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News | People | Features | History | Lifestyle | Interiors<br />

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

At the heart of the community<br />

Issue <strong>62</strong><br />

CRAFTED IN<br />

RHIWBINA<br />

CRAFTED IN<br />

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


a: 222 Pantbach Road,<br />

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

t: 07772 081775 / 07974 022920<br />

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

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

danielle@livingmags.co.uk<br />

2<br />

Inside this issue<br />

Tom Auton<br />

Cardiff's Tom<br />

Auton talks<br />

about his music<br />

and a summer of<br />

concerts in<br />

the city<br />

Wellness<br />

How building good<br />

habits can help<br />

lead to happiness<br />

and improved<br />

wellbeing<br />

History<br />

Nigel Lewis<br />

takes a look<br />

back at Deri<br />

Mill, once a<br />

busy focal<br />

point of the<br />

village<br />

Competition<br />

Win tickets to<br />

see the award-<br />

winning choir<br />

Johns' Boys<br />

at Llandaff<br />

Cathedral this<br />

October<br />

Next issue:<br />

Deadline - 9th September 2024<br />

Published mid September 2024<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 />

Welcome to<br />

your latest issue<br />

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

<strong>Living</strong>.<br />

Summer has<br />

finally arrived,<br />

bringing with<br />

it the warmth<br />

we've all been<br />

waiting for.<br />

Our latest issue<br />

is packed with<br />

features for you,<br />

starting with a<br />

conversation with Tom Auton.<br />

The former Whitchurch High<br />

School student is making<br />

waves in the music industry and<br />

he speaks about his creative<br />

process and the concerts he'll be<br />

playing in Cardiff this summer.<br />

Poet Roger Stennett, another<br />

former Whitchurch student, is<br />

also here to discuss his life in<br />

the written word. Roger's career<br />

has spanned decades and<br />

genres, and he discusses how his<br />

childhood in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> inspired<br />

his success.<br />

Summer is usually a time of<br />

year to take some time out so<br />

we have some wonderful tips to<br />

reset and recharge.<br />

Nature plays its part in our<br />

wellbeing and we show you how<br />

to connect with it on a deeper<br />

level to help you feel more<br />

restored.<br />

The power of developing good<br />

life habits is another way of<br />

reducing stress and making life<br />

more enjoyable. Find out how<br />

you can make the most of them.<br />

While the city of Cardiff<br />

celebrates its 60th anniversary of<br />

its pairing with Nantes this year,<br />

former historian Maggie Smales<br />

reports on a guided visit to the<br />

city and south Wales by their<br />

French counterparts.<br />

For our competition this issue,<br />

we've got a pair of tickets to what<br />

promises to be an unforgettable<br />

concert at Llandaff Cathedral in<br />

October.<br />

Johns' Boys have been<br />

performing since 2016 but you<br />

may have seen them on Britain's<br />

Got Talent last year. The choir<br />

reached the live semi-finals of<br />

the show but will be performing<br />

live in their first-ever visit to<br />

Llandaff.<br />

This season is the perfect time<br />

to get away from it all and we've<br />

hand-picked 10 places that you<br />

can visit in summer. Meanwhile,<br />

our local poets have been busy<br />

at work over the last few months<br />

and you can read their regular<br />

contributions on our seasonal<br />

poetry page - back to two pages<br />

by popular demand!<br />

Readers' favourite Nigel Lewis<br />

charts the history of the Deri Mill<br />

in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>. Once an agricultural<br />

hub, Nigel explains how things<br />

have changed over the last one<br />

hundred years.<br />

In more recent times, the Welsh<br />

music scene saw a phenomenal<br />

resurgence in the second<br />

half of the 1990s. Neil Collins<br />

documents how bands such<br />

as Catatonia and Super Furry<br />

Animals changed the face of the<br />

Welsh music scene for the better<br />

- and how it was received by the<br />

world.<br />

We hear the latest news from<br />

Llanishen Fach Primary School.<br />

They've been making the most<br />

of the sunshine to develop their<br />

outdoor and fitness pledges -<br />

and the pupils have responded<br />

with such enthusiasm.<br />

Hannah Fitt also explores an<br />

alternative way of educating the<br />

younger generation - and it's<br />

proving very popular with the<br />

children themselves.<br />

To sign off this issue, we've got<br />

a wonderful short summer story,<br />

this time from an international<br />

author.<br />

Enjoy your summer and your<br />

holidays if you have one and we'll<br />

see you in our next issue in the<br />

Autumn!<br />

Danielle and Patric<br />

Editors<br />

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

www.facebook.com/rhiwbinaliving<br />

@livingmagazinescardiff


30,000 trees<br />

planted as part<br />

of project to<br />

make Cardiff<br />

greener<br />

2,500 dedicated community<br />

volunteers faced one of the rainiest<br />

winters on record to assist in<br />

planting 30,000 trees within just 6<br />

months, contributing to the creation<br />

of an urban forest in Cardiff.<br />

Chris Engel, the Project Manager,<br />

remarked:<br />

“The wet conditions are great for<br />

the new trees,” explained Project<br />

Manager, Chris Engel, “They just<br />

soak it all up, but it did mean we<br />

had some pretty muddy days. It<br />

never dampens the spirits though.<br />

Planting trees isn’t just good for<br />

the planet, it’s good for the soul as<br />

well and even if they went home<br />

caked in mud, I don’t remember a<br />

day when our volunteers weren’t<br />

wearing a smile as well.”<br />

Launched in 2021 as part of Cardiff<br />

Council's response to the climate<br />

crisis under the One Planet Cardiff<br />

initiative, the Coed Caerdydd<br />

Report praises<br />

Cardiff's<br />

sustainable<br />

growth<br />

A study examining growth trends<br />

of 11 regional UK cities over the<br />

past decade has found that Cardiff<br />

enjoyed sustainable growth. The<br />

city combined employment and<br />

wage growth with the second<br />

strongest improvement in healthy life<br />

expectancy at birth.<br />

A comparably higher percentage<br />

of citizens with no qualifications,<br />

however, is likely to remain a drag on<br />

future growth.<br />

OCO Global’s ‘Local Heroes’ report<br />

examined 37 data points covering<br />

economic, prosperity, wellbeing,<br />

property, and educational trends over<br />

the past decade.<br />

The cities were ranked as Top<br />

Tier (Edinburgh), Booming (Belfast,<br />

Manchester and Bristol), Solid<br />

Performers (Cardiff, Liverpool, Leeds,<br />

and Newcastle), and Moderates<br />

(Birmingham, Sheffield, and<br />

Nottingham).<br />

(Cardiff Forest) project has led to<br />

the planting of 80,000 fresh trees<br />

across 280 diverse locations in<br />

Cardiff. These include over 100<br />

parks and open spaces, 17 schools,<br />

11 community areas, and even on<br />

privately-owned land. This year, the<br />

project has broadened its scope to<br />

focus on street trees, with over 200<br />

sizable new street trees introduced<br />

in areas with limited or no existing<br />

tree coverage.<br />

Free parking<br />

threats met with<br />

petition<br />

Business owners in north Cardiff have<br />

expressed concerns over a potential<br />

decline in trade as several Welsh<br />

councils consider eliminating free<br />

parking to cut costs.<br />

Over 3,500 individuals signed<br />

a petition in April, opposing the<br />

proposed cessation of free parking in<br />

retail areas within Cardiff Council.<br />

Cardiff Council stated that the<br />

elimination of the complimentary<br />

parking period, typically one or two<br />

hours, is among the 'tough choices'<br />

it must make due to dealing with the<br />

'most challenging' financial situation it<br />

has encountered.<br />

One <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> driver who uses the<br />

car parks in Whitchurch lamented the<br />

potential changes, stated:<br />

"It's really disappointing because<br />

the two hours of free parking is so<br />

convenient for running errands in the<br />

village. Two hours is just enough time."<br />

Fears that charges could apply to<br />

on-street parking in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> were<br />

also expressed.<br />

news<br />

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

Society news<br />

Hedgehogs, Flat Holm, and<br />

forensic science all feature in<br />

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

calendar of talks this year.<br />

The complete schedule of talks<br />

for the next few months is as<br />

follows:<br />

2 August: Tour of BBC Wales<br />

Studios, Cardiff (Fully booked)<br />

17 September: Hedgehog Helpline<br />

Cymru - Claire Norman<br />

15 October: Flat Holm: A walk<br />

through time - Bridget Box<br />

19 November: Forensic Science:<br />

an insight into history - Dr David<br />

Whittaker (Meeting preceded by<br />

short AGM)<br />

Meetings are held in the Canolfan<br />

Beulah, Beulah Road, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>,<br />

CF14 6AX, starting at 7.30 pm.<br />

Admission is £2 for members and<br />

£4 for non-members.<br />

For further information, please see<br />

their website,<br />

www.therhiwbinasociety.org or their<br />

Twitter/X or Facebook page. You<br />

can also phone 07811 509490.<br />

Pentyrch Primary<br />

opens new areas<br />

Pentyrch Primary School have<br />

celebrated the completion of<br />

construction works including the<br />

expansion of the existing school<br />

building and the official opening its<br />

first ever nursery provision.<br />

The new development,<br />

undertaken by contractor Knox<br />

and Wells, has included a broad<br />

scope of works including a new<br />

single storey extension housing two<br />

classrooms with their own external<br />

play/teaching area including<br />

canopies, a new nursery with toilets<br />

and changing room, teaching<br />

kitchen, quiet room and external<br />

teaching space with canopies.<br />

Since 2017, the school has been<br />

in a formal collaboration with<br />

Llanishen Fach Primary School in<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>, with a leadership team<br />

working across both schools, and<br />

both schools collaborating on joint<br />

school improvement priorities.<br />

Headteacher Sarah Coombes said:<br />

"This is a momentous day for<br />

Pentyrch Primary School and the<br />

village community."<br />

3


news<br />

Cardiff's new bus<br />

station opens<br />

Cardiff's brand-new bus station<br />

opened in late June, marking a<br />

significant milestone after a nineyear<br />

gap from the demolition of the<br />

previous station.<br />

Residents and visitors in the capital<br />

of Wales have been without a<br />

designated bus station since 2015,<br />

relying on scattered bus stops in and<br />

around the city centre instead.<br />

Initially scheduled to be operational<br />

by 2017, the project encountered<br />

multiple delays over the years, with<br />

the Covid pandemic adding to the<br />

challenges faced.<br />

The freshly completed transport<br />

hub, situated opposite Cardiff<br />

Central railway station, boasts 14 bus<br />

platforms, public toilet facilities, and<br />

plans for various retail stores in the<br />

near future.<br />

Coach firms operating inter-city<br />

services across the UK will remain in<br />

their current locations.<br />

Schoolchildren<br />

learning at former<br />

HMRC site<br />

The site of the former HMRC office<br />

buildings in Tŷ Glas Llanishen has<br />

been used to provide a unique<br />

educational opportunity for local<br />

schoolchildren to witness and learn<br />

from the live demolition process.<br />

Erith, the chosen demolition<br />

contractor for this project, has<br />

welcomed students from local<br />

schools in the last few months.<br />

Students have had the chance to<br />

witness the impressive high-reach<br />

demolition in progress, engage in<br />

discussions with key members of<br />

the demolition team, and participate<br />

in enriching presentations that<br />

complement their classroom studies.<br />

Topics covered have included<br />

local history, demolition techniques,<br />

recycling practices, environmental<br />

considerations, planning procedures,<br />

and insights into careers in demolition.<br />

4<br />

Image: Seth Whales<br />

Cardiff Dogs<br />

Home residents<br />

enjoy new<br />

garden<br />

Residents staying at Cardiff Dogs<br />

Home have a new garden to enjoy as<br />

they wait to find their forever home.<br />

The garden, which provides the<br />

dogs with additional space to exercise<br />

and play with the Dogs Home team,<br />

has been made possible with support<br />

from the Home's affiliated charity, the<br />

Rescue Hotel, Dogs Home volunteers,<br />

Keep Wales Tidy, and partnership<br />

housing developer, Lovell.<br />

Cabinet Member with responsibility<br />

for Cardiff Dogs Home, Cllr Dan<br />

De'Ath, said:<br />

"Many of the dogs who find<br />

themselves at Cardiff Dogs Home<br />

have come from difficult situations<br />

and they deserve a little luxury during<br />

their stay.<br />

"Having this new garden on site will<br />

help ensure the dogs can spend<br />

more time outside of their kennels,<br />

Llysfaen Primary<br />

School praised<br />

During a recent visit to Llysfaen<br />

Primary School, Estyn have<br />

commended the school for its<br />

exceptional standards, outstanding<br />

leadership, and a nurturing<br />

environment that supports all pupils<br />

in achieving high levels of success.<br />

Inspectors from His Majesty’s<br />

Inspectorate for Education and<br />

Training in Wales described the<br />

school as a highly successful<br />

and happy institution where high<br />

standards permeate all aspects<br />

of its life and work. The inspection<br />

report highlights the strong and<br />

effective leadership provided by the<br />

headteacher, governors, and other<br />

senior leaders.<br />

River swimming<br />

warnings<br />

The public has been warned about<br />

the dangers of swimming in north<br />

Cardiff's rivers during the summer<br />

season.<br />

Underwater hazards, cold water<br />

shock, and strong currents all mean<br />

that unsupervised swimming can<br />

be dangerous.<br />

and give them a space where the<br />

team can work with them to ensure<br />

they're ready to be rehomed."<br />

Keep Wales Tidy provided planters,<br />

habitat boxes, plants, trees, turf, a<br />

storage shed and tools, as well as<br />

carrying out work to the previously<br />

overgrown area close to the River Taff.<br />

Estyn inspection<br />

recognises<br />

Birchgrove<br />

Primary School's<br />

shining stars<br />

Birchgrove Primary School has<br />

recently undergone a successful<br />

inspection by Estyn, His Majesty's<br />

Inspectorate for Education and<br />

Training in Wales, which highlights<br />

the school's positive culture and<br />

strong leadership.<br />

Inspectors found the school<br />

to be an inclusive and happy<br />

learning community, with pupils<br />

demonstrating excellent behaviour<br />

and a positive attitude towards<br />

learning. The school's commitment<br />

to fostering a strong culture of care<br />

and understanding is evident.<br />

The report gives praise for<br />

the engaging curriculum,<br />

which includes a wide range of<br />

authentic and stimulating learning<br />

experiences.<br />

Teachers also provide diverse<br />

opportunities for pupils to develop<br />

their literacy, numeracy, and digital<br />

skills, which they enthusiastically<br />

apply across various educational<br />

activities.


