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Rhiwbina Living Issue 55

Summer 2022 issue of the award-winning 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>55</strong> Summer '22<br />

CRAFTED<br />

RHIWBINA<br />

IN<br />

IN<br />

CRAFTED<br />

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


Inside this issue<br />

People<br />

A tribute to<br />

Derrick Hassan,<br />

the first serving<br />

black police<br />

offi cer in the<br />

South Wales<br />

Police<br />

Resilience<br />

Creative ways to<br />

turn the negative<br />

events in your life<br />

into positive traits<br />

for your future<br />

Schools<br />

A look at<br />

Llanishen Fach<br />

Primary School's<br />

continuous<br />

development in<br />

primary education<br />

Plan a<br />

sabbatical<br />

How a sabbatical<br />

can help you take<br />

a step away from<br />

real life, travel<br />

the world, and<br />

recharge your<br />

batteries<br />

Autumn deadline:<br />

10th October 2022<br />

Published late October 2022<br />

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 />

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 />

Whitchurch and Llandaff <strong>Living</strong> is an<br />

independent, apolitical publication.<br />

No part of this publication may be<br />

reproduced without the express<br />

written permission of the publishers.<br />

Welcome / Croeso<br />

We're a little late<br />

with this summer<br />

issue. Alas, we're only<br />

human. As the saying<br />

goes, your health is<br />

your wealth!<br />

The good news is<br />

that we're still here<br />

and we're back<br />

bringing you some of<br />

the finest stories to<br />

come out of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

and beyond.<br />

We start this issue<br />

with a feature about<br />

a man who paved<br />

the way for so many<br />

others in the police<br />

force. We were<br />

honoured to meet<br />

the family of Derrick<br />

Hassan, the first serving black<br />

police offi cer in the South Wales<br />

Police. His remarkable story has<br />

inspired many others to follow in<br />

his footsteps.<br />

They say that tough times help<br />

build character and while there<br />

is some truth in that, learning<br />

the lessons of resilience is<br />

something we can be aware of<br />

and use to our advantage. We<br />

show you how you can convert<br />

those negative experiences into<br />

ones that will serve you better in<br />

the future.<br />

Of course, life isn't all plain<br />

sailing. The current cost of living<br />

crisis is something that's affecting<br />

us all and is likely to be with us<br />

for some time yet. With that in<br />

mind, we've put together some<br />

money-saving ideas to help you<br />

tighten your belt and get you<br />

through the worst of it.<br />

The kids going back to school<br />

doesn't necessarily mean the<br />

end of summer and we've got<br />

some little tricks to help you eke<br />

out as much summer as you can<br />

get before the autumn storms<br />

roll in.<br />

South Wales is peppered with<br />

wonderful waterfalls and if you<br />

fancy a day out looking at these<br />

wonders of nature, we've handpicked<br />

some of the best. And if<br />

you'd rather stay at home, we'd<br />

chosen a few books that you can<br />

chill out with in the last of the<br />

summer sun.<br />

Sabbaticals are becoming<br />

increasingly popular following<br />

the stressful days of the<br />

pandemic. We've given you<br />

the low down on how you can<br />

prepare and enjoy one - and<br />

what to expect when you finally<br />

take the plunge.<br />

We also take a look at summer<br />

gardening and detail a list of<br />

activities that will keep your<br />

green space in tip-top condition.<br />

While the sun still shines well<br />

into September, now is the<br />

perfect time to grab yourself a<br />

late summer barbeque. We've<br />

got some delicious recipes that<br />

you can share with family and<br />

friends.<br />

North Cardiff is bubbling with<br />

history and we've uncovered a<br />

story that might make you sit<br />

up and take notice. It involves a<br />

certain King Arthur and the local<br />

ties to the legend are pretty<br />

convincing.<br />

Finally, we've got a short story<br />

from our award-winning editor,<br />

Patric Morgan to sign off the<br />

summer with a smile.<br />

We've already started working<br />

on our Autumn issue and we'd<br />

love you to show our advertisers<br />

the support they deserve. Local<br />

businesses form the backbone of<br />

our communities.<br />

Enjoy the rest of your summer<br />

and we'll back in October with<br />

our Autumn issue.<br />

Danielle and Patric<br />

Editors<br />

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

www.facebook.com/rhiwbinaliving<br />

@livingmagazinescardiff


National 20mph speed limit to<br />

officially passed into law<br />

Speed limits in built-up areas will<br />

be reduced to 20mph in Wales<br />

from next year - a decision that<br />

has proved controversial to some<br />

motorists.<br />

Welsh ministers have argued that<br />

a 20mph speed limit will lower<br />

road collisions and noise, as well<br />

as encouraging people to walk or<br />

cycle.<br />

Trials of the reduced limit have<br />

been taking place in areas of north<br />

Cardiff over the last few months<br />

and have divided the motoring<br />

community. Road users have<br />

been complaining of signage<br />

confusion, congestion and stress<br />

on gearboxes. The complaints also<br />

include dangerous incidents where<br />

other motorists who aren't aware of<br />

the reduced limits have attempted<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Hub on<br />

track to open<br />

Work on <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>'s Hub is reported<br />

to be going well, ahead of its<br />

expected re-opening in the autumn.<br />

The former <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Library<br />

closed its doors back in April ahead<br />

of the refurb, which will have taken<br />

24 weeks to open if developments<br />

continue to go according to plan.<br />

to overtake the cars sticking to the<br />

new speed limits.<br />

The Welsh Parliament passed<br />

the law in a vote in July. The law<br />

was backed by Labour and Plaid<br />

Cymru but opposed by the Welsh<br />

Conservatives, who claimed that<br />

the blanket rollout was 'ludicrous.'<br />

Safety campaigners have argued<br />

that the chances of someone<br />

surviving being hit by a car at<br />

20mph rather than 30mph is<br />

seven times higher while stopping<br />

distances are almost halved.<br />

But some motorists have<br />

expressed frustration at the rulings.<br />

"How can we be expected to drop<br />

the kids to school on a bike?" said<br />

one angry motorist.<br />

Scotland is expected to follow suit<br />

with the speed limits in 2025.<br />

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

struggle in heat<br />

Several road in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> were<br />

cordoned off in August after a<br />

heatwave caused parts of them to<br />

collapse.<br />

Temperatures reached 33°C in Cardiff<br />

during the heatwave, which lasted for<br />

over a week.<br />

Sections of Pantmawr Road, Heol-y-<br />

Deri, and Pantbach Road all suffered<br />

during the extreme heat, and were<br />

subsequently repaired by Cardiff<br />

Council.<br />

Councillor Jayne Cowan liaised with<br />

the council to arrange the repairs, and<br />

thanked members of the community<br />

for taking proactive actions to resolve<br />

the issues.<br />

Scientists have warned that<br />

heatwaves will become more<br />

common due to climate change.<br />

news<br />

Road repairs for<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>'s<br />

Sections of a <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> suburb<br />

will begin undergoing road<br />

improvements during early autumn.<br />

Carriageway surface<br />

improvements will be carried out<br />

at Heol-y-Bryn and Heol-y-Coed.<br />

The work will be phased over two<br />

years due to the associated costs<br />

of the repairs. The first phase will<br />

be carried out in early September<br />

while the second phase is pencilled<br />

in to be resolved late 2023.<br />

Some properties will be left<br />

without vehicular access to their<br />

properties during the works,<br />

although the contractors have said<br />

that all work will be carried out with<br />

as little impact as possible.<br />

Messages of<br />

support for Rhod<br />

Comedian Rhod Gilbert has been<br />

inundated with goodwill messages<br />

following his announcement that<br />

he is undergoing treatment for<br />

cancer at Velindre Hospital in July.<br />

"As a proud patron of Velindre<br />

Cancer Centre, I've trekked the<br />

world, hosted chaotic quizzes and<br />

star-studded comedy nights," he<br />

said.<br />

"I wouldn't wish this on anyone...<br />

but who knows, maybe I'll come<br />

out the other end with a new standup<br />

show and a 40 minute rant<br />

about orange squash," he added.<br />

"Thank you everyone for your<br />

support over the last few weeks<br />

and months (and years). I'll be<br />

disappearing for a while and won't<br />

be commenting further, at least<br />

not for now, whilst I focus on my<br />

recovery."<br />

The Welsh broadcaster has been<br />

a popular presenter on national<br />

TV shows and was also a regular<br />

presenter on his own BBC Radio<br />

Wales show. Gilbert added he was<br />

working to reschedule his comedy<br />

tour Book of John for early 2023.<br />

ASBOs handed<br />

out for park louts<br />

Several ASBOs (Anti-Social<br />

Behaviour Order) were handed out<br />

in Caedelyn Park over the summer<br />

following complaints of annoying<br />

behaviour from youths.<br />

3


news<br />

Newly-planted<br />

trees damaged<br />

in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> parks<br />

Newly-planted trees in a<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> park have become<br />

the target of vandals over the<br />

last few months.<br />

Young trees worth several<br />

thousand pounds were<br />

snapped in half by mindless<br />

wastrels during the early part<br />

of the summer. The damage<br />

followed similar destruction<br />

to trees in Heath Park.<br />

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

Jayne Cowan said she was<br />

'absolutely disgusted' by the<br />

damage.<br />

"My colleagues Adrian<br />

Robson, Oliver Owen and I<br />

have been inundated with<br />

reports from local residents<br />

regarding the deliberate<br />

damage to trees in both<br />

Caedelyn Park and Parc<br />

y Pentre," she said. "The<br />

community is very angry<br />

that this is continuing to<br />

happen, and I urge anyone<br />

with information about this to<br />

contact 101.<br />

"The local parks and open<br />

spaces are so well used and<br />

loved by local residents and<br />

visitors alike; we need to<br />

ensure they are preserved<br />

and maintained for the<br />

future."<br />

Cardiff Bus<br />

announces<br />

changes<br />

Cardiff Bus has announced<br />

a change to a number of<br />

its timetables from early<br />

September.<br />

A statement said:<br />

"The new timetables restore<br />

the more typical service<br />

frequency seen before the<br />

school summer holidays. At<br />

the same time many routes<br />

will see new timetables, with<br />

many journeys re-timed to<br />

better reflect the level of<br />

congestion, which is often<br />

unpredictable, that we<br />

continue to face."<br />

The new timetable for the<br />

21 and 23 services include a<br />

later departure from Cardiff<br />

city centre to Whitchurch,<br />

Pantmawr and <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

Mondays to Saturdays.<br />

4<br />

Land at Caedelyn Park could be<br />

part of council land swap plans<br />

A large section of Caedelyn Park has<br />

featured in potential plans for a land<br />

swap, as council officials identify two<br />

pieces of land in Cardiff that it could<br />

exchange to allow Maindy Park to be<br />

developed on.<br />

Cardiff Council is the trustee of<br />

Maindy Park, a charity registered with<br />

the Charity Commission. The Council,<br />

acting as Local Education Authority,<br />

has asked the Charity about releasing<br />

part of the land at Maindy Park to<br />

accommodate a proposed expansion<br />

of Cathays High School.<br />

The Council has proposed providing<br />

alternative land in its ownership that is<br />

not currently held in trust or subject to<br />

similar covenants in exchange for the<br />

charity land. The land offered for the<br />

proposed land swap includes an area<br />

of Blackweir and 7.38 acres of land in<br />

Caedelyn Park.<br />

The council approved plans to<br />

expand Cathays High School in<br />

October 2021. The expansion will<br />

see a replacement school built and<br />

the Maindy Velodrome cycle track<br />

moved. The development will allow<br />

for a modern school that can offer<br />

space for more students and sports<br />

pitches - something the school does<br />

not have now.<br />

A Council spokesperson said:<br />

“Two sites near to Maindy, which<br />

might be suitable to the Trust in any<br />

land swap, have been identified at<br />

Blackweir and Caedelyn Park. Both<br />

sites fulfil the required criteria in that<br />

they are green space of a similar scale<br />

and relatively close to the existing<br />

land and do not have existing trust<br />

designation."<br />

Calls for better Blue Plaque system<br />

The leader of the Welsh<br />

Conservatives in the Senedd, Andrew<br />

RT Davies, has called for a ‘proper<br />

blue plaque system for Wales’.<br />

Currently, blue plaques in Wales are<br />

the result of different local schemes.<br />

Davies has said he wants to see a<br />

national scheme for Wales, following<br />

discussions with constituents who<br />

have struggled with the current<br />

system, which would fund and<br />

coordinate the placing of bilingual<br />

plaques across Wales.<br />

Commenting, Mr Davies said:<br />

“Blue plaques are a great way of<br />

fence posting our history. They remind<br />

us of the inspirational people who<br />

lived in our villages, towns and cities,<br />

and they inspire us to try and do great<br />

things.<br />

“The plaque system, as it stands,<br />

is fragmented, and people can find<br />

it hard to interact with. That’s why<br />

I’m calling for a proper blue plaque<br />

system for Wales.<br />

“If Labour ministers do listen to us,<br />

and set up this national body, I’ll be<br />

putting in an application for Derrick<br />

Hassan to receive a blue plaque.<br />

“Derrick was the first black police<br />

officer to serve in South Wales Police,<br />

and I think it would be wonderful<br />

to have that celebrated with a blue<br />

plaque on his house in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>.”


