Saturday, 25 April 2026

New Post Box Topper

 

Here's Owain the Evri delivery man, and his dog!

Friday, 24 April 2026

Black Mountains Lions Close Down

 When I was at Baskerville Hall on Wednesday evening, the large function room on the other side of the bar was all set up for the Black Mountains Lions meeting, with flowers on the tables and display boards illustrating the history of the group.

Sadly, the occasion was the final meeting for the local group.  After over fifty years, they've decided that they can no longer carry on. In that time, they've supported Dial-a-Ride, provided defibrillators, supported the local football club, and supported all sorts of local charities and community groups.

The Clyro group was part of an international body, and the nearest Lions Club appears to be in Hereford, from the map on their website, with eighteen clubs across South and Mid Wales.

Gareth Ratcliffe was there, as County Councillor, to give a speech thanking the group for all their work. 

Thursday, 23 April 2026

Excalibur

 Some years ago I came across a small company which made an audio drama called The Minister of Chance.  It was a sort of loose spin off of Doctor Who (the Minister of Chance was originally intended to be a Time Lord), and it starred some really good actors - Paul McGann and Sylvester McCoy, who had both played the Doctor, Paul Darrow (Avon from Blake's Seven), Jenny Agutter, Jed Brophy, and Julian Wadham as the Minister himself.  It was great fun, and it's now available as a podcast.

The same company, Secret Planet led by Dan Freeman, is now planning a film, set in Wales, and exploring the Welsh myths of King Arthur.  He's very keen to work with local businesses, communities and schools to celebrate Welsh culture.  He said in the Brecon and Radnor Express: "we are not just making a film, we are building something that brings those stories back to the places and communities they come from."  

They're very much committed to working with communities in Wales, and they've already set up sword fighting workshops for people who want to be extras.  They've also partnered with Welsh businesses to raise funds, so you can buy Excalibur themed beer from Purple Moose brewery, or Arthur Mead from Mountain Mead (mountainmead.co.uk). 

They can be found at www.excalibur-film.com  There's even a short clip of film with Sylvester McCoy playing Merlin. 

Sunday, 19 April 2026

History Festival Photo

 

Thanks to Sue Hodgetts (in the red and yellow) for posting this photo of us yesterday in Hereford!

Saturday, 18 April 2026

Herefordshire History Week

 I was in Hereford this morning, in the middle of High Town, dressed in my chainmail and helmet! I was helping to advertise Herefordshire History Week, along with Sue from Cusop History Group who was also in medieval costume.  

The events run from 9th May to 20th May, all over the county.  There'll be a walk to a hillfort; Cloddock Mill will be open; the River and  Canal Trust is involved, and there will be talks all across the county.  

One of the things they're doing is an event all about the Girl Guides and Boy Scouts during the Second World War.  We had a lovely chat with a lady who is involved in that - and she also showed us pictures of a medieval banner she made, with completely accurate heraldry and an orb near the flagpole that shows it was stitched during the year of a Coronation - 2023.  It's now in the Lady Chapel of Newent church.

I also had a lovely chat with an ex-mayor of Ledbury, who used to belong to the Sealed Knot, and a chap in a wheelchair who is involved with a History shop in Bromyard.

It was quite interesting to see who wanted to stop and talk, and who marched straight past, pretending they hadn't noticed us - groups of young teenage  boys were completely oblivious to a person in chainmail and helmet - with a sword! - while older people were a lot more interested, and often had interesting stories to tell.

As part of the History Week, I'll be doing a Weapons and Arrows talk at Cusop Castle at 4pm on May 9th, where people will have the opportunity to try on the chainmail! 

 

Friday, 17 April 2026

Talk on the Armstrong Murder Case

 Tony Pryce started his interest in the Armstrong murder case back when he was an officer with West Mercian Police, and he had to visit a local solicitor's office in Hereford.  The firm was TA Matthews, and in a glass case there was a pipe and a letter.  The pipe had belonged to Major Armstrong, and the letter was to thank the original TA Matthews for all his help during the Major's trial and appeal process.

Since then, he's gone into incredible detail on every aspect of the case, including every person involved and their family backgrounds, and how they related to each other.  He believes the evidence is overwhelming that Major Armstrong was guilty.

One interesting detail is that some evidence from the case ended up in the Metropolitan Police Museum.  Back in 1921, when a murder investigation needed to be done, small police forces often didn't have the expertise to carry them out, so they applied to the Metropolitan Police to send experienced officers.  Modern day investigations typically involve 26 police officers and 4 support staff - back then the Met sent a Detective Chief Inspector (this was his last case before retirement) and a Detective Sergeant, and they started their investigations in secret, while staying at the Green Dragon Hotel in Hereford.

So there is a packet in the Black Museum labelled as arsenic from the chemist at Hay - but it has never been analysed.  Tony Pryce tried to persuade them to find out what the white powder was, but when they realised that the objective was to prove Major Armstrong's guilt rather than overturn the guilty verdict, they decided it wasn't worth spending the money to do it.  Tony Pryce believes that the packet was planted in the Major's bureau (which was produced as a surprise exhibit during the court case) by a member of the defence team, because he owed Major Armstrong a favour.  It's a fascinating theory, and very convincing.

There were so many fascinating details like this that the talk ran for an hour and a half instead of an hour, and he could have continued.  However, he got as far as the execution at Gloucester Prison (an ex-prison governor now gives guided tours of the building!) and stopped there.

Cusop Village Hall was so full they ran out of chairs and had people standing at the back and into the entrance hall!  And there wasn't time to show the video advert for the Cusop Castle dig, which will be happening from 5th to 14th June this year.  Also, I'll be giving a talk on Saturday 9th May at Cusop Castle at 4pm on medieval weapons and arrows, hopefully with audience participation! 

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Comic Shop

 I finally got to see inside the new Comic shop on Castle Street.

They've got a big selection of DC and Marvel comics, and similar, and also a corner devoted to Manga.

They also have a re-purposed 1960s bar as their counter, which goes well with the diner chairs and table in the other corner.  

While I was there, they distributed marker pens and invited us to sign their table - so I added a Starfleet insignia on one leg.

I'm sure I'll be back for some of their graphic novels. 

Monday, 13 April 2026

Cusop History Group Talk

 The next talk from Cusop History Group is on Thursday 16th April at Cusop Village Hall at 7pm.  The topic is The Murder of Katherine Armstrong and the Trial of Herbert Rouse Armstrong, and the speaker is Tony Pryce, with an introduction by Peter Ford.

Strange to think that this happened just over a hundred years ago.

Entry is £2, with donations for refreshments.

I'll be at the hall a bit earlier than that, because the Cusop Dig committee will be having a quick meeting - everything seems to be going well so far! 