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 />

Blue plaque query<br />

I wonder if your readers can give<br />

me some advice to share with<br />

the residents of the road in which<br />

I live?<br />

I live on Junction Terrace in<br />

Radyr and at our last residents'<br />

association meeting, we were<br />

mooting the possibility of a blue<br />

plaque for our terrace. I visited<br />

Cardiff Council website but am<br />

none the wiser where to start.<br />

In 1864, 12 houses were built,<br />

followed by 8 further houses a<br />

few years later, by the Taff Vale<br />

Railway Company to house their<br />

employees. The houses were<br />

built for £150 each. Junction<br />

Terrace therefore became the<br />

first ‘street’ in Radyr.<br />

The houses were built of Radyr<br />

stone, presumably sourced from<br />

the nearby Radyr quarry located<br />

to the south of the site alongside<br />

the river and the Llandaff Loop<br />

railway bridge at the top of Hailey<br />

Park. The houses were built with<br />

long front gardens that were<br />

fronted by a narrow cart track<br />

(owned by the railway) which led<br />

to Radyr Lodge Farm, located<br />

in Radyr Woods. The farm was<br />

purchased by the Education<br />

Authority and demolished in the<br />

1960s to provide land for the<br />

comprehensive school.<br />

In the 1990s, development of<br />

the now disused Radyr Yard<br />

sidings was muted and the<br />

association acted to ensure the<br />

terrace was protected for its<br />

present and future owners. Long<br />

negotiations, with the developers<br />

and the Council (planners<br />

and councillors) enabled the<br />

construction of the new access<br />

road to replace the rough cart<br />

track with footpath.<br />

We would like to recognise this<br />

part of our north Cardiff story and<br />

would appreciate any help. My<br />

email address is below.<br />

Neil Crowle<br />

Radyr<br />

neilcrowle@icloud.com<br />

Our travels well<br />

remembered<br />

I recently collected a copy of your<br />

multi-award winning community<br />

magazine.<br />

Turning to pages 26 and 27<br />

(Spring Visits), subject to one<br />

possible exception, I was met by<br />

countries that my late wife Sue<br />

and I visited from here in Wales.<br />

The exception is Morocco<br />

on the southern side of the<br />

Mediterranean Sea and the north<br />

of the African continent. If I might<br />

be allowed to say so, I would<br />

recommend spring, summer,<br />

autumn, and, even winter visits to<br />

the rest of the African continent.<br />

The recommendation is based<br />

on the nine years that my late wife,<br />

Suzanne Mary, and I lived at its<br />

most southern end in South Africa<br />

encircled Lesotho.<br />

As we found out, Lesotho is also<br />

known as the Kingdom in the Sky.<br />

This is because of its monarchical<br />

societal status and its elevated<br />

position in the mountains of the<br />

country that overlook parts of<br />

Republican South Africa.<br />

During the said nine years, we<br />

took the opportunity to visit vast<br />

other numbers of the countries<br />

constituting the African continent<br />

from south to north and west to<br />

east. In the process, we saw an<br />

abundance of onshore wildlife and<br />

some more offshore too.<br />

I am now aged 85 and must leave<br />

it like that. However, from our<br />

travels, we collected memorabilia<br />

that we have brought home again<br />

to Wales. It helps me remember<br />

our times together.<br />

Derek Noel George Griffiths<br />

BA; LLB 2.1 FCIArb,<br />

Llandaff<br />

Pollution worries<br />

I've recently been made aware<br />

of a source of river pollution that<br />

perhaps some (or most!) of your<br />

readers will be unaware of.<br />

The chemicals found in backof-the-neck<br />

flea treatments<br />

for domestic pets are toxic to<br />

freshwater invertebrates and<br />

have been detected in rivers<br />

across England, despite severe<br />

restrictions on agricultural use<br />

since 2018. Please don't let this<br />

happen in Wales!<br />

Terry Weathers,<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 You can also find us on Facebook and Twitter<br />

5


people<br />

In The<br />

Spotlight<br />

Cardiff's Tom Auton is a rising star in the music industry.<br />

Emma Kaler talks candidly to the man with the world at his feet<br />

by Emma Kaler<br />

The music industry has<br />

dominated society for<br />

centuries, uniting generations<br />

and cultures around the world. It<br />

can represent escapism, inspiring<br />

people to get their creativity<br />

flowing.<br />

Cardiff has produced many famous<br />

performers over the decades,<br />

and I’ve recently had the pleasure<br />

of chatting with Cardiff’s newest<br />

emerging talent, whose latest<br />

performance venues include<br />

Cardiff’s Globe and the Norwegian<br />

Church. Stepping out of the music<br />

studio where he’s currently writing<br />

his new album, Tom Auton explains<br />

what he's currently crafting.<br />

“I’m working on a six track EP,<br />

which is due to be released at<br />

the end of this year," the former<br />

Whitchurch High School student<br />

says. "I can’t wait to show people the<br />

new songs.”<br />

Tom is a high school friend of<br />

mine. Our group would walk home<br />

through <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> after music<br />

6<br />

lessons and stop at each other’s<br />

houses along the way. A few of<br />

us now work in the entertainment<br />

industry. Whilst chatting about<br />

these memories, he recalls:<br />

“Cardiff, and <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> for that<br />

matter, was an amazing place for<br />

me growing up. I played football<br />

when I was younger and would<br />

spend lots of time in Caedelyn Park.<br />

"Moving away for a while made me<br />

realise how lovely my home was<br />

and what fond memories I made in<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong>!"<br />

Being a local boy, it’s not a shock<br />

he got homesick. What stands out<br />

during our conversation is how<br />

grateful Tom is to have had access<br />

to tutors and studio equipment<br />

in Whitchurch High School, one<br />

of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>’s popular catchment<br />

schools. He reflects on his time<br />

there and how it has shaped him:<br />

“When I was in school, music and<br />

the arts had better funding than it<br />

does now. I was lucky enough to<br />

have access the school's Apple<br />

Mac studio where I spent my<br />

lunchtimes making music. The<br />

music department was amazing<br />

and still do lots to help students<br />

pursue their music careers.”<br />

I was interested to find out what<br />

truly inspired Tom to pursue such<br />

an unrelenting and competitive<br />

career path, which many decide<br />

they’re not cut out for. After years<br />

gaining experience in the music<br />

industry though, Tom seems to<br />

have found his way very nicely.<br />

I remember<br />

the moment<br />

music<br />

became my<br />

passion<br />

“I remember the moment music<br />

became my passion. My dad took<br />

me to a Green Day show when I was<br />

10 and I fell in love with watching<br />

Billie Joe Armstrong (the lead<br />

singer) perform. From then on, I<br />

practised guitar religiously every<br />

day.”<br />

Tom began songwriting as a young<br />

Main image: Ellis Thomas


teen and began performing at local<br />

charity events, including Sepsis UK.<br />

You can imagine the jolt of panic<br />

that rushes through a parent’s<br />

mind when their child dreams<br />

of working in the entertainment<br />

industry. However, Tom’s parents<br />

(refreshingly) never questioned his<br />

aspirations. Instead, they happily<br />

encouraged him to pursue his<br />

ambition as a musician.<br />

“They’ve instilled the attitude of if<br />

you love it, do it. That is invaluable<br />

to me.<br />

"I decided to get into music<br />

production as a way of developing<br />

communication with the producers<br />

who were working on my music.<br />

“Making demos was where I<br />

started and before long, I got a job<br />

at Oliver Studios in Gloucester. My<br />

first job was making the tea and the<br />

coffee for the producers but then<br />

I got involved with setting up the<br />

studio equipment. Before long, I<br />

was taking sessions there myself<br />

and I’ve been learning ever since."<br />

Tom's steep learning curve has<br />

meant that his output is already of a<br />

professional standard.<br />

"Producing my own songs can be<br />

stressful at times. There’s a lot of<br />

pressure because I demand high<br />

standards, mostly from myself, but<br />

also from those that I work with.<br />

"But that makes it all the more<br />

satisfying when it does come<br />

together. Learning is the key to<br />

producing a better song next time<br />

and that part is really fun."<br />

Although the industry requires<br />

talent and determination, it’s<br />

important to retain a realistic view.<br />

“Financially, being a musician is<br />

Image: Andrew Dowling<br />

Tom's diligent work on his craft has already brought him success<br />

tough,” he explains. “You need to<br />

find the balance between earning<br />

enough money and investing in<br />

your passion.”<br />

And his proudest moment to date?<br />

"That'd be when myself and my<br />

band supported Feeder at Tredegar<br />

Park in Newport.<br />

“It was the first show back in Wales<br />

after Covid and it was a big moment<br />

for us. With a few thousand<br />

audience members, everyone was<br />

up for a good time - and it was!”<br />

Excited for him myself, I ask what’s<br />

in the pipeline. He reveals he is<br />

due to play at Cardiff Castle for<br />

the ‘Depot in the Castle’ event this<br />

summer, alongside acts such as<br />

Anne Marie, Tom Walker, and Jax<br />

Jones.<br />

“This is the closest to feeling like<br />

I’ve made it in my chosen career. I’m<br />

so excited.”<br />

Catch Tom Auton at Depot in the<br />

Castle on the 27th July. Tickets<br />

available online.<br />

Image: Andrew Dowling<br />

Tom appearing at The Globe in Cardiff<br />

7


Summer<br />

Sale!<br />

Great bargains<br />

in store!<br />

Summer ‘24<br />

now in-store!<br />

Independent Boutique in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

Find us in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> village<br />

Park outside the store in Lon Fach Shopping Mews<br />

9-11 Lon Fach<br />

Rhiwbeina<br />

CF14 6DY<br />

www.calonrhiwbeina.com<br />

tel: 07929 239012<br />

email: info@calonrhiwbeina.com<br />

The Art Workshop Art School<br />

Courses and workshops in Drawing, Oils, Acrylics, Watercolours, Printmaking, Textile Art,<br />

Photography, and more. Join our Summer and Autumn courses for adults and children.<br />

Booking now for Creative Kids Summer Workshops ages 7-13<br />

Find our studios in Lon Fach in the heart of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> village.<br />

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

For timetable and online booking see<br />

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

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

t: 07947 003111


competition<br />

Win tickets to see johns'<br />

boys at llandaff cathedral<br />

The Welsh choir who made a huge impression on the<br />

millions watching last year’s Britain’s Got Talent have<br />

announced that they are to perform here in Llandaff.<br />

Formed in 2016 by Aled Phillips, Johns’ Boys initially<br />

came together for a Noson Lawen to celebrate the life<br />

and work of two composers and conductors from the<br />

village of Rhosllannerchrugog, John Tudor Davies and<br />

John Glyn Williams.<br />

Following the success of that very special occasion,<br />

it became apparent to Aled and all of the singers<br />

that it would be foolish to pass up the opportunity to<br />

continue to make music together.<br />

Success came quickly for Aled and<br />

Johns’ Boys, as they reached the final of<br />

BBC Choir of the Year later in 2016. Their<br />

achievements didn’t end there however as in<br />

2019, they won the prestigious title of Choir<br />

of the World at the Llangollen International<br />

Eisteddfod.<br />

Many new fans however, will be more<br />

familiar with Johns’ Boys from their very<br />

recent exploits on Britain’s Got Talent.<br />

Performing Calum Scott’s ‘Biblical’, they<br />

entranced the judges with their virtuosic<br />

vocals, eliciting a standing ovation from both<br />

the judges and audience. Johns’ Boys got<br />

through to the live semi-finals.<br />

Today, the choir deliver new, fresh, and<br />

passionate performances of diverse<br />

repertoire: from stunning arrangements of Calum Scott<br />

and Lewis Capaldi to contemporary takes of well-loved<br />

Welsh hymns.<br />

The choir has announced a very special performance<br />

this autumn at Llandaff Cathedral, taking place on<br />

Saturday 26th October - and you can be there!<br />

How To Enter<br />

To be in with a chance of winning a pair of tickets, all<br />

you need to do is tell us in which year Johns' Boys was<br />

formed.<br />

Send your answer, along with your name and<br />

telephone number to competitions@livingmags.co.uk<br />

or to our postal address by Monday 30th September.<br />

Winners will be notified by telephone.<br />

VICTORIA FEARN GALLERY<br />

Summer Exhibition<br />

Follow us on social media and sign up to our mailing list<br />

www.victoriafearngallery.wales<br />

6 b Heol y Deri, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong>, Cardiff CF14 6HF


Summer<br />

Visits<br />

The best places in the<br />

world to visit during<br />

the summer months<br />

65 1. SARDINIA<br />

Sardinia, a Mediterranean gem, offers stunning<br />

beaches, rugged mountains, and ancient ruins. Its<br />

turquoise waters and white sandy beaches attract<br />

sun-seekers, while inland vineyards and olive<br />

groves showcase its rural charm.<br />

6 2. CORSICA<br />

Home to picturesque villages and ancient Genoese<br />

fortresses, Corsica's rich history and unique culture<br />

are evident in its cuisine, music, and language. The<br />

birthplace of Napoleon Bonaparte, Corsica offers a<br />

blend of history, natural beauty, and Mediterranean<br />

magic.<br />

5 3. MENORCA<br />

The island's ancient megalithic stone monuments,<br />

including the Navetas and Talaiots, offer a glimpse into its<br />

prehistoric past. Menorca's relaxed atmosphere, delicious<br />

cuisine featuring local seafood and cheese, and vibrant<br />

summer festivals make it a beloved destination for nature<br />

lovers and cultural enthusiasts alike.<br />

6 4. MYKONOS<br />

Famous for its picturesque white-washed buildings,<br />

winding narrow streets, and vibrant nightlife, this<br />

Greek island is also known for its famous beautiful<br />

beaches, such as Paradise and Super Paradise. The<br />

island's iconic windmills, Little Venice district, and<br />

its archaeological sites add to the island's charm<br />

and allure.<br />

10


travel<br />

5 5. LAKE COMO<br />

Nestled in the Italian Alps, Lake Como is a<br />

breathtaking destination renowned for its serene<br />

beauty. Surrounded by picturesque villages, lush<br />

gardens, and grand villas, the lake offers a tranquil<br />

retreat for visitors. There are stunning views of the<br />

surrounding mountains, crystal-clear waters, and<br />

its Mediterranean climate.<br />

8 6. TENERIFE<br />

Tenerife, the largest of the Canary Islands, is a<br />

diverse paradise boasting volcanic landscapes,<br />

golden beaches, and lush forests. Its centrepiece,<br />

Mount Teide, Spain's highest peak, offers<br />

panoramic views across the island.<br />

65 7. COPENHAGEN<br />

The city's picturesque waterfront, colourful houses of<br />

Nyhavn, and iconic Little Mermaid statue are iconic<br />

landmarks of Denmark's capital city. Copenhagen's thriving<br />

culinary scene, trendy neighbourhoods, and commitment<br />

to sustainability mark it out as one of Europe's most<br />

popular venues. It effortlessly brings together modern<br />

architecture and culture with historical royalty.<br />

8 8. CÔTE D’AZUR<br />

The Côte d'Azur, also known as the French Riviera, is a<br />

glamorous stretch of coastline along the Mediterranean in<br />

southern France. Famous for its luxurious resorts, turquoise<br />

waters, and sun-kissed beaches, the Côte d'Azur exudes<br />

elegance and sophistication. Picturesque villages like<br />

Saint-Tropez and Cannes, along with cultural hubs like Nice<br />

and Monaco, make it a playground for the rich and famous.<br />

65 9. THE AZORES<br />

The Azores, a Portuguese archipelago in the<br />

Atlantic Ocean, is a haven of natural beauty and<br />

tranquillity. Each of its nine islands offers a unique<br />

tapestry of volcanic landscapes, emerald green<br />

pastures, and azure blue lakes.<br />

From the geothermal wonders of São Miguel to<br />

the rugged cliffs of Flores, the Azores captivate<br />

visitors with their pristine beauty. Outdoor<br />

enthusiasts can enjoy whale watching, hiking lush<br />

trails, and diving in crystal-clear waters. The islands'<br />

charming towns, traditional cuisine, and warm<br />

hospitality create an unforgettable experience in<br />

this remote paradise.<br />

6 10. CORFU<br />

Corfu, a Greek island in the Ionian Sea, is renowned for its<br />

stunning beaches, lush greenery, and Venetian-influenced<br />

architecture.<br />

The island's vibrant culture, reflected in its lively festivals<br />

and delicious cuisine, adds to its appeal. From the historic<br />

Old Town with its narrow streets and fortresses to the clear<br />

waters of Paleokastritsa, Corfu offers a blend of history,<br />

natural beauty, and Mediterranean allure.<br />

11


outdoors<br />

Escape to Summer<br />

Spending time outdoors is not only fun but can be educational.<br />

Connecting with and embracing the natural world fosters a deeper<br />

appreciation for the environment in which we live<br />

Feed the<br />

butterflies<br />

Using a butterfly feeder is a<br />

gratifying way to attract and<br />

nourish butterflies in your<br />

garden. You can make your<br />

own from a plastic plate and<br />

string or you can buy one<br />

ready-made.<br />

Fill the feeder with a<br />

homemade nectar solution—typically a mixture of water and sugar—or<br />

use overripe fruit to draw these vibrant insects. They particularly like<br />

mashed up bananas as it's easier for them to eat.<br />

Place the feeder in a sunny, sheltered spot among nectar-rich flowers<br />

to create an inviting habitat. Regularly cleaning and refilling the feeder<br />

ensures it remains a safe and appealing stopover for butterflies,<br />

enriching your garden with their beauty and aiding local biodiversity.<br />

Rockpooling<br />

As you explore the shallow pools left<br />

by receding tides, you'll find a hidden<br />

world of marine creatures like crabs,<br />

sea snails, and colourful anemones. It's<br />

important to tread carefully to protect<br />

these fragile ecosystems. Always check<br />

local tide charts to ensure a safe and<br />

fruitful exploration. Rockpooling not<br />

only educates but also fosters a deeper<br />

appreciation for marine biodiversity.<br />

Build a<br />

hedgehog house<br />

Hedgehogs don't start thinking<br />

about hibernating until the onset<br />

of autumn but the warmer, drier<br />

months of summer will give<br />

you the chance to make them a<br />

home for the winter.<br />

You'll need about 30/40 house<br />

bricks, a sheet of wood for the<br />

roof, and a number of logs. Start<br />

by choosing a site for their new<br />

home. Ideally, it'll be close to a<br />

wall or a fence - anything that's<br />

close to a garden boundary.<br />

Dig a shallow rectangle, about<br />

two feet across and a few inches<br />

deep, and layer it with leaves<br />

and dead plants. Layer up the<br />

bricks around it, making sure<br />

to overlap the bricks to make it<br />

sturdy. Leave an opening for their<br />

entrance. Then lay the wooden<br />

sheet on top and weigh down<br />

with logs. Add more logs outside<br />

to add camouflage and leaves to<br />

attract insects.<br />

Go on a beetle hunt<br />

There are over 4,000 varieties of beetles here in the UK. Some, such as the<br />

