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Friday, July 7, 2023

Eisteddfod's grand parade comes back in fine style

* All pictures by Mandy Jones 


The spectacular pageant of the Parade of Nations has made its long-awaited return to the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod.

The colourful cavalcade, sponsored by Everbright, included competitors from 19 countries on five different continents who were given a joyous welcome by delighted spectators who lined the streets in the picturesque town where Wales meets the world.

It was the first time parade has been held since 2019 with Covid taking its toll on the event for three years before this its triumphant return.

Nisha Guy, from Trinidad and Tobago, a cultural ambassador with the Soul Oasis group among a party of 40 from the West Indian islands.

She said: “I’ve just been blown away by the music and dance performances – everyone just really giving their all.

“It’s just been great to have some normalcy brought back to our lives after Covid and it’s been so emotional and so lovely as well, backstage and in the audience as well.

“The Parade is something special and I was singing as part of that and in the town square as well.”

Kiki Dari has been bringing groups of competitors from Djakarta, in Indonesia, for over 20 years and this year is with Labschool Kebayoran and she said: “I feel like Llangollen is my second home and I have missed it .

“I even came here two weeks before the festival to make sure everything was fine and it’s so nice to be back and be part of it all, especially the Parade.

“We have some traditional dancers with us and they have performed as part of the parade today.

“I hope to come many more times in future. I enjoy so much bringing Indonesian people here.”

Gurnoor Kaur, a young dancer from the Punjab, in India, was here for the first time in 2019, the last time the Eisteddfod was held as a full event and she said: “There have been lots of changes from last time but it is such an amazing event.

“It’s just such a great experience and so amazing, even the weather, and the people are so caring, respectful and show lots of love. They have really made us feel at home.

“It’s great to get to know about other cultures and other nations. That’s what makes Llangollen so special – I’d love to come again.”

It was a special moment for the Eisteddfod’s mastermind, Executive Producer Camilla King, who took over last year and hadn’t see it make its colourful way down Abbey Road from the International Pavilion to the town and back again in a kaleidoscopic river of colour.

She said: “It’s been fantastic and the Parade has been wonderful. It’s the first time it has been held since 2019 and the first time I’ve seen and experienced it and it has just been spectacular.

“Having no restrictions to worry about is absolutely wonderful and we’ve had lots of competitors from all over the world taking part, from the West Indies to the East Indies with groups from Trinidad and Tobago to Indonesia.

“We were a bit worried after Covid whether people would come back to the Eisteddfod, particularly from overseas but the response has been magnificent and seeing so many happy faces with people having fun is what the Eisteddfod is all about.

“Events like ours need support and so it’s been wonderful to see so many people along the route because Llangollen is unique. We have a wonderful message of peace and friendship.

“You see things here you won’t see anywhere else, meeting people you wouldn’t meet anywhere else and I’m very proud of that and most of the work is done to make all this happen is done by our volunteers who are phenomenal.”

Among those volunteers are Bill Kong and his wife, Solana, who have settled in the town after Bill first visited the Eisteddfod in 2013 and started volunteering two years later even though he had to fly 6,000 miles to do it.

He has now been here three years and is delighted to see the Eisteddfod back and he said: “I love the people here, the hwyl, the friendliness, the music and the countryside.

“The Parade is back now and that was really important because it really seals the whole connection between the festival and the town and that’s really important.

“It’s been going 76 years now and that not something to be taken lightly.”

* For more on Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod and its competitions and concerts as well as how to get to it and where to stay go to http://international-eisteddfod.co.uk/ or check out https://www.facebook.com/llangollen

Join Llangollen Parkrun as it marks NHS's 75th birthday

Llangollen's first Parkrun on June 17 had 249 people attending.

According to organisers, this figure was boosted by what are known as "Parkrun tourists" - people from all over the UK who like to attend a first run. 

On its second week  the run attracted 181 participants and last week 160 settling down for more local people.

A spokesperson said: "This week we are also celebrating the 75th anniversary of the NHS and our run director on the day is Janet Knight, who local people will know is a senior partner at the GP Practice at Llangollen Health Centre, supported by some of her colleagues from the practice which is actually an official Parkrun practice, to encourage people to volunteer, walk, jog or run at our event."

* Parkrun is now a regular weekly event, starting at 9am every Saturday, in which people can volunteer, walk, jog or run to improve their health and wellbeing, please see: home | Old Railway Trail parkrun, Llangollen | Old Railway Trail parkrun, Llangollen

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Hundreds come out to watch Eisteddfod's big parade

llanblogger picture special

Llangollen Eisteddfod's traditional International Parade took place this afternoon.

