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Saturday, June 15, 2019

Gin from solar distillery on show at Llangollen Food Festival


* Kevin Flower with his new gin.

A scientist is on a mission to create the perfect gin after setting up his new solar-powered distillery in time for a top food festival this autumn.

Former university lecturer Kevin Flower will be unveiling the special edition gin at the popular Llangollen Food Festival on Saturday and Sunday, October 19 and 20.

Kevin, 53, who taught chemistry at the University of Manchester, has developed an eco-friendly distillery in the garage at his home in Conwy.

Three years ago he threw caution to the wind, alongside university pals Andy Whiting and Euan Noble, to develop a unique brand of gin based on decades of combined scientific expertise.

Their company, PHure Liquors, continues to go from strength to strength with a growing list of stockists including pubs, delicatessens and off licences across North Wales.


This time they will be launching the new Autumn gin flavoured with seasonal fruits and berries.

“We came to Llangollen for the first time last year and it seems like the perfect place to celebrate our “50th batch” with a special edition gin using our new solar energy distillery,” explained Kevin who formerly worked as a university research fellow in Auckland, New Zealand.

“The recent addition of solar power has been really important, enabling us to generate more electricity than we need during the distillation process. In this way, we make a small contribution to reducing our carbon footprint.

“You only have to look at what’s going on in the news and the impact human activities are having on the environment to realise every little helps. Everything we make now uses green energy generated by ourselves.”

Solar power is not the only environmentally-friendly benefit from Kevin’s method of making gin.

“We also distil at a lower temperature and lower pressure than other commercial producers,” he said.

“By reducing the pressure, you reduce the temperature at which the liquid boils which is the reason why water boils at 71 degrees on the top of Everest.

“Our distillation temperature is around 35 degrees lower than in a normal copper still distillation so uses less energy. The pressure we distil at is equivalent to about 46,000 feet up.

“As custodians of the planet we have a duty of care. If you can reuse and recycle everything then we create as little rubbish as possible.”

Kevin, who is originally from Sussex and completed his degree and masters in chemistry at Bangor University, was teaching at a local college when he decided it was time for something different.

“Like many in the teaching profession, I’d had enough,” he said.

“It wasn’t the teaching it was everything that goes with it, so I was looking for other outlets.”
The scientists set themselves a friendly challenge to create a unique gin based on their knowledge of science.

“We took the classic academic approach, looking at various scientific literatures about distillation processes and we used that as a basis for how we were going to start, basically turning it into a scientific experiment,” explained Kevin, who has also lectured at the University of Sussex and the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST). 

Kevin borrowed an approach commonly used in medicinal drug discovery to find the perfect combination of flavours.

“It’s called “combinational” strategy,” explained Kevin, who divides his time between his business and private tutoring.

“In a sense, instead of deciding to put this much with that and doing it in a linear fashion you do it in a parallel fashion. We produced each of the botanicals individually. We then took out a fixed volume of each botanical and varied how much we added. We did the same with the second botanical and so on.

“We discovered that just by varying the amount you can achieve a very wide flavour range in a short space of time. It enables you to discover flavours very quickly or eliminate them far more easily, instead of throwing them all in at once and not liking what you find.

“The strategy, although new to gin making, has been around for donkeys’ years and is the way they search for active leads in chemistry.”

The result was the creation of its flagship pHure Gin, made from 96% organic wheat grain alcohol. It remains the company’s biggest selling gin thanks to its velvety smooth flavour and is the base for all its other gin products.

“One of my business partners runs a pub in Yorkshire and for nearly a year we trialled a small amount to see whether we could sell it,” said Kevin.

“Once we worked out people were buying it and coming back for more it was worth expanding and making more of it.”

The company produces occasional batches of Honey Gin and most recently launched strawberry and rhubarb flavours.

Euan, who lives in Yorkshire, is commercial director and looks after compliance/licensing issues while Andy, from Durham, is technical director and delivers presentations on gin production. 

“Sales are growing year on year. As we do more and go out more to food festivals we get more people interested in buying it,” explained Kevin, who is production director.
He’s looking forward to returning to the festival which has played a part in building the company’s reputation.

“Food festivals work very well for brand awareness,” he said.

