Ceri Shaw


 

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Blog

Day One - My Half Marathon Blog


By Ceri Shaw, 2012-03-31

Follow the whole nine yards here (a 95 part series) :- Half Marathon Blog

Why I am running:- West Coast Eisteddfod Bryn Seion Church

For details of how to sponsor see this post


The Background


As a new years resolution I undertook to quit smoking, give up my Friday night sixpack and run a half marathon at some point during the year. New Years Resolutions

Last week Gaabriel announced the date of my coming ordeal. Ceri's Going to Run A Marathon! OK she exaggerated a little, I'm only doing 13 miles

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The Blog


So how does this blog fit into the scheme of things I hear you ask? Well...I decided that the physical challenge wasn't enough so for the next 95 days I am going to blog every single day on the subject of running. That means i will have to think of 95 things to say about running between now and July 4th. Of course I'll throw in details here and there about our plans for this years West Coast Eisteddfod and there will be some talk of our local 128 year old Welsh church, Bryn Seion. I'm running to raise money for both.


But now as an extra incentive to sponsor you get the additional amusement of watching me struggle to find something new to say on the same topic every day for 3 months.

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SO...don't forget to tune in for tomorrow's thrilling instalment:- 'Day Two: Pheidippides - A Lousy PR Man!'

And now for the obvious video .... sorry couldn't resist

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A reminder from last month's winners post:- "As you may have noted from an earlier announcement we have transitioned to the weekly leaderboard for our monthly Top Blogger adjudication. Henceforth the winner will be decided on the basis of their ranking and points in the final weekly leaderboard of the month. Posts which were published in preceding months will be discounted. The reasons for this are twofold. Firstly the weekly leaderboards are much more responsive and competitive and secondly the monthly board has some strange quirks. In particular it insists on ranking a few ancient posts that have received no 'Likes' comments or recent traffic."

So without further ado here are this months winners:-

1. Lyn Mackay 58 points ( 38 ranking points plus 10 for quantity and 10 for 'traffic', Lyn has blogged consistently on the site this month and our log files indicate that her posts have been well received. View Lyn's blog on AC here )

2. Mona Everett 19 points ( 19 ranking points. View Mona's blog on AC here )

3. Jeff Phillips 16 points ( 16 ranking points. View Jeff's blog on AC here )

Fabulous digital prizes will be awarded to our three winners today and Lyn will receive a copy of Owen Sheers, 'White Ravens'. We will be announcing next months Top Blogger prize shortly. To view the current weekly leaderboard and peruse the rules of the competition go to this page

If you would like to congratulate our winners please feel free to do so in comments on this page


This Months Prize

Gwales Review :- " Aled Lewis Evans writes in both Welsh and English, and the pieces in this collection have all been adapted from the original Welsh, either by Martin Davis or by the author.

The collection opens with a series of stories about sad and sorry characters bored, ignored wife and mother of four, Sue, whose spirits and hair colour are temporarily lightened in response to the attentions of the local Casanova; homeless Harry, interminably snapping away with a camera that contains no film (we are pre-digital here); Gareth, the lonely radio presenter, wondering who will listen to him on Christmas day; and middle-aged Ruth throwing an attention-seeking tantrum that backfires on her. Is there anyone out there? Is anyone listening? Does anyone care? These are the questions that resound throughout, as Evanss characters convince themselves that they have either failed or been failed, and fall into the inevitable trap of anger and self-pity " read more

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Cymdeithas Madog News

We may be just a few weeks away from Cwrs y Ddinas Wyntog - The Windy City Course - in Elmhurst, Illinois, but it's not too late to sign up! Registration will stay open until July 1st, 2013 . Register online via our Cwrs Cymrae g 2013 page (click on left sidebar menu).

If you want to learn Welsh, or brush up on what you already know, with fun, like-minded people, now is the time! If you haven't attended one of our week-long Welsh language courses before, this short video perfectly captures the spirit of Cwrs Cymraeg. Click HERE to watch.

Please donot hesitate to reply with any questions.

Join our Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/cymdeithasmadog/

Follow us on Twitter: @CMadog

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This time it IS the whole of Samoa. Let's hope we get some payback

More background info here:- World Cup History Wales South Sea Jinx

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Things To Do In L.A.


By Ceri Shaw, 2011-05-03

As the West Coast Eisteddfod approaches we are aware that many people will be travelling from outside L.A. and indeed from outside the USA to attend this event. This is the first in an occasional informational series for first time visitors to L.A. Today we present a personal view with advice and recommendations from AmeriCymru member Margaret Lloyd Beckham .


Barnsdall Art Park viewed from the north Image via Wikipedia 1) Don't worry about earthquakes.