Your letters<br />

WE<br />

letters<br />

WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU!<br />

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 />

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

Society latest<br />

The <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Civic Society<br />

announces its programme for the<br />

rest of the year, as follows:<br />

20 September: The amazing<br />

Transporter Bridge – David<br />

Hando<br />

18 October: <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> – an<br />

Urban Village or just another City<br />

Suburb? – Ritchie Wood<br />

15 November: The Roman<br />

Conquest of Wales – Sarah<br />

Boyce<br />

13 December: Christmas quiz<br />

plus drinks and nibbles.<br />

Meetings are held in the Canolfan<br />

Beulah starting at 7.30 pm. For<br />

further information, please see<br />

our website or Facebook page –<br />

or phone 07811 509490.<br />

Roger Wright, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

How about a play?<br />

I am a published author and my<br />

books reference north Cardiff<br />

where the Steinberg family live.<br />

My first book, The Steinberg<br />

Diamonds, can be found on<br />

Amazon. I also write plays (again<br />

Cardiff or valleys-based) and I will<br />

have a play performed this year<br />

at the Grand Theatre, Swansea.<br />

Maybe the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Players<br />

would consider performing one?<br />

Proceeds to charity, of course.<br />

Marc Brosnan, email<br />

Author shock<br />

I was shocked to see you<br />

recommend a book by Jordan<br />

Peterson in your Spring issue.<br />

Peterson is a controversial<br />

right-wing figure, who has been<br />

accused of misogyny, fascist<br />

thinking, and contributing to the<br />

problem of 'toxic masculinity.'<br />

Your readers should be aware of<br />

whose book they are buying!<br />

Anna Lewis, email<br />

Did Mark Twain visit<br />

the Wenallt?<br />

I was wondering as to whether you<br />

were aware of the visit of Samuel<br />

Langhorne Clemens, ‘Mark Twain’,<br />

to Cardiff in the 1800s and his<br />

potential visit to the Wenallt,<br />

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

I came to discover this from my<br />

girlfriend who lives in Missouri<br />

and made me aware of a location<br />

called Cardiff Hill in the City<br />

of Hannibal which was Twain’s<br />

boyhood home town, and is<br />

immortalised in ‘The Adventures<br />

of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of<br />

Huckleberry Finn’.<br />

Twain himself named this<br />

location as the vista which strongly<br />

resembled that of a visit to Cardiff<br />

in which he looked down our own<br />

city.<br />

My basic research has not<br />

narrowed down the dates of<br />

the visit, or more importantly<br />

the rough location where he<br />

stood looking down over Cardiff<br />

(although I would assume it was<br />

the Wenallt, or the Garth). As<br />

one who was raised and grew<br />

up in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>, and still walks<br />

the Wenallt, I am intrigued and<br />

tantalised by this connection<br />

between our city and that of<br />

Hannibal, Missouri.<br />

Stuart Bodman<br />

Penarth<br />

Wild flower<br />

anomalies<br />

Just received the latest edition,<br />

and delighted to see the feature<br />

on wild flowers. As a botanist, I'm<br />

always pleased when attention<br />

is drawn to the range of colours<br />

and shapes that flowers come in.<br />

However, I'd like to point out a few<br />

anomalies in your article.<br />

First, none of the wild flower<br />

books I have mention such a<br />

thing as a wild hyacinth. I think<br />

the illustration is of Camassia (or<br />

Quamash), which is more often<br />

grown as a garden pernnial.<br />

Next, the picture of the common<br />

dog violet is wrong. Violets are<br />

related to pansies and share the<br />

same flower structure. I think you<br />

may have picked up a picture of a<br />

bell flower (Campanula).<br />

Finally, you may have missed<br />

an opportunity to remind your<br />

readers that it is illegal to dig up<br />

any wild flower. Good to see you<br />

got the right bluebell, though!<br />

Lyn Owen<br />

email<br />

If you have anything you’d like our readers to know about, drop us a line at<br />

editor@livingmags.co.uk or by letter to 222 Pantbach Road, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>, Cardiff<br />

CF14 6AG. You can also find us on Facebook and Twitter<br />

5


The Man Who<br />

Changed Everything<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>'s Derrick Hassan was the first serving black police officer<br />

in the South Wales Police. This is his remarkable story<br />

There's an old saying that reads:<br />

'Before you judge a man,<br />

walk a mile in his shoes.'<br />

Back in 1972, Derrick Hassan was<br />

walking many a mile around the<br />

streets of Cardiff - and getting<br />

judged in the process for doing the<br />

job he'd only just started.<br />

But Derrick wasn't the sort of man<br />

to let the small voices of others<br />

deter him from his life goals. His<br />

voice was the one he listened to<br />

and by doing so, he not only helped<br />

keep the communities of Cardiff<br />

safe, but he also stepped in the<br />

history books forever.<br />

Derrick's story started in 1947<br />

during the worst winter snows for a<br />

generation - he had to be dug from<br />

his house before he could meet the<br />

world. The family was based in the<br />

docks area of Cardiff but they soon<br />

moved to Ely, where Derrick and his<br />

two younger brothers grew up.<br />

Wife Ceri recalls Derrick's early<br />

years as he tried to figure out what<br />

he wanted to do with his life:<br />

"He was very sporty and liked to<br />

6<br />

play cricket and rugby. After leaving<br />

school, he joined the Merchant<br />

Navy, travelling all over the world<br />

and visiting places like Africa and<br />

Asia. When he returned, he started<br />

a carpentry job, repairing houses for<br />

the council. He was 23 years old."<br />

But it was 1972 when Derrick<br />

decided to join the police force that<br />

changed his life and the lives of<br />

countless others who have followed<br />

in his footsteps forever.<br />

"Dad Moses was a leading member<br />

of the Somali community in Cardiff<br />

docklands," says Ceri. "Moses was<br />

on the Watch Committee, that also<br />

included some police officers and<br />

they were keen to recruit a broader<br />

diversity of officers."<br />

Moses asked Derrick and his two<br />

younger brothers if they would<br />

like to join the police force. Derrick<br />

agreed and on October 6th 1972,<br />

Derrick pulled on the famous<br />

uniform for the first time.<br />

"The early days were tough for<br />

him," says Ceri. "He did get a lot of<br />

abuse. Derrick was the first black<br />

officer to serve in the South Wales<br />

Police and as such, he had no one<br />

else to speak to about his worries<br />

or concerns. He had colleagues<br />

of course but insomuch as his<br />

situation, he was completely on his<br />

own - no one else had been in that<br />

position before."<br />

But Derrick took it all in his stride.<br />

"He had flak from the criminals and<br />

dare I say it, some of his own work<br />

colleagues at the time. But he stood<br />

up for himself.<br />

"In those days, things were a little<br />

different to the way they are now.<br />

If an offender was being sent to<br />

prison for a while, they'd turn to<br />

Derrick and say 'Can you keep an<br />

eye on the wife and kids while<br />

I'm away?' Police officers were<br />

respected by the crooks, even if<br />

they were breaking the law."<br />

Within the force, and even within<br />

Cardiff's criminal underbelly,<br />

Derrick quickly became liked and<br />

respected. He went on to join the<br />

CID, where he spent most of his<br />

police career, and where he made


He was firm<br />

but fair<br />

he was respected<br />

by those on<br />

both sides of<br />

the law<br />

some long-lasting memories.<br />

"He was out on the beat one<br />

day undertaking door-to-door<br />

enquiries when a woman opened<br />

the door, clutched her hand to her<br />

chest and let out a big gasp of<br />

shock," recalls Ceri.<br />

"Derrick asked her what the<br />

matter was and the woman<br />

explained that only a few months<br />

earlier, she had been to see a<br />

psychic medium who told her<br />

that she'd soon have a black<br />

policeman knocking on her door.<br />

At that point in time, there were no<br />

black policemen, which is why the<br />

woman thought that it was such a<br />

strange thing for a medium to say."<br />

While Derrick was building a solid<br />

reputation within policing circles,<br />

he also set about building his own<br />

family - a family he was always<br />

proud of.<br />

"Derrick and I were introduced<br />

at the police club that used to be<br />

situated up the stairs on Queen<br />

Street," says Ceri. "It was called the<br />

Blue Lamp and we never looked<br />

back."<br />

Derrick and Ceri married and had<br />

a son and a daughter together<br />

- Andrew and Aimee, who both<br />

attended Whitchurch High School.<br />

"We moved to <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> in 1995<br />

and have been here ever since. We<br />

quickly became integrated into<br />

village life and Derrick enjoyed<br />

company of friends, especially on<br />

the nearby golf courses."<br />

During his tenure with the police,<br />

Derrick became a leading figure<br />

in the Black Police Association<br />

(BPA) in the South Wales area,<br />

encouraging others from minority<br />

groups to become offi cers.<br />

"He also enjoyed playing cricket<br />

and was a member of the force's<br />

cricket team. He enjoyed that<br />

game for many years," adds Ceri.<br />

Derrick rose through the ranks to<br />

detective constable and through<br />

the years, became an icon for<br />

young ethnic offi cers.<br />

"Derrick loved his work. He was<br />

firm but fair, even allowing one<br />

man to finish his pint before he<br />

arrested him!"<br />

When Derrick picked up his Long<br />

Service medal, dad Moses told him<br />

that at first, he didn't think Derrick<br />

would stick it out. In fact, Derrick<br />

remained in the force for 30 years.<br />

In March 2002, Derrick formally<br />

retired from the police but<br />

continued to work at the Coroner's<br />

Offi ce until he was 62. He then<br />

moved to the Crown Court, where<br />

he finally retired altogether in 2015.<br />

After he retired, Derrick enjoyed<br />

his beloved game of golf and<br />

socialising with friends and family.<br />

"We sold the family house,<br />

downsized in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> and bought<br />

a property in Spain where we<br />

spent a lot of time together before<br />

Derrick fell ill," says Ceri.<br />

Sadly, Derrick passed away in<br />

April this year. Although he had<br />

been ill, it still came as a shock to<br />

his loved ones.<br />

His children were deservedly<br />

proud of the man they called Dad.<br />

"To us, he was just dad and it's<br />

only recently that we've started to<br />

understand the significance of his<br />

place in the world,"<br />

says Aimee.<br />

"After Dad had gone,<br />

we had neighbours<br />

and friends telling us<br />

that they had no idea<br />

that Derrick was the<br />

first black policeman<br />

in South Wales. He<br />

achieved a lot."<br />

Derrick was laid<br />

to rest in May, with<br />

full police honours.<br />

Friends and family<br />

attended the funeral<br />

but it was also<br />

livestreamed so that<br />

those who he had<br />

influenced further<br />

afield could pay their<br />

respects and say<br />

goodbye.<br />

But that's not where<br />

Derrick's story ends.<br />

Derrick's life paved<br />

the way for so many<br />

other black police<br />

offi cers, not just here<br />

in Cardiff, but across<br />

the UK and beyond.<br />

In later life, Derrick<br />

would say that it was<br />

the disillusionment<br />

of his young, black<br />

friends with the<br />

police that first<br />

inspired him to join<br />

the force in the first<br />

people<br />

place.<br />

"They were telling me stories<br />

about being harassed. We thought<br />

a black person should join the<br />

police and break down the barriers<br />

from within," he once said.<br />

It is then perhaps, testament to<br />

Derrick's tenacity and attitude that<br />

we now live in a fairer place than<br />

we did when he took his first steps<br />

on Cardiff's streets as PC Hassan<br />

- a time when race relations were<br />

practically unheard of.<br />

Today, there is positive talk about<br />

a blue plaque in honour of Derrick.<br />

"We are currently in talks with the<br />

right people. It'd be a lovely thing<br />

to do but it just means that I won't<br />

be able to live elsewhere!" laughs<br />

Ceri.<br />

Derrick leaves behind a legacy<br />

that will have positive implications<br />

for generations to come. During<br />

his life, he was encouraging and<br />

advisory, a mentor to many. But<br />

his pioneering work and attitude<br />

will serve to help countless others,<br />

both in their careers, and in their<br />

lives.<br />

Derrick's legacy will<br />

be felt for years to come<br />

7


THE MAZDA2 HYBRID<br />

AVAILABLE FOR £289 PER MONTH ON<br />

MAZDA PERSONAL CONTRACT PURCHASE<br />

NEW ENERGY FOR THE CITY<br />

SEARCH: VICTORIA PARK MAZDA<br />

Mazda2 Hybrid Select<br />

Mazda Personal Contract Purchase Examples<br />

5.4% APR* Representative over 4 years<br />

Monthly Payment £289.00 Total Amount Payable £28,895.93<br />

On The Road Price inc Metallic Paint £25,3<strong>55</strong>.00 Fixed Rate of Interest 2.79% p.a<br />

Mazda Deposit Contribution £500.00 No of monthly payments 48<br />

Customer Deposit £3,390.93 Duration of Agreement 49 months<br />

Amount of Credit £21,464.07 Annual Mileage 9,000<br />

Interest Charges £3,540.93 Excess Mileage Charge per mile 7.5p<br />

Optional Final Payment £11,133.00 % APR 5.4% APR* Representative<br />

Model shown: Mazda2 Hybrid 116ps Select 5 Door, £24,475 On the road. Model shown in Lead Grey. Optional Metallic paint £585. OTR price includes VAT, number plates, delivery, 12 months’ road fund<br />

licence, first registration fee, 3 year or 60,000 mile warranty and 3 years’ European roadside assistance. Test drives subject to applicant status and availability. Details correct at time of going to print. Not available<br />

in conjunction with any other offer unless specified.<br />

Retail sales only, subject to availability for vehicles ordered between 01.07.2022 and 30.09.2022, registered by 31.12.2022 at participating dealers. T&C apply. *5.4% APR Mazda Personal Contract Purchase<br />

available on all new Mazda2 Hybrid models. Finance subject to status, 18s or over. Guarantee may be required. Mazda Financial Services RH1 1SR.<br />

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<br />

and may receive a commission from them for the introduction. If you have any questions about commission please speak to the dealer.<br />

DRIVE TOGETHER


ALL-NEW MAZDA CX-60<br />

PLUG-IN HYBRID<br />

AVAILABLE FOR £529 PER MONTH<br />

Created by our Takumi craftsmen, the all-new Mazda CX-60 showcases the<br />

refined elegance of our KODO design language woven into the toughness of<br />

an SUV. Carefully curated materials like real maple wood, high-quality leather,<br />

Japanese textiles and chrome details are combined in perfect harmony in a<br />

car completely designed around its driver. If this is how we craft the details,<br />

imagine how it feels to drive the all-new Mazda CX-60. Crafted in Japan.<br />

SEARCH: VICTORIA PARK MAZDA<br />

Model<br />

All-new Mazda CX-60 327ps AWD Homura Auto<br />

Monthly Payment £529.00 Total Amount Payable £54,019.71<br />

On The Road Price inc Metallic Paint £47,450.00 Fixed Rate of Interest 2.79%<br />

