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Rhiwbina Living Issue 52

Our Spring issue of the award-winning community magazine for Rhiwbina.

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News | Home | Interviews | Lifestyle | History<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> <strong>Living</strong><br />

At the heart of the community<br />

<strong>Issue</strong> <strong>52</strong> Spring '21<br />

CRAFTED IN<br />

RHIWBINA<br />

CRAFTED IN<br />

Your multi award-winning magazine for <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>


a: 222 Pantbach Road,<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>, Cardiff CF14 6AG<br />

t: 07772 081775 / 07974 022920<br />

w: www.livingmags.co.uk<br />

e: editor@livingmags.co.uk or<br />

danielle@livingmags.co.uk<br />

Distribution: 6,000 copies of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> <strong>Living</strong> are<br />

personally delivered by us to every house in the<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> ward four times a year in line with the<br />

seasons. We also distribute to local shops<br />

2<br />

Inside this issue<br />

Interview<br />

Esteemed actor<br />

Michael Sheen<br />

tells us about<br />

how his life and<br />

career have been<br />

affected by the<br />

pandemic<br />

Declutter<br />

Creative ways to<br />

declutter your<br />

home, your mind<br />

and your life<br />

History<br />

A look back at<br />

the village of<br />

Tongwynlais<br />

through a<br />

collection of old<br />

postcards<br />

Nature's Finest<br />

Discover the<br />

beauty and<br />

serenity of the<br />

local nature<br />

reserves that<br />

we have on our<br />

doorstep<br />

Summer deadline:<br />

9th July 2021<br />

Published late July 2021<br />

While every effort has been made to<br />

ensure the accuracy of the contents,<br />

the publisher cannot accept any<br />

responsibility for errors or omissions,<br />

or for any matter in any way arising<br />

from the publication of this material.<br />

Every effort has been made to<br />

contact any copyright holders.<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> <strong>Living</strong> is an independent,<br />

apolitical publication. No part of this<br />

publication may be reproduced<br />

without the express written<br />

permission of the publishers.<br />

Welcome / Croeso<br />

Spring has finally arrived and we<br />

welcome warmer weather with<br />

our first publication of the year.<br />

It's been a torrid time for<br />

many of us this last year but<br />

with Summer on its way, there<br />

is hope that we can finally put<br />

the struggles and pain of the<br />

pandemic behind us.<br />

With that in mind, we've<br />

put together an issue that<br />

will hopefully spread a little<br />

bit of positivity. You can start<br />

by finding out how you can<br />

declutter your life. Giving your<br />

home and your mind a thorough<br />

Spring clean will make you feel<br />

lighter and full of energy. We've<br />

even hand-picked some selfcare<br />

treats for you to savour too.<br />

Our recipes page features<br />

some delicious dishes that<br />

will help you shift some of that<br />

lockdown lag while <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

property blogger Erica Willmott<br />

shows you how to get your<br />

home ready for Summer. If<br />

you're struggling for space in<br />

your garden, we've got some<br />

great tips to make the most of<br />

your limited room.<br />

The warmer weather gives<br />

us more time to get out of the<br />

house and we have several<br />

features that can help you<br />

embrace the great outdoors.<br />

First up, we highlight some of<br />

the wonderful nature reserves<br />

that can be found in and around<br />

Cardiff. We've also put together<br />

details of places where you can<br />

go and simply sit and admire<br />

the stunning scenery. And if you<br />

want to walk in the footsteps<br />

of history, we've featured some<br />

iconic South Wales venues to<br />

visit and marvel at.<br />

While we're on the subject<br />

of history, we are honoured<br />

to feature old postcards of<br />

Tongwynlais that have been<br />

provided for us by our friends at<br />

CastellCoch.com.<br />

Our featured interview for<br />

this issue is with actor Michael<br />

Sheen, who spoke to us via<br />

Zoom from his apartment in<br />

New York, where he was filming.<br />

His career started out right here<br />

in Cardiff and he told us the story<br />

about his rise to prominence.<br />

We are always delighted to<br />

hear from local residents and<br />

none more so than Ian Kelly,<br />

who has penned the wonderful<br />

history of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Bowls<br />

Club, which is celebrating its<br />

centenary this year.<br />

Born in nearby Caerphilly,<br />

Tommy Cooper went on to<br />

entertain millions for decades.<br />

We chart the legendary<br />

comedian's rise from the streets<br />

of Caerphilly to the stages of<br />

London and TV screens all over<br />

the world.<br />

Local trade is the lifeblood of<br />

our communities and like us, if<br />

you run a small business, you'll<br />

know how difficult life has been<br />

during the pandemic. We've got<br />

some expert tips to help you<br />

use social media to boost your<br />

visibility and reach, and to help<br />

you get back on your feet.<br />

And last but not least, we've<br />

got a short story that you can<br />

settle down to read with a cuppa<br />

and maybe a biscuit.<br />

We are thrilled to be able to<br />

bring you this Spring issue of<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> <strong>Living</strong> but it's important<br />

now more than ever that we<br />

support our local businesses<br />

and advertisers. It may take<br />

a while for things to get back<br />

to some sort of normality but<br />

if we are there for our local<br />

tradespeople, they'll be there for<br />

us when we need them too.<br />

We'll be back with our Summer<br />

issue but until then, enjoy the<br />

sun and stay safe.<br />

Danielle and Patric<br />

Editors<br />

@<strong>Rhiwbina</strong><strong>Living</strong><br />

www.facebook.com/rhiwbinaliving<br />

@livingmagazinescardiff


Protests over £180 controversial<br />

cancer centre announcement<br />

news<br />

On their way to<br />

£100k for Hobbsy<br />

Hundreds of people have taken<br />

part in demonstrations against the<br />

announcement that a £180 million<br />

cancer centre will be built in North<br />

Cardiff.<br />

Protesters claim that the hospital<br />

will be built on an out-dated model,<br />

potentially putting patients' health<br />

at risk. The Welsh health minister<br />

Vaughan Gething gave the green<br />

light for the development of the<br />

new Velindre Cancer Centre in<br />

March.<br />

Gething announced that the plan<br />

could go ahead, and added that<br />

the proposals had been subject to<br />

a detailed scrutiny process by the<br />

Welsh Government.<br />

“Our current Velindre Cancer<br />

Centre has delivered exceptional<br />

service to people for many<br />

Speed limit<br />

reduced on<br />

Western Avenue<br />

A new speed limit has been<br />

introduced on one of Cardiff North's<br />

busiest roads.<br />

A 30mph zone has been<br />

introduced on the westbound<br />

stretch of Western Avenue, heading<br />

towards Llandaff. The area was<br />

previously a 40mph zone.<br />

Cardiff Council said that the<br />

changes were being introduced<br />

to improve road safety and air<br />

quality on one of the city's busiest<br />

routes. The new 30mph area<br />

extends from Gabalfa through<br />

to the Ely roundabout. Drivers<br />

travelling eastbound from Gabalfa<br />

Roundabout towards Newport can<br />

decades. It is known as a special<br />

place by those people who have<br />

needed its crucial support at one of<br />

the most difficult times in their lives,"<br />

he said.<br />

But his announcement has drawn<br />

criticism from both residents and<br />

medical experts, who say that the<br />

proposed model is out-of-date.<br />

"This is not the right model of<br />

cancer care for the future and it is<br />

not the right location," said the Save<br />

The Northern Meadows group.<br />

"We will continue to fight this<br />

decision which disregards the<br />

needs of future generations, of the<br />

local community, of biodiversity,<br />

and our commitment to the<br />

climate."<br />

The new centre is expected to be<br />

ready by 2025.<br />

increase their speed from 30mph<br />

up to 50mph until they reach the<br />

Llanedeyrn Roundabout.<br />

It was announced earlier this year<br />

that parts of north west Cardiff will<br />

see speed limits cut from 30mph<br />

to 20mph as part of a Welsh<br />

Government pilot to improve safety<br />

and pollution. The change will<br />

affect areas including <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>,<br />

Whitchurch, Tongwynlais, Llandaff<br />

North, and Heath.<br />

A presentation was<br />

held in Caedelyn Park on a<br />

Sunday morning in May to mark<br />

a special occasion for all those<br />

involved with <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> RFC's<br />

100KForHobbsy campaign.<br />

Among the hundreds of<br />

children of all ages playing and<br />

having fun was the man himself,<br />

who was there to present<br />

cheques to three of the charities<br />

who will benefit from everyone’s<br />

amazing efforts – inspired by the<br />

club's love and respect for Dave<br />

Hobbs.<br />

Rose Leigh of Cardiff Mind was<br />

there to receive a cheque for<br />

£29,214.63.<br />

Rose said:<br />

"We’ll use this incredible<br />

amount of money to promote<br />

the importance of men’s mental<br />

health through our initiative<br />

called It Takes Balls to Talk –<br />

suicide kills more men under 40<br />

than any other cause of death, so<br />

you can see how this donation<br />

means so much to us’."<br />

Catryn Grundy of School of<br />

Hard Knocks received a cheque<br />

for £18,890 and said:<br />

"We couldn’t be more grateful<br />

for your support. You’re all<br />

amazing! Diolch o galon!"<br />

Liz Andrews, Chief Executive of<br />

City Hospice and her colleagues<br />

Daisy and Neil received a<br />

cheque for £11,848.62. Liz said:<br />

"This money will help us to<br />

provide vital nursing care to<br />

support people in their own<br />

homes. To many of our clients<br />

who have no one to support<br />

them, this home care is a lifeline."<br />

Members of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> RFC have<br />

been fundraising for Headway<br />

Cardiff throughout May and<br />

would appreciate any help,<br />

support and donations which will<br />

get them to their target of 100K<br />

For Hobbsy!<br />

Please use this link to donate:<br />

www.justgiving.com/<br />

team/100kforhobbsy4headway<br />

3


news<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

soprano<br />

shortlisted for<br />

Cardiff Singer of<br />

the World 2021<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Eco Team offer residents<br />

advice to help save hedgehogs<br />

A soprano from <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> will<br />

be performing to win Cardiff<br />

Singer of the World 2021 this<br />

Summer.<br />

28 year-old Sarah Gilford<br />

is currently a member of<br />

the Opernstudio at the<br />

Bayerische Staatsoper.<br />

Aside from her presence in<br />

Munich, Sarah recently won<br />

the Welsh Singers Showcase<br />

2021.<br />

She will be representing<br />

Wales at this year's Cardiff<br />

Singer of the World<br />

competition, which will take<br />

place online this June.<br />

5G mast plan<br />

headache<br />

Residents at the top of<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Hill have expressed<br />

exasperation and anger at<br />

plans to build a large 5G mast<br />

near their houses.<br />

A 20 metre mast is planned<br />

to be built near the bridge<br />

over the M4, right alongside<br />

several properties on the hill.<br />

Residents have been<br />

fighting the installation<br />

since last March when they<br />

received a letter from Cardiff<br />

Council, explaining that<br />

Telefonica UK - commonly<br />

known as O2 - had submitted<br />

an application to build the<br />

mast on <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Hill.<br />

Another 5G mast was<br />

recently installed further<br />

down the road earlier this<br />

year.<br />

4<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Eco Team has been<br />

advising residents on how to save<br />

hedgehogs.<br />

Hedgehogs are now considered<br />

to be an ‘endangered animal’ and<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Eco Team want to reverse<br />

this trend. They are encouraging<br />

residents to speak to their neighbours<br />

and set up a <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Hedgehog<br />

Highway.<br />

“Spring is here and hedgehogs are<br />

out of hibernation. While we sleep,<br />

hedgehogs walk around one mile<br />

in search of food. But with so many<br />

garden walls and fences, crossing<br />

roads has become a necessity for<br />

them. One which doesn’t always end<br />

well," said Nia from the Eco Team.<br />

"By making sure there is a hole, the<br />

size of a CD case between gardens,<br />

hedgehogs can move freely, avoiding<br />

roads. And they will eat your slugs too!<br />

“If you don’t want to cut a hole in<br />

your fence, a shallow tunnel 5 inches<br />

square under a fence will work just as<br />

well. Walls are more tricky, but bricks<br />

can be removed and hedgehog<br />

ramps or miniature staircases created.<br />

It’s amazing how agile they are!”<br />

Hedgehogs have a relatively long<br />

lifespan for their size. Larger species<br />

of hedgehogs live 4–7 years in the<br />

wild (some have been recorded up to<br />

16 years), and smaller species live 2–4<br />

years (4–7 in captivity), compared to<br />

a mouse at 2 years and a large rat at<br />

3–5 years.<br />

In Britain, the main predator is the<br />

badger. Badgers also compete with<br />

hedgehogs for food.<br />

The team are hoping that residents<br />

can map their hedgehog holes on<br />

hedgehogstreet.org.<br />

For advice about making your<br />

garden hedgehog friendly, get<br />

in touch with the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Eco<br />

Team: <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>EcoTeam@gmail.<br />

com; Facebook and Instagram: @<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>EcoTeam<br />

Virtual Summer Festival<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>'s Virtual Summer Festival<br />

will take place for a second year this<br />

Summer, and will include the popular<br />

Scarecrow Walk, which was a hit with<br />

residents last year.<br />

This year's events include a<br />

Scarecrow Wedding Parade,<br />

a competition to find the Most<br />

Summery Business in the village, plus<br />

a Sunflower Competition to find the<br />

village's tallest sunflower.<br />

The traditional Summer Festival was<br />

last held in 2019, and was replaced<br />

with an alternative festival last year<br />

due to the pandemic.<br />

Scarecrows will be on display by<br />

Friday 30th July. They will be put<br />

to the public vote to decide on the<br />

village's favourite scarecrow, with<br />

the winners being announced in mid<br />

August.<br />

More details can be found at<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Events Team's page at<br />

www.facebook.com/One<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>


We love to hear what you've been up to<br />

so send us your letters and photos!<br />

We'll do our best to print them all!<br />

editor@livingmags.co.uk<br />

Your letters<br />

Parc-y-Pentre revisited<br />

I enjoyed the recent article on the history of Parc-y-<br />

Pentre and if I may, I would like to record the links<br />

between the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Recreation Club (RRC), which<br />

was formed in 1914, and Parc-y-Pentre.<br />

In 1914, the RRC leased 7.5 acres of land, from what is<br />

now the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Garden Village, which included the<br />

present site of the club and land up to the houses on<br />

Heol-y-Deri.<br />

Following the First World War, the club, in response<br />

to an unbelievable demand for the leasing of cricket,<br />

football and hockey (named in the club history), rented<br />

the land currently occupied by the school. At that time,<br />

1920, the Civil Service Sports Club rented the field<br />

(Parc-y-Pentre) from the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Garden Village (RGV)<br />

at £15 per annum.<br />

In 1926, the Glamorgan County Council purchased<br />

1.7 acres of land from the RGV ie. the land north of<br />

Lon Ucha. At that time, the RRC rented this site along<br />

with the site of the playing fields from the RGV. As a<br />

consequence, the RRC (having lost their football pitch),<br />

applied to the RGV for a tenancy of the field (now Parcy-Pentre).<br />

In 1926, a football section of the club started<br />

playing on the field. At its peak, the RRC rented 18 acres<br />

of land from the RGV.<br />

In 1930, Cardiff Cosmos AFC applied to the RGV to<br />

share the ground and this was accepted at £20 per<br />

annum. The association lasted until 1942. I suspect that<br />

this coincided with the construction of the water tank<br />

in the middle of the field in response to the wartime<br />

bombings (the Royal Ordnance Factory being the<br />

target). A similar tank was erected in the south east<br />

corner of the school grounds.<br />

One other interesting feature is the background of the<br />

path leading from the village to Parc-y-Pentre. I believe<br />

this is on the boundary between the two major land<br />

ownerships and the fact that the RGV (or Welsh Town<br />

Housing Trust) first purchased land to the north of the<br />

path, hence the houses on Y Groes being the first to<br />

be built in the RGV. I am not sure of the names of the<br />

estates involved; possibly Penllyn Castle and Wenvoe<br />

Castle. Perhaps someone could do some research on<br />

the major land ownerships for the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> area.<br />

