Son drove off with dad s van after boozing
Twenty-year-old Luke Macdonald was caught driving while three times over the legal drink drive limit
Perth Sheriff Court on Tay Street.
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A troubled 20-year-old “borrowed” his dad’s van to give a friend a lift home but was caught driving while more than three times the legal booze limit.
Not just Snowdon - 31 places in North Wales whose original names have been eroded by English
As Welsh culture campaigners lobby for Yr Wyddfa to replace Snowdon , here s snapshot of similar cases across the region
11:39, 9 MAY 2021
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Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy notice A new push to de-anglicise “ Snowdon ” has been launched after moves to reclaim the mountain’s original Welsh name were shelved.
An occasional tipple with Raymond Gleug
Milestone birthdays have that effect. And though there’s still a year and a bit to go, the dread is already kicking in. Also, I read a book recently which reminded me that, like everyone else, I am going to die. I’d always suspected unfortunate outcome to my life and naturally had preferred not to think about it too much. I mean, it couldn’t really happen to me, the great bon viveur and connoisseur, Raymond Gleug, could it?
Surely, my fate was to reside here at my lovely home, Rose Cottage, with my beloved wife, the enigmatic Madame G., sampling wonderful wine and checking in with you guys once a week in perpetuity. Wasn’t it?
Bewdley. Walk up Load Street, turn right after the church then go left up Welch Gate. Fork right at Wyre Hill, continue past Bark Hill then take a stepped footpath by Daisy Cottage. Ignore branching paths and go straight on after crossing a street. Turn right when you come to Yew Tree Lane, then immediately left at a crossroad. Keep straight on to join Drymill Lane and follow it to Dowles Brook. Turn left, then fork right at the next junction and cross the brook. Quite soon after passing Knowles Mill you’ll see a concrete track climbing right. Continue past this for another 100m or so, then take an unsigned path just before a tributary stream. Climb steeply uphill then walk along the top of the cliff above the stream, through oak trees and heather, until the path forks. Take the right-hand branch, follow it to a track and turn left. Ignore branching paths and head towards the road at Buttonoak. Fork right when you’re close to the road, as indicated by a waymark just beyon