ladybird, are easy to identify but others you may not be familiar with.<br />

You can quickly visually identify if the insect is indeed a beetle - they have<br />

six jointed legs, and three main parts to their body - their head, thorax, and<br />

abdomen. They also have an exoskeleton. They have compound eyes and<br />

a pair of antennae. Two pairs of flight wings are often kept carefully under<br />

their hardened outer wings, which are called elytra.<br />

12


Spot shooting stars<br />

To increase your chances of seeing a meteor<br />

shower, find a dark location away from city<br />

lights with a clear view of the night sky. Check<br />

the dates of upcoming meteor showers and<br />

plan your observation accordingly. Be patient<br />

and allow your eyes to adjust to the darkness,<br />

as meteors can be faint and fleeting.<br />

Lie back comfortably and scan the sky,<br />

focusing on the darkest part of the night away<br />

from the moon's glare.<br />

Spot insects after dark<br />

Go bat hunting<br />

To spot bats, venture out at dusk<br />

near water sources, parks, or<br />

wooded areas where they are<br />

known to forage for insects. Look<br />

for fluttering movements or listen<br />

for their echolocation calls. Using a<br />

torch with a red filter can help you<br />

spot bats without disturbing them.<br />

Remember to respect their space<br />

and observe from a distance.<br />

There is a huge variety of creatures that are active after sunset. The<br />

darkness can make spotting them a little more difficult, especially when<br />

it comes to insects. But by using a light trap, you can familiarise yourself<br />

with the local wildlife and find out what goes on after dark in your<br />

neighbourhood.<br />

Setting up a light trap either in your garden, or in a nearby park or<br />

woodland, is a relatively easy thing to do. Your ideal place will have plenty<br />

of trees and you should pick a night where moonlight is at a minimum. Tie<br />

a length of rope between two trees and drape an old white sheet over it.<br />

Secure the bottom of the sheet to the ground using tent pegs.<br />

With some string, fasten the torch to the rope behind the white sheet.<br />

Then all you need to do is wait for darkness and see what insects are drawn<br />

to the sheet. You can collect the insects in jars should you wish to inspect<br />

them further but take care with them and make sure you release them.<br />

Press flowers<br />

Pick flowers from a place where<br />

it is permitted. When you arrive<br />

back home, open a book and line<br />

it with newspaper.<br />

Lay your flowers as flat as<br />

possible on the book, and gently<br />

close the book. Add other books<br />

on top to add weight and store in<br />

a warm, dry place.<br />

When your flowers are dry, you<br />

can remove them and glue them<br />

to some card.<br />

13


Guiding<br />

you home<br />

Our Specialist Property Solicitors will<br />

lead you through any complications<br />

during your property transaction giving<br />

you valuable advice and ensuring there<br />

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

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

Navigating your way through the<br />

complexities of a property transaction can<br />

be stressful but our experienced, accessible<br />

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

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

Our services include:<br />

• Residential Property<br />

• Commercial Property<br />

• Landlord + Tenant<br />

• Wills and Estate Planning<br />

• Estate Administration + Probate<br />

• Lasting Powers of Attorney<br />

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

Cardiff, CF14 6HA<br />

Monday - Friday<br />

9.00am - 5.30pm<br />

And on Saturdays<br />

10.00am - 4.00pm<br />

emyrpierce.co.uk<br />

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

02920 616 002


MICHELLE MARSHALL SALON<br />

HAIR - BEAUTY - WELLNESS<br />

Summer has arrived at Michelle<br />

Marshall Salon - and it's sunshine<br />

all the way for the 5-star team.<br />

Getting yourself summer-ready<br />

is something most of us worry<br />

about in the first half of the year.<br />

But by the time the hot weather<br />

arrives, we sometimes need that<br />

helping expert hand to get the<br />

results we want. Famed for their<br />

award-winning hair and beauty<br />

services, Michelle Marshall's muchloved<br />

specialist team on Beulah<br />

Road can make you look and feel<br />

like sunshine from top to toe this<br />

summer.<br />

Alex brings a wealth of<br />

experience to the salon<br />

"We've said it before and we'll<br />

say it again but it really all comes<br />

down to the incredible training<br />

we receive," says Head Therapist<br />

Sian. "Michelle is continually and<br />

consistently developing each and<br />

every one of us to be the best in<br />

what we do. This investment in our<br />

education gives us the confidence<br />

to perform to our potential but<br />

ultimately, it's the client who<br />

benefits from the skills and<br />

knowledge we acquire."<br />

Michelle's investment in her staff<br />

also stretches to hiring the best in<br />

the business.<br />

“We now have one of the most<br />

sought-after nail technicians in the<br />

area working in our salon," says<br />

Sian. "Alex is well-known in the area<br />

for her stunning creations and she<br />

brings her talents and experience to<br />

our portfolio of beauty services."<br />

Alex's addition complements an<br />

already extensive range of beauty<br />

treatments that can help you glow<br />

this season.<br />

"Summer is an important time<br />

of year to look after your skin. We<br />

recommend our Dermalogica<br />

products to help protect and<br />

nourish. Many of them include high<br />

Sun Protection Factor (SPF) ratings;<br />

they sit nice on your skin and we<br />

stock a range that suits all skin<br />

types and pigmentations," says Sian.<br />

The salon can also take care of<br />

your others skincare needs this<br />

season:<br />

"Summer is a time of holidays and<br />

weddings and we look after men<br />

and women of all ages. A spray tan<br />

will give you the confidence you<br />

need to spend time on the beach or<br />

for wedding photos. We'll take the<br />

time to find out what you need and<br />

adjust the colour accordingly until<br />

we get it exactly right for you.<br />

"We'll also take care of your hair<br />

removal requirements too - whether<br />

that's all over your body such as<br />

waxing, or even just your face. Our<br />

eyebrow specialists can tint, shape,<br />

style, and even reconstruct - we<br />

can even help when there's no hair<br />

at all!<br />

“With the summer sun here, we<br />

can provide you with intimate<br />

waxing to give you more confidence<br />

in your holiday outfits.”<br />

You can top off your seasonal look<br />

with their range of popular insalon<br />

beauty treatments including<br />

massage, facials, and LED light<br />

therapy. And then of course, there's<br />

their award-winning hair treatments<br />

and styling.<br />

"Hair has always been the<br />

foundation of our salon's success,"<br />

says Sian. "And the foundation of<br />

good-looking hair is healthy hair.<br />

"We devote the time to find out<br />

what you want and need, before<br />

even thinking about picking up a<br />

pair of scissors.<br />

“We are big on hair health so<br />

before we do anything we will<br />

analyse your hair, discuss your hair<br />

history, your daily hair routines, and<br />

hair goals. We strive to educate you<br />

throughout - to empower both you<br />

and your hair.<br />

“Our customers always come<br />

first. We always put your needs<br />

first, delivering a service which<br />

is relaxed, friendly, responsible,<br />

professional, and personal, here in<br />

the heart of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> village,” says<br />

Sian.<br />

A: Beulah Road, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

T: 029 2061 1566<br />

W: michellemarshallsalon.co.uk<br />

This is a sponsored feature


Llanishen Fach has developed -<br />

and delivers - an innovative and<br />

engaging curriculum all year round<br />

breadth of activities with something<br />

for everyone. By focussing on<br />

engagement through enjoyment,<br />

building physical confidence and<br />

skills, all our children discover they<br />

can take responsibility for their own<br />

health and wellbeing, both now and<br />

in the future.<br />

The PE sessions are led by one<br />

of our specialist teachers, Mrs<br />

Max Carter who swam for Wales<br />

in the Commonwealth Games.<br />

Mrs Carter devises her sessions to<br />

foster preparedness, perseverance,<br />

resilience, and support and empathy.<br />

Children take responsibility for<br />

dressing appropriately for both the<br />

activity and the weather, hot, cold,<br />

or wet. We all have activities we<br />

enjoy more than others; Mrs Carter<br />

acknowledges this and encourages<br />

pupils to continuing even if, “I am not<br />

very good at it…”<br />

Improving at any physical discipline<br />

takes perseverance and a supportive<br />

environment surrounded by caring<br />

and encouraging friends.<br />

Activities covered in PE, as part of<br />

our outdoor learning programme,<br />

Embracing<br />

movement is<br />

promoting good<br />

health at Llanishen<br />

Fach Primary School.<br />

And it's all part of<br />

their commitment to<br />

their pupils<br />

16<br />

Physical education (PE) at Llanishen<br />

Fach Primary School is so much<br />

more than a hasty session squeezed<br />

in between classroom-based<br />

lessons.<br />

Come rain or shine, and recently<br />

there has been a lot of the former,<br />

our determination to promote and<br />

build the physical and mental health<br />

of our pupils has never faltered. We<br />

recognise that not all our pupils are<br />

focused on competitive glory, least<br />

not until they find their passion, that’s<br />

why we have developed a wide


schools<br />

and parkour. Each of these stretch<br />

our pupils in different ways and<br />

ensure they gain skills and develop<br />

good physicality. Team games within<br />

lessons include various ball games:<br />

jump ball, throw tennis, netball,<br />

basketball, cricket, baseball, and<br />

tennis.<br />

Opportunities to participate in team<br />

sports are extended further through<br />

after-school clubs and competitive<br />

games against other local schools<br />

which include rugby, hockey, and<br />

football. Finally, gaining cycling skills<br />

as a ‘skill for life’ takes in all our pupils,<br />

from the very youngest thanks to<br />

an initiative sponsored by Welsh<br />

Government and Cardiff Council.<br />

fall into two areas. Firstly, the<br />

children work on generic skills,<br />

vital to improving performance.<br />

Gaining an understanding of the<br />

need for cooperation in a team<br />

and an appreciation that teamwork<br />

improves everyone’s enjoyment and<br />

success. As is the need to enjoy and<br />

be inspired to take part in physical<br />

activities, now and in the future as<br />

part of a healthy and happy lifestyle.<br />

Secondly, our pupils compete both<br />

individually and in team sports. Some<br />

of the individual activities our pupils<br />

practise are orienteering, gymnastics,<br />

17


seen & heard<br />

The Awen Project is a learning community that's been created<br />

to give a voice to a generation that's often overlooked<br />

The words 'children should<br />

be seen and not heard', is a<br />

phrase that many of us grew<br />

up with.<br />

The saying has led to the loss of a<br />

voice and identity for generations,<br />

many children not feeling confident<br />

enough to express their own<br />

opinions or feel validated as they<br />

enter adult life.<br />

The Awen Project, based in South<br />

Wales, is pioneering a new model<br />

for learning environments that<br />

addresses those concerns. It's a<br />

place where young people are<br />

championed to be themselves<br />

and to follow their passions as<br />

active participants in a democratic<br />

community.<br />

The project was founded in 2019<br />

by singer Charlotte Church and her<br />

husband Jonny Powell, with Hannah<br />

Fitt as the Director.<br />

"We work with families to coconstruct<br />

small, free-to-attend<br />

learning communities, that<br />

are democratically led by the<br />

children, families, and educators<br />

and have ethics of excellence,<br />

entrepreneurialism, and deep<br />

creativity," says Hannah.<br />

"The current national education<br />

model is not working for many<br />

18<br />

children and Awen is a direct<br />

response to that," she adds.<br />

"The kids involved in the project<br />

are at the heart of this journey.<br />

We don't just tell them what to<br />

do or praise them for sitting still.<br />

We actively encourage them to<br />

develop their own learning and<br />

have a say in their own futures.<br />

"The children learn through<br />

projects that are really creative<br />

and more relevant to our day-today<br />

lives; it's more fun and super<br />

engaging for them and they actively<br />

embrace their learning when they<br />

are directly involved in it."<br />

The Awen Tribe is the first Awen<br />

Learning Community, established<br />

in 2019 and has been operating in<br />

a number of temporary structures<br />

in an ancient woodland in South<br />

Wales. It is a self-directed, consentbased<br />

learning community for<br />

young people aged 11+ to focus on<br />

their own education, developing<br />

their individual processes and<br />

objectives, and unlocking their own<br />

intellects and creativity.<br />

The students benefit from a rich<br />

and wild learning environment and<br />

participate in a community that's<br />

founded on robust debate and<br />

mutual respect.<br />

Awen's pioneering model is<br />

centred around The Gathering, a<br />

democratic meeting that's held<br />

weekly. Any member of the Tribe<br />

can voice concerns, put forward<br />

ideas, and address issues that<br />

may arise. Each member has an<br />

equal vote, and through practising<br />

deep democracy exercises and<br />

upholding the importance of<br />

individual consent, the Gathering<br />

promotes social learning,<br />

tolerance, and the development of<br />

communication and collaboration<br />

skills.<br />

"It's often the case that when<br />

children come to us, it's because<br />

they've found themselves outside<br />

of the traditional education system,<br />

which isn't working for them," says<br />

Hannah. "In many cases, no one has<br />

believed in them.<br />

"The long-term aim of the project<br />

is to build a large network of<br />

Tribes that will cross borders,<br />

share resources, staff, and learning<br />

opportunities, and support<br />

generations of young people to<br />

become healthy, informed, and<br />

responsible members of the global<br />

society. The next generation will<br />

face a future that is going to require<br />

great things from them."