A final point regarding Parc-y-Pentre relates to when<br />

I was recently walking in the park, and I came across<br />

a man with a metal detector. Apparently, he had, over<br />

the years, discovered several coins in the park. I believe<br />

that they were Roman coins. I understand that there is<br />

a small society of metal detectors in the area. Again,<br />

another interesting point to follow up.<br />

Brian Rowlands<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

Car parking catastrophe<br />

How sad it is to see such an intrinsic part of the<br />

character and heritage of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> being rapidly and<br />

comprehensively destroyed before our eyes on a daily<br />

basis.<br />

I refer to the many grass verges which are (or were)<br />

both a stunning visual aspect of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>, as well as a<br />

haven for the local ecosystem.<br />

The verges are rapidly being churned up and<br />

wrecked, along with the destruction of the thousands<br />

of daffodil bulbs which <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> community residents<br />

so enthusiastically planted - in those same grass<br />

verges to further enhance our local, aesthetic and<br />

natural environment .<br />

A combination of deliberate car parking by residents<br />

and visitors, as well as numerous contractors with<br />

delivery and construction, drivers of heavy vehicles<br />

now consider the grass verges to be an integral part of<br />

the highway on which to drive and park.<br />

On many <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> roads, it is now impossible to walk<br />

along the pavements, let alone traverse with wheel<br />

chairs or pushchairs, without stepping into the roadway.<br />

It is thus creating serious safety risks and hazards for<br />

young and old alike, as well as the visually impaired<br />

and disabled. Likewise, stepping onto any grass verge<br />

in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> is now more like walking through ploughed<br />

fields.<br />

Local representatives are either disinterested or<br />

ineffectual in the matter. Some residents have taken to<br />

installing rocks or canes into the verges in a desperate<br />

attempt to deter the vehicle trespassers; but this valiant<br />

and commendable effort should not be necessary and<br />

in itself does nothing to enhance our visual enjoyment,<br />

or to improve safety.<br />

So why don’t we all take action in the matter before<br />

it becomes too late and a key aspect of the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

character is irrevocably destroyed on our watch? Let's<br />

each individually and collectively take 'pride in our<br />

locality' and stop parking on our pavements and the<br />

grass verges? Simultaneously, why not take ownership<br />

and instruct our own contractors to respect our natural<br />

environment .We will be here long after they have<br />

finished their (our) projects, but by then, we will not<br />

have a roadscape to enjoy if we don’t take responsibly<br />

and act now.<br />

Name and address supplied<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

5


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weather, driving styles and vehicle load. All figures quoted are derived from the latest WLTP test cycle. Retail sales only, subject<br />

to availability for vehicles registered between 06.01.21 and 30.06.21 at participating dealers. T&C apply. *0% APR Mazda<br />

Personal Contract Purchase available on all new Mazda CX-5 models and all-new Mazda CX-30 models’. Finance subject to<br />

status, 18s or over. Guarantee may be required. Mazda Financial Services RH1 1SR. Models shown: Mazda CX-30 180ps 2WD<br />

GT Sport. OTR from £29,640. Model Shown features optional Soul Red Crystal Metallic paint (£810). Mazda CX-5 165ps 2WD<br />

GT Sport, OTR from £32,730. Model shown features optional Soul Red Crystal Metallic paint (£820). OTR price includes VAT,<br />

number plates, delivery, 12 months’ road fund licence, first registration fee, 3 year or 60,000 mile warranty and 3 years’<br />

European Roadside Assistance. °Test drives subject to applicant status and availability. Details correct at time of going to print.<br />

Not available in conjunction with any other offer unless specified. Victoria Park Motor Company Limited, trading as Victoria<br />

Park Mazda is a credit broker not a lender for this financial promotion. We can introduce you to a limited number of carefully<br />

selected finance providers and may receive a commission from them for the introduction. If you have any questions about<br />

commission please speak to the dealer.<br />

Book a test drive° today, call us on 02920 347445<br />

Victoria Park Mazda, Hadfield Road, Cardiff CF11 8AQ<br />

02920 347445 www.victoriapark-mazda.co.uk<br />

ALL-NEW MAZDA MX-30<br />

4% APR*<br />

REPRESENTATIVE<br />

ELIGIBLE FOR A £3,000<br />

GOVERNMENT PLUG-IN VEHICLE GRANT^<br />

AVAILABLE WITH FREE HOME<br />

WALL BOX CHARGER ~<br />

Call us on 02920 347445<br />

Victoria Park Mazda, Hadfield Road, Cardiff CF11 8AQ<br />

02920 347442 www.victoriapark-mazda.co.uk<br />

The official energy consumption figures for the all-new Mazda MX-30 range: Combined 19 kWh/100km. CO 2 emissions 0g/km. Figures have been<br />

determined according to WLTP test procedure methodology. These figures may not reflect real life driving results, which will depend upon a number of factors including the accessories fitted (post-registration), variations in weather, driving styles<br />

and vehicle load. All figures quoted are derived from the latest WLTP test cycle.Model shown may not be to UK specification. Colours and some exterior and/or interior elements may differ on screen from the actual model. Retail sales only,<br />

subject to availability for vehicles ordered and registered by 30.06.21 at participating dealers. T&C apply. *4% APR available on all new Mazda MX-30 models. Finance subject to status, 18s or over. Guarantee may be required. Mazda Financial<br />

Services RH1 1SR. Victoria Park Motor Company Limited, trading as Victoria Park Mazda is a credit broker not a lender for this financial promotion. We can introduce you to a limited number of carefully selected finance providers and<br />

may receive a commission from them for the Introduction. If you have any questions about commission please speak to the dealer.^All-new Mazda MX-30 currently qualifies for the Office of Low Emission Vehicles (“OLEV”) Plug-In Car Grant,<br />

which offers £3,000 off the purchase price. OLEV reserve the right to alter or withdraw the Plug-In Car Grant at any time. Any changes in the Plug-In Car Grant will be reflected in the overall all-new Mazda MX-30 price. All figures are correct<br />

at time of publication but may be subject to change. ~ Free home charger is available on all-new Mazda MX-30 First Edition models ordered and registered by 30.06.21. T&C Apply. Includes 1 X free home charger with standard installation<br />

by NewMotion. Any non-standard installation or additional options requested, will be payable by the customer. Installation address must match the registered keeper and take place within 4 months of vehicle delivery. Promotion is subject<br />

to application and approval for the Electric Vehicle Homecharge Scheme administered by OLEV. If you cancel your order post installation, you agree to immediately pay back the full cost of the home charger and standard installation £485<br />

to your dealer. Your dealer may withhold part of your vehicle deposit until this is done. Details correct at time of going to print. Channel Islands and Isle of Man excluded. Not available in conjunction with any other offer unless specified.


Michael Sheen sighs. His<br />

fingers stroke his grizzly<br />

beard and for a moment,<br />

he's no longer in New York; he's<br />

stepping onto a stage for the first<br />

time back in his home town of Port<br />

Talbot.<br />

Gone are the days of a telephone<br />

interview. The pandemic has seen<br />

to that. Zoom is the new way of life.<br />

And across the internet, across the<br />

Atlantic, Michael's voice is beaming<br />

right into <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>.<br />

He's in the US, filming for the<br />

acclaimed drama series Prodigal<br />

Son. It goes without saying that he<br />

has come a long way since his early<br />

days in South Wales. But he traces<br />

the success of his career back to his<br />

days of youth in Port Talbot.<br />

“As I’ve got older, I’ve realised<br />

more and more about what went<br />

into allowing me to have the path<br />

that I’ve had in life. I’m very aware<br />

that I had a supportive family, a<br />

family who would be involved with<br />

performing in one way or another.<br />

"They also pointed me in the<br />

right direction, not necessarily<br />

professionally but my parents and<br />

aunts and uncles and grandparents<br />

were all involved with the amateur<br />

dramatics society. Coming from an<br />

area that had a tradition for actors<br />

in the form of Burton and Hopkins,<br />

there was a lot of respect for it."<br />

Michael has followed in the<br />

footsteps of the giants of stage<br />

8<br />

and screen; but in doing so, he has<br />

forged his own path, straight out of<br />

the industrial South Wales town that<br />

he still calls home.<br />

“If anyone was to take a look, they<br />

wouldn’t think that Port Talbot<br />

would have that kind of output.<br />

I was very involved with West<br />

Glamorgan Youth Arts groups<br />

that were borne out of the local<br />

education system. Godfrey Evans<br />

was the man responsible for<br />

founding the West Glamorgan<br />

Youth Theatre Company. He<br />

changed the lives of generations of<br />

young people from the same sort of<br />

South Wales area – myself, Russell<br />

T Davies and Catherine Zeta Jones,<br />

who I’m currently working with on<br />

Prodigal Son."<br />

Michael was to then train with the<br />

National Youth Theatre of Wales in<br />

the Welsh capital.<br />

“We never moved around much<br />

when I was young so moving to<br />

Cardiff during the Summer holidays<br />

to do the National Youth courses<br />

– that was like going on holiday.<br />

Even going to Neath back then<br />

seemed exotic so to go all the<br />

way to Cardiff seemed like going<br />

to Mars. I remember we stayed in<br />

the university's Senghenedd Court<br />

halls of residence. We'd rehearse in<br />

various places around Cardiff and it<br />

honestly felt like a mixture of being<br />

on holiday and going to space.<br />

It was so exciting. That was my<br />

Prodigal<br />

son<br />

Actor and activist Michael Sheen speaks to <strong>Living</strong> Magazines about his<br />

career so far, and how he adapted to life during lockdown<br />

introduction to Cardiff."<br />

The National Youth Theatre of<br />

Wales was to give Michael the<br />

grounding that has underpinned his<br />

career since.<br />

"It was a brilliant youth theatre. It<br />

taught me great work ethics; it was<br />

very disciplined. Once I went to<br />

London, I realised that I'd taken it for<br />

granted about what was available in<br />

my area. I'm not too sure about how<br />

it compared to others in different<br />

parts of the country, but I started to<br />

see how my life could have gone<br />

a very different way. I owe a lot to<br />

the hard work of others. I'm amazed<br />

that I ever made it."<br />

In 1988, like Hopkins and Burton<br />

before him, Michael moved to<br />

London to train as an actor. He<br />

attended the Royal Academy of<br />

Dramatic Art (RADA), where he<br />

picked up his first professional<br />

role, and graduated in 1991.<br />

Throughout the 90s, Michael's<br />

stage work brought accolade after<br />

accolade, and he made his first TV<br />

appearance in 1993.<br />

"Stage work is where I started but<br />

theatre work has a tendency to take<br />

over your psyche. You wake up in<br />

the morning and all you can think<br />

is that you’re performing that night.<br />

You can’t concentrate on anything<br />

else. That may be the way for other<br />

actors too, I don't know, but that’s<br />

how it is for me. And it’s strange<br />

because the performance only<br />

Photographs: Glenn Dene


takes up a few hours of the day but<br />

it takes over an actor's life. I do a<br />

lot more work now in front of the<br />

cameras these days and despite<br />

it sounding grim, I’d say that I feel<br />

more at home on the stage."<br />

Michael's breakthrough screen<br />

role was as former Prime Minister<br />

Tony Blair in the 2003 film, The Deal.<br />

It was to mark his first collaboration<br />

with screenwriter Peter Morgan.<br />

They were to team up again for the<br />

2006 movie The Queen, Michael<br />

once again reprising his role as<br />

Tony Blair. He was nominated for<br />

a BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a<br />

Supporting Role. In that same year,<br />

he also appeared as English actor<br />

Kenneth Williams in BBC Four's<br />

Fantabulosa!<br />

For the following year, Michael<br />

starred as the television<br />

broadcaster David Frost in Frost/<br />

Nixon in the West End, before it was<br />

adapted into a movie in 2008, in<br />

which he again played Frost.<br />

I'd like to<br />

run a book<br />

shop where<br />

we could drink<br />

tea and talk<br />

about books<br />

"I’m very lucky to be in a position<br />

where I’m able to express who I<br />

am as a person. People always<br />

come up to me and say 'Oh, you’ve<br />

probably heard this before but I<br />

love your work'. But I’ve been on<br />

the other side of that - I've done it<br />

myself, so I know how important it is<br />

for them to do that. What really puts<br />

a smile on my face is if someone<br />

says that they’ve been deeply<br />

touched by something that I’ve<br />

done."<br />

Michael has gone on to become a<br />

household name, both here in the<br />

UK, as well as in the US. But what<br />

would he be doing if he wasn't<br />

acting?<br />

"I was only talking about this the<br />

other day actually. If I wasn't doing<br />

all the acting stuff, I’d like to run<br />

a book shop. But I wouldn’t want<br />

anyone to take the books. I’d want<br />

people to come in and talk about<br />

the books. They'd have to come in<br />

and we’d drink tea and talk about<br />

them. But I wouldn’t want them<br />

walking out with the books." Michael<br />

pauses. "Maybe it’d have to be a<br />

library instead."<br />

Meeting people is one thing that<br />

many across the world have<br />

had to think twice about<br />

doing since the outbreak<br />

of Covid19. In June 2020,<br />

Michael starred alongside<br />

his friend David Tennant<br />

in a six-part television<br />

lockdown comedy called<br />

Staged, which was made<br />

using video-conferencing<br />

software. A second eightepisode<br />

season aired in<br />

January 2021.<br />

“The pandemic has made<br />

me realise how vulnerable<br />

we all are. I’m working in<br />

New York at the moment<br />

and it really saddens me to<br />

see how many businesses<br />

are closed down – and<br />

for good. It’s startling to<br />

see how our economies<br />

have been brought to<br />

a halt. It’s frightening<br />

how many conspiracy<br />

theories have sprung up<br />

but overwhelmingly, it's<br />

heartening to see how<br />

people have worked<br />

together."<br />

The actor has taken a keen<br />

interest in the fate of small local<br />

businesses, especially those faced<br />

with the challenges presented by<br />

the pandemic. He's also keen to see<br />

Wales get a better quality media,<br />

suited to the country's needs.<br />

"Most of our news comes from<br />

outside of Wales and that has sent<br />

conflicting messages to the people<br />

of Wales during the pandemic."<br />

Despite his international fame and<br />

success, Michael hasn't forgotten<br />

his roots, or those who are in a<br />

place that he was once in.<br />

"I'm lucky in that I can use the<br />

reach that I have to help change<br />

aspects of society for the better.<br />

I don't do charity work in the<br />

traditional sense but I do see my life<br />

as two distinct parts and the acting<br />

Michael still considers<br />

Port Talbot his home<br />

people<br />

side of it allows me to support<br />

causes that I care about." He is<br />

currently the honourary President of<br />

Wales Council for Voluntary Action<br />

and in 2017, he founded the End<br />

High Cost Credit Alliance, which<br />

works to promote more affordable<br />

ways to borrow money.<br />

As we wrap up the interview,<br />

Michael has spoken for more than<br />

half an hour. It's still early morning in<br />

New York, his coffee has long since<br />

gone cold and he has another day<br />

of filming ahead of him.<br />

"It's a little unnerving being here<br />

with the pandemic still going on,<br />

but we'll get through it somehow,"<br />

he says.<br />

It seems it's all in a day's work for<br />

Michael Sheen.<br />

9


Jo Hollyman Brown<br />

Online / *Bethany Baptist<br />

Church<br />

07944 084791<br />

joh@tinytalk.co.uk<br />

* Subject to Welsh Government<br />

announcement on 13/05/2021<br />

The Art Workshop<br />

Quality Fine Art Tuition for adults and young artists<br />

Six week Printmaking<br />

Course starts 17th June<br />

We have social distancing measures in place to<br />

keep you safe and Zoom options for home learning<br />

Term courses and individual<br />

workshops from qualified tutors<br />

Drawing, Oil Painting, Watercolours,<br />

Acrylics, Textile Art, Printmaking<br />

3 Lon Fach, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>, Cardiff CF14 6DY<br />

For timetable and booking see<br />

w: www.theartworkshop.co.uk<br />

e: theartworkshop@live.co.uk<br />

t: 07947 003111


Scarecrow Wedding<br />

Parade<br />

Come and meet the<br />

Scarecrows on their way<br />

to their wedding! They will<br />

be stopping off at various<br />

points around <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> and<br />

Pantmawr for the children of<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> to wish them well.<br />

More details will be posted<br />

on Facebook and Instagram<br />

nearer the time.<br />

Most Summery<br />

Business<br />

Look out for <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

businesses, who will<br />

be invited to dress their<br />

windows/fronts in a very<br />

summery theme!<br />

If you have bunting, or can<br />

make it, why not join us by<br />

putting it up, safely, outside<br />

where you live?<br />

Sunflower<br />

Competition<br />

Submit a photograph and<br />

the height of your sunflower<br />

to <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Events Team,<br />

via Facebook messenger by<br />

Saturday 21st August.<br />

There will be<br />

prizes for the<br />

three tallest<br />

sunflowers!<br />

Scarecrows will be on display by Friday 30th July. If you wish to enter<br />

your scarecrow for the competition, you need to send a photograph, the name<br />

of the scarecrow, your name and address to us via Facebook messenger at<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Events Team. A map will be available by Saturday 31st July for everyone<br />

to incorporate the scarecrows in their walk. You vote for your favourite scarecrow<br />

via <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Events Team Facebook messenger, or you can drop your vote into<br />

the voting box that will be available at Word of Mouth Maintenance,<br />

8 Heol Llanishen Fach, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> - voting begins 31st July.<br />

All votes must be submitted by 12 noon on Sunday 8th August.<br />

The three scarecrows that get the most votes will receive a great prize!


