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Tuesday, July 14, 2015

First woman bishop preaches at St Collen's


* The eisteddfod service at St Collen's last Sunday. 

In her sermon at St Collen’s annual eisteddfod service last Sunday, the Church of England’s first woman bishop drew a comparison between Christian worship and singing in a choir.

Llangollen’s parish church was almost full to hear the Rt Rev Libby Lane, Bishop of Stockport, (pictured below) as guest preacher.  
She explained that it was a long time since she had sung regularly in a choir but, growing up, she sang with her mother in the local choral society and at school in a chamber choir, and later on in the chapel choirs at university and theological college.
“And while my singing may not be notable, I learnt extraordinarily important values from being part of a choir,” she said.
“I learnt about mutuality. Choirs get better when they learn to be mutually dependent.

“Those with the strongest voices are not always the best choir member.
“By definition it is not possible to be a choir on your own. The capacity to listen, and take account of one another, is key to effective choral singing, I remember.

“There is something extraordinarily valuable is learning both to take responsibility for your own contribution, while simultaneously accepting responsibility for the actions of others.
“It is a lesson in Christlikeness, in living out the gospel.”

The Bishop added: “In love and obedience to God in Christ we each have responsibility for our own engagement and participation, and we all have responsibility for the engagement and participation of one another.
“Like the voices that make up a choir, what we bring will be particular to us but essential to the whole.”

The general theme of the service was “For those in peril on the sea” and all donations from the congregation went to the Mission for Seafarers. 

MP supports keeping Hunting Act unchanged

Clwyd South MP Susan Elan Jones has spoken in support of keeping the existing Hunting Act unchanged.

MPs will be voting on whether to amend the Act this Wednesday.

Susan Elan Jones MP (pictured left) said: "The message from rural Clwyd South is loud and clear - people don't want to see the bad old days of fox hunting returning. The change proposed would do exactly that by the back door.

"All of us who come from the countryside know full well that the population of foxes has to be controlled. But most of us also think that a so-called 'sport' where foxes are chased and ripped up by hounds is cruel and does not belong in the 21st century.

"I'd like to see a huge majority of MPs, including those Plaid and Tory MPs who have previously been pro-fox hunting, vote against changing the Hunting Act on Wednesday."

Monday, July 13, 2015

Hopes of new start for Dobson & Crowther

Llanblogger exclusive


* The Dobson & Crowther factory at Cilmedw.

THE new owners of a Llangollen printworks which recently went into administration say they are hoping to re-start production there “very soon” taking back many of its redundant staff.

Dobson & Crowther, which earlier this year moved into a new factory at Cilmedw,  called in administrators last month after what was described as a “challenging 18 months” for the business and made 55 of the 79-strong workforce redundant.
Llanblogger revealed on Saturday that Telford-based company, Mail Solutions Group, had bought the assets  of the company from administration.

Now, Mail Solutions’ group finance director Phil Reid has given llanblogger more information about what it has planned for Dobson & Crowther.
And his statement contains two pieces of good news for the area – that envelope manufacture could soon be resumed and that members of the previous workforce manning the machines.  

Mr Reid said: “We are still formulating plans for the building, and can’t give a definitive response.
“Suffice to say that the previous Dobson & Crowther staff had a fantastic reputation in the marketplace in relation to their manufacturing skill and customer service.

“We are therefore excited about the prospect of re-commencing envelope production activities at Llangollen.
“There are, however, several commercial hurdles to overcome.

“For instance, many of the staff made redundant by the administrator prior to our involvement with the Llangollen site may have found new jobs; suppliers, many of whom suffered bad debts when Dobson & Crowther entered administration, may be unwilling to support a new venture at the site and customers may have moved their trade elsewhere due to the uncertainty caused by the administration process.”
Mr Reid added: “Notwithstanding these issues, we are hopeful that we will indeed re-commence production at Llangollen, and create employment for many of the workers who have lost their livelihoods.

“So far, staff, customers and suppliers have been amazingly supportive, and Mail Solutions Group is looking forward to the possibility of re-starting the machines at Llangollen very soon for the benefit of all stakeholders.”
Llangollen county councillor Stuart Davies said: “I welcome the news from Mail Solutions and will do everything in my power to assist in any way I can to help make this happen.

“My thoughts go out to the workforce in these difficult times and I hope as many as want to can get employment again in the magnificent new factory.
"My heartfelt thanks go out to the company and I wish them well in the new venture."

* Clwyd South AM Ken Skates held extended discussions with administrators Baker Tilly after the redundancies were announced, and secured assurances that details of the workers laid off would be passed on to any buyer.
 
Mr Skates said: “I am delighted by this very positive news and hugely relieved that the hard-working employees made redundant could soon find new opportunities at the site.
 
"I’m pleased to have been able to help and look forward to the presses rolling again soon.”