The pandemic has perhaps<br />

forced individuals and groups to<br />

take another, alternative look at<br />

education.<br />

"Home-schooling can be isolating<br />

for many, as we found out during<br />

the lockdown," says Hannah. "Our<br />

aim is to develop those personal<br />

and social skills that aren't perhaps<br />

nurtured fully in other ways.<br />

"We're not the forest-dwelling<br />

ferals that we're sometimes made<br />

out to be. We're based in nature<br />

but that's for several reasons -<br />

there's strong evidence to show<br />

that learning in nature improves<br />

children's academic performance,<br />

focus, behaviour, and their love<br />

of learning. There's also the<br />

added benefit of the children<br />

understanding the ecosystem and<br />

environment in which they exist."<br />

But this is no airy-fairy approach to<br />

learning:<br />

"Our students, all aged between<br />

11 and 15, develop all the skills they<br />

need to face the real world and<br />

always have the option to take their<br />

GCSEs if they wish, although we<br />

don't push any agenda on our Tribe<br />

Members. Instead, we facilitate and<br />

support them to develop their own<br />

self-directed learning in a safe and<br />

sustainable way. And in addition,<br />

our learning does not contradict<br />

or oppose the mainstream Welsh<br />

Curriculum, but aligns itself and<br />

compliments it too.”<br />

The project has faced its fair<br />

share of challenges, including the<br />

recent withdrawal of access to their<br />

location.<br />

"It has been a rollercoaster - and<br />

we tried so hard to stay where we<br />

were - but as a very small charity<br />

we just couldn’t keep going against<br />

the big guys," says Charlotte.<br />

In Welsh mythology, Awen is the<br />

inspiration of the poets, or bards;<br />

or, in its personification, Awen is the<br />

inspirational muse of creative artists<br />

in general.<br />

In what's quickly becoming an<br />

annual tradition, the project now<br />

hosts a summer evening of food,<br />

music, and storytelling, this year<br />

taking place in the grounds of<br />

Fonmon Castle.<br />

"This year's Banquet as we're<br />

calling it, takes place in September.<br />

London-based chefs, Grace & Skye,<br />

noted for their wild and fine-dining<br />

cuisine, will be serving a menu that<br />

they tell us is seasonal, sustainable,<br />

and indulgent; all prepared from<br />

locally sourced ingredients,<br />

prepared over roaring wood fires in<br />

the woods.<br />

"The students will also perform a<br />

sneak preview of their theatre show,<br />

The Letter Killers Club, which is set<br />

to debut in Cardiff in July."<br />

The students are given autonomy<br />

over their projects, even down to<br />

running the project's social media<br />

accounts. For Charlotte, the entire<br />

educational project stemmed from<br />

her own memories.<br />

"My idea began when reflecting on<br />

my own education," she says. Her<br />

vision for the Awen Project came as<br />

people<br />

Students are given autonomy<br />

and confidence<br />

a mother balking at the unnatural<br />

way schools organise children and<br />

systematically deny them basic<br />

freedoms.<br />

Hannah, who has been on<br />

the board of trustees from the<br />

beginning before becoming<br />

operational at Awen, has extensive<br />

experience herself. Along with<br />

her identical twin sister, Lucy,<br />

Hannah co-founded The SAFE<br />

Foundation, an international<br />

sustainable development charity<br />

in 2006. Through SAFE, Hannah<br />

has been able to reach over 10,000<br />

people across Africa and Asia and<br />

help them access vital health,<br />

education, and skills resources to<br />

lift communities out of poverty.<br />

"Since 2019, our Awen students<br />

have put on public art exhibitions,<br />

filmed a production of Macbeth,<br />

transformed trash collected in the<br />

woods into monster sculptures, and<br />

built an online school.<br />

"They write poetry and paint<br />

watercolours in the forest; they<br />

learn to identify plants and observe<br />

the seasonal changes in an<br />

ecosystem that they are a part of.<br />

They learn history and languages,<br />

economics and psychology.<br />

None of this is untested or even<br />

revolutionary. This is the way<br />

learning is facilitated in schools<br />

across the globe that are seen as<br />

world leaders in education," says<br />

Hannah.<br />

Find out more about this project at<br />

www.theawenproject.com<br />

Adult guests arrive at the Banquet, organised by the students<br />

The Wild Banquet takes place on<br />

Friday 20th September at Fonmon<br />

Castle. Tickets are available from<br />

www.eventbrite.com<br />

19


uild<br />

good<br />

habits<br />

For better or worse, habits form our everyday lives. They influence our<br />

thoughts, our behaviours, and our actions. Here's how to create a happier<br />

and more balanced life through the power of positive habits<br />

Why build habits?<br />

Developing good habits is crucial<br />

for your personal growth and<br />

success. Consistent routines help<br />

streamline daily tasks, leading<br />

to increased productivity and<br />

efficiency.<br />

Good habits foster discipline<br />

and self-control, enabling you<br />

to stay focused on long-term<br />

goals, despite obstacles. By<br />

cultivating positive habits, such as<br />

regular exercise, healthy eating,<br />

or effective time management,<br />

you can enhance your physical,<br />

mental, and emotional well-being,<br />

ultimately leading to a more<br />

fulfilling and balanced life.<br />

Excellence doesn't happen in<br />

an instant. It happens over time,<br />

and as a result of what we do<br />

repeatedly.<br />

20<br />

Think long-term<br />

We become the result of our habits<br />

over time so when it comes to<br />

making positive change, we need<br />

to think long-term rather than<br />

quick fixes.<br />

By envisioning the future benefits<br />

of consistent actions, we can stay<br />

motivated and committed to our<br />

habits. This helps us when we face<br />

unexpected challenges because<br />

we understand that it's all part of<br />

the process, and that long-term,<br />

we can still achieve our aims.<br />

Think ahead in terms of months or<br />

even years. Imagine how you'll look<br />

and feel a year down the line if you<br />

commit to exercising three times a<br />

week.<br />

The compound effect of these<br />

habits are the real and most<br />

effective ways of implementing<br />

positive change in your life - and<br />

it's the consistency that's the key.<br />

Understand your<br />

motivations<br />

By delving into the reasons behind<br />

wanting to cultivate specific<br />

habits, you can establish strong<br />

foundations for change.<br />

Understanding the 'why' will<br />

provide you with a very genuine<br />

reason for sticking to your good<br />

habits. Whether it's a health goal or<br />

a financial goal, understanding the<br />

reason behind the habit can help<br />

fuel persistence and consistency,<br />

even on the toughest of days.<br />

To understand your motivations,<br />

reflect on your own personal<br />

values and find out what's really<br />

important to you. Discover what<br />

makes you tick, what things hold<br />

you back, and your strengths and<br />

weaknesses.<br />

Create the right<br />

environment<br />

You'll struggle to be consistent<br />

in your good habits if the<br />

environment in which you work<br />

and play is working against you.<br />

Your environment should work<br />

with you in your aims on a practical<br />

level. This includes the people you<br />

surround yourself with.


