The A5 Berwyn Road in #Llangollen will be closed in both directions as we deal with a collision. Motorists please avoid the area. Thank you for your cooperation.
Latest events and comments from the town of Llangollen in Denbighshire, North Wales, UK. EMAIL: llanblogger@gmail.com
Get in touch ...
Know of something happening in
Llangollen? Tweet
us on @llanblogger
E-mail your contributions to: llanblogger@gmail.com
We are on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/llanbloggercouk/139122552895186
Llangollen? Tweet
us on @llanblogger
E-mail your contributions to: llanblogger@gmail.com
We are on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/llanbloggercouk/139122552895186
Friday, May 3, 2019
VIP arrives for Tory conference
A llanblogger reader took this picture earlier today of what appears to be a VIP bound for the Conservative Party conference taking place at the Pavilion arriving in town over the bridge.
It's not clear whether this was a Cabinet Minister or Prime Minister Theresa May herself.
However, the reader said there was a high level of security as the car, escorted by police, drove into town.
MP urges people to see Polish exhibition
* Jonathan Gammond, Exhibitions Officer of Wrexham Museum, and Susan Elan Jones MP at the exhibition. |
Clwyd South MP Susan Elan Jones is urging local residents to visit the Penley Hospital: The Story of a
Polish Community in Wales exhibition at Wrexham Museum.
She said: “The exhibition
is unmissable,
and the artefacts and recordings are superb. Huge tributes should go to Wrexham Museum,
Wrexham Council and all the volunteers who made this wonderful exhibition
possible.
“The story begins in World War
Two when Polish camps were established in our country by British and American
service personnel.
"Polish
medics then ran hospitals that would care for our Polish allies and their families.
Subsequent Soviet annexation of Poland meant that few could return home.
"By 1956, the three North East
Wales Polish hospitals combined in Penley and over the next half a century,
more than 25,000 people were cared for at this excellent community hospital.
“Today, this amazing legacy
lives on in work of the Penley Rainbow Centre and the lives of many local
residents. The links between our area and Poland are really deep.”
* The exhibition runs at Wrexham Museum until June 22nd
2019. Admission is free. Wrexham
Museum is open Monday – Friday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday 11 a.m to 4 p.m.
Courtyard Café is open 10 a.m. to 4 .30 p.m.
Thursday, May 2, 2019
Incidents on both roads into Llan
Update from the Daily Post ...
https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/biker-flown-hospital-two-crashes-16217987
Llanblogger has just received the following message from a reader...
***URGENT***Anyone coming from Wrexham/Ruabon to Llangollen - the road is currently blocked around the bronze sculpture and towards the Health Centre. There was a cyclist and a car, there’s now an ambulance. Traffic backed up and I had to turn around and come back home again from my errand. Barrie Roberts has also been stuck. I’d use the A5 but could people keep us informed please?
FYI: A5 closed 10 mins ago heading towards llangollen from Corwen just before Berwyn station. Looks like motorcyclist down and air ambulance in attendance. Police asking motorists to turn around so not sure how long it will be closed for.
Tweets from North Wales Police ...
The A539 Llangollen Road in #Llangollen will be closed in both directions as we deal with a collision. Motorists please avoid the area. Thank you for your cooperation.
County to switch to green energy sources
Denbighshire County Council will switch to obtaining
all of its electricity from renewable sources.
As part of its commitment to reduce carbon emissions
under its Corporate Plan, the council will be using only certified
renewable electricity from October.
All schools, leisure centres, libraries, council
offices and depots will have their electricity provided by wind, solar, hydro
or biomass renewable energy sources.
Electricity consumption across the local authority is
8.54GWh – about the same amount of energy as produced by a large off-shore wind
turbine during the course of a year - and once the switch occurs the Council’s
carbon footprint from electricity consumption will be zero.
Tony Ward, the council’s Head of Highways and Environment,
said: “Climate change is an important issue facing not just local authorities
but society as a whole.
“The council takes this issue very seriously and the
switch to using only renewable electricity is just one of a number of things
the council is doing.
“As part of our commitment to the environment, the council will reduce carbon emissions from council vehicles as well as improving
the energy performance of our buildings.
“We will also be doubling our renewable energy
generation, building all new council houses to an ‘excellent’ energy efficiency
standard and are in the process of planting 18,000 additional trees in the
county.”
Llan bikers take part in marathon charity ride
* A previous Ride Cymru which saw bikers dressed at Evel Knievel.