* At first glance it might be interpreted that Dobson & Crowther could be reopening under new management and that jobs will be saved, all just in the nick of time:  See http://llanblogger.blogspot.co.uk/2015/07/deal-done-for-dobson-crowthers-assets.html, the latest headline is Deal done for Dobson & Crowther's assets.

It looked like standard liquidation by Administrators, asset-stripping in order to pay off as many pence in the pound to creditors as possible, but Keep Llangollen Special’s research reveals a much closer symbiosis between Dobson & Crowther and Mail Solutions Group’s operations than it appears at first glance.
In fact, the Telford company’s product range would be increased, introducing more stability and the chance to expand.
Can we actually believe it this time after all the propaganda, broken promises and bogus claims that the fundamental business is “sound”? It’s easy to by cynical, but at least one victim of the job losses had been interviewed by telephone by the new company.
KLS will, as always, keep a watch and ensure everyone’s kept informed. Meanwhile, the moral of this and other recent stories is to ram it home to our elected representatives that they put themselves forward to represent us, not themselves.
Our hopes and wishes are, as always, with the former and prospective employees, and KLS would welcome the opportunity to meet with Phil Reid of Mail Solutions Group to foster good community relations with the company from the very outset. 
Martin Crumpton
 
Chair ΞKeep Llangollen SpecialΞ
 
 

Millie snaps up prestigious photo award

 
* Millie with her camera at  the Eisteddfod.
 
A teenage volunteer at the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod has won a prestigious national photography competition run by the Sunday Times.
 
Millie Adams Davies, from Llangollen, had her winning photograph on display at the Eisteddfod where she has been a volunteer since the age of 11.
 
The 19-year-old won the Sunday Times competition for amateur photographers with an image entitled Ladies Who Lunch, taken in La Paz while she was travelling through South America last year and has already been printed in the newspaper.
 
It is quite a coup for Millie, who was brought up with the Eisteddfod - her parents are season ticket-holders and her dad, retired local GP Dr Rhys Davies, is currently vice-chairman of the event.
 
As soon as she was old enough to get involved herself, Millie jumped at the chance to join the 800 volunteers who make sure the musical extravaganza runs smoothly every year.
 
She said: “I’ve been to the Eisteddfod every year of my life. It’s on our doorstep and Mum and Dad always took me so as soon as I was 11 I wanted to join in.
 
 
 * Millie's prize-winning picture of Bolivian women sitting
on the steps of the San Francisco Cathedral.
 
“I was an usher for my first year and then joined the floral committee who I’ve been helping ever since.”
 
In the intervening years Millie left Ysgol Y Gwernant, completed her secondary schooling at Moreton Hall, travelled extensively during a gap year and started studying medicine at Cardiff University.
 
Millie ended up spending much of last year in South America. She started by visiting her brother who was living in Chile at the time and went on to spend seven months in the region.
 
She said: “I stayed with my brother for Christmas and then I went on to Santiago to do a Spanish course for a month.
 
“After that I joined a conservation project in Peru and basically spent nearly three months chasing butterflies and catching lizards in a remote part of the rainforest you could only get to by boat.
 
“It was an amazing experience and completely different. After that I did a bit more travelling through Bolivia, Argentina and back to Chile.”
 
In the course of her adventures Millie took thousands of photographs and even had one of them printed in the Sunday Times recently.
 
She said: “I was reading the travel section, as I always do, and spotted this photographic competition. I had taken so many pictures, but my favourite was one of a group of Bolivian women sitting on the steps of the San Francisco Cathedral in La Paz so I just thought I’d send it in.
 
“I got an email at the end of the week saying I was that week’s winner and I’d get £250 vouchers to spend on photographic equipment.”
 
This comes as good news for Millie as her trusty camera took quite a beating on her travels as she went sandboarding, enjoyed mud fights, dropped it on the Machu Picchu trail and repeatedly covered it in sand.
 
Now able to buy a new one, Millie is happily planning this summer’s travels through Europe, once she has finished her ninth year as stalwart of the International Eisteddfod.
 
Once again she helped organise the floral stage arrangements that the festival is famous for as well as selling posies and baskets of flowers.
 
Millie said: “I really enjoy it. I take time out to do it every year and you always meet up with the same people again which is lovely.
 
“It’s a really good time to practice my Welsh too as I used to be fluent when I was little and then it dropped off a bit.”
 
Over her years working behind the scenes at North Wales’s premier music event, Millie has also bumped into all sorts of celebrities.
 
She said: “A lot of people like to come to the floral tent so you end up having all sorts of random chats with quite famous people like Terry Waite and people from the television.
 
“I once had to go on stage to present a bouquet to Sir Willard White which was really cool, and I got to buy a new dress too!”
 
Despite her passion for music, Millie has followed her parents’ career paths and just completed her first year as a medical student in Cardiff.
 
She said: “Mum and Dad are both medical professionals so I started out saying I wanted to do anything but that – be an astronaut even, anything just to be different.
 