Re-imagining our<br />

school<br />

The past year has proven to be an<br />

unprecedented era in all of our lives<br />

as we have found ourselves having<br />

to adapt to the ways that we live<br />

and work; changes that we could<br />

never have imagined only a short<br />

time ago.<br />

Our young people are no<br />

exception. With enforced periods<br />

of time learning at home, and with<br />

restrictions on socialising with<br />

friends, it has been inconceivable<br />

for them to continue in their<br />

normal childhood routines and<br />

activities in and out of school<br />

during this period. Faced with<br />

unimaginable challenges, schools<br />

have very quickly had to re-imagine<br />

themselves in order to create<br />

provision that best meet the needs<br />

of the school community during this<br />

torrid time.<br />

More than ever in unthinkable<br />

times, we strive to create a home<br />

away from home at Llanishen<br />

Fach; a happy, secure place where<br />

children can be the best that<br />

12<br />

they can be, knowing that they<br />

belong and are special. We aim<br />

to develop a sense of place and<br />

‘cynefin’ (familiarity) whether our<br />

children are learning in school or at<br />

home with the school’s ethos and<br />

culture underpinned by stability,<br />

connectivity and reassurance.<br />

Remaining open throughout the<br />

pandemic, keen to support the<br />

efforts of key workers and provide<br />

essential support to vulnerable<br />

families, we welcomed five other<br />

Cardiff primary schools to Llanishen<br />

Fach, forming a bilingual ‘hub’<br />

provision during the first lockdown.<br />

The tireless efforts of staff at<br />

a moment’s notice led to the<br />

creation of innovative childcare<br />

provision for over 80 children in a<br />

safe and happy setting. With the<br />

majority of the school population<br />

spending extended periods of<br />

time at home, maintaining both<br />

teaching and social contact with<br />

our children, switching seamlessly<br />

between online learning and<br />

video conferencing and school<br />

attendance in class bubbles as<br />

circumstances have permitted,<br />

has been paramount in sustaining<br />

connection.<br />

Technology has played a huge<br />

part in our lives over the last<br />

year, allowing us all to connect,<br />

maintain relationships and sustain<br />

livelihoods. It has been integral in<br />

allowing children to sustain learning<br />

in the face of adversity and has<br />

resulted in children becoming<br />

more confident, proficient and<br />

independent in their use of<br />

technology.<br />

Where children were required to<br />

stay off school, thanks to the help<br />

of the Welsh and local government,<br />

we have been able loan 70+<br />

computers to families, creating<br />

extra digital support for children<br />

to be able to engage in distance<br />

learning. The use of IT has also<br />

greatly helped us maintain a sense<br />

of togetherness through shared<br />

virtual experiences such as VE Day<br />

celebrations, ‘The Great Llanishen<br />

Fach Camp Out’, ‘Virtual Sports Day’<br />

and the ever-popular Friends of<br />

Llanishen Fach (FOLF) ‘Virtual Duck<br />

Race’.<br />

Redesigning our curriculum to be<br />

realistic, flexible and sustainable for<br />

our families juggling their own work,<br />

home learning and childcare has<br />

positively affected the wellbeing of<br />

our school community. Our children<br />

reaped the benefit of our ‘mirrored’<br />

approach to learning if they were<br />

affected by periods of self-isolation<br />

and enforced home learning. Our<br />

innovative ‘learning mats,’ designed<br />

and created by staff, provided<br />

universal access to learning for<br />

all, whether in school or at home,<br />

ensuring that no child missed out<br />

on learning opportunities.<br />

Coupled with our use of online<br />

platforms, daily live learning<br />

sessions for each class, and the<br />

formation of ‘buddy’ groups,<br />

allowing children to collaborate and<br />

support one another whilst at home,<br />

has ensured that connections<br />

between children and staff have<br />

remained strong and disruption<br />

to our children’s education<br />

minimalised.<br />

Throughout, the health and<br />

wellbeing of our pupils and their<br />

families has been, and remains, an<br />

overarching priority as we support<br />

our children to be the best they can<br />

be and reach their full potential. As<br />

we adapted to working and living<br />

in very different ways, we became<br />

acutely aware of some of the<br />

challenges our families were facing.<br />

By establishing links with the All<br />

Nations Church and a partnership<br />

with FareShare.org.uk, our staff<br />

were regularly out and about on the<br />

school minibus making food-drops.<br />

Life has been hard for so many of


us over the past year, so it has given<br />

the school staff a great sense of<br />

pleasure to be part of what we have<br />

come to call our ‘Random Acts of<br />

Kindness’.<br />

Following a successful application<br />

to the Moondance Foundation,<br />

we have been able to fund small<br />

gestures of support to many of<br />

our pupils and their families. The<br />

Foundation is designed to support<br />

welfare and wellbeing to improve<br />

outcomes for future generations<br />

and support organisations that<br />

have a transformational impact in<br />

their communities in Wales and<br />

beyond. The scope of these acts<br />

of kindnesses has been further<br />

extended by the great generosity<br />

of Dusty’s Pizzeria, which enabled<br />

us to touch yet more lives as well<br />

as through the support of local<br />

businesses ‘Cotton Reel Sunshine’<br />

and ‘Carter Fruit & Veg’.<br />

Despite remarkable achievements<br />

in remaining connected with our<br />

children whilst away from school,<br />

there is no substitute to having<br />

our Llanishen Fach family back<br />

together. Whilst school maybe<br />

different to before the pandemic,<br />

Llanishen Fach is ultimately the<br />

same happy and secure place it has<br />

always been and we have aimed to<br />

put the school community at ease<br />

and assure them of this.<br />

Greeting families with huge<br />

celebrations and a ‘party’<br />

atmosphere has created a warm<br />

and reassuring air of business<br />

as usual. With robust safety<br />

measures in place, our designated<br />

one-way system demarcated by<br />

colourful spots and rainbows to<br />

aid social distancing, enables the<br />

safe passage of 1,000 adults and<br />

children on and off site twice daily,<br />

staggered over a 30-minute period.<br />

Staff worked extensively to<br />

create a physically welcoming<br />

environment for our families,<br />

building a new community garden<br />

in the space of a week, complete<br />

with a magnificent hand-painted<br />

mural and raised beds ready for<br />

each child to plant and nurture<br />

sunflowers.<br />

In practical terms, the children<br />

have remained in familiar ‘class<br />

bubbles’ with the same teacher<br />

throughout and follow simple<br />

daily routines to ensure a sense<br />

of reassuring security, but with<br />

flexibility to allow children to just<br />

‘be’, reflect and reconnect with their<br />

friends.<br />

At Llanishen Fach, we take every<br />

opportunity to build on positive<br />

experiences and engender a sense<br />

of fun whilst acknowledging that<br />

some of our pupils are experiencing<br />

emotional struggles. We have reimagined<br />

key events to make them<br />

possible under current restrictions<br />

and ensure that the children don’t<br />

miss out. Hallowe'en saw the<br />

driveway lined with 500 pumpkins<br />

for our pupils to pick, carve and<br />

decorate with monster madness<br />

in-class disco. Raising vital funds<br />

for Children in Need illustrated our<br />

children’s ability to demonstrate a<br />

remarkable sense of gratitude in<br />

recognising their ‘real’ superheroes<br />

as we acknowledged and thanked<br />

heroes from within our school<br />

community as key workers in a<br />

socially distance parade.<br />

A little Welsh hwyl (fun) in school<br />

and online ensured celebrations<br />

of our Welsh culture and heritage<br />

on St David’s Day, in the absence<br />

of our traditional Eisteddfod. Fun<br />

and games at our monthly class<br />

birthday parties have gone a long<br />

way to making up for children being<br />

unable to celebrate with friends<br />

at parties and gatherings under<br />

current restrictions.<br />

schools<br />

A word from<br />

headteacher Mrs<br />

Sarah Coombes<br />

We are<br />

overjoyed to<br />

have our school<br />

back together<br />

as one and we<br />

look forward<br />

with hope to<br />

a period of<br />

stability as the<br />

children settle back into school<br />

life.<br />

The school’s ability to manage<br />

change through this period<br />

and its tenacity in reinventing<br />

processes and procedures, as<br />

we have had to adjust to both<br />

the school and educations everchanging<br />

climate, has been<br />

astonishing. I am astounded at<br />

the dynamic, interdependent<br />

working environment that<br />

has evolved. It has enabled a<br />

remarkable team of 60 staff to<br />

place and implement solutions<br />

whilst showing immense<br />

resilience to the challenges<br />

everyone has faced and<br />

continues to face during the<br />

pandemic.<br />

The schools’ capacity to change<br />

and address each problem with<br />

innovation and creativity whilst<br />

drawing on the strengths of the<br />

individual, has proven invaluable<br />

as we continue to tackle one<br />

of our greatest challenges. I<br />

could not be prouder of my<br />

team, the school community,<br />

our supportive governors and of<br />

course our children.<br />

13


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The Garden Village Garage<br />

5 Star Customer Rating<br />

Under new management<br />

Service / MOT / Repair<br />

Collection & Delivery<br />

Call us free<br />

0333 121 2012<br />

Visit online<br />

www.GardenVillageGarage.co.uk<br />

or in person<br />

227 Pantbach Road, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> CF14 6AE<br />

We Buy Cars For cash


Nature's<br />

finest<br />

The Cardiff area is<br />

bursting with nature<br />

reserves. Here are some<br />

of the finest on offer<br />

65 1. Y GWEIRA<br />

Located at the north-eastern corner of Llantrisant<br />

Common, this site lies west of the village of<br />

Beddau, and less than one mile north of Llantrisant.<br />

It mainly consists of marshy grassland and low wet<br />

heathland.<br />

6 2. COED-Y-BEDW<br />

Coed-y-Bedw, east of Pentyrch, contains ancient,<br />

broad-leaved woodland, prettiest in springtime<br />

when the ground is carpeted with dense fields<br />

of bluebells and wild garlic. Several streams run<br />

through it, and the wood spans the boundary<br />

between acidic and basic bedrock.<br />

5 3. LAVERNOCK POINT<br />

Lavernock is made up of a variety of habitats, mostly<br />

coastal Jurassic limestone grassland and scrub. Most of the<br />

area is made up of open meadow, including some unusual<br />

varieties that can survive on the limestone. Butterflies<br />

abound here and the elusive Purple Hairstreak butterfly,<br />

that relies entirely on the oak tree to survive, is known to<br />

visit the reserve.<br />

6 4. HOWARDIAN RESERVE<br />

Howardian Local Nature Reserve in the lower<br />

Rhymney valley Penylan, is a wildlife oasis of<br />

woodland, wildflower meadow, ponds and<br />

reedbeds.<br />

A network of paths now weave between the<br />

variety of habitats that are packed with interesting<br />

flora and fauna. It's located on Ipswich Road, just<br />

past the tennis centre.<br />

16


5 5. PWLL WAUN CYNON<br />

Travelling further afield, Pwll Waun Cynon is<br />

situated south of the River Cynon between the<br />

A4059 and the A4224. It was previously one of the<br />

most polluted parts of the UK but began its revival<br />

in the mid 1980s. It now boasts an impressive<br />

number of water birds and also provides a habitat<br />

for aquatic insects.<br />

8 6. PARC SLIP<br />

This reserve in Bridgend consists of over 300<br />

acres of different habitat types and supports many<br />

different species. It also includes 4km of cycle<br />

paths and 10km of dog walking tracks.<br />

65 7. CWM COLHUW<br />

The coastline at Llantwit Major is well known for its ancient<br />

historical features but it's also home to Cwm Colhuw<br />

Nature Reserve, which runs along the cliff tops to the<br />

west and back towards the town. The site was used for<br />

allotments during the Second World War and also contains<br />

part of the boundary bank and ditches of an Iron Age<br />

Promontory Fort.<br />

8 8. BRYNNA WOODS<br />

The woods comprises of 38 hectares of secondary, and<br />

some ancient, semi-natural woodland, scrub, marshy<br />

grassland, dry grassland and ruderal habitats.<br />

There are plenty of public footpaths and bridleways<br />

throughout the woods, and is a haven for wildlife, most<br />

notably the dormouse.<br />

65 9. ROGIET POORLAND<br />

This reserve hosts areas of woodland and scrub, as<br />

well as a small remnant of limestone grassland, a<br />

habitat that is becoming increasingly rare in Gwent.<br />

The woodland is rich with aspen, ash and alder<br />

and at the margins, red campion and sweet violet<br />

flourish in the shade. Full of fascinating wildflowers,<br />

it's a magnet for foraging insects such as the Brown<br />

Argus butterfly. The reserve's name came about<br />

after the area was set aside for the local labouring<br />

poor at a time when the rest of the land on the<br />

Tredegar Estate was enclosed.<br />

6 10. COED GARNLLWYD<br />

This reserve is less than a mile north-east from Llancarfan,<br />

not far from Barry. Its ancient broadleaved woodland<br />

features scrub and a meadow, and you'll also find<br />

varied and active bird life here too. From buzzards to<br />

woodpeckers and tawny owls, the woodland is also<br />

teeming with a large range of trees. You'll also find plenty<br />

of bluebells and buttercups at this time of year too.<br />

17


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Life online<br />

after<br />

lockdown<br />

,<br />

As life begins to return to some semblance of normality, change is inevitably the new<br />

norm. We spoke to Matthew Davies, founder of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>’s Garden Village Garage, who<br />

explains why change is now needed and why, after twelve years of investment and the<br />

building of many relationships within the local community, he has made the difficult<br />

decision to resign from the Hemaret business he grew and loved, and to move on<br />

The pandemic has given<br />

many of us the chance to<br />

pause, to reflect and to<br />

change many things.<br />

That’s certainly the case for<br />

Matthew Davies, founder of<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>’s Garden Village<br />

Garage, a familiar sight within the<br />

heart of the village.<br />

Matthew says:<br />

“Following the outbreak of<br />

Covid 19, it was time for me<br />

to make some life changing<br />

decisions, both personally and<br />

professionally. Resigning in<br />

order to attain new dreams and<br />

aspirations was essential for me.<br />

It was always my intention to<br />

build my business while growing<br />

relationships within this local<br />

community. Putting down roots<br />

at the office, nestled in the heart<br />

of the village, was just the first<br />

stage.<br />

“A visual presence in our<br />

community was always part of<br />

the original plan. However, having<br />

worked extremely hard over the<br />

past twelve years to achieve this,<br />

now the time is right to migrate<br />

my business online.”<br />

As a result, Matthew has now<br />

separated from and has no<br />

affiliation with the business or<br />

office site in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> village.<br />

