
The Lyneal Trust toasting 40 years of getting disabled on canals
A charity that helps wheelchair users enjoy a trip on a canal boat is preparing to celebrate its 40th anniversary.The Lyneal Trust in north Shropshire uses adapted narrow boats and cottages to offer holidays and day trips and is staffed by 40 volunteers, who welcome people with a range of mobility issues.Peter Fox, who is one of them, said it had given him the opportunity to "put something back, to help people that wouldn't otherwise be able to do it".His colleague, Nicky Fox, said she enjoyed seeing the "joy on the faces" of the people enjoying the experience.
Derwen College, a nearby college for young adults with special educational needs and disabilities, has visited the Lyneal Trust for the last four years.Bev Simmonds, who was taking a group from the college this week, says the trust is "leading the way on accessibility and inclusion".
The canal boats give young people "the opportunity to explore different environments" and for students it is "a completely different sensory environment", Ms Simmonds said.Ms Fox said: "We meet some amazing people with fantastic stories."She also said she was impressed by their resilience and willingness to try something new."Being on the water for a day, or longer, is a great way to relax and take time in nature to enjoy the environment of the lovely canal side," Ms Fox added.
Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
13 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Will I get lost – or liberated? My day at Glastonbury without a phone
For someone who gets lost on the way back from a restaurant bathroom, the 364-hectare (900-acre) sprawl of Glastonbury is a navigational nightmare. I've been to the festival three times, and between the music and the drinking I've always been glued to my phone, risking a rolled ankle as I hurry along, staring at the site map on the app and racing to recorrect my route to the shows. Losing power or losing my phone hasn't ever seemed an option here. Without it, I would cease to function. But perhaps, at the ripe old age of 31, it is time to face my fears. What would happen if I ditched my phone for the day? Would I perish from boredom or find myself liberated, finally embracing the full freedom of the Glastonbury experience? I feel like a frightened puppy at the start of the day, stowing my phone in my bag and attaching myself to colleagues who can show me around instead. I follow my first benevolent handler to the circus fields to watch a talk – so far, so straightforward. But as I head off to find some water, I momentarily lose my bearings on my way back to the group. I have to remind myself to be more attentive once I'm cast off alone to follow the signs (and the many helpful stewards I ask) to the Pyramid stage. Supergrass are playing and as I watch their skittish set I feel my phone start to buzz. I instinctively reach for it, worrying I'm missing out on group chats or work goings-on, and feel strangely bereft when I realise I have to let it vibrate, ignoring it to focus on the stage. I begin to feel a bit bored – something I haven't felt since I first had a smartphone to fill every quiet moment with scrolling. I am considering the state of modern boredom when the Spice Girl Mel C walks past. If I'd been staring at my screen, I never would have noticed her. I head over to ask for a selfie before realising I'd need to take my phone out, settling for an awkward wave instead. As the sun reaches a woozy afternoon peak, I reach into my bag and turn the phone off, free now to wander. I soon spot a group dressed as pirates and ask where they're off to. They hand me a warm bottle of vodka and squash and invite me to tag along. This is their eighth Glastonbury as a group and two of them, Jo and Chris, got engaged here last year. 'It's the most magical place on Earth,' Jo says. 'Nothing bad can happen to you, so have fun!' We spend the next few hours together, stumbling past an Elvis impersonator, the millennial rappers Rizzle Kicks and someone in a morph suit singing Frank Sinatra's My Way on a karaoke machine. As night falls, I find myself alone again, but no longer bored or lonely. Sebastian, a Greenpeace volunteer, spots me scribbling and asks what I'm up to. He tells me he's been coming since the 1980s. 'It's changed a lot and there's more of a corporate atmosphere these days,' he says. 'But you won't find a place with more friendly people in the world.' We try to make our way to the hedonistic south-east corner before losing each other in the crowd. Soon, though, the magic of the festival strikes, as I spot a friend from primary school who I haven't seen in two decades. In a sea of 200,000 people, this meeting feels very unlikely, and as we catch up into the early hours, I realise I would never have found myself here had I followed my phone and had arranged plans. Bleary-eyed, I eventually make the long walk back to the tent. When I wake up and turn on my phone, I realise I missed a meeting with a photographer the day before and an interview for another piece in the afternoon. There are downsides to being uncontactable, but it feels a small price to pay for a revelation: my sense of direction hasn't improved, but I now feel comfortable with getting lost. Perhaps I'll leave my phone at home more often.


