by. The official average is 78.5mpg which will be a bit of a stretch.

From a safety point of view my driving style was calmer and more considerate because I wanted to exploit the hybrid potential so I tried to keep the needle in the green zone, the place to be for the big economy numbers. So there was no harsh braking or flooring it from the traffic lights, although should the need arise Yaris is no slouch up to 40mph thanks to the CVT auto gearbox.

So what of Yaris? The little hatchback has been around for yonks and has a reputation as a car for, lets say, the older community. My wife's niece, who is in her forty somethings, asked for advice before changing her car and almost had a dicky fit when Yaris was suggested among the sensible options.

"I don't want one of those, that's the sort of car mum would drive," was her response. Mum, by the way, is 71 and drives a Honda Jazz, another car her daughter would not consider. She bought a Citroen DS 3 which I concede is the coolest of all the small cool cars, and, as it happens, is also my wife's favourite small car and she is 68!

Yaris sits in a host of good superminis and although its looks have improved down the years, is not eye candy in the same way as a Renault Clio, Ford Fiesta, Seat Ibiza, Nissan Micra etc, etc, etc.

Nevertheless it does have a five year warranty, and in hybrid form has genuine economy credentials so running costs should be low. 

Yaris does not break any records on interior space but is still adequate and is well equipped - automatic dipping headlights and such like - and so it should be for £20 grand.

It rides a little on the hard side, not uncommon in small cars, and has a too much road noise, but it handles beautifully and would have been a good buy for my wife's niece but you know how stubborn young women can be...

Fast facts

Yaris Excel Hybrid
1329cc 4-cyl VVT-i; 73bhp
59bhp electric motor
0-62mph 11.8seccs; 103mph
78.5mpg combined
Emissions: 82/gkm
First year road tax £100
Insurance group 8
£19,620
Test car: £20,785 with sat nav and metallic paint

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

Spring fair at Plas Newydd this Saturday


The team on Our Picturesque Landscape Project (OPL) have been busy over the winter planning events to engage the local communities with the stunning locations on their doorsteps.
This Saturday, April 13, from 12 noon to 3pm, they will hold an official launch at the Spring Fair at Plas Newydd in Llangollen.

The fair promises an afternoon of activities, including have-a-go at wool felting, discover the story of wool and meet the sheep. 

There will also be an opportunity to try the new self-guided discovery trails round the grounds and join a guided walk and talk about the future plans to restore the Dell back to its former glory as it was in the romantic period when the Ladies of Llangollen lived at Plas Newydd. 

The new season for the house and revamped tearoom is now in full swing.

Since the 1700’s people have been on inspirational journeys through the Dee Valley, across the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct and Canal, along Telford’s A5, the Llangollen Railway and the River Dee. 

They came to enjoy and engage with the unique landscape and many felt compelled to recall this stunning landscape in art. 

Through a wide range of events and community activities, the OPL project aims to engage local people to follow in the footsteps of the artists of the past and to engage in artistic activities themselves to celebrate this beautiful and unique landscape. 

The team also hopes to encourage people to discover and learn about their heritage and habitats, the modern day pressures these face and how we can protect and manage them for the future.
For more details about the OPL project or if you are part of a community group based along the Dee Valley between Corwen and Chirk and would be interested in participating in the project through art or outdoor activities, then contact our.picturesque.landscape@denbighshire.gov.uk or by phone on 01824 706163.

Tuesday, April 9, 2019

Fringe headliners announced



* Electric Swing Circus.

Llangollen Fringe have just announced the acts that will headline the 23rd edition of the town festival, which organisers say is the biggest yet by far.

The acts announced are: EMMANUEL JAL – a former boy soldier in Sudan.

Jal has triumphed against adversity to become a leading proponent of a crossover style of afrobeat and hip hop having worked with and performed alongside such names as Lauren Hill and Alicia Keys.

He is well known across Africa and North America, but his Fringe concert will be one of his very first in Europe.


* Robyn Hitchcock.

Joining Jal at the festival are:

* Psychedelic singer and songwriter ROBYN HITCHCOCK, whom ROLLING STONE magazine describe as “A gifted Melodist, Welsh and Bretton singing LLEUWEN and band. 

* Adventurer and film maker BRUCE PARRY, best known for his BBC TV series TRIBE will appear live in conversation and will also screen his latest film TAWAI.

There is also a return for festival favourites the DUB PISTOLS and a debut performance for Glastonbury festival regulars ELECTRIC SWING CIRCUS.


Lleuwen. 

