Category: News

Divers to preserve early submarine

Resurgam with anode on propeller DSC_6948 web 2

SCUBA divers are part of a major conservation project to help preserve the UK’s earliest submarine which was wrecked off the North Wales coast 132 years ago.

The three-man Victorian submersible Resurgam, designed by a Manchester clergyman, sank about five miles off Rhyl in February 1880.

Cheshire and Flintshire members of the UK’s top diving organisation, the British Sub-Aqua Club, have been authorised to attach zinc anodes to the 45ft long hull which will help protect the wreck.

Chester BSAC club member Chris Holden, from Higher Kinnerton, said: “Considering the Resurgam was made in 1879 it is in remarkable condition. We have already attached four anodes with several more to go.”

The “sacrificial” anodes decay while preserving the original metal.

The wreck site is legally protected and is under the care of Wales’ ancient monuments organisation CADW, with former Bangor University lecturer Mike Bowyer, a maritime historian, the licence holder who ensures only approved divers are allowed to dive the site.

“Raising the Resurgam would not be an insurmountable problem but preserving it once it was on shore would be a major financial problem,” said Chris.

Mary Tetley, Chief Executive of BSAC, said: “Being part of a BSAC club means our members frequently find themselves involved in fascinating projects such as this one.

“Our highly trained and respectful scuba divers are trusted to carry out such important work and the skills and experience of the Chester branch of BSAC have proved crucial to preserving
this historical treasure for future generations.”

Resurgam, Latin for “I shall rise again”, was the brainchild of remarkable Manchester clergyman Rev George William Garrett. Resurgam II (Resurgam I was a one man, hand-propelled submersible built the year before) was built in 1879 by Cochran and Company in Birkenhead for just over £1,500.

Although hailed by many as the world’s first full sized, powered working submarine there are disputes over whether it could have worked. The 30 ton iron vessel, propelled by an enclosed steam engine, which provided extremely cramped, hot and uncomfortable conditions for three men, was supposed to have been successfully trialled just off Wallasey before it made its way along the North Wales coast on route for a demonstration before the Royal Navy in Portsmouth.

After putting in at Rhyl for some modifications, the Resurgam was towed out again in rough conditions but the towing vessel encountered problems. Rev Garrett and the two crew transferred from Resurgam to the towing vessel to help with repairs but were unable to secure the Resurgam from the outside.

It shipped water, broke the towing rope and sank, where it remained until found by BSAC diver Keith Hurley from Chester, in 1995 when he investigated why a Colwyn Bay fishing trawler had snagged its nets.

Chris said: “You can see right down into the vessel. It would be almost impossible to go inside. It is so narrow it would have to be a slim person and without an aqualung. In any case there would be no point because it would probably wreck what was inside. There is loads of silt in it and at one time the only resident was a conger eel.”

A replica of the Resurgam was built by Cammell Laird apprentices and is on display at Woodside, Birkenhead.

BSAC club members who dive the site have to have their names submitted by Mike Bowyer to CADW to ensure they are suitable, and to make sure the “job is done properly,” says Chris.

Historian Mike Bowyer added: “The Resurgam’s place in history is probably more to do with its shape. All submarines since have been shaped like the Resurgam (cigar shaped), previously they were very odd shapes indeed.

“The most interesting thing if it was possible to get inside would be to see the engine and how Rev Garrett had developed the first under water breathing system.”

Rev Garrett eventually emigrated to America but died penniless just 50 years of age and was buried in a pauper’s grave, until it was marked relatively recently with a piece of Welsh slate which generously describes him as the “inventor of the submarine”.

His great grandson, Bill Garrett from New Jersey, USA, has actually dived the site and took part in a BBC documentary which sought to try and prove whether the Resurgam could have worked.

For more information about BSAC go to www.bsac.com

Do you live in the Chester area and want to learn to scuba dive or improve your existing skills Contact the Chester branch of BSAC by emailing to:enquiries@chestersubaquaclub.co.uk">enquiries@chestersubaquaclub.co.uk

Thursday August 30th, 2012

News

Here come the girls!

Eagles Meadow, GOZO Men launch their Womens Beauty business. Kevin Critchley Eagles Meadow centre Manager enjoys a coctail  at the launch of GOZO'S Womens Beauty Business. pictured is Chloe Sudlow, Hazel Rogers, Laura Owen Beauty therapist, Katie Hughes, Tara Davies, Kevin Critchley and Sharon Hughes.

A woman who used her life savings to open a men’s barber shop in Wrexham is reaping the benefits – thanks to girl power.

Sharon Hughes risked everything she had to open Gozo at the Eagles Meadow shopping centre in the teeth of the recession in 2010.

But the salon has  really taken off  and she’s now expanding the business to provide a beauty treatments for women.

The new women’s beauty business was launched with a glamorous cocktail party at the shop.

