Latest events and comments from the town of Llangollen in Denbighshire, North Wales, UK. EMAIL: llanblogger@gmail.com
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Sunday, March 3, 2013
Operatic looking for show sponsors
Llangollen Operatic is looking for sponsors for their forthcoming production of Anything Goes by Cole Porter, which will be staged from April 16-20 in Llangollen Town Hall.
Society spokesperson Louisa Jones said: For just £100, we are offering local companies and individuals the opportunity to sponsor one of our five performances.
"In return for this, sponsors will receive tickets for front row balcony seats for four people, a drink each from the bar, programmes, prominent display of your/your company's name and the chance to display and distribute your marketing material during the evening.
"We believe this is a very good deal and in addition to getting an evening of great entertainment you will be making a valued contribution towards the cost of putting on what is guaranteed to be a fantastic show.
"If you consider a full price ticket is £9 this year, it's particularly good value for money."
* For more information, contact: louisa.jones@live.com, or tel: 07989 985644.
Twenty Club aims for smash hit with Glass Menagerie
* Anna Turner, who plays Laura Wingfield.
Llangollen’s Twenty Club’s will present the American classic, The Glass Menagerie, on three nights next week (Thursday, Friday and Saturday, March 7, 8 and 9) in the Town Hall.
This play is seen as the most touching, tender and painful of Tennessee Williams’ works and is the gripping portrayal of a post-depression family in crisis.
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Buy Local Day in store for next Friday
Local shops can supply you with smaller, useable quantities of food at the right price – unlike the large packs supermarkets try to persuade you to buy.
That is one of the key
messages from community group Keep Llangollen Special (KLS) as it organises its
next Buy Local Day.
Timed for next Friday, March
8– usefully just a couple of days before Mothering Sunday – this will see a number of businesses
in Llangollen offering special deals to savvy local shoppers.
KLS chair Mike Edwards (pictured left) said: “We are distributing printed colour flyers to residents in the next few days - Maesmawr is already done - and also getting a version of the new Buy Local poster to the shops around town.
“We are encouraging shopkeepers to make a special offer to local residents on the day and KLS are co-operating with the Slow Food initiative supported by the Town Council.”
KLS chair Mike Edwards (pictured left) said: “We are distributing printed colour flyers to residents in the next few days - Maesmawr is already done - and also getting a version of the new Buy Local poster to the shops around town.
“We are encouraging shopkeepers to make a special offer to local residents on the day and KLS are co-operating with the Slow Food initiative supported by the Town Council.”
Mike added: “We would strongly recommend residents to buy
fresh quality local food and not travel outside Llangollen and support the
local economy and supply chain.
“KLS
has found from a survey carried out that local produce is actually very
competitively priced and its possible to buy quantities you actually need not
large packages which supermarkets encourage you to buy with resultant high
levels of wasted food.
“So
our strong message to Llangollen people is Buy Local next Friday.”
River's future discussed at meeting
* The River Dee in Llangollen.
The future of the River Dee over the next 20-30 years was discussed at a meeting in Llangollen’s Wild Pheasant Hotel on Thursday.
Four bodies – the Environment Agency, Environment Agency
Wales, Natural England and the Countryside Council for Wales – jointly
commissioned specialist contractors Jacobs to carry out a major ecological
study taking in over 50 kilometres of the Dee, along with some of its
tributaries such as the River Ceiriog, from Bala to Chester Weir.
The study was based on information from previous surveys and
also included the results of new inspections which took place late last year.
The aim was to record the physical conditions of the
rivers and habitats along them to give
an understanding of their physical processes and identify potential restoration
actions.
Data from the survey was used to compile technical and
management reports and it was these that were highlighted at a consultation
workshop for a range of interested individuals and groups at the Wild Pheasant
by members of the survey team.
The reports reveal that in places the physical form of the
rivers have been altered by weirs, flood embankments, bank protection and
straightening - all of which can reduce habitat quality, quantity and variety
and affect the movement of fish, water and sediment.
No specific restoration actions were put forward, although a
range of options was outlined by Dr Andrew Brookes (pictured right) from Jacobs.
He explained that the waterways put under the microscope
included two separate Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs), one in
Wales and one downstream in England, which provided habitats for species such
as Atlantic salmon, lamprey, otter and club-tailed dragonfly.