“It’s basically good advertising and gives you the opportunity to go out and meet people who could become potential customers. Last year, we acquired a new delicatessen from just being at the festival. They’re really a great marketing and advertising exercise.”

Llangollen Food Festival committee member Phil Davies was delighted PHure Liquors had chosen the event to launch their special edition gin.

He said: “A major part of our role is enable our growing army of indigenous food and drink producers to have a higher profile by providing them with a shop window.

“I am looking forward to sampling the new, solar-powered gin at the festival and I wish them every success.

“Their eco-friendly approach is right on trend and I’m sure the taste will also hit the spot.”
For more information about Llangollen Food Festival go to www.llangollenfoodfestival.com

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Latest flooding update from county

Flooding in Denbighshire – Thursday (update at 9.30am)

Denbighshire County Council will continue to respond to flood-related incidents across the county during the day, although the weather situation has improved overnight.

There is surface water on a number of the county’s roads and a number of roads have closed or remain closed:

·         Mia Hall Road, Dyserth
·         B5430 Valley Lodge To Junction B5431 Llanarmon Yn Ial (by Pistyll Gwyn quarry),
·         Maes Llan Road, Llanrhydd, Ruthin,
·         Junction with A5151 opposite Bryn Ffynnon Cottages to Ty Gwyn, Dyserth
·         Pandy Lane, Dyserth
·         Mia Hall Road, Dyserth

Loggerheads Country Park is open and the main paths are passable with care. The water levels at the site have dropped dramatically since yesterday.
Bus services to Llanarmon yn Iâl:  Service bus (numbers 1 and 2) WILL NOT operate to Llanarmon this morning until further notice, but WILL serve Maeshafn and Eryrys.
More rain is forecast between now and mid afternoon.  A flood warning remains in place for the Lower Dee Valley from Llangollen towards Rossett and Be Prepared warnings issue for the Rivers Clwyd and Alyn Catchment areas.
Residents are urged to continue to monitor forecasts for the latest updates and information, as well as following information on Denbighshire’s website:www.denbighshire.gov.uk; Facebook: www.facebook.com/denbighshirecountycouncil and Twitter: www.twitter.com/denbighshirecc

MP meets volunteers of local befriending service



* Susan Elan Jones MP meets volunteers from the Ymestyn service.

Clwyd South MP Susan Elan Jones recently met with volunteers from the Ymestyn – Reaching Out befriending service to offer her support and advice.

The service is active in the Llangollen and Glyn Ceiriog areas. 

It started in 2016 and has grown from strength to strength. 

Volunteers are trained by Nightingale House Hospice in Wrexham to support people in the community who feel lonely or are socially isolated and may suffer from ill health, mobility or age-related issues. 

They can visit people in their own homes or arrange short outings in the locality. There are plans to develop the service to include some social activities.

Before being elected to Parliament, Susan Elan Jones spent 15 years working for charities and is committed to using her expertise in this area as part of her parliamentary and constituency work. 

She is co-chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Charities and Volunteering and in March introduced the Charity Trustees (Time Off for Duties) Bill to Parliament.

Following the meeting, Ms Jones said: “It’s been fantastic to catch up with Ymestyn and hear about their latest news. 

"I think that supporting these excellent local groups is a very important and worthwhile part of my job as an MP. Ymestyn is a vital lifeline for people who feel lonely or isolated from their community and I am pleased to have had the opportunity to offer my advice and support."

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

County council statement on flooding

Summary of flooding issues in Denbighshire – Wednesday morning – 10am
Last night: There were problems with surface water on the A539 at Llangollen.  Teams from the Council attended and the flood water was cleared.
This morning:
The majority of the problems seem to be in the north of the county, with areas around Dyserth affected in particular. 
The A5151 between Dyserth and Rhuddlan has a lot of standing water.
Westbourne Avenue, Rhyl is closed due to flooding and sandbags have been issued to properties there. Our teams are down at the scene.
Loggerheads Country Park is closed due to flooding, with water levels still rising.
 The rain is expected to ease this afternoon, but more rain is expected overnight.  Residents are advised to continue to monitor weather forecasts and social media for any updates.