Make it easy<br />

Make implementing your good<br />

habits easy to do or access.<br />

Writing plans or to-do lists<br />

can help keep you on track and<br />

focused, whether it's meal plans,<br />

or simply a list of chores. Put<br />

things in the diary or they'll never<br />

get done.<br />

Pack your gym bag, fill your<br />

fridge with healthy food, get<br />

enough sleep - as if you were<br />

planning it for someone else.<br />

Start by breaking habits into<br />

smaller tasks that are manageable<br />

and achievable. For example,<br />

if you want to develop a habit<br />

of reading daily, start with just<br />

a few pages a day instead of<br />

committing to a whole chapter<br />

at once. Additionally, prepare<br />

your environment to support<br />

your habit. Keep a book by your<br />

bedside, set a specific time for<br />

reading, or create a cosy reading<br />

nook to make it inviting. Eliminate<br />

distractions that might derail your<br />

efforts, and make the desired<br />

behaviour as convenient as<br />

possible.<br />

Habit stacking<br />

Most humans are creatures of<br />

habit. It's where we feel safe so we<br />

tend not to do anything different.<br />

The idea of habit stacking is an<br />

effective method of effecting<br />

change without stressing us out<br />

too much. It works on the basis<br />

that you add a positive habit to<br />

something that you already do<br />

regularly. By pairing your new habit<br />

with your current one, you'll find it<br />

easier to incorporate better habits<br />

into your life.<br />

The idea is to start small. It could<br />

be adding a 5 minute stretch<br />

routine when you make a coffee in<br />

the morning or doing a 5 minute<br />

meditation on the train.<br />

By starting small, you can focus<br />

on making that new behaviour a<br />

habit. Once you've mastered that,<br />

then you can look to add another<br />

one to the 'stack' and work on that<br />

one too.<br />

Stacking your habits avoids the<br />

feeling of overwhelm on your<br />

routine, giving you a better chance<br />

of sticking to your new positive<br />

habits.<br />

Reward yourself<br />

Celebrating your achievements, no<br />

matter how small, can boost your<br />

motivation and make the habitforming<br />

process more enjoyable<br />

and sustainable.<br />

Find rewards that align with<br />

your goals and provide a sense<br />

of accomplishment. For example,<br />

after completing a week of daily<br />

reading, treat yourself to a relaxing<br />

bath, a favourite snack, or perhaps<br />

some leisure time with a hobby<br />

you enjoy.<br />

When we anticipate rewards,<br />

dopamine levels in our brain rises,<br />

making us feel good.<br />

Be consistent<br />

wellbeing<br />

Consistency is the cornerstone of<br />

building good habits and is crucial<br />

for long-term success. When<br />

you perform a specific behaviour<br />

repeatedly, it becomes ingrained<br />

in your routine and eventually<br />

second nature. Consistency<br />

reinforces neural pathways in the<br />

brain associated with the habit,<br />

making it easier to maintain over<br />

time. By consistently practicing a<br />

behaviour, you signal to your brain<br />

that this action is important and<br />

worth repeating.<br />

When you encounter challenges<br />

on your journey to forming a<br />

habit, the momentum you've built<br />

through consistent practice can<br />

help you stay on track. It reinforces<br />

your resilience and determination<br />

to persevere through difficulties.<br />

Ultimately then, consistency<br />

transforms actions into habits and<br />

habits into a lifestyle. By prioritising<br />

consistency in your efforts to build<br />

good habits, you set yourself up<br />

for lasting success.<br />

21


In her latest communiqué, Maggie Smales showcases<br />

Cardiff and south Wales to the visiting French contingent<br />

If you had been around in Cardiff<br />

Bay on the last Wednesday in<br />

April, you might have seen a group<br />

of what appeared to be tourists<br />

being followed around by a TV<br />

reporter and a cameraman. The<br />

French were in town!<br />

Every year, the Association for<br />

the Cardiff Nantes Exchange hosts<br />

a group of around 25 people<br />

from Nantes. They stay with our<br />

members, they practise their<br />

English, and we try to show them<br />

a side of Cardiff and of this part of<br />

South Wales that they would be<br />

unlikely to experience if they just<br />

flew into Cardiff or Bristol, hired a<br />

car, and stayed in an AirBnB.<br />

So, in Cardiff Bay we, of course,<br />

took them on a tour of the<br />

Senedd. We also showed them<br />

the inscription commemorating<br />

the French chef Abel Magneron,<br />

who ran one of the best French<br />

restaurants in Britain in the<br />

immediate post-war period,<br />

frequented by showbiz stars like<br />

Richard Burton, here in what was<br />

the Big Windsor Hotel.<br />

We went into Butetown and used<br />

the census of 1911 to explain just<br />

how multi-cultural Cardiff already<br />

was a century ago. In the same<br />

street cheek by jowl, lived a family<br />

of Russian Jewish emigres, a Turkish<br />

boarding housekeeper with an<br />

English wife, and a Greek cook,<br />

and lodgers from Turkey, Greece<br />

and India, all sailors. Down the road<br />

was a Chinese-run boarding house,<br />

housing mainly Chinese shop<br />

workers. And, of course, there were<br />

a good sprinkling of Irish and Scots<br />

as well as native Welsh.<br />

That’s before we get to the<br />

22<br />

Greeks, of whom more anon, and<br />

the Norwegians, whose church on<br />

Harbour Drive is now an arts centre<br />

and café, and whose most famous<br />

son, the children’s author, Roald<br />

Dahl, gave his name to Roald Dahl<br />

Plass, the public plaza in front of the<br />

Millennium Centre.<br />

Speaking of the Millennium Centre,<br />

many of the French group went<br />

there on their first Sunday evening<br />

to a wonderful concert given by the<br />

Welsh National Opera and chorus,<br />

whose future is now under threat<br />

because of drastic funding cuts. We<br />

were told this would never happen<br />

in France! On Monday night, they<br />

went bowling in Whitchurch rugby<br />

union club.<br />

For most, the highlight of the<br />

week was the celebratory dinner<br />

on Wednesday evening, attended<br />

by the Right Honourable The Lord<br />

Mayor of Cardiff, Councillor Bablin<br />

Malik and her consort. 120 people<br />

from various associations in Cardiff<br />

with links with France gathered<br />

together to celebrate the 60th<br />

anniversary of the formal twinning<br />

between Cardiff and Nantes. It was<br />

a chance for people to meet up<br />

with old friends, to listen to some<br />

excellent musicians, including a<br />

rendering of “We’ll Gather Lilacs in<br />

the Spring” as a tribute to another of<br />

Cardiff’s famous sons, Ivor Novello,<br />

and to eat and drink of course.<br />

The evening was finished with a<br />

singsong in English, French, and<br />

Welsh. And yes, despite everything,<br />

the links between Cardiff and<br />

Nantes are still strong: “Ry’n ni yma<br />

o hyd”.<br />

Day trips included Margam Abbey,<br />

the National Botanical Gardens,<br />

Penderyn Distillery, and Brecon. Did<br />

you know that there were 120,000<br />

French prisoners of war in Britain<br />

during the Napoleonic wars and<br />

that one of them ended up being<br />

buried in the churchyard of Brecon<br />

cathedral? There are links with<br />

France everywhere if you know<br />

where to look.<br />

The finale was a visit to Cardiff’s<br />

wonderful Greek Orthodox Church –<br />

more than a hundred years old and<br />

like a little corner of Thessaloniki<br />

or the Peloponnese in Butetown.<br />

Many Cardiffians don’t know it is<br />

there. And we finished with a lovely<br />

Greek meze lunch prepared by the<br />

ladies of the congregation, even<br />

though, as the Orthodox Calendar is<br />

different, they themselves were still<br />

fasting for Lent.<br />

And leaving the best bit till last<br />

– in June a similar number of us<br />

Cardiffians headed off to Nantes<br />

to follow a similarly varied and<br />

interesting programme.<br />

Find out more at cardiff-nantes.org


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REST<br />

We often dream of lazy sunny days, but if<br />

you're someone that lives by routine, you may<br />

find it somewhat uneasy when you can finally<br />

get some time to rest.<br />

Summer can offer us a chance to truly reset<br />

though and one way of making that happen<br />

is by getting enough rest. Forget the chores<br />

and tasks that you've set yourself. Make time<br />

to actually switch off, and let your mind and<br />

body rest. It could be lying on a sun bed, or in<br />

a hammock in the shade of a tree. Whatever it<br />

is, keep things quiet and slow.<br />

If you can, totally switch off from work. Enjoy a<br />

good book instead.<br />

RECHARGE<br />

Recharging your energy isn't<br />

something that happens<br />

overnight. If you sleep fewer<br />

hours than your body and mind<br />

needs, especially on a regular<br />

basis, this accumulates into<br />

what's known as sleep debt.<br />

For chronic sleep debt,<br />

accumulated over weeks or<br />

months, it can take several<br />

weeks of consistently good<br />

sleep habits to restore your<br />

sleep balance.<br />

REFLECT<br />

Give yourself the space<br />

and time to truly reflect<br />

on where you are in life,<br />

and where you'd like to<br />

go. Accept the difficult<br />

things, and quietly<br />

celebrate the wins.<br />

Allow your mind to take<br />

you wherever it wants<br />

and perhaps find a new<br />

perspective on life's<br />

problems. Allowing your<br />

mind to reflect honestly<br />

and openly will allow it<br />

to breathe and perform<br />

more effectively when<br />

you need it most.<br />

SUMMERreset<br />

Use the healing power of the summer months to restore and reset<br />

REWIND<br />

Take a few moments out<br />

of your day to remind<br />

yourself of a time when<br />

you felt happy.<br />

Recall to mind what was<br />

happening. Who was<br />

there? How did it make<br />

you feel?<br />

Rewinding to happy<br />

moments stimulates<br />

the parts of your brain<br />

that releases happy<br />

hormones and reminds<br />

us that life can be good.<br />

REMOVE DIGITAL MEDIA<br />

Digital media is continuously trying to get our<br />

attention. Whether it's videos, emails, images, or<br />

notifications, they are all designed to take you<br />

away from real life and engage with them instead.<br />

If you have a mobile phone, remove anything<br />

that you don't need or use. Turn off non-urgent<br />

notifications, and if possible,<br />

turn your phone off<br />

completely for extended<br />

lengths of time.<br />

Committing to a<br />

set period of time<br />

without digital media<br />

will help you engage<br />

with real life and will<br />

bring about a real<br />

sense of calm.<br />

24


wellbeing<br />

RESTRICT<br />

Ditch the damaging alcohol<br />

and unhealthy drinks.<br />

Instead, nourish your body<br />

with the things it's crying out<br />

for - vitamins, minerals, and<br />

everything it needs to function<br />

at its best.<br />

RECONNECT<br />

Reconnecting with the<br />

things that once made<br />

you happy can go a long<br />

way towards helping you<br />

become happier and<br />

more fulfilled.<br />

It could be an old<br />

hobby, places you<br />

used to visit, or even<br />

re-establishing<br />

faded friendships.<br />

Reintroducing these<br />

things into your life on a<br />

regular basis can build<br />

more time for yourself.<br />

Reconnecting with<br />

nature and the outdoors<br />

can also bring its own<br />

benefits, both physically<br />

and emotionally.<br />

RESPIRE<br />

When faced with a<br />

threat, your brain alerts<br />

your body to respond<br />

with either a fight or<br />

flight response. When<br />

you take the time<br />

to slow down and<br />

purposefully breathe<br />

deeply and slowly, you<br />

reassure your brain that<br />

everything is under<br />

control. Your brain then<br />

communicates to your<br />

body that it's safe to<br />

relax.<br />

Making breathwork<br />

part of your daily<br />

routine can help you<br />

deal with stress.<br />

RECONCILE<br />

Use the summer<br />

months to reconcile any<br />

damaged relationships<br />

that are worth keeping.<br />

You'll need to be<br />

prepared to be honest,<br />

and to hear honest views<br />

coming back. Active<br />

listening will give you a<br />

perspective on how the<br />

other person feels but<br />

make sure your feelings<br />

are heard too.<br />

Acknowledge mistakes,<br />

but also build on the<br />

present and look to the<br />

future with optimism.<br />

RE-EMERGE<br />

Here's your chance to<br />

reset and to re-emerge as<br />

a better version of yourself.<br />

If trauma or depression is<br />

something that's darkening<br />

your every day, now is the<br />

chance to seek help and<br />

work through it.<br />

Trauma is stored in the<br />

body, mostly away from<br />

any conscious thoughts. It<br />

affects daily life, and is a<br />

heavy burden to carry.<br />

Asking for help isn't a sign<br />

of weakness. In fact, it's a<br />

sign that you're ready to<br />

start a new chapter in your<br />

life - and on your terms.<br />

Therapy never promises<br />

to fix you. Instead, it helps<br />

you process things, to<br />

clear some head space,<br />

and allows you to reemerge<br />

stronger and<br />

happier.<br />

25


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Roger<br />

Roger<br />

Roger Stennett has spent his life writing and creating.<br />

He speaks to <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> <strong>Living</strong> about his life, his career -<br />

and his decades of poems, plays, and TV shows<br />

"I'll have a latte please. Oh! No! I'll<br />

have a hot chocolate. I haven't had<br />

a hot chocolate in years. How lovely.<br />

Back in the homeland and I'm<br />

having a hot chocolate."<br />

Roger Stennett is a man of many<br />

words. Countless numbers of<br />

fans have read and absorbed<br />

those words, filtering into the<br />

consciousness of generations. His<br />

work has been showcased in books,<br />

in film, and in theatre.<br />

He's in Cardiff to promote his new<br />

book, Cloud Cuckoo Land.<br />

"The phrase Cloud Cuckoo Land<br />

is to be found in Aristophanes'<br />

comedy, The Birds, which was first<br />

performed in 414 BC," says Roger.<br />

"It was a literal place in the clouds.<br />

These days of course, the meaning<br />

has fallen into contemporary<br />

language to mean unrealistic plans.”<br />

For Roger, his life plans were<br />

almost laid out in front of him since<br />

his childhood. Although he's lived<br />

in a village near Bristol for decades,<br />

Roger is a Cardiff boy through and<br />

through. His father, the entertainer<br />

28<br />

Stan Stennett, was a well-known<br />

face, not only around north Cardiff,<br />

but internationally.<br />

"I grew up in dressing rooms. At<br />

one point in my childhood, my best<br />

mate was a chimpanzee. As a kid,<br />

Dad was often working around the<br />

country. I remember I'd stand at the<br />

window and watch him as he went<br />

away, often for long periods of time.<br />

"Whitchurch was a wonderful<br />

place to grow up. There used to<br />

be an old metal roundabout on<br />

Whitchurch Common and we'd<br />

spend hours playing there on<br />

endless summer days.<br />

"Aged five, the family moved to<br />

Heol Madoc near The Philog until<br />

the age of 12 when we moved to<br />

live upon <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> Hill.<br />

"There were very few cars on the<br />

roads back in those days and as a<br />

kid, we'd play in the Wenallt or in<br />

the streams that flowed through the<br />

village.<br />

"I went to what was Whitchurch<br />

Grammar School back then. We had<br />

a wonderful history teacher by the<br />

name of Malcolm Thomas. He was<br />

from west Wales and was a zealot<br />

for any form of Welsh history.<br />

"We were also encouraged to read<br />

a lot of poetry back then too. We<br />

were exposed to a lot of the famous<br />

names that would have an influence<br />

on me during my later years."<br />

Roger went on to read History at<br />

Christ’s College, Cambridge.<br />

"Actually, it wasn't my first choice,"<br />

admits Roger. "Technically it was<br />

because I'd decided to read History<br />

on the Monday. On the Tuesday,<br />

Roger with his dad, Stan


I had decided to read English.<br />

Wednesday saw me change my<br />

mind and I was doing Archaeology.<br />

Thursday came around and I was<br />

reading Political Studies but by<br />

Friday, I was settled on History and<br />

that was that."<br />

Roger excelled at Cambridge, not<br />

only in his academic studies, but<br />

also in his extra-curricular activities.<br />

"I was a British Schools Champion,"<br />

he smiles. "I was an international<br />

athlete and even held the Welsh<br />

high jump record at one point. At<br />

university, I became a Cambridge<br />

Athletics ‘Blue’ and a life member of<br />

Hawks Club (Cambridge University)<br />

and Achilles Club."<br />

Poetry was in Roger's blood, and<br />

as a young man, it became his<br />

passion.<br />

"All the girls took an interest in<br />

a poet back then so that was an<br />

added bonus. I had started writing<br />

in the footsteps of the protest<br />

culture - people like Bob Dylan and<br />

Allen Ginsburg, both cultural icons,<br />

incidentally, that I'd go on to meet.<br />

It was the poetry of Dylan Thomas<br />

though that really captured my<br />

attention.<br />

"He always fascinated me, both as<br />

a poet and as a person. He was a<br />

misunderstood, unmade bed of a<br />

man. The words of his final telegram<br />

read: 'On my way to Hollywood.'<br />

"Of course, he never quite made it<br />

there. He was dead before he made<br />

the age of 40 and since then, I feel<br />

that Wales has quietly disowned<br />

him a little. He was no more of an<br />

alcoholic than others who are in the<br />

public eye these days. You can't<br />

sanitise him but similarly, you can't<br />

not be influenced by him. I know I<br />

was.<br />

"For more than 40 years, I have<br />

been planning a film drama<br />

project inspired by an opera Dylan<br />

Thomas was planning with Russian<br />

composer Igor Stravinsky. I’d often<br />

talk about it with Dylan’s daughter,<br />

Aeronwy, when we were published<br />

by the same press in the 1970s."<br />

Roger's late teens and early<br />

twenties were dominated by the<br />

poetry he was producing. He<br />

published his first book Just A<br />

Matter Of Time in 1976.<br />

"There was then this long gap<br />

before I ever wrote poetry again<br />

- maybe forty years or so while I<br />

worked as a dramatist."<br />

Those four decades saw Roger<br />

write for an eclectic range of<br />

productions - from Sooty to The<br />

Royal Shakespeare Company.<br />

"I spent many years teaching<br />

creative writing to postgraduate<br />

level at British universities, including<br />

Oxford and Cambridge, and<br />

drama schools such as The Royal<br />

Academy of Dramatic Arts, Bristol<br />

Old Vic Theatre School, and The<br />

Royal Welsh Academy.<br />

"For several years, as part of my<br />

family production company, The<br />

Stennett Company, I helped to run<br />

and programme two 365-seater<br />

regional theatre and cinemas in<br />

Tewkesbury and Hereford."<br />

Roger's childhood had given<br />

him the background he needed<br />

to flourish in the entertainment<br />

business but that wasn't enough.<br />

"I also trained to become a<br />

Psychotherapist and Clinical<br />

Hypnotherapist.I saw hundreds of<br />

therapy clients in private practice<br />

alongside my writing work."<br />

He also became a black belt and<br />

British Aikido Board Martial Arts<br />

Instructor. But it was poetry that<br />

Roger was eventually drawn back<br />

to in more recent times.<br />

"It was when Covid hit that got me<br />

back into poetry. The theatres had<br />

all closed down and opportunities<br />

in radio and animation had all dried<br />

up. It was during those times that<br />

I picked up my pen and started<br />

writing poetry again. There was one<br />

moment where I'd written a poem<br />

and realised that I still had it in me.<br />

It had never left."<br />

Today, Roger lives outside of<br />

Wales, but is still able to cast his<br />

eye on the place he still calls home.<br />

"I live overlooking the Severn<br />

Estuary and look over at the<br />

homeland. I still write daily,<br />

especially to my Roger Stennett<br />

Poetry Page on Facebook. I love<br />

people<br />

to write about people, about life,<br />

about nature. They're the things that<br />

have been important to me and still<br />

are.<br />

"History and conflict has often<br />

been a theme of my work too. One<br />

work of mine is called Out of the<br />

Sun and as part of the research,<br />

I spent time with fighter pilots,<br />

listening to their stories. My Dad<br />

was a pilot so I spent a lot of my<br />

time in the air but for this script, I<br />

spent 8 hours sitting alone in an<br />

idle B17 bomber. It was incredible to<br />

absorb the plane's silent and untold<br />

tales."<br />

"As for the future, my creative<br />

genes have also been passed<br />

down to my son Sam, who plays<br />

in the gypsy jazz quartet, The<br />

Schmoozenbergs (www.schmusic.<br />

co.uk)," he adds.<br />

His story told, Roger stands and<br />

unfurls from the sofa. He picks up<br />

his bag and bids his farewell.<br />

"It's good being home," he smiles.<br />

"I have a few friends I need to go<br />

visit before heading back over the<br />

bridge," he says, and disappears out<br />

into the summer sunshine.<br />

Like the smudges of cream still<br />

smeared inside his empty hot<br />

chocolate mug, Roger's left a mark<br />

on a place he is still proud to call<br />

‘home’.<br />

Roger's latest book, Cloud Cuckoo<br />

Land is available in book shops or<br />

anothersmallpress.net priced £12.99.<br />

His other book 'Forty Poems For<br />

Dylan Thomas’ is available from<br />

www.candyjarbooks.co.uk<br />

Roger's work has been heavily influenced by the Welsh poet, Dylan Thomas<br />

29


city life<br />

market Day<br />

Cardiff Market is receiving a facelift this summer. Here's the history<br />

of the famous venue that's served the city for over a century<br />

Cardiff Central Market, a<br />

bustling hub located in the<br />

heart of our capital, is steeped<br />

in history and tradition. An emblem<br />

of Cardiff’s rich heritage, the market<br />

has been an integral part of city life<br />

for over a century, adapting and<br />

thriving through various economic<br />

and social changes.<br />

The history of Cardiff Market<br />

begins in the 18th century when<br />

the site was an open-air farmers'<br />

market. As Cardiff evolved into an<br />

industrial powerhouse during the<br />

19th century, largely due to the coal<br />

and iron industries, the demand<br />

for a more structured trading area<br />

grew. The development aimed to<br />

provide a permanent selling space<br />

that would support the increasing<br />

population brought in by the<br />

booming coal trade.<br />

In 1891, the Cardiff Central Market<br />

was officially established, housed<br />

in a grand Victorian structure<br />

designed by the Municipal<br />

Engineer, William Harpur. The<br />

building featured a striking glass<br />

roof supported by iron frames, a<br />

design that allowed natural light<br />

to flood into the market space<br />

beneath, illuminating the variety of<br />

30<br />

stalls. The architecture was not only<br />

functional, providing shelter and a<br />

well-lit environment for trade, but it<br />

also added a sense of grandeur and<br />

permanence to the market setting.<br />

The choice of location was<br />

strategic, situated near St. Mary<br />

Street and directly adjacent to<br />

the Hayes, an area known for its<br />

commerce. The market quickly<br />

became a central point for<br />

Cardiff’s citizens to purchase fresh<br />

produce, meats, fish, and a range of<br />

household goods. Over the years,<br />

it expanded to include vendors<br />

selling textiles, flowers, and other<br />

commodities, reflecting the diverse<br />

needs and tastes of the Cardiff<br />

Photo: M J Richardson


cardiff<br />

market<br />

has witnessed<br />

and withstood<br />

historical<br />

events<br />

population.<br />

The site was originally that of<br />

Cardiff gaol. This imposing prison<br />

housed a variety of offenders,<br />

reflecting the changing attitudes<br />

towards punishment and<br />

rehabilitation over the years. Initially<br />

known for its harsh conditions and<br />

strict discipline, the gallows were<br />

located on the site of the current<br />

St. Mary Street entrance of Cardiff<br />

Market, where Dic Penderyn was<br />

hanged on 13 August 1831.<br />

During the 20th century, Cardiff<br />

Market witnessed and withstood<br />

the impacts of significant historical<br />

events, including both World Wars.<br />

During these challenging times, the<br />

market remained a vital source of<br />

food and goods for the residents<br />

of Cardiff. It was during the postwar<br />

era that the market truly<br />

cemented its role as a community<br />

hub, providing not only essential<br />

goods but also a sense of normalcy<br />

and continuity amidst the changing<br />

external conditions. Since 1975,<br />

the building has been listed and is<br />

currently Grade II.<br />

The latter part of the 20th century<br />

and the early 21st century brought<br />

new challenges, particularly from<br />

the rise of supermarkets and<br />

online shopping. However, Cardiff<br />

Market adapted by diversifying<br />

its offerings and enhancing the<br />

shopping experience. Today, it not<br />

only serves traditional products<br />

but also features a range of<br />

international cuisine, artisan crafts,<br />

and unique gift items. The market<br />

has embraced a more modern<br />

retail approach while maintaining<br />

the historic charm and architectural<br />

beauty that have long defined it.<br />

In 1980, a plaque was placed at<br />

the St. Mary Street entrance to the<br />

market by the National Union of<br />

Mineworkers to commemorate Dic<br />

Penderyn's death.<br />

In recent years, there has been<br />

a growing recognition of the<br />

importance of sustainability and<br />

supporting local economies. Cardiff<br />

Market has played a key role in<br />

this movement, with consumers<br />

increasingly turning to local<br />

vendors for fresh, locally-sourced<br />

products. This shift has helped<br />

to reinvigorate the market and<br />

underscore its relevance in today’s<br />

retail landscape.<br />

This summer, a renovation<br />

project worth £6.5 million is set<br />

to enhance the market, with work<br />

commencing in the summer.<br />

Despite the construction, the<br />

market will continue operations.<br />

For approximately 12 weeks,<br />

stallholders will be relocated to<br />

temporary units situated in The<br />

Hayes, right outside the market.<br />

The refurbishment plan includes<br />

the installation of a dining area that<br />

can accommodate 70 people, and<br />

the restoration of the roof and the<br />

market's original Victorian windows.<br />

Additionally, the traditional<br />

entrances on Trinity Street and St<br />

Mary Street, along with the original<br />

stalls, will be refurbished. Upgrades<br />

will also be made to the Victorianera<br />

drainage system. Replacement<br />

of glazing and tiles, along with<br />

repairs to the H Samuel market<br />

clock, are also planned. Lastly,<br />

the market will benefit from the<br />

addition of a new room dedicated<br />

to activities and education.<br />

This follows a £2.1m grant from the<br />

National Lottery Heritage Fund. The<br />

aim of the restoration is to futureproof<br />

the market, and to continue<br />

offering the diverse goods and the<br />

fostering of community connections<br />

that have taken place since the<br />

market first opened its doors.<br />

Cardiff Market is home to a diverse range of stalls<br />

31


history<br />

the old deri mill<br />

Mills around <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> were quite commonplace during the 1800s.<br />