All this plus STAND UP COMEDY, the return of BAND FOR A DAY, a SKA themed STEAM TRAIN ride and Musical CANAL BOAT trips, along with many other fringe events.

Llangollen Fringe Festival will take place from July 19-27. 

Tickets for all headline shows are on sale now as well as Festival passes priced at £70. These allow access to all of the main events across the 10 days.

Festival tickets and dates and times for all concerts and events are available from www.llangollenfringe.co.uk or by calling the Fringe box office:  0800 1455 779.

Elderly warned over smooth-talking conmen



* Matthew Hazelwood, Modern Slavery Case worker; Elin Davies, Senior Victim Health Worker; Emma Davies Williams, Mental Health and Wellbeing caseworker; Jessica Rees; Wales Hate Crime Manager;, Sioned Jacobsen, Operations  Manager; Arfon Jones, North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner; Ann Griffith, Deputy Police and Crime Commissioner.

The boss of a centre that supports crime victims from across North Wales has warned elderly people to be on their guard against fraudsters after her 87-year-old grandfather fell prey to a smooth-talking conman.

Sioned Jacobsen, the Operations Manager at the North Wales Victim Help Centre, revealed they’re seeing a big increase in the number of fraud cases involving victims aged 70 or over being targeted over the phone or online.

In recent weeks they have been providing support to one victim who was conned out of £140,000 of their life-savings.

Ms Jacobsen was horrified to discover that her much-loved Taid had been duped by fraudsters who persuaded him to give them his bank details.

She said: “They contacted him and said that the telegraph pole outside needed repairing, otherwise his phone would be cut off so he gave his bank details and PIN over the phone.

“They didn’t take any money because he contacted my mum straight away and said he thought he’d done something stupid, so she phoned the bank on his behalf.

“But he said they were so believable and assured him it was absolutely fine to give them his PIN number and his card details over the phone.

“It’s horrible. It just goes to show it can happen to absolutely anyone. My Taid would like to think he is quite clued up and he is quite with it, but he felt awful and embarrassed by it.”

Ms Jacobsen was speaking at the official launch of two videos made to highlight the help available to victims of crime.

The North Wales Victim Help Centre, which his based in St Asaph, is funded by the North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Arfon Jones.

It has 12 members of staff including caseworkers who specialise in modern day slavery, mental health and hate crime.

They are supplemented by a network of trained volunteer helpers located across the region.
Demand for the centre’s services has increased every year since it was established in 2015 and last year they made contact with 34,500 victims.

Most are referred to them by the police and other agencies but victims are also encouraged to call he centre themselves if they need expert support and guidance.

Ms Jacobsen added:  “We’ve had a record amount of self-referrals in the last quarter from people who don’t want to report to the police and from other agencies who want to directly refer to us.

“There is a big growth in the number of fraud cases involving older people being referred to us. Normally the victims are aged 70 or over.

“We’ve had victims take support when they’ve lost 70, 80, 90 thousand pounds and last week someone who was defrauded out of around £140,000.

“It’s particularly despicable that these fraudsters target older people because they are generally more vulnerable to this type of crime.

“Very often the victims feel ashamed so one of the things the staff is trying to do is tell them it’s not their fault and that they shouldn’t feel embarrassed about it.

“These people who are committing the crimes are clever, they know who to target, so it’s just a case of reassuring them really that they haven’t done anything wrong, and it’s not their fault. The con artists are very credible, very plausible, that’s the trouble.

“The key message to victims is that they should get in touch because help and support is available.

“We can support victims of crime, no matter what the crime is, no matter how long ago it happened and whether it’s been reported or not.

“If they feel like they’ve been victimised in any way then they should please contact us.”

North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Arfon Jones said: “I am very concerned about the increase in the number of fraud cases and the suffering it’s causing to people.

“I would like to see a dedicated economic crime unit being set up in North Wales to investigate these crimes and this is a conversation I need to  have with the force.

“I think every force in the country could do more but it’s not something the police can solve on their own.

“We also need to educate people to educate themselves as well as catching the perpetrators.

“The big banks do a lot of anti-fraud work but I think the regional managers in Wales could and should be doing more to fund either victim support officers or fraud investigators.

“I think the work they do nationally should be spread out regionally, especially in areas were bank branches are disappearing left, right and centre leaving rural communities and the people living in them quite vulnerable.”

* To find out more about the North Wales Victim Support Centre please visit www.victimhelpcentrenorthwales.org.uk

Monday, April 8, 2019

Residents give woodland a spring clean



* The spring clean group with the final pile of rubbish collected in Trevor.