Mazda Deposit Contribution £500.00 No of monthly payments 48<br />

Customer Deposit £7,292.71 Duration of Agreement 49 months<br />

Amount of Credit £39,657.29 Annual Mileage 9,000<br />

Interest Charges £6,569.71 Excess Mileage Charge per mile 7.5p<br />

Optional Final Payment £20,835.00 % APR 5.4% APR* Representative<br />

Model shown may not be UK specification.<br />

The official fuel consumption figures in mpg (l/100km) for the all-new Mazda CX-60 range: Weighted 188.3 (1.5)^. CO 2<br />

emissions (g/km) 33^.<br />

^Figures shown are for comparability purposes; only compare fuel consumption and CO 2<br />

figures with other cars tested to the same technical procedures. These figures may not reflect real life driving results,<br />

which will depend upon a number of factors including the accessories fitted (post-registration), variations in weather, driving styles and vehicle load. All figures quoted are derived from the latest WLTP test cycle.<br />

T&C apply. Retail sales only, subject to availability for vehicles ordered between 01.07.2022 and 30.09.2022, registered by 31.12.2022. † £1,000 Mazda Loyalty Deposit Contribution can only be used in<br />

conjunction with Mazda PCP or Mazda Purchase Plan finance. *5.4% APR Mazda Personal Contract Purchase available on all new Mazda CX-60 models. Finance subject to status, 18s or over. Guarantee may<br />

be required. Mazda Financial Services RH1 1SR. Channel Islands and Isle of Man excluded. Not available in conjunction with any other offer unless specified.<br />

Model shown: All-new Mazda CX-60 327ps AWD Homura Auto, OTR from £46,700. Model shown features Soul Red Crystal paint (£900). OTR price includes VAT, number plates, delivery, 12 months’ road<br />

fund licence, first registration fee, 3-year or 60,000-mile warranty and 3 years’ European roadside assistance. Test drives subject to applicant status and availability. Details correct at time of going to print.<br />

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<br />

and may receive a commission from them for the introduction. If you have any questions about commission please speak to the dealer.<br />

DRIVE TOGETHER


Life can be extremely hard at times. But out of adversity will always<br />

come opportunity. You can convert your negative experiences into<br />

positive ones to help you through life. Here's how.<br />

Find a sense of<br />

purpose<br />

Finding a sense of purpose in<br />

your life might seem a bit of<br />

a luxury but it plays a more<br />

important role than we might first<br />

think.<br />

Life is hard, and with it comes its<br />

own set of challenges, pain, and<br />

perspectives. Your story will be<br />

different to most other people's<br />

but with that comes the unique<br />

opportunity to convert them into<br />

a sense of purpose.<br />

You may find that you want<br />

to help those who are going<br />

through similar situations to the<br />

ones that you have overcome.<br />

You can show them how you<br />

did it, and offer guidance and<br />

support. How you transform<br />

your pain into purpose is entirely<br />

down to you but it might help if<br />

you get involved with community<br />

causes or groups that you feel<br />

drawn to.<br />

Being connected to others<br />

helps you discover people that<br />

share similar values and interests,<br />

and working with them towards<br />

a common goal will reignite a<br />

reason for pushing forward.<br />

10<br />

Believe in yourself<br />

Having confidence to back<br />

yourself when times are hard is<br />

crucial to surviving them.<br />

The fact that you've come this<br />

far just goes to show that you<br />

already have great levels of<br />

resilience. But changing your<br />

perspective on how you deal<br />

with them will make things less<br />

stressful.<br />

The way that you view yourself<br />

underpins the success in which<br />

you deal with life's challenges.<br />

Reminding yourself that you can<br />

cope with anything on a daily<br />

basis will help you believe that<br />

you can. Give yourself positive<br />

affi rmations daily.<br />

Everyone is a critic so while<br />

people are entitled to air their<br />

opinions, that doesn't necessarily<br />

mean that you have no worth.<br />

How you can use your<br />

setbacks and pain to<br />

create a better life<br />

Maintain friendships<br />

Keeping your strains and stresses<br />

to yourself is always going to<br />

eat you up from the inside so<br />

it's important to maintain and<br />

develop a good social network.<br />

Being able to verbally express<br />

your problems can make you feel<br />

better but the beauty of talking<br />

to people is that they can think<br />

about your problems differently<br />

and possibly think of alternative<br />

solutions.<br />

Friends will more often than not<br />

also provide you with positive<br />

feedback. They will remind you<br />

that you are doing a good job,<br />

despite what you think. They<br />

can see things from an outside<br />

perspective and they'll be able to<br />

help talk you through the things<br />

that are weighing you down.


Welcome change<br />

Change is an inevitable fact of life<br />

and the sooner we accept that<br />

fact, the easier life becomes as we<br />

move through it.<br />

Being flexible to change stops<br />

us from wasting energy trying to<br />

push back against it. Better still,<br />

change can also provide us with<br />

new opportunities that perhaps<br />

weren't there before. It could give<br />

you an opportunity to improve<br />

yourself or a situation. You can<br />

learn new things or develop new<br />

skills, even if it's the art of being<br />

more flexible and optimistic.<br />

For every negative event that<br />

happens, it will always contain<br />

a seed of opportunity to make a<br />

positive outcome.<br />

Remember that it is not life<br />

events that shape us. It's how<br />

we react and deal with those life<br />

events. We have the power within<br />

ourselves to affect the outcome.<br />

Think positively<br />

Maintaining a positive outlook<br />

on life, especially when it seems<br />

that everything is crashing down<br />

around us, can be very diffi cult.<br />

Thinking positively doesn't mean<br />

ignoring the problems of life,<br />

or daydreaming at the expense<br />

of practical solutions. It's about<br />

reminding yourself that whatever<br />

is going on is temporary, and that<br />

whatever the setback is, it can be<br />

fixed. Even in some of the most<br />

darkest days, there is always hope<br />

that there are better days ahead.<br />

A good way to start thinking<br />

positively is to accept your past<br />

mistakes for what they were, and<br />

leaving them in the past. Mistakes<br />

happen and while we can learn<br />

from them, dwelling on them<br />

does no good to anyone.<br />

Try and view obstacles and<br />

setbacks as opportunities to learn<br />

new things. Identify the situations<br />

that trigger you negatively, and try<br />

to look at them from a different<br />

angle. Instead of telling yourself<br />

that you 'have to', tell yourself that<br />

you 'get to'. This will help bring a<br />

sense of gratitude to your life, and<br />

equip you for other challenges.<br />

Look after yourself<br />

Because your physical wellbeing<br />

is so closely linked to your mental<br />

wellbeing, taking care of yourself<br />

physically can help you get through<br />

life's toughest challenges. And it's<br />

not just exercise that helps - you<br />

may want to explore how your diet<br />

affects you. Improving your diet<br />

can give you more energy, lift your<br />

mood and help you think more<br />

clearly.<br />

Keep hydrated by drinking plenty<br />

of water and keeping caffeine and<br />

alcohol to a minimum. Nourish<br />

your body with the vitamins and<br />

minerals it needs and it will reward<br />

you with more positive moods. Also<br />

get the sleep that you need. Both<br />

your body and mind need it.<br />

Problem solve<br />

Taking the time to solve a problem<br />

will give you the confidence to deal<br />

with the next problem that comes<br />

along.<br />

When a problem does arise, count<br />

to ten to avoid going into panic<br />

mode. Then reassure yourself that<br />

you can deal with the problem,<br />

even if the solution doesn't present<br />

itself straight away.<br />

Look at the problem logically,<br />

without emotion. Then break it<br />

down and apply solutions for each<br />

piece in a timely manner.<br />

wellbeing<br />

Set and achieve goals<br />

To begin with, it might be a good<br />

idea to set yourself a personal vision<br />

statement, in which you can identify<br />

core values and aims in life. Doing this<br />

will help you create a basic roadmap<br />

for the next few years, allowing you<br />

to visualise and aim for medium and<br />

long-term goals.<br />

It will also help allay your stress<br />

since you know exactly where you're<br />

headed, even if temporary setbacks<br />

creep up in the meantime.<br />

You'll also feel a great sense of<br />

achievement when you stop to look<br />

back at what you've accomplished.<br />

Improve yourself<br />

Life shouldn't be about just getting<br />

through it. It should be about feeling<br />

fulfilled and making the most of your<br />

experiences.<br />

Continuous self-improvement goes<br />

a long way towards that because it<br />

enlightens you to new possibilities<br />

and opportunities. Whether it's<br />

trying out a new hobby, creating an<br />

inspirational room, or even starting<br />

that educational course you've always<br />

wanted to do, improving yourself<br />

will give you more confidence to<br />

overcome the challenges of everyday<br />

life.<br />

One clever trick is to write a letter to<br />

your future self, outlining where you<br />

want to be and what kind of person<br />

you want to be. Date and seal the<br />

letter, and then set about aiming to<br />

achieve all those self-improvements<br />

that you've included in the letter.<br />

11


Northwood:<br />

home of<br />

worry-free<br />

landlords<br />

All the benefits of being a<br />

landlord, with none of the risk.<br />

Our Guaranteed Rent Scheme<br />

gives you a guaranteed monthly<br />

income, paid into your account<br />

on the same day every month.<br />

Even if your property is empty.<br />

Pop in and speak to a member of the team to find<br />

out more about how our Guaranteed Rent Scheme<br />

will revolutionise your landlord experience.<br />

northwood<br />

Over & Above<br />

The UK’s Number One Provider of Guaranteed Rent*<br />

*See northwooduk.com/no1<br />

02920 301141 northwooduk.com/cardiff<br />

02920 301141 | northwooduk.com/cardiff<br />

Northwood Cardiff, 23 Northwood Whitchurch Cardiff, Road, 1a/1b<br />

Heol Y Deri, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>, Cardiff Cardiff, CF14 3JN CF14 6HA


20 Years In The Making<br />

Northwood Cardiff of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

Village recently celebrated a<br />

fantastic 20 years in business in<br />

May 2022, having had a home in<br />

North Cardiff since the company<br />

was launched.<br />

The team celebrated by holding<br />

a birthday party to raise money<br />

for local charity Hollibobs with<br />

several competitions and games<br />

being run – highlights being a<br />

This is a sponsored post<br />

golden ticket hunt in the village.<br />

Flossy’s facepainting was on hand<br />

for the kids with cakes from Dotty<br />

Cupcakes also being given out.<br />

This family-run estate and letting<br />

agency was established in 2002<br />

on Whitchurch Road and has<br />

offered full management services<br />

and guaranteed rental incomes<br />

for landlords in Cardiff and South<br />

Wales from the start with the<br />

business<br />

expanding<br />

into<br />

Residential<br />

Sales in 2014.<br />

Following<br />

continued<br />

growth and<br />

acquisition,<br />

Northwood<br />

moved into<br />

their current<br />

premises<br />

on Heol-y-<br />

Deri in 2019<br />

and is now<br />

led by local<br />

husband and<br />

wife team Ben and Kate Gwinnutt.<br />

You can find more about the work<br />

Hollibobs carries out in the local<br />

community on their website<br />

www.holibobscharity.org.uk. You can<br />

see more from Northwood Cardiff<br />

on their website or social media<br />

channels or get in touch in person<br />

or on the phone for a free lettings<br />

or sales valuation.<br />

1A & 1B Heol Y Deri, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>,<br />

