WIN!!! Four tickets to SSE SWALEC Finals Day at the Principality Stadium, Sunday 1 May!

giant rugby ball in the wallOkay, so who DOESN’T like winning free stuff? That’s right, nobody.

Here’s the deal: our friends over at SSE SWALEC have given us FOUR TICKETS for you and your family or friends to watch some of the best grassroots rugby in Wales at SSE SWALEC Finals Day, at the Principality Stadium on Sunday 1 May.

Wanna know how to win?

Go to Farcebook, like the We Are Cardiff page, and then like and share this post.

OR

Go to Tweeter, follow @WeAreCardiff, and retweet this tweet.

If you’re not on either of those platforms, leave us a comment below telling us why we should pick you!

Once you’re entered you’ll be put into our prize draw – the winner will get four tickets to watch six clubs from across Wales compete to win the SSE SWALEC Cup, Plate and Bowl.

Aaaannnnd ….. GO!

x

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Register to vote in Wales on 5 May – deadline for registration is MONDAY 18 APRIL

On May 5, all citizens of Wales will get the chance to vote for their representative in the National Assembly, which is like our parliament. Laws about things like health, education and the environment are all made in Wales by the Assembly.

Every year, around £16 billion is spent in Wales, on things that affect your life – like hospitals and schools. Decisions about these things are made here – in Wales, for Wales – but, in the 2011 Assembly election, fewer than half of us turned out to vote. So if you care at all about schools, hospitals, or our countryside, YOU SHOULD CARE ABOUT VOTING ON MAY 5.

In order to vote though, you gotta be registered.

YOU CAN REGISTER TO VOTE IN WALES HERE: gov.uk/register-to-vote

www.2016.wales

walesvote2016

So be smart, son! REGISTER!

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Cardiff street theatre company to perform Glasto – and you can help!

Ooooo an exciting new performance company! Bad Egg Theatre tells us about their campaign for a new pram so they can perform their hilarious material at Glastonbury!

We are Olga Kaleta, Rosy Roberts and Maddy Lennox. Together we are The Bad Egg Theatre Company, an emerging company specialising in street theatre. As a company we were brought together by a shared desire to create work focused on current issues. Using a unique blend of physical and verbal comedy, our ambition is to create highly entertaining, multi dimensional work that makes the audience think & question. We’re developing an outdoor street show that will be performed at arts festivals, community events, parades & fairs.

 

“The Sprats”

The Sprats are a wicked take on the limits of our responsibility and knowledge. The twin babies contemplate. They debate. They discuss political apathy and the wealth divides. They also cry a lot and poop. They want to entertain you, but they’re on the edge. Kind of like Robbie Williams, but much more naughty and a little bit less famous.

Story so far…

… we have spent two weeks devising and have showcased the project in Somerset. We’ve developed a prototype pram with support from Take Art. But our main issue is that our pram doesn’t move… This limits us in both a practical and artistic sense. Therefore we’re currently crowd funding for a new pram that will be motorized, all-terrain and easily maneuverable (in collaboration with former Scrapheap Challenge winner- Paul McGarry).

We are scheduled to premier the new version of The Sprats at Glastonbury Festival 2016!!

Why do we do it?

We really believe in this project. In addition to being highly entertaining and visually striking, it also creates a platform to speak about uneasy social and political issues. Children are the ultimate buffoons. Unconfined by social sensitivity, they can say the unspeakable and get away with it.

Here are some lovely things that people said about “The Sprats”:

“Startling and very funny- made some sharp observations too. Great script and acting. As good as any sketch I’ve seen on TV.”

“Spectacularly odious children! Grand children of Jeremy Clarkson? Clever staging and utterly brilliant!”

“Up to date comedy- appropriate for all ages…”

Fundraising

We launched our Kickstarter campaign on the 4th of April. The project will only be funded if we reach our target by the 4th of May 2016. You can support by donating here: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1495800494/the-sprats?ref=discovery.
You can also help us by sharing our campaign with your communities.

http://thebadeggtheatrecompany.weebly.com

https://mobile.twitter.com/thebadeggs

https://www.facebook.com/The-Bad-Egg-Theatre-Company-1384244728541512/?fref=ts

thebadeggtheatre@gmail.com

A guide to creative Cardiff

Are you looking for a guide to creative Cardiff? Look no further! We teamed up with the Creative Cardiff team at Cardiff Uni and I Loves the ‘Diff to produce a rather natty guide to Creative Cardiff.

