Latest events and comments from the town of Llangollen in Denbighshire, North Wales, UK. EMAIL: llanblogger@gmail.com
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Monday, January 28, 2019
Composting workshop planned at Plas Newydd
A series of composting workshops are to be held across North Wales, including Llangollen, next month.
The workshops have been arranged by Friends of the Earth Cymru in conjunction with the Welsh Government and other organisations.
The local one will be at Plas Newydd on Sunday February 10, from 11.30am-3.30pm.
Other workshops are planned for Canolfan Ni in Corwen on February 27, from 11.30am-3.30pm, and at Prestatyn Men's Shed, from 10am-2.30pm.
* To book any of the workshops, contact Mair Davies on 07969 891683, or email: cerimair@gmail.com
Homes application for Tyn-Y-Wern site
A planning application has been
submitted to the county council for the demolition of the former Tyn-Y-Wern
Hotel on Maesmawr Road, Llangollen and the erection of 14 dwellings.
The plan, by Knights Construction Ltd,
was validated last week and is due for consideration by the council.
A planning and design statement by consultants acting for the applicants says: “The
proposed development would not materially alter the overall character of the
area as the scale and density of the development reflects the existing ribbon
style settlement pattern.
“The application site is located within the 40mph speed
limit. The proposed access can achieve appropriate visibility in both
directions.”
A previous application, for 12 detached homes, was submitted
for the site in October 2017.
* For further details of the current application, reference number 03/2018/1141, go to: http://planning.denbighshire.gov.uk/Planning/lg/GFPlanningWelcome.page
Sunday, January 27, 2019
Chance for greatest dancers to be on top of the world
* Dawnswyr Bro Cefni competing at Llangollen.
|
A
new festival is to offer Wales’s dancing hopefuls a unique route into one
of the world’s greatest cultural events – and the chance to compete for a share
of £3,500.
In a
ground-breaking partnership the inaugural Festival of Discovery on Anglesey in
May will give 12 troupes of folk dancers the chance to perform on stage at this
year’s Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod.
It’s
the first time the Eisteddfod, founded in 1947, has allowed another event to
act as a qualifier for its prestigious competitions which have helped launch
the careers of world stars like Sir Bryn Terfel, Luciano Pavarotti and Placido
Domingo.
The Festival of Discovery Wales will take place at the Anglesey Showground over three days from Thursday, May 30, to Saturday, June 1, and is really three events rolled into one combining adventure, culture and the great outdoors.
It
chimes with the Visit Wales campaign which has designated 2019 as the Year of
Discovery and includes a packed programme of music, dance, food, nature, science,
adventure and evening entertainment as well as the chance to take up a glamping
offer of luxury tented accommodation on site.The Festival of Discovery Wales will take place at the Anglesey Showground over three days from Thursday, May 30, to Saturday, June 1, and is really three events rolled into one combining adventure, culture and the great outdoors.
Folk
dance will be an integral part of the cultural section with four competitions,
Traditional Folk-Dance Group, Choreographed/Stylized Folk-Dance Group,
Children’s Traditional Folk-Dance Group, and Cultural Showcase – with the top
three in each class invited to Llangollen in July - as well as dance workshops
to introduce dance to a new audience.
Wales’s
very own king of clog dancers, Huw Williams, winner of dancing crowns at
Wales’s National Eisteddfod and at Llangollen Eisteddfod, will be among those
running dance workshops at the festival and he will also be a judge for the
dance competitions.
Huw,
59, from Brynmawr, in Blaenau Gwent, has written songs for folk music legends
Fairport Convention, performed with the chart-topping Ralph McTell and manages
the acclaimed Welsh band Calan which includes his daughter, Bethan Rhiannon,
also a Welsh clog dance champion.
He
said: “Welsh folk music is enjoying a revival. It’s like watching a tornado
starting and I think the same could happen to Welsh dance because it is quite
unique.
“Welsh dance struggled to survive the religious revival of the 19th century with dance particularly affected and it used to be that no Welsh dance group could ever win a folk dance competition because none of their dances were traditional – they were all composed.
“Welsh dance struggled to survive the religious revival of the 19th century with dance particularly affected and it used to be that no Welsh dance group could ever win a folk dance competition because none of their dances were traditional – they were all composed.
“When
I started in the 1970s we had to develop our own dances, inventing new steps
and that is a unique aspect of Welsh folk dance.
“I
invented many of the steps and younger dancers have come along and taken dance
along and they are much better and more inventive than me and I’m looking
forward to seeing that on Anglesey.
“It
should be a fantastic festival and a chance to celebrate our Welsh culture and
language.”
Festival
of Discovery organiser Davina Carey-Evans, managing director of Beaumaris-based
Sbarc Event Management, said: “It’s very exciting to have a partnership with
Llangollen Eisteddfod and to have Huw Williams involved.
