Author: Beth Rogers

  • Wrexham’s new Wellbeing Hub to officially open

    Wrexham’s new Wellbeing Hub to officially open

    Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHB), Wrexham Council and AVOW have joined forces to create a new Wellbeing Hub in Wrexham city centre.

    The Wellbeing Hub aims to make it quicker and easier for people to access information, providing a range of services under one roof, helping to prevent illness and encourage people to lead longer, happier lives.

    With easy access to information and advice as well as accessible spaces and facilities, the Wellbeing Hub is perfect for a range of community groups to use.
    Some community groups and individuals have had the opportunity to try the facilities before the official opening.

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    Robin Ranson, from BCUHB Health Improvement Team, said: “I have been fortunate enough to have a tour around the Wrexham Wellbeing Hub, while attending a recent meeting in one of its community rooms. The building looks fantastic, is very inviting and is located in a handy central Wrexham location with great transport links, as well as easy walking and wheelchair access. The rooms for hire look super and we are very keen to run our Health Improvement Programmes from there, as they meet our needs of a kitchen for our Cooking Programme. There is also space for exercise classes, as well as tables and chairs for our educational sessions. We can see ourselves making great use of this amazing facility that we are so lucky to have in Wrexham, and recommend others come to see what potential it has for their groups/services.”

    Dynamic Wrexham said: “Our children and young people have been to the new Wellbeing Hub at Crown buildings and got to test out their amazing new sensory room and outdoor play area and it did not disappoint. What a fantastic space. We feel very honoured to be able to test run the facilities before they officially open.”

    Phil, a father of two young boys said: “The Wellbeing Hub is an amazing space for families. The sensory room and outdoor play area was a great hit with my children and we are looking forward to seeing what activities are on offer in the future.”

    The Wellbeing Hub will officially open on Wednesday, October 5th from 2pm – 5pm. Members of the public are invited to come along to see what the hub can offer. There will be demonstrations, information stalls, tai chi taster sessions, story time, sensory room, outdoor play area and fun activities.

    For more information about the Wellbeing Hub and the services it has to offer please search for Wellbeing Hub Wrexham on Facebook.

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  • Unpaid carers – have your say

    Unpaid carers – have your say

    Are you an unpaid carer? Come along to a special focus group to have your say about the services and information that is available to you in Wrexham.

    Unpaid Carers Focus Group

    Friday, 9 September 11am-3pm

    Wellbeing Hub, Crown Buildings, 31 Chester Street, Wrexham LL138BG

    Book Now 

    Call: 01978 423114

    Email: Enquiries@newcis.org.uk

    A carer is anyone who cares, unpaid, for a relative, partner or friend who is frail, ill, disabled or has mental health or substance misuse problems.

    NEWCIS (North East Wales Carers Information Service) are commissioned to provide a service for unpaid carers by Wrexham County Borough Council. NEWCIS provide timely information, one to one support, respite, financial support, training, social events, counselling and more.

    For more information about NEWCIS visit their website

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  • Dementia Interpreter Course – Booking Essential

    Dementia Interpreter Course – Booking Essential

    Do you live in Wrexham or work with people living in Wrexham? Would you like to understand how to better communicate with people living with dementia?

    The dementia interpreter course is designed to help people understand how to communicate with people with dementia and to recognise that some behaviours are often a way of telling us something.

    By understanding this behaviour, we can then reduce the frustration that losing the ability to talk can cause.

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    The course will delve into the impact of communication issues on an individual and on a group – not only from your perspective but from the person’s perspective as well. You will learn new techniques to help understand the simple changes you need to make to understand a person and you will gain skills to decipher behaviours and enable you to understand what someone is “saying”.

    There are two sessions available per day at each venue: 09.30am – 12.30pm or 1.30pm – 4.30pm

    This training is available specifically for people living in Wrexham or working with individuals living in Wrexham.

    Course dates – booking essential

    19 & 22 September 2022:
    Enterprise Hub, Queens square, Wrexham, LL11 1AT

    21 September 2022 – Fully booked
    Crown Buildings, 31 Chester Street, Wrexham, LL13 8BG

    23 September 2022:
    Phoenix Homecare and Support, Wrexham, LL11 4YL

    For more information, please contact:
    commissioning@wrexham.gov.uk
    To book your place: Ffôn: / Tel: 01978 292000

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  • Voting open! Two of Wrexham’s parks nominated in UK’s Favourite Park competition

    Voting open! Two of Wrexham’s parks nominated in UK’s Favourite Park competition

    Fields in Trust is celebrating the nation’s parks and two of Wrexham’s parks have been nominated!

