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Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Ruby wedding party raises £1,000 for air ambulance
Llangollen's town crier has something to shout about after he raised £1,000 for the Wales Air Ambulance at his 40th wedding anniversary party.
Austin “Chem” and Jane Cheminais (pictured left) held their ruby celebration for relatives and friends in the Town Hall.
The party was a great success with bar profits and a collection raising £1,000 for the air ambulance.
Chem said: "Jane and I would like to thank everyone for their generosity and for making our evening really special."
* The couple pictured below in 1975, the year they were married.
Monday, August 17, 2015
New school wins AM’s praise
Assembly Member Ken Skates has paid tribute to a head teacher and her staff after a new school’s first Estyn report was published.
Welsh-medium Ysgol Bro Dyfrdwy in Cynwyd, near Corwen, was established in 2013 following the merger of Ysgol Maes Hyfryd and Ysgol Llandrillo.
Estyn inspectors visited the school – based at the old Maes Hyfryd site – in June and published their report this week, rating both current performance and prospects for improvement as ‘good’.
Mr Skates, Labour AM for Clwyd South, (pictured left) praised the work done by head teacher Eirian Owain, who was previously head at Maes Hyfryd, and her team.
He said: “This is an extremely encouraging first report, which highlights a high standard of teaching and the school’s excellent leadership and management over the past two and a half years. It’s also very pleasing to see the inspectors note the care and support the children receive every day.
“Mrs Owain and her staff have overseen great changes and have still managed to ensure the children receive a high quality education. I’m sure the parents will be delighted with this.”
The Estyn report notes that:
* Nearly all pupils make good progress in their learning and produce work of a good standard
* The vast majority concentrate well in lessons and show interest and pride in their work
* Most pupils use language effectively and confidently
* The children’s behaviour is praiseworthy and they are extremely respectful
* Teachers lead effective and interesting lessons that motivate pupils to learn
* The school provides thoroughly for pupils who have additional learning needs
Inspectors also said ‘there is a very strong feeling of teamwork among the staff’ and that ‘members of the governing body have a strong commitment to their responsibilities and contribute consistently to setting a strategic direction for the life and work of the school’.
Mr Skates added: “It’s brilliant to see so many key strengths identified by the inspectors and the future looks bright for Ysgol Bro Dyfrdwy and the children of Cynwyd. It’s a fantastic report.”
Welsh-medium Ysgol Bro Dyfrdwy in Cynwyd, near Corwen, was established in 2013 following the merger of Ysgol Maes Hyfryd and Ysgol Llandrillo.
Estyn inspectors visited the school – based at the old Maes Hyfryd site – in June and published their report this week, rating both current performance and prospects for improvement as ‘good’.
Mr Skates, Labour AM for Clwyd South, (pictured left) praised the work done by head teacher Eirian Owain, who was previously head at Maes Hyfryd, and her team.
He said: “This is an extremely encouraging first report, which highlights a high standard of teaching and the school’s excellent leadership and management over the past two and a half years. It’s also very pleasing to see the inspectors note the care and support the children receive every day.
“Mrs Owain and her staff have overseen great changes and have still managed to ensure the children receive a high quality education. I’m sure the parents will be delighted with this.”
The Estyn report notes that:
* Nearly all pupils make good progress in their learning and produce work of a good standard
* The vast majority concentrate well in lessons and show interest and pride in their work
* Most pupils use language effectively and confidently
* The children’s behaviour is praiseworthy and they are extremely respectful
* Teachers lead effective and interesting lessons that motivate pupils to learn
* The school provides thoroughly for pupils who have additional learning needs
Inspectors also said ‘there is a very strong feeling of teamwork among the staff’ and that ‘members of the governing body have a strong commitment to their responsibilities and contribute consistently to setting a strategic direction for the life and work of the school’.
Mr Skates added: “It’s brilliant to see so many key strengths identified by the inspectors and the future looks bright for Ysgol Bro Dyfrdwy and the children of Cynwyd. It’s a fantastic report.”
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Cycling vicar raises £3,500 for chosen charity
* The Rev Andrew Sully at the signpost at John O'Groats with his godson Ioan Hegarty and Ioan's mother, Liza Tercero, who also took part in the cycling marathon. |
Over the past few years the Rev Andrew Sully of St Collen’s Church has done a number of fundraising rides for good causes.
His latest challenge was the gruelling
10-day LEJOG marathon from Land’s End to John O’Groats in aid of Action Duchenne, a
charity which supports parents of sons with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy as well
as lobbying for greater investment in research to find a genetic cure for the
condition usually only affecting males.
Mr Sully took on the tough test
alongside 18 other cyclist from around the country and together they raised a
total of £80,000 – his share of which is £3,500 and possibly £4,000.
He said: “Starting at a very
wet and blustery Land's End on Sunday July 26, the route took us west through
Cornwall and Devon then north through Somerset, Wiltshire, Avon and
Bristol, Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Shropshire and Cheshire.
“On the fourth day we arrived
in Wigan before continuing north through Lancaster, Carlisle and Penrith and
then further north to Gretna Green and south Lanarkshire.