He said that when it came to the physical condition of the
rivers there was “a lot of room for improvement” with only 28 per cent of
surface waters in the Dee catchment area being classified as ‘good’ or ‘high’
ecological standard and the majority of bodies of water having been heavily
modified over the years.
Dr Brookes added: “There are challenges and not a lot of
money available.”
But he stressed: “There are sources of funding and we are
talking about a long-term strategy with a time frame of 20 to 30 years.”
He then answered a number of technical points put to him by
members of the audience.
Consultations on the reports will continue amongst
interested parties, including landowners, fishing clubs, river and wildlife
trusts.
Comments made by them will then be considered and amendments
made to the final restoration plan before it is published at the end of
March.
Friday, March 1, 2013
New breast cancer scan could save lives says AM
The Welsh Government is being urged to adopt a new breast cancer scan that could save dozens of lives according to health experts.
Llyr Gruffydd, Plaid Cymru’s regional AM for North Wales (pictured right being shown the screening process) made his plea during a debate he had organised on tackling breast cancer among women under 50 years of age.
He told the Assembly: “Breast Test Wales do a great job of screening women over 50 years of age, when the risk of cancer rises. There are also mammograms available for under 50s but it is not an effective form of screening.
“However, cancer specialists and the National Institute of Clinical Excellence have established that there is a group of younger women with genetic or family history that make them more pre-disposed to breast cancer.
“The best way, it is felt by experts, to deal with this small but specific group is to offer MRI screening. This has been NICE’s case for the past seven years and it’s about time the Welsh Government adopted this guideline.
“A thorough pilot has taken place in the North to establish that this kind of programme can work and it’s estimated that it would only cost about £500,000 a year to screen hundreds of identified at-risk women. These are hard economic times but it’s impossible to put a price on anyone’s life when it’s possible to deal with this so promptly.”
The campaign is being supported by MacMillan charity, Treasure Chest, a breast cancer support group based in Llandudno and senior clinicians including Dr Alexandra Murray, lead consultant Cancer Genetics Service Wales, Dr Kate Gower Thomas and Dr Andy Gash, of Ysbyty Gwynedd.
Llyr Gruffydd, Plaid Cymru’s regional AM for North Wales (pictured right being shown the screening process) made his plea during a debate he had organised on tackling breast cancer among women under 50 years of age.
He told the Assembly: “Breast Test Wales do a great job of screening women over 50 years of age, when the risk of cancer rises. There are also mammograms available for under 50s but it is not an effective form of screening.
“However, cancer specialists and the National Institute of Clinical Excellence have established that there is a group of younger women with genetic or family history that make them more pre-disposed to breast cancer.
“The best way, it is felt by experts, to deal with this small but specific group is to offer MRI screening. This has been NICE’s case for the past seven years and it’s about time the Welsh Government adopted this guideline.
“A thorough pilot has taken place in the North to establish that this kind of programme can work and it’s estimated that it would only cost about £500,000 a year to screen hundreds of identified at-risk women. These are hard economic times but it’s impossible to put a price on anyone’s life when it’s possible to deal with this so promptly.”
The campaign is being supported by MacMillan charity, Treasure Chest, a breast cancer support group based in Llandudno and senior clinicians including Dr Alexandra Murray, lead consultant Cancer Genetics Service Wales, Dr Kate Gower Thomas and Dr Andy Gash, of Ysbyty Gwynedd.
Dr Murray said: “I believe that MRI screening should be available for young women at high risk of developing breast cancer, as one of a range of options for managing their risk.
“At the moment these women have to choose between mammography, which is less effective in young women with a genetic risk, and bilateral risk-reducing mastectomies. MRI screening has been shown to be effective in this group and it offers them a realistic alternative to surgery.
“Not every young woman with a high genetic risk will want MRI screening but it should be available for those that do.”
Anybody wishing to join Llyr Gruffydd’s campaign can contact him onllyr.gruffydd@wales.gov.uk or sign the petitionhttp://bit.ly/UQQCiF
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Watchdog given more time to consider health changes
The BBC North East Wales website is reporting this afternoon that the patient watchdog for north Wales has been given more time to discuss NHS
reshuffle plans with Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, which include the closure of Llangollen Cottage Hospital.
See the full story at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-21617162
See the full story at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-21617162
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