Sunday, 12 April 2026

Printers Fair

 I really enjoyed the Printers' Fair - two floors of stalls with all sorts of beautiful artwork and letterpress text.  I treated myself to a print with a line of Gerald Manley Hopkins poetry on it: "Glory be to God for dappled things" from the poem Pied Beauty, and it's a limited edition.  Mine is no. 6 of 100.  It was made by Kathleen Littler, who uses wood engraving, with incredibly fine detail - she has a website at www.kathlittler.co.uk

The chap from Prints of Hay was giving out free prints of Hay Castle, and I also got some cards.  I especially liked the Francesca Kay cards with simple cutouts and haiku poems.  My favourite was Anubis: 

"He protects the Dead, 

But they're quite self-sufficient,

It's not a hard job."

Several of the stalls will be at the Marches Makers Festival in Kington from Saturday 2nd May to Monday 4th May.  I hope they come back to the Castle sometime, too.

There were also families looking round the Castle, and I found two little girls with their parents in the costume corner, having a swordfight with wooden swords.  So I asked if the bigger girl would like to know how to do real sword moves, and taught her the basic defensive positions, which I think we both enjoyed immensely. 

Meanwhile down in the Buttermarket there was a Craft Fair going on, and I treated myself to two hand made pottery bowls from Helen's Art Creation.  She also sells on Etsy as helensartcreation

 

Saturday, 11 April 2026

Dig for Cusop


Here's the new video advert for Cusop Dig in June!

Friday, 10 April 2026

Fun at Baskerville Hall

 It was the weekly singing session at Baskerville Hall on Wednesday night, and a group of people came over from the Yoga retreat in the barn near the petrol station - so it was an easy walk for them.

One of them was a really good singer, and she joined Rob in the circle - he played guitar while she sang.

The others formed a pretty good backing group, with actions - and got up to dance with Dale and Joe.  Ellie handed out castanets and shakers all round.

Another couple were staying in the hotel, and eventually the woman plucked up courage to sing a folk song as well. 

I was singing songs from the SF Convention, and threw in Star Trekking, which was a hit in the 1980s, and which they all knew! 

Thursday, 9 April 2026

Printer's Fair

 This Saturday there will be a printers' fair at Hay Castle, spread over two floors and open from 10am to 4pm.  All sorts of different printing techniques will be on display, and these are true craftsmen keeping the old traditions alive for the modern day.  Techniques include etching, letterpress, wood engraving, lino cutting, paper marbling, illustration, book art and calligraphy.

There have been Wayzgooses (as a meeting of printers is traditionally called) in Hay before, at the shop which is now Rambling Rosa and across at Baskerville Hall, and I've always enjoyed them. 

Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Back to Earth

 I'm back home, after an absolutely brilliant time at EasterCon!


 This is me in my Starfleet uniform, Next Generation era.

It's not just dressing up - there were also fascinating panels on folklore and fantasy, 100 years of Anne McCaffrey, archaeology, how to find hope in a darkening world (with reference to grimdark fantasy), climate change, AI, and there was a lot of emphasis on finding community in a hostile world, and welcoming all sorts of diversity.  Also, I got to hang out with some really lovely people.

We were also sharing space with an anime con - lots of costumes, and generally a much younger fan base, and we all got along so well that we want to do it again, maybe with even more integration between the cons next time.

I'm already looking forward to next year in Glasgow! 

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Happy Easter!

 

Here's the latest Post Box topper.

I'll be back after Easter. 

Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Wildlife Art

 Oil and Oak often put on exhibitions in their upstairs room, and at the moment the space is filled with very detailed and realistic paintings of British wildlife by Lyndsay Reid.  I especially like the hares.

Monday, 30 March 2026

New Comic Shop

 

Congratulations to Lauren and Julian of Hay-on-Wye Comics, who have upgraded from the market stall and shelf in Broad Street Books to a shop of their own.  They're closed on Mondays and Tuesdays, so I haven't been able to look inside properly yet, but I know they have lots of interesting stock, and I'll be browsing as soon as I can.

Sunday, 29 March 2026

New Exhibition at Lion Street Gallery

 I saw the announcement on Facebook, so I decided to check it out when I went shopping.

The exhibition at Lion Street Gallery is called Emotional Terrain, and is a group of works by Di Metcalfe.

I had the gallery to myself that morning, so i had plenty of time to linger over the landscapes.  The card that goes with the exhibition says: "Her work radiates energy and intensity" and it's true - you can feel the energy in the brushstrokes - or maybe she uses a pallet knife - there's a lot of texture to the paint.  Brent explained that she works on solid panels rather than canvas, because her vigorous style would make the  canvas stretch and go baggy   Most of the landscapes are places in Wales, with exuberant cloudscapes.  I liked them a lot.

Brent also displays work from a regular group of artists, and I like most of them - the interiors of historic houses by Matthew Wood, and the wildflowers standing out of a blurred background by Dylan Lloyd, and at the moment there are some green semi-abstract woodland glades and pools by Sandra Graham that I also liked very much.  The paintings are expensive, but there's a scheme where you can pay installments over several months - which makes it a far more reasonable proposition.  And they are very fine works of art.

Friday, 27 March 2026

Yorkshire Building Society

 I was very disappointed to get an email this morning to say that the Hay branch of the Yorkshire Building Society will be closing down in August.

One of my main reasons for opening a savings account with them - when I was in a position to actually have savings! - was that I could walk into their office and talk to an actual human being, who knew me, and the whole business took about five minutes out of my day.

I understand that the next nearest physical branch is a choice between Abergavenny or Worcester - neither of which are exactly accessible for a visit from Hay.  So instead of walking in while I'm doing my shopping, this would mean a bus ride to Hereford and a train, and take all day.  Or a bus ride to Brecon and bus down to Abergavenny that way, which would also take most of a day.

Looks like I'm going to have to start thinking about moving my savings - I refuse to do online banking.  It's only more convenient for the bank or building society, not for me as a customer. 

Thursday, 26 March 2026

Children's Concert

 My neighbour was sitting in her garden this morning when two children leaned over the wall.

"We're in a concert at the church this evening.  You've got to come!"

So we walked down to the church together.  Just in front of us, a kid with a violin case was charging full pelt down the hill, obviously thinking he was going to be late.

As we sat down, the two kids who had invited my neighbour looked back from their seats with thumbs up.  "You came!" 

The first half of the concert was performed by the professional pianist Jelena Makarova and soprano - the children were being introduced to a wide variety of music featuring rivers and the sea, starting with Benjamin Britten's arrangement of the folk song O, Waly, Waly, the Mermaid's Song by Haydn, a setting of a piece for choir done specially for Jessica Summers to sing with the piano by Colin Riley, called Never Coming Back, and At the River arranged by Aaron Copeland - one of those hymns that turns  up in old Westerns.