“After bypassing Glasgow, we
continued up Loch Lomond, Glen Coe, Fort Augustus, Loch Ness, Inverness, then
north into the highlands before reaching Thurso and John O'Groats on Tuesday August
4.”
Mr Sully added: “It was a real
challenge with the first four days particularly long ones when we arrived at
journey's end as late as 9.30, 8.30 and 7.45pm.
“Thereafter we learned not to
'faff about' so much at stops along the way and became more disciplined as the
miles slipped away and we learned to get 50 miles in before lunch so that we
had broken the back of the cycling in the morning and early afternoon.
“It was encouraging to learn of
the total raised at the start , £70 000, which was increased every day by £1,000,
so that by the end we had raised over £80 000.
“My own personal fundraising
currently stands at £3,500.
“I'm hoping to be able to raise
£4,000 before the closing date for sponsorship money at the end of September.”
* Mr Sully’s Justgiving charity
page is: www.justgiving/andrew-sully1
Saturday, August 15, 2015
New Dot Cinema attracts another big audience
* Cinema-goers queue for popcorn in the interval.
Llangollen's new community cinema attracted another full house for its second film-show staged at the Town Hall last night (Friday).
New Dot Cinema was set up earlier this year by a group of film buff friends to re-create the fun of the town's old Dorothy Cinema in Castle Street which screened its final movie back in 1963 before bringing down the final curtain.
New Dot - the name was chosen in homage to the original flicks - had its smash-hit debut performance with French-made 2011 Oscar-winner The Artist last month.
And it stayed with the Gallic influence to put on its latest offering, PlayTime, by French comedy master Jacques Tati and dating from 1967.
It's an enchanting piece of cinema in which Monsieur Hulot becomes increasingly perplexed by the intimidating complexity of a gadget-filled Paris.
Few who know nothing about French cinema of that era will have ever seen anything quite like it before.
* Low lighting helps create the right atmosphere. |
But who can ever imagine being able to sit at a device which brings you the latest news, weather, TV guide and share prices at the touch of button without ever having to leave the comfort of your kitchen?
New Dot not only shows classic films but also strives to bring a touch of the 40/50s bijou cinema experience to Llan.
On top of the usual dim lights, sofas, popcorn and delicious cakes on offer there was also a definite French flavour to last night's session, with wine and cheese from the country being sold at the bar and a number of cinema-goers dressing in chic French 60s style.
Next month, on Friday September 11, sees New Dot bringing to the Town Hall's silver screen another French offering, Wonderland Special: The Science of Sleep, a 2006 Michel Gondry film celebrating the 150th anniversary of the publication of Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
October 9's screening will be a Halloween special entitled Carnival of Souls, from the USA and dating from 1962.
November 13 sees Northern Soul, a 2015 British movie telling the sweat-soaked story of a youth culture said to have changed a generation.
Tickets for New Dot - £8 and £5 concessions - are available on the door on the night or from Bailey's Deli and Lottie's Bespoke Vintage in the town or online at newdotcinema.org
Friday, August 14, 2015
More details of rope swing fall drama
The Daily Post website has a story this afternoon giving more details about how quick-thinking canoeists rescued a woman who had suffered a fall from a rope swing near the Horseshoe Falls.
For the full story see: http://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/llangollen-canoe-rescue-rope-swing--9856211
Railway's gala weekend marks three big dates
* Llangollen's own ex-GWR Large Prairie 2-6-2T No.5199
will be a star of the Along Branch Lines gala weekend.
This year sees three major anniversaries for the Llangollen Railway.
It's now been 150 years since the line between Llangollen and Corwen officially opened, 50 years since it closed and 40 years since the preservation society was first formed.
The heritage railway’s Along Branch Lines weekend not only aims to celebrate these major milestones, but also to stir up memories of the way the region’s railways once looked by running a mixture of unusual trains, ranging from short pick-up goods trains to four and five coach passenger trains in authentic liveries.
The three-day weekend event, from September 11-13, is steam operated with an intensive timetable featuring a variety of different types of trains, including an ‘auto train’.
This is the train most often associated with Great Western branch line services and would usually consist of just one or two coaches worked in push-pull mode by a small steam engine.
Two special guest locomotives will be in attendance for the event, GWR Small Prairie' type 2-6-2T loco No.5542 visiting from the Gloucestershire & Warwickshire Railway and LMS Jinty type 0-6-0T loco No.47406 from the Great Central Railway at Loughborough.
These will join the home fleet, drawn from ex-GWR Large Prairie 2-6-2T No.5199, GWR Heavy Freight 2-8-0 No.3802 and GWR Pannier Tank No.6430.
Another feature will be the recreation of a pick-up goods train, which were regular sights on many lines up until the 1960s.
These ambled along from station to station, collecting and delivering a wide variety of goods wagons as they went.
A new feature for the Along Branch Lines gala will be the opening of a permanent line-side viewing area near to Berwyn Tunnel.
A temporary area enabling visitors and photographers to experience the sight of steam locomotives working hard up the 1 in 80 Berwyn Bank proved popular during the line's Steel, Steam & Stars IV gala earlier in the year.
Tickets are now on sale through the Llangollen Railway's website at discounted rates.
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