Police are appealing for witnesses following a serious collision on the B5126 Mold Road near Northop this evening at 17.55hrs.
They say: "We were called to reports of a collision between two cars, a Toyota and a Chevrolet. One of the drivers was taken to hospital in Stoke with serious injuries.
We are appealing for anyone who may have witnessed the collision or has dashcam footage to get in touch on 101 Ref X143181
The road is currently closed and will remain so for the next couple of hours."
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Monday, September 30, 2019
Range of local groups showcased at Cittaslow event
* Visitors check out some of the stalls at the Sunday event.
* A range of local food and drink on display.
Sixteen local groups, as diverse as Llangollen Guides to the Quakers and from South Clwyd Beekeepers to Friends of the Earth, took part in Cittaslow Sunday yesterday.
Cittaslow is an international network of towns in 30 countries across the world that have adopted a set of common goals and principles to enhance their quality of life for residents and visitors.
Cittaslow Llangollen hosted the special Sunday event at the front of the Town Hall to showcase the wide range of organisations which contribute to the life of the town.
Also with stalls were the Twenty Club amateur dramatic group, Llangollen Health Centre, Dial a Ride, the International Eisteddfod, Run Free Fell Runners, the RAFA Club, Extinction Rebellion, Llangollen Christmas Festival, Llangollen Prostate Support Group and Shape My Llangollen, which is preparing the local contribution to the county's next Local Development Plan.
Freshly-made local food and drink was available throughout the event.
TV chef to champion Welsh meat at food festival
* Hot stuff: Chris Roberts will give an outdoor cookery demonstration at the food festival.
A larger than life TV chef will be championing Welsh beef and lamb with an outdoor cookery demonstration at a top food festival.
Chris “Foodgasm” Roberts, who has his own television series on S4C, will also have a starring role at the popular Llangollen Food Festival on Saturday and Sunday, October 19 and 20.
He went from being a man who cooked on an old-fashioned spit roasting fire with his friends, without anyone watching, to overnight fame as a Facebook foodie with thousands of fans.
The first TV series, Bwyd Epic Chris, produced by Caernarfon-based Cwmni Da, was a big hit on S4C and the second series will be going on air in November.
Chris, who lives in Caernarfon, is looking forward to his first visit to the festival which has now established itself as one of the highlights in the culinary calendar and has been named as one of the Top 10 food festivals in the UK.
According to Chris, the inspiration for his cooking style has come from Patagonia, the Welsh colony in Argentina.
He said: “My dad went to Patagonia and told me how they cooked. I never really thought about it at first but a couple of years ago I thought I’d give it a try and cook the Gaucho way. Gauchos are basically cowboys.
“It just took off really and people just seemed to like what I was doing. I was asked to do a TV series for S4C and we are just filming the second series.
Chris added: ": "There is always variation when cooking on an open-fire, instinct needs
to be used when adapting to the climate outdoors.
“You must feel the food, the heat, test the temperature and be patient. When the food’s ready, it’s ready. I’m not just putting food in the oven and waiting for three hours, I work with the elements and the experience is always different.
“I want to show that we have amazing local produce, to showcase and celebrate the local food. Food is the best way of bringing people together, it makes life worth living and makes everyone feel good.”
“I’ll almost certainly cook up some Tomahawk Welsh Black steaks in Llangollen as well as some lamb. We have the best meat in the world in Wales. It comes from animals that have had a good life. A happy lamb is a tasty lamb in my humble opinion.
“Welsh lamb that has been out on the hillsides eating succulent grass, berries and herbs and that comes through in the flavour of the meat. It’s the same with grass fed Welsh beef.
“And if you buy Welsh meat that has the PGI mark - Protected Geographic Indicator – then it’s fully traceable right down to the farm and the animal it originated from. That’s important.”
“I’m looking forward to Llangollen and showing people what an amazing product we have in Welsh meat and how to cook it Gaucho-style. I can assure meat lovers they won’t taste anything better!”
Llangollen Food Festival committee member Phil Davies says the festival is the perfect platform for Chris Roberts to demonstrate his love of Gaucho-style cooking.
He said: “The idea of the food festival is to inspire people to try new products, and see what we have to offer here in Wales.
“Chris’ Facebook videos have been viewed an incredible number of times and his first TV series was so popular we thought he’d be the perfect fit for the Llangollen Food Festival.
“We are delighted he’s agreed to come along and demonstrate his amazing cooking. There is no doubt that Welsh meat, be it lamb or beef, is a really high quality product and deserves to be championed.
“Cooking meat the way people of Welsh heritage learned to cook when they arrived in Patagonia just makes it extra special.”
* For more information about the Llangollen International Food Festival, visit www.llangollenfoodfestival.com
Sunday, September 29, 2019
Five-vehicle smash causes A5 closure
5 vehicle RTC A5 between Whittington and Gobowen islands. North bound carriageway closed - road blocked.
Llangollen goes on the market for $34 million
* The Llangollen estate in Virginia, USA.
But before the panic starts, that's not our famous town but an enormous mansion of the same name in the state of Virginia, USA.
First American diplomat and publisher Jock Whitney, then Donald Brennan, a former Morgan Stanley exec, built up the equestrian mecca and now it’s somebody else’s turn, according to an article on the Bloomberg news website.
The story says that of the roughly five million acres in Virginia granted to the Fairfax family by the kings of England in the 17th century 600 acres or so ended up in the hands of the Powell family by 1827. Politicians and gentleman merchants, the Powells built a lovely mansion they called Llangollen, which then passed from one illustrious owner to the next.