    Bellevue Park and Haywards Field are among the 364 parks and green spaces in the running to be awarded UK’s Favourite Park 2022.

    Our local parks have acted as a sanctuary for so many of us over the past few years and the UK’s Favourite Parks award celebrates the contributions these spaces deliver for our neighbourhoods and communities.

    Lead Member for Environment, Councillor Hugh Jones said, “It’s great news that two of our fantastic parks in Wrexham have been nominated for this award. Green spaces are important for everyone and are vital to our wellbeing. I would like to encourage everyone to support our parks and vote in this nationwide public vote organised by green space charity, Fields in Trust.”

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    Fields in Trust Chief Executive Helen Griffiths said: “We’re absolutely delighted to see that hundreds of parks and green spaces have been nominated up and down the country. It is heartening to hear the individual stories of significance for these spaces and this process has only emphasised the collective importance of having natural areas in our communities. Our nation’s parks have been so important during the pandemic, and it is vital that we celebrate them to help ensure they are protected for future generations. Our children and grandchildren deserve to have the same access to green space that we do, and benefit from the contribution local green spaces make to our health, our wellbeing, our environment, and ultimately our futures.”

    UK’s Favourite Park 2022 – Vote now! 

    Voting is now open at the fields in trust website and will close at noon on Thursday 18th August 2022. The parks with the most votes in each of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will be named National Favourites and the overall winner the UK’s Favourite Park 2022.

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  • Tŷ Pawb’s comedy night is back!

    Tŷ Pawb’s comedy night is back!

    It promises to be a top comedy night that is guaranteed to make you laugh and leave you feeling uplifted! Comedy nights at Tŷ Pawb have been very popular and the line-up for this event promises to deliver another hilarious evening for you all.

    Friday, August 12
    7.30pm (first act 8.00pm)
    Tickets: £10

    Starring Harry Stachini, Jordan Ducharme, Kevin Caswell-Jones, Joanne Sargingson and Justina Seselskaite

    Tickets 

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  • Visit Tŷ Pawb to see one of the best surviving examples of Welsh folk art

    Visit Tŷ Pawb to see one of the best surviving examples of Welsh folk art

    The Tailor’s Tale brings together artistic responses to the famous Wrexham Tailor’s Quilt, created by James Williams between 1842 and 1852.

    The quilt, now housed permanently at St Fagan’s Museum, loaned to Tŷ Pawb for this exhibition, is actually a single layer patchwork coverlet made up of 4,525 individual pieces of woolen cloth.

    The quilt depicts scenes from the Bible such as Adam naming the animals, Cain and Abel, Jonah and the whale, and Noah’s ark. It also features motifs symbolizing Wales, England, Scotland and Ireland. The Menai Suspension Bridge and Cefn Viaduct are also featured.

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    Such was the workmanship of the quilt, it was displayed at the Art Treasures Exhibition of North Wales, held in Wrexham in 1876 and the National Eisteddfod in 1933, also held in Wrexham.

    The quilt is now widely regarded as one of the best surviving examples of Welsh folk art.

    Adam Jones is a Wrexham born, London based fashion designer; a contemporary tailor who has been commissioned by Tŷ Pawb to recreate a Wrexham Quilt for 2022. Adam’s quilt is exhibited alongside garments from his own collection.

    Ruth Caswell

    This exhibition was conceived and realised by the grace and drive of Ruth Caswell, the Award winning costumier and fashion designer, lecturer and enthusiastic supporter of Tŷ Pawb. We dedicate The Tailor’s Tale to Ruth’s memory.

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  • Help with childcare costs for working parents of 3 to 4 year olds

    Help with childcare costs for working parents of 3 to 4 year olds

    Most working parents of 3 or 4 year old children could be getting government help with childcare costs.

    Under the Childcare Offer for Wales, you could claim 30 hours of early education and childcare in Wales a week for up to 48 weeks of the year. It aims to make life a little bit easier for parents by offering help with childcare costs.

    The offer has already helped parents from all over Wales to return to work, increase their hours or work more flexibly.

    Whatever the offer means for you and your family, don’t miss out on your share of government help with childcare.