Two intrepid bikers from Llangollen are taking part in the eighth annual Ride Cymru which will see a fleet of like-minded riders dressed as 1970s motorbike stuntman Evel Knievel blast around the edge of Wales in aid of charity.
Malcolm Preston and Mark Realey are joining scores of others bike fans from the region in the event which starts off in Wrexham today.
The 1,070-mile route of the big ride clings to the Welsh side of its border with England as tightly as public highways allow.
It goes through back lanes, the odd navigable track and stretch of A road and also stops off at some of the premier motor racing circuits of Wales.
Riders, who have each had to raise over £100 in sponsorship, can opt to join for as many of the five day sections as they wish, or complete the full
trip, which eventually ends up back in Wrexham on Bank Holiday Monday at 4.30pm.
Stereophonics star Richard Jones is planning to join Ride Cymru which also aims to set a new official record for the largest numbers of riders kitted out as Evel Knievel.
They will be flagged off from Wrexham High Street today by Len Lewis, an 89-year-old ex TT rider, and Wrexham Mayor, Cllr Mayor Andy Williams.
In Cardiff the riders will get to meet ITV weather presenter Ruth Wignall and their progress will be followed by Evel Knievel’s children.
Since the first Ride Cymru in 2012, the event has raised more than £80,000 for charity, with about £20,000 going to the Macmillan Cancer Support and about £3,000 to PAPYRUS
prevention of young suicide charity, from this year's event.
Malcolm Preston from Pengwern in Llangollen said: “Myself and Mark Realey are both taking in the ride.
“There are 50 of us all riding the perimeter of Wales with lots of celebs meeting up with us along the way.
“So far this year as a group we have raised approximately £25,000 in sponsorship.
“The event is organised by Jas Lewis from Coedpoeth who has run several events of this nature raising in the region of £80,000 over the past seven years.
“We have a Facebook page which is Ride Cymru and a Just Giving page aswell.
“We are all dressed as Evel Knievel and we hope to break the world record for the largest gathering of Evil Knievels.”
Wednesday, May 1, 2019
Operatic Society's Fiddler pulls at the heart strings
* A scene from Fiddler on the Roof now playing at the Town Hall. Picture by Barrie Potter. |
And joy is a feeling shared by the audience after watching Llangollen Operatic Society stage the first night of this evergreen musical at the Town Hall yesterday.
The show, with music by Jerry Brock, lyrics by Sheldon Harmick and book by Joseph Stein, is set in Imperial Russia in 1905.
That wasn’t a great place and time to be alive especially if you were part of the Jewish community which was being subjected to all manner of persecution by a brutal tsarist regime, not least of which was a form of ethnic cleansing under the pogroms.
That wasn’t a great place and time to be alive especially if you were part of the Jewish community which was being subjected to all manner of persecution by a brutal tsarist regime, not least of which was a form of ethnic cleansing under the pogroms.
Fiddler is all about how one small part of that community faces up to these challenges at the same time as battling to uphold its ancient traditions and customs.
The story centres on village milkman Tevye, the father of five daughters, and his attempts to maintain his Jewish religious and cultural traditions as the dark outside influences encroach upon his family's lives.
He must cope both with the strong-willed actions of his three older daughters, who wish to marry for love – each one's choice of a husband moving further away from the customs
of their Jewish faith and heritage – and then with the edict of the Tsar that finally drives the Jews from their village.
Amongst the large and talented cast which jams itself into the confines of the small Town Hall stage are quite a few new faces including a large contingent of the more senior members of
the society’s junior section, the Young’Uns.
They’ve just had their own smash-hit production of Grease and here a handful of them swap 1950s jeans and leather jackets for drab skirts and farmers’ smocks, all to great effect.
Taking the lead role of Tevye is society favourite Bill Hughes. Beneath the big beard which he and most of the men are sporting for their roles lurks the kind of talent which has shone through
in his earlier key parts such as Alfie Doolittle in the society’s last show, My Fair Lady.
Topol made this role his own in the famous 1971 film of Fiddler but Bill stamps on it his own brand of stylish acting and powerful singing, his singing prowess standing out particularly
in the hopeful If I Were A Rich Man.
But there are other great numbers too in which the cast demonstrate their ability such as the lively Matchmaker and very moving Sunrise, Sunset, each presented flawlessly. There’s also some very neat traditional Jewish dancing to add to the atmosphere.