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
The 17 best restaurants in Pembrokeshire
Caught between the sea and the mountains, Pembrokeshire has access to some of the finest (and freshest) produce in Wales. Here distinctly season-driven restaurant menus sing with local seafood and farm-fresh cheeses, not to mention Preseli lamb and beef, all elevated to new heights with garden-grown vegetables and herbs. In recent years the county has seriously upped its culinary game in a number of slickly modern restaurants, where bold, creative menus are often pepped up with foraged ingredients. And should you prefer a chilled fish shack by the sea or a good old-fashioned country pub, there is of course that too. All our recommendations below have been hand selected and tested by our resident destination expert to help you discover the best restaurants in Pembrokeshire. Find out more below or discover our guide to Pembrokeshire and the best hotels, nightlife, beaches and things to do in the area. Find a restaurant by type: Best all rounders Best for families Best for fine dining Best for walk ins Best for views Best farm-to-table Best all rounders Blas Housed in the minimalist-chic Twr Y Felin hotel, where Welsh architect Keith Griffiths has worked his magic on a former windmill, Blas translates as 'taste'. Snagging a table for dinner at this dark, seductive restaurant means you also get to nose around a fine collection of street art, with silver-screen starlets (Audrey Hepburn and co.) by graffiti artist Pure Evil gracing the charcoal walls in the low-lit bistro. Food is artfully presented, seasonally driven and sprinkled with foraged ingredients: from Solva crab with green tomato, turnip and crispy chicken skin, to butter-soft beef with beetroot, shallot, horseradish and nasturtium. The intimate ambience makes this a romantic date-night pick.


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
I was so insecure I spent £4.5k getting perfect Turkey teeth – it was so painful I cried & trolls say my smile's ruined
A WOMAN who spent £4,500 getting the perfect Turkey teeth has hit back at trolls who say she's "ruined" her smile. Tara Omidi made the decision to get a full set of new gnashers after a UK dentist "failed" her and she had to have two teeth removed following a routine root canal. 6 6 6 6 "They were right at the back of my mouth and caused my remaining teeth to move away from the centre of my face, leaving me feeling very insecure when I spoke," Tara, from Oldham, Manchester, said. 'People would make indirect digs and tell me I had 'unique' teeth or comment 'Your teeth aren't in the middle, are they?' "I felt really insecure, my job is social media and I'm known for being the happy, always laughing person. 'It would make me so shy and I'd just crumble. 'I decided I was going to have them all shaved down, realigned and have crowns fitted." Despite the horror stories she'd heard about Turkey teeth gone wrong, Tara did her research and finally found a clinic she felt she could trust - with the positive reviews also reassuring her. She sent over pictures of her teeth, had an online consultation and flew to Turkey eight weeks later. However, Tara admitted she had no idea how painful the procedure would end up being. 'I felt I could trust the clinic as they were very thorough with their examinations and X-rays," she added to Need T oKnow. 'But it was painful - the actual fitting. 'People do lie about it and make out it is a breeze... I cried having them fitted!" Tara spent four days abroad, which included having the procedure, resting in her hotel room and a final check-in with the dentist. And she said that since heading back to the UK, "everything has been great". 'I love them - they have given me my confidence and smile back," she grinned. 'Of course you get trolls online saying horrible things but being online, people think they have the right to say and do nasty things – I couldn't care less. 'I do what makes me happy for me, not for other people.' Tara has faced cruel comments from trolls throughout her dental journey, and previously c ame under fire for a TikTok video which showed her teeth after they'd been filed down - before the crowns are fitted. Tara filmed the clip in her hotel room after she had her teeth filed down, which happens before the crowns are fitted. And the comments section was quickly filled with people slamming her for going ahead with the transformation. "You have ruined your own teeth," one sighed. "Jesus woman!" another added, as a third marvelled "I dunno how people can do this." "Give it a few months and you will be in horrendous pain!" someone else predicted. As another questioned: "How is that natural?!" 6 6