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    Applications for the Childcare Offer For Wales are open right now across Wales.

    If you are a childcare provider, you can find information and guidance on the Welsh Government website. 

    What’s included in the offer?

    The Welsh Government Childcare Offer for Wales means that most working parents of 3 to 4 year olds can now claim funds towards the cost of childcare.

    This means 30 hours of early education and childcare in Wales for eligible parents.

    The 30 hours is made up of a minimum of 10 hours early education a week and a maximum of 20 hours a week of childcare.

    It is available for 48 weeks of the year, meaning that the offer can help with childcare cover for some of the school holidays.

    Find out more about the Childcare Offer for Wales and apply here.

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  • New artwork for Tŷ Pawb’s Wal Pawb

    New artwork for Tŷ Pawb’s Wal Pawb

    Wal Pawb is an annual commission of six artworks to be displayed across two Tri-Vision billboards within Tŷ Pawb.

    The six new Wal Pawb artworks have been created by artist Alan Dunn. They are a “celebration of the hard working traders, community members and behind-the-scenes Tŷ Pawb staff.”

    The six new designs have been developed over 12 months in collaboration with artists Natasha Borton and Meilir Tomos, Tŷ Pawb market traders, staff and visitors.

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    Alan Dunn said, “I started visiting Tŷ Pawb in July 2021 wanting to explore a kind of post-Covid desire to celebrate food and a return to ‘real’ socialising. From then to the final work, I was privileged to work closely with artists Natasha Borton and Meilir Tomos and through them I met a staggering range of people across Wrexham, from Tŷ Pawb market traders, through staff and visitors. I was immediately taken by the energy and feistiness of the (then) Town which really reminded me of my birthplace Glasgow and Liverpool where I’ve lived for over 25 years – no strict lines between artists, musicians, poets or community activists. I wanted to capture all this in just four words and six photographs!

    One day I was sat having a coffee from Curry on the Go and I overheard someone say supercalifragilisticexpialidocious and the whole project fell into place – we’d all create FOUR SUPERWORDS of Welsh, English, Portuguese and Polish that cross-checked food, music, poetry and all those little Wrexham stories that only a few will recognise. We wanted the designs to be equally bold and monumental, like record sleeves and billboards for all the bands we love, with dramatic lighting, rockstar poses and our final three ‘Sgt Pepper’ style tableaux that celebrate hard working traders, community members and behind-the-scenes Tŷ Pawb staff.”

     

    www.typawb.wales/wal-pawb

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  • Don’t miss your chance! Grants available to help community groups in Wrexham

    Don’t miss your chance! Grants available to help community groups in Wrexham

    Do you want to set up a new group for adults in your local community?

    Could you host a luncheon club?

    Is a group you attend looking to expand?

    Well, the Community Inclusion Grant could help you!

    Our Adult Social Care Team helps to fund lots of different projects and groups for adults across Wrexham. From luncheon clubs, Yoga and art classes to bird watching and line dancing.

    The grant aims to support the start-up of community based activities or expand groups and lunch, supper and breakfast clubs which support the independence, health and wellbeing of individuals living within their community.

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    Previously, recipients of the grant include Springfield Gardeners Club and Overton on Dee Community Gardeners.

    Overton on Dee Community Gardeners said, “The grant has helped us to forge strong cross community links with members of various other village groups and organisations e.g. Overton and village hall committee, Overton Oracle, Overton community council, Overton WI, Overton bowling club, Overton British Legion, Blues and Roots Festival, Village Fete and local businesses.

    It helped us to develop the integration within the village of older and younger villagers through a diverse age range of membership. It has widened, extended and developed a sense of community for all our members, and as a result, the village environment has been improved and maintained.

    Following on from the success of the Community Inclusion Grant since 2012, we are now widening the eligibility criteria. This means that we will welcome applications from schemes that support older adults and adults with learning and/or physical disabilities and mental health problems, as well as informal carers.

    Since 2012 the grant has helped nearly one hundred groups in the county borough.

    Mr Phil Coops, said, “Funding from the Community Inclusion Grant has made it possible for our small group to obtain and make available equipment and material for the use of the whole community in a manner that has not been available before. We can now help the senior members of the district remember their previous years and recollect the past that they will enjoy.

    “The process for obtaining the grant is quite simple to navigate and the staff were always available to help should there be any problems. As a group, they have been invaluable in helping us to carry out our successful application and project for the community.”