“He is
a real legend of Welsh dance and this is a real opportunity to showcase dance
as an important and vibrant element of Welsh culture and the competitions give
a chance for dancers from across Wales to earn a place at the Eisteddfod and
perhaps feature on the stage on Saturday night competing for the Dance
Champions of the World title.”
That’s
something the Eisteddfod’s Acting Musical Director Edward-Rhys Harry is excited
about and he said: “This partnership with the Festival of Discovery is a first
for us and is about reaching out into the community and forging links with
other cultural events.
“Dance
is very important to us at Llangollen and we are very well represented from an
international point of view and we hope this will encourage a stronger entry
from within Wales, across all ages, no holds barred.
“We
have the Dance Champions of the World on stage on Saturday night at the
Eisteddfod and I hope to see not just representation from Wales but for them to
go all the way.”
* Entries
for the Festival of Discovery’s four dance categories, must be in by March 29,
and details of how to enter, as well as full information on the three-day
event, are on the website at https://www.festivalofdiscovery.wales/
This
year’s Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod takes places from July 1-7,
see website for further details, https://international-eisteddfod.co.uk/
Saturday, January 26, 2019
Rise in cost of policing is unveiled
* North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Arfon Jones.
A
police boss has unveiled plans for a 38p-a-week increase in the cost of
policing in North Wales – less than the price of a packet of chewing gum.
North
Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Arfon Jones says the 7.74 per cent rise is
needed to recruit 34 extra officers and six more staff to focus on tackling
emerging threats like serious and organised crime, child sexual exploitation,
cyber-crime, modern day slavery, domestic abuse and drugs gangs who prey on
children and young adults.
An
online survey carried out the commissioner showed that 51 per cent of the 1,877
council tax payers who took part were in favour of an increase of 37p or more –
with a third of them supporting a much higher increase of 50p and above a week.
Friday, January 25, 2019
Council seeks information on dumped caravan
The county
council wants to track down the person responsible for dumping a caravan in the
countryside just outside Llangollen.
It's on the
Green Lane /Three Trees track and has been there since last Friday night.
A spokesman for Denbighshire County
Council said: "We have been made aware of the incident and are in the
process of removing the caravan.
"Anyone with any information as to
who is responsible for dumping the caravan can contact the council's customer services
on 01824 706000."
Businesses served up top tips on customer service
* Representatives of Dee Valley businesses during the training session.
Leading businesses from in and around Llangollen have been given some top tips on meeting international customer service standards.
They took advantage of
an opportunity offered by the Llangollen & Dee Valley Good Grub Club to
participate in Welcome Host Gold Customer Service training.
The course was made possible by Cadwyn Clwyd who receive
funding through the Welsh Government Rural Communities - Rural Development
Programme 2014-2020, which is funded by the European Agricultural Fund for
Rural Development and the Welsh Government.
Businesses who sent their staff on the course included Tyn Dwr Hall,
Gales of Llangollen, ManorHaus, One Planet Adventure, Riverbanc, the Sun Trevor
and ProAdventure.
The course was a full day leading to a City & Guilds qualification
in customer service and covered how to resolve challenging situations to turn
complaints into a positive experience and how to building lasting relationships
that encourage repeat business and recommendations.
Showing the importance of
customer service, it covered how a £10 transaction can lead to over £50,000 of
follow-up business if handled well.
Pip Gale, owner and manager at Gales Wine Bar in Llangollen, said: “It
was a fantastic opportunity that gave a vocabulary to things we just 'do'.
"I
took a lot away from the course, including a new way to talk with my team about
putting our values into action.
"I look forward to seeing what my staff members
take away from it too."
Mathew Povey from Tyn Dwr Hall in Llangollen said: "The day
provided a very good programme which has enthused me with some new ideas
and methods which I will be able to put into action immediately.
"I’m looking forward to sharing these ideas
with the rest of the team at Tyn Dwr Hall.”
Robyn Lovelock, co-ordinator for Llangollen & Dee Valley Good Grub
Club, said: “I’m delighted the training has been received so well.
"With all the participating
businesses bringing decades of frontline customer service experience to the
training, there was a lot of pressure to make sure it offered new information
and new ways of engaging customers. T
"The strapline for our town is ‘Where Wales
Welcomes the World’, so this was a great opportunity for businesses to check
they are meeting world class standards. It will also be great groundwork for
businesses planning to take part in the Denbighshire Ambassador programme later
this year.”
Llangollen & Dee Valley Good Grub Club is a co-operative of
independent businesses from the retail, hospitality, farming and food sectors
in and around the Dee Valley.