Then it was the children's turn.  Francesca Kay the poet had worked with Class 5 in four groups, each of which produced a very different river-themed poem, which composer Robert Peate set to music, including a very serious young drummer, a girl on the xylophone, various cymbals and percussion instruments, and two violinists - and the choir.  They all looked as if they were enjoying themselves, and thoroughly deserved the applause after each song, and at the end.  The poet said that she'd love to just go back to the school and write poetry with the kids until they told her to go away!

It was hugely enjoyable, and lots of people were leaving donations for further Outreach events in the future as they left. 

Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Symphony Orchestra in Hay

 It's not often Hay gets an entire symphony orchestra*, but Hay Music has organised a concert with the Hereford Symphony Orchestra this Saturday at 3pm (doors open at 2.30pm) in St Mary's Church.  

Tickets are £20, under-25s £10.  They will be playing Rossini's An Italian Girl in Algiers, Wagner's Siegfried Idyll and Mendelssohn's Italian Symphony.

And it's a busy week for music lovers, because Songs of the River will be performed, also at St Mary's, on Thursday 26th March at 6pm.  This is a project put together by the musicians and children of Hay School - composer Robert Peate, poet Francesca Kay, soprano Jessica Summers and pianist Jelena Makarova.  This concert is free with a retiring collection in support of Hay Music's Outreach Programme. 

*in fact, this is the first  time! 

Sunday, 22 March 2026

M is for Mushroom

 Or F is for Forest.

The Parish Hall was packed for a showing of The Life of the Forest: Fungi, a Polish documentary by Tomasz Ogrodowczyk, with English narration, and fantastic photography of all sorts of fungi in a Polish forest.  The film covered how essential fungi are to the health of the forest, forming a symbiotic relationship with the trees, the various types of fungi, invasive species (there's one from North America which has become naturalised in the coastal forests, for example, which is collected for food by Polish mushroom pickers).  They also talked about forest management and logging, and regeneration of the forests.

After the film, the panel were introduced.  There's no stage in the Parish Hall, so they had to stand so that everyone could see them.  They were Alex Armstrong, a PhD researcher from the University of Birmingham, Martha Crockatt, a PhD researcher from the University of Oxford, Jenny Dickers, now retired, but her career was in land management, and Ray Woods, botanist, mycologist, and expert in lichen.  The moderator of the panel was Matthew Pryor, a journalist.

The discussion soon moved beyond fungi to all sorts of questions about woodland management, policy making at central government level, nitrogen pollution affecting the growth of fungi, orange lichen on oak trees indicating pollution - and being used by a limestone quarry to see how effective their dust suppression programme was (the smaller the area affected by the lichen, the better they were doing).

Jenny implored us all to think about what sort of woodland we wanted to see, because there are lots of different ideas for the uses of woodland that don't necessarily work well together.  She comes from a farming family, as well as working in conservation, and there was a good discussion about trying to understand how farmers think, so they don't get defensive about new ideas coming in, while at the same time acknowledging that farmers are being pulled in several different directions at once, with some policies aimed at increasing food production, others at conservation and pollution reduction, and those policies often contradict each other.  So they tend to be suspicious of researchers like Alex coming in when actually the researchers could help them.

There's the very prescriptive way the policies are applied, too, without taking account of local conditions, and (for instance) planting hedgerows with hawthorn far too thickly so that no undergrowth can grow - which would be beneficial for insects, birds and so on.  They also talked about policies that led to nitrogen reduction (a good thing) could lead to unintended consequences which were not so good for the health of the forests - it's a very complex problem, and a complex ecosystem.  More research needs to be done on the impact of chicken farms, too, and the use of ammonia scrubbers to take the ammonia emissions out of the atmosphere - but then, what do the farmers do with the ammonia in the scrubbers?  Is it taken away, or is it just moved around the farm?

There's the question, too, of which species of trees to plant to cope with climate change.  Roy Woods said that one scheme in Wales is planting hornbeam - he's not a fan, and would prefer other trees to be planted instead.  He also mentioned the importance of planting trees in upland areas to prevent floods further downstream. 

Also available, on each seat, were copies of the latest Cabbage Leaf, which is all about forests and fungi, with illustrations of local fungi painted by  Françoise Verger, and collected for her by Chris Bradshaw, who has been monitoring local fungi for about five years now.  He asked why it should be that some areas he surveyed had almost no fungi, while other seemingly identical areas had a rich variety.  Roy Woods suggested that it was the difference between valleys that ran east/west, compared to valleys that ran north/south.  Winds bringing nitrogen pollution from the east run up against the edges of woodland in the east/west running valleys and the trees have more nitrogen than they need, while the wind skips over the valleys running north/south.

So a fascinating evening, with a lot of food for thought.

The next event will be G is for Garden, on 9th May - more information nearer the time.  One of the panelists then will be John Crellin, whose book on the flora of Brecknockshire will be out on 9th April.  Layla Robinson's new book is also out, about creating things with dried flowers (she was in the audience, and her book was on display at the back).

Saturday, 21 March 2026

Bookshop451

 

Welcome to the newest bookshop in Hay - open to the public for the first time today, but open for drinks for other booksellers and friends last night.  It's a specialist SF and Fantasy bookshop, and the name is rather cleverly taken from Ray Bradbury's classic Fahrenheit 451, which is the temperature at which books burn, hence the flames on the window.  They're not sure if they're going to keep the flames - after all, they want to display their books in the window as well.  They also have an early edition of Fahrenheit 451 in a case at the cash desk.

I had a great time at the party, and several fascinating discussions.  For instance I found out that one chap I've known for years used to go to a bookshop in London that I also went to - one of the first specialist SF bookshops, Dark They Were And Golden Eyed, also a quotation from Ray Bradbury.  It was a sad day when that bookshop closed down.

I was very impressed with the quality of their stock - and so was Derek Addyman, who left the shop with a pile of books in his arms.  Later, Anne Brichto was also piling up the Gollancz yellow jacket SF. 

Thursday, 19 March 2026

Forest

 Botany and other Stories are holding an event at the Parish Hall on Saturday 21st March, from 7pm to 9pm.  It's under the umbrella of The Travelling Cabinet of Curiosities (since Henallt House, the permanent Cabinet of Curiosities, is having major renovation work done at the moment).

They are showing a film called Forest, a documentary about trees and the living system that connects them, followed by a Q and A session.  Entry is free. 

Monday, 16 March 2026

Hay Festival

 The Hay Festival programme is out online now, and I've been looking through it.

The printed catalogue usually takes a bit longer to come out, and they're trying to cut down on the quantities for sustainability - it uses a lot of paper.

The first thing I noticed is that I've never seen so many Doctor Who actors on the programme before!

Christopher Eccleston (9th Doctor) will be reading A Kestrel for a Knave for BBC radio, along with Alex Kingston (River Song) who is reading Frankenstein, Sacha Dhawan (the Master) reading 1984, and Reece Shearsmith (several Dr Who roles plus William Shakespeare and Furfur the demon in Good Omens) reading Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

Meanwhile Russell Tovey (War Between the Land and Sea) is talking about contemporary art for kids.

