Friday, 24 April 2026
Cwmni Caws Cheddar Blaenafon a Bonedau Pasg – Cyfarfod mis Ebrill
Friday, 10 April 2026
Newsletter – April 2026
April 13th meeting:
We are delighted to welcome Blaenavon Cheese to tell us about their company and offer samples of their products to taste.
Are you making an Easter bonnet? Hopefully there will be an vast array of members wearing Easter bonnets at the meeting. There is a prize for the best one.
Membership Fees: Membership fees are now due for renewal. The cost is £54 for the year's subscription. You can pay by bank transfer or give Liz cash or a cheque at the meeting.
Our charity:
A table has been booked at Whitchurch Festival on Saturday July 4th to raise funds for our charity. Our charity for this year is Parkinson’s UK Cymru. Do please let the committee have your suggestions for this event and fundraising ideas.
Events:
On Wednesday 22nd April we will be celebrating our 21st anniversary. This is an afternoon tea at Llanishen Golf Club at 2:30. A VEST bus has been booked for transport and there are still a few spare spaces available.
Information
Link to the Glamorgan Newsletters.
MyWI site (registration and log in required)
Groups:
Book Group: Wednesday 15th April / 11.00 am / La Cucina da Mara
Family History: Monday 27th April / 2.00 pm / 113 Pantbach Road
Poetry and Prose Group: Monday 27th April / 10.45 am
The Ark coffee bar, Ararat / Topic: food and drink
Craft Group: Monday 20th April / 2 pm / 18 Heol Stradling
St Mary's Gardens: Tuesday 5th May / 10 – 12
Sunday Lunch Group: Sunday 26th April / 1 pm / Pendragon
Following meeting:
Next meeting: Monday 11th May in Ararat Church Hall, Whitchurch Common, 2 pm.
This meeting is our AGM where members vote in the new committee.
There will be a demonstration of Tai Chi by Corina Walker during the time that the committee have a short meeting with the Glamorgan Federation representative. Corina teaches a set of movements called Shibashi on Wednesdays through Age Cymru.
Sunday, 15 March 2026
A Girls' School in South Sudan – March 2026
Ysgol i Ferched yn Ne Swdan -- Mawrth 2026
Charity cheque presentation - March 2026
We were delighted to present a cheque to Velindre for £750. This was the result of our fundraising efforts for 2025/26.
The charity we have chosen for 2026/27 is Parkinsons UK Cymru.
Saturday, 28 February 2026
Newsletter – March 2026
March 9th meeting:
We are delighted to welcome back the accomplished singer, Christine Purkiss. Her topic this time is Gilbert and Sullivan.
There will be feedback on the questionnaire. Thank you to the 52 members who completed a one.
A good number of people have signed up for the 21st anniversary celebratory afternoon tea. It is not too late to add your name, but all payments must be paid this meeting please. The cost is £15. There will be a VEST bus to transport those who need it.
Our charity:
We will present a cheque to Emma from Velindre, for £750.
We will also vote on the selection of our new charity to support. The short list is: RNLI, Salvation Army, Parkinson’s UK Cymru, Crisis and Banardo’s.
Information
Link to the Glamorgan Newsletters.
MyWI site (registration and log in required)
Groups:
Book Group: Wednesday 11th March / 11.00 am / La Cucina da Mara
Family History: Monday 30th March / 2.00 pm / 113 Pantbach Road
Poetry and Prose Group: Monday 16th March / 10.45 am
The Ark coffee bar, Ararat / Topic: women writers
Craft Group: Monday 16th March / 2 pm / 18 Heol Stradling
St Mary's Gardens: Tuesday 7th April / 10 – 12
Following meeting:
Next meeting: Monday 13th April in Ararat Church Hall, Whitchurch Common, 2 pm.
Speaker : Blaenavon Cheddar
There will also be an Easter bonnet competition, so get busy with your creativity.
Friday, 13 February 2026
Meeting Speakers – February 2026
Empowering Communities: enhancing 'carbon capability' for climate action.
Dr Briony Latter, from Cardiff University, and her colleague, Dr Sam Hampton, from Bath University, have been working with the WI and the National Childbirth Trust. Briony visited to present a short, ten-minute introduction to the project. They have been looking at climate change and how it effects us. Briony explained that the project has been looking at how climate change impacts on daily life; have seen that it attracts public support; are stressing that individual and societal choices are important; and raising awareness that we do have a personal capability to reduce our carbon footprint. Areas we can examine personally are the use of energy in our homes; transport, in particular avoiding flying; how we shop; citizenship and our influence on others; and food shopping, consumption and waste, such as eating meat less frequently. Briony emphasised the need for people to have conversations about climate change and what differences we can make personally. The project has discovered that conversations at the hairdressers are a good source of everyday influence.
Women of the Titanic: stewardesses, spies and suffragettes.
Michelle Michaelis gave a detailed and interesting talk on the victims and survivors of the sinking of the Titanic in 1912. She also brought a fascinating array of photographs, memorabilia and newspapers all connected with the passengers and crew. The Titanic hit the iceberg at night and many passengers had already gone to bed. Some were woken by the impact but simply went back to bed, unaware of the seriousness of the event. Many passengers believed the ship to be unsinkable, and the situation did not become obviously serious for quite a long time, as the staff were reassuring people that everything was alright, and the musicians continued to play. It was also bitterly cold outside and many preferred to stay indoors where it was warm.
There were 2,224 people on board, but the lifeboats could only accommodate 1100. The crew were not well-trained in lifeboat drill, and the boats were not prepared, lacking lights, water and food. It was over an hour after the collision before the first lifeboat was launched. Some passengers were more frightened of being launched from the height of the deck into the sea than they were of remaining on the ship.
Michelle told individual stories of some of the passengers. One elderly coupled stayed in their cabin to go down with the ship, rather than being separated on the lifeboat. Families were separated because the women and children were instructed to board the lifeboats first. One actress who survived the disaster may have been a spy. Molly Brown and several other women were suffragettes. There were 23 stewardesses on board. Three refused to leave the ship, but 20 survived. Michelle gave many interesting facts and snippets of information, such as Edith Rosenbaum's musical toy pig that she played on the lifeboat to entertain the frightened children (sound available on YouTube: 'Titanic pig'.)
Newsletter – June 2026
June 8th meeting: Nor'dzin, our co-President will talk about the era of Jane Austen's novels, and in particular present some of the ...
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July 14th meeting: Main Speaker and Singer: Christine Purkiss – The Story of Rodgers and Hammerstein Additional Speaker: Dr Krist...
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The meeting began with a short presentation by Dr Kristian Skoczek, Post-doctoral Research Associate for Cardiff University's REVAMP pro...
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Many thanks to John Lewis in Cardiff for displaying these excellent and inspiring fabric squares.