Cardiff, CF14 6HA<br />

02920 521400<br />

www.northwooduk.com


Extending horizons<br />

at Llanishen Fach<br />

Primary School<br />

The retired teachers amongst the<br />

readership may well remember the<br />

introduction of 'Baker days', now<br />

more correctly termed in-service<br />

training or 'INSET' days. While<br />

such days are a well-established<br />

part of school life and a valuable<br />

tool for school management, they<br />

are sometimes misunderstood by<br />

some, being seen as an unwelcome<br />

interruption to the school term.<br />

14<br />

Here at Llanishen Fach Primary<br />

School, INSET days are far from<br />

a disruption, providing valuable<br />

time for our teachers and teaching<br />

assistants to continue to improve<br />

and develop our practice and stay<br />

abreast of recent thinking and<br />

developments in primary education.<br />

Such training opportunities have<br />

never been more valued as now,<br />

as we emerge from a difficult time<br />

for schools and look to the future,<br />

certain in the knowledge that our<br />

professionalism is more than ever<br />

vital to the lives and prospects of<br />

our pupils.<br />

Outdoor learning<br />

For many years now, outdoor<br />

learning has been a mainstay<br />

of our curriculum, with pupils<br />

spending one day a fortnight<br />

totally immersed in the outdoor<br />

environment, come rain or shine.<br />

So, when March saw schools across<br />

Wales celebrate the potential and<br />

benefits of taking learning outdoors,<br />

we were eager to get involved. We<br />

decided to mark ‘Wales Outdoor<br />

Learning Week’ by setting aside a<br />

sizable part of our spring’s two day<br />

INSET programme to exploring<br />

teaching and learning opportunities<br />

for our school community.<br />

Taking the lead from the many and<br />

varied outdoor resources we have<br />

access to, staff considered how to<br />

extend their teaching using these<br />

resources as a focus:<br />

“Lamby Way” – our investigation<br />

and exploration area<br />

• chicken coop<br />

• ancient varieties apple orchard<br />

• raised planting beds


• thriving apiary and other<br />

pollinators found on site<br />

• willow circle and hazel grove<br />

previously planted by pupils<br />

• extensive British native trees,<br />

both mature and recently<br />

planted<br />

• pond (we received a grant to<br />

establish)<br />

As our staff bounced ideas off each<br />

other, new and exciting teaching<br />

and learning opportunities began<br />

to take shape and develop into<br />

proposals to be developed in the<br />

summer term.<br />

Busy bees<br />

With the arrival of the summer term<br />

our returning pupils, fresh from their<br />

Easter break, were quickly engaged<br />

in a range of exciting activities. Our<br />

Year 5 children got busy thinking<br />

about both the honeybees we have<br />

on site and the bumble bees that<br />

visit our grounds. They researched<br />

the hives and created graphs to<br />

depict colony size while in the art<br />

room they made paintings of some<br />

of the different bumble bees they<br />

observed around the school. Pupils<br />

also used Google maps to gain a<br />

better understanding of the school<br />

grounds and their place in the wider<br />

community.<br />

The Year 6 pupils conducted an<br />

extensive and meticulous survey of<br />

pondlife found in our 5mx3m pond<br />

which, as you can imagine, took<br />

some doing!<br />

At the younger end of the school,<br />

the Reception age children have<br />

been learning about plant growth<br />

and cultivating their own garden<br />

while the Year 1 pupils learnt about<br />

insects, creating homes for them,<br />

and pollinators which they surveyed<br />

at different locations around the<br />

school grounds.<br />

Nocturnal visits<br />

In Year 2 the pupils used their<br />

interaction with our chickens<br />

to inspire their creative writing<br />

with the odd exclamation mark<br />

to emphasise their delight and<br />

excitement. It isn’t just insects that<br />

we have in abundance, we also<br />

have regular visits from a range of<br />

nocturnal mammals. How do we<br />

know this? The children in Year 4<br />

have been using a motion-activated<br />

infrared night camera. Taking the<br />

lead in their learning, once they<br />

had discovered the existence of<br />

these visitors, they wanted to find<br />

other ways of recording their nightly<br />

visits and set footprint tracking<br />

tunnels along the routes they had<br />

discovered and mapped.<br />

Minibeasts<br />

As well as being integrated into our<br />

mainstream classes, our Specialist<br />

Resource Base (SRB) pupils have<br />

been using the grounds within<br />

their own curriculum. The younger<br />

pupils in Dosbarth Enfys 1 spent an<br />

enjoyable morning washing ‘Incy<br />

schools<br />

Wincy Spider’ down the waterspout.<br />

In Dosbarth Enfys 2, the pupils<br />

wanted to spend more time looking<br />

at the ‘minibeasts’ found around the<br />

school, which they did with great<br />

thoroughness!<br />

So, following our ‘Wales Outdoor<br />

Learning Week’ INSET we now ask<br />

the question, when planning our<br />

future teaching, ‘What is it about<br />

this activity that requires it to be<br />

done indoors?’ As a result, we now<br />

TAKE THE LEARNING OUTDOORS<br />

whenever we can.<br />

15


How do you clean your ears?<br />

In my years of being a Hearing<br />

Audiologist, I have been told many<br />

stories about what people clean<br />

their ears with - from the everyday<br />

cotton swabs to pens, paperclips,<br />

hair grips, glasses arms, and car<br />

keys. I’m sure nearly everyone is<br />

guilty of sticking something in their<br />

ears they are not supposed to so I’m<br />

going to explain why the old wives<br />

tale ‘nothing smaller than your<br />

elbow’ is so true.<br />

Our ears are designed by nature<br />

to be both self-cleaning and selfprotecting<br />

and that’s why by using<br />

the wrong cleaning methods, you<br />

risk causing injury to the ears,<br />

damaging your hearing, or even<br />

cause infections.<br />

Earwax (also called cerumen) is<br />

necessary for the ear’s self-cleaning<br />

mechanism to work properly.<br />

Earwax is manufactured by glands<br />

in the skin of the outer ear canal, the<br />

hole through which sound travels to<br />

the eardrum. Earwax serves several<br />

important functions. It coats the skin<br />

of the ear canal, repelling water and<br />

helping to protect it against injury<br />

and infection. It also helps to keep<br />

the skin inside the ears from getting<br />

dry and itchy.<br />

In addition, earwax traps dust and<br />

germs, keeping them from reaching<br />

the eardrum. Usually, you don’t<br />

need to do anything to help this<br />

natural cleaning process unless you<br />

suffer from an impaction that may<br />

have to be removed.<br />

Trying to forcibly remove the ear’s<br />

protective wax layer or stop an itch<br />

can damage the delicate skin of the<br />

ear canal or puncture (put a hole<br />

in) the eardrum. This can increase<br />

your risk of infection and lead to a<br />

permanent hearing loss needing<br />

either surgery or a hearing aid to<br />

correct the impairment. So it is<br />

best to leave the inside of your ear<br />

alone and not disturb its natural<br />

environment. This means no cotton<br />

swabs, no fingers and certainly no<br />

sharp objects!<br />

The ear canal is narrow and<br />

curved, consequently some<br />

people are susceptible to getting<br />

blockages of wax, skin, foreign<br />

objects, debris from infection. If a<br />

blockage is present, you may notice<br />

your hearing seems, dull, there may<br />

be a ringing sound in your ears,<br />

your ears may feel full become<br />

itchy or ache. If this is the case, you<br />

will need to have it professionally<br />

removed. Microsuction is renowned<br />

as the most efficient and the safest<br />

way to remove blockages.<br />

It is highly recommended by GPs,<br />

audiologists and ENT consultants.<br />

Microsuction of an ear canal is<br />

performed under direct vision<br />

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iney Hearing Care 02920 250121<br />

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www.vineyhearingcare.co.uk


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eat the<br />

cost of living<br />

The current cost of living crisis is already starting to impact on our<br />

personal finances. Here are a few ways to help protect against its<br />

worst effects and to help you navigate your way through it<br />

Keep track<br />

Possibly the best place to start<br />

is by setting some time aside to<br />

see where you are currently with<br />

your income and outgoings. It's<br />

often surprising how much is<br />

actually going out of your bank<br />

account every month once you<br />

sit down and add it all up.<br />

It can be daunting facing up<br />

to the realities of your finances<br />

but even taking the first step of<br />

actually figuring out where you<br />

are will give you some sense of<br />

achievement and purpose.<br />

The first thing to do is to figure<br />

out whether you're earning<br />

more than you're spending, just<br />

about breaking even, or sliding<br />

into trouble. If you are spending<br />

more than you're earning, the<br />

first place to start is to cancel any<br />

outgoings that you don't use or<br />

can do without.<br />

Also check what your food<br />

cupboards are looking like<br />

before you go shopping. Many<br />

of us head to the shops without<br />

checking what we already have<br />

and end up throwing away items<br />

in our cupboards that we've<br />

never used.<br />

18<br />

Plan a weekly menu<br />

Setting a budget for the week<br />

ahead will help you feel more in<br />

control and provide you with the<br />

ability to save money by using food<br />

more sparingly.<br />

You'll need to plan all the<br />

ingredients of each meal so<br />

that you can take a list to the<br />

supermarket or order it online. Try<br />

your best to stick to what's only<br />

on the list as any little extras will<br />

soon add up. Don't be afraid to<br />

give yourself a treat, as long as it's<br />

included in the weekly menu.<br />

Vegetables are generally<br />

less expensive to buy than<br />

meat and you can bulk out a<br />

healthy casserole by using more<br />

vegetables and less meat. Batch<br />

cooking base sauces also means<br />

that you can use them for different<br />

dishes throughout the week.<br />

Use your freezer<br />

Food wastage costs the<br />

average UK household around<br />

£700 a year, according to the<br />

sustainability charity, Wrap.<br />

If you have a freezer, or better<br />

still a chest freezer, you can<br />

stock up on meals for weeks and<br />

months ahead. Freezing food<br />

that's also approaching its useby<br />

date will also save you from<br />

throwing it in the bin.<br />

While most foods are freezable,<br />

thawing them may not present<br />

them in the form that they were<br />

frozen in so you may need to<br />

think outside the box when it<br />

comes to using them.<br />

Batch cooking and then<br />

freezing your meals will also<br />

make the most of bulk buying,<br />

especially when it comes to<br />

things like meat and vegetables.


Shop differently<br />

Savvy shoppers are the ones that<br />

head straight for the Reduced<br />

Items section in the supermarket,<br />

often picking up things that they<br />

actually need instead of paying for<br />

full price versions.<br />

After the reduced aisle, head<br />

to the frozen and tinned aisles<br />

next. Goods here tend to be<br />

less expensive than their fresh<br />

counterparts and are often<br />

packed, tinned, or frozen within<br />

hours of being picked.<br />

Sell unwanted stuff<br />

If you take a quick look around<br />

your home, there is likely to be<br />

a range of things that no longer<br />

serve you and can be exchanged<br />

for cash with someone who needs<br />

them more than you do.<br />

Social media market places are<br />

a good place to sell a lot of stuff<br />

locally, giving you space and<br />

funds at the same time.<br />

Walk where you can<br />

The rise of fuel costs is something<br />

that can't be ignored so if<br />

possible, walk to places instead<br />

of using the car, especially if it's<br />

local. Walking is a lot healthier for<br />

starters, plus you'll be saving on<br />

both fuel, and the wear and tear of<br />

your vehicle.<br />

Dining out<br />

It's perhaps too easy to suggest<br />

a blanket ban on eating out,<br />

especially since many of our local<br />

eateries rely on our custom to<br />

keep their doors open.<br />

But you can save money when<br />

going out by working with your<br />

favourite venues. Join their mailing<br />

lists to receive their latest deals.<br />

Ordering takeaways directly from<br />

your local restaurant can also<br />

save you money on the third-party<br />

companies that cream off a small<br />

profit for organising a delivery.<br />

If you also find that you've overordered<br />

at the restaurant, most<br />

venues will be more than happy to<br />

provide a doggy bag - giving you<br />

leftovers to munch on later.<br />

Buy second hand<br />

Millions of Brits are turning to<br />

buying second hand clothing<br />

(Confused.com, 2022) as the cost<br />

of living crisis bites into day-to-day<br />

living.<br />

Buying second hand doesn't<br />

just save you money. It helps the<br />

environment by reducing the need<br />

to create new goods. The fashion<br />

industry is notorious for sending<br />

unwanted items to landfill sites, in<br />

addition to the costs and energy<br />

used to create the garments in the<br />

first place.<br />

If you have little ones, buying preloved<br />

toys means that you extend<br />

the life of that toy - and provide<br />

your youngsters with a good<br />

example of recycling.<br />

Second hand goods can be found<br />

in charity shops plus online listings<br />

and social media.<br />

Find a new income<br />

stream<br />

Converting your knowledge and<br />

expertise into an income is a great<br />

way of boosting your salary.<br />

If you have any particular skills<br />

that are needed locally, why not put<br />

them to good use and generate an<br />

income from it?<br />

The internet also provides a great<br />

way to top up your wages, whether<br />

it's selling goods or services<br />

online, or even offering courses in<br />

your specialist area. Either way, if<br />

you can't do anything about your<br />

outgoings, the only way you're<br />

going to balance it out is to level up<br />

your income.<br />

finances<br />

Save on energy bills<br />

In normal times, experts would<br />

be recommending that you look<br />

around for the best deal when it<br />

comes to your energy bills. The<br />

problem that we are all facing is the<br />

unprecedented rise in costs, with<br />

more rises predicted in October.<br />

As a result, most energy companies<br />

have withdrawn their special offers,<br />

leaving some households in the<br />

lurch as we head into autumn.<br />

If you do foresee trouble ahead, it's<br />

always best to contact your energy<br />

company as soon as you can so that<br />

you can come to some solution.<br />

Around the home, there are actions<br />

you can take to help save on your<br />

bills - turning off unnecessary lights<br />

and appliances is a good start.<br />

Making sure that your house is<br />

properly insulated for the winter will<br />

also go some way to reducing your<br />

reliance on energy. Leaky windows<br />

and poor loft insulation are often<br />

the main culprits when it comes to<br />

higher energy bills.<br />

Save on phone bills<br />

Most us have mobile phones these<br />

days and these can be an expensive<br />

drain on our financial resources. With<br />

that in mind, it's worth checking your<br />

current deal to see if you're paying<br />

over the odds, and to see if there are<br />

any savings to be made.<br />

Phone companies are used<br />

to customers haggling as most<br />

companies would rather throw in a<br />

few goodies or reduce a monthly<br />

tariff if it means that you stay loyal<br />

to them. Be careful too that you're<br />

not paying over the odds for internet<br />

data. Paying for unlimited metering<br />

when you mostly use Wifi is a classic<br />

example of customers paying<br />

through the nose for something that<br />

they don't need.<br />

The technology used in mobile<br />

phones also means that in some<br />

cases, the specs on some phones<br />

come close to matching those of the<br />

more expensive, high-end versions.<br />

Finally, check to see if you have any<br />

useful perks in your contract, like<br />

data rollover.<br />

19


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SHOP LOCAL L A4 v1.indd 1 09/11/2020 14:51