Juno Dawson, who has written for Doctor Who, will be in conversation with local drag queen Boo La Croux. 

Local personalities include Barbara Erskine talking about Lady of Hay, the book that started her successful career, and Derek Addyman and Anne Brichto are being interviewed about the history of Hay as a Book Town.  Catrin Nye, the daughter of my neighbour when I lived in Broad Street, is interviewing Claudia Hammond.  And the Hay Shantymen will be singing on the Festival site.  The Beefy Boys are doing some cooking events, too, and Lucky Seven Brewery will be providing the drinks for another foodie event with Wild by Nature and their charcuterie. 

The big names for the Festival this year are all women: Gisèle Pelicot, Malala Yousafzai, and Nazarin Zaghari-Ratcliffe.  

There are also local walks, tours of Hay Castle, children's authors like Cressida Cowell, archaeology with Alice Roberts, astronomy with Sheila Kanani, the MUBI cinema showing films ranging from Buster Keaton's The General to Bright Young Things to Orlando with Tilda Swanton, Natalie Haynes talking about Jason of the Argonauts and Medea, historians like Anthony Beevor and James Holland, and lots more.

Some of the events are already sold out. 

 

Friday, 13 March 2026

Improving Home and Garden

 It happened so gradually that I didn't notice, until my hands were almost under my chin to type!  My old office chair (which was being thrown out when I got it over ten years ago), was sinking slowly in the West - and the mechanism to make the seat higher again no longer works.

So it had to go.

I had an idea of what I wanted to replace it - not a modern office chair, but something vintage, and wooden.

I tried Fleur de Lys - I can usually get something good there - but they had no swivel chairs in stock at the moment.

So I tried the basement of Bain and Murrin - and there it was, right at the bottom of the stairs.  The perfect chair.  They even delivered for me.


 Meanwhile in the garden I was thinking that there were some spaces that needed to be filled up, so I went out to The Old Railway Line Garden Centre at Three Cocks on the bus.  I only had about an hour there before the bus back, so I needed to have a plan and not just wander round aimlessly.

I have loved magnolia bushes since I first saw one when I was eleven.  We were walking down to see a house my mum wanted to buy, and passed a garden when the bush was in full bloom, masses of cream flowers everywhere.  

As a teenager on holiday in Ireland, we went to Birr Castle.  The garden back then was still very much a family garden, and we met a lovely old lady pottering around with her gardening basket, who told us all about their wonderful magnolia bush.  We realised later that she was the Dowager Marchioness!

So I wanted a magnolia, and there were several to choose from. Initially I was going to go for a cream one, but there was a deep pink one called Emperor and since I had recently bought a plum tree called Czar, that was the one I went for.

[Edited to add: I have planted a monster!  When I read the label more carefully at home, I found it will grow to 5 metres high!] 

The weather was not pleasant, so I cut it rather fine in getting back to the bus stop.  In fact, as I trundled my trolley out of the garden centre, I could see the bus pulling into the layby, and had to make a dash for it.  Fortunately, the bus was five minutes early, so had to wait there, and I needn't have panicked!

Back in Hay, I had time to go up to the market - sadly depleted because of the weather.  The lovely plant lady was there, though - and she had a cream flowered magnolia.  Well, why shouldn't I have two magnolias?  This one is stellata, and doesn't grow very big. 

Thursday, 12 March 2026

New Book of Poetry

 A lady called Tammy Allen recently joined the Hay Writers' Circle, and she's just had a book of poetry published.

The book is called Roots, and it's published by The Conrad Press.  Tammy is a Mental Health Counsellor from the Swansea Valley, and the poems deal with her experiences of loss, grief, healing and acceptance in the face of adversity.  Each poem is illustrated by Sion Rees.

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Borderlines Film Festival

 The Borderlines Film Festival began on 6th March, and there are several films being shown in Hay.

I'm afraid I missed the first weekend of films - Booth's Bookshop Cinema was showing No Other Choice, a South Korean film about a man who goes for a job and decides to get rid of his rivals, Resurrection, a Chinese sort of time travel film spanning a century of Chinese history, and Nouvelle Vague, a French film re-imagining the making of Jean-Luc Godard's film A bout de souffle - the original film is also being shown in Ludlow and Hereford.

Coming up on Friday 13th is The Last Viking, a Danish crime comedy starring Mads Mikkelsen, and on Saturday 14th is The Stranger, a French adaptation of the Albert Camus novel.

All sorts of other films are showing across Herefordshire - it's a pity I can't get to Malvern or Hereford (well, I can get there - it's getting home that's the problem!) to see The Testament of Ann Lee, founder of the Shakers, a religious sect that started in Manchester.  There's also H is for Hawk, and Zootropolis 2, which shows something of the wide variety of films on offer.

There are also films about Palestine. All That's Left of You follows three generations of a Palestinian family from 1948 to the near present, one is set in 1936 when the Palestinians rose up against British rule, and The Voice of Hind Rajab, is about the little girl who was killed by Israeli forces in 2024, along with everyone else in the car with her, and the ambulance crew sent to rescue her. 

 

Monday, 9 March 2026

Hay Castle on TV

 Sky History at 9pm tonight - the programme is called Great British Castle Rescue, and Hay Castle features in the first episode.  As far as I can see, all the castles in the series were helped by National Lottery money, which is why Hay Castle has been letting visitors in for free if they have a lottery ticket this week (normally it's £7.50, but the ticket lasts for a year).

Saturday, 7 March 2026

Flora of Brecknockshire

 Compiling a complete record of the flora of the local area has been literally a life time's work.

Mike Porter, the Recorder for the county for the British Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland, started collecting information for the book soon after he got the job in 1968.  In 2013, John Crellin joined him as co-Recorder, and started to help him with the book in 2021.  Sadly, Mike died last year, but by then most of the main text was complete, and John Crellin brought it to publication.  

There's a lot of diversity of habitats in the area, with mountains, moorlands, woodland, limestone pavements, and the largest lake in South Wales.  The book is hardback, with over 1100 distribution maps of the different species.  It's been illustrated by the wonderful local artist Meg Stevens - she did the most marvellous landscapes of the local area, often from a vantage point low down among the wildflowers.  I could never afford one of her paintings, but I do still have some of her greetings cards (which she kindly signed for me).

Not only does the book have the flora of the present day, but Mike Porter went back into the records as far as 1666, also incorporating the work of Victorian naturalists, especially Augustin Ley, vicar of Sellack in Herefordshire.

The book is available for pre-order now, at a discount price of £35, from Summerfield Books, www.summerfieldbooks.com  The publication date is 1st April, at which time the cover price of £40 will be charged, and there will be a press launch at the Bannau Brycheiniog Visitor Centre on 9th April.