Hundreds of onlookers packed into the town centre to watch and cheer the cavalcade of colour and music as it made its way from the Eisteddfod field, down Abbey Road, across the famous bridge and into the heart of Llangollen.

Flag-waving competitors and performers from across the globe were in the big line-up, led by town crier Chem.














Visiting Welsh Secretary says Eisteddfod is 'fantastic international day'


* Welsh Secretary David TC Davies meets, a limbo dancer from Trinidad and Tobago who will be competing with his group later today.

Llangollen Eisteddfod is a "fantastic international day right in the heart of Wales", according to Secretary of State for Wales, David TC Davies.

Mr Davies was spending the day at the Eisteddfod and meeting festival organisers.

Speaking to llanblogger, he said: "I am delighted to be here and have to admit it's not somewhere I've been before.

"My early impressions are that it is absolutely fantastic to be here and watching all the colourful performers walking past, like members of an African dance band and a group of dancers from Turkey, is great.

"It's a fantastic international day right in the heart of Wales and is very important that it continues."

He added: "In Wales we celebrate music, culture and dancing in a way I don't think happens anywhere else in the rest of the UK.

"My wife is Hungarian and used to be a Hungarian folk dancer and I know she really likes the fact that we celebrate these traditions in Wales and welcome visitors to Llangollen from all over the world."   

* In a round-up of other Eisteddfod activities this morning (Thursday) ...

* The Cantilon youth choir appear at the last minute in St Collen's.

A youth choir from Canada stepped in at the last moment to replace their counterparts from the Philippines when they were unable to make a recital at St Collen’s this afternoon (Thursday).

Members of Cantilon from Edmonton in Alberta cut short their lunch break to dash across town from the maes to the church and within minutes get right into their first number, a jaunty Irish folk tune.

They became unexpected substitutes for Kammerchor after the plane bringing them to the UK from Manila was cancelled.

St Collen’s is hosting a series of recitals by visiting choirs throughout the week and it was announced in church that Kammerchor still hoped to make the 2pm slot tomorrow (Friday) after the Delaware Choral Sholars from the USA perform at 1pm.


* Singers from Ysgol Tryfan in Bangor perform on the Globe Stage.


* Above and below: the Northern Lights dancers from Yorkshire take part in the children's folk dance competition.



* Youngsters take part in a circus skills session which was one of the activities on the maes this morning.

Search for hero who helped concert goer suffering cardiac arrest

 

* The packed audience for the Alfie Boe concert on Tuesday night.

A search has been launched for a heroic former paramedic who leapt into action after a concert-goer suffered a cardiac arrest.

The victim collapsed in the car park following the opening concert at Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod starring Alfie Boe and supergroup, Welsh of the West End.

The quick-thinking ex paramedic ran to the nearby rugby club and grabbed a defibrillator to perform CPR - cardio-pulmonary resuscitation.

It’s understood his heart was shocked back into life three times.

The Eisteddfod are keen to identify the hero of the hour and want to reward him with free concert tickets to the rest of the festival.


* Camilla King, Executive Producer of Llangollen Eisteddfod.

The incident happened on the car park field above the Eisteddfod Maes after 11pm and the response by the emergency services was exemplary, according to Eisteddfod Executive Producer Camilla King.

She said the man’s swift action was quickly followed up by the St John’s Ambulance staff on site who quickly had two paramedics, an ambulance crew and an operational commander on the scene.

An ambulance arrived at the scene not long after and took him to Wrexham Maelor Hospital where his condition was said to be stable.

She said: “A couple who had attended the concert were in the car park when the man collapsed and by an absolute miracle there was a couple nearby and the man is a former paramedic.

“He started immediate CPR  and was soon joined by our on-site St John’s team who also did a fantastic job.

“In the meantime he must have known that the nearby sports club had a defibrillator and he was able to get that into operation. It was very quick thinking on his part.

“There were so many people leaving the Alfie Boe concert that we were worried the ambulance might get held up but it also arrived quickly and so it was an excellent response by everyone.

“By the time the ambulance was taking him to the Maelor Hospital he was able to speak to his wife. It was a fantastic response all round and we’re very grateful to everyone concerned.

“I spoke to the man’s wife and it was good to hear that his condition was stable and we wish him a full and speedy recovery.