Instead, he is building another<br />

new business online.<br />

Matthew added:<br />

“In small business, people<br />

buy from people and it is<br />

the personality within small<br />

businesses that allows this to<br />

happen. I’ve built a business<br />

before and I will do the same<br />

again.”<br />

With more than three decades<br />

of expertise in the premium retail<br />

motor trade sector, Matthew<br />

understands the needs from<br />

within our local community.<br />

“I’ve chosen <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>’s premium<br />

magazine to communicate the<br />

relaunch and rebranding of the<br />

new business to be known simply<br />

as ‘The <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Garage’”.<br />

Matthew has transitioned his<br />

successful business formula<br />

online. Having been a pioneer<br />

in social distancing for more<br />

than twelve years, Matthew’s<br />

new online business now offers<br />

to existing and new customers,<br />

a premium, safe, contactless,<br />

convenient and easy to use<br />

motoring alternative.<br />

Commercially and<br />

comprehensively insured to<br />

take care of every customers’<br />

requirements while delivering this<br />

seamless service which includes<br />

home or local work based<br />

collection and return delivery and<br />

high definition video reporting for<br />

Mot testing; routine service and<br />

repair; all diligently finished with<br />

a complimentary cleaned car on<br />

return. The <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Garage also<br />

continues to buy cars for cash.<br />

Matthew was keen to confirm<br />

that all of his carefully selected<br />

service providers deliver to<br />

his high standards, values and<br />

requirements and his customers’<br />

vehicles receive the highest<br />

levels of technical care at all<br />

times. His independent service<br />

providers are licensed and<br />

authorised by the Driver & Vehicle<br />

Standards Agency (Ministry of<br />

Transport).<br />

“I’ve always supported <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

<strong>Living</strong> magazine and I look<br />

forward to working with the<br />

publication as I move upwards<br />

and onwards into the cloud!”<br />

No doubt many will spot<br />

Matthew in and around our<br />

local community from day to<br />

day collecting cars as before.<br />

Matthew warmly welcomes all<br />

enquiries on his new contact<br />

details listed below:<br />

our contact details<br />

........................................................................<br />

t: 0333 900 2404<br />

(FreeCall)<br />

m: 07776 220248<br />

w: www.the<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>Garage.com<br />

e: info@the<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>Garage.com<br />

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home<br />

Summer<br />

Ready<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> property expert and interior design expert Erica Willmott is<br />

on hand to help you get your home shipshape for summer<br />

Erica<br />

Willmott<br />

The winter dragged out even<br />

more so this year because we<br />

couldn't celebrate Christmas<br />

or see the back of 2020 with a<br />

party. I feel like I have had the<br />

January blues for months now!<br />

However, with the lighter<br />

nights and the warmer weather<br />

here, it's time to think about<br />

opening up the house and<br />

getting our home summer<br />

ready!<br />

Let’s look at some ideas on<br />

improving your home for the<br />

summer!<br />

Follow Erica's blog at<br />

www.curatedcartref.co.uk<br />

20<br />

Spring Clean<br />

First, think about spring cleaning<br />

your home. Open up the windows,<br />

and let the invigorating fresh<br />

spring air in. Pop on your favourite<br />

radio station and throw out what<br />

you don’t need.<br />

Box up items for charity and sort<br />

out the recycling. Invest in some<br />

storage to hide away what you<br />

don’t need or reduce space taken<br />

in wardrobes or cupboards. Don’t<br />

forget the little places – like the<br />

medicine cabinet, and don’t forget<br />

the big things either – like the junk<br />

in the garage. Getting rid of the old,<br />

makes way for the new!<br />

The outside of your<br />

home<br />

Is the outside of your house<br />

looking tired? I love the idea of<br />

spraying your UPVC windows and<br />

doors and updating the colour to<br />

look modern. You may need to get<br />

a professional in for this but the<br />

difference can be amazing.<br />

Paint the surrounding windowsill<br />

and freshen up any woodwork.<br />

Brush away any old leaves, remove<br />

dead flowers. Make your home<br />

inviting; don’t forget it’s all about<br />

the kerb appeal!


Tidy up the garden<br />

Chop the trees that stop the<br />

sunshine getting in and tidy<br />

up overgrown hedges. Fix any<br />

fencing that has blown down<br />

in the winter months. Mow the<br />

lawn, clean the patio and tidy up<br />

the garden area, after all this is<br />

where we hope to be spending a<br />

lot of time!<br />

Plant some new bulbs that will<br />

be in full bloom by summer.<br />

Don’t forget to plant some new<br />

flowers in the front too!<br />

If you have no garden<br />

Create a room inside which emulates the<br />

outside space. Think about buying a few<br />

potted plants to introduce some greenery;<br />

look at introducing some flowery paintings<br />

or scenes of summer to walls.<br />

Change the curtains for something<br />

colourful, or flowery; maybe add a blind<br />

that will still allow light in, or if you can<br />

afford it, how about a plantation shutter,<br />

really bringing a touch of abroad home.<br />

Introduce some natural textiles and hang<br />

up an extra mirror which can reflect space<br />

and light into the room.<br />

Change your soft furnishings<br />

If you are content with the look of your home but just like to change the<br />

soft furnishings and brighten up with a few cushions, then how about<br />

replacing the velvet, fluffy and dark colours with some summer fresh<br />

bright cushions? I have seen some amazing neon colours! You can even<br />

change the colour of your lampshades<br />

and don’t be afraid to use contrasting<br />

colours.<br />

Introduce some tactile textiles and<br />

accessories. I love the hessian rugs which<br />

remind me of being abroad. Get some<br />

large vases and maybe add Pampas<br />

grass, which is very in-fashion, and it<br />

comes in some very bright colours!<br />

Upcycling<br />

'They don’t make them like they used to’ is a very true saying about<br />

furniture. Now, more than ever, people are upcycling old pieces of furniture,<br />

from chest of drawers to sideboards, and their grandfather’s old chair.<br />

The easiest way to update pieces is<br />

to paint them; however, there are a<br />

fantastic range of sticky back vinyls<br />

which are just as easy to place on<br />

and trim with a craft knife. These can<br />

be easily removed so be bold and<br />

colourful for summer!<br />

Reupholstering chairs is a very tricky<br />

business so I do recommend getting<br />

a professional to do this, but it’s such<br />

a lovely way to keep a well-loved<br />

relative's chair in the family.<br />

A room out back<br />

As many of us may not be able to go on holiday<br />

again this year, or perhaps you have decided<br />

you actually quite like being at home, how<br />

about investing in a summer house or cabin for<br />

your garden? These can be adapted and used<br />

as anything, from a home gym to an office or<br />

even as a spa to chill out in. In the summer,<br />

these would be great to carry on the party in<br />

the cooler evenings!<br />

Or create a space in the garden with some<br />

decking and trellis. Invest in some garden<br />

furniture, inject warmth with cushions and a<br />

few bright coloured blankets for the cooler<br />

evenings, and finish off the look by draping<br />

solar lights through the trellis above.<br />

Paint<br />

If you are too frightened to use<br />

any colour in your home, then a<br />

standard white will make such<br />

a difference to your rooms,<br />

brightening them up. Next step<br />

(ok quite a big one!) would be<br />

to add a feature wall with a bold<br />

colour. Purchase a few samples<br />

and paint a 10cm x 10cm patch<br />

to really get a feel for the colour.<br />

Don’t panic if you hate it after a<br />

few weeks; it’s easily corrected.<br />

Paint can also be used on<br />

kitchen cabinetry to update and<br />

modernise the doors. There are<br />

a few companies who sell paint<br />

specifically for this purpose and<br />

it’s so much cheaper than getting<br />

a new kitchen!<br />

21


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FIVE MINUTES A DAY<br />

Getting started is often the<br />

hardest bit of any project<br />

so ease yourself into your<br />

decluttering by devoting just<br />

5 minutes a day to it. Even if<br />

it's clearing off a busy dining<br />

table or collecting all your<br />

unopened mail to be dealt<br />

with on another day, you'll<br />

soon start to see and feel the<br />

difference in your home.<br />

DECLUTTER YOUR MIND<br />

Taking the time to declutter your mind<br />

will help you feel lighter and more<br />

energised. Mindfulness has become<br />

a very popular concept over the last<br />

CREATE A CHECKLIST<br />

few years and many are embracing<br />

Decluttering your home<br />

it because it offers an opportunity to<br />

can be broken down room<br />

connect with your own mind.<br />

by room. In the kitchen, list<br />

Yoga is also a great way to work on your<br />

things such as pots and<br />

flexibility and strength, but it's also a<br />

pans that you no longer use.<br />

fantastic way of soothing the mind. Some<br />

Bathrooms are also a great<br />

yoga styles use meditation techniques<br />

place to get rid of a lot of<br />

that focus on your breathing. This<br />

unused items. Drawers can<br />

usually results in feeling calmer and<br />

be more easily organised<br />

less stressed. It can help centre<br />

and cupboards will be<br />

your attention levels and<br />

more manageable.<br />

help with concentration.<br />

Ticking things off<br />

Carrying less in your head<br />

your list will also<br />

will certainly make your<br />

give you a sense of<br />

days easier to deal with.<br />

achievement.<br />

DECLUTTERyour life<br />

Simplify your life by giving yourself less to worry about, less to clean<br />

and less to stress you out. Here's how you can declutter your life<br />

24<br />

TAKE THE 10-10-10<br />

CHALLENGE<br />

Every day, make it a habit<br />

to throw out ten things,<br />

return ten things to their<br />

proper places and find<br />

ten things that you can<br />

give away.<br />

Before you know it,<br />

you'll start to see the<br />

compound effect of<br />

doing this every day.<br />

Disposing of, re-homing<br />

or giving away small<br />

things will help make<br />

your home feel more<br />

spacious and more of a<br />

sanctuary.<br />

VIEW YOUR HOME AS A FIRST-TIME GUEST<br />

Sometimes, all it takes is to stand back and look at<br />

things for how they really are.<br />

One of the best ways to do this is to view your<br />

home as a first-time guest.<br />

Start by coming in<br />

through the front door<br />

and observing your<br />

home as if you've just<br />

entered it for the first<br />

time.<br />

What would<br />

you think if it was<br />

somebody else's<br />

house? What would<br />

you change? Looking<br />

at things objectively is<br />

a bit of an eye-opener!


wellbeing<br />

CREATE A ROOM LIST<br />

There's perhaps nothing<br />

more satisfying than ticking<br />

things off a to-do list.<br />

Creating a decluttering<br />

list will allow you to plan<br />

your project and feel a<br />

sense of completion as you<br />

progress. Break your list into<br />

manageable sections so<br />

that it's not overwhelming.<br />

CLEAN OUT YOUR<br />

WARDROBES<br />

Decluttering your<br />

wardrobe is a powerful<br />

way to take back an<br />

amount of control in your<br />

life.<br />

The first step is to<br />

completely empty your<br />

wardrobe. Decide on<br />

some rules before you<br />

start sorting and then<br />

be totally honest with<br />

yourself as you plough<br />

through your clothes.<br />

Keep the basics but ditch<br />

the things that you've<br />

probably worn once or<br />

twice. Don't be tempted<br />

to keep stuff in the hope<br />

that it'll come back into<br />

fashion one day.<br />

WORK TOGETHER<br />

If you share a home with<br />

a partner or family, get<br />

them involved and you'll<br />

be declutter quicker and<br />

help create a feeling of<br />

solidarity.<br />

Delegating others can<br />

allow you to focus on<br />

your own areas, and<br />

save time in the process.<br />

TAKE BEFORE AND<br />

AFTER PHOTOS OF<br />

YOUR DECLUTTERING<br />

One effective way of<br />

staying motivated is to<br />

take before and after<br />

photos of the specific<br />

areas you're working<br />

in.<br />

When you're finding<br />

it hard going, remind<br />

yourself of where you<br />

started and how far<br />

you've come.<br />

STREAMLINE YOUR<br />

STORAGE SOLUTIONS<br />

This applies to many areas<br />

of your home, especially<br />

rooms like kitchens and<br />

bathrooms. Only buy<br />

products that you know<br />

that you love and are<br />

going to use.<br />

In the kitchen, go through<br />

cupboards and throw out<br />

anything that's past its<br />

sell-by date. If you have<br />

items that you're unlikely<br />

to use, donate them to a<br />

local food bank.<br />

Using clear jars for<br />

storage of dry foodstuffs<br />

like pasta and rice will<br />

mean less packaging and<br />

can easily be replenished<br />

from your local eco-shop.<br />

It's also useful to arrange<br />

food items according<br />

to their type. More<br />

frequently-used items<br />

should be easier to reach<br />

while things that you use<br />

less often can be put away<br />

up on higher shelves.<br />

25


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SHOP LOCAL L A5 v1.indd 1 09/11/2020 14:51