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You can read the whole thing, or jump straight to one of the sections:

Helia wrote these ones:

Spaces to work : The city is overflowing with lovely places to hang out. Recently Cardiff has enjoyed something of a coffee revolution, with an array of new, independent coffee shops with free wifi scattered across the city. Nomadic workers armed with Macbooks and seeking caffeine to fuel their big novels, screenplays, or start up proposals can be found around every corner.

Cardiff’s creative spaces : The architecture in Cardiff is a glorious mish-mash of everything from Roman to brutal modernist, so Cardiff doesn’t really have an adopted architectural ‘style’. Instead, the city piles different influences on top of each other, throwing up cream and glass luxury apartments next to listed, stone buildings.

There’s also these articles in the series (the European one gives some good background info on the city):

If you haven’t seen the Creative Cardiff project, here’s what they say about themselves:

Creative Cardiff is a new network which connects people working in any creative organisation, business or job in the Cardiff region. By encouraging people to work together we believe that we can make Cardiff the most creative place it can be.

Pretty good, eh? Find our more about Creative Cardiff here.

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#towerlives: a festival of storytelling and music in Butetown

#towerlives is a week-long festival of storytelling and music, on air and on the ground, around the council estate tower blocks of Butetown in Cardiff. How fabulous!

BBC Wales, 1XTRA, Radio 2 and News Online are collaborating all week with documentaries, news reports, features, comedy, spoken word and music.

#towerlives

Ceri Jackson has written this in-depth and beautiful piece about #towerlives: Rise of towers and fall of Tiger Bay (it’s a great long-read): “By the later 1800s Butetown had taken on its unofficial name as the legendary Tiger Bay, the source of tales once told by sailors around the world. “Local folklore has it that there was a woman who used to walk around Loudoun Square with two tigers but then seamen were known for their tall tales,” says Neil. “Portuguese sailors are believed to have come up with the name. The tides in the area are notoriously difficult. After successfully docking they would say that sailing into Cardiff was like sailing through a bay of tigers. And so it was – Tiger Bay stuck.” Another theory is that its reputation as a wild hotbed of hedonism, rough house boozers, crime, prostitution and illegal gambling earned it sole use of a once generic term long used by sailors for raucous ports everywhere. Some of the nicknames given to the area’s 97 pubs – House of Blazes, Bucket of Blood, Snakepit – infamous for brawling sailors and prostitutes could add some weight to that.”

Cardiff comedian Leroy Brito explores the curious dialect that is spoken there (watch the video on this page:#towerlives: Leroy Brito in Butetown ‘talking Butetown’

Chris Walsh-Heron’s blog – telling the story of life on a high-rise estate: “The old Tiger Bay had a fearsome reputation for danger and debauchery. But if you dared to venture into the dockland streets, you’d stumble across the whole world in just one square mile. The laughter from the late-night Maltese cafes would echo down lanes full of Chinese laundries, Arabian tea houses and Caribbean dancehalls, where sailors from Cyprus, Somalia and Sierra Leone would be trying their luck with the local Welsh girls.”

#towerlives

Looks great – and how awesome for this part of the city with such a diverse community to get this kind of coverage.

More please! #towerlives

Butetown History and Arts Centre

Butetown history

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Welcome bloggers of the world to Cardiff for #Traverse16!

There’s a pretty big blogging conference taking place in Cardiff this weekend, put together by the Traverse organisation. Welcoming bloggers from all over the place, and with a pretty impressive range of speakers, it’s pretty fab they’re having 2016’s event here in our fair city!

So, welcome, #Traverse16 bloggers! I thought I’d put together a quick welcome pack for you, in case you haven’t been to Cardiff before, or don’t know much about the place.

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The city itself has a population of around 350k, with a greater metropolitan area population of about one million people. We’re a small but vibrant city: the centre is small enough to walk around, we’re nestled between the seaside and the mountains, and packed with places to eat / drink / dance / shop / walk your dog / hula hoop / play ultimate frisbee.

Have a flick through our archives to see a flavour of the alternative side of the city; check out our @WeAreCardiff Twitter feed for live updates of what’s happening, our We Are Cardiff Instagram for beautiful snaps taken by local residents (a different one each month!) or We Are Cardiff Facebook for key links and information.