The Brecknock Botany Group has a blog at https://floralimages.blogspot.com/ and it's well worth a visit or two. 

Thursday, 5 March 2026

Cash Machine Back

 Someone said on Facebook that the cash machine in the craft centre is working again, so I checked this morning, and it is.  The toilets are still closed, however.

According to the Powys County Times, NoteMachine, the owners of the cash machine, had to order a new security door for the machine - and it took between six to eight weeks to be delivered! 

Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Telescope

 The Red Cross shop has had a space themed window for a while now - Star Wars jigsaws, books on astronomy and, as a focal point, a large telescope on a tripod.

Now that it's so easy for me to just step  outside my kitchen door and look up at the night sky, from a very dark garden, I've been getting into astronomy more.  So finally, I decided to take the plunge.

Even in the charity shop, it cost £80, but I looked it up online, and it's supposed to be a perfect telescope for a beginner.

Now all I need is a clear night!


 

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

More Archaeology in Hay

 Exciting news at the Castle mound in the old cattle market by the Swan - trial trenches are being opened up this week to search for evidence of the original Norman castle.  This is the castle that came before Matilda de Braose built the present Hay Castle.

Black Mountains Archaeology Ltd. have been hired by Powys County Council to do the dig, and it's professionals only - not like the Cusop Castle dig in June, which welcomes volunteers as a community dig.

I'm hoping to get there towards the end of the week to see what they've uncovered.


 

Monday, 2 March 2026

Quilting at the Castle

 The entrance hall to the Castle has been moved around a bit, so the reception desk is no longer by the stairs, but directly opposite the front door where it can be seen more easily.  However, this means that the quilting table was pushed into a corner - about half the table was in direct light from one of the windows, but the corner was a bit dark.

I wasn't sure what to expect, so I went along with no sewing materials at all.  The regular ladies quickly set me up with needle, thread, snips and a pile of material cut into hexagons that needed to be sewn to hexagon shaped pieces of paper.  When the quilts are finally assembled, the paper is taken out.

Another new lady was shown how to add hexagons onto a partly completed quilt.

Each quilt is quite small, and they are intended to be given to new refugees.

Conversation around the table was  interesting - one lady was about to go to Shanghai to see her son.  Another lady is a potter, and she showed us pictures of a Viking lamp she had made.  This is a small bowl with a central column, and you wind beeswax impregnated twine round the column to make the wick, then fill the bowl with wax, or olive oil, or whale blubber if you've got it!  Because it's a coiled wick, it makes a brighter light than a normal candle.

Another lady had pictures of the Red Dress.  It's an absolutely gorgeous silk dress, made from embroidered pieces from all over the world, and it took years to put together.  Many of the pieces were made by refugees.  It's now touring on exhibition - it was at Theatr Brycheiniog last September, and it's in Geneva on 10th March.  Later in the year it will be in Australia. 

There's now a new project for a Calico Dress made in a similar way.  Calico Dress Cymru has been made by a variety of different groups across Wales, in partnership with the Waterfront Museum in Swansea.  Other calico dresses are being developed around the world.

The quilting group meets every Saturday at 11am at the Castle, and I've already put a little box of supplies ready for next week. 

Saturday, 28 February 2026

Wyevale

 I went into Hereford to buy some train tickets, and do some other necessary business, and have a look for some new boots.  Sadly, nothing caught my eye, but I did run into two lovely ladies who recognised me from my blog.  Since there was a while to wait until the next bus home, they offered me a lift.

On the way, they wanted to pop into Wyevale Garden Centre.  I haven't been there for years, so I was quite happy to have a look round with them.  Also, I had been thinking of buying a dwarf plum tree for my garden, and they said there was plenty of room in the back of the car for it.  They even let me use their discount card to buy it.

So thank you Penny and Liz for the lift home, the garden centre, and the interesting conversation.  I'm really glad I bumped into them! 

Friday, 27 February 2026

Scaffolding

 

Scaffolding is going up around the Cabinet of Curiosities - it looks as if it's going to go right over the roof.

It's good to see the work starting to renovate the building. 

Thursday, 26 February 2026

13th Anniversary at the Baskie

 It was the 13th Anniversary of the first acoustic Wednesday evening session at Baskerville Hall last night, and a good crowd came to celebrate - some of whom hadn't been for several years!  They all knew each other from other local open mics, though, so there was a lot of very nice collaboration going on, with guitars and harmonicas and, occasionally, Ellie's train whistle!  I went back to some of the very first things I did when I started going (not quite thirteen years ago), so they got the Joyce Grenfell monologue where one of the nursery children gets her finger stuck in the keyhole.

We also got some Elvis for Dale, and Jolene for Joe, with Dale and Joe dancing at the end.

It was an excellent evening, and there were also sausage rolls and chocolates to celebrate. 

Sunday, 22 February 2026

Collapsing Castle

 I was very sad to hear that one of the towers at Clifford Castle has collapsed, due to the heavy rain we've been having.

The owner of the castle had been opening it to the public for twenty eight days a year (I went up there with a group a few years ago, and had a good look round).  But now he says he's closing the site, because he can't take the risk of anyone getting hurt.  He's working with Historic England now to see how the site can be stabilised and made safe. 

Saturday, 21 February 2026

The Herefordshire Hoard

 Tim Hoverd came to Cusop Village Hall on Thursday evening to talk about the Herefordshire Hoard (or 'how can two metal detectorists be so spectacularly stupid?').  It's a talk he says he's given "too many times", but it's part of his job to publicise things like this, to show what happens when people don't follow the law in metal detecting.

Put briefly, two metal detectorists from South Wales walked some fields near Leominster without the land owner's permission (they asked the tenant farmer, who did not have the authority to allow it), and they found a hoard of silver coins from the Viking era.  They did not declare the find, as they were supposed to do, but eventually produced a few pieces to satisfy the Finds Liason Officer - an arm ring, a ring, a crystal orb bound with gold, and a badly damaged coin.

They intended to sell the rest of the coins - it was later estimated that there were around 300 of them. But the police quickly became involved.  The detectorists had taken photos of their finds, which is how the archaeologists could estimate how many coins were in the hoard.  Some were found when their homes were searched.  Others had been already sold, but once the story became public, it became almost impossible to sell any more of the coins on the open market, because they are very distinctive.

If archaeologists had been able to study the hoard, as a whole, they would have been able to tell a lot more about the dating, and the conditions at the time the hoard was buried, and who was most likely to have buried it.  From the few pieces that were recovered - about eighty coins were found - they can tell that the hoard was likely buried at the time that the Great Viking Army was sweeping across Saxon England.  The coins were mostly from Wessex and Mercia - and the designs on the coins showed an alliance between King Alfred the Great and his Mercian counterpart Ceolwulf II.  Some are struck with only one king's head, but there are others with both, known as "The Two Emperors" coins.

