Category: News

Chef cooks up Christmas cheer

Cartrefi Cowny residents at Kennedy Court Sheltered Housing in Old Colwyn enjoyed their Christmas party. Chef Brian Williamson with from left, Brenda Robinson, Sheila Jarvis, Glenys Evans and Margaret Jones.

A former professional chef cooked up a Christmas treat for the residents of a sheltered housing scheme.

Residents of Cartrefi Conwy’s Kennedy Court complex met for their annual Christmas lunch which was organised by residents themselves and served up by ex-cook Brian Williamson.

Tenant Brenda Robinson organised the Christmas lunch, along with fellow resident and former chef Brian Williamson.

She said: “We had a full Christmas lunch with melon or prawn cocktail to start followed by turkey with all the trimmings. Then we had Christmas pudding or gateaux plus coffee and mints.

“Everyone seems to have had a good time which is the most important thing.

“We have had a lot of help from our wardens, Chris Bradley and Cate Jones- Hughes. It’s not easy feeding 37 residents! We also had a visit from Ysgol Hen Golwyn choir.

“The children performed a number of Christmas carols and other songs for us and everyone really enjoyed it. The atmosphere has been lovely and really festive. I almost wish it was Christmas every day!”

Brian Williamson says he’d forgotten just how much hard work was involved feeding 37 people.

He said: “Everything went smoothly and I’m sure everyone has had a wonderful time, there’s certainly been plenty of laughter.

Kennedy Court resident, Edna Parker, says the lunch was delicious and she enjoyed celebrating Christmas with her friends and neighbours.

She said: “I moved here from Bristol quite a few years ago to be near my brother. I really like living in Kennedy Court as I have so many friends. It’s been a lovely Christmas meal cooked by Brian and Brenda and served by the wardens.”

And Kennedy Court residents invited some friends from Cartrefi Conwy’s Rhos-on-Sea Parkway complex along to share the Christmas lunch.

Parkway resident, Richard Blackwell, who originates from Skegness, said: “I love it in North Wales and enjoy visiting Kennedy Court as we always have plenty of social events to enjoy. The Christmas lunch and party has been brilliant.”

Kennedy Court warden, Chris Bradley, says tenants did a wonderful job organising their Christmas lunch, and in my absence, Cate stepped in to help serving.

She said: “It’s been a lovely lunch and Brian Williamson and his helpers did a marvelous job. All the tenants have said they thoroughly enjoyed the event and there was certainly plenty of Christmas cheer.

“It is always nice to see residents enjoying themselves especially when they have worked together as a community to make things happen.”

Thursday December 20th, 2012

News

Gwynedd’s Enfys is a Christmas star

Enfys2 web 1

A six year old girl from Gwynedd will be starring in the ground-breaking TV series she inspired on Christmas Eve.

The idea for Dwylo’r Enfys (Rainbow Hands) on S4C’s Cyw came from mum-of-two Ruth Thomas, from Bontnewydd, near Caernarfon, whose daughter Enfys has Down’s Syndrome.

The series made by award-winning producer Nia Ceidiog is introducing a signing system called Makaton to small children in Welsh for the first time.

Makaton is a language programme that uses speech, signs and symbols to encourage communication. The system is used by more than 100,000 children and adults.

During the series, Dwylo’r Enfys (Rainbow Hands) visits children with special needs across Wales.

Each week, Cawod and Heulwen, two lively and colourful characters leave their home at the End of the Rainbow to meet the children and introduce three new Makaton signs.

The part of Heulwen is played by Ceri Bostock,from Caernarfon and Cawod is played by Iago McGuire from Anglesey

Enfys will be starring in a festive special being screened at 8.30am on Christmas Eve.

Ruth, who works part time for Gwynedd Social Services, said: “We had Makaton when Enfys was a baby but everything was in English.

“Because she attends a Welsh-medium school (Ysgol Bontnewydd) it meant as she was getting older she was having to translate everything which was something she could do without.

“Dwylo’r Enfys is a very special programme and it’s a programme for every one – not just for special children but also their friends, families and people at their schools.

“Makaton has changed our lives and I hope that Dwylo’r Enfys will do the same for other Welsh families.”

Nia, who also wrote the original versions of Fireman Sam in English and Welsh, said: “Dwylo’r Enfys is a very important project.

“This is the first time that children with special needs have been given such a stage on S4C.

