logo
Welshpool Rotary hosts visitors from Hangzhou Rotary, China

Welshpool Rotary hosts visitors from Hangzhou Rotary, China

Welshpool Rotary Club hosted visitors from Hangzhou Rotary during a recent meeting.
Alex Boschell, who is originally from Welshpool, was visiting relatives with his wife Cindy, and decided to visit the club.
Mike Lade, publicity lead at Welshpool Rotary, said: "It was very interesting to hear from Alex about their club as well as Cindy who holds a district position for China.
"What was most interesting was to hear how difficult it can be in a Rotary club working under the Chinese government."
Hangzhou is the capital city of the Zhejiang Province, located about an hour away from Shanghai.
Welshpool Rotary meet on the 2nd and 4th Wednesday at 12.30pm at the Royal Oak at the Cross in Welshpool.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lumphini Park turns 100 this year
Lumphini Park turns 100 this year

Time Out

time3 days ago

  • Time Out

Lumphini Park turns 100 this year

There's a certain charm to a park that comes with its own resident dinosaurs. Or at least, that's what they look like when you're half-asleep and jogging past the lake at 7am. Lumphini Park, Bangkok's first public park and an oddly thrilling microcosm of the city's contradictions, has turned 100 this year. And frankly, it's aged more gracefully than most of us. In 1925, King Rama VI generously gifted 360 rais of royal land to the public, marking a rare gesture of leisure-focused governance. However, it would take nearly two decades for the park to fully take shape and flourish into its final in 1942 and now home to a monument of the King standing rather regally at the Rama IV entrance, Lumpini feels like it exists in a slightly alternate Bangkok. One where things move just a bit slower, the air is thick with birdsong not honking traffic, and the most pressing threat is a monitor lizard giving you side-eye. Let's address the lizard in the room (everybody talks about them). The water monitors of Lumpini Park are not subtle. They're massive, they roam freely, and yes, they look like they've been lifted straight from the Jurassic era. Tourists squeal, locals barely flinch. These semi-aquatic reptiles have become a kind of unofficial mascot – wholly unbothered by your presence. They sunbathe like retirees and occasionally startle a yoga class. It's their park too, after all. Sprawling across central Bangkok, Lumphini is a rare thing: green space without pretence. No manicured topiary. Instead, you get earnest joggers making their fourth lap of the 2.5km circuit, uncles playing Chinese chess beneath the trees, and couples attempting to row boats across stubbornly still water. The lakes glimmer, the lawns invite and the smell of grilled squid occasionally drifts in from nearby vendors. It's serene, yes, but never dull. Open daily from 4.30am to 9pm, the park draws up to 20,000 people a day. And not just fitness types or nostalgic aunties. There's a whole ecosystem of early risers, tai chi enthusiasts, pigeon whisperers, dog walkers and quiet lovers reclaiming their city from the roar of motorcycles and the tyranny of concrete. A century on, Lumphini is no longer just a park – it's a living, breathing piece of Bangkok's psyche. A place that holds the weight of history while being delightfully unserious about it. So the next time you're nearby – maybe just a short walk from Time Out Bangkok's HQ – drop in. Watch the lizards. Run a lap. Pretend you're in Season 4: Bangkok. Just remember: the park may be old, but it's still very much alive.

Welshpool Rotary hosts visitors from Hangzhou Rotary, China
Welshpool Rotary hosts visitors from Hangzhou Rotary, China

Powys County Times

time3 days ago

  • Powys County Times

Welshpool Rotary hosts visitors from Hangzhou Rotary, China

Welshpool Rotary Club hosted visitors from Hangzhou Rotary during a recent meeting. Alex Boschell, who is originally from Welshpool, was visiting relatives with his wife Cindy, and decided to visit the club. Mike Lade, publicity lead at Welshpool Rotary, said: "It was very interesting to hear from Alex about their club as well as Cindy who holds a district position for China. "What was most interesting was to hear how difficult it can be in a Rotary club working under the Chinese government." Hangzhou is the capital city of the Zhejiang Province, located about an hour away from Shanghai. Welshpool Rotary meet on the 2nd and 4th Wednesday at 12.30pm at the Royal Oak at the Cross in Welshpool.

Plane carrying 48 people crashes in Russia's Far East
Plane carrying 48 people crashes in Russia's Far East

Western Telegraph

time3 days ago

  • Western Telegraph

Plane carrying 48 people crashes in Russia's Far East

The An-24 passenger plane disappeared from radar as it travelled from the city of Blagoveshchensk on the Russian-Chinese border to the town of Tynda. Rescuers later found the aircraft's burning wreckage amid dense forests on a hillside south of its planned destination. Regional Governor Vasily Orlov said all passengers, including five children, and crew on board the aircraft were killed in the crash. He also announced three days of mourning. Images of the reported crash site circulated by Russian state media show debris scattered among dense forest, surrounded by plumes of smoke. An An-24 passenger plane belonging Siberia-based Angara Airlines (Marina Lystseva/AP) Russia's Interfax news agency said there were adverse weather conditions at the time of the crash, citing unnamed sources in the emergency services. Several Russian news outlets also reported that the aircraft was almost 50 years old, citing data taken from the plane's tail number. The transport prosecutor's office in the Far East reported that the site of the crash was nine miles south of Tynda. The office said the plane attempted a second approach while trying to land when contact with it was lost. The plane had initially departed from Khabarovsk before making its way to Blagoveshchensk and onwards to Tynda. Authorities have launched an investigation on suspicion of flight safety violations that resulted in multiple deaths, a standard procedure in aviation accidents. Such incidents have been frequent in Russia, especially in recent years as international sanctions have squeezed the country's aviation sector.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store