    Cllr John Pritchard, Lead Member for Adult Social Care said: “The grants have already supported lots of community activities across Wrexham and I would encourage anyone who is thinking of setting up a community group or wants to build on an existing group to get in touch with the commissioning team.”

    Grants can be used for sessions run by volunteers where people can meet together on a regular basis for activities. Proposals are invited from individuals and organisations for activities such as:

    Lunch with good company
    Sharing hobbies
    Learning new skills
    Social enterprise / co-operative

    You can now apply online

    Or email: CIG@wrexham.gov.uk for more information

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  • WATCH: Dementia Action Week (Interview Rosemarie and Pat)

    WATCH: Dementia Action Week (Interview Rosemarie and Pat)

    Rosemarie and Pat interview transcript 

    LG:

    Hello everyone. It’s day two of Dementia Action Week and we had a really great start to it yesterday and I know that today is not going to be any different. I bring you two very special guests today. Double the trouble and I’m sure double the brilliant answers. I’m joined today with Rosemarie and Pat Williams and they’re going to talk to us a little bit about their story with dementia. For those of you who missed yesterday’s video, the purpose of this series is asking five different individuals, or now six with these two lovely ladies, the same three questions to show that if you’ve met one person living with dementia, you’ve only met one person living with dementia. The way I’m hoping to show this is by showing how different everyone’s answers are during these interviews. Without further ado, thanks very much for joining us today ladies. The first question is, tell us a bit about yourselves. What’s your involvement and your story with dementia?

    RW:

    It came from the church really. It came from St. Anne’s Church in Caia Park. They were looking for somebody to represent the voice of people with dementia. Pat has always worked in the community, I’ve done quite a bit in the community and we thought we’d go along to the meeting where they were trying to enable parishes to become more dementia friendly. Pat thought she was going along to make a cup of tea and help people.

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    PW:

    I thought it was to volunteer to befriend somebody with Alzheimer’s, take them out for a cup of coffee in the afternoon. That’s what I thought. Got quite a shock when we got there and they told us we had to do a project.

     

    RW:

    We thought we’d ask people themselves so we asked people in the parish in St. Anne’s what they thought would be helpful. We thought, we don’t want to restrict it to the church, we want the wider community involvement. We invited another group of people to come along to learn more about what the needs were for people. For people who are carers for people with dementia. For people themselves. We had great ideas coming forward and one thing, like Pat said, that was really lacking was a simple guide. There’s loads of information out there but it’s not all put together so we got a group of people together to ask them. We did some research on what is it you’d want in a guide. People told us those answers and we came up with the title “Memories” which is very apt. We met some really interesting people along the way which the people informed us. On the 20th, we’re actually launching “Memories”. We’re having a simple local guide and you’re right Luke, we realise that dementia doesn’t define people. People are individuals and people experience, what they experience, are very varied and different ways. By involving people and agreeing that dementia doesn’t define anybody, there’s still some joy to be had in your life. Our first stopping point is this launch of “Memories”, this leaflet that will go in Wrexham.

     

    PW:

    From a) How does somebody know that they’ve got dementia? To accessing an assessment and then accessing different services that might be of help to the person who’s got dementia. Also, to the carer. Specifically the carer because they’re under an enormous amount of pressure looking after somebody with dementia. It’s time consuming and it really is exhausting. Especially if they don’t get any respite care as well. That came up a lot in the services from Wrexham County Borough Council, respite care. They just don’t get it. People need respite care if only going to a day centre to allow the carer to be able to go to the shops or get their haircut or something. Even a luncheon club one day a week.

     

    RW:

    Sorry Luke. We’re looking then to have this guide which, on the 20th, it will be launched. Then there’ll be a next steps project to “Memories” and we’re going to ask people again to come forward in a very socially inclusive, getting people together, to combat isolation. To burst some of the myths that are around about, well, “people don’t know you if you visit them”. Well, people are left with a very good feeling if you visit them as you know as an ambassador. We’re trying to take away some of the stigma surrounding it. There’s a lot of stigma around dementia, mental health. Actually by being ore open about it, by listening to what people say would be helpful, then we’ll develop a plan of things to do over the next twelve months really.