1<br />

2<br />

3<br />

4<br />

self-care treats<br />

1. Little Adventurer<br />

Children's Gift Box<br />

£26.50<br />

After everything our<br />

children have been through,<br />

it's only right that they are<br />

thought of too. This little<br />

adventurer gift box will help<br />

them to explore the world<br />

around them.<br />

2. Dwarf Umbrella<br />

Tree Gold Capella £90<br />

The dwarf tree has beautiful<br />

leaf foliage that grows from<br />

a single stem, fanning out<br />

in an umbrella-like pattern.<br />

It will also help to purify the<br />

air in your home by filtering<br />

out airborne toxins.<br />

3. Mother and Baby<br />

Collection £45<br />

Treat mother and baby with<br />

this award-winning, natural<br />

and organic collection. The<br />

skin-nourishing, organic<br />

mother’s range helps<br />

expectant mothers during<br />

and after pregnancy, and<br />

includes goodies for baby.<br />

4. Lavender and Lime<br />

Candle £8.95<br />

Let the day float away!<br />

The candle is heavily<br />

scented with lavender<br />

but is blended with a<br />

contemporary twist of<br />

lime. It's both relaxing and<br />

uplifting, and is cruelty-free<br />

and vegan.<br />

boxtreegifts.com<br />

bloomboxclub.com<br />

nealsyardremedies.com<br />

lily-flame.co.uk<br />

28


home<br />

6<br />

5<br />

7<br />

8<br />

5. Spa at Home £39<br />

The carefully selected,<br />

luxurious Hebridean<br />

seaweed products in this<br />

collection will provide a<br />

relaxing and rejuvenating<br />

experience, and the ishga<br />

Hebridean Dreams Candle<br />

will add to the perfect<br />

ambience.<br />

6. Wooden Oil Diffuser<br />

£25<br />

Take time out of your day<br />

and breathe in the calming<br />

mist of essential oils. This<br />

vase-shaped diffuser<br />

produces a fine mist, which<br />

helps create a soothing and<br />

calming atmosphere. It also<br />

has a soft light.<br />

7. Perfect Night's<br />

Sleep Reed Diffuser<br />

£38<br />

Contains 19 dreamy<br />

essential oils including<br />

English lavender, precious<br />

jasmine and sweet basil,<br />

plus little touches of other<br />

perfectly chosen natural<br />

essential oils.<br />

uk.ishga.com amazon.co.uk neomorganics.com bettys.co.uk<br />

8. Tea and Scones Gift<br />

Box £16.50<br />

This box comes packed<br />

with delicious, buttery<br />

scones full of plump<br />

sultanas, classic Tea Room<br />

Blend tea, a tasty Yorkshire<br />

Tea Loaf, and a jar of<br />

Strawberry Preserve. Just<br />

add cream!<br />

29


YOU & YOUR HEALTH<br />

THE IMPORTANCE OF HAVING REGULAR HEARING TESTS BY VINEY HEARING CARE<br />

THE LAST 12 MONTHS HAVE REALLY SHOWN US HOW IMPORTANT<br />

COMMUNICATION IS WITH FAMILY AND FRIENDS, ESPECIALLY WHEN WE<br />

HAVE BEEN FORCED TO BE APART. FOR THOSE SUFFERING WITH HEARING<br />

LOSS, THIS HAS BEEN A VERY LONELY AND ISOLATING TIME<br />

Our hearing is a very<br />

important sense.<br />

It allows us to<br />

communicate with loved<br />

ones, appreciate our<br />

favourite sounds and process the<br />

world around us. Your ears and<br />

brain work together to provide a<br />

soundscape of every environment,<br />

even when you’re asleep. Your<br />

ears collect the sound but it’s your<br />

brain's job to interpret it. If our<br />

hearing changes, then our ears<br />

aren’t collecting all the sound<br />

that our brain needs to work<br />

properly.<br />

Do you have a regular hearing test?<br />

Hearing loss is a major public health<br />

issue; it is the third most common<br />

physical condition after arthritis<br />

and heart disease and<br />

currently there are<br />

more than 10 million<br />

people in the UK with<br />

some form of hearing<br />

loss. However, because<br />

hearing deterioration<br />

can be gradual, it takes<br />

the average person 10<br />

years to recognise that they have<br />

a problem and finally do something<br />

about it. This time lapse can have<br />

some severe health and social<br />

consequences.<br />

Gradual hearing loss can affect<br />

people of all ages and depending<br />

on the cause, it can be mild to<br />

severe, temporary or permanent.<br />

There are many causes of hearing<br />

loss such as genetics, ageing, noise<br />

exposure, medications, illness,<br />

viruses (including COVID) and many<br />

more. The most common form of<br />

hearing loss is Presbiacusis and it<br />

relates to ageing.<br />

What are the effects of hearing loss?<br />

When hearing deteriorates,<br />

understanding speech becomes<br />

difficult. We lose clarity, voices<br />

become muffled and we can begin<br />

to muddle the beginning and ends<br />

of words. We might then start to<br />

Sponsored feature<br />

make mistakes, get the wrong end<br />

of the stick or ask people to repeat<br />

themselves.<br />

It can also become difficult<br />

to hear in restaurants, work,<br />

meetings, social situations, or<br />

watching television. This can cause<br />

frustration, upset and reluctance<br />

to socialise in those ‘difficult’<br />

environments. But if hearing loss<br />

is caught early on, there is a lot<br />

that we can do to eradicate these<br />

problems; the longer it's ignored,<br />

the more difficult this becomes.<br />

Treating hearing loss will not only<br />

help you to hear better but it also<br />

helps with balance, the ability<br />

to tell which direction sounds<br />

are coming from, short-term<br />

memory processing and the icing<br />

on the cake - it helps to slow the<br />

deterioration preventing cognitive<br />

changes.<br />

We get our eyes and<br />

teeth checked on a<br />

regular basis to flag up<br />

any underlying issues. We<br />

need to add hearing to that<br />

maintenance list.<br />

Most types of hearing<br />

loss can be corrected with<br />

the use of hearing aids. Hearing<br />

aids should, put simply, help you to<br />

hear all you need, and comfortably.<br />

We understand that it is essential<br />

to give your brain as much sound<br />

information as possible in order<br />

to hear properly. Research has<br />

demonstrated that the brain needs<br />

access to a full sound scene in<br />

order to focus and hear clearly.<br />

By helping the brain to process<br />

sound in the most natural way, we<br />

will better help reduce the health<br />

and life problems associated with<br />

untreated hearing loss.<br />

We need to do a better job of<br />

looking after our hearing, and in<br />

turn, keep our brains and balance<br />

healthy. It takes less than an hour to<br />

assess your hearing health.<br />

If you would like to arrange a free<br />

hearing assessment, please call<br />

Viney Hearing on 02920 250121 or<br />

call into our Whitchurch branch<br />

NEW AT VINEY HEARING!<br />

........................................................................<br />

We need YOU!<br />

We are looking for 20 volunteers<br />

to trial a new innovative invisible<br />

hearing device proven to mimic<br />

the way our brain naturally hears.<br />

More TM is the world’s first<br />

hearing aid to give the brain the<br />

full perspective. This is thanks<br />

to a breakthrough in hearing aid<br />

technology like nothing before.<br />

The trial will include full<br />

audiometric testing, FREE<br />

microsuction wax removal, aid<br />

calibration and progressive<br />

monitoring to review the hearing<br />

performance. If you decide<br />

following the trial to keep the<br />

instruments, there will be a 10%<br />

discount off the cost as a thank<br />

you for taking part.<br />

Recommend a friend<br />

reward<br />

If you feel that any of your friends<br />

or family would benefit from our<br />

help, we also have a ‘recommend<br />

a friend’ reward.<br />

When they choose to have<br />

hearing aids with us, you both get<br />

a choice of the following:<br />

• A FREE year’s supply of hearing<br />

aid batteries (2 boxes)<br />

• £30 Marks & Spencer’s vouchers<br />

• £30 donated to a charity of your<br />

choice


Bowled<br />

over<br />

The history of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Bowls Club<br />

began seven years after <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

Recreation Club (RRC) was<br />

established on land leased from the<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Garden Village Society.<br />

In 1921, after an extended lease<br />

was granted, RRC members<br />

decided to construct a new hall,<br />

and also a bowling green and<br />

extra tennis courts. Although<br />

finance was a problem, the money<br />

was eventually raised through a<br />

debenture scheme, resulting in the<br />

sum of £825 in £1 shares from 235<br />

members. The bowling green and<br />

tennis courts were completed in the<br />

autumn and <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Bowling Club<br />

32<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Bowls Club celebrates its centenary year this year. Ian Kelly<br />

charts the history of the club over the last 100 years<br />

was then founded, but the green<br />

did not open until April 1922.<br />

In its early years, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Bowling<br />

Club’s members achieved success<br />

at national level. In 1929, the Club<br />

had its first national winner when<br />

H.R. Edwards won the Welsh<br />

Bowling Association (WBA) Singles<br />

Competition. A few years later, in<br />

1934, Idris Evans became the first<br />

Club member to be awarded an<br />

international cap, followed in 1936<br />

by another member, T.J. Thomas.<br />

Between 1939 – 1945, the war<br />

years, bowling continued, but the<br />

green began to deteriorate due<br />

to a lack of professional care, the<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> bowlers in the 1960s<br />

groundsman having been called<br />

into military service. On his return,<br />

this problem was overcome, but<br />

finances became a problem and, in<br />

1947, despite protests by members,<br />

fees increased to £3-5s-0d.<br />

During the 1950s, the green<br />

continued to improve. National<br />

honours were achieved again<br />

in 1953, when Bill Gamlin was<br />

awarded an international cap. In<br />

1958, the year of the Empire Games,<br />

the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> green was used<br />

for practice by the competitors,<br />

receiving praise from Australian<br />

bowlers as one of the best greens<br />

in the area.<br />

The 1960s witnessed further<br />

development of RRC, on and off<br />

the green. In July 1960, a bar was<br />

opened on Club premises, and 1965<br />

saw the Club’s finest achievement<br />

to date when a rink consisting of<br />

Towyn Roberts, Bill Jones, Rundle<br />

Bending and Jock Thomson won<br />

the British Isles Fours Competition.<br />

Jock Thomson also gained the first<br />

of his many Welsh international<br />

caps.<br />

An extension to the clubhouse<br />

was opened in December 1965,<br />

and indoor bowls was first played<br />

in the main hall of the clubhouse,<br />

with carpets rolled down and back


again at the end of play. In 1968 a<br />

separate ladies’ green was officially<br />

opened. In 1969, Herbert Jones<br />

was elected President of the Welsh<br />

Bowling Association, a rare honour<br />

for a club.<br />

The 1970s brought further<br />

progress. A new bar and bowls<br />

pavilion were opened in 1972,<br />

replacing the old, rather dilapidated,<br />

wooden pavilion with veranda on<br />

the western side of the green.<br />

On the green, the greatest<br />

achievement in the Club’s history<br />

was recorded when, in 1973,<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> won the WBA’s Carruthers<br />

Shield, the F.A. Cup of Welsh bowls.<br />

There followed a period of<br />

outstanding success for <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

bowlers. In 1974, Les Hughes<br />

carried off the WBA Singles title<br />

and, in 1975, was awarded an<br />

international cap. Jock Thomson<br />

successfully captained Wales in an<br />

international tournament in 1978<br />

and he represented Wales at the<br />

Commonwealth Games, winning a<br />

bronze medal in the Fours event. He<br />

went on to be selected for Wales in<br />

more than 100 matches.<br />

In 1982, the Club duo of Peter<br />

Evans and Jock Thomson won the<br />

WBA Pairs Competition and went<br />

on to win the British Isles Title in<br />

1983.<br />

Back at the Recreation Club,<br />

a permanent, two-rink indoor<br />

green was opened in March 1985,<br />

indoor bowls having been played<br />

previously on roll down, roll up<br />

carpet. It remains one of the best<br />

permanent short greens in the area.<br />

In the 75th anniversary year, 1996,<br />

an Open Triples Tournament was<br />

a highlight of the year, bringing<br />

many of the finest bowlers in South<br />

Wales to <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>. The event was<br />

won by John Price, Steve Rees and<br />

Harry Price, John and Steve both<br />

international bowlers.<br />

After earlier successes in many<br />

County competitions, Gerwyn<br />

Morgan won the inaugural County<br />

Two Wood Trophy in 1997, thus<br />

becoming the first <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> bowler<br />

to win a hat-trick of County Open<br />

Singles (1983), Over 60 Singles<br />

(1995) and Two Wood Singles.<br />

Gerwyn was followed in 2004 by<br />

Colin Wood, when he added the<br />

County Two Wood Singles to his<br />

list of titles, thus becoming the<br />

second <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> bowler to win<br />

three different County Singles<br />

competitions – Over 60 Singles<br />

(2000), Open Singles (2001) and<br />

now Two Wood Singles.<br />

In 2006, the Civil Service British<br />

Championships were held at<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> in July. The following<br />

year, 2007, Colin Wood won<br />

the Club Championship for a<br />

record-equalling sixth time,<br />

joining previous record-holders<br />

Gerwyn Morgan and Bill Gamlin,<br />

and repeated the feat in 2010 to<br />

become the Club’s record holder as<br />

Club Champion for a seventh time,<br />

before extending his record with an<br />

eighth success in 2011.<br />

In 2014, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Recreation Club’s<br />

centenary was celebrated with the<br />

publication of Brian Rowlands’ Club<br />

history. Chris Gibson competed in<br />

the triples event for Wales in the<br />

Commonwealth Para Bowls Games<br />

in Glasgow.<br />

history<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>'s Carruthers Shield Winning Team 1973<br />

R. Bending, R. Sunderland, G. Richards, L. Hughes, J. Thomson, H. Haddock,<br />

C. Wood, R. Brown, D. Laverty, P. Evans, J. Blakemore, W. Owen, W. M. James,<br />

T. Roberts, F. Moon, G. Smith (Captain), L. Watkins, F. Sanders<br />

The Wales Para Bowls Team<br />

A highlight of 2019 was the Club’s<br />

hosting of the 3-day Para Bowls<br />

Home Nations Tournament, with<br />

teams from Scotland, England and<br />

Wales taking part.<br />

2020 - the season that never was!<br />

A major lounge refurbishment was<br />

completed just prior to the Covid-19<br />

Coronavirus lockdown. During 2020<br />

no matches or Club competitions<br />

were played, but members<br />

managed to use the green for<br />

socially distanced bowling from late<br />

June until the end of September.<br />

2021 – our centenary season. We<br />

hope to be able to return to bowls<br />

as we know it from Spring onwards.<br />

33


Venerable<br />

Viewpoints<br />

If you're not planning on going<br />

abroad this year, there are<br />

plenty of places in Wales where<br />

you can sit , be still, and<br />

admire the gorgeous views<br />

Tryfan<br />

This mountain in the western reaches<br />

of Snowdonia punctures the sky for<br />

miles around. It's easy to access from<br />

the A5 and on a good day, the views<br />

from its 3,010ft summit are extensive.<br />

But this mountain is no easy stroll. In<br />

fact, it was used as a training ground<br />

by Sir Edmund Hillary and his team<br />

who tried out oxygen equipment,<br />

as well as practising rescue and<br />

safety routines there. If it's an easy<br />

ramble you're after, you're better off<br />

leaving the mountain to those more<br />

experienced and prepared.<br />

Stick to the lower paths instead, in<br />

and around Llyn Ogwen, where you'll<br />

be rewarded with gorgeous views of<br />

the mountain itself. The routes cover<br />

rocky ground which can get slippery<br />

when wet, so extra care is needed<br />

when you're out exploring.<br />

34<br />

Rhossili Bay<br />

With 3 miles of golden beaches,<br />

it's easy to see why Rhossili Bay<br />

has been voted many times as<br />

one of the best beaches in the<br />

UK.<br />

The bay includes one of<br />

Wales’s most famous landmarks<br />

- Worms Head. Penrhyn Gwyr,<br />

as it's known in Welsh, is a<br />

tidal island just off the coast.<br />

Walkers have access to it 2 and<br />

half hours either side of low<br />

tide but due to the sharp rocks<br />

that you'll find there, it's best to<br />

stay away if you have dogs or<br />

mobility problems. Remember<br />

to check the tide times before<br />

you venture out!<br />

If it's a gentle amble you'd<br />

prefer, the beach's sandy<br />

shores offer the perfect place to<br />

unwind. There is also a coastal<br />

path that you can take that offers<br />

wonderful views.<br />

Three Cliffs Bay<br />

Another bay in the Gower that<br />

offers a spectacular shoreline<br />

of sand dunes, salt marsh and<br />

three famous limestone cliffs.<br />

About 500 yards from the<br />

main beach, overlooking the<br />

bay are the ruins of Pennard<br />

Castle, which was eventually<br />

abandoned due to the<br />

encroaching sand dunes.<br />

Pennard Pill, a large stream,<br />

flows into the sea down the<br />

middle of the bay, which is often<br />

awarded Blue Flag status. Dogs<br />

are also allowed on the beach<br />

all year round.<br />

Eagle-eyed TV viewers may<br />

also recognise it in the opening<br />

titles to the 1980s comedy,<br />

Me and My Girl, which starred<br />

Richard Sullivan and Joanne<br />

Ridley.