Residents of Trevor and surrounding communities have teamed up to give the woodland of Rhos y Coed a spring clean.

The woodland has been subject to some historic fly tipping and all sorts of rubbish was found from car bonnets to garden pots. 

The full extent of the litter problem was brought to light following the creation of a new path through the woodland linking the community centre up with the canal and enabling people to get up close to the massive meteorite-like clinker, a piece of historical fly tipping in itself, dating from as far back as 1870 and a relic of the local iron industry.!

The Clinker Path as it is now known and some new trees which were planted by the Trevor cubs and beavers a few weeks ago were both made possible through the Our Picturesque Landscape (OPL) National Lottery Heritage Fund Project as part of their remit to improve access to the picturesque countryside. 

Following the discovery of the rubbish the OPL team contacted Keep Wales Tidy, a charity working across the whole of Wales to protect our environment for now and for the future, to organise the community Spring Clean event as part of their annual Spring Clean Cymru which is a nationwide campaign encouraging people across Wales to get together to help clean up our beautiful Cymru.

A total of 10 local people, including four children gave up their Saturday morning to help tidy up the woods and improve them for both people and wildlife and by the end a total of 20 bags of rubbish and other larger items were collected.

If you feel inspired by these local environmental heroes and want to do your bit there are lots of other Spring Clean Cymru events going on until April 23rd, visit the Keep Wales Tidy website for more information.  

Our Picturesque Landscape Project centres on the landscape of the Dee Valley and the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct and Canal World Heritage Site. 

It takes the theme of inspirational journeys that have been, and continue to be, a feature of the area which is cut by the canal, Telford's A5 and the River Dee. Visitors have drawn inspiration from this beautiful valley in art and poetry since the 18th century and it continues to draw tourists in search of the sublime.

Our Picturesque Landscape Project is predominantly funded by The National Lottery Heritage Fund. It is a partnership project developed by the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, Pontcysyllte Aqueduct and Canal World Heritage Site, Denbighshire County Council, Wrexham County Borough Council, Shropshire Council, The Canal & River Trust, Natural Resources Wales, Cadw, Cadwyn Clwyd, Aqueducks (Friends of the World Heritage Site) and the Friends of the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley.

Follow on Facebook @Clwydian Range and Dee Valley

Railway swings back to the 40s this weekend


* Winston Churchill and General Montogomery look-alikes will be visiting the 1940s weekend.

Llangollen Railway will be putting the clock back to the World War Two era when it stages its Home Front Weekend this Saturday and Sunday.

The event will be feature displays of military personnel, equipment and vehicles - both British and American - located at the stations along the line to Carrog.

The Home Front side of the period will also be represented with civilian vehicles parked at various locations together with displays of life in the 1940s. 

There will be a mock air raid and demonstration of military firepower on both days. 

Entertainment will be provided at each station along the line by live performers singing songs of the era including George Formby, the Bluebird Belles a group of WAAF entertainers, the Airborne Angel and Jayne Darling.


* Jayne Darling will sing live during the event.

On Saturday night Llangollen Station will offer live acts for the evening dance with a real ale bar from 7-1p.m.  

Look-alikes of Winston Churchill, General Montgomery and Air Vice Marshall Harris will visit the Dee valley during the course of the event to undertake inspections and make patriotic speeches. 

A drum head church service will be held on Sunday morning at Llangollen Station.

Steam-hauled trains will run at regular intervals through the scenic Dee valley during the day with an evening service on Saturday to convey visitors to the concert at Llangollen Station.


* George Formby will also put in an appearance.

A demonstration goods train will also be in operation carrying vital wartime materials along the line.

The main display of military vehicles will be at Glyndyfrdwy Station, about halfway along the railway. 

Unrationed refreshments will be available at stations along the line.

There will be a real ale bar at Llangollen which will be open during the day and into the evening during the concert.  

Visitors are invited to enter into the spirit of the event and come dressed in period costume. 

Any children being evacuated should have the appropriate labels. Unfortunately the line between Carrog and Corwen will be closed due to ‘enemy action’.

* Further information on departure time so of trains and events can be obtained by contacting the Station Office at Llangollen on telephone number 01978-860979, or the website at www.llangollen-railway.co.uk   

On Friday evening New Dot Cinema is screening A Matter of Life and Death, a great 1940s epic, in the Town Hall in Llangollen. Doors open 7.30pm and the film starts at 8pm.


Sunday, April 7, 2019

Youngsters take to the streets to showcase eisteddfod


* The eisteddfod mini parade pf nations in Wrexham town centre.