     

    LG:

    That’s fantastic. That project is brilliant. My colleague, Delyth, did tell me a little bit about what you guys were doing and that was another reason why I was really happy that you guys could join me today. It’s because of people like yourselves why this question might be a little easy for you. Obviously, you are a part of this but, myself being a Dementia Friends Champion, I go out and I do awareness sessions. I take part in campaigns like Dementia Action Week and you both are going out with this brilliant idea of the pamphlet. With all this that’s going on, I think I’m going ot get a really good answer from you here, how important do you feel that there are things like this that we’re all doing, that it’s going on in the community, how vital is it that things like this are going on?

     

    RW:

    I think it’s important.

     

    PW:

    It’s got to be because there’s so many more people now suffering with dementia. Dementia sufferers is just on the increase and it’s going to get worse because people are living longer.

     

    RW:

    It’s all of us. There’s no good looking over our shoulder and saying “It’s her next door, it’s him down the road”. If you think about it, with an ageing population, looking at the demographics, it’s all of us. We’re all included. We all know somebody, we’ve all got a friend or a relative that’s affected by dementia and so what we’re about, really, supporting people to stave off some of the signs of it by people having good wellbeing. We’re hoping that our project will, you know, there’s many things going on, many other projects. We hope that this is something that we can offer and, hopefully, other people will join the bandwagon if you like. We’ve already had the offer of volunteers to come along and do things. We know that music is uplifting for people. I don’t know if you saw on the television about the choir, the dementia choir. That was fantastic.

     

    LG:

    With Vicky McClure. Yeah, brilliant.

     

    RW:

    Who knows? We might have a dementia choir in Wrexham, why not?

     

    LG:

    There’s no reason why we can’t.

     

    RW:

    No. So, you know, there’s lots of people who’ve got lots of talents to share, including people with dementia. People have got lots of talents and music is one. Only one way through but there are many other ways to touch people so we learn together. There’s lots of learning for all of us.

     

    LG:

    Definitely.

     

    PW:

    Inter-generational schemes, talking to school children about their war experiences or just saying about their life experiences and they can do that, old people. Even if they’re suffering from dementia because they remember things like that. They’re passing on their knowledge as well to younger people.

     

    LG:

    Totally and that leads on to one of the key messages that there is more to the person than the dementia. It’s exactly like what you guys said then that these people could’ve fought in the war. They have still got a story behind the disease. The disease isn’t the person. I’ve spoken to one of the carers in the community and he said very much the same. People don’t talk to the person, they’re talking to the disease and that’s very, very wrong. It’s things like that that need stopping and it’s during these sessions, we get people to think about a positive action to do when you come across someone living with dementia just to make their life a little bit easier. For the people at home, what would you suggest would be a positive action for the people at home?

     

    RW:

    I think listening. I think as you’ve just said Luke, people seem to not listen to what’s going on so not having that proper interaction and sometimes talk at people rather than really carefully listening. Everybody, as you said, has a story to tell and we can link in with the history of that person. I visited a person recently who was a farmer, Ken, who’s had a real rich life with his farming and his family and his community and has a lot still to give. We think of people being made up of physical and mental but there’s also that spiritual, that tick, inside all of us and his eyes lit up. He was beaming relating to people on a human level. Listening, we can all do it. It’s free. It’s just time.

     

    PW:

    I think as well, for family members, not to argue with the person that’s got dementia. I’ve been to several houses and the old person has said “I want to go such and such a place”, “Oh no you can’t go, you haven’t been there in years” instead of just going along with it and say “Oh yeah, we can go there later on. Have your dinner first and we’ll go there later” because they will have forgotten about it then but just don’t argue with them because it gets them agitated and you get yourself agitated as well. It doesn’t do either of you any good.

     

    LG:

    No and those are two really important ones and thanks for sharing them ones. Thank you for your time today. It’s been brilliant. I’ve got to say, the very, very best of luck with the pamphlet. If you need a volunteer, hit me up, I’ll roll my sleeves up.

    RW:

    I’ll put your name down Luke.

     

    LG:

    You stick that name down there, I’ll roll my sleeves up. I’d be delighted to come and help you. Ladies and gentlemen, I’ve had two fantastic guests on today as you’ve seen for yourselves and it’s only aiding what we’re doing this week. A big, big thank you to Rosemarie and Pat for their time today and thank you guys for tuning in. Keep wearing your Dementia Friends badge with pride and we’ll see you on the nest one. Thanks very much everybody. Thanks both.

     

    RW:

    Thank you. Take care, bye.

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