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Facebook integration is now live on AmeriCymru. As part of this release, youll now see Facebook links next to the Twitter links on your contents detail pages ( blogs, events etc ). To see how it works check out the Facebook button on this blog post ( below ). You should find a similar capability on all blog, event, photo and video pages ( Forums too ). Basically this means that you'll be able to share your favorite content on AmeriCymru with your Facebook friends with one simple click. Enjoy!
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Dont forget to tune in to IRFT Celtic Radio for 38 hours of music by Welsh artists in celebration of St. David's Day! http://www.irftradio.comlu.com/stdavids.html Starting at Noon (12:00 p.m.) Pacific Standard Time, February 28th, and running until 2 a.m., Pacific Standard Time, March 2nd!
Add Your St. David's Day Greeting Here!
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Dydd Dewi Sant Hapus/Happy Saint David's DayCheck out our St. David's Day USA page for ideas and events to help you mark the occasion. Please feel free to add your St. Davids Day greeting in the comments boxes below:-
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Octavius Pitt's second novel, 'The Doorkeeper' is set in pre-World War II Britain, the story of an eight-year-old boy who goes to live with his grandparents in Wales. Jonathan Webster's mother has left him and his father for what seemed to her a more glamorous life in fascist Italy. Jonathan's father must briefly leave him also, for work in the United States. Jonathan goes to stay with his maternal grandparents on their farm in Wales, a part of his family his mother turned her back on and about which he knows next to nothing. In Wales, Jonathan finds the love and shelter of a greater family and a place in which he fits. The beauty of his new home can't dispel his concern for his parents but he finds an unusual and unexpected ally who comes to his aid. The Doorkeeper contains passages of lyrical prose which bring the landscape of its setting to vivid life. The rustic routine of daily life on the farm is described in many passages:- 'Peat, fuel for cooking and winter heating, they cut high up on the hafod land at Fawnog-fawr. Black, wet peat, sliced into rectangular blocks by Mr Williams with his special spade made for the purpose, whilst he sang out happily in the breezes in his lovely baritone voice. Each piece was then laid out by the boys for drying in the warm July winds - plentiful up there now, among misty mountains beyond the distant Conwy river in a picture book panorama. They returned when the blocks were dried, at least as far as the weather had allowed, Prince pulling the big wooden wain down to the hendre, it stacked high with partly dry peat blocks looking like solidified treacle and Jonathan as tired as a virgin navvy holding the reins manfully, the farmer, his pipe burning strongly, giving out gentle instructions to two loved grandsons among curling wreaths of cheerful blue smoke.' But there is much more here to intrigue and delight the younger reader. What is the secret of the old Mithraic Roman temple? What is the connection between Squire Bellamy and Old Mad Silas? The Doorkeeper controls access to the hidden world of 'Ansaurius' where the real power of 'Mother Earth' is revealed to Jonathan as he is prepared for future adventures he could little have anticipated. This delightful and occasionally profound tale is ideally suited for older children and younger adults. Mr Pitt has said that this will be the first of several volumes in the series. The reviewer sincerely hopes that volume two will be published soon.
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1) Contact your local radio stations by late February and ask them to play Welsh music and relay "Happy St. David's Day" messages to the Welsh in your area on March 1st. There is plenty of music by Welsh artists that are readily available on most radio stations play lists. If it is a rock/pop station ask for Duffy, The Stereophonics, The Manic Street Preachers, Jem, Catatonia, or Tom Jones, if it is a classical station, you might try asking for Bryn Terfel, Charlotte Church, Paul Potts, Katherine Jenkins or Karl Jenkins.
2) Email a 'Happy Saint David's Day/ Dydd Gwyl Dewi Hapus' message to your friends and family.
3) Wear a daffodil, a leek, or something red on March 1st.
4) Attend a St. David's day event sponsored by your local Welsh society; there are hundreds across North America to choose from.
5) If there are no Welsh groups nearby, hold a St. David's day dinner at your home or request your local pub to stock:
Welsh-American wine or cider (e.g. Cambria wines from California, AmByth wines from
California, Gales cider from the Thomas Family winery in Madison,
Indiana)
6) Sign up to AmeriCymru - the Welsh-American social network https://americymru.net/user/login
7) Hang a Welsh flag outside your house or put a Welsh flag bumper sticker on your car.
8) Change your Facebook, Twitter, MySpace etc. profile picture to the Welsh flag for the day.
9) Buy a subscription to North American's Welsh newspaper Ninnau www.ninnau.com
10) Forward this message on to as many people as possible!