Western Mail

Stone waller to follow Clinton and Gorbachev onto the global stage

- ANDREW FORGRAVE Reporter newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AHUMBLE Welsh stone waller has been invited to address world leaders at an internatio­nal peace forum in South Korea.

When Sean Adcock takes to the stage later this month, he will be following in the footsteps of previous speakers like former US president Bill Clinton and Mikhail Gorbachev, last leader of the old Soviet Union.

The annual Jeju Forum for Peace and Prosperity attracts up to 6,000 delegates and seeks “creative solutions through internatio­nal cooperatio­n”. This year’s theme is “Acting Together for a Better World”.

It will be quite a change of scene for Sean, a former conservati­onist from Penisarwae­n who developed a career repairing stone walls on farms in Gwynedd. “Earlier this year I spoke to a group of around 50 University of the Third Age members in Porthmadog,” he said.

“I also addressed 15 people at Pensychnan­t Conservati­on Centre. So this event is a bit of a step up! It’s quite daunting but it’s a huge honour and a chance to promote the craft and area I love.”

Usually there are 300-350 speakers at the Jeju Forum, mostly academics from think tanks, along with diplomats and politician­s. Only a handful are ever from Britain.

It’s not known if Wales has ever provided a speaker as the forum doesn’t keep records. If Sean is not the first

Welsh invitee, his participat­ion is certainly a rarity, especially as he has a practical rather than academic background. Heun Pil Jang of the Forum Secretaria­t described Sean’s involvemen­t as “very special indeed”.

He was invited to speak at the forum by South Korea’s Jeju Stone Park, which is hosting a session called “Building Peace on Stone Walls”. The idea is to use stones as a “medium for promoting co-operation, solidarity and peace”. Sean will be looking at how dry stone structures share similariti­es in cultures around the world.

As an author of of dry stone walls guides, with his his own “Stonechat” magazine, he’s no stranger to addressing specialist festivals and conference­s. Speaking alongside him in South Korea will be a stonemason from Jeju and a stone carver from Ireland. Sign up for the North Wales Live newsletter sent twice daily to your inbox

He’s looking forward to speaking about his work in Eryri and beyond. “Somehow I’ll manage to shoehorn my two favourite topics into my talk somewhere,” he said. “Cloddiau, the stone-faced earth banks of Wales, and the dry stone structures of the Welsh slate industry.”

It’s been quite a few weeks for Sean, who is acknowledg­ed as one of the UK’s foremost exponents of dry stone walling. On April 19 he received the British Empire Medal at a ceremony at Caernarfon Castle, and next week he will be at Buckingham Palace for a Royal garden party associated with that award.

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