We made a film about Cardiff that gives you a whistle stop tour of what’s so great about the city:

A couple of years back we made a Little Guide to Cardiff, which is still pretty much on the money.

You can read it below, or download it straight from the We Are Cardiff Scribd page (it’s a PDF, 9MG).

We also recently collaborated with Cardiff University and I Loves The Diff to help write a Guide to Creative Cardiff which covers Cardiff’s creative networks, spaces to work, Cardiff’s creative spaces, studying in Cardiff, our creative economy and Cardiff as a young and vibrant creative capital.

Helia recently wrote about urban adventures in Cardiff, a good read for a short weekend trip.

If you want to hear about the city from the words of its residents, you can flick through our articles by Cardiff people.

I guess our main focus is ‘the arts’ (darling), but on an alternative, lo-fi scale: gigs, pub theatre, pop-up poetry readings, arts festivals – all that jazz. Read our articles about the arts in Cardiff.

If you want to know about what’s coming up, look in our What’s On section. If you’re really keen to know about what’s going on, befriend our local culture vulture Joy on Facebook and have a look through the events she’s going to. She’s everywhere!

If you’re interested in the team behind We Are Cardiff, we are mostly Helia and Hana, with support from a cast of thousands (mostly notably Ellie Pilott, Ellie Philpotts, Adam Chard, James O’Brien, and many more).

So welcome, Traverse bloggers – hope you have a truly epic weekend here in our most wonderful little city

Lots of love

We Are Cardiff
x

 

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We Are Cardiff: Guest Lecture for ICMP Cardiff

Since launching, Cardiff’s Institute of Contemporary Performance has had a series of guest speakers in to talk to students about a variety of things. And next Wednesday, We Are Cardiff blog boss Helia Phoenix (hi, that’s actually me, writing this in the third person like some sort of a) total boss b) raving lunatic c) symptomatic personality disorder) is giving a guest lecture about “strategic digital marketing” and the role it has played in creating the local media behemoth that is WE ARE CARDIFF!

helia_web

(me, arsing around under a flyover, photo credit Simon Ayre)

Oh, didn’t you realise this was a behemoth? Well, I’m not sure it’s one either, but I couldn’t think of anything better to call it (suggestions welcome, keep it clean please).

I don’t really blog personally much anymore – doing We Are Cardiff in my spare time doesn’t leave me with much writing capability, and whatever is leftover from that has been spent writing a novel for the past year or so. But I wrote my own We Are Cardiff post a few years back and I do have a personal/professional website which I used more when I used to freelance a lot. I don’t freelance much anymore (there aren’t enough hours in the day!), but there’s more info about what I’ve done on there.

I’ve never given a guest lecture before, though I do enjoy talking (as per my friend Elf’s comment “well done, big mouth” on Facebook when I posted the event on there, ta mate) so I’m sure we’ll be fine. You can expect some or all of the following, depending on how I’m feeling:

  • a potted history of We Are Cardiff
  • partnerships and working collaboratively (finding friends, avoiding a-holes)
  • useful websites / third party apps / functions you can use to make blogging a billion times easier (low cost or free)
  • useful equipment / tech (again, low cost or free)
  • digital content production and promotion in Today’s Digital Media Landscape (what can you do to make your brand/band/label/whatever stand out, etc).

My background is mainly in music journalism so I’ll talk a bit about that probably, I might start talking about Kruger Magazine or Catapult Records and start tearing up (someone bring the Kleenex please). (Also I just noticed that James Maclaren wrote that Kruger piece. Double Kleenex.)

Anyway …

The guest lecture is on Eventbrite and is open to the public. Plus it’s free! Here’s what they say…

Wednesday April 13: 1pm – 3.30pm, Guest Lecture Helia Phoenix (We Are Cardiff)

“We Are Cardiff’s mission to create & share interesting stories about culture, arts & people took them on wondrous journey that has resulted in 40k followers, a published book & prestigious awards. Hear how strategic digital marketing played a crucial role in the blog’s success, straight from the horse’s mouth”.

Neigh!

Helia x

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Cardiff in the city: photo blog from March 2016

In March we handed over our Instagram to the fabulously talented @rhysioanannett who took some wonderful snaps of Cardiff!

Can you spot where these were taken?

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More information on all pics (including locations!) can be found in the March Facebook album.

