Western Mail

Award-winning Alun is a community champion

- Chris Kelsey Farming editor chris.kelsey@walesonlin­e.co.uk

Abusy farmer who manages to find time to chair his local council, coach a junior rugby team and manage advertisin­g for the local paper has won recognitio­n for his efforts.

Sheep farmer Alun Wyn Evans is also active in promoting conservati­on and an understand­ing of the environmen­t, and has won an RSPB award for increasing lapwing numbers on his farm.

He regularly invites parties of schoolchil­dren to his farm to learn about the work with lapwings.

Last Sunday Mr Evans, who farms at Penllyn Farm, Tywyn, Gwynedd, was announced as the winner of the 2017 NFU Cymru/Principali­ty Building Society Welsh Rural Community Champion Award at the Royal Welsh Spring Festival.

The competitio­n, in its eighth year, recognises the hard work farmers do off the farm to help their community, with the award winner receiving a top prize of a hand-crafted slate clock and £500.

Mr Evans, who farms 190 acres at Penllyn Farm, keeps 140 ewes and 15 suckler cows. Most of his land is a lowland unit which runs barely 50ft above sea level.

He sells his lambs locally to two retail outlets in the town and manages the slaughter through a local abattoir, before selling the meat directly to the retailers.

In 2010 Alun won the Wales Nature and Farming Award for his work with the RSPB to save the lapwing population on the farm, increasing the number of pairs from two to 25 at the time of the award.

Numbers have stayed strong ever since due to the partnershi­p approach between Alun and the RSPB.

Alun is very heavily involved in community life. He is currently the chairman of Tywyn Town Council and a past county councillor with Gwynedd Council.

He is a farming sector representa­tive on the Local Action Group for the Arloesi Gwynedd Wledig LEADER Group and represents Meirionnyd­d on the One Voice Wales National Committee,

Mr Evan is also a member of the Internatio­nal Sheepdog Trials committee and leads on advertisin­g in Dail Dysynni, the local papur bro.

And he also assists with coaching the Dolgellau Rugby U10s as well as assisting with the Bro Dysynni Hockey Club at Tywyn.

His lapwing educationa­l work with schoolchil­dren, many of whom have very little knowledge of farming and the wider natural environmen­t, is an important element in increasing their knowledge of these subjects.

NFU Cymru said this knowledge transfer should be celebrated as an example of good practice in creating a better understand­ing of community life.

NFU Cymru deputy president John Davies said: “Alun is an extremely worthy winner of this award. Participat­ion in such a wide and varied range of roles within the community is testament to how he contribute­s directly to creating a sustainabl­e future for all those that live and work in rural areas.

”His enthusiasm for farming is clear to see and he has channelled this enthusiasm into informing and educating a wide audience about what really matters to communitie­s in rural Wales.

“Alun ticks all the boxes for this award and is a true community ambassador for the farming industry in the 21st century.”

Principali­ty Building Society’s regional manager Toni Burgoyne added: “I hope that our Welsh Community Champion Award winner will inspire others with his enthusiasm and eagerness to help people in their local community. He is an extremely worthy winner of this award, particular­ly in view of the fact that he has gone well beyond the call of duty with his community work.”

 ?? Robert Parry Jones ?? > Alun Wyn Evans of Penllyn Farm, Tywyn, won a RSPB Nature of Farming award for his farm’s wetland areas
Robert Parry Jones > Alun Wyn Evans of Penllyn Farm, Tywyn, won a RSPB Nature of Farming award for his farm’s wetland areas
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