If the detectorists had declared the hoard, they would have got a huge payout.  As it was, they got six and ten years in prison, and one of the coin dealers they tried to sell the coins through was also prosecuted.  They were involved with the criminal underworld in South Wales, and owed someone nasty a lot of money - and Tim Hoverd suspects that the bulk of the coins went to some crime boss, and may never be seen again. 

Earlier in the evening, before the talk, Tim sat down with the committee of the Cusop Castle dig to flesh out a few details.  The dig will take place from Friday 5th June to Sunday 14th June, and they are looking for volunteers.  It won't all be heavy digging - there are plenty of jobs around site for people of all sorts of varying ability, and full training is given.  I'm going to be there as much as I can - bearing in mind that I was last a professional archaeologist over thirty years ago, and a full day's digging now would probably kill me!

If anyone is interested in volunteering, they should contact Cusop History Group - there's a link on their front page.  Under sixteen year olds must be accompanied by an adult who is taking a full part in the dig, and Tim has a strict No Dogs policy. 

Also at the talk, to sell copies of his new book, was Joseph Emmett.  It's called New Roots, Ancient Lands: Walking Through Herefordshire's History, and it looks very interesting - I bought a copy, but it might be some time before I get round to reading it.  In it, he visits local sites like Arthur's Stone and Mouse Castle, Snodhill Castle and the Gloucester to Hereford Canal, as well as other sites right across the county. 

The next Cusop History Group talk will be "The Murder of Katherine Armstrong and the Trial of Herbert Rowse Armstrong" with Tony Pryce, introduced by Peter Ford.  It will be at Cusop Village Hall on Thursday 16th April at 7pm.  Entry is £2, with donations for refreshments. 

Friday, 20 February 2026

Spring is On the Way!

 

My first sighting of daffodils this year, at the top of the path near the school/library.  The snow covered Cae Mawr is in the background.

Thursday, 19 February 2026

Wednesday Nights at Baskerville Hall

 I generally go to the Baskie on Wednesday nights to sing in the acoustic session there - the new picture on the sidebar is me singing one of the filk songs I learned when I went to a Filk Convention in Norwich recently.  Filk is Science Fiction Folk Music - back in the 1970s, when someone was typing out a convention programme (on a manual typewriter!, to be mimeographed) they meant to type "folk" and missed the key - and it's been "filk" ever since.

So all sorts of music are welcome there - this week we had a lady fiddler who we hope will come again.  She mainly plays folk, but was a welcome addition to House of the Rising Sun, which everyone joined in on.

Next week is the 13th anniversary of the session, so we're hoping for a good night.  Starts at about 8pm, goes on to 11pm, and we usually finish with Jolene, which is Joe's favourite song. 

And when we came out at 11pm last night, there was snow everywhere. 

Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Snoopy and Friends

 The post box has been looking a little naked lately, but now there's a new topper!


 

 

Friday, 13 February 2026

Hay Castle News

 Last week the Castle closed for routine maintenance, but this week they're open again.

At the moment, the Castle Trust is working with local primary schools to design a new interactive model about the Castle's history, which will be unveiled in May.

The latest newsletter also mentions a lot of Trusts and charitable foundations which have been supporting work at the Castle.  These include the Moondance Foundation, Adrian Swire Charitable Trust, Mumford Memorial Trust, Community Foundation Wales, Simon Gibson Charitable Trust and Oakdale Trust.  Hay Castle is also one of only eleven recipients of the Colwinston Trust award, celebrating innovation, excellence, creative expression and the power of story telling.  Other recipients include the British Library, National Library of Wales, Welsh National Theatre, BBC National Orchestra of Wales and Rambert Dance Company - that's quite an impressive list to be part of!

The Castle is also preparing for this year's Weekend of Mistakes, the third year it's been held here.  The weekend in question is 20th to 22nd March, and they have a website at www.weekendofmistakes.org

The focus of the weekend is to explore financial and economic ideas. 

Thursday, 12 February 2026

Archaeology Talks

 This morning, I was whisked off to Brecon to give a talk about archaeology to a dementia group there.  I was talking about some of the digs I'd been on, and showing slides, and I had a few things to hand round, too, including my trowel!

The group meets at Kensington Baptist Church, near the Castle Hotel, which is a lovely modern building.  I gave the talk in the chapel part, and we had lunch in the hall (there's a proper kitchen - we had fish and chips).  All the people in the group were absolutely lovely, and told me all sorts of things about the local history of Brecon, and the farms they grew up in, and so on.  They asked interesting questions during the talk too.  I'd prepared quite a bit, but I was ready for the talk to go in several different directions, depending on what people were interested in.  In the end, it even included Martello Towers on the South Coast and the Wrexham Lager Brewery!  

Apparently there is another archaeologist who is one of the volunteers for the group, and she recently gave them a talk about Orkney and the archaeology up there (which is fascinating - I'm sorry I didn't get to meet her). 

So I had a lovely time - and I got a great compliment.  One of the ladies said that sometimes, speakers came and they couldn't wait for them to finish, but they wished I could have gone on for longer. 

So it was rather later than I had hoped when I got back to Hay, and I only caught the tail end of the Cusop Castle group meeting in the Swan.  Still, it was great to get back in touch with Denise Darbyshire again - who is doing research into the history of settlement in Cusop along with Peter Ford who lives across the road from me.

Next week, I'll be nice and early for the talk at Cusop Village Hall on the Herefordshire Hoard - the talk starts at 7.30pm and will be given by Tim Hoverd, the archaeologist from Herefordshire Council.  The group organising the dig at Cusop Castle this summer will be able to have a short meeting with him before the talk begins, and there will be a form available for anyone to sign if they are interested in being a volunteer on the dig.  Some people have already expressed an interest.  The dig is taking place at the beginning of June.  For further information, email the Cusop History Group.

Monday, 9 February 2026

Town of Culture Bid

 There's a new competition for a Town of Culture being launched by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.  The first winner will be in 2028.  This follows the success of the City of Culture programme.  There are three categories, for small, medium and large towns, and the cut off date to express an interest is 31st March.  After that, the short-listed towns will get £60,000 to develop a full bid.  The winning town will receive three million pounds to develop a cultural programme in 2028, with two runners up getting £250,000 each.

Hay has plenty of culture, so the Town Council are putting a bid forward.

If anyone would like to get involved, they should contact townclerk@haytowncouncil.gov.uk

Fiona Howard has already suggested Richard Booth: The Musical! 

Saturday, 7 February 2026

Changes at The Chair

 The little art gallery on the Square is changing - into another bookshop!

The windows are presently obscured by painted flames, but behind the scenes, a specialist SF and fantasy bookshop is taking shape.  They've got to the stage of advertising for staff, with a note on the door.  If anyone is interested, they should contact Green Ink Bookshop for more details.