Have your say about dementia services

Residents are being asked to take part in a consultation about how to improve services people living with dementia in North Wales.

Councils across North Wales are working together with Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHB) to develop a regional plan for dementia services, which will build on some of the excellent work that is already in place. 

The plan will look at how health and social care services can work better together and focus on how to achieve the Welsh Government priorities, risk reduction and delaying onset, raising awareness and understanding, recognition and identification, assessment and diagnosis, living as well as possible, for as long as possible with dementia and the need for increased support. 

The plan is being developed along with people living with dementia, carers and organisations who provide care and support.

Lesley Singleton, North Wales Project Lead and Director of Partnerships in the Mental Health and Learning Disabilities Division of BCUHB, said:  “We recognise that the best people to shape effective services are the people who use them. 

"We see the future as one in which those who are diagnosed with dementia and those who support them can feel confident that not only will they experience compassionate, safe and professional care but that they have, as a right, real opportunities to shape and be more involved in that care.

“I want to encourage people living with dementia and their carers to take part in the consultation to help us ensure that our services are tailored to meet their specific needs.”

* More information about the consultation is available at: https://www.northwalescollaborative.wales/dementia-strategy-consultation/

The consultation will be open until Friday July 26.

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

New online map aims to showcase North Wales


* The launch of the new online map introducing visitors to North Wales. 

The UK’s first online video map to promote tourism has been launched to help attract more visitors to North Wales.

The new map was unveiled at the annual meeting of North Wales Tourism and includes around 40 films from attractions, events and accommodation providers across the region.

According to managing director Jim Jones, they were now looking for more high end promotional videos to populate the map which can be accessed via the organisation’s website, www.gonorthwales.co.uk

The map can be used with North Wales Tourism’s new online itinerary planner which is also on the website.

Mr Jones told the meeting that the spectacular growth in the tourism industry in recent years was being driven by adrenaline-fuelled tourism.

That had been the spur to launch a new umbrella campaign, branding North Wales as the European Capital of Adventure.

Overall, the visitor economy is now worth £3.1 billion a year and employs 40,000 people.

He said: “We thought it would be a really good idea to launch the new video map as an excellent tool for visitors, showcasing North Wales through video.

“All the videos featured are from our members and they are a really good way to see what they can expect when they arrive at a destination.

“We’ve had a soft launch to make sure all the technology is working but we have the capacity for a lot more and that’s what we’re working on at the moment.

“I’m not aware of anything else like it in the UK and the same goes for our itinerary planner which is an incredible piece of software.

“Visitors can go to our website and can formulate plans using the information about the accommodation, attractions and activities.

“They can factor in their journey time, plan their dwell time and it can be printed out or sent via email in a nice, easy-to-read format.

“Essentially, we have put in a lot of work to make life easier for visitors and provide added benefits to our members.”

The aim,  he said, was to capitalise on the huge investment that’s going into North Wales at the moment.

Mr Jones added: “Tourism is booming and it’s one of the biggest sectors in the region’s economy and as a business North Wales Tourism has seen a five per cent year-on-year growth.

“We are riding high and there is a lot of confidence in the industry too.

“There is massive potential for growth and the North Wales Growth Bid is going to have a huge part to play in that because hopefully they are going to create the infrastructure and the environment in order for everybody to benefit.”

Among the guest speakers was John Irving, the chief executive of Liverpool John Lennon Airport, who said that North Wales was an important catchment for them.

He said: “We want to play a role as a gateway for the north west of England but also for the North of Wales.

“We’re at five million passengers now so we think in the next five years we can reach six million just growing the route network and getting some different carriers into the airport.

“There’s about 35,000 inbound passengers coming to North Wales at the moment through Liverpool and there’ll be many more coming through Manchester and via the rest of the UK.”

Lee Robinson, Transport for Wales’s development director for North Wales, told the meeting that on the ground there was an £800m investment to replace every train by 2023 in Wales and that 95 per cent of rail journeys will be made on brand new trains.

North Wales Tourism chair Christopher Frost, who runs the Manorhaus boutique hotels in Ruthin and Llangollen, said: “We’ve had a fantastic 10 years or so with an increase in inbound tourism and outbound tourism and fantastic engagement with overseas markets also.