“We would very much like to be able to identify the man who reacted so brilliantly well and offer him our thanks and tickets to concerts of his choice for the rest of the week.

“The man’s family are understandably also keen to say thank you for his quick thinking which probably meant the difference between life and death. He was a real hero.”

According to St John Ambulance, the patient was handed over to the Welsh Ambulance Service NHS Trust who safely transported him to hospital.

Darren Murray, Head of Community Operations, said: ‘We are proud of the volunteers who responded quickly and delivered a high standard of care synonymous with St John Ambulance Cymru. We wish the patient all the best in their recovery.”

Poignant and moving concert was perfect for the Pavilion stage


* New Sinfonia orchestra and massed choir united for the concert.

The Eisteddfod Pavilion’s enormous stage was made for last night’s emotive and deeply moving concert, The White Flower Into the Light, which showed how the beauty of hope can be born from the ugliness and pain of war.

Its cavernous dimensions perfectly accommodated a massed choir of 200 voices and a wondrous orchestra who came together for a work of remembrance for the fallen of Srebrenica, Bosnia and Ukraine.

And their performance was also the very embodiment of the eisteddfod’s founding principles of international peace and friendship.

Music to touch the soul came from Karl Jenkins, Finzim Gjeilo and the traditions of Wales, Bosnia and the Ukraine.

This was poignantly driven by the north Wales-based New Sinfonia orchestra led by its resident conductor Robert Guy and, at one point, by Polina Horelova, a Ukrainian mother-of-four and musician who escaped the Russian invasion of her homeland to take refuge in this country.

In close partnership with New Sinfonia was Lleisiau Llan, a tremendous 200-strong choir of voices recruited and trained locally specially for this occasion and containing a number of refugees.

The piece which gave the concert its title, The White Flower, was penned by Sarajevo-born composer and guitarist Elvir Solak who was there to help present it along with Lejia Jusic, an accomplished musician also from Sarajevo.

The programme for the evening began with the deeply evocative White Flower and moved through the haunting The Rose by Gjeilo then was lightened somewhat by Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Edelweiss, written for the film Sound of Music, whose theme was the destructive power yet hope which war can bring. It was here that the choir’s powerful resonance first took command.

Elen Mair Roberts, a notable north Wales musical director, took over the conductor’s baton to lead New Sinfonia in the traditional Welsh piece Mil Harddach wyt na’r rhosyn gwyn.

Finzi’s Let us Garlands Bring followed before baritone Emyr Lloyd Jones presented three traditional folk songs including the ever-hopeful springtime note of It Was a Lover and His Lass.

Later in the programme came Karl Jenkins’ The Armed Man, A Mass for Peace and a choral suite comprising Agnus Dei, Benedictus, Hymn Before Action, Kyrie and Sanctus – all at once soaring and majestic and cataclysmic yet joyous thanks to the profound skills of the orchestra and the pieces’ interpretation by that marvellous choir.

Polina Horelova conducted the light-hearted yet still moving Ukraine River Song by Yakub, when a group of young dancers in traditional Ukrainian costume appeared amongst the audience to help illustrate the piece.

The evening was perfectly rounded off with the spine-tingling and hopeful World in Union with music by Holst arranged by Skarbek.

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Round-up of action from Eisteddfod's first full day

llanblogger has been capturing some action from the first full day of the 2023 Llangollen Eisteddfod:


* The day began with a performance in Centenary Square of the Greek performing arts group Kyklos who are based in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Entertainment by various groups will continue there each day of the Eisteddfod.


* The Eisteddfod's children's day traditionally features two morning concerts specially arranged for hundreds of primary school youngsters from across north Wales. This includes the Peace Message from the children of Llangollen to their counterparts across the world which was this year delivered in Welsh and English by pupils from Ysgol Dinas Bran in Llangollen. Amongst those performing this morning during the concerts was the Cantilon Chamber Choir from Canada.   


* Also on the entertainment bill for the children's concerts was a storytelling session on a dinosaur theme. This was accompanied by a trio of musicians from the New Sinfonia orchestra which will be performing in this evening's (Wednesday) concert in the Pavilion, entitled White Flower. This will also feature a choir of Ukrainian refugees.


* Above and two pictures below: throughout the week international choirs competing in the Eisteddfod are giving recitals at St Collen's Church. Today it was the turn of the Azusa Pacific University Choir from the USA who were last at the Eisteddfod in 2015. They will be competing in a number of choral competitions later this week.   