HAVE A MOVIE NIGHT IN<br />

THE GARDEN<br />

There's something<br />

special about watching<br />

a movie outdoors and<br />

late summer gives you<br />

the perfect mix of warm<br />

weather, darkening<br />

nights and the chance<br />

to catch up with friends<br />

and neighbours who'll be<br />

back off holiday.<br />

Project your movie onto<br />

a simple screen and add<br />

sound and drinks!<br />

EXTEND your summer<br />

As Autumn approaches, it's easy to switch off from the summer vibes.<br />

Here are a few ways to make that summer feeling last a little longer<br />

KEEP SUMMER ON YOUR PLATE<br />

Summer doesn't have to be a<br />

season - you can also find it on<br />

your plate.<br />

Keeping your meals light and<br />

nutritious will also help stave off<br />

those sluggish feelings you get<br />

after eating heavy meals. Eating<br />

fruits and vegetables that are rich<br />

in beta-carotene and antioxidants<br />

will also help keep your tan and<br />

also help keep your skin hydrated<br />

from the inside.<br />

VISIT THE BEACH<br />

Perhaps the best time<br />

of year to visit the beach<br />

is just after the kids go<br />

back to school. You<br />

still get the gorgeous<br />

weather but the beaches<br />

are a lot quieter.<br />

Grab a portable<br />

barbeque and a cool box<br />

of drinks and spend a<br />

few hours watching the<br />

sun go down. The perfect<br />

way to make more<br />

summer memories.<br />

GARDEN READING<br />

Getting lost in a good<br />

book is a great way<br />

to while away a<br />

sunny afternoon<br />

when there's no<br />

one around.<br />

The garden is<br />

an ideal place<br />

to pack away<br />

your troubles,<br />

put your feet<br />

up, and to<br />

forget about<br />

the world for a<br />

moment.<br />

24


wellbeing<br />

PACK A PICNIC<br />

The cooler days of late<br />

summer are the ideal times to<br />

pack a picnic - no sunburn, less<br />

bugs, but all the gorgeousness<br />

of the bright weather. Just<br />

remember to pack a cardi - just<br />

in case!<br />

SWIM IN THE SUN<br />

Swimming in the<br />

sunshine shouldn't<br />

only be reserved for<br />

holidays. If you can get<br />

the chance, and while<br />

the summer sun is<br />

still shining, aim to get<br />

swimming outdoors.<br />

Not only does it help<br />

promote better sleep<br />

and improve circulation<br />

and metabolism, it also<br />

helps creates a sense<br />

of happiness and helps<br />

improve mental health.<br />

As we move into<br />

autumn, cold water<br />

swimming can boast the<br />

same benefits.<br />

PLAY OUTDOORS<br />

Going back to school<br />

doesn't mean that<br />

playtime at home should<br />

switch to indoors.<br />

The start of the school<br />

year isn't overloaded<br />

with homework and<br />

coursework so let the<br />

kids play outdoors. It'll<br />

help them sleep better!<br />

HOST A GARDEN PARTY<br />

Make the most of the evenings by hosting<br />

a late summer garden party. It'd be a great<br />

opportunity to catch up with friends and family<br />

before we roll into the darker days of autumn<br />

and winter.<br />

GET ON YOUR BIKE<br />

This is the perfect time of<br />

year to get on a bicycle<br />

and visit new places. The<br />

fierce heat of the sun<br />

will be a little tempered<br />

by the cooler winds but<br />

the rumbles of the rough<br />

autumn storms are still<br />

some way off.<br />

Do plan for your journey,<br />

especially if it's going to<br />

be an extended one. Make<br />

sure that you stay hydrated<br />

and use sunscreen if it's<br />

a sunny day. Lightweight<br />

clothing offering plenty of<br />

ventilation will also help in<br />

the late summer heat.<br />

25


Water<br />

features<br />

South Wales is rich in<br />

waterfalls. Slip on your walking<br />

shoes, pack a flask, and take<br />

time to admire these calming<br />

wonders of nature for free<br />

Melincourt Falls<br />

Situated in the Vale of Neath,<br />

Melincourt Falls sits at the end of a<br />

short walk from the car park.<br />

It has been drawing visitors to the<br />

site for over two centuries, and it has<br />

been said that the falls inspired the<br />

artist JMW Turner to paint them. At<br />

over 80 feet high, the falls certainly<br />

catch the eye as they plunge off<br />

Melin Court Brook, a left-bank<br />

tributary of the River Neath.<br />

Considered one of the easier of<br />

the Welsh waterfalls to visit, the<br />

experience is further enhanced by a<br />

gentle stream that gurgles through<br />

the vegetation.<br />

The falls can be accessed from the<br />

public footpath that sits on the B4434<br />

Resolven to Tonna Road. It's situated<br />

about a mile south of Resolven.<br />

Henrhyd Falls<br />

The path leading to the highest<br />

waterfall in South Wales is<br />

maintained but even so, it is best<br />

to treat it with caution as it does<br />

get hilly and wet in places.<br />

Its 90 feet drop marks it out<br />

as one of the finest in what is<br />

considered 'Brecon Beacons<br />

Waterfall Country.' The falls<br />

occur where the small river Nant<br />

Llech drops over the faulted<br />

edge of a hard sandstone known<br />

as the Farewell Rock.<br />

The area was surveyed<br />

by the Canadian geologist<br />

William Logan in the 1800s. He<br />

discovered early fossilised trees<br />

that are now on display outside<br />

Swansea Museum.<br />

If you're a fan of Batman, you<br />

might also recognise it from the<br />

2012 film, The Dark Knight Rises,<br />

staring Christian Bale, Anne<br />

Hathaway, and Tom Hardy.<br />

Sgwd yr Eira<br />

Translated from the Welsh,<br />

meaning Waterfalls of Snow,<br />

Sgwd yr Eira is one of the most<br />

well-known waterfalls in South<br />

Wales.<br />

It is located on the Afon<br />

Hepste and is part of the Four<br />

Falls Walk that sits between<br />

the villages of Ystradfellte and<br />

Pontneddfechan.<br />

The falls are famous for having<br />

a footpath that leads behind the<br />

falling water, although this can<br />

be closed after periods of heavy<br />

rain.<br />

You can take a 2.5 mile walk<br />

from Pontneddfechan to the<br />

falls, passing through woodland<br />

on a series of footpaths with<br />

some moderate climbs on the<br />

way.<br />

26


Caerfanell Falls<br />

Along the upper reaches of the<br />

Caerfanell River, and its tributary<br />

Nant Bwrefwr can be found a<br />

series of around 20 waterfalls<br />

over a two-mile stretch.<br />

Caerfanell Falls is one of the<br />

largest in the vicinity, and is easily<br />

accessible from one of the area's<br />

offi cial car parks. The river and<br />

the surrounding cascades are<br />

renowned for their clear waters.<br />

The falls are also a popular<br />

destination for visitors and<br />

walkers all year round.<br />

Sgwd Ddwli Isaf<br />

Meaning 'Lower Gushing Falls'<br />

in Welsh, Sgwd Ddwli Isaf is a<br />

pretty waterfall on the Nedd<br />

Fechan in Brecknockshire,<br />

and one of several celebrated<br />

falls on that stream.<br />

Located in the famed<br />

Waterfall Country, these falls<br />

drop about 30ft in two tiers,<br />

and are sometimes referred<br />

to as the Rainbow Falls,<br />

due to the rainbows that<br />

sometimes appear when the<br />

Sgwd Einion Gam<br />

outdoors<br />

Also known as ‘the fall of the crooked<br />

anvil’, Sgwd Einion Gam is located deep<br />

in the heart of Waterfall Country. And<br />

with a 70ft drop, it is the second-highest<br />

waterfall in South Wales.<br />

Its location is challenging to get to,<br />

meaning that it's one of the lesser<br />

visited waterfalls in the area. You can<br />

leave the car at the visitors centre at<br />

Pontneddfechan and follow the Elidir<br />

Trail Route to the falls.<br />

conditions are right. Fossils of<br />

ancient plants can also be made out on some of the smoother rocks but<br />

these can become dangerously slippery when wet so take care.<br />

Visitors can make their way to the falls from the Waterfall Centre, which<br />

has plenty of parking and provides a great base for hiking and walking in<br />

the area.<br />

Blaen-y-Glyn<br />

While not the biggest of<br />

waterfalls, Blaen-y-Glyn near<br />

Tredegar, still has the power<br />

to impress those that visit it.<br />

The trail to the falls can be<br />

a challenge and should only<br />

be attempted on drier days<br />

when the rocks aren't as<br />

slippery. The walk starts near<br />

the north end of Talybont<br />

Reservoir below Cerrig<br />

Edmwnt, and takes about two<br />

hours to complete.<br />

Clydach Gorge<br />

The River Clydach flows from the<br />

southern slopes of Llangattock<br />

Mountain to the River Usk near<br />

Gilwern, a journey of around six miles.<br />

About two miles of this is what's<br />

known as Clydach Gorge, a deep<br />

valley steeped on either side by<br />

wooded slopes. The area contains a<br />

number of caves as well as a handful<br />

of waterfalls.<br />

Walkers will also encounter disused<br />

railway tracks and abandoned<br />

buildings, a nod to the area's industrial<br />

past.<br />

Pistyll Rhaeadr<br />

Pistyll Rhaeadr is an enchanting<br />

waterfall in the Berwyn<br />

Mountains, just inside the<br />

Welsh border, west of Oswestry<br />

and Shrewsbury if you fancy<br />

a day trip. And at 240ft high,<br />

it is Britain's tallest singledrop<br />

waterfall and has been<br />

captivating those that visit it for<br />

generations.<br />

The falls are a great excuse<br />

to explore the surrounding<br />

Berwyn Mountains and the falls<br />

themselves have selection of<br />

nearby amenities, including<br />

tearooms and accommodation.<br />

27


MARTIN BAYFIELD’S<br />

RUGBY LEGENDS<br />

07.10.22<br />

BOYZLIFE<br />

Old School<br />

02.10.22<br />

NOEL FITZPATRICK<br />

The Supervet<br />

10.11.22<br />

NEIL WARNOCK<br />

Are You With Me?<br />

06.09.22<br />

VARNA INTERNATIONAL BALLET<br />

Coppélia, The Nutcracker & Swan Lake<br />

17.12.22 - 31.12.22<br />

DON MCLEAN<br />

American Pie 50 th Anniversary<br />

11.09.22<br />

QUEEN MACHINE SYMPHONIC<br />

feat. Kerry Ellis<br />

18.09.22<br />

MILKSHAKE LIVE<br />

12.30pm & 3.30pm<br />

26.10.22<br />

KIM WILDE + CHINA CRISIS<br />

Greatest Hits<br />

22.09.22<br />

OMID DJALILI<br />

Good Times<br />

09.09.22<br />

WOMAN TO WOMAN<br />

feat. Rumer<br />

11.11.22<br />

AN EVENING WITH<br />

MONTY DON<br />

24.11.22


THE PAPER PALACE<br />

On a perfect August morning, Elle<br />

Bishop heads out for a swim in the<br />

pond below 'The Paper Palace' - her<br />

family's holiday home in Cape Cod.<br />

As she dives beneath the water she<br />

relives the passionate encounter<br />

she had the night before, against the<br />

side of the house that knows all her<br />

darkest secrets, while her husband<br />

and mother chatted to their guests<br />

inside.<br />

So begins a story that unfolds over<br />

twenty-four hours and fifty years, as<br />

Elle's shocking betrayal leads her to<br />

a life-changing decision.<br />

Tender yet devastating, The Paper<br />

Palace has been described as<br />

'a masterful novel that brilliantly<br />

illuminates the tensions between<br />

desire and safety; the legacy<br />

of tragedy, and the crimes and<br />

misdemeanours of families.'<br />

SUMMERbooks<br />

If you're looking for engaging books to read<br />

while you sit in the sun, here's our handpicked<br />

selection for this season<br />

books<br />

FOUR THOUSAND WEEKS<br />

An uplifting, engrossing and<br />

deeply realistic exploration of the<br />

challenge of making the most<br />

of our time. Rejecting the futile<br />

modern obsession with 'getting<br />

everything done,' it introduces<br />

readers to tools for constructing<br />

a meaningful life by embracing<br />

rather than denying their<br />

limitations.<br />

THE LIDO<br />

This Sunday Times Top Ten Bestseller centres<br />

around a woman called Rosemary, who has<br />

lived in Brixton all her life - but everything she<br />

knows is changing. Only the local lido, where<br />

she swims every day, remains a constant<br />

reminder of the past and her beloved<br />

husband George.<br />

But when the lido is threatened with closure,<br />

local journalist Kate decides to help.<br />

MENOPAUSING<br />

Menopause<br />

affects every<br />

woman, and<br />

yet so many<br />

approach it with<br />

shame, fear,<br />

misinformation or<br />

silence.<br />

This groundbreaking<br />

book<br />

will equip women<br />

to make the<br />

most informed<br />

decisions about<br />

their health and<br />

their lives.<br />

HOW TO BE CONFIDENT<br />

Now, more than ever, we are<br />

so often lost within a cycle of<br />

negativity – from comparing<br />

ourselves to others and<br />

doom scrolling on social<br />

media, to a paralysis<br />

of choice and chasing<br />

external gratification that<br />

does nothing to nurture<br />

authentic happiness. We<br />

need confidence to master<br />

our true ambitions, realise<br />

our genuine strengths, and<br />

achieve the life we need,<br />

but might not know we<br />

want. Here's how.<br />

29


Plan your sabbatical<br />

With some careful planning, a sabbatical can be a life-affirming and<br />

soul-nourishing experience. Here are some useful tips<br />

Defi ne what success looks like to you<br />

Taking yourself away from your current life is a big deal so you'll want to<br />

have some sort of definition of what you're looking to achieve by taking a<br />

sabbatical.<br />

Are you looking to heal from something? How would a sabbatical play a<br />

part in that? Are you looking for inspiration in some form? Maybe you're<br />

seeking a purpose in life. How will a sabbatical help you on your return?<br />

Think about what you'd like to come back with in terms of personal<br />

development. Try and put into words what success might look like to you.<br />

It'll help with your planning and post-sabbatical reflection.<br />

30<br />

Think about why<br />

you'd like to take a<br />

sabbatical<br />

Planning something as big and<br />

as important as a sabbatical<br />

will take some thorough<br />

planning. And while there are<br />

some general steps to follow,<br />

remember that you have<br />

different needs to those who<br />

have perhaps gone before you.<br />

Start by thinking about the<br />

reasons why you are wanting to take a break. These reasons can help<br />

underpin your entire experience and help shape your time away.<br />

Are you wanting to get away from your current life? Are you looking to<br />

recharge your batteries? Or are you wanting to return to your life with a<br />

fresh new perspective on everything?<br />

Whatever your reasons, get them down in black and white so that you can<br />

start formulating your sabbatical.<br />

Make a wish list<br />

This is the part where you can really let<br />

your hair down and decide what sort of<br />

things you'd like to experience.<br />

It's often a good idea to catch up on<br />

travel documentaries or do some travel<br />

reading. You can even spend time online<br />

discovering potential places to visit and<br />

things to do - and creating a Pinterest<br />

board if that works for you.<br />

Whatever you decide, make the list as<br />

long as you like. You can always trim it<br />

later.<br />

Create a sabbatical<br />

fund<br />

None of this sabbatical will be<br />

possible without the ability to<br />

fund yourself while you are away.<br />

You may need to look at your<br />

current financial circumstances<br />

and figure out how it is going to<br />

be possible. You may need to<br />

consider renting out your house<br />

on a short-term deal if you don't<br />

have the funds up front.<br />

There will also need to be an<br />

element of financial planning<br />

to ensure that you are able to<br />

support yourself for the duration<br />

of the sabbatical. The last thing<br />

you want to do is stress about<br />

money when you're attempting<br />

to develop yourself.<br />

With this in mind, creating a<br />

budget should help you on your<br />

way. Things to consider are travel<br />

costs, accommodation costs,<br />

food and drink, as well as day-today<br />

living expenses.<br />

Come to a figure for a daily<br />

budget and you can bear that in<br />

mind while you are away.