Nigel Lewis revisits some of the more prominent ones<br />

By Nigel Lewis<br />

In the last issue of <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> <strong>Living</strong>,<br />

we looked at Beulah Corner and<br />

what a difference 180-odd years<br />

had made since the time of the<br />

parish Tithe Map.<br />

If you remember, I’d produced a<br />

map showing how rural the area<br />

was c.1875. It showed a meandering<br />

and timeless stream and the<br />

junction of a couple of rural tracks<br />

(hardly roads as we might know<br />

them). On the Tithe Map a few years<br />

earlier, the ancient ford (called<br />

Rhydwaedlyd) had been replaced<br />

by a simple humpback bridge<br />

leading north to the Deri and then<br />

by 1875, a ‘new’ shallower bridge<br />

had been constructed, with the<br />

stream diverted.<br />

There were a few scattered<br />

cottages and one or two larger<br />

houses. The first iteration of Beulah<br />

Chapel was there, and of course<br />

there were the ancient farmhouses,<br />

32<br />

but they were spread over the area.<br />

I’ve produced another map, also<br />

dated c.1875, just north-east of<br />

Beulah Corner, showing an old mill.<br />

There’s a tree-lined track off Rhydy-Walla<br />

(later renamed Beulah<br />

Road) leading to a mill. This track is<br />

now Heol-y-Felin.<br />

Just like Beulah Corner, the whole<br />

area was incredibly rural, with lots<br />

of fields. There were a few cottages<br />

and then a grander house called<br />

Ty’n-y-Coed. The parish boundary<br />

with Llanishen ran haphazardly<br />

across the area. In fact, it looks as<br />

though it ran right through Ty’ny-Coed;<br />

so apart from perhaps a<br />

living room and a bedroom, most<br />

of the house would have been in<br />

Llanishen parish! Its fields certainly<br />

were. Then there was the mill, a<br />

millpond, and a pub.<br />

The stream, Nantwaedlyd<br />

meandered as it always did, but<br />

a millrace had been constructed<br />

(quite possibly as far back as the<br />

17th century), diverting some of the<br />

stream water into the millpond. By<br />

1840 and the Tithe Map, the mill<br />

would have already been very old.<br />

At the time, it was called ‘Crofft-y-<br />

Felin’ and was owned by Mrs Rachel<br />

Lewis of Deri Farm.<br />

The fields of Deri Farm seem<br />

almost to wrap the mill, with a few<br />

more fields to the south.<br />

The mill, Crofft-y-Felin, was the<br />

largest building around (probably<br />

bigger than Ty’n-y-Coed), with the<br />

large millpond adjacent. Passing<br />

through the mill, water from the<br />

millpond was discharged via a<br />

‘tailrace’ back into Nantwaedlyd,<br />

just about where All Saints Church<br />

is today. There was also an overflow,<br />

to prevent the millpond from<br />

overtopping.<br />

So, what did the mill look like?<br />

We’ll never know for certain, but<br />

there is help from John Constable’s<br />

well-known painting ‘The Haywain’.<br />

Painted in 1821, Flatford Mill and<br />

Willie Lott’s cottage might well be<br />

contemporary with the <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

Sketches: Nigel Lewis


mill.<br />

My sketch shows what Crofft-y-<br />

Felin/Deri Mill might have looked<br />

like back then. Looking from the<br />

east over the millpond, was an<br />

undershot waterwheel (where the<br />

water passed under the wheel)<br />

into the old mill building. Almost<br />

certainly built from local stone<br />

with thick walls, the mill possibly<br />

had a thatched roof and all sorts<br />

of outbuildings, constructed and<br />

altered over many years.<br />

There was another local mill at<br />

the time, Felin-Fach (Little Mill)<br />

in Whitchurch village. This mill<br />

took advantage of the sloping<br />

ground there and had an overshot<br />

waterwheel. Water passed over the<br />

top of this wheel with greater power.<br />

As a result, Felin Fach was probably<br />

more efficient than the older Deri<br />

Mill.<br />

In the 1861 census (just 14 years<br />

before this map and sketch), there<br />

were five families shown living at<br />

Crofft-y-Felin/Deri Mill. They may<br />

not all have been living in the mill<br />

itself, some may have been in the<br />

adjacent cottages:<br />

Morgan Salathiel, age 46, was<br />

the miller, living with his wife and<br />

two adult children, who probably<br />

helped in the mill. William Howell,<br />

age 44, was a mason, living with<br />

his wife and two young children.<br />

Thomas, age 73, was an agricultural<br />

worker with his wife and two adult<br />

children (the son was blind). William<br />

Llewellyn (spelt differently from<br />

The Deri farmhouse (date unknown)<br />

Thomas Llewelin), was 23, with his<br />

young wife. And then there was<br />

Evan Evans, age 39, who was a<br />

cooper, living with his wife and three<br />

young children. Counting them all,<br />

there were 19 people living in and<br />

around the mill!<br />

In addition, there were another<br />

five families living in other cottages<br />

nearby, so around Crofft-y-Felin, it<br />

was quite a community. Everyone<br />

would have known everyone else!<br />

And then there was the pub. It<br />

wasn’t there in 1840, but the narrow<br />

strip of land that would eventually<br />

become the Butcher’s Arms was<br />

owned by George Lewis. Was he<br />

related to Rachel at Deri Farm?<br />

Interestingly, George wasn’t there<br />

for the next census, but a George<br />

Lewis had become the landlord of<br />

the Three Elms pub on Whitchurch<br />

Common. Might he be the same<br />

man?<br />

By 1861, Isaac Richards, age 39,<br />

who was a butcher, was living in an<br />

un-named local public house. Isaac<br />

had a wife and young daughter<br />

living with him, and also Jane<br />

Salathiel, age 17, from Deri Mill. I<br />

wonder whether she was working at<br />

the pub.<br />

By the time of the next census,<br />

and this map, the Butcher’s Arms<br />

had been named and established.<br />

The mill, millpond, and cottages<br />

are all gone now, replaced by<br />

modern houses. There’s only a<br />

plaque on a garden wall nearby,<br />

acknowledging the story.<br />

Even the Butcher’s Arms has been<br />

rebuilt a few times. But that’s a story<br />

for another day!<br />

Nigel Lewis is a member of AWEN@<br />

thelibrary (awen.cymru@gmail.com)<br />

33


culture<br />

International<br />

Velvet<br />

Wales has always been a land of song but back in the 1990s, the<br />

country rode the crest of a musical wave that shook the world<br />

By Neil Collins<br />

‘Every day when I wake up, I thank<br />

the Lord I’m Welsh…’<br />

There’s no song that epitomises<br />

1990s Wales quite like Catatonia’s<br />

‘International Velvet’. Yet at the start<br />

of the decade, such a lyric was<br />

inconceivable.<br />

Back then, Cymru was anything<br />

but cool. Tom Jones, Shirley Bassey,<br />

Shakin’ Stevens, and Bonnie Tyler<br />

may have been mega-selling pop<br />

acts, but what did Wales have to<br />

offer the alternative music fan?<br />

Within a few short years though,<br />

an explosion of bands including<br />

Manic Street Preachers, Super Furry<br />

Animals, Stereophonics, Gorky’s<br />

Zygotic Mynci, 60 Ft. Dolls, Feeder,<br />

and of course, Catatonia, erupted<br />

from this quaint land of harps and<br />

choirs. By its release in 1998, their<br />

album (also named) International<br />

Velvet not only topped the UK<br />

charts, but cast a jealous eye from<br />

across the world onto Wales.<br />

34<br />

No longer the butt of music press<br />

jokes, this new generation of Welsh<br />

talent was releasing No. 1 records<br />

and celebrating with huge gigs.<br />

Simultaneously, stars like Catherine<br />

Zeta-Jones, Rhys Ifans, Colin<br />

Jackson, and Joe Calzaghe were<br />

becoming household names. This<br />

rise in Welsh celebrity coincided<br />

with an increasing pride and<br />

respect for Cymraeg following the<br />

Welsh Language Act 1993, which<br />

put Welsh on an equal footing to<br />

English.<br />

Plus, Wales was now ready to<br />

begin governing itself. After the<br />

devastating defeats of the past,<br />

devolution was achieved with a<br />

‘Yes’ vote at the 1997 referendum<br />

along with the creation of a National<br />

Assembly for Wales two years later.<br />

The chorus of ‘International Velvet’<br />

typifies that seismic shift in the<br />

nation’s confidence – a feel-good<br />

factor encapsulating music, culture,<br />

sport, language, and politics.<br />

The incredible success of Welsh<br />

music in the second half of the ’90s<br />

was unprecedented, but it was the<br />

groundwork spanning the previous<br />

ten years that made it all possible.<br />

Bubbling away under the surface<br />

in the early ’90s was an intriguing<br />

Welsh-language scene, which led<br />

to the formation of not only two of<br />

Britain’s best bands of the era, but<br />

also two of the greatest Welsh acts<br />

of all time: Super Furry Animals and<br />

Catatonia.<br />

Each group was lambasted for<br />

making the decision to go big and<br />

sing in English, but both defied their<br />

critics while still embracing their<br />

bilingualism. By the millennium, the<br />

Super Furries released Mwng – the<br />

biggest-selling Welsh-language<br />

album of all time – while Catatonia’s<br />

song ‘International Velvet’ captured<br />

the best of both worlds.<br />

Its verses are delivered in Welsh<br />

before the euphoric, Englishlanguage<br />

chorus tells the world<br />

how proud they are of their<br />

national identity. The transition was


complete once crowds from across<br />

the border belted back the words<br />

with the same vigour. The Guardian<br />

wrote:<br />

‘It’s hard to decide which is the<br />

more improbable – a hall full of<br />

Londoners claiming to be Welsh, or<br />

a Welsh band inspiring such loyalty.’<br />

What is often lost in translation<br />

is its irony. It’s highly unlikely that<br />

Catatonia thanked the Lord they<br />

were Welsh on a daily basis, but<br />

now a band was happy with wearing<br />

its Welshness on its sleeve. As<br />

Cerys Matthews told the Daily<br />

Record:<br />

‘Hopefully, by now people realise<br />

that Wales is brimmed full of<br />

talent and we’re great people with<br />

massive brains.’<br />

Obviously, its chorus can be<br />

easily latched onto and enjoyed<br />

on a superficial level. Yet, it’s so<br />

over the top, how can it be viewed<br />

as anything other than ironic?<br />

Addressing narrow-minded views<br />

of the Welsh, the song’s opening<br />

line depicts stereotypes of a small,<br />

oppressed nation that has little to<br />

offer other than its skill for singing:<br />

‘Deffrwch Cymry cysglyd, Gwlad y<br />

Gan’ (‘Wake up, sleepy Wales, Land<br />

of Song’). It then continues with<br />

more overtly ironic jabs at Welsh<br />

cultural clichés and its history as a<br />

defeated nation.<br />

Therefore, the verses portray the<br />

decades of doubt Wales suffered,<br />

while Cerys’s triumphant howl in<br />

the chorus embodies the rebirth of<br />

a country at last comfortable in its<br />

own skin. When asked by Melody<br />

Maker if the song could become the<br />

new Welsh national anthem, Mark<br />

Roberts replied:<br />

‘Probably not. The melody’s too<br />

difficult to have them singing in the<br />

streets at closing time.’<br />

In ‘Blerwytirhwng?’ The Place of<br />

Welsh Pop Music, Sarah Hill said:<br />

'Catatonia intend to play in the<br />

mainstream culture, but on their<br />

own terms – they do not intend<br />

to conform to the British notion<br />

of what Welshness is, and their<br />

bilingualism is a statement of fact<br />

which needs no justification. That is<br />

‘English’, but not quite.’<br />

If ‘International Velvet’ wasn’t the<br />

national anthem, it was certainly<br />

emblematic of a modernised,<br />

progressive Wales at the end<br />

of the twentieth century, and its<br />

influence resonated in three key<br />

performances in 1999.<br />

At Port Talbot’s Margam Park in<br />

late May, over 30,000 screaming<br />

fans boomed out the chorus as one<br />

with as much gusto as a massed<br />

Welsh choir. Cerys confessed she<br />

Author photo: Catherine Sharples<br />

wept while singing it.<br />

The Margam Park performance<br />

of the song illustrated how much<br />

it had connected with the public.<br />

Days before though, there had<br />

been an overblown rendition<br />

that stripped away its irony and<br />

saw it delve into pantomime. On<br />

Wednesday, 26 May 1999, the<br />

Welsh Assembly was officially<br />

inaugurated with the Voices<br />

of a Nation concert. Top of the<br />

organisers’ list were Catatonia to<br />

sing a certain song to celebrate<br />

the occasion. If only the band<br />

weren’t so busy with preparations<br />

for their Home Internationals gigs in<br />

Llangollen.<br />

Instead, they granted the BBC<br />

permission for a stellar cast to<br />

perform their anthem. Enter stageleft<br />

Tom Jones, Shakin’ Stevens,<br />

Max Boyce, Bonnie Tyler, Charlotte<br />

Church, and Mike Peters et al.<br />

belting it out to a confused live<br />

audience, who couldn’t hear over<br />

fireworks. A song that was penned<br />

as a cheeky jibe had achieved its<br />

aim. As one unimpressed journalist<br />

wrote:<br />

‘The live TV concert to celebrate<br />

the opening of the Welsh Assembly<br />

was an unmitigated disaster…<br />

“International Velvet” should’ve<br />

been a rousing all-star finale,<br />

but instead it was unbelievably<br />

embarrassing for Wales.’<br />

Regardless, ‘International Velvet’<br />

was the perfect song to promote<br />

Wales on the world stage and it was<br />

everywhere from soundtracking<br />

sporting montages to being<br />

referenced by academics as<br />

personifying the transition in postreferendum<br />

optimism.<br />

This buoyant mood was<br />

perpetuated by the Rugby World<br />

Cup, which was hosted in Wales<br />

in 1999. The state-of-the-art<br />

Millennium Stadium was the ideal<br />

new home for Graham Henry’s<br />

exciting squad after a mid-decade<br />

period in the doldrums. Soon to<br />

be labelled ‘The Great Redeemer’,<br />

Henry masterminded a 29–19<br />

victory over South Africa to open<br />

the venue on 26 June 1999.<br />

Three months later, Catatonia were<br />

requested to start the Rugby World<br />

Cup opening ceremony. Forget the<br />

Top 5 singles ‘Mulder and Scully’<br />

and ‘Road Rage’; it was ‘International<br />

Velvet’ – an album track – that the<br />

organisers wanted to be part of a<br />

diverse ceremony celebrating the<br />