In a break from tradition the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod has taken its annual Parade of Nations to the streets of Wrexham.

The parade features performers waving flags representing their nation. 

It has always taken place in the host town of Llangollen but, for the first time in the festival’s history, volunteers took to the streets of Wrexham and other towns to celebrate the launch of the eisteddfod’s daytime programme.

The mini parades included young students from Ysgol Dinas Brân and also visited Liverpool, Chester and Oswestry.

Eisteddfod chairman Dr Rhys Davies said: “Showcasing an array of colourful flags, our international parade marched through the town of Wrexham in a vivacious display of international unity and friendship.

“It’s always extremely exciting announcing our daytime line-up and we hope that our parade inspires Wrexham to join us for our week-long festival of music and dance this summer.”

From Tuesday 2nd July to Saturday 6th July,  the three outdoor stages will host a variety of live world music and dance, folk, classical, jazz, indie, acoustic, roots, and opera, Celtic reggae, and rock, whilst world-class entertainment continues in the main pavilion where choirs, dancers and soloists from different nations compete for international recognition and prizes.

Tickets for the 2019 Llangollen Eisteddfod are on sale and can be purchased online at www.llangollen.net or via the box office. An early bird £5 Ground ticket offer is available using the discount code NEWS19.
  

Daytime line-up includes:


Tuesday July 2

Earth’s Little Heroes – International Children’s Day

The Eisteddfod opens with a day of programming especially for primary school age children. Earth’s Little Heroes’ matinee performances in the pavilion will include the annual Peace message and a special ‘World Warriors’ performance with pupils from local Denbighshire schools. Field events will include Interactive Junk Music™, workshops with the Junkman and a Magic of Recycling Show with The Conwy Jester.

Priority booking for this event is given to those on educational trips but public admission will be available on the day with seating in the rear section of the pavilion. Kindly supported by MBNA General Foundation.

Into the evening from 4.30pm there will be a variety of operas, acoustic soloists and ballet.

Wednesday July 3

Harmony and Diversity

Young competitors take to the pavilion stage with the Children’s Folk Song Choirs, Junior Children’s Choirs, Vocal Solo (age 12-15) and Children’s Traditional Folk Dance Group categories. There will also be this year’s Inclusion Project, 'Tapestry' involving local groups from diverse backgrounds.
The day will be filled with music and dance workshops so everyone has the chance to try something new

From 4.30pm there will be world music from the Balkans and Eastern Europe and local choirs.

Thursday July 4

Exploring Peace Together

Discover what peace means to you and to your neighbours. Get involved in workshops and peace chants with the Southern Shaolin Temple Warrior Monks, celebrate the WCIA Young Peacemakers Awards and witness the bespoke artwork from young people of Plas Madoc.

International competitions include Senior Children’s Choir, A cappella Group, Open Folk Solo, Vocal Solo (age 16-19), Voice of Musical Theatre and the announcement of the Children’s Choir of the World results.

Into the evening from 4.30pm international participants join together in ‘The Gathering’ in an exchange of dance and culture not to be missed before the outside stages come alive with South American and Spanish vibes along with Eastern European folk music with gypsy jazz.

Friday July 5

Uniting Nations in Music

Llangollen Eisteddfod was established in 1947 as a means of uniting nations through music. Today we showcase music from all over the world with performances of intercultural song and dance all around the field. Lively marimba band Otto & The Mutapa Calling treat us to the energetic, joyful music from Botswana, South Africa and Zimbabwe whilst Mambo Jambo will take you on an exciting and joyous musical journey with a mash-up of sounds from world, roots, folk and jazz.

The pavilion will be jammed full with international sights and sounds with the Adult Folk Song Choirs, Choreographed/Stylised Folk Dance, Youth Choirs, Traditional Folk Dance, Open Folk Solo and Young Instrumentalist categories.

The Parade of Nations takes place at 4.30pm this spectacle of colour and sound is one of the highlights of the eisteddfod.

Saturday 6 July

Discovering our World Community

Enjoy local community performances on the field and the Dancing in the Street competition at the Riverside Park at 2.00pm. Field activities for families include circus skills and stilt walking, walkabout artistes and craft activities.

The last day of competitions will see a splash of colour with the Cultural Showcase competition and the very best of Mixed Choirs, Female Voice Choirs, Open Choirs and Male Voice Choirs who are competing to win a place in the Choir of the World final.

World music featuring a lively Ceilidh band, Sitar and Tablo duo, and Celtic rock band, folk and acoustic music will entertain all day and into the evening from 4.30pm.