“The programme shows Wales and all its diversity. It is refreshing and historical.

“I have been making television programmes for little children for a long time. This year I was asked to refresh Something Special  for Cbeebies.

“My experience with Mr Tumble and Makaton on Something Special was invaluable when I was developing Dwylo’r Enfys.

“The programme has been quite a quick turn-around and very enjoyable to do.

“We hit the screen on December 3 and the response from the audience and their families has already been very warm.

“One child is featured on each show with our presenters; they come down from the rainbow and take part in activities and adventures, using the Makaton signing system to communicate. All the youngsters have learning disabilities of some kind or other caused by various factors.

“Enfys is the star of our Christmas Eve show. A little boy called Owen from Cardiff loves music and he went to visit the Welsh language music service.

“Another little girl loves swimming and she went swimming with our presenters. We have a little boy who loves dressing up and shopping, so he makes his own shop and dresses as a baker.

“The children are very individual and we feature them in the context of their families and their lives. We’ve made 13 programmes, five to be shown before the end of the year.

“The presenters are both practitioners of the Makaton system of communication and we have a Makaton tutor on set and work alongside the Makaton charity.

“One of the reasons we did the programmes was to reflect Wales in all its diversity and the Welsh language. In Wales up to now children with learning disabilities have not been seen to this extent on S4C in a Welsh language context.”

Ruth says Enfys comes “down to earth” with the superheroes and goes in search for a present for her best friend Alaw.

“We were keen to promote social inclusion so we had a choir in this Christmas  programme featuring children from Bontnewydd and Ysgol Pendalar, so that Enfys and Alaw are singing
with a choir of about 30 children.

“Enfys is a real little character and she enjoyed watching some of the programmes but she has not seen her episode. I’m not sure she realises she was the inspiration for the series,” said Ruth, who also has a three-year-old son, Daniel.

Ruth is hoping there could be a second series of Dwylo’r Enfys, which now has its own Facebook page for viewers to leave comments.

She also hopes the Welsh medium Makaton will help more parents improve communication with their children.

“I want it to change the life of Welsh speaking children and their families because it’s so important. Imagine going to another country and not being able to communicate with someone. Often children are labelled with difficult behavioural problems when in fact they just cannot communicate,” said Ruth.

Nia added: “We are hoping its appeal will spread and that people presently not able to access resources and training will be able to do that.

“We are currently working on additional teaching resources to support Makaton training through the medium of Welsh, connected with the programme, and hopefully with support from the Welsh Government.”

Wednesday December 19th, 2012

News

Denbigh girls’ school that grows its own food produces a bumper crop

Howells school Denbigh? Pictured is Maddie Watkins, Sian Lind and Isobel Dignum.

A top independent girls’ school is not just producing a bumper crop of exam results – it’s also producing over 1,000 tons of potatoes, enough for five million bags of chips.

That’s because Howells School in Denbigh is not only a seat of learning but of farming too.

Girls from all over the world are not the only boarders at the school – there are flocks of Jacob sheep and alpacas and the beginnings of a herd of Highland cattle.

And it’s not just young minds that are flourishing at the 153-year-old school, but crops of potatoes, winter turnips, corn and hay.

They’ve all got their parts to play in the life of the school, a registered charity, according to Howells School Academic Principal Emma Jones.

She said: “As well as the valuable economic benefit they bring to the school, the farm also contributes educationally, culturally and socially.

“Many of our girls come here from big cities, from places like Tokyo, the home of our Prime Warden (Head Girl), Kotoe Kuroda, Seoul, Milan, Madrid and London, and they are just not used to seeing farming and farm animals up close.

“It’s important that they see and understand that the countryside isn’t just a place that’s pretty with green fields and trees and mountains but that it’s a place where people live and work and farm.”

The economic benefits to the school of the 100 acres of Goblin Farm are also significant.

The farm took its name from the Goblin Tower, part of the medieval castle of Denbigh, which still stands sentinel above the school fields.

The original Goblin Farm stood where Stanley House, one of the school boarding houses, now stands but the present farmhouse is still the hub of a thriving business which contributes to school funds.

There are 22 sheep and six alpacas which are big favourites with the girls and they will produce wool to revive the school’s traditions of spinning and weaving and School Trustee Robbie Locke said: “The girls love them and it’s a good way for them to relate to animals.