nation’s past, present, and future.<br />

With a huge banner declaring<br />

‘Croeso i Gymru’ (‘Welcome to<br />

Wales’), Cerys strutted onstage<br />

and unveiled a Welsh rugby shirt<br />

matched with sequins and sparkly<br />

eyeliner.<br />

Introducing Catatonia, presenter<br />

Alan Wilkins said:<br />

‘This is a momentous day in<br />

sporting history as the magnificent<br />

new Millennium Stadium in Cardiff<br />

hosts the opening ceremony of the<br />

fourth Rugby World Cup.<br />

‘A new spirit in Wales, a new<br />

vibrancy, a new energy, a country<br />

acclaimed as the ‘Land of Song’.<br />

The Welsh love to perform and no<br />

one more so than Catatonia, who<br />

kick us off with their massive hit,<br />

‘International Velvet’. Young, Welsh<br />

talent taking Wales into the new<br />

century.’<br />

With Manic Millennium providing<br />

an epic finale to the decade<br />

a couple of months later, the<br />

fascinating story of Wales in the<br />

’90s is a mind-blowing journey<br />

of growth and confidence that<br />

continues to inspire the country’s<br />

vibrant music scene today.<br />

Wales was a nation finally off its<br />

knees, and standing proudly. If it<br />

was a movie plot, it would all seem<br />

so far-fetched.<br />

Thankfully, it was all true.<br />

International Velvet: How Wales<br />

Conquered the 90s Charts is<br />

published 25th July from Calon,<br />

University of Wales Press.<br />

Featuring fresh analysis and<br />

new interviews, the book charts<br />

how ‘Cool Cymru’ won over the<br />

masses and shows how it inspired<br />

the still-vibrant Welsh music<br />

scene into the 21st century and<br />

beyond.<br />

Born and bred in Whitchurch,<br />

the book's author, Neil Collins<br />

is a writer, former WalesOnline<br />

journalist, and co-host of the<br />

Welsh Music Podcast.<br />

35


gardens<br />

Herb<br />

garden<br />

Nothing beats cooking with home-grown herbs so here are<br />

some simple steps to get your own herb garden started<br />

Why grow<br />

garden herbs?<br />

Growing herbs at home offers a<br />

range of benefits that can enhance<br />

your daily life in various different<br />

ways.<br />

To start, cultivating herbs at<br />

home provides a convenient<br />

and sustainable source of fresh,<br />

flavourful ingredients for your<br />

culinary creations. Having a<br />

selection of herbs such as basil,<br />

rosemary, mint, and thyme at<br />

your fingertips not only elevates<br />

the taste of your dishes but also<br />

ensures that you have access to<br />

high-quality, organic herbs free<br />

from pesticides and preservatives.<br />

Herbs are not just tasty additions<br />

to your meals; they also offer a<br />

range of health benefits. Many<br />

herbs are rich in essential nutrients,<br />

antioxidants, and medicinal<br />

properties that can support your<br />

overall well-being. For example,<br />

herbs like thyme and oregano<br />

are known for their antimicrobial<br />

36<br />

properties, while mint and basil<br />

can aid in digestion and alleviate<br />

stomach discomfort. By growing<br />

these healthful herbs at home, you<br />

can incorporate them into your<br />

diet and harness their beneficial<br />

properties.<br />

Additionally, nurturing herbs at<br />

home can be a therapeutic and<br />

rewarding experience. The act of<br />

tending to plants, watching them<br />

grow, and eventually harvesting<br />

their aromatic leaves can be a<br />

calming and grounding practice. It<br />

allows you to connect with nature,<br />

reduce stress, and foster a sense of<br />

accomplishment as you witness the<br />

fruits of your hard work flourish.<br />

Growing herbs at home also<br />

promotes sustainability and reduces<br />

your carbon footprint. By cultivating<br />

herbs indoors or in a small outdoor<br />

garden, you minimise the need for<br />

store-bought herbs that are often<br />

packaged in plastic and transported<br />

long distances, contributing to<br />

environmental pollution.<br />

Cultivating herbs at home then is<br />

a fulfilling and practical endeavour<br />

that not only enhances the flavour<br />

of your meals but also promotes<br />

well-being, sustainability, and<br />

a deeper connection to nature.<br />

Whether you are an experienced<br />

gardener or a novice with a green<br />

thumb, growing herbs at home is<br />

a rewarding and enriching activity<br />

worth pursuing.<br />

What herbs are<br />

best to grow?<br />

Five herbs - basil, mint, parsley,<br />

rosemary, and thyme - are popular<br />

choices for home gardeners due to<br />

their versatility, culinary uses, and<br />

relatively easy care requirements.<br />

Whether you're a seasoned<br />

gardener or a beginner, cultivating<br />

these herbs at home can<br />

enhance your cooking, promote<br />

sustainability, and provide a<br />

rewarding connection to nature.<br />

Basil is a beloved herb known<br />

for its bright green leaves and<br />

distinct aroma. It is a staple in<br />

Italian cuisine and pairs well with<br />

tomatoes, mozzarella, and pasta<br />

dishes. Basil thrives in warm, sunny<br />

conditions and is relatively easy to<br />

grow indoors or outdoors. Regular<br />

harvesting promotes bushier<br />

growth, making it a rewarding herb<br />

for home gardeners.<br />

Mint is a<br />

refreshing<br />

herb with<br />

a variety<br />

of culinary<br />

uses, from<br />

flavouring<br />

beverages<br />

like mojitos<br />

and teas to


How to feed a herb garden<br />

Feeding your herb garden is essential for ensuring healthy growth and optimal<br />

flavour in your herbs.<br />

Incorporating organic matter such as compost or well-rotted manure into the<br />

soil can provide essential nutrients to your herbs and improve soil structure.<br />

Organic matter helps retain moisture, promotes beneficial soil microbes, and<br />

enhances overall plant health.<br />

Using a balanced fertiliser with equal parts nitrogen, phosphorus, and<br />

potassium can also supplement your herb garden with essential nutrients for<br />

vigorous growth and robust flavour. Look for a fertiliser specifically formulated<br />

for herbs or vegetables and follow the instructions for application rates. Liquid<br />

fertilisers, such as fish emulsion or seaweed extract, can be applied to herb<br />

plants during the growing season to provide a quick nutrient boost. These<br />

promote healthy foliage and strong root development.<br />

adding a burst of<br />

freshness to salads and desserts.<br />

Parsley is a versatile herb that<br />

adds a pop of colour and flavour to<br />

a wide range of dishes. There are<br />

two main types of parsley: curly<br />

leaf and flat-leaf (Italian) parsley.<br />

Flat-leaf parsley is favoured for<br />

its robust flavour, while curly leaf<br />

parsley is often used as a garnish.<br />

Parsley is a biennial herb that<br />

grows well in containers or garden<br />

beds with rich, well-draining soil.<br />

Rosemary is a fragrant herb<br />

with needle-like leaves that add<br />

a savoury note to roasted meats,<br />

vegetables, and bread. It thrives in<br />

sunny locations with well-draining<br />

soil and prefers drier conditions,<br />

making it a low-maintenance herb<br />

for home cultivation. Rosemary can<br />

be grown in containers or planted<br />

directly in the ground and is known<br />

for its resilience and long lifespan.<br />

Lastly, thyme is a versatile herb<br />

with a subtle, earthy flavour that<br />

complements a wide range of<br />

dishes, including soups, stews, and<br />

roasted meats. Thyme is a hardy<br />

herb that thrives in well-draining<br />

soil and full sun, making it an<br />

excellent choice for both indoor<br />

and outdoor herb gardens.<br />

How to harvest<br />

herbs<br />

Harvesting herbs at the right time<br />

and in the correct manner can<br />

maximise their flavour and yield.<br />

The timing of herb harvest is<br />

crucial for optimal flavour and<br />

potency. Most herbs are at their<br />

best flavour and aroma when<br />

they are harvested just before<br />

they flower. It's recommended<br />

to harvest herbs in the morning<br />

after the dew has dried but before<br />

the midday sun evaporates the<br />

essential oils.<br />

Use sharp, clean scissors or<br />

pruning shears to harvest herbs.<br />

Avoid tearing or crushing the<br />

leaves, as this can damage the<br />

plant and reduce its overall<br />

health. Make clean cuts close to<br />

a leaf node to encourage<br />

new growth and maintain<br />

the plant's shape.<br />

When harvesting herbs,<br />

focus on picking the outer<br />

leaves or stems first,<br />

leaving the inner growth<br />

to continue developing.<br />

For leafy herbs like<br />

basil and mint, pinch off<br />

individual leaves or small<br />

sprigs. For woody herbs<br />

like rosemary and thyme,<br />

snip the stems just above<br />

a set of leaves.<br />

Regular harvesting<br />

promotes bushier<br />

growth and encourages<br />

continuous production<br />

of fresh leaves. Avoid<br />

stripping the plant of all<br />

its leaves at once, as this<br />

can weaken the plant<br />

and hinder future growth.<br />

Instead, harvest small amounts<br />

frequently to keep the plant<br />

thriving.<br />

To preserve herbs for later use,<br />

you can air dry them by hanging<br />

small bunches upside down<br />

in a dry, well-ventilated area<br />

away from direct sunlight. Once<br />

dried, store the herbs in airtight<br />

containers in a cool, dark place<br />

to maintain their flavour and<br />

potency. Alternatively, herbs can<br />

be frozen, chopped, and stored in<br />

ice cube trays or frozen in zip-top<br />

bags for longer-term storage.<br />

For perennial herbs like oregano,<br />

chives, and thyme, it's essential<br />

to prune them regularly to<br />

encourage new growth and<br />

prevent them from becoming<br />

woody. Trim back leggy growth<br />

and harvest mature stems to keep<br />

the plant vibrant and productive.<br />

37


SSSSH<br />

Ssssh.<br />

The woodland is still.<br />

Its quiet tones shimmer<br />

as bulbs push through the earth<br />

and bluebells nod their heads,<br />

glorying in soft breezes<br />

gently passing by.<br />

An aged tree lies where it has fallen,<br />

helpless victim of a gale’s fury.<br />

With head buried in decaying leaves<br />

and roots facing the sky,<br />

it remains immobile, neglected,<br />

anchored in damp earth.<br />

Above it, a youthful green canopy dances and sings<br />

heralding with joy the lighter nights and summer days.<br />

Sssh.<br />

All is still.<br />

But wait…<br />

There is movement - a flowery skirt,<br />

scarcely visible against this woodland’s luscious backdrop,<br />

a tiny concentrated face,<br />

arms balancing, foot over foot,<br />

foot over foot, fingers tremble.<br />

The forest holds its breath.<br />

A squeal of joy,<br />

a radiant smile,<br />

victorious hands punch the air.<br />

And the fallen tree - ugly and bare<br />

basks in the knowledge<br />

that he, of all the trees in the forest,<br />

is the chosen one - a child’s delight.<br />

Sue Chalkley<br />

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

38<br />

Seasonal<br />

Poems<br />

HERE IN THIS<br />

GARDEN<br />

Here in this garden the pleasant<br />

sunlight rays<br />

Fall on blooms that hang from<br />

ancient wall<br />

And gently flow into a coloured<br />

maze<br />

There scents to creatures reach<br />

that heed its call,<br />

How like them I am when within<br />

your gaze<br />

As under your charm I quickly fall<br />

And voices turn to a murmured<br />

haze<br />

So great it does my soul enthral,<br />

And so it has been for many days<br />

As do I walk from hall to hall<br />

Though would I for your presence<br />

praise<br />

And wish of your time so ever<br />

small,<br />

So I do miss thee that my heart<br />

does ache<br />

And would I willingly your hand<br />

to take.<br />

David Morris<br />

Llandaff


poetry<br />

Poems penned by the local community<br />

CHARITY SHOPS ARE<br />

FOR ALL SEASONS<br />

Like a lucky dip, mid-day addictive,<br />

(though not a dupe, a dab hand at<br />

'Bric-a-Brac'), a whack whackily exacting,<br />

(but for more than a 'bob')<br />

We imbibe these unembittered lives<br />

(our pride tried!) in overdue.<br />

We dive in, delve, deciding in an instant<br />

The standing of lustre jugs - distorted?<br />

Kokloma ware - a risky assortment;<br />

wary of coloured glass - too exhorted,<br />

and always scornful of what weighs in light.<br />

Right texture? (vexing if it's not)<br />

Gilding over bright? (too much excitement!)<br />

Do I want it? (Quite. It does invite.)<br />

Have I room? (secret heirlooms are not enough.)<br />

It might equate with 'stuff'. Tough.<br />

Why scoff? A treat is good. Adaptably.<br />

Adept, I've accepted it already. Renewed.<br />

I review 'a treat is good' (a dud for the befuddled)<br />

Shrewdly, I brood.<br />

Food for thought if bought. And I always do.<br />

Nigel Phillips<br />

Whitchurch<br />

ENDLESS MEADOWS<br />

Through fields of gold,<br />

the summer sun does dance,<br />

Soft whispers of the wind,<br />

a gentle trance.<br />

The meadow blooms<br />

with colours bright and fair,<br />

A symphony of life<br />

in perfumed air.<br />

Beneath my feet,<br />

the soft grass sighs and sways,<br />

Each step I take,<br />

a dance among the rays.<br />

Butterflies flit, their delicate wings unfurled,<br />

In this paradise, I feel the world.<br />

The buzzing bees hum a sweet melody,<br />

As I stroll through nature’s grand tapestry.<br />

The wildflowers bow in the warm breeze’s wake,<br />

Their beauty a gift for the heart to take.<br />

The sun caresses my skin with loving light,<br />

As day turns to dusk, a magical sight.<br />

The meadow whispers secrets of the past,<br />

A timeless moment, forever to last.<br />

In summer’s embrace,<br />

I find my true home,<br />

A place of peace where my spirit can roam.<br />

Among these meadows,<br />

I find my true rest,<br />

In nature’s arms,<br />

I am truly blessed.<br />

Melissa Francis<br />

Llandaff<br />

39


Join us for<br />

our next<br />

events<br />

Llys Herbert care home<br />

Lisvane<br />

Friendship café<br />

First Wednesday of each month<br />

2pm - 4pm<br />

Goldies Cymru sing-a-long<br />

Last Wednesday of each month<br />

10.30am - 11.30am<br />

The Big Care UK sports day<br />

Wednesday 24th July, 2pm - 5pm<br />

Trusted to care.<br />

To attend please call<br />

029 2168 2828 or email<br />

jenny.ashton@careuk.com


Victoria Fearn Gallery is celebrating 20 years in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> this year.<br />