Nefyn<br />

The north coast village of<br />

Nefyn on the Llŷn Peninsula, is<br />

popular with visitors for its sandy<br />

beaches.<br />

The history of the area can be<br />

traced back to 300 BC and the<br />

sea has played a crucial role<br />

in the town's survival. Fishing,<br />

particularly for herring, became<br />

the prime trade for most of the<br />

18th and 19th centuries.<br />

Today, the town offers walkers a<br />

great place to base themselves,<br />

the village being situated<br />

midway along Llŷn’s north coast<br />

path. The beach is well known<br />

for its clear blue waters and<br />

stunning views of the bay. The<br />

distant three peaks of The Rival<br />

Mountains (Yr Eifl) can be seen to<br />

the east.<br />

The golf club, way up on<br />

the headland, offers players<br />

spectacular views of the sea and<br />

the coastline on every hole.<br />

outdoors<br />

Penmon Lighthouse<br />

Trwyn Du Lighthouse, also known as<br />

Penmon Lighthouse, is a lighthouse<br />

between Black Point near Penmon and<br />

Ynys Seiriol, or Puffin Island, situated<br />

at the eastern extremity of Anglesey. It<br />

marks the passage between the two<br />

islands. It has been unmanned since<br />

1922.<br />

The surrounding area contains a cafe,<br />

shop and toilets and is reputedly good<br />

for fishing.<br />

Ynys Llanddwyn<br />

Situated at the far end of a<br />

gorgeous beach, this narrow<br />

finger of land is the perfect<br />

place to enjoy the summer<br />

sun. Its rolling dunes, large<br />

rock outcrops and mixture of<br />

historic buildings makes it an<br />

ideal place for an afternoon of<br />

exploration.<br />

There is a mile-long walk<br />

from the car park along the<br />

beach, and there are more<br />

than ten miles of footpaths<br />

in the surrounding areas to<br />

explore.<br />

The island is rich in legends,<br />

in particular in its association with St. Dwynwen, the Welsh patron saint<br />

of lovers. Tŵr Mawr lighthouse marks the western entrance to the Menai<br />

Strait.<br />

Pont Ar Elan<br />

Walks around the River Elan<br />

are famed for their expanse<br />

and beauty. Walkers are<br />

rewarded with views of wild<br />

landscapes and flowing<br />

rivers.<br />

The area is also popular<br />

with star-gazers, who take<br />

advantage of the area's Dark<br />

Sky Discovery Site status. On<br />

a clear night, the Milky Way<br />

is clearly visible to the naked<br />

eye.<br />

Ceibwr Bay<br />

Ceibwr Bay is a small inlet of rocks<br />

surrounded on both sides by tall cliffs.<br />

This remote little beach consists<br />

mainly of pebbles, and sits at the end<br />

of a deep valley with cliffs extending<br />

far out along both sides of the cove.<br />

It's not the place to go swimming due<br />

to the fluctuations in the tides but it is<br />

popular with scuba divers, and those<br />

who enjoy kayaking and snorkelling.<br />

On a good day, you may even spot a<br />

porpoise out to sea.<br />

The views from the clifftops though<br />

are worth the climb.<br />

Llandudno Sea Front<br />

Llandudno may be the largest<br />

holiday resort in Wales but that<br />

doesn't mean that it can't boast<br />

its own fair share of wonderful<br />

viewpoints.<br />

In 1902, the Great Orme<br />

Tramway was built to transport<br />

visitors to the top of the Great<br />

Orme. In 1969, the Llandudno<br />

Cable Car was also constructed<br />

to take visitors up to the summit<br />

attractions. These include a<br />

tourist shop, cafeteria, visitors'<br />

centre, play areas, a licensed<br />

hotel, and the vintage tram/<br />

cable-car stations.<br />

35


Guiding<br />

you home<br />

Our Specialist Property Solicitors will<br />

lead you through any complications<br />

during your property transaction giving<br />

you valuable advice and ensuring there<br />

is always light at the end of the tunnel.<br />

Relax and let us do the hard work.<br />

Navigating your way through the<br />

complexities of a property transaction can<br />

be stressful but our experienced, accessible<br />

and caring team of lawyers take the time to<br />

successfully guide you every step of the way.<br />

Our services include:<br />

• Residential Property<br />

• Commercial Property<br />

• Landlord + Tenant<br />

• Wills and Estate Planning<br />

• Estate Administration + Probate<br />

• Lasting Powers of Attorney<br />

1 Heol-y-Deri, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>,<br />

Cardiff, CF14 6HA<br />

Monday - Friday<br />

9.00am - 5.30pm<br />

And on Saturdays<br />

10.00am - 4.00pm<br />

emyrpierce.co.uk<br />

Call us today for a detailed Quote;<br />

02920 616 002


pets<br />

Your pet<br />

questions<br />

answered<br />

Chris Troughton is clinical director of Heath Vets. He’s here to answer all your pet<br />

questions. If you’d like to ask Chris a pet-related question, drop us a line<br />

Can animals catch and/or<br />

transmit Coronavirus?<br />

A very small number of pet cats<br />

and an even smaller number<br />

of pet dogs have been found<br />

to be infected with the SARS-<br />

CoV-2 virus worldwide since the<br />

pandemic began. All of these<br />

animals came from homes<br />

where there had been human<br />

cases. Almost all showed mild<br />

signs of respiratory illness and<br />

very few have died as a result.<br />

There have been no reports of<br />

people being infected through<br />

contact with an infected pet.<br />

However, pets can act as<br />

‘fomites’, whereby their coats<br />

become contaminated by<br />

contact with an infected person<br />

and then pass it on to another<br />

person who touches them. With<br />

this in mind, it is wise to avoid<br />

close contact with pets that are<br />

not your own.<br />

My cat often gets into scraps<br />

and sometimes comes home<br />

with a graze or a cut here<br />

and there. He always licks<br />

any wounds himself and I’ve<br />

always been told that saliva<br />

helps prevent an infection but I<br />

can’t help think that infection is<br />

always a concern. How worried<br />

should I be?<br />

The old wives’ tale of the powers<br />

of saliva to prevent infection<br />

persists! The oral cavity is one<br />

of the most contaminated sites<br />

of the body, whether it be cat,<br />

dog or human and there is no<br />

beneficial effect of licking a<br />

wound other than to remove<br />

gross contamination and dirt.<br />

Any occasion where you<br />

suspect your cat has been<br />

fighting should be taken<br />

seriously. Cuts and grazes<br />

should be cleaned with a mild<br />

antiseptic safe for cats (not TCP<br />

which is toxic to cats), and he<br />

should be discouraged from<br />

licking them.<br />

If there are any puncture<br />

wounds – ie. penetrating bites<br />

– veterinary attention should<br />

be sought at the earliest<br />

opportunity, as these frequently<br />

become infected and cause<br />

abscesses or cellulitis.<br />

How are Heath Vets coping with<br />

pets’ vaccinations throughout<br />

the pandemic?<br />

During the first lockdown,<br />

we were only able to provide<br />

emergency and urgent<br />

treatment, so all vaccinations<br />

were out of the question. As the<br />

rules relaxed, we were able to<br />

restart both puppy and kitten<br />

vaccinations and also annual<br />

booster vaccinations.<br />

With the second lockdown, the<br />

restrictions returned but were<br />

not quite as severe. We are able<br />

to do vaccinations where to not<br />

give them would harm animal<br />

welfare. It is very important that<br />

puppies are able to go out for<br />

walks safely as soon as possible<br />

because to keep them isolated<br />

indoors will cause many serious<br />

behavioural problems. To take<br />

them out before they have had<br />

their vaccination course puts<br />

them at risk of contracting<br />

serious infectious diseases - so<br />

puppy vaccinations are ok.<br />

On the other hand, it is not so<br />

important for kittens to socialise<br />

and experience the outside<br />

world at an early stage so they<br />

will not be harmed by staying<br />

indoors – so we don’t do these.<br />

Older pets do need their<br />

vaccinations to remain safe, and<br />

once they have had the first<br />

annual booster, the effectiveness<br />

of the vaccine lasts a bit more<br />

than a year. So for pets needing<br />

their first annual booster (ie.<br />

when they are about 15 months<br />

old), we are giving these on time.<br />

For older pets, we are delaying<br />

the booster vaccinations by up<br />

to 3 months. If delayed more<br />

than this, the primary 2-dose<br />

course has to be repeated. It’s a<br />

bit complicated, and guidance is<br />

liable to change, so if your pet is<br />

due for a vaccination, it’s easiest<br />

to phone us to see what we<br />

recommend.<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

02920 621 511<br />

123-5 Heol-y-Deri, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>,<br />

Cardiff CF14 6UH<br />

Danescourt<br />

02920 564 626<br />

Llantrisant Road Retail Park,<br />

Llantrisant Road,<br />

Cardiff CF5 2BF<br />

Sponsored feature


Just<br />

like<br />

that<br />

Caerphilly-born Tommy Cooper made the world laugh with his jokes<br />

and his magic, becoming a comedy icon of the 20th century<br />

He was the man who didn't<br />

even have to say a word to<br />

make people laugh.<br />

Born Thomas Frederick<br />

Cooper in 19 Llwyn-On Street in<br />

Caerphilly, Tommy was born two<br />

months premature; doctors warned<br />

that he might not survive infancy.<br />

But survive he did and went on to<br />

become a comedy legend.<br />

In those days, Caerphilly<br />

was heavily polluted from the<br />

surrounding industries so his<br />

father accepted a job in Exeter,<br />

which is where Tommy gained his<br />

West-country accent that he was<br />

renowned for.<br />

He was given a magic set at the<br />

age of eight, and dedicated hours<br />

of his time to perfect his tricks. After<br />

leaving school, Tommy went on to<br />

become a shipwright, helping to<br />

build ships in Southampton.<br />

One Christmas, when he was an<br />

apprentice at the British Power Boat<br />

Company, the management asked<br />

him to perform in the canteen.<br />

Tommy later said:<br />

"I did everything wrong. But<br />

the audience loved it. The more<br />

I panicked and made a mess of<br />

everything, the more they laughed. I<br />

came off and cried, but five minutes<br />

later I could still hear the sound of<br />

the laughter in my ears and was<br />

thinking maybe there's a living to be<br />

made here."<br />

In 1940, Tommy joined the army,<br />

where he put his talents to good<br />

38<br />

use entertaining the troops as part<br />

of the Navy, Army and Air Force<br />

Institutes (NAAFI) entertainment<br />

party. During one fateful show that<br />

he was performing in Cairo where<br />

he was stationed, Tommy had<br />

forgotten a safari helmet, which he<br />

was using as a prop. Instead, he<br />

whipped the fez from a passing<br />

waiter, which got a huge roar of<br />

laughter from the crowd. The idea<br />

of a fez stuck and Tommy wore<br />

it for most performances after.<br />

Even today, the fez has become<br />

synonymous with Tommy.<br />

After the war, Tommy decided<br />

to try and earn a living in<br />

showbusiness. He had crafted his<br />

act throughout his army years, but<br />

he wasn't an immediate success.<br />

After auditioning for a BBC show,<br />

one the verdict from an executive<br />

read:<br />

"Unattractive young man with


indistinct speaking voice and<br />

extremely unfortunate appearance."<br />

But slowly, he began making his<br />

name. During one show in London's<br />

East End, some rougher members<br />

of the crowd began throwing bread<br />

rolls at him on stage. After politely<br />

asking them to stop throwing bread<br />

rolls, a voice from the audience<br />

shouted out 'Why should we?'.<br />

Tommy replied:<br />

"Because I haven't got an ad lib for<br />

people throwing bread rolls at me."<br />

During the 1950s, he toured<br />

extensively. In one week alone,<br />

he performed <strong>52</strong> shows. Through<br />

his shows, he became renowned<br />

as the magician whose tricks<br />

very rarely came off. But it was<br />

his appearances on TV that really<br />

propelled him to national fame.<br />

Following his TV debut in 1948,<br />

he soon began starring in his<br />

own shows, notably with London<br />

Weekend Television from 1968 to<br />

1972 and with Thames Television<br />

from 1973 to 1980.<br />

The secret to Tommy's act was<br />

the perfect blend of magic and<br />

comedy. He was an accomplished<br />

magician and a member of the<br />

Magician's Circle. Sometimes, he<br />

would drop in a successful magic<br />

trick unexpectedly to keep the<br />

members of the audience on their<br />

toes. But his mixture of innocence<br />

and childlike nature lent an added<br />

dimension to his act.<br />

The late magician Paul Daniels<br />

once said of Tommy:<br />

"This great big man just stood<br />

up. That’s all he did. He just stood<br />

up and the place was in absolute<br />

hysterics at a man standing up.<br />

Now, I don’t care how much you<br />

study comedy, you can’t define<br />

that, that ability to fill a room<br />

with laughter because you are<br />

emanating humour. After several<br />

minutes of laughter, he turned to<br />

his wife and said, 'I haven’t said<br />

anything yet.' And the whole place<br />

went up again.“<br />

His ability to make people laugh<br />

continued away from his acts too.<br />

At one memorable Royal Variety<br />

performance, he was introduced<br />

to the Queen, where he enquired<br />

whether he could ask a personal<br />

question.<br />

“Yes," replied the Queen, "but I<br />

might not be able to give you a full<br />

answer.”<br />

“Do you like football?” asked<br />

Tommy.<br />

“Well, not really,” said the Queen.<br />

“Can I have your Cup Final tickets<br />

then?” asked Tommy.<br />

But it wasn't all laughs and japes.<br />

Photos: Jaggery/Sam Salt<br />

There was a dark side to Tommy<br />

that ultimately contributed to his<br />

downfall.<br />

By the mid-1970s, alcohol had<br />

started to eat away at Tommy's<br />

professionalism. Complaints from<br />

club owners began to mount up,<br />

with stories of him turning up late<br />

for work or rushing through his<br />

routines. Worse still, there were<br />

stories of Tommy getting violent<br />

with his wife Gwen, whom he had<br />

married in 1948.<br />

His physical health began to suffer.<br />

He struggled with chronic<br />

indigestion, lumbago, sciatica,<br />

bronchitis and circulation problems<br />

in his legs. He attempted to cut<br />

down on his drinking to help relieve<br />

the problems, but that, along with<br />

his heavy smoking, would cause<br />

problems for the rest of his life.<br />

He once appeared with Michael<br />

Parkinson but forgot to set the<br />

safety catch on a guillotine trick,<br />

which he had persuaded Parkinson<br />

to take part in. Only a last-minute<br />

intervention by the floor manager<br />

saved Michael Parkinson from<br />

serious injury or worse.<br />

In 1977, while performing in Rome,<br />

Tommy suffered a heart attack<br />

but made a full recovery and was<br />

back on television within a few<br />

months. But by the early 1980s, TV<br />

executives at Thames Television<br />

were not impressed with his heavy<br />

drinking and told him that he would<br />

not get another series.<br />

He did continue to make TV<br />

appearances though and worked<br />

with Eric Sykes on several<br />

productions.<br />

It was on a Sunday night<br />

in April 1984 that Tommy<br />

collapsed midway through<br />

his performance on the<br />

London Weekend Television<br />

variety show Live from Her<br />

Majesty's. The show was<br />

being broadcast live to the<br />

nation and millions watched<br />

him fall, thinking it was part<br />

of his routine.<br />

After a few moments, it<br />

was clear that something<br />

was terribly wrong and the<br />

director of the show cut to<br />

the adverts.<br />

Behind the curtain,<br />

comedian Jimmy Tarbuck,<br />

who had been hosting the<br />

show, and his manager,<br />

struggled to get the 6'5<br />

frame of Tommy behind<br />

the curtains. Attempts were<br />

made to revive him and he<br />

was moved to Westminster<br />

Hospital, where he was<br />

people<br />

A statue now stands in<br />

Tommy's home town<br />

pronounced dead on arrival.<br />

His death shocked the nation<br />

but it was not officially reported<br />

in the media until the following<br />

day. He was cremated at Mortlake<br />

Crematorium in London.<br />

A statue of Tommy was unveiled<br />

by Sir Anthony Hopkins in Caerphilly<br />

in 2008. He was a true original - the<br />

trademark Fez, the distinctive laugh,<br />

the clumsy delivery, and his jokes<br />

and catchphrases make him one of<br />

the most instantly recognisable of<br />

all comedy icons.<br />

Despite arguments and fights and<br />

an affair, Gwen still appreciated her<br />

husband’s many good qualities. She<br />

said of him:<br />

“He was the nicest, kindest – and<br />

most awkward – man in the world.”<br />

39


Postcards from Tongwynlais<br />

7 The card above is dated 1908, when the<br />

castle still was still listed as situated in Taff's<br />

Well. The card looks colourised, as was the<br />

tradition back then.<br />

8 The card below is dated 1966.<br />

Academic interest in the property grew,<br />

with publications in the 1950s and 1960s<br />

exploring its artistic and architectural value.<br />

It wouldn't be until 1984 that Cadw took over<br />

looking after the castle<br />

The Glamorganshire Canal is pictured here, featuring some of<br />

the original houses that sat along the riverbank<br />

40<br />

This 1968 postcard is from the Department of the Environment.<br />

The castle was the responsibility of the DoE after the Ministry of<br />

Public Building and Works was absorbed in 1970


history<br />

This is a rare photo of the River Taff from a different<br />

viewpoint<br />

This postcard was sent in 1977 and was produced by<br />

J Salmon, who established their business in 1880 and<br />

only closed down recently<br />

An undated, but undoubtedly old picture of St.<br />

Michael's Church, Tongwynlais<br />

Greenmeadow is believed to have been a medieval farmstead and later, a Jacobean farmhouse. The property<br />

came into the possession of Wyndham Lewis MP (1779–1838) in 1817. He renamed it Pantgwynlais Castle and<br />

had a grand new facade constructed. The house was left to ruin and was eventually demolished in 1945<br />