“It also gives them an understanding of livestock farming which is integral to the local way of life.

“The Jacob sheep are actually a registered flock which used to belong to Chris Goffey who used to present Top Gear on BBC. He lived near Oxford and advertised them for sale and we bought them.

“We have also begun to make much more positive use of the land which the school owns which was formerly pasture and had been for more than 50 years and so had become quite sterile.

“We’ve introduced a crop cycle aimed at improving the soil and we began with potatoes because that entails tilling down deeper so we brought in machines and did it properly and took out  a lot of stones which we put down in the tractor tracks.

“We brought in 16 tractors and in two days we put down 60 acres of seed potatoes – at one stage we had £2 million worth of machinery here working on the land.”

The Olympics certainly had a positive effect on the school’s economy, according to Mr Locke, with demand for chips pushing up the price of potatoes by £70 a ton and with Howells fields producing 18 tons of potatoes an acre, that added up to nearly two and a half million pounds of potatoes or over five million portions of chips.

He said: “Some of those potatoes have also found their way into the kitchens at Howells so it has worked well for us and it shows how the farm is helping the school in so many ways.

“We’re also growing winter barley and winter corn which will help provide straw for the horses in the stables and is environmentally friendly and we also produce all our own hay for the stables as
well.”

Tuesday December 18th, 2012

News

Wrexham home residents come face to face with python and tarantula

Animals out of the box event at Pen y Bryn, Pendine Park. Pictured is resident Mark Horner.

Snakes, snails and giant spiders invaded a Wrexham care home – much to the delight of residents.

June and Billy Lincoln, from Animals Out The Box, in Leeswood, near Mold, dropped in on the Pendine Park care organisation to introduce residents to their reptilian, arachnid and furry mammal friends.

The visitors to the Penybryn home included a selection of reptiles, from a Royal Python called Victoria to bearded dragon lizards and a pygmy hedgehog to a tarantula spider.

June said: “Normally we are asked to attend schools, youth clubs, and nurseries so it’s actually quite nice to visit some older people. We also help people deal with phobias, although the residents here were all clearly very comfortable handling the three snakes we brought along.

“We also offer advice to people who are looking to keep a reptile or spider as a pet. We like to point out the pitfalls and the fact that many snakes can live for many, many years and the commitment you have to make to keep them healthy.

“I am thrilled with the way residents have responded to our animals and delighted they have found the visit both fun and educational.”

Pendine Park Activities Co-ordinator Gerry Humphreys says it was the residents who asked if they could invite Animals Out The Box along.

She said: “We hold regular meetings with residents to discuss the activities they’d like us to try and put on. Many wanted to do something with animals and then some said they’d never handled a snake.

“I researched the idea and found out about Animals Out The Box and we decided to invite June and Billy along. I was a little apprehensive as I have a fear of spiders myself and I wasn’t sure how some residents would react to snakes and lizards.

“In fact, I needn’t have worried, they have all thoroughly enjoyed it and many were really excited. It has been a new experience and clearly one they have enjoyed immensely.

“Residents chose whether they want to attend and join in activities, no one is forced into doing something they don’t want to do. However, the day room was absolutely packed for Animals Out The Box. It’s clearly an activity that’s  been a big, big hit.”

Resident Una Wise, 79, who was originally from Holywell, says she had never handled a snake before but loved holding the royal python and king snake saying they were beautiful.

She said: “It’s been brilliant, they are lovely. I really like it when we get to do different things. I liked the snakes most but the lizards were nice too.”

Resident John Galley, 64,  and originally from Chester, said: “It’s been something different and really nice. I have enjoyed it very much. I liked the spider a lot.”

Mark Horner, 39, a long-term Pendine Park resident and originally from Northwich, said: “Brilliant! I loved it. It’s great to do something different. I like snakes and to be able to hold one was amazing. I hope they come back again.”

Bernadette Oloughlin, 50, and originally from Chester, said: “I loved the little hedgehog. I liked the snakes but I didn’t like them too close. The lizards were nice and felt different to what I thought they’d be like.”

Pen y Bryn resident Sian Walley, 41, and from Wrexham, said: “I never thought I ever hold a snake in my hands. It was amazing. I watched lots of other people holding them and thought if they can do it so can I. I’m glad I did now.

“Activities such as this are brilliant because it’s something different. I really hope they come back and see us again.”

Tuesday December 18th, 2012

News