Here's how the popular art gallery has remained a local favourite<br />

<strong>Rhiwbina</strong> village has seen a lot<br />

come and go in the last two<br />

decades. But one permanent<br />

fixture that has always been a firm<br />

favourite of locals is Victoria Fearn<br />

Gallery.<br />

The gallery is celebrating 20<br />

years in the village this year, an<br />

achievement made all the more<br />

remarkable given the challenges<br />

that have faced small businesses in<br />

the last few years.<br />

Owner Victoria Matia told <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

<strong>Living</strong>:<br />

"We are celebrating twenty<br />

years in business this year and<br />

we recently held our Summer<br />

Exhibition preview, but it was also a<br />

birthday party to celebrate 20 years<br />

in the village. It was held on the 21st<br />

This is a sponsored feature<br />

June, which was the exact day we<br />

opened twenty years ago. We had a<br />

wonderful weekend and I am truly<br />

grateful of the support over the<br />

years to keep Victoria Fearn Gallery<br />

in <strong>Rhiwbina</strong> village."<br />

Specialising in original artworks<br />

and contemporary British crafts, the<br />

gallery has an excellent collection<br />

of gifts to suit all tastes at affordable<br />

prices.<br />

"I work closely with our artists to<br />

bring a uniquely curated selection<br />

of contemporary art to the gallery<br />

featuring well known Welsh artists<br />

and top British designers. The<br />

gallery acts as an agent for the<br />

artists and these handmade items<br />

remain the property of the maker<br />

until sold."<br />

Art exhibitions change frequently,<br />

featuring numerous Welsh artists<br />

such as Lynne Cartlidge, David<br />

Knight, Chris Neale, and many<br />

more. "Our exhibition space is<br />

constantly changing as items sell<br />

and we introduce new pieces<br />

and makers to the gallery. Our<br />

website features a selection of the<br />

wonderful gifts we offer too," says<br />

Victoria.<br />

As well as a wide variety of<br />

paintings, the gallery also has<br />

a great selection of jewellery,<br />

ceramics, hand blown glass,<br />

books, leather accessories, textiles,<br />

sculpture, and lots more.<br />

"This year, we've got fabulous<br />

Kimono gowns from Powder as part<br />

of our Summer 2024 collection. Also<br />

in stock are shoppers' favourites,<br />

including Inis. All of their body care<br />

products feature skin restoring<br />

ingredients from the sea – seaweed<br />

extracts and sea minerals – that<br />

can help soothe, hydrate, and<br />

rejuvenate the skin. If you're not<br />

going on holiday this year, our<br />

Inis products will help you feel<br />

connected to the sea."<br />

The gallery will make the most of<br />

their achievements this season:<br />

"Our summer exhibition will<br />

continue until the end of August<br />

but keeps changing as we sell<br />

and introduce new pieces," adds<br />

Victoria.<br />

A: 6B Heol-y-Deri, <strong>Rhiwbina</strong><br />

T: 029 2052 0884<br />

W: www.victoriafearngallery.wales<br />

41


Summer<br />

Sizzlers<br />

Summer is a time to dine al fresco. Fire up the barbeque, pour yourself<br />

a drink, and enjoy these gorgeous seasonal recipes<br />

BBQ Courgettes<br />

500g thick Greek yoghurt<br />

2 lemons, both juiced<br />

zest of one lemon<br />

4 tbsp olive oil<br />

4 cloves garlic<br />

2 red chillies, thinly sliced<br />

handful of oregano leaves<br />

2 courgettes, cut into diagonal slices<br />

2 yellow courgettes, cut into diagonal slices<br />

☐<br />

☐ Mix the yoghurt, half of the lemon zest<br />

and juice, some salt and pepper together,<br />

then place the mixture in the fridge to chill<br />

while you prepare the courgettes.<br />

☐ In a small pan, heat the olive oil, garlic,<br />

and chilli over a medium heat for 4-5<br />

minutes, or until the garlic is crispy. Remove<br />

the pan from the heat, stir in the oregano,<br />

season the mixture, and then add the<br />

remaining lemon zest and juice. Set to one<br />

side.<br />

☐ Prepare your barbeque with a high heat.<br />

Coat the courgette slices with a little oil<br />

and season generously. Grill the slices for<br />

3-4 minutes on each side, or until they are<br />

charred, in batches if needed. Spread the<br />

Greek yogurt on a large platter or plate.<br />

☐ Arrange the courgettes on the plate.<br />

Drizzle over the warm dressing and garnish<br />

with more oregano leaves, sliced garlic,<br />

and chilli.<br />

42


Loaded hot<br />

dog specials<br />

100g thinly sliced white onion<br />

1 tbsp BBQ sauce<br />

200g all purpose flour<br />

oil for frying<br />

4 hot dogs<br />

4 hot dog buns<br />

2 tbsp mayonnaise<br />

1 tbsp apple cider vinegar<br />

1/2 tsp garlic powder<br />

salt and pepper<br />

300g finely shredded red cabbage<br />

food<br />

☐ Mix the onions with a tablespoon<br />

of BBQ sauce. Marinate for at<br />

least 20 minutes. Whisk together<br />

mayonnaise, apple cider vinegar,<br />

garlic powder, salt and pepper. Pour<br />

over shredded cabbage and toss to<br />

combine. Cover and pop in fridge.<br />

☐ Place flour in a resealable plastic<br />

bag, add in onions and shake to coat.<br />

☐ Heat oil in a skillet over medium<br />

heat. Once hot, remove onions from<br />

flour and shake off any excess. Fry<br />

in hot oil until golden brown and<br />

crunchy. Sprinkle with salt.<br />

☐ Cook hot dogs thoroughly.<br />

☐ Assemble hot dogs, spooning slaw<br />

all over and onions on top.<br />

The Ultimate<br />

Burger<br />

For the burger:<br />

1kg of beef brisket<br />

250g of bacon<br />

2 tsp ginger powder<br />

2 tsp garlic powder<br />

2 tsp of onion powder<br />

ground black pepper to taste<br />

pinch of sumac<br />

salt to taste<br />

For the bun:<br />

brioche burger buns<br />

sliced Monterey Jack cheese<br />

grilled bacon<br />

fresh tomato, sliced<br />

red onion, sliced<br />

lettuce<br />

any other condiments<br />

☐ Grind the raw beef and the bacon<br />

together in a meat grinder. If you don't<br />

have one, a butcher can do this.<br />

☐ Mix the meat mixture with the<br />

spices in a large bowl, being careful<br />

not to handle the meat too much.<br />

☐ Cover the mixture with clingfilm<br />

and rest in the fridge overnight.<br />

☐ The next day, make balls of meat<br />

from 150g off the mixture and gently<br />

pat down into burger patties.<br />

☐ Prepare your barbeque by lighting<br />

the charcoals. Wait until they have<br />

gone white before distributing them<br />

evenly throughout the pan.<br />

☐ To avoid the burgers sticking to<br />

your barbeque, rub raw onion over<br />

the griddle.<br />

☐ Grill the burgers to your liking, using<br />

a digital thermometer to make sure<br />

that they are cooked inside.<br />

☐ Assemble your bun, place the<br />

burger on top, and serve with<br />

condiments of your choice.<br />

43


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a summer's<br />

breeze<br />

He watched her from a<br />

distance, sitting on the old,<br />

wooden bench, her gaze<br />

switching between the view of<br />

Niagara Falls and the army of<br />

tourists that had descended upon<br />

her chosen spot.<br />

She had a serenity about her, the<br />

soft smile she offered to passersby<br />

causing many to pause and smile<br />

back. It was as though she was a<br />

moment of quiet for people, as they<br />

navigated the insanity of the area<br />

during summertime.<br />

Watching the breeze play with the<br />

greying strands framing her face,<br />

that same old feeling of familiarity<br />

and warmth squeezed his heart.<br />

She was the one that got away. The<br />

only one to consistently appear in<br />

his thoughts, the hint of promises<br />

that were never fulfilled. And<br />

46<br />

here she was, as though he had<br />

somehow manifested this moment.<br />

“Excuse me. Would you be able to<br />

take a photo for us?”<br />

His reverie was interrupted by a<br />

frazzled looking young mother in<br />

the throes of what appeared to be a<br />

birthday party from hell. There had<br />

to have been eighteen children in<br />

her care, with no other adults to be<br />

found.<br />

“Of course.” He smiled at her. “Why<br />

don’t we go over here where we can<br />

get a bit of the falls in the photo?<br />

I’m Ben, by the way.” He smiled<br />

reassuringly. “Are you handling this<br />

crew all on your own?” he asked. “I<br />

admit, I’m impressed.”<br />

The woman laughed. “My husband<br />

went and broke his leg while<br />

cleaning the gutters yesterday.<br />

Right before our daughter’s already<br />

planned, ready to be epic, party to<br />

beat all birthday parties.”<br />

“Ahh. The old fake cast routine. I’ve<br />

considered it many a time myself.”<br />

She threw her head back and<br />

laughed. “I didn’t think to check.”<br />

As she began to corral the kids<br />

kindly, but firmly into position, she<br />

asked over her shoulder, “Are you<br />

here on your own? I hope I’m not<br />

taking you away from something or<br />

someone important.”<br />

Ben’s eyes crinkled. “This will<br />

take no time at all. Besides, you’re<br />

a damsel in distress and my last<br />

name happens to be Knight.”<br />

She looked him up and down. He<br />

was probably in his fifties if the grey<br />

in his whiskers was anything to go<br />

by. And yes. She could picture him<br />

in chainmail, whisking a woman up<br />

onto his horse away from invaders.


“Well, Ben Knight. I’m Amanda<br />

Jones and I will be forever grateful<br />

for this.”<br />

He took the offered phone from<br />

her hands and began taking<br />

some shots. The one little girl was<br />

determined to go gold mining up<br />

her nose so he sang out, “Wave<br />

your hands in the air! And wave<br />

them like you just don’t care!”<br />

As if they had been<br />

choreographed, they proceeded<br />

to do just that. He quickly took<br />

some shots, switching it to video<br />

to capture the moment. He was<br />

just handing the phone back when<br />

he heard a lilting voice he had not<br />

heard in decades.<br />

“Ben? Is that really you?”<br />

He whipped around, narrowly<br />

missing tripping over his own feet.<br />

“Jennifer.”<br />

Sound, time, literally everything<br />

ceased to exist. Their eyes<br />

connecting made sure of that.<br />

She reached over and gently<br />

touched his cheek. “It has been too<br />

long.”<br />

He leaned into her touch, reaching<br />

to hold her hand in place along his<br />

jaw which was now clenching in<br />

emotion. “Yes,” was all he could get<br />

out.<br />

Amanda watched this reunion with<br />

great interest. If these two weren’t<br />

two halves to one soul, she would<br />

eat the entire SpongeBob birthday<br />

cake. She did a quick, “Ahem,”<br />

breaking the apparent spell. “I just<br />

wanted to say thank you for your<br />

help.”<br />

Her daughter reached over to pull<br />

on his shirt. “Me too,” the highpitched<br />

voice said politely.<br />

Ben crouched down and asked,<br />

“Are you the birthday girl?” An<br />

impish smile was her response. “I’m<br />

Jade and I’m eight.”<br />

Jennifer watched the exchange<br />

and could feel her heart swell. He<br />

had not changed a bit. Maybe a bit<br />

of grey in his hair and beard, but<br />

he could still capture the attention<br />

of every female in a ten-kilometre<br />

radius. There was a sincerity about<br />

him, plus a sense that he could<br />

capably handle anything that came<br />

his way.<br />

“Eight? Is that all? I would have<br />

guessed nine.”<br />

The girl proceeded to blush. Yes.<br />

He hadn’t changed a bit. Jennifer<br />

also crouched down. “Happy<br />

birthday to a very beautiful eightyear-old.”<br />

Amanda looked at them both.<br />

There was an energy that<br />

connected them. She was always<br />

able to pick up on these things<br />

and the feeling was particularly<br />

strong with these two. Something<br />

momentous was happening and<br />

she wanted to witness it. She<br />

nodded, making a snap decision.<br />

“Would you two like some birthday<br />

cake? It’s chocolate.”<br />

“And SpongeBob,” her daughter<br />

added.<br />

Ben and Jennifer exchanged<br />

a glance, smiling. “I do love<br />

chocolate,” she said.<br />

“And I’ve been mistaken for<br />

Squidward before.”<br />

Amanda snorted. “I highly doubt<br />

it, Sir Squidward.” She led them<br />

over to a group of picnic tables in<br />

the shade of some large oak trees,<br />

teal and gold balloons attached<br />

to the benches with a huge cake<br />

on display. A lone seagull had just<br />

been considering making a move<br />

but ten of the kids had charged,<br />

causing it to take off with a squawk.<br />

After introductions were made at<br />

the table, they proceeded to sing<br />

“Happy Birthday” and within minutes<br />

were all eating the delicious cake.<br />

“How do you two know each<br />

other?” Amanda didn’t beat around<br />

the bush.<br />

Ben paused. “Jennifer is the<br />

woman I should be spending the<br />

rest of my life with.”<br />

Jennifer gasped. “Ben! Take that<br />

back. You’re married.”<br />

Amanda raised an eyebrow. The<br />

plot had thickened. “I want to hear<br />

this story. And quickly while their<br />

mouths are full.”<br />

Ben looked at Jennifer and<br />

glanced over at the falls. “Did you<br />

know almost 700,000 gallons<br />

of water go over the falls in one<br />

second?” The mist was starting to<br />

make its way in their direction as the<br />

wind shifted across the horseshoeshaped<br />

falls.<br />

“I did not know that bit of trivia.”<br />

Amanda watched many expressions<br />

move across his face in rapid<br />

succession.<br />

“A lot can happen in one second.”<br />

He proceeded to tell the story<br />

of Ben and Jennifer. They met in<br />

university. Had always felt as if<br />

they had known each other. The<br />

attraction was instant and they had<br />

fallen deeply in love.<br />

“Deeply,” Jennifer agreed.<br />

But he screwed up. One night,<br />

he had too many beverages at<br />

the campus bar and woke up in<br />

someone else’s room.<br />

“And she was sure to send me<br />

photos.” Jennifer rolled her eyes.<br />

“Oh, no.” Amanda glared at Ben.<br />

“What were you thinking?”<br />

Ben looked shamefaced. “I didn’t<br />

even remember it, for what it's<br />

worth. And it turns out there was a<br />

reason for it.” He grimaced. “She had<br />

set the whole thing up to make it<br />

look like we had done the deed and<br />

I assumed we actually had.”<br />

“You still married her one year<br />

later.” Jennifer had flames shooting<br />

out of her green eyes. Gone was<br />

the calm demeanour, now replaced<br />

with pure, vibrating emotion.<br />

“You what?!” Amanda handed<br />

another piece of cake to Jennifer. “It<br />

was a mistake.”<br />

“Ben. You cannot say that.”<br />

“I can. We’re divorced now.”<br />

The silence stretched out. Jennifer<br />

turned to look into Ben’s eyes. “Why<br />

did you leave me? How could you<br />

do that to us? To what we were? To<br />

what might have been?”<br />

Amanda quickly handed out some<br />

sliced watermelon to the kids so<br />

she could help these two get things<br />

on the track she suspected they<br />

should be on.<br />

“Sometimes, it’s all about timing. It<br />

wasn’t your time. But here you are<br />

now. Two halves of one soul. I would<br />

stake my life on it. And the universe<br />

has brought you together at this<br />

moment for this second chance. It’s<br />

up to you what you do with it now.”<br />

She gave their hands a squeeze,<br />

walking away to play frisbee on the<br />

stretch of grass nearby.<br />

The mist enveloped them, washing<br />

away the angst of the past. And love<br />

was all that was left.<br />

“I have always loved you,” he said<br />

with tears in his eyes. He would<br />

never forgive himself for the pain<br />

he had caused her. “Not a day has<br />

gone by where I have not thought<br />

of you. In all these years.”<br />

“And I have always loved you.”<br />

She trembled. Was it possible they<br />

could finally get things right? Could<br />

she forgive him and move forward,<br />

confident he knew she had always<br />

been ‘the one’?<br />

He turned her towards him. “I<br />

watched you sitting over there,<br />

smiling at strangers, a calm in the<br />

storm of humanity, and I felt like<br />

I was home. You are, and have<br />

always been my home.”<br />

She began to weep quietly at the<br />

wasted years. “I’ve always been<br />

yours.”<br />

Lips connected and the world<br />

stopped turning for a moment, to<br />

allow these two some stolen time.<br />

For love will always find a way to<br />

bring a soul back together on a<br />

summer’s breeze.<br />

By Rose Barrett<br />

short story<br />

47


Unit 8, Fieldway, Heath<br />

Cardiff CF14 4HY<br />

02920 692690<br />

cardiffwindows.com

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