2) Getting around in LA is not difficult with Public Transit (or so my brother says). If you have a GPS device, take it with you, and set it for LA. There are no toll roads to worry about.

The Hollywood sign on Mount Lee in Griffith Pa... Image via Wikipedia

3) Griffith Park is just North of Barnsdall Park , where the WCE will be held. Several have voiced an interest in going there. It has the Gene Autry Museum, Train Town (you can ride the train there), a Zoo, and an Equestrian Park where you can ride horses. Along the South End of the Park, there is an area that reminds you of the "land that time forgot". There are huge, beautiful ferns, plenty of places to picnic, and beautiful scenery. A lot of people use this for birthday parties, and other family gatherings. It's quite beautiful.

View of the Hollywood Sign on Mount Lee in Los... Image via Wikipedia




4) The WCE site is also close to Hollywood and Vine, a very famous location. Don't bother trying to get up to the "Hollywood" sign, taking a "Hollywood" star tour, or buying star's maps. It's a waste of your money.

5) Investigate your hotel, motel or lodgings ahead of time. Don't pick some cut rate place just to save a dollar or two. Find a nice hotel and find out if you can make a deal with them. They are more likely to give a good rate, especiallyif you prepay. There are a lot of good hotels. We want you to be happy, not stuck in some awful place. By Sept., the tourists will be gone and there should be plenty of vacancies.

Griffith J Griffith statue in front of Griffit... Image via Wikipedia

6) Weather in LA will be about 60-75 degrees; it'sbeautiful weather. Youmay need a jacket in the mornings and evenings. It can get very cool due to the ocean breeze.

7) There are great restaurants in LA, and the prices will vary with how nice the restaurant is. We will be adding more information to this list as soon as we get it.

8) Some expressed a wish to go to San Francisco once the WCE concludes. Travel between 10 AM & 3PM so the traffic isn't so bad. A fun thing to do is drive up the PCH (Pacific Coast Hwy 1), which goes through Malibu, Point Magu, Zuma Beach, Ventura (for sport fishing), Santa Barbara (has a Marina and small public beach, you can also take a champagne cruise), Morro Bay (rock formation), Cambria (where the pines meet the sea), San Simeon (famous Hearst Castle), Big Sur, south of Carmel there is a Sea Otter Game Refuge, then Carmel (beautiful bay), Monterrey (larger bay and a famous Aquarium), Santa Cruz, San luis Obispo, then San Francisco. Once you get there, you won't want to leave. You may see dolphins, whales, & seals in different locations along the coast. There are lots of B and B's and hotels along the coast, and quirky hotel called Madonna near Cambria. Keep in mind that is can be cool in San Francisco (same latitute as England & N.. France).

Related articles

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Learn With Grandma

Member Valerie Wood-Gaiger author, grandmother and teacher recently won a contest to become one of two W-Icons, or spokespeople, for the British Women's Institute (WI). The Women's Institute is the largest voluntary organisation for women in the United Kingdom. The first British Women's Institute was formed at Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch, Anglesey, Wales, in 1915 and today the WI boasts more than 200,000 members.

Valerie lives in Myddfai, in the county of Carmarthenshire, in south Wales. Besides her work with the WI, Valerie is active in her community, enjoys walking with her dogs, is a great-grandmother, an author and one of the founders and operators of Grandmas Stories, a small publisher, through which she will be publishing a series of books on "on pan European prehistory".

You recently won a competition to become one of two W-Icons, how did you come to be in the competition and what does that mean for you?

I read about the competition in WI Life magazine, just before closing date, and thought I could have a go at that! Got my entry in one hour before Carmarthenshire WI Federation office closed for two weeks! I only applied the day before the competition closed, and before I knew it I found myself in the top ten. We then had two days ask people to vote for me. I live in Myddfai, where there are only about five computers, so I enlisted help from my grandchildren. I was amazed that I received votes from Ukraine to California, Latvia to Australia! I am thrilled that Wales has another winner. The judges actually decided to have two winners. The other one is Emma Cunningham, a 35 year old, from Hampshire. Between the two of us we illustrate the wide age range of women involved with the modern WI.

Many people may not be aware that as well as being fun, the WI is, always was, a campaigning organisation. A current campaign is against slavery in the West. I've just returned from a conference in the Ukraine on language learning where I was the keynote speaker. While there I was able to speak to a lot of students and took the opportunity to warn them to thoroughly check before accepting jobs promised to them in the West. Usually promised jobs are bona-fide offers but there are cases, even here in Wales, where young women, have had their passports, money & mobile phones taken from them and they are forced into prostitution. W.I. is much more than simply "jam and Jerusalem" [jam-making competitions and "Jerusalem," a song many WI chapters sing to open their meetings]. We are encouraging younger women to join and it is an excellent organisation for those women who are recently retired. When retirement comes, work networks can be lost but membership of the WI can provide the opportunity to establish a whole new network of friends.