 

If you fancy taking over the We Are Cardiff Instagram for a month, email us

x

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Out of Cardiff: Walking up Table Mountain

Occasionally we like to leave the safety of our favourite capital city and explore the beautiful countryside of Wales that surrounds us. This weekend, honouring the fact that 2016 is Wales’ Year of Adventure, we decided to jump in our campervan and head to the Black Mountains, in search of some good walking.

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

Table Mountain, Crickhowell, by Nick on Flickr

We parked in the tiny, picturesque town of Crickhowell, in the Usk Valley, just south of the Black Mountains. It’s on the eastern side of the Brecon Beacons National Park, and is a great starting point for lots of good hiking trails.

There is a car park in the centre of town, but during weekends getting a space is a cut-throat affair … luckily we found a space and went into the Crickhowell Visitor Information Centre to have a look at maps and local info. We bought two maps on local walks (for a whopping £1.50), popped across the road to have a quick coffee at the nattily-named ‘Latte-Da’ (see what they did there?), and then decided on the Table Mountain Walk.

It’s an energetic walk, and a quick ascent up the 380m to the peak of Table Mountain, where the Iron Age hillfort is located. There are some pretty special views from the top, but expect tired legs getting up there!

From Crickhowell town centre, it’s a circular walk that you can either do steep side first (up Llanbedr Road – this was how we did it), or if you’re carrying a child on your shoulders or accompanied by an older dog, you can go down to start at the Cwmbeth Dingle, so the ascent is much longer, but less difficult.

The route up. Legs burning …

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

The sun-kissed peak!

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

Views from the top: alright, like …

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

On the way down …

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

Table Mountain, Crickhowell

The walk took about about three hours in total, including a very enjoyable pause on the peak to look at some wild horses and some lambs frolicking around in the field below us.

Vital statistics:

  • Cardiff – Crickhowell: 40 miles (up the A470)
  • Crickhowell has limited amenities, so we suggest taking a packed lunch with you.
  • There is parking on Llanbedr Road if the car park in the centre of town is full …

And that’s all from us on our out-of-Cardiff jaunt for this week. Get out in the countryside and have a lovely time!

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Trade School Cardiff is back! Barter for knowledge…

Good news for Trade School supporters, fans, and friends! The Trade School Cardiff (TSC) team have started hatching plans for this year – Trade School Cardiff will be BACK in June 2016!

tradeschoolcardiff2016

They will be running classes between 1 – 12 June, to coincide with the UK-wide Volunteer Week. Little Man Coffee in central Cardiff have kindly offered to host the classes. Hooray!

There are confirmed dates and time slots added to the Trade School Cardiff website, so you can start booking yourself in to teach! Just fill in the form and one of the team will get back to you. More info is on this Teacher Info page.

There are also regular meet-ups at Little Man Coffee leading up to the June sessions – these will take place at 7pm every 1st Tuesday of the month, so do come over on Tuesday 5th April which is the next one.

Come meet TSC, hang out, drink some excellent coffee (or other beverages), and see how you can take part. TSC need all kinds of people to get involved – teachers and students of course, but also volunteers and people who can help us spread the word. If you don’t already know them, they’re a friendly bunch, so just come say hi!

If you have a potential idea of something you might want to teach, but you’re not sure, come and use us as a sounding board!

There is also a new FB group for Trade School teachers, so you can also join that and post / ask questions / discuss ideas online. Check out the FB group here. It’s still a new group so it is a small, select, and friendly group of people who have taught before and who are enthusiastic about sharing support and ideas. Ask anything you like.

For more information, you can follow the Trade School Cardiff team (Angharad, Laura, Lynsey and Noreen) at the following places:

Email tradeschoolcardiff@gmail.com

Twitter @TradeschoolCDF

Facebook TradeSchoolCardiff

Subscribe to their mailing list

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Lunch at The Pilot: venturing out of Cardiff

Just south of Cardiff lies the sleepy, seaside town of Penarth, which forms a nice stop off if you’re hiking the Wales Costal Path, or just want a slow-paced day out from Cardiff. There are plenty of nice eateries there, one of which is a pub that got a mention in this year’s Michelin Guide: The Pilot.

Today, it’s a bright and breezy boozer, part of the Knife and Fork group (that also own The Conway in Pontcanna), and sports white, wooden panel walling, and nautical themed details dotted around the place. There’s a restaurant area, a lounge, and tables outside for those brief moments when the sun’s out.