It offers networking, training and
events that aim to increase the availability of food from the region, to provide
training and mentoring for local young people keen to work in the food and
drink sector and to improve the quality of the visitor experience to the Dee
Valley.
Information about the Denbighshire County Council Ambassador programme will
be available online, with online certification launching later in 2019.
* For further information see www.GoodGrubClub.wales, or contact
Robyn Lovelock, Good Grub Club co-ordinator, on 07799896108 or deevalley.goodgrubclub@gmail.com
Sleak Seat ST closes hatch on boxy old estates
* The Seat Leon ST ... FR.
* The Seat Leon ST's load area.
Seat
Leon ST road test by Steve Rogers
ESTATE
cars aren't meant to be fun...or are they?
The
days of rattley old boxes bought by people who needed to haul tea chests and
sideboards - think they were mainly antique dealers - have been confined to
history, in fact I can pinpoint the very year the estate car market was turned
on its head.
It
was 2000 and Alfa Romeo showed us the 156 Sportwagon, a car that was drop dead
gorgeous with its rising waistline, shallow windows and sloping roof, just like
a coupe. This was the start of a new breed and got rival car designers thinking
outside the box.
Mercedes-Benz
CLS, Honda Civic, Hyundai i40, are good recent examples, and even Volvo, the 'box'
king, has joined the sporty estate club, although now most are called Sport
Tourer, Sport Wagon or Sport Back. The emphasis on Sport tells the story.
Spanish
car maker Seat is relatively new to the club and although the Leon ST is not as
eye catching as the hatchback the sloping roofline gives it a bit of a racy
look.
As
part of the Volkswagen-Audi group the ST is cut from the same cloth as VW Golf
and Skoda Octavia both of which have slightly more carrying capacity, as does a
Peugeot 308 and Honda Civic, but we are talking small margins and Leon is a
convincing story with the tailgate open.
So
what do we need to look for in a good estate car? First up is a full width
opening, no light clusters poking in from the sides, low loading sill, minimal
intrusion from the wheel arches, and fold flat rear seats, not every car maker
achieves that.
Here
the back seats can be dropped by pulling levers in the side walls which is a
thoughtful touch and saves a walk to the rear door.
Leon
ST ticks all those boxes and the good sized boot does not cut into rear seat
legroom which is plentiful, even for taller folk. In fact this is a generous
five seat family car.
Where
does the fun come in? The clue is in the title - FR. We had a bit of fun with Leon's
full title - STTSIEVOFR - which looks like the jumble of letters from the TV
game show Countdown.
Embarrassingly
I could not tell my wife what FR stands for, she offered fast runner, very apt
in this case. A call to the press office revealed Formula Racing which is one
step away from Seat's ultimate hot shot, the Cupra models.
That
said there is plenty of fun and excitement to be had from the FR. The
suspension has been lowered a tad to sharpen handling and that works a treat.
Mrs Rogers immediately moaned about the hard ride but she doesn't get that
there has to be a compromise on comfort, and the ride is not that hard anyway.
So
we have a car built for thrills, but can a 1.5 litre engine provide the performance
back up? Too right it can. This is
Volkswagen's new high powered small petrol engine and combines performance, low
emissions and economy.
As
diesel continues to die a slow death VW has come up with a petrol engine that
gets close to achieving the same strong response at low revs as well as good
mid range pick up. It will never match a diesel on economy but this is clever
stuff with two of the four cylinders closing when cruising and that saves fuel.
I
averaged about 40mpg, well down on what the official figures predict, but I did
enjoy the performance so a little more care should push that to 45-46mpg.
Seat
can pick and choose from VW's parts bin so there are similarities with switches
and layout, and while it is all very orderly and precise it is a touch bland
although the FR benefits from shiny black and chrome dashboard highlights and
soft red penlight strips along the door panels.
What
do you get for your £24k? A lot of safety features, which are all the rage
these days, excellent LED headlights, an eight inch touch screen with
navigation, mobile phone integration for Apple CarPlay, Mirror Link and Google
Android, DAB radio and more.
Unfortunately
Seat's touchscreen does not have the quick function keys either side of the
screen, a sensible feature in the VW Golf, so you have to go into the system to
select a function. At least the heating controls are clearly displayed switches.
The
FR has front and rear parking sensors but for this money I would want a rear
camera and even heated front seats.
And
they could do with sorting out something that must irritate everyone. The two
USB ports are tucked out of site at the back of a cubby in the centre console so
trying to plug in a mobile phone charge lead is a real pain.
Apart
from that go and buy one, you'll like it.
Leon
ST EVO FR Sport
£24,125
1.5
litre TSI; 148bhp
0-62mph
8.2secs; 134mph
55.4mpg
combined
117g/km
1st year road tax £165
Insurance
group 20
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