enquiries@tywigateway.org.uk Parc a Gerddi yr Esgob, Abergwili, Sir Caerfyrddin SA31 2JG

Stacey’s Kitchen

Logo for Stacey's Kitchen featuring a stylised green plate with a black fork in the centre, and the business name written below in elegant script.

Stacey’s Kitchen will be closing at 3:30pm today Wednesday 5th of April 2023, due to a private event. Back to normal opening hours (9:00am-5:00pm) from tomorrow.

Sorry for any inconvenience caused.

Spring Plant Fair

A poster for the Bishops Park Spring Plant Fair shows blooming red and yellow tulips in a garden with people in the background. Event details in Welsh and English are listed, including date, contact info, and stallholder details.

Our 2nd Annual Spring Plant Fair will be held on Saturday 29th April, stalls to open at 11am.

There will be a range of stalls by local growers, along with other local businesses. We will be holding tours of the park & gardens, along with talks and demonstrations throughout the day.

If you would like to book a stall, please complete the form below and return to FfionaJones@tywigateway.org.uk or for further enquires, please contact our Head Gardener, Piers Lunt on 07444438168 or Ffiona on 07395082719

file:///C:/Users/FfionaJones/Documents/Stall%20Booking%20Plant%20Fair.pdf

Wildlife Watch Walk February 2023

Several brown and white mushrooms are growing in a vertical cluster on the rough, textured bark of a tree. The mushrooms are layered closely together, showing their gills and curved caps. Cluster of pale, fan-shaped mushrooms growing on the rough bark of a tree, displaying delicate gills underneath their caps.

February’s Wildlife Watch Walk was held on Tuesday 21st of February, which happened to be during the half term holidays and it was lovely to welcome a small group of girls who joined us.

We immediately spotted some signs that spring was on its way as we walked through the Jenkinson Garden at the beginning of our walk, with the crocuses which were just peeking through the soil last month, now in full bloom.

We could hear a great tit shouting close to the bridge and a pair of coots were spotted in the undergrowth at the side of the island, along with a grey squirrel. We could also see goat willow in full bloom on the island.

Despite last month’s flooding, the water level in the pond has already receded significantly. There were 2 pairs of mute swans and one male on the lower end of the pond. We saw a number of mallards, including a female sitting on a branch of a tree by the side of the pond, creating a real racket!

We saw 2 robins and a number of wood pigeon and a red kite across the Great Meadow. There was a large cluster of frog spawn in the ditch that runs from the old oak tree to the hedge line. We noticed a deep hole that had been dug at an angle in the soil. We couldn’t identify what had created it, but we felt it was too deep and at the wrong angle to have been dug by a dog. A fungus, which we think were oyster mushrooms were seen growing on an old oak tree in the hedge line. The horse chestnut at the bottom of the meadow had large, sticky buds developing on it.

In the grassland, we noticed that the docks were starting to come through, thistles starting to develop, along with spurge, nettles, bitter cress and speedwell.

On the lawn, a number of daisies and a few lesser celandine were starting to flower, along with a carpet of snowdrops along the side of the lower path and the Ha-ha.

Clusters of frogspawn, consisting of black eggs in jelly-like masses, float in shallow, muddy water among grass and twigs. A cluster of green, oval-shaped leaves grows close to the ground among grass and a few brown, fallen leaves. The surrounding area appears natural and slightly untidy.

Monthy Wildlife Watch Returns

We’ll be resuming our monthly Wildlife Watch walks at Parc Yr Esgob-Bishop’s Park to record the site’s flora & fauna after a break over the summer. Recording the wildlife across the site is an important part of the ecological work we do here at Parc Yr Esgob-Bishop’s Park. It enables us to monitor if the work we’ve already completed to expand the site’s biodiversity is working.

Everyone is welcome to join us, including experienced naturalists or members of the public who want to learn more about the natural environment.

