North Wales Police put out the following message on its Facebook page just before 7am this morning (Monday) ...
#RTC A5118 @ Llong #Mold road is closed due to serious collision and will be closed for some time - diversions will be put in place at the A541 side and the Padeswood side. Please use a different route
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Monday, September 23, 2019
Cor Meibion Dyffryn Ceiriog hosts successful concert
Mike Gleed has sent in this report about the recent choral concert at the RAFA Club.
At the concert by Cor Meibion Dyffryn Ceiriog in the RAFA Club on Friday 20th September a little over £300 was raised for Llangollen Prostate Cancer Group.
At the concert by Cor Meibion Dyffryn Ceiriog in the RAFA Club on Friday 20th September a little over £300 was raised for Llangollen Prostate Cancer Group.
Although a little depleted due
to prior commitments and one unforeseen incident the choir gave a well-received
performance.
Three choristers who “morph into” the Border Men and tenor Alan
Williams added popular variety to the programme.
To cap it all our Musical
Director, Helen Rayner, at no notice at all, sang the solo in O Gymru, due
to the absence of our usual chorister who was unable to get to the venue.
This
was, although unplanned, a very successful part of the evening for audience and choristers. Thanks and well done Helen, Wow!
Thanks to the RAFA Club for making us
welcome as always and to the audience for coming to support us and the
aforementioned Group.
Go-slower Volvo gets the electrical buzz
* The Volvo S60. |
* The Volvo XC40. |
Volvo
launch news by Steve Rogers
Volvo is on a mission to make driving safer and cleaner.
The
buzz word at Volvo is electric. It is already the first manufacturer to offer
plug in hybrid versions on its entire seven model range and new UK managing
director Kristian Elvefors told me the company's target is for half its sales to
be fully electric by 2025.
On
the safety front the top speed of all its cars will be limited to 112mph from
next year. Most Volvos are in the 130-140-mph bracket with some capped at
155mph. Elvefors said they want to send a 'strong signal about the dangers of
speeding'.
Given
our 70mph speed limit that should not worry drivers and the cars will still
have the same acceleration.
In the case of the new S60 T8 60mph comes up in under
five seconds but the Swedish company is still hell bent on safety and the
latest innovation is for sensors to alert the driver to any lack of
concentration and even bring the car to a stop in the most extreme case.
The
rise of Volvo has been phenomenal from an insignificant player in the premium
sector to one that is ruffling the feathers of the establishment, very much
like Audi which rose from nowhere in the nineties to leader of the premium pack
before the dieselgate scandal spoilt the party.
The
Swedish company has seen five years of continued growth selling more than 50,000
cars last year and this year is looking like another record in the UK with
sales up 27 per cent in a market that is still on the slide.
Electrification
of its models is leading the charge with new hybrid engines for the XC90 being
rolled out across the range. There will be plug-in hybrid versions for S60 and
V60 with the XC40 debuting as the first fully electric Volvo next year.
As
for the cars Volvo has created some of the most stylish and luxurious models in
the premium sector and has the likes of Land Rover, Mercedes-Benz and Audi
wondering what is coming next.
The
XC90 is as plush as a Range Rover but with a greater wow factor thanks to the
minimalist design and delicate Swedish textures. The dashboard is dominated by
the vertical tablet style multi media centre which I still find a real handful
to work out.
Drivers
need to learn the ins and outs of this system otherwise it can be a big
distraction while driving. I stay away from it when underway preferring voice
control for everyday functions like selecting a radio station, changing the
heating settings, although that job is pretty easy, or asking for sat-nav guidance.
Even
though Volvo has a huge commitment to safety it can still spice things up and
the place to find that is behind the wheel of the new S60. This is the first
Volvo to really challenge the red hot BMW, Mercedes and Audi models setting up
the Polestar performance division.
The
Polestar tuned S60 will be here soon but in the meantime the all wheel drive T8
plug-in hybrid is hardly short on excitement. With 390bhp on tap - 303bhp from
2-litre petrol and 87bhp from the electric motor - the T8 can hit 62mph in 4.6
seconds, only two tenths of a second behind the Polestar tuned S60.