Sharon’s ultimate aim is to open a second premises so she can have his and hers salons.

The mother-of-two, a former nurse, fulfilled a lifelong ambition to run her own business when she opened Gozo (the Portuguese word for pleasure) but admitted it had been a difficult decision at the time.

Among those who’s helped make Gozo a success is Sharon’s daughter, Katie, 23, who is the company’s Style Director.

Sharon recalled: “Establishing Gozo was stressful because I put all of my savings into it but I’ve overcome that now and I’m now looking to expand further..

“Things are going very well and we are attracting about 10 to 15 new customers a week in addition to our regulars.

“In this era of people like David Beckham and these reality stars, men’s grooming seems to be coming ever more important.

“We’ve got a bar we’re a licensed bar as well so the guys quite like that.

The idea to provide beauty treatments for women came after Gozo took part at a charity event at the Ramada Hotel.

Sharon discovered there was a huge demand for everything from waxing to Indian head massages.

“People kept asking us why we didn’t do women’s beauty treatments at Gozo.”

The demand inspired Sharon to employ beautician Laura Owen, 24, to work solely with women.

Sharon added: “I decided to see how it goes with beauty treatments for women and it just took off.

“It’s very exciting because it’s a whole new element to the business and the response has been great.

“I’ve really enjoyed working with the ladies as well, and they certainly enjoy the wine and the cocktails we make.

“We now do a full range of beauty treatments including waxing such as eyebrow, leg, and underarm waxing.

“Also we do eyelash extensions, eyelash tints, facials, massaging, pedicures, manicures, file and polish, acrylic nails, gel nails, and nail art.

“There’s a huge demand. The men and the women get on really well. The ladies bring in their partners and their children in for their haircuts when they’ve been coming in for treatments.

“It’s been such a success that I am now looking for another property.

“I currently employ five people but when we open the new premises there’ll be more jobs.”

Eagles Meadow Manager Kevin Critchley is delighted  Gozo has proved such a success.

He said: “I am so pleased that Sharon’s hard work is paying off so handsomely and that she has now been able to create a women’s beauty salon within Gozo.

“It’s great news for Sharon and it’s great news for Eagles Meadow.”

For more information go to: www.gozo-men.co.uk

Wednesday August 29th, 2012

News

Martyn puts his best foot forward

Martin Tapscott, Boots 110812

KEEP fit enthusiast Martyn Tapscott, the new manager of Boots at the Quadrant shopping centre in Swansea, will be putting his hobby to good use when he and the staff stride out on a 15km walk for charity.

Martyn, 42, has just taken over the reins at the Quadrant Boots store – a company he has been with since graduating from university, 21 years ago.

A native of Barry, Martyn gained a degree in pharmacy from Bath University and then joined Boots to complete his pre-registration training to become a fully qualified pharmacist.

“When I joined the company it was a slightly different career path to now, back then most of the managers were pharmacists. I still spend time in the pharmacy to keep my hand in.

“I qualified in 1991 and did my pre-registration in Barry for a year. I spent a couple of years on relief pharmacist/manager duties across South Wales covering for other managers and my first store as manager was Caerphilly about 18 years ago.

“I was then manager at a couple of stores in the Cardiff area, Cardiff Bay and the large store at Newport.

“I did take about nine months out from store looking after our care services. It was a field role looking out for a group of people who handle our care services business in the West which is an area from Wales over to Birmingham down towards Bournemouth and Poole.”

Martyn, who lives with his partner in Barry, likes to spend what little spare time he has keeping fit. He also enjoys photography and travel.

Ian Kirkpatrick, Manager of the Quadrant Centre, said: “It’s good to welcome Martyn as the new manager of the store.

“Boots is an iconic brand and the branch here at the Quadrant is a very busy and vibrant one which plays a full part in the life of the community.”

The Boots group has adopted MacMillan Nurses as its strategic partner and organises fund-raising events for the cancer charity.

The Quadrant store will be taking part in a regional sponsored coastal walk on September 30 when Martyn and other members of staff will walk about 15km from Swansea to Mumbles and back.

“We also have loads of events on in-store for the August Bank Holiday weekend with singers and dancers, face painting, balloons, all sorts of things and we’ll have collection points in store,” he said.

Wednesday August 29th, 2012

News

West End theatre dresser takes on her own starring role in art exhibition

Artist Lisa Carter from Llanefydd for Helfa Gelf art trail.

A former West End theatre dresser on the hit show Phantom of the Opera is taking on a starring role of her own at a new art exhibition.

Mum-of-three Lisa Carter, from Llannefydd, between Denbigh and Abergele, gave up her glitzy life working with musical stars like Michael Ball, Shan Cothi and John Barrowman.

She transformed herself into a leading contemporary artist after escaping the rat race for the sake of her family.

The dramatic abstract landscapes created by Lisa will now be featured at the North Wales Open Studios Network exhibition which opens at Oriel Pendeitch, in Caernarfon, on Saturday, September 1.