We’ll be meeting at the reception area at 2pm on the 3rd Tuesdays of the month. Please wear suitable clothing for the weather and sturdy shoes/boots or wellingtons.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Funeral of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II

On Monday September 19th, as a mark of respect for the state funeral of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, Parc Yr Esgob-Bishop’s Park visitor centre & @Stacey’s kitchen will be closed.
@Stacey’s kitchen will be offering ‘Afternoon Tea’ boxes which will need to be ordered in advanced and picked up between 10am & 11am on Monday morning. Please contact them directly to order.

New Skill Opportunities for Young People

14 -25 years old? An opportunity to learn new skills for free!
Scripting and film-making workshops at Bishop’s Park this month as part of out 15 Minute Digital Heritage project.
Scripting workshops – Thursday 25th & Friday 26th August 10.30am
Film workshops – Tuesday 30th August – Friday 2nd September 10am- 4pm

Contact Ffiona for more details or to book your place: 07395082719, FfionaJones@tywigateway.org.ukAerial view of a large country house with multiple chimneys, surrounded by lush greenery, gardens, and winding paths, set in a scenic rural landscape with rolling hills in the background.

Café Open!

A logo with a green plate and fork outlined in black, with the text Stacey’s Kitchen in elegant script below the image. The background is white.

It is with great pleasure that we can announce the long-awaited café has finally opened!

We welcome Stacey & Lisa, two local business women who live in Abergwili, who run ‘Stacey’s Kitchen’, along with their team.

There has been much excitement since they opened – long may it continue!

Stacey’s Kitchen’s opening times are 9.00am – 5.00pm, Monday – Sunday

Dogs are welcome & we are fully accessible

Bishop’s Park Recollections

Aerial view of a large country house with multiple chimneys, surrounded by lush greenery, gardens, and winding paths, set in a scenic rural landscape with rolling hills in the background.

We’re working with our volunteers and groups of local young people around the Carmarthen area to collect and record recollections and stories of the site of the Old Bishop’s Palace, Abergwili, which will then feed into the 15 Minute Digital Heritage project. The site has over 800 years of history & our historical research volunteers have worked hard to collate it, but we don’t have much on record from the 1930’s onwards. We have a number of visitors who tell us how they were allowed into the gardens on a Sunday afternoon, or how they would fish the Bishop’s Pond, or that their aunt was a maid in the Palac, or that they had their wedding photos taken in the grounds etc. Well, this project is a chance for us to collect these stories and memories and to keep them on record. We’ve received a grant from the 15 Minute Digital Heritage Fund in order to do this and to feed into the trust’s digital content, through working with young people from the Carmarthen area to create short films which will be based around the recollection & stories that we collect.

We’d like to invite anyone who has any connection to the Old Bishop’s Palace, Abergwili site to come for a cup of tea or coffee & cake in our brand new café area to share their stories, memories and recollections and our trained volunteers will be on hand to record them.

The drop-in sessions will be held:

02/08/22 (Wednesday) 2pm – 4pm

03/08/22 (Thursday) 10am-12pm and 4.30pm-6.30pm

09/08/22 (Tuesday) 11am – 4pm

For further details please contact Ffiona on 07395082719 email: FfionaJones@tywigateway.org.uk

 

Max Pulford

A man wearing sunglasses, a grey jumper, and a checked shirt stands outdoors on green grass, smiling at the camera.

It is with great sadness that we have to let everyone know that our newly appointed Commercial Manager, Max Pulford, died suddenly last week. Although only a few weeks into the job Max had already begun to make an impact, and all of us were benefitting from his infectious enthusiasm, drive and ability to connect with everyone he met. His wife Penny said that Max was thrilled to have joined our team at the park, and that he came home from his last day at work feeling he’d had a particularly good day. Max evidently enjoyed his new role building practical relationships with local businesses and organisations, and encouraging them to view the park as a valuable asset that could enhance their work. Max was clearly dedicated to the ethos of the Trust, and to making Bishop’s Park a better place for everyone. Our thoughts and condolences go to his family and friends at this difficult time.