Because
it is hybrid emissions are just 39g/km and driven very sensibly can achieve
anything between 122 to 176mpg. The price tag is a hefty £49,805 but a 205bhp
T5 version brings S60 closer to the masses at £37,935.
If
S60 was my drive of the day my car of the day was the more modest XC40, Volvo's
newest and smallest SUV. This has an entry level three-cylinder 1.5 litre
petrol engine which has been upgraded to 163bhp, a lot of power for a small
engine and like all modern three-cylinder engines it is refined with a punchy
response at very low revs.
Like
the rest of the range it is packed with safety features, has the standard 9
inch tablet style touchscreen, and comes with a choice of diesel, petrol and
petrol hybrid engines.
Key facts
XC
40 R-Design 8sp auto
£34,365
(starts £28,965)
1.5
litre 3ycl; 163bhp
0-60mph
9.1secs; 124mph
35.8-39.2mpg
147g/km.
1st yr tax £210
Boot:
460-1336 litres
Sunday, September 22, 2019
Llan group enjoys music hall trip to Leeds
* Above and below: members of the Llangollen group outside the theatre in Leeds.
A party of around 50 people from Llangollen journeyed over to Leeds yesterday (Saturday) to see a performance of the Old Time Music Hall at the famous City Varieties Theatre, starring former Coronation Street star Sherrie Hewson.
Many of the party got into the spirit of things by donning Victorian-era fancy dress.
The trip, which went down very well, was arranged and led by Llangollen vicar Father Lee Taylor who is a keen music hall fan.
Invite goes out to Cittaslow Sunday
From 11-3pm on September
29 representatives of the many social, cultural and community groups in
Llangollen will be hosting stalls on Centenary Square as part of Cittaslow Sunday.
They will be sharing what they do, how
they do it and suggesting ways to help and opportunities to get involved.
There will also be food,
drinks entertainment and activities
Llangollen is exceptional for the
high number and wide range of community groups it has: nearly 100 groups were
captured in the Llangollen Community Photobook published by Simon Collinge and
Andrew Gale in 2013.
On Cittaslow Sunday, the Cittaslow
Committee of Llangollen Town Council, aim to recognise and celebrate how
much the work of all these groups contribute to the social, physical and
cultural fabric of our town.
Daily, weekly, monthly and annually these (largely
volunteer) groups organise and offer support for individuals and groups of all
ages and in some cases provide life-saving services.
There are groups that
help maintain and develop the very fabric of our town. The rich and diverse
cultural environment that helps define Llangollen is also largely the result of
the hard work of volunteers who attract art, culture, sport and music to the
town.
Cittaslow Sunday is celebrated each
year by Cittaslow towns around the world.
Llangollen became a designated Cittaslow
town in 2013 after a substantial effort from a large group of councillors and
local volunteers to secure the designation, joining the network of 252 other
Cittaslow towns globally.
Cittaslow promotes a way of life for market towns
that is environmentally sustainable and supportive of local community groups
and businesses. Its themes are about:
·
Encouraging
community connections
·
Supporting
local products (arts & agriculture)
·
Creating
human-friendly infrastructure
·
Protecting
and conserving the environment
·
Using technology wisely, and
·
Promoting hospitality (‘slow travel’)
Other initiatives the Cittaslow
Committee are currently working on include:
· * Developing
a website for community groups to share information on activities, events and
meetings including a shared community calendar
· * Improving
the Community Newsletter
· * Participatory
budgeting – small grants programme for community groups
· * Supporting
information sharing between groups and with the Town Council through regular
events and a monthly “open to ideas forum” with the Cittaslow Committee (6pm,
second Wednesday of each month)
All town organisations and groups are
welcome to host a stall and should have received an invitation to do so. To
register your interest in a stall, please contact Councillor Austin Cheminais at
chemshouts@yahoo.co.uk or cllrcheminais@llangollentowncounci.gov.uk
* For more information, look at Facebook www.facebook.com/CittaslowLlangollen
Saturday, September 21, 2019
Hospice launches new heart failure service
* The launch of the new service by Nightingale House Hospice. |
A new permanent hospice service for patients with advanced heart failure and
palliative care needs has been launched in Wrexham.