Thursday, 5 February 2026

Hay Writers' Circle Poetry Competition

 Submissions for the 2026 Hay Writers' Circle poetry competition are now open.

Poems should be original, unpublished, a maximum of 40 lines in length, and on any theme.

The judge this year is Lesley Saunders, a prize winning author of several poetry collections, and translator of modern Portuguese poetry.

For full details, visit the website at www.haywriters.com

Closing date is 7th April. 

Thursday, 29 January 2026

Holidays

 I shall be away for a few days, so no posts - I'm off singing science fiction folk songs (filk) in Norwich!

Citizen Scientists Testing the Waters

 An article in the Hereford Times has paid tribute to the over 500 citizen scientists who have been testing the waters of the River Wye for pollution levels over the past few years.  By now they have taken something like 50,000 samples!

It started with anglers from the Wye Salmon Association who were concerned about the water quality in the river, and expanded to other groups along the river like Friends of the River Wye and CPRE Herefordshire.

There is now a combined database available to view, created by one of the members of Friends of the River Wye, at WyeViz (the Wye Viz Wye Alliance Citizen Science dashboard).  100,000 people have visited the site so far.

Citizen scientists and their groups are also calling for the government to do more to clean up the river.  The main problem along the Wye is agricultural run-off.  A recent Welsh Government report (www.gov.wales on Control of Agricultural Pollution) says that only 41% of farmers are compliant with the environmental regulations, and they are visiting farms and sending out warning letters and enforcement notices, but there's still a lot more that could be done, if the funding and staffing levels were better.

The number of citizen scientists involved shows just how much local people love their river - and for every citizen scientist there are more people who love the river but can't get involved in that way.

From the article: "Andrew McRobb from CPRE Herefordshire said: “We started doing this monitoring because the agencies told us that they were lacking data. We’ve delivered data in spades and they need to act on it. Over five years of sterling work by volunteer citizen scientists has delivered evidence for the agencies and governments and led the way to the government funding a long overdue comprehensive Wye Catchment Plan. We can identify the problems, but only the government agencies can enforce the actions necessary to deliver real change”."

 

Tuesday, 27 January 2026

Forty Years of Wye Valley Beer

 Wye Valley Brewery marks its fortieth anniversary this year - that's a lot of pints of Butty Bach along the way!

Back in the 1990s, when I was an active member of CAMRA, we used to meet at the Barrels, the Wye Valley brew pub in Hereford.  We were among the first to see the pump clips for their new Dorothy Goodbody range.  Pete Amor wanted to show them to the ladies in the group, because he was slightly worried the artwork might be seen as a bit sexist - but we thought they were fine.  The beer was certainly fine.

Since then, the business has grown - brewing has moved to bigger premises, they've bought new pubs in the area, and they still hold their beer festival at the Barrels.  Founder Pete Amor retired, and his son Vernon took over.  Pete even made a little film, going round other independent breweries around the country, as a way of celebrating local breweries like his.

I regularly stock up with their bottled range, including Butty Bach and Wholesome Stout, from Londis. 

Sunday, 25 January 2026

Dydd Hapus Sant Dwynwen

 

Happy St Dwynwen's Day - she is the patron saint of romantic love, and she was local to Mid Wales, being one of the many daughters of King Brychan.

Friday, 23 January 2026

First Snowdrop

 

I always look for snowdrops, and this year the first one I saw was on the patch of ground at the top of Backfold.  The first sign that spring is on the way!

Thursday, 22 January 2026

Healthcare Fellowship Award

 Congratulations to Melanie Prince - she works in healthcare as a Point of Care Testing Co-ordinator, and she has been selected as one of six Healthcare Scientists in Wales to receive a Healthcare Science Service Transformation Fellowship.  She will be going to Norway in February, to study how the Norwegians organise urgent care pathways in remote rural areas, and she will be bringing back what she learns there to improve healthcare service locally.  It's a very exciting opportunity!

Tuesday, 20 January 2026

North Weir Trust

 The North Weir Trust are starting 2026 with three applications for funds:

three teenagers want support for an educational and charity based trip to South Africa 

a local forest school wants to support volunteer engagement and knowledge

and a local primary school wants to support love of reading.

The North Weir Trust was created to support all sorts of projects locally, and does really good work.

They have a website at nwtrusthay.org.uk 

Monday, 19 January 2026

Health Drop-In at the Swan

 

There will be a drop-in session at the Swan on Thursday 22nd January from 3pm to 6pm, for anyone who's interested in what's going on in local health services.

They'll be talking about Better Together, the local mental health services, and temporary service changes, particularly to the Minor Injury Units, Ready to Go Home Units and Rehabilitation Units.

There'll be tea and coffee available, and staff will be able to chat. 

Saturday, 17 January 2026

Banking Hub for Hay

 There was a knock on the door this morning, while I was in the middle of watching an episode of Star Trek with my friend.

On the door step was Jane Dodds, the MS for this area, and another Lib Dem campaigner.  They wanted to drum up support for a banking hub for Hay.  

The last proper bank in Hay, Barclays, closed in 2018.  There used to be three bank branches in total, the others being Nat West and the Midland, which became Santander (and is now a clothes shop).  The Nat West send a van every fortnight, which parks outside the Cinema Bookshop for three quarters of an hour.

The idea of a Banking Hub is that several different banks share the same premises - so on Monday it's Barclays, on Tuesday it's Nat West, and so on. 

I was immediately enthusiastic, and so was my friend, who also came to the door to sign the petition.

At the moment, if I want cash I can go to the cash point at the Craft Centre, but it often runs out of money, and at the moment it is closed down until repairs can be made after someone tried to break into it.  The other option is the Post Office, which has taken on some of the functions of a bank branch.

If I want to do anything more complicated with my money, I have to take the bus into Hereford, which takes about an hour, and then I have to make sure I have other things to do in Hereford, because the X44 only runs, at best, every two hours (and not at all in the afternoons).  So what used to take me ten minutes at a local branch now takes me half a day.

I'm quite capable of organising online banking - I'm computer literate enough to have a blog, after all - but I refuse to do it.  I want to be able to go into a branch and speak to an actual human being who knows what they're doing, face to face.

So I have filled in the questionnaire they gave me, and I'm about to take it to the post box now.

For anyone who wants to join in the survey to say how the loss of banking services in Hay has affected them, they are also gathering information online at www.brlibdems.uk/HayHub

They will then take all the answers to the regulators to convince them that Hay needs a Banking Hub. 

Friday, 16 January 2026

Guitar Workshops for Women

 Sometimes I think it would be a nice idea to learn to play the guitar.  Occasionally, I've even got as far as buying a cheap guitar from a charity shop and having a go - but I've never got very far, and the guitar has always been given away again.

Having said that, the workshops at Racquety Farm look interesting.

