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Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Ken Skates MS pays tribute to Llangollen Eisteddfod
Council aims to boost its Care and Support Team
Denbighshire County Council is expanding its Care and Support Team in Adult Social Care by recruiting nine new staff who will work across the county.
This forms part of Denbighshire’s aim to ensure a sustainable Social Care Service for the future and aims to help offset some of the financial pressures the council faces.
Following a successful first recruitment campaign earlier this year where seven Reablement Support Workers were recruited, the council is now looking for further staff to join them.
The new team members will support people who need a hand to regain the skills to do everyday activities like washing, cooking meals, dressing and moving about the home and going out.
There are a number of reasons why people may need this support, such as following a period of illness or a hospital stay. This support can last for as little as one or two weeks but can be offered for up to six weeks if it is needed. In addition to this the team can also offer longer term domiciliary support when this is needed.
Darylanne, an existing Senior Care and Support Worker, said: “Our teams support those who need a helping hand after a period away from the home in the hospital, or maybe after an illness.
"Members of the team have access to a work vehicle as standard while working and therefore do not have to use their personal vehicle as they travel from location to location. Comprehensive training is provided and there is a lot of support for staff to support them in their role.”
Ann Lloyd, Head of Service for Adult Social Care & Homelessness Service, said: “After the success of the expansion earlier in the year, we are now looking to add 9 more workers to our team.
"Our teams care for people up and down the County every day in their own homes, meaning residents can live comfortably in their own homes for longer.
"This expansion helps us achieve our wider social care aims and will bring more care to residents in their own homes.”
Councillor Elen Heaton, Lead Member for Health and Social Care, said: “Our teams are there for our residents who have just arrived home from hospital or treatment and need a support package whilst they adjust back into day-to-day life.
"This support helps make that transition a little easier, with our team on hand to help residents relearn the skills needed, right in the comfort of their own home.
"Our team do an amazing job throughout the whole County, and I am looking forward to welcoming more Care and Support Workers into our team.”
* To find out more about these job opportunities and working in Social Care, visit the council's website here.
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
Ambassadors for Manchester back on Eisteddfod stage
* Lee Woods, John O'Grady, Adam Kelly, Jonny Helm, Mark Brandreth and David Hennigan on stage at the Llangollen International Eisteddfod in July 2025.
* Some of the Manchester lads on Llangollen Bridge in 1985.
This year, the world-renowned Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod celebrated the seventieth anniversary of iconic tenor, Luciano Pavarotti making his international debut at the festival. It was a debut that defined his career.
* The Pavarotti Mural commissioned by Decca Classics and the Llangollen Eisteddfod to commemorate the 70 anniversary of Luciano Pavarotti iconic international debut in 1955. Just one of the Llangollen Eisteddfod's anniversaries.
Nissan X-Trail is a novel way of doing an EV
Nissan X-Trail e-4ORCE drive by Steve Rogers
What
about this for a smart way of driving on electric?
There’s
a petrol engine but it does not drive the wheels. Starting to think I’m talking
nonsense? Don’t blame you.
The
e-4ORCE is Nissan’s novel name for electric four wheel drive but the engine’s
job is to charge the batteries that send power to two electric motors, one on
each axle, that drive the wheels.
This is
where you say ‘why not just buy an electric car’? Not everyone is comfortable
going down the all electric road, so called range anxiety is still a concern,
but the X-Trail is different because it does not need to be charged so no
worries about finding a charging point during a long journey, just fill up with
petrol.
And it
has given X-Trail a new lease of life. It arrived 23 years ago as a
trailblazing off roader that wasn’t afraid to wade up to its wheel arches in
water or mud. Then Nissan pulled a master stroke producing a small SUV that
drove like a family hatchback. It was called Qashqai and X-Trail has played
second fiddle ever since.
Both
cars share the same electric technology but this time X-Trail gets one over its
sibling with all wheel drive. Qash only gets e-power on the front wheel drive
model.
The next
surprise is the engine. Who would have thought a three-cylinder 1.5 litre
petrol would be enough for a big 4x4? That is where the electric motors come in
providing instant power the second the throttle is pushed to the floor
accelerating X-Trail to sixty in seven seconds, quicker than the new Honda C-RV
plug-in hybrid.
Quicker
it might be but X-Trail lags behind on economy, recording 41.6mpg at the end of
a week’s driving when some rivals are hitting the 50mpg mark.
Regenerative
braking is common on the new generation of hybrids and the Nissan goes a step
further with e-pedal. This system brings the car to a virtual stop without
touching the brake pedal harnessing power for the batteries and saving on brake
wear although not quite as efficient as a Volvo which brakes the car to a dead
stop.
With a
new chassis the Nissan is surprisingly nimble given its size with a lot less
body roll than the previous model while the suspension manages to stifle the
worst of our road surfaces.