lifestyle<br />

Plan the best times to travel<br />

Now that you've got some ideas together, it's time to<br />

start planning in earnest. One of the first things you'll<br />

need to factor in is when you're looking to travel. What<br />

season will the places you want to visit be experiencing?<br />

Are there any local weather phenomenons that you need<br />

to be aware of?<br />

Be aware too that seasonal factors also play a part<br />

in cost as the busier places are, the more places can<br />

charge for accommodation. You may want to travel<br />

outside of peak season if you don't want to feel crowded.<br />

If you are planning to visit a few locations, try and plan<br />

your travel there too. You don't want to be left stranded.<br />

Book your time off work<br />

Planning early is key here and the earlier,<br />

the better.<br />

Broaching the subject with your employer<br />

is something that you will need to do and<br />

getting them onside is something that<br />

you'll know best. Some businesses need a<br />

few weeks or even a few months to sign off<br />

a sabbatical so work with them on this.<br />

Once you do book the time off, that's the<br />

moment that your sabbatical will start to<br />

feel more real as you'll have made that<br />

commitment.<br />

Start your travels<br />

Finally, you can start to live<br />

the dream that you've been<br />

imagining in your head.<br />

With careful planning, your<br />

sabbatical can be a life-affi rming<br />

and rewarding experience.<br />

Try and keep in mind the<br />

reasons you laid out for taking<br />

this break - and enjoy yourself.<br />

Pulling it all together<br />

Getting the green light from your employer is when you can start firming up<br />

your plans and making definite arrangements.<br />

Start to keep all your bookings in one place - you may want to start a<br />

folder when you can keep all your travel documents and bookings. Don't<br />

forget to look up travel insurance too and keep these documents safe.<br />

You'll have some idea of the structure of your plans so it's always worth<br />

booking the main elements first as some travel experiences may need to<br />

be booked well in advance. Flights and accommodation should be the first<br />

planks of your sabbatical that you'll want to lay down.<br />

Once your main elements are booked and confirmed, you can start<br />

creating an itinerary and populating all the dates and times with the things<br />

that you've booked. Any other smaller activities can then be slotted in<br />

around the main parts.<br />

If in doubt, it's often worth speaking to a travel specialist, who will know<br />

the ins-and-outs of the logistical challenges.<br />

31


The Glassmith Wales are transforming local homes with their stunning splashbacks.<br />

We spoke to owner Dez Foster about how glass is proving to be the king of kitchens<br />

Home owners around Cardiff are<br />

discovering that glass is adding<br />

a dazzling touch of class to their<br />

kitchens and bathrooms.<br />

Dez Foster, owner of Glassmith<br />

Wales, says that glass is becoming<br />

a popular feature in kitchens and<br />

bathrooms for both splashbacks,<br />

wallcoverings and worktops - and<br />

for more than one reason.<br />

“Apart from the fact that they look<br />

absolutely fantastic when installed,<br />

there are other great reasons why<br />

glass is becoming the product of<br />

choice.<br />

“Granite and tile surfaces allow<br />

mould, bacteria, and mildew to<br />

thrive. Glass on the other hand,<br />

is naturally resistant to bacteria<br />

and water, promising a safe and<br />

hygienic environment for you and<br />

your family.”<br />

32<br />

We can create a new<br />

look for your kitchen<br />

As well as the hygiene benefits of<br />

using glass in your house, Dez also<br />

highlights the practicalities of using<br />

glass in the family home.<br />

“Food splashes in the kitchen can<br />

be cleaned up effortlessly; likewise<br />

soapy tide marks and toothpaste<br />

smears can be wiped away easily in<br />

the bathroom,” he adds.<br />

Unlike tiles, glass does away with<br />

annoying grout lines that need to be<br />

repeatedly cleaned and maintained.<br />

Glass offers a continuous smooth<br />

surface with the ability to cover up<br />

to 3.6m lengths in one piece.<br />

“You can let your imagination run<br />

wild with colour and can even have<br />

images, patterns or texture added<br />

to the glass,” says Dez.<br />

“Made of toughened glass, the<br />

splashbacks are five times more<br />

resistant than any other splashback<br />

material, which is great news<br />

when it’s being used around a heat<br />

source, or with heavy pots and pans.<br />

“Their resistance to moisture is<br />

also a big bonus when being used<br />

in the bathroom. They make great<br />

splashbacks for the sink or fantastic<br />

shower panels,” says Dez.<br />

Dez is particularly proud of the<br />

products he and his team are<br />

installing in homes across Cardiff:<br />

“Having worked installing bespoke<br />

kitchens for twenty years, it became<br />

obvious that there was a gap in<br />

the market for people wanting to<br />

spruce up their kitchens without<br />

having to spend a small fortune on<br />

renewing the whole room. I realised<br />

that glass created a fantastic<br />

Perfect for kitchens,<br />

utilities and bathrooms<br />

feature and could be installed<br />

seamlessly into existing kitchens.<br />

“I knew that I could help people<br />

fall in love with their kitchens again.<br />

Starting off surveying and installing<br />

myself, I now employ a small team,<br />

all based locally, and my wife also<br />

works alongside us, whilst caring for<br />

our five young children.<br />

“We are a family business, taking<br />

pride in customer service, helping<br />

our clients achieve the feature<br />

they’re looking for whilst sticking<br />

to their budget and providing an<br />

exquisite finish.”<br />

And you don’t have to take Dez’s<br />

word for it either. The Glassmith<br />

Sponsored feature


Wales are consistently rated<br />

‘excellent’ on Trustpilot, the trusted<br />

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genuine feedback on local<br />

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A recent customer reviewed The<br />

Glassmith Wales on Trustpilot,<br />

saying:<br />

“We are so happy with our<br />

mirrored splashback, it has<br />

totally transformed our kitchen<br />

and we have received so many<br />

compliments! We would 100%<br />

recommend, as the service has<br />

been amazing!”<br />

The business has gone from<br />

strength to strength since its<br />

launch, and Dez hopes to be given<br />

the opportunity to showcase his<br />

team’s craftsmanship in more<br />

homes across Cardiff.<br />

“Since founding the business, we<br />

have diversified into installing glass<br />

worktops, bespoke glass shower<br />

enclosures, glass balustrades and<br />

even glass partitioning,” says Dez.<br />

“Glass splashbacks are often the<br />

stand-out feature in a kitchen and<br />

are real conversation starters.<br />

“Whether our customers fancy a<br />

flat colour, a tinted mirror, a textured<br />

finish or even an image printed on<br />

the glass, they can let their creative<br />

streak go wherever it takes them<br />

- and we’ll happily run alongside<br />

them. So, whether we’re revitalising<br />

an existing kitchen or helping finish<br />

off a kitchen re-fit, we handle both<br />

our glass and our customers with<br />

care.<br />

“All-in-all, glass, with its natural<br />

resistance to almost anything and<br />

its incredible strength, will offer<br />

superb, long-lasting protection for<br />

your home,” adds Dez.<br />

If you’re interested in receiving a<br />

quote or learning more about what<br />

we do, please email us at<br />

enquiries@theglassmithwales.co.uk<br />

or visit our website<br />

www.theglassmithwales.co.uk<br />

We create bespoke<br />

shower enclosures<br />

What the customers say...<br />

get in touch<br />

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

t: 07791 415772<br />

w: theglassmithwales.co.uk<br />

e: enquiries@theglassmithwales.co.uk<br />

We are the suppliers<br />

and fitters of choice for<br />

several kitchen firms<br />

across the UK<br />

33


Arthur<br />

Did King Arthur<br />

walk our land?<br />

The legend of King Arthur has fascinated generations of historians.<br />

But is there any truth in the myth of the man and his kingdom?<br />

In the sacred stone walls of Llandaff<br />

Cathedral sits a large stained glass<br />

window. The window is a three-light<br />

window with standing figures of<br />

each saint, with scenes below. But<br />

on closer inspection, the scenes<br />

depict someone you'd probably not<br />

expect to see.<br />

The windows depict scenes of<br />

King Arthur, the legendary leader of<br />

the Celtic Britons in battles against<br />

Saxon invaders in the late 5th and<br />

early 6th centuries.<br />

The question remains - why is he<br />

depicted in a Cardiff cathedral?<br />

The answer could lie several miles<br />

from the iconic cathedral. Just north<br />

of the city lies a field and its history<br />

could hold an astonishing secret.<br />

Still popular today, the Arthurian<br />

legend came out of South-Eastern<br />

Wales into France, via the Normans,<br />

in the 12th century. The depiction<br />

of Arthur still resonates - romantic<br />

visions of knights sitting around<br />

Round Tables, dashing around and<br />

rescuing damsels in distress.<br />

Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia<br />

Regum Britanniae, completed in the<br />

early 12th century, provides the first<br />

narrative account of Arthur's life and<br />

introduced him to the world.<br />

Geoffrey had been commissioned<br />

34<br />

to write his account by Robert<br />

of Gloucester - the book is even<br />

dedicated to him. Having been<br />

commissioned to write the book, it<br />

was inevitable the Geoffrey wanted<br />

to please his patron.<br />

And so Arthur and the stories that<br />

surrounded him soon filtered down<br />

into society. For many centuries,<br />

Geoffrey's book was accepted as<br />

fact without question. It has only<br />

been more recently that it has<br />

come under more scrutiny.<br />

With the narrative came a place<br />

that will forever be associated with<br />

King Arthur - Camelot - a mythical<br />

place where chivalry and honour<br />

went hand in hand with peace and<br />

social justice. Absent in the early<br />

Arthurian material, Camelot first<br />

appeared in 12th-century French<br />

romances and, eventually came<br />

to be regarded as the wonderful<br />

capital of Arthur's kingdom and a<br />

symbol of the Arthurian world.<br />

The stories that revolved around<br />

Camelot place it somewhere in<br />

Great Britain although its exact<br />

location was never revealed.<br />

In more recent times, scholars<br />

have dismissed Camelot as a work<br />

of fiction, its deliberately vague<br />

details seemingly perfect for


history<br />

romantic writers of the time.<br />

However, work by local historians<br />

in recent years have stumbled<br />

across a site that could give<br />

credence to the idea that Camelot<br />

did exist - and that it was right here<br />

in north Cardiff.<br />

In 1995, a documentary called<br />

Wales: History in Bondage was<br />

released, focusing on what<br />

they described at 'the English<br />

destruction and cover-up of Welsh<br />

history.'<br />

The documentary was headed<br />

by Professor Lee Pennington,<br />

President of the Ancient Kentucke<br />

Association in the United States.<br />

It also included footage from the<br />

Welsh historian, Alan Wilson, who<br />

had spent decades researching<br />

Arthurian legends.<br />

The film delved into very real<br />

possibility that Camelot did exist -<br />

and what's more - it was situated<br />

in what is now a field just north of<br />

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

The site's location would have<br />

given the King of Glamorgan an<br />

ideal position within the kingdom,<br />

having extensive views over the<br />

Bristol Channel and England, as<br />

well as Ynys Rhonech (Steep Holm)<br />

and Ynys Echni (Flat Holm). The<br />

panorama stretches all the way to<br />

Penarth (is Penarth Head 'Arthur's<br />

Head'?). They would have been<br />

able to see any threat coming from<br />

the English side from miles away.<br />

Inland, the site would have been<br />

protected too, having not been far<br />

from Caerleon, and to the west, the<br />

there was<br />

english<br />

destruction<br />

and a cover-up<br />

of welsh history<br />

dense woods of Cefn Mably.<br />

Surrounding what would have<br />

been a castle was a series of forts,<br />

encircling the main construction.<br />

It's very possible that castle stood<br />

at the centre of the site.<br />

As Alan Wilson points out in the<br />

documentary:<br />

"There was definitely a marriage<br />

here in 1453 so the castle was still<br />

standing then. Below the castle<br />

was Yellow Wells Farm, so-called<br />

because of the sulphur springs<br />

there.<br />

"It is well-known in Welsh history<br />

that this site was the number one<br />

place for the Glamorgan kings," he<br />

adds.<br />

The name Camelot could derive<br />

from the Welsh word Caermelin,<br />

meaning Yellow Fort. This backs<br />

up what Alan Wilson is referring<br />

to when he talks about the nearby<br />

Yellow Wells Farm.<br />

And Arthur's links to Wales<br />

don't end there. Further regional<br />

archaeological evidence exists<br />

to support the notion that Arthur<br />

did exist. Caerleon's Roman<br />

amphitheatre has been known as<br />

the site of King Arthur's court since<br />

the 12th century.<br />

In 1405, it was the French Army<br />

that landed at Milford Haven<br />

to support Owain Glyndŵr in<br />

his uprising against the English<br />

Crown. The army marched to<br />

Caerleon, where according to the<br />

anonymous historiographical text<br />

Chronique Religieux de St Denys,<br />

they visited 'The Round Table'. The<br />

Round Table in fact would have<br />

been the Roman amphitheatre<br />

of the legionary fortress of Isca in<br />

Caerleon.<br />

Geoffrey of Monmouth had<br />

identified Caerleon as the court<br />

of King Arthur in his fictional epic,<br />

the History of the Kings of Britain<br />

in 1136. This identification, not far<br />

from the area where he grew up,<br />

has been described as 'the fruits<br />

of a lively historical imagination<br />

playing upon the visible remains<br />

of an imposing Roman city'. Some<br />

parts of Roman Isca was still<br />

standing in the 13th century.<br />

Some half dozen Welsh Stone<br />

Age megaliths are called 'Arthur's<br />

Stone', and his name has also<br />

been given to an Iron Age hillfort<br />

on the Clwydian Range, Moel<br />

Arthur, near Denbigh. According to<br />

one tradition, King Arthur and his<br />

knights lie sleeping in a cave below<br />

Craig y Ddinas, Pontneddfechan, in<br />

south Wales.<br />

Whatever the truth is, it's out<br />

there somewhere. And it's probably<br />

right beneath our feet.<br />

Gustave Doré's illustration of<br />

Camelot from Idylls of the King<br />

(1867)<br />

35


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The Garden Village Garage<br />