Tomorrow, Saturday 17th January, there will be two workshops for women who are learning to play guitar.  In the morning, starting at 10am, there's a half day workshop for beginners, and the afternoon session, starting at 1.30pm, is for improvers.

Contact www.guitarforwomen@gmail.com for more details. 

 

Thursday, 15 January 2026

Wholly Cow

 When I came home from the concert on Saturday evening, I decided to walk down St Mary's Road onto Brecon Road and round that way instead of going up the hill round the Swan, just for a change.

I've walked past the playground and the sports centre several times, and I've never noticed this before:


 In the dark, it was all lit up, so I couldn't miss it!  So this morning I went to have a proper look.  

On one end is a coffee machine.  In the middle is a milk vending machine (or milkshakes!) and on the other end there are snacks, with a screen to pay at the nearest end.  It's open 24/7, which is why it was all lit up at night.

I imagine it will be quite popular as the weather gets warmer, and there are parents bringing their children to the playground and people using the sports facilities.  There were quite a few footprints in the mud, indicating that people are using it now. 

Wednesday, 14 January 2026

Hay Vouchers

 I saw in the December issue of WyeLocal that this is the tenth anniversary of the start of Hay Vouchers.  These are gift vouchers for use in local businesses in Hay, and they've been a great success!

They are administered through Pughs at Londis, and in the ten years the scheme has been running, they've sold an amazing £75,000 worth of vouchers, which can be spent in 113 businesses in Hay.  Some have even been sold to collectors around the world.

This keeps money circulating within the local economy, instead of being spent at national retailers or online and disappearing from the local economy.

The vouchers can be used just like cash, and then the business redeems the money for them from Pughs. 

Tuesday, 13 January 2026

Hay Theatre - Towards Zero

 The Senior Youth Theatre group are rehearsing for their next play.  It's Towards Zero, by Agatha Christie, adapted for the stage by local writer and director Janine Sharp.

National Lottery Wales and PAVO Youth-Led Grant Scheme are funding the production, which will be performed in Clyro Village Hall on Saturday 21st and Sunday 22nd March.

The eleven to eighteen year olds in the group chose the play themselves, because they wanted to perform a traditional murder mystery, and they are also making the set, props and costumes.  They also applied for the PAVO grant themselves.

There will be some slight changes to the original plot - instead of being set in Cornwall in 1944, it is now set on the coast of Clyro near Hay Sands in 1949.  This is because the first female Detective Inspector in Britain was appointed in 1949 - the doctor in the play is also a woman, because of the shortage of men after the Second World War.

It's not too late to get involved - there will be an open rehearsal and masterclass on Saturday 31st January from 1pm to 3pm at Clyro Village Hall (free, and refreshments will be available).

Then from 3pm to 4.30pm on the same day, they will be talking about what goes on behind the scenes, with the set, props and costume. 

Monday, 12 January 2026

Majolica Retrospective

 Pat Birks is one of the founder members of The Hay Makers Gallery - she's a potter, and has made many gorgeous jugs and jars and other pottery over the years, in the style called Majolica ware.  Some Majolica is very intricate and  colourful.  Pat's style is mostly blue and white patterns.  I found this picture on the Haymakers website:


 The Hay Makers Gallery are holding a retrospective exhibition of Pat's work, and they are looking for loans of her work.  They can be contacted on info@haymakers.co.uk, and would like to see a picture of the piece.

The exibition will run from 22nd to 31st January, at the St John's Place Gallery, open from 10.30am to 4pm. 

Sunday, 11 January 2026

Nordic and Baroque Music at St Mary's

 The Hay Music concert was brilliant!

Erik Rydvall on the nyckelharpa, (from Sweden) and Olav Mjelva on hardanger fiddle (from Norway) are both folk music stars, and they were joined by Max Baillie on the classical violin.

There were times when the nyckelharpa sounded like more than one instrument - it looks very complex, but Erik said it was quite easy really (!).  It's an instrument which has been evolving since medieval times, when nyckelharpas were included in wall paintings of medieval musical angels.  He said he chose his current one because he can play Bach on it (and proceeded to demonstrate).

It's played with a bow, over four groups of four strings, and then each individual string has a peg to sound the note. 

By contrast, the classical violin hasn't really changed in 400 years.

The Hardanger fiddle has several differences from the classical violin, too.  Olav said that he comes from a mining area of Norway, and in the 19th century German mining engineers wanted to hear the latest European fashions in music, like the polka and the waltz, so sent local folk fiddlers off to places like Copenhagen to learn the new styles, which got incorporated with the local traditions.

On Friday, they went into the school to give a workshop, and several of the children turned up for the concert with their families - they seemed to be really enjoying it.

As well as Nordic folk music and baroque music, they have started to branch out into Eastern European music from composers like Dvorak - who themselves went off into the countryside to collect folk music to incorporate into their music.  And they played pieces that they had written themselves.

They have made a CD, Bach to Folk, so I had to buy a copy.  They said that, if anyone took the CD home and didn't like it, they could send it to Olav - and he would send them back a CD that he didn't like!  There was a warning that it would probably include accordion music!  They added that some people had actually taken the offer seriously....
 

At the beginning of the second half, Janice Day took the mic to advertise the upcoming concert Rhapsody in Green, which features her husband Martin Litton and Mike Hatchard sharing one piano, with Janice performing some musical comedy. The concert will be at St Mary's on Thursday 29th January, from 7pm.  Early bird tickets are £13 each, and can be booked via the website www.vintagebythewye.com

Thursday, 8 January 2026

Crime in the Craft Centre

 

This is the first time I've had a chance to get up to the Craft Centre, where someone tried to break into the ATM on Sunday.  They failed, but damaged the wall inside the building badly enough that the toilets have had to be closed until further notice, until the damage can be repaired.  Obviously, the ATM isn't working either, but cash can be obtained from the Post Office across the road.

The miscreants have not been caught yet. 

Monday, 5 January 2026

Lodestar Trio

 Hay Music is starting off the New Year with an afternoon concert at St Mary's Church at 4pm on Saturday 10th January.  I went down to the Tourist Information office to get my ticket yesterday.

The Lodestar Trio plays classical and baroque music on violin, Swedish nyckelharpa and Norwegian hardanger fiddle, which is quite a combination!  They also play traditional and contemporary Nordic tunes.

Doors open at 3.30pm, and there will be a bar. Tickets are £20, and £10 for under-25s, with a limited number of free tickets for under-25 year olds, first come, first served.

Then on Saturday 31st January, at 6pm, there's a children's concert at Hay Castle. Tickets are £15, with under-25s free.  The Solstice Collective wind quintet are doing Peter and the Wolf, with Felix Ashley as narrator.

I love Peter and the Wolf, and have happy memories of seeing Johnny Morris (of Animal Magic fame) narrate it at a concert at Lancaster University back in the 1980s.  Sadly, I'll be away that weekend, so I won't be able to see this version.