“North Wales Tourism has been instrumental in creating alliances and creating partnerships with both public and private sector organisations to promote tourism to our members across the whole world.

“It’s a very exciting time because of the amount business that is coming our way with an increase of a significant proportion compared to other regions of Wales and compared to other regions of the UK.

“Adventure tourism is very important and has seen massive financial input in the North Wales economy, which has impacted across the whole of North Wales.

“I operate in Ruthin and Llangollen and even the events and attractions in Snowdonia impact my business because people come and stay with me and drive an hour into Snowdonia to the Zip Wire or to do the surfing or that kind of thing.

“One consequence is that we are now attracting younger people to North Wales.

“Whereas 20 years ago, the demographic was 40 or 50 plus, the demographic we are seeing is mid-20s to 40.

“We can offer the best of both worlds. As well as the new adventure attractions, we still have the coast, the castle and the culture for those wanting a gentler time.

“We’ve added a new dimension to something that was already brilliant.”

Monday, June 10, 2019

Isherwood calls on health minister to quit



North Wales Assembly Member Mark Isherwood (pictured) has called on the Welsh Health Minister, Vaughan Gething, to resign for “failing to deliver" the required improvement at the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHB) which covers Llangollen.
Speaking in the Welsh Conservatives debate on the troubled North Wales Health Board, Mr Isherwood expressed concern that BCUHB has been in Special Measures for coming up to four years, said that the Health Minister’s “repeated statements that he ‘expects to see action’ have become hollow”, and called for him to stand down.
Mr Isherwood said: “The self-proclaimed party of the NHS, Labour, is responsible for just seven Health Boards in Wales. It is shocking that five of these are in special measures of some kind.  
“The largest of these, serving 1 million people, Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board in North Wales, will not be celebrating the fact that next Saturday will be four years since it was placed into special measures. Ministerial oversight of these special measures arrangements has been with the current Health Minister.

“No Conservative Prime Minister has ever cut an NHS budget. Under Labour, however, Wales was the only UK Nation to see a real terms decrease in identifiable expenditure on health between 2010 and 2016.
“Betsi Cadwaladr entered special measures after horrific reports emanated from the Tawel Fan Mental Health ward. 
“The Welsh Labour Government has failed to heed the warnings of the Ockenden Review of this - and consistently ignored the concerns of families involved.
“They have instead relied on the 2018 HASCAS review which was described as a cover-up by the families."
He added: “In January Donna Ockenden said she had seen ‘insufficient progress’ in improving mental health services and revealed that staff had told her services ‘were going backwards’.  
“Her 2018 Review was repeatedly informed that from the Health Board’s birth in October 2009, there was very significant cause for concern in the systems, structures and processes of governance underpinning a range of services provided by Betsi Cadwaladr.

“Speaking here in May last year, I asked the Health Minister why the conclusions of the HASCAS report Commissioned by Betsi Cadwaladr did not stack up with the findings of Donna Ockenden’s 2015 report, which the Welsh Government had accepted - or with a Healthcare Inspectorate Wales Report, or  Dementia Care mapping work, both in 2013, the year that the Health Board states that it was alerted to serious concerns regarding patient care on the Tawel Fan ward. In fact, I had highlighted concerns  in 2009. 

“While frontline staff are working incredibly hard, last month the Public Accounts Committee found that the Welsh Government’s intervention with the Board has had ‘little practical impact’.  

“The North Wales Community Health Council stated that it totally agreed with this report’s recommendations - and referred to a letter sent to the Health Minister in which they stated there is a belief among its members that Special Measures  is now ‘the new normal’ and ‘appears to have lost its impact’.
Mr Isherwood also highlighted that the latest A&E figures show that Betsi Cadwaladr remains the worst performing in Wales, and that Wrexham Maelor hospital’s A&E department only saw half of its patients within four hours, and referred to the fact that in January, the North Wales Coroner, John Gittins, stated that ‘ambulance hold ups, staff shortages and the difficulty of getting speedy A&E care have contributed to numerous deaths and may claim more lives’. 
He added: “This Health Minister’s repeated statement that he ‘expects to see action’ have become hollow. 
“He needs to accept his responsibility for failing to deliver the required improvement at the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, and honourably resign.”