Well you got me right, and sitting on the bench in front of me with her back to the camera (white hair) is my mum, Megan (not on the forum). @sarapeacock is standing next to us (wearing a scarf).
I can confirm that the unidentified head is most definitely me!! Quite shocking actually, I thought I had more hair! Oh wellā¦
Unidentified head hereā¦
Sorry @henddraig, I got there just in time to see the entourage leaving the Gorsedd Circle. I got a few photos but none which would help you.
Lovely to meet you too Pippa!
It is my pleasure. I wish I would have them more and one of us all on that one picture missing now BUT Iām glad Iāve met you all and had a little conversation with many of you.
Maybe one day I come back, meeting you all and making that alltogether big picture! Iāll surely try to work toward that goal, developing more in Welsh in that time of course.
@hewrop, Iām sorry itās only now Iāve read your āreportā. Lovely and thank you for all nice and warm words meant to me. Lovely report in deed.
Iāve been meaning to ask if any of you who met @leiafee saw her on Dal Ati on Sunday morning, the program about Abertawe and area? She was being asked about flying from the local airfield and also about learning the language! She gave SSiW a wonderful advert!! @aran & @Iestyn should be pleased!
I was taken up in a little plane from there, by a friend with half-shares in it (the plane, not the airfield!). We buzzed various friends and relations!
Theyāre getting their moneyās worth out of thst clip! It was years ago they filmed it, when I was still flying the club Tomahawks. Two days before I had all my wisdom teeth taken out due to the enormous tooth abscess Iām sporting like the elephant woman!
I think all our SSiW interviews are on a loop. They just keep popping up again and again. Must be quality TV
Mind, to be fair, we do know S4C are short of money! We wouldnāt need the petition otherwise!
It was great to meet those of you that I saw at the Eisteddfod, unfortunately I ended up scheduling my long volunteer shift right during the middle of the meet-up. But shout out to @netmouse who kindly came to say helloā¦until we got told off! Did I stamp your hand maybe?
Lovely to meet you, Kerstin! Pity we didnāt get more time to chat - but the Eisteddfod tends to be a bit like that! Weāll have to try and arrange a slightly longer meetup/party kind of thing next yearā¦
DIOLCH yn fawr!
Between your enthusiastic comments here and the āBEEBā transmitting the highlights of each day I enjoyed the Eisteddfod vicariously from thousands of miles away.
Looking forward to this yearās SSiW one.
Cheers,
Marilyn
Iām not sure whether to post this here or wake up the ācustomsā thread! I decided on here with the notion that it can always get linked and shifted if it sparks any reaction!
BBC recently repeated a series in which Michael Palin travelled round what he called ānew Europeā. It wasnāt of course. Parts had restored boundaries, parts had recently joined the EU, Germany was reunited, but that was nearly 20 years before the filming in 2007. Anyway, Iād missed it, so recorded it on Sky and finally got around to watching!
I nearly deleted after a bit of the first episode because @tatjanaās lovely country was represented by shots of Palin on a mountain and a mention that Slovenia had voted to leave Yugoslavia and this brought about its break-up. (I believe this is a great simplification and although I paraphrased Palin, I donāt think I did so unfairly!) We know there is a lot more of Slovenia that is worth seeing than one mountain and I was cross! But I did continue to watch. It was all very patchy and haphazard. I doubt most countries would feel well represented, but then Palin is a comedian!
Eventually, we reached Latvia and I stared at the screen and gasped, āBlodeuged!ā
It was girls wearing flowers garlands round their hair and then dancing in circles round an oak tree. It was āJaniā he said, which is June 24th and, basically, a solstice festival. I had been instantly struck by the resemblance to the Maiden and her floral dancers presenting the Blodeuged to the crowned or chaired Bard at the Eisteddfod.
I do not believe Iolo Morganwg ever visited Latvia!
Does anyone know if there is evidence of connections between the people of Latvia and those who arrived in Britain after the Ice Age?
Is @seren still with us? I know she knows a lot about customs and Latvia is next to Belarus. Is anyone from Latvia on the Forum?
Or am I chasing a totally spurious similarity? It wasnāt just the garlands and dancers, it was honouring the oak which, I think, the Romans mentioned that we did!
Ah yes, Iāll have to get a move on with that
Hen Ddraig,
It would be nice to find very historical linkages, but the 19th century was rife with aristocrats and philosophers trying to reinvent ancient customs and traditions - kilts, christmas trees, Easter eggs etc. I think Lady Llanofer got a lot of mention in the Eisteddfod, patron of Iolo Morgannwg and sister in-law to the Prussian Christian Von Bunsen, who was very interested in links to culture and language etc and how to harness this to unify teutonic peoples etc. It sounds like there should be a good book or two out there on what the aristocrats were thinking and doing at that time, but it could be that many similarities between customs and festivals across Europe originate from that time - much like the spread of Christmas trees and Easter eggs etc (Christian von Bunsen said that Easter eggs were a tradition going back to the ancient Egyptians - which is odd, but maybe true, although the revival in interest may be down to people like him?).
Just a thought.
P.S. Unrelated, but this is interesting on Cymru Fyw: (remains of part of a stone age boat near Monmouth (3200 BC, close to the site of the bronze age shipyard found a few years ago)
I think one needs a certain amount of faith to accept that as part of a boat. I could suggest about 100+ things it could be part of! (Things that might end up in water, that is!) But even if it is, it doesnāt tell us much about boat design in that era!
I think they found a lot more last year, but this is the oldest bit thatās been dated. They found parts of a crannog there, which are between 2600 to 2800 BC - which is before the earliest pyramids. (not as old as the Sweet Track in the Somerset levels yet or another trackway found in London a few years back, but within a few hundred years of those. Plenty of interesting things going on back then.
edit: didnāt mention Bryn Gelli ddu in Anglesey 4000 BC (henge built about 3000BC), which possibly predates Newgrange in Ireland 3200BC - both well before Stonehenge - 2400BC (possibly back to 3000BC, without the bluestones or the henge).