Backing up this faultless Tevye in fine style are Helen Belton as his strong and loving wife Golde, and Louisa Jones, Stephanie Williams and Cleyn Orton-Jones playing respectively their
daughters Tzeitel, Hodel and Chava.
Jo Lloyd makes an extremely believable Yente the matchmaker while Ellis Griffith Morey shines out as Motel the tailor who sews up his romance with the eldest daughter with the consummate
ease.
Graham Kelly, last seen in the society’s My Fair Lady, returns for a skilful portrayal of Perchik the student from Kiev who wins the heart of another of the daughters.
Chris Phillips extracts every morsel of meat from his interpretation of Lazar Wolf, the rich but lonely village butcher.
Grace Goff and Heather Wolfson might not have the biggest parts but their performances as the two dead relatives who return to advise Tevye and Golde on the marriage of one of their daughters
are amongst the most memorable, their ghostly costumes and make-up being spine-chillingly powerful.
As always, the chorus work by both the society’s men and the women is polished to an extremely high degree while settings are simple yet very effective.
Tom Dickinson takes the title role of the mythical Fiddler who appears on the roof and elsewhere to guide Tevye through his tribulations.
The production team of producer Helen Belton, director Alison Ravenscroft, associate director Chrissie Ashworth, choreographer Pamela Williams and musical director Leigh Mason have a major
success on their hands which deserves to win large audiences.
The original Broadweay production of the show, which opened in 1964, had the first musical theatre run in history to surpass 3,000 performances. Fiddler held the record for the longest-running Broadway musical for almost 10 years until Grease surpassed its run.
This version can only run for the rest of this week until Saturday but every performance is going to be well worth seeing.
* Tickets for Fiddler on the Roof are available at the following Llangollen establishments - Jades, Llangollen Oggie and Fine Foods and Gwyn the Butcher.
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
Residents urged to register interest in housing scheme
* An artist's impression of the scheme. |
A call has gone out across Denbighshire for eligible residents to register their interest in moving into a £12m landmark extra care housing scheme now under construction.
And such has been the interest already in Awel y Dyffryn in Denbigh, that Grŵp Cynefin, the housing association behind the 66-apartment scheme, has urged would-be tenants to sign up sooner rather than later in order not to miss out.
It is to hold an information day, in Denbigh Museum, on Wednesday 15 May between 2pm and 7pm.
Construction on the site of the derelict former Middle Lane School is due for completion in mid-2020.
Preference for tenancies will be given to Denbighshire residents aged 60 and over.
Awel y Dyffryn will meet the needs of older people who want to live independently in their own homes, but with care and support available 24 hours.
Tenants will be able to access shared facilities including a restaurant; activities room; communal lounges; landscaped gardens and laundry.
Grŵp Cynefin and Denbighshire County Council staff will be on hand at the open day, to explain the specification of apartments, about communal rooms and shared facilities, the services on offer, and also how to apply to be considered for an apartment.
Extra benefits on offer will include intergenerational events to tackle loneliness and mental health, together with other social and leisure activities.
Awel y Dyffryn is Grŵp Cynefin’s fifth extra care scheme, and its second in Denbighshire. Its other, long-established, schemes are located in Bala, Holyhead, Ruthin and Porthmadog.
Its accommodation will comprise 42 two-bedroom and 24 one-bedroom apartments.
Awel y Dyffryn is a joint project between Grŵp Cynefin and Denbighshire County Council, with financial support from the Welsh Government,
Grŵp Cynefin chief executive, Shan Lloyd Williams, said: “Awel y Dyffryn will not only help meet the supported housing needs of older and vulnerable residents in the county.
“A number of years ago, Grŵp Cynefin pledged to provide tenants with more than just housing. So we’ll also be offering many services, events and activities, to help support the overall good health and wellbeing in the wider community.”
Head of housing services, Noela Jones said: “The addition of a quality new housing development alone, is a breath of fresh air to Denbigh town centre, where the former grammar school building had been declining for a number of years.”
Phil Gilroy, Denbighshire County Council’s Head of Community Support Services said: “We are pleased to be working with Grŵp Cynefin on this project which will provide quality housing as well as support residents’ well-being.
“Extra care housing is a key part of our Corporate Plan and making more housing options open to people in Denbighshire is a priority for us.”
Awel y Dyffryn is being developed by local contractor, R L Davies, of Colwyn Bay.
* For more information visit www.grwpcynefin.org
* For more information visit www.grwpcynefin.org
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)