It will give patients with
the condition improved access to managing their care in a planned and
coordinated way, enabling them to live their best life possible.
Nightingale
House Hospice on Chester Road has been able to launch the service following
recruitment of a heart failure nurse specialist.
The post was developed
following a pilot project which was made possible through a £40,000 grant from
the St James’s Place Charitable Foundation, administered by Hospice UK.
BCU
Health Board made further resources possible during the length of the project
to complete the project aims. The project evaluation identified a need for
patients with heart failure to have better palliative care for their condition.
A
total of 26% of patient deaths are heart failure related in the UK compared to
27% for cancer patients, yet only 4% percent of heart failure patients are
cared for by a hospice and palliative care team compared to 70% of cancer
patients.
During
the pilot project (November 2017-May 2019) some heart failure patients said
they were frightened and shocked to be given an appointment at Nightingale
House Hospice due to the misconception that it is only for people with cancer.
The new clinic enables patients to be assessed by a specialist heart failure
nurse linked with palliative care, to give advice including practical and
emotional concerns of living with heart failure; this might be years before
death.
Dr
Jenny Welstand, Hospice Heart Failure Nurse Specialist, said: “Palliative symptoms are often
under-estimated and inadequately addressed, mainly because patients can often
look much better than they feel. The service allows us to assess patients in
clinic and via telephone, not only to manage their symptoms and medication
alongside the heart failure team, but also to support them with concerns and
problems they identify as important to them. Importantly we also support
families who often shoulder the burden of care and the emotional issues this
brings.
“We
received significant feedback from our patients who were adamant they wanted to
live their lives in the best way possible and feel supported. As our joint
pilot project progressed the word ‘hospice’ became less of a fear as the
benefits of the service developed.
“Hospice-enabled care has transformed the
care our local Heart Failure Team can offer and invigorated our hospice team.
Both teams know we still have so much to learn, but we want to carry on doing
this together.”
Here
are some of the things heart failure patients told the team when they were
initially referred for an assessment at Nightingale House Hospice on Chester
Road, Wrexham:
“It frightened me when the hospice was
mentioned, I thought I had cancer.”
“I’ve never really been ill before and
thought that when the hospice was mentioned, I only had a few weeks left to
live.”
Sue Glover’s late husband Paul had
stage four kidney cancer and needed to have a replacement heart valve. But in
March 2018 Paul had a severe reaction to his cancer medication which severely
damaged the pumping ability of his heart, meaning he developed heart failure.
“We came to see Jenny here at
Nightingale House where we chatted, and she explained lots of things to
Paul. She helped support him to tap into other resources that meant he
could stay at home for as long as possible. Sadly, Paul passed away in hospital
due to complications but to see this project now become a permanent service for
those experiencing heart failure is just fantastic.”
Karl
Benn, Head of Grants, Hospice UK, said: “Hospices are not just about cancer, it’s
about the whole issue of how we approach death and dying.
“Patients
diagnosed with heart failure in the Nightingale House catchment area will now
be able to access a service that will mean they, together with their families
and carers can learn to cope with their life limiting illness and adjust to the
challenges that brings.
“Some
of the projects we fund don’t continue so it is fantastic to see real success
here. It’s encouraging to know the funding provided through St. James’s Place
Charitable Foundation will continue to have an impact well beyond the life of
the grant.”
Medwyn Edwards, of Hadlow Edwards Wealth Management, Wrexham, is the local
representative for St. James’s Place Charitable Foundation. He said: “We are
delighted to have been able to give this grant funding via Hospice UK to
support the Heart Failure Project at Nightingale House and enable them to
develop an innovative and effective support service that help improve the the quality of
life for people with life limiting illnesses and improve their end of life
care.”
Sunday, September 15, 2019
llanblogger takes a short break
llanblogger is now taking a short break and will be back by the weekend
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