* Steffan Hughes, who appeared in Tuesday's evening concert alongside Alfie Boe with his group Welsh of the West End, sang on the Globe stage near the town end of the Eisteddfod field this afternoon, performing a number of hit numbers from hit musicals and film.    

Dream comes true for Shea as he shares stage with Alfie Boe


* Shea sings along with Alfie Boe on the Pavilion stage.

A dream came true for a talented young music student when he was called up on stage by superstar Alfie Boe to duet on the first night of the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod.

What made it extra special for Shea Ferron,  20, from Ruabon, was that his mum and dad, Sharon and Damian, along with sister Niamh, were also in the audience to celebrate their 26th wedding anniversary.

The number they performed together was also special because it was Alfie’s signature song, Bring Him Home, from the musical, Les Miserables.

Shea, a tenor and a student of the Performing Arts at Manchester’s Institute for Contemporary Theatre, is a regular at Llangollen’s iconic Eisteddfod where he has been one of its army of volunteers since he was 14.

He is also a member of the John’s Boys choir which reached the semi-finals of Britain’s Got Talent and he said: “I had a line translated into Welsh for Camilla King, the Director of the Eisteddfod, and I cheekily texted asking if she could get me on stage with Alfie Boe and she laughed and said , ‘No’.

“Then earlier yesterday I met him on the Maes and we were chatting and I just wanted to get a selfie with him and my friend said, ‘This lad does a mean Bring Him Home ’ and Alfie replied, ‘No pressure then’.

“Last night I was sitting in Block H right at the front and right in Alfie Boe’s eyeline and he looked at me and remembered me and got me up and we duetted on Bring Him Home – it’s my greatest achievement.

“Afterwards I gave him one of my cards and told hm that if he gets fed up with singing with Michael Ball he knows who to call.

“It was pretty special My phone has been going non-stop since.”

Camilla said: “It was a really great night and Alfie Boe just kept singing and when Shea was called up it was just one of those magical Eisteddfod moments.

“We had joked about him singing with Alfie but for it to actually happen was incredible.

“It was a brilliant experience for him and he harmonised with Alfie which was really nice.

“The volunteers here are involved in everything and Alfie has been here before and he loves the relationship with the audience who were all up and dancing by then.

“It was a wonderful night and Welsh of the West End were amazing.”

Shea, who also works on the Llangollen Canal with the horse-drawn barges, added: “I first came to the Eisteddfod when I was eight or nine and I just think the whole ethos about it is special.

“It’s a festival of music but the way it promotes peace is the biggest and best thing.

“The first Eisteddfod in 1947 had a German choir and everyone can communicate through music and I really love that.”

 

According to Camilla, it was the perfect way to start the Llangollen Eisteddfod where around 3,000 competitors from 19 countries on five continents will be taking part.

Each day features a full programme of competitions in the famous pavilion and a line-up of stalls and exhibitions on the field along with the competitors from around the world, many in colourful dress while three open-air stages run a stream of live performances.

Entertainment on the outside site includes workshops, talks, international showcases, outdoor theatre performances, circus skills, sound bath sessions, yoga, belly dancing, beginner’s Welsh and  salsa.

The Globe Stage will feature music acts spanning folk, jazz, world and indie.

There will also be an international flavour to the cuisine available in the new Globe Food Court.

Visitors will be able to “go around the world in 80 minutes” with stalls serving food from different countries including India, Greece, Jamaica, Mexico, Germany and Italy.

At 4.30 pm on Thursday (July 6) the Parade of Nations will be making a joyous comeback when a cavalcade of colourful competitors will march through the town.

A famous radio broadcast by poet Dylan Thomas about Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod is being recreated to mark its 70th anniversary between 2-3pm on Friday. The reading from actor, writer and director Celyn Jones will form the centrepiece of a mini programme of events to celebrate the literary magician’s 15-minute masterpiece on the BBC’s Home Service when he visited in 1953.

Camilla added: ““Sunday is going to be a very special day because we’ve got outdoor performances and entertainment all day. And we’ve changed the evening concert entry so it’s now free to attend with a Field ticket, from £10. We wanted to give audiences a thank you treat. 

“That final concert includes the final round of Voice of Musical Theatre (Welsh of the West End have had former winners), performances from our best international dance groups, and lots more.

“Also just announced today is that on Sunday we have former BBC Breakfast presenter Louise Minchin coming to talk about her new book and do a signing session from 12.15pm.” 