I am increasingly being asked to give talks to WI, U3A, Rotary (I am a Paul Harris Fellow, which should impress any Rotarian's reading) which I like doing. The next conference I will speak at is on eLearning in Berlin. I will introduce Inter-Generational eLearning. It is absurd that my 10-year-old grandson can produce a PowerPoint presentation and I can't. We older people can learn from the young and we have lots of skills to pass on we need to do so in a modern technological way.

How did you come to be involved in the WI?

I joined as a young woman in the late 1960s, early 1970s, when I moved to a village in Hampshire. I then lapsed when I lived in London and rejoined when I moved to Myddfai in 1999. WI is a great way to meet new people. WI are keen to attract younger members, incidentally, that is why there are now two SKY W-Icons. There was to have been just one winner but the judges decided to have two: me, sixty-seven years old and a great granny, and Emma, a young mum of thirty five. I also think that WI is ideal for ladies who have just retired and have lost work-related networks. WI is a great network.

What will you do with the grant that you've won in the competition?

The money will be donated to the 'not for profit' company, Learn with Grandma, which I co-founded after I read that 64% of grandparents look after their grandchildren on a regular basis. In the past that was something they did because they wanted to but these days, with both couples having to work and so many divorces, it is becoming a necessity. I wanted to use this money to help people all over the country have fun without breaking the bank, especially important in these economically difficult times.

One of our publications will be Grandmas Guide to Great Days Out , which will list FREE places to take your children or grandchildren, and those that offer excellent value for money, less than 25.00 for a family ticket. There will be no charge for inclusion in the guide.

We are looking for places like St Fagan's , wonderful and FREE! In the 100-acre parkland of St Fagans Castle are over forty buildings moved from all over Wales. Roam round the late 16th-century manor house, see workshops where craftsmen demonstrate traditional skills, native breeds of livestock in the fields and galleries with exhibitions of costume, daily life, farming implements and the largest collection of Welsh Love spoons in the World. All FREE. The only charge is 2.50 to park the car and you can eat Welsh food in the caf or take a picnic. Places that offer great value for money like Ladyland Farm where, for only 6.00 per person, you get a tractor ride and a badge, you get the opportunity to get right in with the animals, to hold fluffy day old chicks, rabbits and kittens, to see the baby calves, lambs and piglets and to feed & stroke them and bed them down.

How many books have you written and what are your plans, as a writer and publisher?

I am currently working on a series of fourteen books that trace history from the Ice Age chronologically through to Roman times. The first of these, The Ice Journey , is based on America's Smithsonian Institute research that indicates that the original humans to reach the American continent were from what is now Europe. My books are aimed at Key Stage 2 but can also be used in helping adults to read and the dual language Welsh/English version is ideal for adult Welsh learners. This series will end with The Welsh Empress of Rome, the wife of Magnus Maximus, murdered in 388. All books in this series will be bilingual. They're aimed at older children and for adults to read with children and the subject matter is designed to interest a very wide age range. I like weave little known facts into a fictional story. Most adults who read my books find themselves saying, "I didnt know that." Parents, grandparents, even teachers learn with the children. Books are equally suitable for adults learning a second language. Following a trip to Ukraine recently (I was keynote speaker at a conference for English teachers from eastern Europe) we are working towards publishing in Russian/English, Ukrainian/English, Latvian/English and perhaps Polish/English.

I write from the perspective of a grandmother teaching her grandchildren and at the end include a Learn with Grandma Section with comprehension questions as well as things to do. I remembered all the things I used to do with my grandma, included those and added science and modern technology.

For The Ice Journey , I show how to make a DNA molecule using sweets. Fortunately the old educational idea of learning through doing is now back in fashion. The second book in this series, Beck, an Ice Age Hunter , will be published in the New Year. I am also working on a series based on pan European folk & fairy stories that will be for younger children, These books will also contain our Learn with Grandma actives.

How did you come to write The Ice Journey?

After some research I decided to write a history of the people of the Celtic lands. There is a lot of interest in the Celts but people do not really know much about them. I decided to start, long before the Celts, back to The Ice Age because that was the start of modern history. The only people alive were homo sapiens people exactly like you & me. Also because I hope one day to bring these stories to the American market.

When will this series be available?

Grandmas Stories is a new, small publisher. We can only afford to publish one book at a time, when we have the money to do so. Book two of the prehistory series will be out in the New Year. After that it is in Gods and our customers hands. We need more customers!

