Please watch out for the satirical footnote!

Please watch out for the satirical footnote!

This picture dates from 2005 and features Babs and I and three great Marian friends: Rog, Malc and Dunc, of whom at least two joined me on trips to Farchynys.
The Mawddach bonding must have been powerful because 40 years after we made the trip, I was able to persuade them to join me at the Royal Festival Hall for the reunion concert of Van der Graaf Generator, a band which was the Marmite of British 70s rock and not particularly famous for moments of easy musical mindfulness. We had a great night.
And today in 2017, it was wonderful to see the banter and the warmth as strong as ever amongst us.
Floreat!


Farchynys early acquired a reputation for austerity. As The Marian noted in 1965, “A weekend at Farchynys is to a large extent getting by without it; ‘it’ being some of the luxuries of home and the delights of Babylon.” But I wonder what that writer would have made of the spectacular Gothic experiences shared by A- level English students at The Coach House in an appropriately spooky November 2011?
Taking the long view, Gothic experiences are nothing new on the Mawddach. In the early nineteenth century, the area was popular with many writers and artists. Samuel Taylor Coleridge climbed Cadair, Percy Bysshe Shelley visited in 1812 and perhaps inspired by this our latter day Goths were a party of A level sixth formers intent on days of “exploration and transgression” as one them recorded. A suitably sybaritic and uncanny programme included readings of Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto and Marlowe’s Dr Faustus in The Coach House, of Dracula in the Gazebo by torchlight served with popcorn and a performance of The Woman in Black in the suitably ghostly atmosphere of the Church of St. Mary and St. Bodfan, Llanber.


So proud to have the support of these pupils of QMGS at the Merioneth Yacht Club.

The ancient county of Merioneth standard

GWR Foxcote Manor at The George III (Keith Davies)
A section taken from the wonderful painting by Keith Davies


A group of Marians who have picked a fine day to climb Cadair Idris. The slightly damaged Trig Point is in the background. Do you recognise any of the intrepid explorers?

Thanks to the good offices of our resident designer the excellent Robin Stannard there is a specially collated set of seven postcards available from Strategol. The set makes an excellent gift.