The_Pilot

A few years ago, before it was taken over by The Knife and Fork I used to live just up the street from The Pilot, when it was a very different beast: full of surly locals, dark and dingy inside, and with the vague sniff of waccy baccy as you’d wander past, keys in hand (just in case, like). I only dared go in for a drink once, and it was the fastest pint I ever drank.

Today the place couldn’t be more different: it’s friendly and welcoming, and the day I visited, it was full of “ladies doing lunch” (any TV execs reading this – you should immediately be preparing for the ‘Housewives of Penarth’, right?), along with a couple of hikers and cyclists who had stopped for refuelling on their way. The restaurant area has a cosy wood burning stove and beautiful views over Cardiff Bay. What’s not to love?

There’s a special lunch menu, which mostly consists of baguettes / sandwiches for around a fiver (perfect if you’re just stopping for something quick), or you can order from the main a la carte menu. There are also daily specials. As we weren’t in a rush, we went for three courses (sharing the starter and pudding).

For a shared starter, we picked the squid and prawn with Asian slaw.

The_Pilot_Starter

Looks delicious, right? It really was. The squid was soft and tender, and the prawns grilled to perfection.

For mains, there was a wide selection on the a la carte menu (salmon, lamb, and beef) but we picked the duo of pork and the beetroot risotto (obviously to eat sharesies). We also asked for a recommendation of wine to accompany the pork (I let my dining partner deal with this, as I’ve never been a wine drinker).

Duo_of_pork_The_Pilot_Lunch Beetroot_risotto_The_Pilot_Lunch

The duo of pork was a big winner: particularly the belly pork, which was cooked to perfection (especially the crackling …).

The risotto was a sweet main, with torn chunks of goat’s cheese to cut through the sweetness. Also some beetroot crisps on top. It was delicious (so if you’re a vegetarian, you’re in good hands in The Pilot!).

I could bang on about how nice it was (and it really, really was very nice), but it’s probably easier to just show you:

The_Pilot_lunch_empty_plates

I did wonder whether we’d manage to stuff in anything else after that, but obviously there’s always space for pudding, right?

I was tempted by the Earl Grey creme brulee, but the bread and butter pudding was recommended so we picked that instead. I hadn’t eaten the old bnb since school (and didn’t have great memories of it from then), but it was light and fluffy, and served with some insanely good vanilla ice cream and chocolate sauce. If you can imagine me doing a Homer Simpson style face drool, that’s what happened here.

The_Pilot_bread_and_butter_pudding

We just about managed a couple of coffees before falling into a food coma. Luckily, The Pilot is right on the top of the hill on the northern edge of Penarth, overlooking the Bay and Cardiff beyond it.

Sunset//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Photo by Ben Salter

If you’ve got a healthy appetite, you’re in luck here: the portions are generous, the food is delicious, the service is friendly, and it’s a lovely location to while away some long hours in the afternoon.

So if you’re on the Wales Coastal Path, just wandering vaguely across the Barrage, or looking for somewhere to get out of Cardiff, The Pilot comes highly recommended as a place for food or just drinks. They have a different ale on tap everyday, as they support a local Vale of Glamorgan brewery.

They do plenty of offers that chance on a weekly basis (for more info, check @ThePilotPenarth Twitter feed). Steak Wednesdays? Six Nations burgers? Yes please!

To see The Pilot’s latest menu, see The Pilot’s Blackboard

The Pilot, 67 Queens Road, Penarth CF64 1DJ

International Women’s Day: Paint Jam

On 5 March, artists from across the UK gathered on the boardwalk next to the River Taff and the Principality Stadium for the ‘Back to Nature’ Paint Jam. The jam was to raise awareness of the Women’s Equality Network, a network of over 700 organisations and individuals committed to making Wales a safer and fairer place for women and girls.

International Women’s Day is an important opportunity to celebrate the contribution and achievements of women across the world. It’s also a chance to raise awareness about the rights of women and girls. In Wales, it’s an opportunity to celebrate the work done to uphold women’s rights and to consider the challenges still facing women.

Photographer Shannon Jackson went along to take some photos of the event for us:

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To see the full album of photographs, visit the We Are Cardiff Facebook page: Back to Nature photo album.

More information about the artists and the event is available from the Back to Nature Facebook event: if you’re interested in going along to support the next one, on April 9 in the same spot, there will be another one: this time, the ‘Underwater Paint Jam’. We’ll see you there!

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A blog about Cardiff, its people, and the alternative arts and cultural scene!