“But after a while I had to give in and admit it was all I was interested in. I’d quite like to work in surgery and I’m definitely going to spend some time abroad with Medecins Sans Frontieres as I think they’re a great charity.”
 
Gethin Davies, Chairman of the Eisteddfod, said: “We’re really grateful to Millie and all the rest of our volunteers – the event just wouldn’t work without them.
 
“It’s wonderful that she has won this competition too so she obviously has a range of talents, not least in the floral department where we always have an incredible display.”

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Ladies of Llan play showcased at Eisteddfod

 
 * Cast members of the new Ladies of Llangollen
play at the Eisteddfod.
 
VISITORS to Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod have been given a fascinating look at the lives of two of the town’s celebrities from the past.
 
Wrexham playwright Peter Read chose the festival to showcase his latest work, an hour-long drama telling the story of the famous Ladies of Llangollen.
 
Scenes from the production, which is due to have its open-air premiere at Plas Newydd, their former home in Llangollen, on Tuesday and Wednesday, July 21 and 22, were played out in the Denbighshire County Council tent at the festival at hourly intervals.
 
Peter Read said: “I’ve written the play especially for the performances at Plas Newydd later this month and we thought the Eisteddfod provided the ideal platform for giving members of the public a little taste of what it’s all about.
 
“Basically, it tells the story of the ladies, Sarah Ponsonby and her friend Eleanor Butler, two members of the Irish nobility who came over to Britain in the late 18th century to find their own rural retreat.
 
“They eventually settled at Plas Newydd which became a famous meeting place for their many friends and was once visited by the Duke of Wellington as a young man.
 
“There are eight members in the cast and after its performances in Llangollen we hope to take it on tour around Wales and possibly also to Ireland where the ladies came from.” 

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Success is on the cards for Llan shop boss


* Sarah Meade with her designs for Llangollen and Oswestry.

Local businesswoman Sarah Meade, proprietor of Honey Pots in Oswestry and Llangollen, is taking the chance to showcase her artistic skills by designing some postcards with local themes.

“As we have a shop in both towns, I thought it would be a nice idea to try and promote each town with postcards highlighting something that each town is known for," she said.

" I was surprised recently when I went to buy a postcard to send to a friend and found that none really exist for Oswestry.”

As a result, Sarah decided to design a postcard for Oswestry and then, because she has a shop in Llangollen as well, thought she would do something similar for Llangollen.

She now has three designs, one for Oswestry telling the story of Oswald’s tree and two for Llangollen one highlighting the musical history of the town based on the classical film “The Sounds of Music” and one highlighting the International Eisteddfod for which the town is globally recognised.

“My initial plan was to sell the postcards in my own shops but a number of local businesses have already shown an interest and I was very excited when the Eisteddfod also expressed an interest in stocking them, so that they can be sold at the event this week.”

Sarah also plans to put the designs on other products including mugs and tea towels as well as selling limited edition prints all of which (including the postcards) will be available in the Oswestry and Llangollen shops as well as other outlets that have expressed an interest.

The originals will be displayed in the shops shortly and the postcards and posters can also be viewed on the shops website www.honey-pots.com

Deal done for Dobson & Crowther's assets


* The assets of Dobson & Crowther have been bought by a Telford-based firm. 

A Shropshire-based company has confirmed that it has bought the assets of Dobson & Crowther printworks from the administrators.
Rumours about a possible deal had been circulating about the fate of the firm which moved into a purpose-built factory at Cilmedw earlier this year.

Llanblogger contacted the company mentioned in connection with a deal, Mail Solutions Group which has its head office in Telford, to confirm whether this was the case.
And we have now received an email from one of its directors, Phil Reid, which said: “I can confirm that our company, Mail Solutions Group, has indeed purchased the assets of Dobson & Crowther from that company's administrators.”

Llanblogger is now trying to gain further information about the purchase and what it is likely to mean for the Dobson & Crowther factory and its remaining workforce.
Dobson & Crowther went into administration in early June with 55 of its 79-strong workforce being made redundant.

Llangollen county councillor, Stuart Davies, said: “I heard a few days ago that there might be some good news about the future of the company.

"Now it seems that events are still unfolding and I am still concerned about the future of the workforce and the factory building.

"I am awaiting a definite update."

According to its company website, Mail Solutions Group was established in March 2000 and has evolved into a major independent manufacturer of envelopes and print in the UK and India.
From its headquarters in Telford, Mail Solutions says it offers a broad range of value-added solutions for all your envelope and print requirements, from stock envelopes and bespoke envelopes to business forms and tickets.

The website says: “The foundations of our success is the company's ongoing commitment to providing a quality product and service to each customer, which is reflected through our high levels of business retention and continued client growth.”

Comprising of five subsidiaries across two divisions, the group has over 300 highly trained employees and generates a combined turnover approaching £40million per year.