* For tickets or for more on Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod and its competitions and concerts as well as how to get to it and where to stay go to www.international-eisteddfod.co.uk or check out www.facebook.com/llangollen

Llan Food Share aims to freeze out waste with free fridge

* Food Share treasurer Gill Robertson, left, and Steph Mitchell, centre manager.

Llangollen’s Food Share organisation has launched a new initiative to prevent waste by opening a Community Fridge.

It will be open on Mondays and Thursdays, between 9am and 11am, inviting everyone to help themselves to quality food that would otherwise be wasted.

The Community Fridge is located in the Food Share Hub at the town end of Market Street car park.

Centre manager Steph Mitchell said: "For the last four years our main priority has been to make sure that everyone in the Llangollen area has enough food for themselves and their families. That is still our top priority and our Wednesday session is to distribute our regular food provisions for those in need.

“Monday and Thursday sessions are for everyone, not just those who are struggling to make ends meet. The food we offer will often have a short shelf life. Other items have been donated to us in large quantities and our limited storage space means that we have no room to store them."

She added: “Llangollen Food Share has a zero waste policy. Food waste is a huge issue in the UK. The average household throws away £700 worth of food every year and at the same time 4 million people in the UK are living in food poverty. 

"Most food waste is avoidable and could have been eaten had it been better managed. We hope that this new initiative will reduce food waste in Llangollen.

“Donations from local residents, businesses and other organisations are always welcome to help us achieve our purpose of ensuring that no-one locally goes without good quality food."

The Llangollen fridge is one of a growing number opening up across the UK. 

The concept first arrived in the UK in 2016 with Community Fridges opening up in Swadlincote, Frome and London. Now over 50 projects are running across the country.

Opening hours:

* Foodshare for individuals and family support: Wednesdays 1pm - 2pm

* Community Fridge for Everyone: 9am-11am on Mondays and Thursdays.

* Llangollen Foodshare Hub is on the Castle Street end of the main Market Street Car Park.

* The community fridge initiative is supported by the charity Hubbub UK in a growing effort to tackle food waste.

Steph can be contacted by email:llangollenfoodshare@gmail.com or mobile 07538 894 449.

More information on The Community Fridge Network, including a map of fridge locations and advice for those interested in setting up a community fridge can be found at www.hubbub.org.uk/communityfridgenetwork

Alfie Boe serves up sizzling show to kick off Eisteddfod


* Alfie Boe delivers a memorable Eisteddfod performance.



* Welsh of the West End shared the show.


* Joined on stage by Shea Ferron.

Alfie Boe stormed back to Llangollen in style when he delivered up a storming, sizzling two and a half hours of pure musical magic to a packed Pavilion audience last night (Tuesday).

In his advance publicity he promised fans would be treated to a “fantastic bloody show” to kick off the 2023 Eisteddfod.

And he certainly kept to his word and more as he pierced those famous canvas walls with a million marvellous lyrics from a cavalcade of songs.

Helping him to enthral and beguile us until around 11pm was a sixsome of pure home-grown talent in the form of Welsh of the West End, the musical theatre super-group and Britain’s Got Talent semi-finalists, and a young local lad named Shea whose dream of sharing the stage with his hero he made come beautifully true.

On first came the Welsh group to present some belters such as Seasons of Love from the musical Rent, That’s All I Ask of You from Phantom of the Opera and, in a Welsh medley, Calon Lan and even Green Green Grass of Home from Saint Tom Jones.

Then it was time for Boe to bounce back onto the big flower-bedecked stage with a completely accurate advert for the ensuing performance entitled The Greatest Show.

That was just the opening salvo in a broadside of hits from the West End and beyond which he lavished upon us backed by a stylish five-piece band and a couple of brilliant backing singers.

Falling Slowly from Once he delivered with the help of one of these impressive  singers named Emily who he jokingly instructed not to “mess it up” before they started. A little sample of why the Llan audience just loves down-to-earth Boe, an affair which began a couple of years back on his first appearance here.

There were a couple of his own songs, the plaintive White Lily Fields and Stormy Waters, before he unleashed a mighty, throbbing version of Proud Mary from the lamentably late Tina Turner and Bring Him Home from Les Miserables.

It was during Bring Him Home that he beckoned up on stage Llangollen’s own Mr Showbiz Shea Ferron, who though still in his early twenties has become something of a megastar through his singing performances locally and regionally as a soloist and even nationally as part of the Johns’ Boys choir.

I reckon those few shared bars made Shea’s day if not his life up to this point.

It then became something of a delicious blur as Boe hammered home more and more gems like Do You Hear the People Sing and One Day More, again from Les Mis.