The big
fella has been given a total makeover to bring it in line with Nissan’s more
modern face while the cabin is a lot plusher. A digital driver’s binnacle
provides a mound of information accessed through steering wheel buttons, a
brilliant class leading head-up display on the windscreen, and there is even
more reading in the central 12.3in touchscreen, but credit to Nissan for
sticking with traditional switches for climate control.
X-Trail
is a car for a growing family so there will be no concerns about back seat
legroom although it can’t quite match the CR-V. An extra £1,000 will buy two
extra seats but these are only suitable for young children. Leg and headroom is
too tight for adults and getting into them is not easy. You will also gain
extra boot space without them.
The top
of the range Tekna+ driven here is packed with equipment, so expect smart phone
connections, heated front and rear seats, heated windscreen, 360 degree all
round camera among a long spec list. You won't even have to unlock or lock the
doors, the hands free i-key does it for you.
There
are more than enough driver safety aids to keep you safe. I am a big fan of
cross traffic alert which is so useful when reversing out of side parking
slots, and it will emergency brake to help avoid a frontal shunt.
In many
ways this X-Trail has come of age, impressively efficient and with lots of
skills in its locker.
Fast
facts
X-Trail
Tekna+ 4WD
£48,375
1.5
litre turbo; 211bhp
0-62mph
7secs; 111mph
42.8mpg
combined
144g/km.
1st road tax £620
Boot:
585-1298 litres
Towing
capacity 1650kg
Insurance group 31
Amateur stage performer tells of her frightening brush with Covid
A Llangollen amateur stage performer has told of her frightening brush with Covid which led to her being rushed to hospital and treated for a suspected heart attack.
Naomi Riley, who has appeared in productions for Llangollen Operatic Society and the Twenty Club, reveals what she went through in a post on Facebook, which has already attracted over 30 sympathetic comments since going up in the early hours of this morning (Tuesday).
And she says she took to social media to let people
know that the virus at the centre of the pandemic is something that people still need
to be aware of.
She writes: “I'd like to have a little catch up about Covid, mainly because it's been a little too close to home this last week, and it's playing on my mind.
“So, Mark [husband] and I have had it. It started last Sunday morning /afternoon respectively with both of us presenting with just a sore throat, nothing major.
“By Monday afternoon, I can only describe it as all my pipework felt sore from up into my sinuses to down into my chest.
“By Tuesday, we were feeling a little bit out of it as our temperatures started to spike. Rounds of meds every four hours began.
“By Wednesday morning, Mark's temp was above 39, with mine not far behind. We were aching all over and my chest felt tight and heavy.
“Thurs afternoon, I was barely mobile, we both had
streaming colds.
“Thurs evening I was taken to A&E after collapsing with crushing chest pains and was treated for a suspected heart attack!
“I'd honestly thought at first it was just trapped
wind, but it just got worse and more intense, radiating through my chest from
front to back, up into my neck... then I collapsed.
“Mark was a hero and got me to hospital despite being ill himself.
“I was triaged in no time. Oxygen levels were fine, blood pressure, fine, ECG, bloods.... no idea. My chest was still heavy, and breathing felt like hard work, honestly, but I clearly wasn't dying so took a seat, all masked up, and waited.
“Over the next few hours of waiting to see a Dr the pain in my chest slowly eased to nothing. Eventually, another ECG was taken and more blood pressure tests - my blood pressure appeared to be dropping - and suddenly I'm being moved to resus, no longer allowed to walk.
“Was a scarily surreal few hours once I was plumbed
in and all the tests were being done.
"The blood tests confirmed I had Covid.
“And then all the other tests fortunately determined that no permanent damage was done to my heart - however... what the hell???
“At no point in my life has flu or even Covid the first time round ever caused me to suffer anything like a heart attack.
“It may be mutated; weakened from the original strain, but please, just be mindful. The symptoms started out as nothing, but became something very nasty, very quickly for me. And Mark's gone through the ringer despite being up to date with all his jabs due to being in a high risk category.
“We're finally coming out the other side of it now.
“Please
take care folks, and stay well xx”
Later, Naomi said the purpose of her post was: “Not to scare so much as remind people that it's not something to get blasé about and to still be aware of, that these were the symptoms and how it progressed as we experienced it.
“I know, I'd had it in the back of my mind that it's just like the flu nowadays, and though in some respects that's true, in a way that was quite terrifying for me, that wasn't true at all.”
Regular men’s events in Llangollen
Men’s events in Llangollen include:
Probus
Meets every week at the Hand Hotel, from 11am -12noon on Tuesday. For men in retirement to enjoy coffee and biscuits (with about eight others), and in a very informal environment. They share town information, personal stories, the week’s news and solve country and world issues.
Prostate Support Group
Meets at the Hand Hotel, on the third Wednesday of every month at 2pm. For men with prostate cancer, of whatever stage, to share experiences and offer support to each other with practical advice and update to latest medical techniques. Open welcome. For more information contact David Davies on 07485 630834.

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