Your painter and decorator will carry out most of the preparation work for your project. You can help them by ensuring that the area is clean and tidy. Also, remove as many personal items and pieces of furniture from the area as possible and make sure all your internal doors are firmly closed just in case of dust from rubbing down.
Llanerchymedd
Llannerch-y-medd, is a tiny town, neighborhood and post town on the Isle of Anglesey in Wales. The Royal Mail postcode is LL71, and it has a population of 1,360, of whom more than 60% is Welsh talking. The village is situated near the centre of Anglesey near to the big supply of water reservoir, Llyn Alaw, as well as is thought to have an old foundation. Llannerch implies "a woodland clearing up". The word medd in the name is Welsh for mead, which is made from honey, as well as the name might be connected to the production of honey for mead. The disused Anglesey Central Railway goes through the town. Its station, opened up in 1866, was closed in 1964 as part of the Beeching Axe, as well as its goods yard is now a parking lot. There is currently a coffee shop as well as cafeteria housed in a contemporary expansion of the old structures. Just to the northeast of the village is the hill called Pen y Foel which is 123m over water level; in between 1951 and also 1956 this was the site of a VHF Fixer station, part of the RAF Western Sector, and was just one of a number comparable fixed sites managed by RAF Longley Lane near Preston in Lancashire. The website consisted of an octagonal wooden hut with a hand-steerable radio pole with two radio receivers of type R1392D, transmitter and also telephone line. This hut was protected by a close bordering octagonal brick wall to provide some bomb blast security which still exists. The terminal was utilized to permit each market to find RAF or allied aircraft and also to assist pilots discover landing strips in reduced cloud weather. Also on capital was a rectangular block hut (currently unroofed) additionally built by the RAF; this was a simple two-room hut with a rain collection storage tank. The site had three RAF cordless personnel (two were usually working) that were billeted with a landlady in Llannerch-y-Medd and also attached to nearby RAF Valley. The site closed in around 1956 as the modern technology was replaced by boosted systems. The hill Pen y Foel is also the basis for the name of the local Male Voice Choir Cor Meibion Y Foel which is a member of the National Association of Choirs. It has 43 participants as well as rehearses in the village at Capel Ifan. Over the past years the Choir has actually sustained regional Eisteddfodau, completed in the Anglesey Eisteddfod, raised money for numerous charities and has actually entertained target markets together, weddings as well as various other features throughout North Wales.