We were transported deeper into West End world as the second half dawned with material including He Lives in You from Lion King II and Let it Go from Frozen.

But of course he wouldn’t let it go yet and as it went dark outside he continued to light up the place for ages longer with a Queen medley featuring a rocking Radio Gaga and We Are the Champions, which touched off a kind of madness in the dancing, arm-waving and chanting-along crowd.

Grease is the Word was the prelude to a collection of more hits from Tommy (Pinball Wizard) and the Jersey Boys during which he sang You’re Too Good to Be True.

And for all of us who were privileged to see this show, it was.

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Brilliant car but shame about thee speedo



Toyota Yaris Cross GR Sport drive by Steve Rogers

I’m in a Steve sounds off mood. Nothing too serious, but need to get it off my chest.

It concerns something as simple as a speedometer. Today’s cars are generally well equipped to give warnings about speed limits so why was I so anxious about stepping over the mark in the Yaris Cross?

The display is standard numbers but set out in European style 20mph increments, so just a mark for 30mph. Then there is the computer generated speedo pointer which is too thick for complete accuracy.

Yaris has traffic sign recognition so lights up the speed limit in a small circle but is positioned just below the 40mph mark which could be tricky in a 30 limit because your eye is drawn to it. Now all this would not matter if there was a digital speed readout as well. Most cars have one and I am pretty certain Toyota has it on the similar dial in the Corolla.

There, I’ve said my piece, now let’s get down to the real business and the Yaris brand which is growing and growing. Cross is the five-door mini SUV model, taller and longer than the  hatchback by 240mm (nearly 10 inches if you prefer) and has been joined by the GR Sport, but not to be confused with the Yaris GR which is the hottest hatchback on the planet bar none.

It is a bit of a show car with a redesigned sporty looking grille, 18in machine finished 10 spoke alloys, rear diffuser, sports seats with GR logos and drilled aluminium pedals. GR stands for Gazoo Racing, the performance arm of Toyota, and they have lowered and tweaked he suspension so slightly sharper handling, but a firmer less comfortable ride than standard Yaris Cross.

As with all Toyotas you get an efficient hybrid supported engine, in this case the three-cylinder 1.5 litre petrol. Although it carries the GR badge it does not gain any extra horse power so performance is nothing special but the sportier ride can give a misguided notion that you are zipping along.

The engine is all about efficiency and there can be no argument there. It drops in and out of electric mode and in town driving will manage a mile or so on pure electric power. Official fuel consumption is in the high fifties but I had no trouble bettering that and never dropped below 62mpg in a week’s driving.

This is one engine fits all while rivals like Ford Puma, Volkswagen T-Cross and Skoda Kamiq, offer a choice. Some would say that is a drawback but I don’t think a car of this nature needs more than one engine size.

At 4180mm long Yaris Cross is a small car but you would not think so once inside. With a higher roofline than the hatchback headroom is good and there is ample legroom in the back with a seat wide enough to fit three not too overweight adults.

Even more impressive is boot space and with the excellent 40-20-40 seat back arrangement there is room for skis or surfboard through the middle. It has two levels with a flat loading area, or the boards can be lifted to increase space. A useful extra is a removable rubber floor mat and rubber protectors for the seat backs.

Apart from the sports seats and logos GR Sport gets heated front seats and powered lumber support otherwise it is standard Yaris Cross. Trim quality is okay but there is far too much hard plastic along the dashboard and door cards. Glad to see heating controls are separate from the touchscreen which has been given a much needed upgrade so better graphics and  faster response.

Without any increase in performance I would walk past GR Sport and look at a higher grade Cross if only to have a more comfortable ride. In spite of my hiatus with the speedometer this still makes it into my top three small SUVs, in fact it is a toss up between Ford Puma, which is a bit nicer to drive, or Yaris Cross which is a brilliant compelling all round package.

Fast facts

Yaris Cross GR Sport

£29,480 (starts £23,919)

1.5 litre petrol; 114bhp

0-62mph 11.2secs; 106mph

57.6mpg combined

112g/km. 1st road tax £210

Insurance group 12

Boot: 397-1097

 

Church bells will ring out to mark start of Eisteddfod

Bell-ringers at St Collen's Church are aiming to ring a quarter peal tomorrow (Wednesday) morning to celebrate the start of the 2023 Llangollen Eisteddfod.

It will take place at 11.30am, just before the song and dance performances in Centenary Square.