Summer motoring tips at our<br />

5 rated Garage<br />

Use your AirCon!<br />

It can be tempting to switch off<br />

the air conditioning given the price<br />

of fuel, but modern systems are<br />

much more fuel effi cient than they<br />

used to be and fuel economy really<br />

is negligible. Running the aircon<br />

keeps the system in tip-top shape,<br />

and keeps you cool and calm on<br />

the road. If your air conditioning<br />

system isn’t up to scratch, we offer a<br />

re-gassing service in our workshop!<br />

We hope these handy tips help<br />

you keep motoring this summer,<br />

and if you do need any assistance,<br />

whether it’s a breakdown or a<br />

service, call The Garden Village<br />

Garage today and we’ll book you in<br />

with our experienced mechanics<br />

using our new state of the art<br />

technology.<br />

It’s summer in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> and for<br />

many of us that means summer<br />

holidays, trips to the airport, and<br />

days out! If you’re making plans<br />

for the summer then don’t forget<br />

to prioritise your transport; having<br />

breakdown cover is great but we<br />

want to ensure you don’t break<br />

down in the first place!<br />

No one wants to be stuck on<br />

the hard shoulder in a blistering<br />

heatwave, and we don’t want to be<br />

the cause of your engine issues.<br />

That’s why at the Garden Village<br />

Garage we employ the best and<br />

most experienced mechanics in the<br />

city and fill our workshop with the<br />

best equipment. We have recently<br />

invested in the most up to date<br />

diagnostic tools in today’s market to<br />

ensure all your motoring needs are<br />

met!<br />

Chris, our lead mechanic is an<br />

expert in all makes and models<br />

especially Jaguars. His years of<br />

experience have put him among<br />

the best technical mechanics in the<br />

motoring trade. Should you suffer<br />

from any motoring woes during this<br />

period of hot weather, we’re on hand<br />

to diagnose and repair, while aiming<br />

to get your vehicle back to you as<br />

quickly as possible. Today Chris has<br />

some tips for you to ensure a safe<br />

and uneventful summer of motoring<br />

for you!<br />

Maintenance is key!<br />

With the cost of living crisis<br />

crunching at our bank balances,<br />

it can be easy let vehicle<br />

maintenance slip, but this is false<br />

economy. Remember your summer<br />

service, and if you find any issues<br />

with your vehicle call us right away<br />

before the problem grows!<br />

Keeping things Cool!<br />

Don’t forget fluids! While you might<br />

remember to drink more yourself,<br />

and you’re always ensuring the<br />

kids have plenty to drink, your<br />

car may also be a little more<br />

thirsty than usual. Make sure you<br />

regularly check your oil and coolant,<br />

particularly in warmer weather to<br />

stop problems growing in the first<br />

place.<br />

Give us a call today on 0333 121<br />

2012 and take advantage of our<br />

personalised and professional<br />

service.<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,<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> CF14 6AE


The Summer<br />

Garden<br />

38<br />

Feed your plants<br />

The summer months can<br />

be tough on your plants as<br />

they deal with both heat and<br />

summer storms. Most plants<br />

continue to grow throughout<br />

summer, following on from their<br />

initial development in spring.<br />

Container plants especially<br />

exhaust their nutrients quickly<br />

and will need replenishing with<br />

plant food.<br />

A general purpose plant food<br />

should be suitable for most<br />

plants but if you are growing<br />

fruit or vegetables, make<br />

sure that your plant feed is<br />

appropriate to your needs.<br />

Feed little and often instead of<br />

big, infrequent doses during<br />

the growing season and stop<br />

feeding at the end of summer.<br />

Hydrate your<br />

garden<br />

Around the villages on dusty<br />

summer mornings, you'll often<br />

hear the soothing hiss of gardeners<br />

watering their gardens. And they<br />

do it at this time of day for a very<br />

good reason - this is because it's<br />

typically cooler at these times of<br />

day, which allows the water to<br />

soak down into the soil, keeping<br />

it moist for longer. There is less<br />

evaporation at night too, since the<br />

temperatures are lower.<br />

Water them slowly and at the<br />

roots. New plants require less<br />

water more frequently and older,<br />

more mature plants do great with<br />

heavier waterings at less frequent<br />

intervals.<br />

Maintain your<br />

lawn<br />

All lawns need sunlight,<br />

good drainage and moisture.<br />

Continuous hot weather<br />

can affect the health and<br />

appearance of your grass and<br />

in conditions like this, consider<br />

reducing your mowing schedule<br />

to maintain at least some<br />

moisture in your lawn.<br />

Weeds are also often the bane<br />

of most gardeners' lives and<br />

the best way to keep on top of<br />

these in your lawn is to mow. If<br />

the weeds are more prevalent, it<br />

might be worth using herbicide<br />

on it to eradicate them.<br />

Either way, keeping your lawn<br />

watered will allow it to flourish<br />

during the summer months.


Keep deckings and patios clean<br />

gardens<br />

While we tend to focus on the greener areas of the garden, let's not<br />

overlook the harder areas where perhaps we spend more of our time.<br />

Decking and patios can quickly accumulate dust and dirt and a<br />

regular sweep or hose down will help keep it looking clean and tidy.<br />

If you have patio furniture, it's also a good idea to pack this away<br />

when not in use. Umbrellas can become bleached by the sun and<br />

also dry it out, leaving it tatty. Store your cushions in the garage or<br />

shed until they're needed and use furniture covers if you have any.<br />

Tidy up your<br />

furniture<br />

Garden furniture really can make<br />

the difference when it comes to<br />

the appearance of your garden.<br />

Tired-looking pieces can affect<br />

the appeal of your outdoor space<br />

so if you can afford it, invest in a<br />

smart-looking dining set or seating<br />

set-up.<br />

If that's not an option this summer,<br />

you can always spruce up some<br />

of your older pieces, especially if<br />

they are still functionable. Wooden<br />

items can be tidied up with a lick<br />

of paint or even sometimes all your<br />

furniture needs is a good old clean.<br />

Improve your<br />

drainage<br />

Heavy use of a garden, particularly<br />

the lawn, will lead to the soil<br />

compacting, making it hard for<br />

any excess water to drain away.<br />

This can lead to pools of water<br />

collecting in areas where the water<br />

has no place to go.<br />

The simplest way to avoid this<br />

problem is to take a garden fork<br />

and to prod holes in the soil to<br />

aerate it. This is usually best done<br />

in spring or autumn months when<br />

the soil is more malleable.<br />

Prune your shrubs<br />

Summer is the season to prune<br />

back your spring-flowering shrubs.<br />

It'll help encourage larger crops<br />

from your fruit trees and bushes.<br />

For shrubs, remove any stems<br />

that have been killed during the<br />

spring frosts. Prune off growth that<br />

has just finished flowering down to<br />

an outward facing bud and remove<br />

entirely any branches that are<br />

damaged or causing damage to<br />

other parts.<br />

When it comes to fruit trees, the<br />

aim is to create space that will<br />

allow more light and air in through<br />

the tree, giving the fruit a chance to<br />

flourish. Pruning out excess growth<br />

will help the fruit and the tree.<br />

Control the weeds<br />

If the plants in your garden are<br />

flourishing, it's a good indication that<br />

the weeds are taking advantage<br />

of the summer conditions and<br />

flourishing too.<br />

Weeds will absorb some of the<br />

much-needed nutrients needed for<br />

your garden plants so it's essential<br />

to keep on top of them. Little and<br />

often is probably the best way to<br />

go during the hotter months, and it<br />

will save you a bigger job later in the<br />

year. Try not to turn up the soil too<br />

much as this will lead to the natural<br />

moistness evaporating.<br />

Deadhead summer<br />

flowering plants<br />

If you have any time to spare,<br />

taking the time to deadhead the<br />

flowers in your garden will provide<br />

you with an abundance of colour.<br />

Any flowers that are dead, dying,<br />

or producing seeds should be<br />

picked off, just below the flower<br />

head. This encourages the plant<br />

to create more flowers. As soon as<br />

the flower's appearance begins to<br />

fade, you'll know that you should<br />

be deadheading it.<br />

The act of deadheading isn't<br />

an essential one during the<br />

summer months. Instead, it's<br />

often used to make the garden<br />

more aesthetically pleasing. Don't<br />

fret too much if you are too busy<br />

working on other areas.<br />

39


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BBQ<br />

Bliss<br />

There's nothing better than dining al-fresco so make the most of the<br />

late summer sunshine with these delicious barbeque recipes<br />

Ultimate Beef<br />

Burger<br />

450g ground beef<br />

2 cloves garlic, finely chopped<br />

30g onion chopped<br />

1 egg, beaten<br />

1 tbsp barbecue sauce<br />

1 tsp salt<br />

1 tsp pepper<br />

☐ In a large bowl, mix all ingredients<br />

together well until they are blended.<br />

☐ Get your barbeque on the go.<br />

While that's firing up, form 4 round<br />

burgers patties with the mixture.<br />

☐ Grill the patties for around 12-14<br />

minutes, turning once during the<br />

cooking. Do not squash the burger<br />

with your spatula as it will force out<br />

the fat that it needs to cook.<br />

☐ About a minute or two before the<br />

burgers are cooked, brush them with<br />

the barbeque sauce and continue to<br />

cook until the sauce starts to thicken<br />

up.<br />

☐ Remove the patties from grill and<br />

serve on prepared buns with any<br />

toppings of your choice.<br />

42<br />

Quick-andeasy<br />

Tomato<br />

Relish<br />

1kg diced, ripe on-the-vine plum<br />

tomatoes<br />

2 diced red onions<br />

150ml extra virgin olive oil<br />

2 grated garlic cloves<br />

3 tbsp small capers<br />

3 tbsp chopped parsley<br />

1 tbsp balsamic vinegar<br />

☐ In a mixing bowl, toss together<br />

1kg diced, ripe on-the-vine plum<br />

tomatoes, 2 diced red onions, 150ml<br />

extra virgin olive oil and 2 tsp flaky<br />

sea salt. Tip onto a baking tray and<br />

place under a hot grill for 5-10 mins<br />

or until charred.<br />

☐ Tip the mixture back into the bowl.<br />

Stir in 2 grated garlic cloves and 3<br />

tbsp small capers and leave to cool<br />

for 10 mins.<br />

☐ Stir in 3 tbsp chopped parsley and<br />

1 tbsp balsamic vinegar.<br />

☐ Place in the fridge until cool and<br />

serve when you are ready.<br />

Grilled<br />

halloumi with<br />

fig jam<br />

400g fresh figs<br />

4 dried figs, roughly chopped<br />

2 x 250g blocks halloumi<br />

olive oil for drizzling<br />

1 star anise<br />

125g caster sugar<br />

juice of 1 lemon<br />

a few fresh basil sprigs<br />

2 tbsp runny honey<br />

☐ Set 4 fresh figs aside, then roughly<br />

chop the remaining figs. Put the<br />

chopped figs in a pan with the dried<br />

figs, star anise, caster sugar, lemon<br />

juice and 75ml water. Pick the basil<br />

leaves and place to one side. Add<br />

the stalks to the pan and bring to the<br />

boil. Reduce the heat and simmer<br />

the mixture for 20-25 minutes, stirring<br />

occasionally, until it is dark and thick.<br />

Remove the basil stalks, adjust the<br />

seasoning to taste and season with<br />

lemon juice and the sugar. Keep the<br />

figs warm.<br />

☐ Set your grill to high. Score the<br />

blocks of halloumi in a criss-cross<br />

pattern, roughly 2cm deep. Drizzle the<br />

halloumi with olive oil and place on<br />

a baking tray under the hot grill until<br />

they are browned. This should take<br />

between 6-8 minutes.<br />

☐ Cut the remaining figs into wedges.<br />

Put a few spoonfuls of the jam onto a<br />

serving platter and then top with the<br />

halloumi as soon as it’s ready.<br />

☐ Drizzle the plate with honey and<br />

serve with the chopped fresh figs and<br />

the basil leaves that you set to one<br />

side earlier.