It’s a far cry from her 10 years as a top theatre dresser for impresarios like Cameron McIntosh or from her time in the high pressure world of advertising, working on glamorous assignments for clients ranging from the Champions League to Virgin Atlantic.

They are mainly black and white though, influenced by the work of her father, Alan Grist, picture editor with the Western Mail in Cardiff, who had photographed everything from Royal Investitures to the Aberfan tragedy – her grandfather, Leslie Grist, had been the paper’s editor.

The Network showcases the work of area’s many artists in a summer-long series of events, part of the Helfa Gelf/Art Trail, which is funded by the Rural Development Plan for Wales.

It was Helfa Gelf, the open studios project, which kick-started the art college graduate’s return to her first love, painting, four years ago when she packed the youngest of her three children off to the village school in Llannefydd, between Denbuigh and Abergele.

She and husband Alex, a musician, moved to the village from London ten years ago to renovate a rambling cottage, Plas yn Llan, and bring up their children in Wales.

She said: “I wanted to come back to Wales but not South Wales so we stuck a finger on the map and found Llannefydd.”

The old house has the added benefit of wooden outbuildings, with one room neatly hung with Alex’s guitars and fitted with his desk and recording equipment while the other has Lisa’s canvases, a table scattered with artist materials and an expanse of floor, her preferred work surface.

She went to London at 18 to Central Saint Martin’s College of Art and Design and graduated with a theatre design degree and went to work in the capital, mainly as a dresser in theatres.

She said: “I specialized in costume and design, mostly set design, but worked mainly in the wardrobe department for people like Cameron McIntosh on shows like Phantom of the Opera.

“It was wonderful when you were young because you were out in the theatre world until four in the morning all the time and Alex was working as a technical stage manager.

“I was mainly working as a dresser and getting people into their costumes and out on stage with quick changes.”

Lisa, now 39, moved into advertising and branding, using her skills and contacts there and she said: “It was in the 1990s and it was the start of shopping as entertainment.

“I was travelling a lot, to the USA in particular, to bring back ideas, and putting together design teams for brands like Virgin Atlantic and the Champions League.

She worked with industry giant Global Design Register who number Sony, McDonalds and Kraft among their clients, but when the first of her children, Sammy, now aged 11, arrived, she and Alex decided a change was needed.

Agnes, 10, and Laurence, 8, have followed but by now the family had moved to North Wales and when the youngest went to school – all three are now Welsh speakers – mum took up her brushes again.

She said: “I started work the day he went to school, in the old stables here. I got involved with Helfa Gelf right away through Sabine Cockrill who I’d known at art college and I had two weeks to get my first exhibition done.

“I managed it though and then I put my work in for the National Eisteddfod at Bala and was accepted and that got me noticed and then I was signed up by the owner of the Ffin y Parc gallery in Llanrwst, and my exhibition there sold out.

“I don’t deal in the pretty, green fields, type of landscapes. I work from memory and my sketch books don’t have drawings in them – non-visual things stimulate me, often words and phrases.

“Writings by Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf and Japanese haiku poetry inspire me rather than the romantic view of landscape. I like a view that is more sideways.”

She has enjoyed Helfa Gelf and been surprised by how many people it attracts to her out of the way studio: “I get over 100 people each September,” she said: “The first year I sat there wondering if anyone would come.

“It’s lovely to be able to talk to people about your work and they are almost always really nice, even if they don’t like it.

“I remember one woman was quite rude though but after I had chatted to her for a while she actually bought something.”

Lisa’s work will be featured in a diverse and exciting exhibition of 28 artists is a showcase of some of North Wales Open Studios Network artists.

Sabine Cockrill, Project Coordinator for the Helfa Gelf /Art Trail, said: “Lisa is a fantastic example of how a project like Helfa Gelf can support and nurture artists abd bring their talents to the public’s attention.

“Her work is incredibly distinct and powerful and has found buyers from all over. It is nice to know that we played a small part in her success.”

The project sees Helfa Gelf /Art Trail working in partnership with Anglesey Arts Weeks with the aim of inviting the public into artists studios to experience first hand how arts and crafts in the region are created.

Helfa Gelf / Art Trail is now North Wales’ biggest Open Studio event with over 300 artists taking part in Gwynedd, Conwy, Denbighshire, Flintshire and Wrexham.

It takes place every Friday, Saturday and Sunday this September. Anglesey Arts Weeks is North Wales’ longest running event and takes place every Easter.

Delyth Gordon, Visual Art Officer, Gwynedd Council, said: “Oriel Pendeitsh is glad to support the open studios event by presenting a mixed exhibition to give a taste of the wide variety of work on view by the artists and craftworkers who are taking part across the six counties of the North Wales Open Studios Network.”

Tuesday August 28th, 2012

News