Pictures courtesty of www.CastellCoch.com


“The whole team have done a great<br />

job keeping Mum safe throughout the<br />

current difficult times and even kept a<br />

level of activities, keeping spirits up.”<br />

Son of resident, December 2020<br />

Source: carehome.co.uk<br />

Video<br />

tours available<br />

Heol Don<br />

Care Home<br />

Here for you<br />

We’re welcoming new residents for short and long<br />

term stays. Whether you need to find a local care home<br />

now, or are just starting to look into options, you can<br />

consider Heol Don in Cardiff for a range of care needs<br />

including nursing, residential and dementia residential.<br />

Residents are welcome to join us for as long as they<br />

need – a week, month or a more permanent stay.<br />

Call us for advice on care today<br />

029 2000 9805<br />

Lines are open 8am to 6.30pm Monday to Friday,<br />

9am to 12.30pm Saturday. Closed Sunday and<br />

bank holidays. We may record or monitor our calls.<br />

9.8<br />

carehome.co.uk<br />

Review Score<br />

57 reviews †<br />

Safety comes first, so we make sure our team always have PPE, regular testing<br />

takes place, we participate in available vaccine programmes and that we follow<br />

strict UK infection control standards.<br />

All types of funding welcome<br />

No health insurance needed<br />

†The Review Score is based on the quality and number of independent reviews this home has received on carehome.co.uk in the last two years, at the time of going to print.<br />

FEB21 CS 02116<br />

Images are for illustrative purposes only<br />

New Clinic & Office Space available soon in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

Enquiries call 07794 663739


outdoors<br />

TINTERN ABBEY<br />

Tintern Abbey is a<br />

national icon — still<br />

standing in roofless<br />

splendour on the banks<br />

of the River Wye nearly<br />

500 years since its tragic<br />

fall from grace.<br />

It was founded in 1131<br />

by Cistercian monks;<br />

construction of the<br />

abbey began in 1269 and<br />

was abandoned in 1536<br />

during King Henry VIII’s<br />

Reformation.<br />

SILENT giants<br />

If you fancy spending time in the company<br />

of our historical past, these places are all<br />

within an hour's drive of Cardiff<br />

LLANTHONY PRIORY<br />

It’s easy to see from the 900-yearold<br />

ruins that Llanthony was once<br />

one of Wales’s great medieval<br />

buildings.<br />

The priory dates back to around the<br />

year 1100, when Norman nobleman<br />

Walter de Lacy reputedly came<br />

upon a ruined chapel of St. David in<br />

this location.<br />

MARGAM COUNTRY PARK<br />

Set in 1,000 acres of glorious<br />

parklands, Margam Country Park<br />

offers natural beauty, history,<br />

wildlife and things to do.<br />

1793 saw the completion of<br />

the Orangery, designed by the<br />

eighteenth century architect<br />

Anthony Keck. Construction of<br />

a new manor house, to become<br />

Margam Castle, had begun by<br />

1830. The estate is noted for its<br />

peacock population. Also on<br />

the estate are deer, which have<br />

existed on the site since at least<br />

Norman times.<br />

CAERWENT ROMAN<br />

TOWN<br />

Caerwent, established in<br />

about AD 75–80, served<br />

as a settlement of the<br />

Silures, a native tribe<br />

who became Romanised<br />

following the conquest of<br />

Britain.<br />

Impressive remains<br />

include walls still standing<br />

up to 17ft tall, excavated<br />

houses, market-place and<br />

Romano-British temple.<br />

BLAENAVON IRONWORKS<br />

Blaenavon Ironworks is internationally recognised<br />

as representing South Wales’ pivotal role during the<br />

Industrial Revolution.<br />

The iron that was forged here built engines, tools and<br />

machines. It was used to construct<br />

bridges, ships and railway lines<br />

across the world.<br />

The ruined furnaces are still<br />

visible today alongside the<br />

impressive remains of the<br />

foundry, cast house and water<br />

balance tower that<br />

raised wagons 80<br />

feet into the air. It<br />

was awarded World<br />

Heritage Site status<br />

in 2000 and was<br />

renovated in 2001.<br />

43


Social media<br />

for small<br />

businesses<br />

If you're running a small business, social media can become an<br />

effective part of your marketing strategy. Award-winning digital<br />

marketer Patric Morgan shows you the basics of how to use it<br />

Why use social media<br />

for your business?<br />

The pandemic has changed the<br />

way that businesses operate.<br />

Those that fared best were<br />

those that were quick to adapt<br />

to the changing landscape<br />

and social media played, and<br />

continues to play, a key part<br />

in connecting businesses<br />

with their customers. While<br />

many businesses were closed,<br />

the need to communicate<br />

information fell to social media<br />

channels.<br />

If you don't currently have any<br />

social media channels, or do<br />

but are in need of revisiting,<br />

start by thinking as if you were a<br />

potential customer. What does<br />

your online presence look like?<br />

Are you approachable? Do you<br />

come across as professional?<br />

You'll know where most of your<br />

potential customers come from<br />

so ask yourself which social<br />

media platforms are they likely<br />

to be on? Focus then on those<br />

platforms.<br />

44<br />

Twitter<br />

Twitter is a divisive platform,<br />

that many people say that they<br />

don't 'get'. But used correctly,<br />

you can use Twitter to reach a<br />

huge amount of people for your<br />

business. Unlike other platforms,<br />

Twitter also allows you to find<br />

prospective customers using the<br />

hashtag feature, which allows you<br />

to seek out certain people and<br />

build business relationships with<br />

them.<br />

You don't necessarily need a large<br />

following on Twitter since the more<br />

engagement you're involved in, the<br />

more your tweets will show up on<br />

other people's feeds.<br />

The key to success on Twitter<br />

relies on providing good content,<br />

and engaging with your audience<br />

consistently and professionally.<br />

Becoming an authoritative voice<br />

on Twitter also helps build the<br />

narrative that you're an expert in<br />

your field, which is when you'll<br />

find people coming to you for your<br />

services. Share what you know,<br />

helps others, and you'll soon find<br />

your account growing.<br />

Facebook<br />

While becoming increasingly<br />

complicated and bloated,<br />

Facebook still commands a<br />

dominant position both in terms of<br />

business and in society as a whole.<br />

You'll need a personal Facebook<br />

profile to create a Facebook<br />

business page, which is designed<br />

specifically for businesses. What<br />

you're aiming for is to gain page<br />

followers, so that when you post<br />

something to your page, your<br />

followers will see it on their feed.<br />

Customers can also contact you<br />

via your Facebook page, which is<br />

useful if you don't have an official<br />

website. Advanced users can even<br />

use it to create an online shop.


LinkedIn<br />

Often viewed as the<br />

professional's choice of social<br />

media, LinkedIn is perfect<br />

for building long-term B2B<br />

relationships. As of February<br />

2021, LinkedIn had 740 million<br />

registered members from 150<br />

countries.<br />

Building a network is the core<br />

principle of LinkedIn, but it<br />

can also be used to seek out<br />

employees for your business. You<br />

can also post lengthy articles,<br />

which is great if you are looking<br />

to build a brand, either around<br />

yourself or your business. Other<br />

users can interact with these<br />

posts and can also endorse you<br />

for your listed skills.<br />

Focus on building quality and<br />

meaningful relationships instead<br />

of adding connections for the<br />

sake of it.<br />

business<br />

Snapchat<br />

Snapchat launched in 2011. And as of<br />

early 2020, Snapchat was still one of<br />

the top 15 most-used social media<br />

platforms in the world.<br />

It's not right for every business but if<br />

you connect with a younger audience, it<br />

could be the one for you. The platform<br />

was designed to be casual and fun<br />

so your content should reflect that.<br />

Business accounts are available too.<br />

Instagram<br />

If your business lends itself to photos and videos, Instagram is one of the<br />

platforms that's worth looking at.<br />

You can ramp up some pretty decent engagement by posting photos<br />

and videos to the main news feed by adding up to 30 hashtags. The only<br />

snag is that you can't add a live link (eg. to your website) unless you have<br />

over 10,000 followers. One way around this is to add your website in your<br />

bio and refer your followers to it in your posts.<br />

Stories are another way of getting people's attention and you can add<br />

links to these. Viewers can swipe<br />

up on a story or tap an arrow at the<br />

bottom of their screen to access a<br />

link without leaving the Instagram<br />

app or navigating back to a<br />

business’s bio.<br />

To get access to this feature, you<br />

will need to convert your account<br />

to a business account, which can<br />

be done from inside the app's<br />

settings.<br />

YouTube<br />

Imagine having your own TV channel. Well you can! Over 1 billion hours of<br />

content are watched on YouTube every day and hundreds of hours of video<br />

being uploaded every minute; YouTube<br />

can be a great way to connect with your<br />

customers.<br />

Used effectively, you can use YouTube<br />

to build trust and authority between<br />

you and your audience, especially<br />

when it comes to granting them access<br />

to see 'behind-the-scenes' footage.<br />

You can also use it to promote your<br />

products and services or even tutorials<br />

that customers will lap up.<br />

TikTok<br />

One of the newer members of<br />

the social media big-hitters, but<br />

by no means any less effective,<br />

TikTok has become a useful<br />

tool thanks to its easy-to-use<br />

features and creative elements.<br />

The video-based platform has<br />

an audience for every kind of<br />

voice, so whether you're selling<br />

clothes or plumbing services,<br />

you'll be able to create your<br />

own channel and keep your<br />

business in people's minds by<br />

posting regularly.<br />

Email lists<br />

One of the most often<br />

overlooked ways of using social<br />

media is by using it to build your<br />

email lists.<br />

Email lists are still one of the<br />

most powerful methods of<br />

getting people to buy and to<br />

do this, you may want to give<br />

something away digitally (eg.<br />

a guide to something that you<br />

specialise in) in exchange for<br />

someone's email address.<br />

Use social media to get people<br />

off social media and onto your<br />

email lists, where you will have<br />

more control and a more direct<br />

avenue to your customers.<br />

45


The Small<br />

Garden<br />

46<br />

Secluded areas<br />

You can make your garden feel<br />

bigger than it is by dividing it up<br />

and adding areas of interest. As<br />

a result, you won't be able to<br />

see all of your garden in one go.<br />

Use bamboo screens,<br />

foliage or trellis to create<br />

hidden seating areas or cosy<br />

hideaways. If you have enough<br />

room for an arch, use one as<br />

a portal to other parts of your<br />

garden.<br />

The addition of trees can<br />

help give the illusion of space<br />

upwards and if you are thinking<br />

of putting paving slabs down,<br />

lay them diagonally in diamond<br />

shapes. It creates a trick of the<br />

eye that will make your garden<br />

area look bigger than it actually<br />

is.<br />

Balcony gardens<br />

Not all of us have gardens but<br />

even if you have a small balcony,<br />

you can still create a small garden<br />

area for you to enjoy during the<br />

warmer months.<br />

You will able to include mature<br />

plants and you can mix these with<br />

younger ones. Of course, you'll<br />

need to grow them in containers,<br />

but with a bit of imagination,<br />

there's no reason why you can't<br />

surround yourself with wonderful<br />

plants. Summer bedding<br />

plants, like begonias, petunias,<br />

osteospermum and Busy Lizzies<br />

will brighten up your balcony from<br />

late spring right through summer.<br />

Try and avoid heavy pots like<br />

terracotta as they will add to the<br />

weight on your balcony.<br />

Courtyard<br />

gardens<br />

Courtyard gardens have more<br />

potential than you might think at<br />

first. Keep colours of fences and<br />

walls neutral as brash colours<br />

will stand out and make your<br />

area look smaller than it is.<br />

One clever trick is to layer the<br />

flooring with durable faux grass,<br />

which will feel great underfoot<br />

and also bring a sense of depth<br />

to your small garden.<br />

Quirky statement pieces, such<br />

as statues, statement pots or<br />

ornaments can also distract<br />

from the surroundings. If you<br />

have the room to do it, adding<br />

raised beds can add another<br />

level to your space. Tall planters<br />

can be used instead if space is<br />

limited.


Pallet Planters<br />

gardens<br />

Pallets are the perfect addition to a small garden because they offer<br />

a place to grow plants upwards instead of taking up valuable room<br />

horizontally. The other great benefit is that you can move them around<br />

for different occasions if needed.<br />

You can either leave your pallets untouched, or you can add some<br />

colour to them to brighten up an area of your garden. You may need<br />

to add some sort of shelving to the beams, depending on the pallet.<br />

Trailing plants will also fill in the natural gaps of the pallet.<br />

Furniture<br />

If you are really wanting to enjoy<br />

your garden, you will need some<br />

form of furniture, even if it's just<br />

having somewhere to sit.<br />

Folding chairs are the obvious<br />

answer but if you're looking to<br />

include somewhere to dine, look<br />

for a dining set that allows you to<br />

tuck the chairs right underneath<br />

when it's not being used.<br />

You can also use outdoor rugs,<br />

cushions and bean bags that can<br />

be stowed away or used indoors if<br />

the weather's not looking too good.<br />

Slimline storage solutions can<br />

help if you don't have a shed and<br />

adding large mirrors around the<br />

perimeters may sound like a crazy<br />

idea but they can give the illusion<br />

of more space.<br />

Lighting is often a feature that is<br />

overlooked and you can use this to<br />

your advantage by adding outdoor<br />

wall lights to cast long shadows.<br />

You can use lighting to add<br />

depth to smaller areas and also<br />

showcase anything you want to<br />

highlight. Hanging lanterns in the<br />

trees and bushes will also increase<br />

the perceived height of your<br />

garden, and will create a wonderful<br />

space that you and your friends<br />

and family can enjoy.<br />

<strong>Living</strong> walls<br />

If you've got a sturdy wall or fence,<br />

it might be worth using it as a<br />

vertical garden.<br />

Wall planters are perfect for<br />

artistic displays and attractive<br />

focal points and can be used to<br />

hold flowers, herbs and cascading<br />

vines. Wooden wall planters are<br />

versatile and unlike clay pots, a<br />

wooden wall planter won’t crack<br />

in freezing weather. Wood can rot<br />

of course, but galvanised metal<br />

planters will last longer. Make sure<br />

that they have drainage holes<br />

included and when it comes to<br />

planting, think ahead. In which<br />

direction will your plants grow and<br />

have you left enough room for<br />

them to do so?<br />

Use colour<br />

One of the best ways to make your<br />

garden look bigger is to camouflage<br />

the walls, either with trailing plants<br />

or foliage. If this isn't possible, you<br />

can always paint the wall green so<br />

that it blends in with the rest of the<br />

surrounding greenery.<br />

When it comes to painting other<br />

areas of the garden, avoid bold<br />

colours that stand out. Instead,<br />

try and blend your colours to give<br />

shapes length and width. You can<br />

create an illusion of height too by<br />

painting any fences in two-tone<br />

colours.<br />

Window boxes<br />

Window boxes make planting and<br />

growing manageable but also<br />

provide visual appeal to a small<br />

garden.<br />

Make sure that your window box<br />

is clean before you start planting<br />

and also ensure that the drainage<br />

holes are adequate. If you have a<br />

terracotta box, you can line it with a<br />

plastic bag to reduce the need for<br />

watering. Just make sure it has a<br />

few drainage holes cut out. Adding<br />

a shallow gravel layer at the<br />

bottom of the box will also help.<br />

You will need good quality<br />

garden compost as it contains the<br />

nutrients that your plants will need.<br />

Lastly, make sure that the plants<br />

are secured safely in the compost.<br />

47


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Back to<br />

health<br />

We've all perhaps taken too much comfort in our food over the last<br />

year or so. As we emerge back into normality, here are some<br />

healthy options that you can call upon without compromising on taste<br />

Avocado and<br />

egg on toast<br />

2 eggs<br />

1 avocado<br />

2 slices wholemeal soda bread<br />

dried chilli flakes<br />

handful of rocket<br />

Asparagus &<br />

Strawberry<br />

Salad<br />

250g fresh asparagus, cut into 1-inch<br />

pieces<br />

250g fresh spinach<br />

250g fresh strawberries, sliced in<br />

half<br />

1 large spring onion, chopped<br />

100g pea shoots<br />

2 tablespoons sliced almonds<br />

goat's cheese, crumbled (optional)<br />

juice from 1/2 lemon<br />

2 tablespoons olive oil<br />

1 tablespoon honey<br />

salt and freshly ground black<br />

pepper, to taste<br />

50<br />

☐ Bring a large pot of water mixed<br />

with a teaspoon of salt to a boil over<br />

a medium heat. Also prepare a bowl<br />

of iced water nearby.<br />

☐ When the water is boiling, add<br />

the asparagus and cook for 2 to 3<br />

minutes. Drain the asparagus and<br />

immediately add it to the ice water.<br />

☐ In a large bowl, combine the<br />

asparagus, spinach, strawberries,<br />

onion, pea shoots, and almonds. If<br />

you intend adding goat's cheese to<br />

your salad, include that now.<br />

☐ In a small bowl, you can prepare<br />

the dressing by whisking together<br />

the lemon juice, olive oil, honey, salt<br />

and pepper. Adjust the seasoning to<br />

taste.<br />

☐ Pour the dressing over the salad<br />

and toss lightly to coat. Serve with<br />

ice cold mineral water.<br />

☐ Halve and stone the avocado.<br />

Scoop out the flesh and mash in a<br />

bowl with a fork.<br />

☐ Poach your eggs, removing them<br />

from the water just before the yolks<br />

harden.<br />

☐ Toast your bread. Add the avocado,<br />

the eggs and sprinkle with a few chilli<br />

flakes. Serve with rocket.