The Bloomberg piece goes on: "When Donald Brennan, the former head of Morgan Stanley Capital Partners, saw the house at the start of the 21st century, it was one of the pre-eminent properties in blue blood American horse country.
"The acreage had been expanded—the plot had become 1,100 acres—and the house enlarged, most notably in the 1930s by John Hay “Jock” Whitney, a gilded age playboy-millionaire.
"Brennan and his family officially took ownership of Llangollen in 2006 and he is now putting the property back on the market for $34 million.
"The estate, in its present form, is largely unaltered from when Jock Whitney and his wife Mary Elizabeth purchased it. Whitney inherited his wealth but did an excellent job putting it to good use. He financed Gone With The Wind, was a trustee of the Museum of Modern Art, bought the New York Herald Tribune, and served as ambassador to Great Britain.
"The Whitneys founded the Llangollen Race Meeting, a steeplechase that attracted 20,000 spectators, and built ancillary buildings on the property, including the now-famous “horseshoe stables” for their show-ponies. They added a polo field, nine houses for guests, a race track, a training track, and, most impressive of all, a hyper-sophisticated water system that remains to this day.
“The property has about 400 acres of forest that sit on the east face of the Blue Ridge Mountains,”
Brennan says. “In order to produce water for the property, there are springs whose water is pumped to the top of the mountain, at which point it comes down through streams that go into a large concrete cistern, which Whitney built into the side of the mountain above the house.”
Brennan says. “In order to produce water for the property, there are springs whose water is pumped to the top of the mountain, at which point it comes down through streams that go into a large concrete cistern, which Whitney built into the side of the mountain above the house.”
"There’s a distribution system that sends water to 120 points across the property—“the homes, the water troughs for horses, the stables, the polo facilities … it’s an incredible engineering feat,” Brennan explains. Should water levels run low, an electrical system sets off pumps in wells at ground level, sending water up to the cistern.
"When the couple divorced, Mary Elizabeth Whitney kept the estate and lived there until her death in 1988."
* To see the Bloomberg story, go to: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-23/llangollen-virginia-horse-country-historic-estate-for-sale
* To see the Bloomberg story, go to: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-23/llangollen-virginia-horse-country-historic-estate-for-sale
Saturday, September 28, 2019
Talks held on Kronospan emission concerns
* From left, town councillor Jackie Allen; Susan Elan Jones MP; Ken Skates AM; county councillor Terry Evans and Kronospan’s environmental manager Keith Baker at Chirk Parish Hall this morning.
|
Politicians
have held 'constructive' talks about concerns over emissions from the Kronospan
factory in Chirk.
Clwyd
South Assembly Member Ken Skates and Susan Elan Jones MP met with Terry Evans,
county councillor for Chirk South and Wrexham Council’s Lead Member for Economy
and Regeneration this morning (Friday).
They
were joined by Chirk town councillor Jackie Allen, who is also chair of Chirk
Environmental Liaison Group, and Kronospan’s Environmental Manager Keith Baker.
Mr
Skates said: “I was pleased when Wrexham Council contacted me to arrange this
meeting. I know Terry as the local member gets a lot of complaints as the
council are currently responsible for monitoring emissions.
“It
was a constructive meeting and Susan and I are pleased to be working alongside
Terry and Jackie to address residents’ ongoing concerns.”
Ms
Jones said: “We know this is a long-standing issue for some of our constituents
so this was a welcome opportunity to discuss what the council and company are
doing to mitigate their concerns. It’s vital we work together on issues like
this which are important to local people, so I'm pleased Cllr Evans from
Wrexham County Borough Council and town councillor Allen were able to attend.
“Ken
and I have made numerous representations on behalf of our constituents in the
Chirk area to Wrexham Council and the company itself over the past few years to
convey residents' concerns. Most people say they don’t want the factory closed
as it’s one of our area's biggest employers and closure would devastate
hundreds of local families. However, I’m strongly of the view that more has to
be done to deal with the very legitimate environmental concerns that local
residents have.”
Natural
Resources Wales (NRW) is set to take over sole responsibility for monitoring
emissions from Kronospan next year.
Mr
Skates said: “I know there continues to be some confusion and misinformation
with regard to Kronospan, which is why the Welsh Government has issued a
direction to ensure that the site has a single regulator in the future, which
will be NRW.”
Kronospan
currently has two environmental permits. One is issued by Wrexham Council,
which relates to the wood-related production. The other issued by Natural
Resources Wales (NRW), which relates to formaldehyde production. NRW is
currently determining an environmental permit application received from Kronospan
and is expected to complete this process by early 2020.
A
recent letter to Mr Skates from Wrexham Council’s chief planning and regulatory
officer, Lawrence Isted, confirmed that the authority is currently responsible
for emissions to air, land and water, as well as noise.
Mr Isted said:
“Upon receiving complaints on such matters, my officers would consider the
likely source of the alleged pollutant and assess the controls implemented by
the company against the requirement of the permit.
“Officers would
also consider the effect of the pollutant on human health and the environment
with reference to relevant environmental standards issued by the World Health
Organisation and relevant air quality standards regulations. These standards
are used to protect the health and wellbeing of the local population.”
He added: “Recent air quality
monitoring indicates that air quality levels within the Chirk area complies
with relevant statutory guidelines.”
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