Marinated<br />

pork kebabs<br />

500g pork shoulder diced<br />

200ml natural yoghurt<br />

1 tsp cayenne chilli pepper<br />

2 chillis, finely chopped<br />

1/2 lemon (or lime) juice and zest<br />

3 garlic cloves crushed<br />

salt and pepper<br />

fresh coriander, chopped<br />

fresh mint, chopped<br />

1 or 2 green peppers, cut into large<br />

chunks<br />

wooden skewers, soaked in water<br />

for at least 15 minutes<br />

food<br />

☐ Place the diced pork into a bowl<br />

along with the lemon, garlic, chilli<br />

and herbs.<br />

☐ Mix in the natural yoghurt and<br />

cayenne pepper; add salt and<br />

pepper to taste.<br />

☐ Cover and place in the fridge for<br />

2 - 3 hours to marinate.<br />

☐ When ready to cook, remove the<br />

skewers from the water and place<br />

the pork and green pepper on them.<br />

☐ Cook under medium grill for 15 -<br />

20 mins or place on barbeque.<br />

Grilled<br />

salmon<br />

4 salmon fillets, skin on<br />

olive oil for cooking<br />

lemon to garnish<br />

For the marinade<br />

85ml soy sauce<br />

2 tsbp lemon juice<br />

3 tsbp honey<br />

2 tsbp olive oil<br />

2 minced garlic cloves<br />

☐ Place the soy sauce, lemon<br />

juice, honey, olive oil, and minced<br />

garlic into a ziplock bag. Mix the<br />

contents of the bag to blend<br />

together.<br />

☐ Add the salmon to the bag<br />

and cover with the marinade.<br />

Leave the salmon in the bag and<br />

put in fridge for 24 hours. Repeat<br />

the process with the remaining<br />

salmon fillets.<br />

☐ Remove salmon from fridge 30<br />

minutes prior to cooking, allowing<br />

the marinade to drain away.<br />

☐ Grill salmon skin-side up<br />

until golden brown (around 3-5<br />

minutes). Then grill other side,<br />

adding left-over marinade.<br />

43


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petrichor<br />

"Just bloody move, will you?"<br />

Dan Williams was running late.<br />

After driving around the car park<br />

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reversing lights glowing on a Fiat<br />

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giving you the space!" Dan yelled,<br />

holding out the palm of his hand.<br />

Out of the corner of his eye, Dan<br />

spotted a car creeping around the<br />

car park, most likely drawn to the<br />

Panda's reversing lights like a moth.<br />

Worse still, the air con in Dan's<br />

ageing Toyota had packed in on the<br />

hottest day of the summer so far. A<br />

bead of sweat rolled down Dan's<br />

forehead, down his nose and<br />

dropped silently onto his lap.<br />

Finally, after a full minute, the<br />

Panda began to budge backwards.<br />

Painfully slowly, the driver - an old<br />

man - reversed out. He gingerly<br />

raised his bony hand to thank Dan,<br />

before clutching around to find first<br />

gear. He eventually found it and<br />

drove off at a snail's pace.<br />

Dan swiftly moved his car into the<br />

vacant space and turned his engine<br />

off. He reached over to pick up his<br />

bag from the passenger seat but as<br />

he pulled it towards him, its<br />

contents spilt out and into the<br />

passenger's footwell. Dan growled.<br />

"God. I hate my stupid life!" he<br />

scowled, reaching over to scoop up<br />

his textbooks and pens. He dumped<br />

them all into his bag and yanked<br />

open his car door to get out.<br />

Unfortunately, he'd only left himself<br />

a few inches from the car next to<br />

him and his door hit the car next to<br />

46<br />

his with an almighty thump.<br />

It was a good five minutes before<br />

Dan had finally repositioned his car<br />

and hot-footed it across the car<br />

park of the hospital. He hurriedly<br />

walked through the automatic<br />

doors of the entrance and out of the<br />

searing summer sun. He<br />

approached the desk where a<br />

young nurse was sitting.<br />

"Hi. My name's Dan and I'm here to<br />

tutor Ollie."<br />

"Ah yes," replied the nurse. "You're<br />

the GCSE English teacher, right?"<br />

"That's it. A bit late, I'm afraid. It's<br />

been a nightmare. Traffic's terrible<br />

and I couldn't find anywhere to<br />

park."<br />

"Oh no. That's not good. Ollie's just<br />

through that door and down the<br />

corridor. Last door on the left. I'll<br />

buzz you in." She pointed to the<br />

door, which Dan approached and<br />

opened. He'd been hoping that the<br />

air-conditioning at the hospital<br />

would have offered him some<br />

respite but the corridor was hot and<br />

airless. A stuffy children's hospital<br />

ward was the last place he wanted<br />

to be on a hot summer's afternoon.<br />

A few of the doors along the<br />

corridor were open and Dan<br />

instinctively peered in as he passed.<br />

In one room, a child was curled up<br />

asleep and in another, a child was<br />

sitting in her chair, watching her<br />

iPad. Neither of the children had<br />

hair.<br />

Dan arrived at the last door on the<br />

left and tapped on the small<br />

window.<br />

"Ollie?"<br />

"Come in," came a voice from<br />

inside. Dan pushed down on the<br />

heavy handle and opened the door.<br />

Ollie was sat up in bed, looking at<br />

his laptop. He looked up as Dan<br />

opened the door and smiled. Ollie's<br />

teeth looked off-white compared to<br />

his pale face and on his head, he<br />

wore a black bandana. His lack of<br />

eyebrows made his bright blue eyes<br />

look like saucers.<br />

"Hi buddy. Are you ok?" asked Dan,<br />

shifting into the room.<br />

"Do I look ok?" replied Ollie.<br />

Dan couldn't tell whether Ollie was<br />

being sarcastic or genuine.<br />

"I'm Dan, your new English tutor."<br />

"Cool. Come on in." Ollie beckoned<br />

Dan in, closed his laptop and placed<br />

it on his bedside table.<br />

Dan looked around the room for a<br />

place to sit. The obvious place<br />

would have been the chair next to<br />

the bed but it was strewn with<br />

clothes and wires. Instead, he<br />

spotted a plastic chair and pulled it<br />

over to sit alongside Ollie.<br />

"Thanks for coming. How long are<br />

you here for?" asked Ollie.<br />

"An hour."<br />

"An hour?"<br />

"Yep. You can learn a lot in an hour,"<br />

replied Dan confidently.<br />

"What will I be learning today?"<br />

"Well, it's more of a kind of getting<br />

to know you lesson this one. I can<br />

find out a bit more about you and<br />

you can find out a bit more about<br />

me. To see if we can work together."<br />

"Ok. That sounds cool," said Ollie.<br />

"Where do we start?"<br />

"I thought it'd be a good idea for<br />

you to jot down a short<br />

autobiography to get us going. That<br />

way, I can get to know a bit about<br />

you and assess where you are with<br />

your handwriting ability too."<br />

"You want me to hand write it?"<br />

"Are you able?"<br />

"I do everything on my laptop<br />

these days."<br />

"I'd prefer it if was hand-written so


that I can see the standard of your<br />

cursive writing."<br />

"You mean joined-up writing?"<br />

"Yes."<br />

Ollie pursed his lips before<br />

agreeing. "You got pen and paper?"<br />

he asked.<br />

Dan opened up his bag before<br />

realising that he didn't have any.<br />

"Erm. Actually. We'll have to use<br />

your laptop. I forgot to bring paper."<br />

"That's ok," replied Ollie, pulling his<br />

laptop onto his lap and opening it.<br />

"Sorry," said Dan. "It's been one of<br />

those days. I'm just so tired. I just<br />

wish I could stay in bed all day."<br />

Ollie looked up from his laptop,<br />

raised a non-existent eyebrow and<br />

looked quizzically at Dan.<br />

"Gosh. I'm sorry," said Dan, closing<br />

his bag uncomfortably and popping<br />

it under his seat. "Ok. I'll give you ten<br />

minutes to come up with a short<br />

autobiography. Just tell me a bit<br />

about yourself."<br />

"Ok."<br />

Ollie opened up a new document<br />

and started typing. For Dan, it was<br />

the first chance he'd had to catch<br />

his breath all day. He gazed around<br />

the room. A half-eaten rice pudding,<br />

a jug of water and an open pack of<br />

Jammie Dodgers biscuits.<br />

After ten minutes, Dan took the<br />

laptop and sat in silence while he<br />

read. He read out Ollie's last<br />

sentence:<br />

"I'm going to make it out of here<br />

and make the most of my life for my<br />

friends that never made it."<br />

Dan looked up at Ollie, who was<br />

pouring a small bottle of lemonade<br />

into his mouth.<br />

"I like that. Positivity is good. Are<br />

you a positive person?"<br />

Ollie opened his mouth to answer<br />

but instead of an answer, out came<br />

a thunderous belch that swept<br />

through the room and bounced off<br />

the clinically cream walls.<br />

Ollie looked at Dan quite stunned<br />

and then exploded into laughter. He<br />

clutched his tummy, scrunched up<br />

his face and squawked like some<br />

kind of dinosaur. Dan couldn't help<br />

but laugh with him and for several<br />

minutes, they collapsed in laughter.<br />

Every time they looked at each<br />

other, they'd start again.<br />

"Jeez. Where did that come from?"<br />

asked Dan finally.<br />

"From the depths of hell! I felt like I<br />

was in The Exorcist!" shrieked Ollie,<br />

his eyes watering. It took a good<br />

few minutes for them to gather their<br />

senses. Dan hadn't laughed like that<br />

for years. His stomach ached. All<br />

that laughter for just one perfectlytimed<br />

burp!<br />

"And just for clarity," said Dan, "a<br />

burp is not an answer. Right. Where<br />

were we?"<br />

Dan put on his serious face and<br />

looked at the laptop again. "Ah yes.<br />

Tell me about the watch you're<br />

wearing."<br />

Ollie raised his wrist and showed<br />

Dan his watch. It was a small black<br />

Casio with a plastic wristband.<br />

"My friend Paul gave it to me," said<br />

Ollie.<br />

"That's kind," said Dan.<br />

"Yeah. Paul was admitted to this<br />

place the same day as me. He gave<br />

me this watch before he left, and<br />

told me to make the most of my<br />

time."<br />

"When was he discharged?"<br />

"He wasn't."<br />

Dan felt a dagger in his chest.<br />

"I'm so sorry."<br />

"That's ok. That's why I'm grateful<br />

that I'm still here every time I open<br />

my eyes."<br />

"It can't be easy."<br />

"Nothing is. But hey. I've got a roof<br />

over my head, room service, a TV, a<br />

laptop, and foxy nurses giving me<br />

TLC all day. And it's all for free. I'm<br />

pretty blessed really."<br />

Dan smiled. "I'm sorry I moaned<br />

about my life when I first got here."<br />

"Hey man. We've all got troubles.<br />

Yours are just different to mine."<br />

"True."<br />

"Did you always want to be a<br />

teacher?" asked Ollie.<br />

"Not really. I kind of fell into it."<br />

"What did you want to be?"<br />

"I wanted to become a novelist."<br />

"What's stopped you?"<br />

"The bills that come through my<br />

letterbox. I just don't get the time."<br />

"I've got all the time in the world. In<br />

fact, I've got too much time on my<br />

hands. Want to swap?"<br />

Dan had to think about his reply.<br />

Ollie sensed Dan's discomfort and<br />

picked up the packet of biscuits.<br />

"Want a Jammie Dodger?" he<br />

asked.<br />

"Thanks."<br />

Dan took a biscuit and bit into it.<br />

He took his time chewing it to avoid<br />

having to answer any further<br />

awkward questions.<br />

"I was thinking earlier," said Ollie. "If<br />

you had to flip a coin and heads<br />

makes your life better, and tails<br />

makes it worse, would you toss the<br />

coin?" asked Ollie.<br />

And for the next 45 minutes, the<br />

pair discussed life, death and<br />

everything in between.<br />

Before he knew it, Dan looked at<br />

the wall clock and realised his hour<br />

was done.<br />

"That's it for today, I'm afraid. That<br />

went quickly!"<br />

"Thanks. I enjoyed that."<br />

short story<br />

Dan stood up.<br />

"It's so hot in here. Can you open<br />

the window before you go please?"<br />

asked Ollie. Dan reached over and<br />

pulled at the window handle next to<br />

him.<br />

"You need to give it a good whack,"<br />

said Ollie.<br />

The window finally creaked open,<br />

just as a few large spots of rain<br />

appeared on the pane.<br />

"It's raining! I'm so glad!" exclaimed<br />

Dan. The rain pit-pattered on the<br />

window and for once, a cool breeze<br />

drifted into the room. Ollie closed<br />

his eyes and inhaled deeply<br />

through his nose.<br />

"Mm. Smell that. Petrichor," said<br />

Ollie, his eyes still closed.<br />

"Petri-what?"<br />

"Petrichor. The smell of the rain<br />

after a dry spell. It comes from the<br />

Greek words 'petra', meaning stone,<br />

and 'ichor'. In Greek mythology,<br />

'ichor' refers to the golden fluid that<br />

flows in the veins of the immortals."<br />

"Oh," replied Dan, impressed. "I<br />

never knew that," he said, packing<br />

up his bag.<br />

"You can have that one for free.<br />

Impress your students with it."<br />

"I might just do that."<br />

Ollie tutted and gently shook his<br />

head. "Sheesh. Call yourself an<br />

English teacher?"<br />

Dan laughed. Ollie had a point.<br />

"Same time next week?" said Dan.<br />

He picked up his bag and slung it<br />

over his shoulder. A quick fear that<br />

he might come back to an empty<br />

bed flashed through his mind.<br />

"Yep. Look forward to it," replied<br />

Ollie. And with that, Dan left the<br />

room and headed back down the<br />

corridor. He passed the children in<br />

their beds, fighting their own battles<br />

alone. Dan knew he had his children<br />

to go home to and tonight, he'd hug<br />

them a bit tighter and a bit longer.<br />

The automatic doors trundled<br />

open and Dan stepped out under<br />

the entrance's shelter. He took a<br />

look out into the rain, gurgling in the<br />

drains and soaking into the parched<br />

earth. He closed his eyes and took<br />

in a chestful of the cool, clean air. It<br />

flowed through every vein in his<br />

body, refreshing and vitalising every<br />

sinew along the way.<br />

"Petrichor," he said to himself.<br />

"Through the veins of the<br />

immortals." He thought about his<br />

novels. And he knew he had to<br />

make them happen before time<br />

robbed him of the opportunity.<br />

He smiled calmly and took the car<br />

keys out of his pocket.<br />

He'd learnt a lot in an hour.<br />

47


windows.com<br />

www.cardi<br />

02920 692690<br />

Info@cardiffwindows.com<br />

Unit 8<br />

Fieldway<br />

Heath<br />

Cardiff<br />

CF14 4HY

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