Shakshouka<br />

(poached<br />

eggs in spicy<br />

tomato sauce)<br />

2 tablespoons olive oil<br />

1 onion, chopped<br />

2 chilli peppers, seeded and<br />

chopped<br />

1 jalapeño or habanero pepper,<br />

seeded and finely chopped<br />

1 400g can chopped tomatoes<br />

120ml vegetable stock<br />

1 teaspoon cumin<br />

1 teaspoon smoked paprika<br />

1/2 teaspoon dried oregano<br />

1/2 teaspoon salt<br />

1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black<br />

pepper<br />

6 to 8 eggs<br />

2 tablespoons chopped parsley<br />

30g crumbled feta cheese<br />

☐ In a large, deep skillet, heat the oil<br />

over a medium-high heat.<br />

☐ Add the onion and peppers and<br />

cook until they are softened and<br />

beginning to brown. This should take<br />

about 7 minutes.<br />

☐ Add the tomatoes, vegetable<br />

stock, cumin, paprika, oregano, and<br />

salt and pepper; simmer for 20 to<br />

22 minutes or until the sauce has<br />

thickened.<br />

☐ Crack the eggs evenly on top of<br />

food<br />

the sauce. Cover and cook for 6 to<br />

8 minutes or until the whites are set<br />

and yolks are thick but runny. If you<br />

prefer firmer yolks, cook for 1 to 2<br />

minutes more.<br />

☐ Sprinkle with parsley and feta<br />

cheese and serve with warm pitta<br />

bread.<br />

Greek salad<br />

4 large vine tomatoes, cut into<br />

wedges<br />

1 cucumber, peeled, deseeded,<br />

then roughly chopped<br />

85g feta cheese, cut into chunks<br />

½ red onion, thinly sliced<br />

16 Kalamata olives<br />

1 tsp dried oregano<br />

4 tablespoons Greek extra virgin<br />

olive oil<br />

☐ Place the large vine tomatoes,<br />

cut into wedges, 1 peeled,<br />

deseeded and chopped<br />

cucumber, ½ a thinly sliced red<br />

onion, 16 Kalamata olives, 1 tsp<br />

dried oregano, 85g feta cheese<br />

chunks and 4 tbsp Greek extra<br />

virgin olive oil in a large bowl.<br />

☐ Lightly season, then serve with<br />

crusty bread.<br />

51


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Car<br />

Park<br />

Ron Brown was at the beach car cup of ink-black coffee and Ron<br />

park by 6.30am that morning. would watch as it wrung every last<br />

Like every other morning. drop out from its innards.<br />

Like every other morning for the “I’ll get you a new machine when<br />

last 29 years, 6 months, and 3 days. my numbers come up,” Ron would<br />

Except today was the end. But it say.<br />

was also the beginning.<br />

“I won’t hold my breath,” Mary<br />

It would be the last Monday would reply. Then they’d laugh.<br />

morning that Ron would ever work Today was another glorious<br />

as the car park’s only attendant. It summer’s morning. The forecast<br />

would also be the last time he’d that had been broadcast on Ron’s<br />

see Barry Island and its Old Harbour bedside radio promised a searing<br />

in the serenity of early Monday day. The early pink sky had slowly<br />

daybreak.<br />

diffused into a pale blue and the<br />

He had a morning routine. His cool air was beginning to fire up for<br />

bedside alarm would be set for the long sizzling day ahead. Ron<br />

5.57am exactly. That way, the sat himself on the rocks with his<br />

weather report would be the first coffee, overlooking the Old Harbour,<br />

and only thing he heard. He’d turn allowing the silk morning air to<br />

his radio off on the hour mark at caress his craggy face.<br />

6am. He last listened to the news For Ron, sitting on the rocks was<br />

29 years, 6 months and 3 days something he did every morning,<br />

ago. It had been depressing then. whatever the weather. It gave him<br />

He figured that he wasn’t able to time to reflect, time to think about<br />

help the world and its problems. his plan to get out of working. The<br />

Listening to them all made him only thing that kept him going was<br />

sad and feel utterly helpless. So he the fact that one day he wouldn’t<br />

decided that instead, he was going have to do this job; that one day,<br />

to focus on his own life. And his own things were going to be a lot better.<br />

future happiness.<br />

When that day arrived, he’d be sat<br />

At 6.30am, the day-trippers would on a faraway beach, anonymous,<br />

probably still be in bed; except sleepy, and slowly happy. But until<br />

maybe for the organised ones that day, he had to do what he had<br />

who’d be up making sweaty cheese to do. Like everybody else.<br />

sandwiches with thin white bread He sipped his coffee that scalded<br />

in faraway kitchens. But 6.30am his tongue and he let the hot bitter<br />

was perfect for Ron to get himself liquid slide freely down his throat.<br />

a coffee and prepare for the day He quite liked the fierce burning<br />

ahead.<br />

sensation as it trickled down, down<br />

“How are you today, Mary?” he into his empty belly. It fired him<br />

would ask as he approached the up for the day from the middle of<br />

serving window at the coffee shop. his being. And at 6.48am on the<br />

“I’ll be fine when I can afford a new dot, he looked up and raised his<br />

coffee machine. This one’s on its coffee to the plane that had flown<br />

last legs,” Mary would reply. She’d over every day since he started<br />

bash the machine with her hand working. Destination: Owen Roberts<br />

and then she’d place two Biscoff International Airport, Cayman<br />

biscuits onto a napkin for Ron. Islands.<br />

The asthmatic machine was<br />

Coffee downed, Ron made his way<br />

indeed battered. It grunted out a to his place of work — the car park.<br />

54<br />

His hut wasn’t anything special — a<br />

battered wooden building that had<br />

soaked up the rains of winter and<br />

scorched and cracked in the heat<br />

of the summer over the years. It sat<br />

at the entrance to the car park and<br />

inside it sat an old armchair that<br />

used to belong to Terry, the resort<br />

manager and Ron’s boss for nearly<br />

30 years.<br />

The marvel of electricity had<br />

reached Ron’s hut in 1993, allowing<br />

Ron to run a kettle and a small<br />

fridge. Inside, from the roof, hung a<br />

bare bulb on the end of a piece of<br />

yellowing flex and it hypnotised and<br />

vamped the moths on long summer<br />

evenings. Ron preferred to run his<br />

radio on batteries as it allowed him<br />

to take it outside and work on hot<br />

days, especially when the cricket<br />

was on. It was his home from home.<br />

By 7am, Ron would be at the hut,<br />

sat in his deck chair, waiting for the<br />

first day-tripper to come along. Next<br />

to the hut, he’d have placed the<br />

battered sign that read “£5 For The<br />

Day. Cash Only” so that the drivers<br />

could see it as they approached.<br />

And throughout the morning, he’d<br />

collect £5 off everyone who came<br />

in and stuff it firmly in his everpregnant<br />

money bag that was<br />

strapped around his waist.<br />

He’d only ever seen one car at the<br />

car park before 7am in his 29 years,<br />

6 months, and 3 days here — and<br />

that was a guy who had left his wife<br />

and had nowhere to sleep apart<br />

from his car. Ron had spent an hour<br />

talking to the guy before sending<br />

him on his way, full of renewed<br />

hope for the future. A few days later,<br />

Ron heard that police had found<br />

the guy’s car down the side of a<br />

mountain.<br />

The Monday passed like any other.<br />

The day-trippers came and went<br />

like the tide. And by late afternoon,<br />

Ron locked up the door to his hut<br />

Photo: D Noble


for the last time.<br />

He made his way up to Terry’s<br />

office and popped his head around<br />

the door.<br />

“I’m leaving early. I need to get to<br />

the bank before it shuts.”<br />

“Ok, Ron. Thanks for today.”<br />

—<br />

The bank was empty of customers<br />

and Ron approached the only<br />

counter that was open. Alys was<br />

there, as he had hoped.<br />

“How are you Ron? What are you<br />

doing here? Not your normal day,”<br />

she said, filing away some tenpound<br />

notes into the drawer in front<br />

of her.<br />

Ron didn’t answer.<br />

“Not cashing anything today?”<br />

she asked. Ron remained silent. He<br />

simply placed two hands on the<br />

counter and sighed hard. Around<br />

one of his fingers was a smiley face<br />

keyring with two keys on it.<br />

It suddenly dawned on Alys what<br />

was happening. Her cheery smile<br />

crumpled.<br />

“Oh no,” she said, putting a hand to<br />

her mouth. Ron didn’t utter a word.<br />

He didn’t need to. He knew that this<br />

was the day they had both been<br />

dreading for nearly 30 years.<br />

Under the glass, he slowly passed<br />

over his house keys; his life; his<br />

past. He kept his hand there. It was<br />

shaking.<br />

Alys reached her hand forward to<br />

collect the keys and for a brief few<br />

seconds, their fingertips touched. It<br />

was the first time they had touched<br />

for nearly three decades. Through<br />

blurry eyes, Alys looked at the man<br />

who had broken her heart all those<br />

years ago.<br />

Within a matter of seconds, Ron’s<br />

mind flooded with memories.<br />

Memories that clamped around<br />

his chest and suffocated him —<br />

the drunken night in the Ship Inn;<br />

standing waiting for his pint to be<br />

pulled while Alys plunged her hand<br />

into his trouser pocket and emptied<br />

the contents on the bar; the smell<br />

of the cleaner that the barman used<br />

on the table at throwing out time;<br />

the taxi driver who wandered in<br />

looking for his fare and who had lost<br />

patience and left.<br />

Ron remembered the drunken<br />

walk home in the rain through the<br />

sleeping streets; the sheen on<br />

the rooftops; the wet cigarette;<br />

the fumble for the door key; the<br />

lingering smell of roast dinner that<br />

Alys had cooked the night before;<br />

the first kiss in the hallway; the<br />

half-made bed; the memory of her<br />

heart beating against his; the sense<br />

of sheer abandonment through the<br />

lonely small hours; how he held her<br />

in his arms as he began to sober<br />

up; the sound of the town hall clock<br />

chiming four; drifting off to sleep<br />

while the rain hammered down<br />

outside; the awkward morning after.<br />

He remembered the blue walls<br />

of the clinic they visited together<br />

two months later; the words of the<br />

doctor who told them that she was<br />

due around Christmas time; the day<br />

they rented a room; the cold cup<br />

of coffee that the nurse handed to<br />

him while he waited in the corridor;<br />

holding Billy in his arms for the first<br />

time; the overwhelming sense of<br />

fear; the day they realised that it<br />

was never going to work and that<br />

they were best going their separate<br />

ways; the day, as a confused young<br />

man, he promised her that he would<br />

take care of them for the rest of<br />

their lives.<br />

“Thank you. Thank you for<br />

everything,” said Alys.<br />

“All the paperwork is in order. You<br />

don’t need to do anything. You can<br />

move your stuff in whenever you<br />

want. I still haven’t finished building<br />

that garden wall though. But it’s all<br />

yours.”<br />

Alys clenched her hand and held it<br />

to her mouth. She was hoping that it<br />

might stop the tears but it didn’t.<br />

“Take good care of Billy for me,”<br />

said Ron, his voice breaking.<br />

Alys pursed her lips and nodded in<br />

agreement.<br />

Ron ran his eyes over her pretty<br />

face one more time; over her grey<br />

roots and over her earrings.<br />

“Always,” was all she managed<br />

to say. He placed his hand on the<br />

glass between them.<br />

“There’s milk in the fridge and<br />

Custard Creams in the cupboard. All<br />

the bills have been paid for the rest<br />

of the year. It’s all yours, lovely head.<br />

Goodbye.”<br />

He started for the door but<br />

stopped and turned for one last<br />

look.<br />

“I love you,” he said “Always have.<br />

Always will.”<br />

Alys smiled and waved, a tear<br />

rolling down her cheek.<br />

And with that, he was gone forever.<br />

—<br />

It wasn’t until 9.30am the following<br />

morning that anyone had noticed<br />

that Ron wasn’t at work. Terry was<br />

on the phone to the Council.<br />

“Hi. This is Terry here from<br />

Barry Island. Yes. Can you send a<br />

replacement car park attendant?<br />

Ours hasn’t turned up this morning.<br />

Never known him not to turn up<br />

before.”<br />

There was a prolonged silence<br />

before Terry spoke again.<br />

“Barry Island car park. I don’t<br />

understand… so you’re telling me<br />

that for the last 30 years, you’ve<br />

never employed anyone for our car<br />

park?…He’s been taking £5 a day off<br />

everyone for the last 30 years. What<br />

the hell has he done with the…?”<br />

His mouth dropped wide open;<br />

Terry placed the phone back on the<br />

receiver and slumped into his seat.<br />

—<br />

For nearly 30 years, Ron had played<br />

this moment out in his mind.<br />

On the tray in front of him sat a<br />

small transparent plastic cup. At<br />

the bottom of the cup was a glug<br />

of vodka. And next to the cup was<br />

a chilled can of Coke, the beads of<br />

condensation catching the morning<br />

sunlight.<br />

Ron slowly lifted the cold can and<br />

pulled it open. Its sweet crack split<br />

the still air of the aeroplane. In his<br />

left hand, he lifted the plastic cup<br />

and brought the two together in a<br />

long-awaited marriage.<br />

He took a sip, toasted himself<br />

and let it slip down his throat. For a<br />

moment, he let the small bubbles<br />

fizz on his lips and the inside of his<br />

mouth.<br />

Bliss.<br />

The plane was still climbing,<br />

pulling away from his life forever.<br />

He was high above the clouds now,<br />

far away from his wooden hut, far<br />

away from his battery-powered<br />

radio, far away from the car park.<br />

He looked out through the small<br />

round windows at the Welsh hills<br />

as he passed over, now looking like<br />

sleeping scruffy bears, never to be<br />

seen again.<br />

He took a deep sigh, closed his<br />

eyes, and relaxed back into his<br />

Premium seat. His mind drifted and<br />

he thought about Mary, far below<br />

him and he wondered what starting<br />

the day would be like without him.<br />

She’d be taking delivery of her new<br />

coffee machine about now. He<br />

thought about the sweaty cheese<br />

sandwiches that were being made<br />

in homes across South Wales. He<br />

thought about Alys, who would be<br />

watching TV in his old house — now<br />

an official homeowner. He hoped<br />

that she had found the Custard<br />

Creams and he hoped that Billy<br />

would stick at his new job. And he<br />

thought about his half-built wall. It<br />

would just have to stay that way.<br />

Later that day, Ron’s plane would<br />

touch down at Owen Roberts<br />

Airport, Cayman Islands. He’d<br />

collect his small travel bag from the<br />

carousel, smile to himself, and start<br />

his new life in the Caribbean.<br />

More stories at medium.com/<br />

@patricmorgan<br />

short story<br />

55


shenanilL<br />

BRIGHTER<br />

DAYS ARE<br />

COMING<br />

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