Prior to writing this book, did you have a background or an interest in archaeology, anthropology or related sciences?

No formal background but a great interest in archaeology, anthropology & related sciences. This had been fostered by my grandmother. After my children grew up most of my holidays were spend visiting ancient sites in many countries. I always did the research before going. I went on an archaeological dig in Portugal last summer. I saw it advertised on an online archaeological magazine & decided to go. It was very interesting, great fun and I loved the journey to northern Portugal. The train ride up the Douro Valley was spectacular.

What was your prior career?

Quite a few. Ranging from photographer to shop owner to soft toy agent (I earned enough from that to have a 19 room house. A Rolls Royce, send my 3 children to boarding school and run a huge overdraft!) to founding a charity to create work for disabled people, for which I was awarded MBE and, in the same week, I was made redundant, age 58. After wasting two years crying, I woke up and realised that I was not redundant, that it was time I pulled my self together & started a new life.

You have a great-grandson, how many children and grandchildren do you have?

My son Neil will be 50 on 2 December. He lives in Glastonbury has two children: Emma, nearly 25, Adam, 22 yesterday. My son, Nicky, 48, is a DJ and a teacher. He lives in Ithaca in the USA and has three children. Maria, 23, is Danish and lives in Copenhagen. She is mother to Magnus, who will be 2 years old in January, Kristian, age 12 and Lula, age 10. My daughter, Alison is married to Erik and lives in Surrey. She has two sons: Oscar, age 10, and Hugo, age 8.

Did you tutor or educate your own children or grandchildren? Have any of them followed in your footsteps?

I was only 17 when Neil was born. We had a lot of fun learning stuff together when they were children. They have all made their own path in life and live all over the world. I am now working on a new ways of maintaining contact with my grandchildren. I started writing books after Kristian said I love you grandma but I need to see you. I am "Facebook Friends" with the older grandchildren. I have now bought a webcam to tell Magnus stories and am off to Berlin in December to launch a new intergenerational e-learning project.

Can you describe the place you live? How long have you lived there?

Myddfai is a tiny village - about 30 people live in the actual village, plus second homes, Prince Charles has bought a property here. I'm very involved in my community, I go to church and chapel and help organize events to help keep the community together, so important since our pub closed. I have two dogs to walk, great walking round here! And there is the day job. It is a hill village, three miles above Llandovery and in The Brecon Beacons National Park. It is stunningly beautiful and the people have been so kind and welcoming. I thank God for the wind that blew me here. I hope to die here.

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In this interview AmeriCymru speaks to Keith Morris of Segontium Searchers a Welsh genealogical research company. Segontium Searchers are collaborating with Celticos to bring a new service to American tourists who book for the Celticos/AmeriCymru Trail Tour . For more details listen to the embedded interview below.




ABOUT SEGONTIUM SEARCHERS

"Have you ever wanted to know more about your ancestors?

We can help.

Segontium Searchers offer a fast, friendly and professional research service for all your family history needs.

Confidentiality assured.

We cover the counties of Caernarfonshire, specialising in the area covered by the Caernarfon Record Office and the University Archives at Bangor, as well as Anglesey. Research further afield can also be accommodated by prior arrangement. We can also carry out general research for the whole of England and Wales.

We have entered into an exclusive partnership with tour organisers Celticos Ltd, providers of heritage tours of North Wales. This is an exciting opportunity for you to engage Segontium Searchers to research your family, following which Celticos Ltd. will arrange a bespoke tour to visit the specific sites connected to your ancestors: family homes, schools, churches & graveyards where marriages, baptisms & funerals took place, and places of work, all of which will enable you to appreciate the way of life of your ancestors.

Further information about the tours can be obtained here: Celticos Ltd."

More Here


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Winifred's Well

We are currently in the process of transferring all articles, reviews and interviews relating to Welsh authors, books, music etc to the Welsh American Bookstore. A long and arduous task!

For some time AmeriCymru has led a somewhat schizophrenic existence. Primarily It has served as a social site for the Welsh, Welsh ex-pats and persons of Welsh descent. This it will continue to do. It has ALSO served as a shop window for Welsh cultural goods; books,music etc, and it is this aspect of the sites activities that is being devolved to the newly created Welsh American Bookstore.

We will be proceeding slowly with this transition and we thought we might highlight items from time to time as we move old posts to the archive on the new site.

Today for your delight and delectation ladies and gentlemen, we proudly present Winifred's Well by John Shaffer. A great little read ( I read it a few years back in pdf format ) but I'm not so sure I like the current Amazon hardback price


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