
Anglesey man wanted ultimate room with a view and now he's got it
A nondescript gable wall on an Anglesey building has been turned into a work of art – to improve the views for its owner. Fed up of staring at a blank wall while having his morning coffee, undertaker Arwel Hughes wanted to look out over Amlwch Port's old harbour instead.
Over three weeks, a giant, life-like painting has taken shape, populated with some of his favourite vessels moored at the harbour. They include a newly built Viking boat that will be torched in a burning ceremony at Amlwch's popular Viking Festival later this month.
The mural, completed on Monday afternoon (July 7), has left people astonished. When the artist shared photos online, it was hailed 'beautiful', 'amazing' and an 'instant treasure'.
It was also labelled a 'wonderful attraction for locals and visitors'. Which could be tricky, as it's on private property and can only be seen up close from Arwel's driveway in Amlwch Port. People who have vowed to visit are being asked to knock first and ask permission – the funeral parlour is directly across the road.
Arwel himself has said he is 'beyond happy with it'. To create the mural, he commissioned local artist Ffion Roberts-Drakley – she's already painted several eye-catching murals on buildings across Anglesey.
'Between the weather and picking up the girls from school, I managed three to five hours a day,' she said. 'Some days it was too windy to go up the scaffolding, on others it was just too wet. Sign up now for the latest news on the North Wales Live Whatsapp community
'Arwel said he wanted a better view when looking out from his dining room while having his morning coffee. I'm very pleased with it - I think it's the best one I've done so far. To complete it, I'll be using a forklift in a few weeks time to spray a weather seal on the painting.'
(Image: Ffion Roberts-Drakley)
The mural was created on the wall of a neighbouring florist shop – Arwel owns the building. Ffion's main challenge was incorporating a window into the design: after overlaying harbour and wall photos on her iPad, she opted for a Dali-esque flourish, perching the window up in the clouds.
'Arwel wanted boats to be included in the mural that held a special meaning for him, 'said Ffion. 'So his own boat is is depicted, as well an old boat he used to fish on as a child.'
(Image: Ffion Roberts-Drakley)
Another request was for HMS Pickle – a recreation of the famous Royal Navy schooner that brought back news of Nelson's victory at Trafalgar and his demise.
She was berthed at Amlwch Port for several years before moving to Conwy, and is now moored in Hull.
(Image: Ffion Roberts-Drakley)
The Viking boat depicted in the mural is shown as the finished article, with a red dragon on its bow: in reality, the carved figurehead on the newly built vessel has yet to be painted – which Ffion has volunteered to undertake.
No sooner than the boat is finished, it will be burnt on the weekend of July 26-27 following a torch-lit procession through the town by Viking reenactors.
However the boat will live on in a mural just up the road that gives one resident the ultimate room with a view. Get the best island stories from our Anglesey newsletter - sent every Friday
Find out what's happening near you
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


North Wales Live
13 hours ago
- North Wales Live
The real life North Wales story behind new BBC drama Confessions of a Steroid Gang
A new BBC series has revealed how a steroid empire based in North Wales was dismantled, partly through a dodgy dog grooming shop set up to launder the money being made. Confessions of a Steroid Gang tells the real life story of Macaulay Dodd and his father Andrew who were jailed after their £1m steroid lab was uncovered. The three-part series reveals how Macaulay, portrayed by Rhondda-based actor Garin Williams, first became addicted to steroids at 15 in the pursuit to achieve the perfect body before he would go on to cook up £1.2m worth of the Class C drug. Although anabolic steroids are a Class C drug, there is an exemption for personal use. Struggling with his relationship with his dad following his parents divorce, Macaulay latched onto his older, gym-going brother and his circle of older friends. His trips to the gym soon turned into something darker when he began injecting steroids at 15, becoming addicted to build the perfect body. His dad, Andrew Dodd, was also struggling. A former Dee estuary fisherman, he was desperate to change his circumstances when he had a chance encounter with a man in the pub who introduced him to the world of steroids. Hearing that 1.5 million people in the UK were using the drug, he decided to get involved. The pair reconnected when Macauley was 18 and living out his car in Deeside before they moved to St Asaph, where they set up their steroid lab in a remote farmhouse. It started as a small scheme in a garden shed but quickly evolved into one of the UK's biggest underground steroid labs, Renvex. The pair were importing the raw ingredients, mainly synthetic testosterone, from China, and formed a network of members of the public who would accept parcels for them without asking questions. Join the North Wales Live Whatsapp community now Speaking on the show, Andrew said: "I didn't really class myself as a criminal. I'd just seen myself as a business owner." A police operation in London eventually led to the discovery of a large quantity of steroids in a flat belonging to Terence Murrell, an online dealer who was buying from Renvex. Documents at the home led police to find a payment to a dog grooming business that Andrew and Macauley had set up in Ruthin to launder the money. North Wales Police closed in on the father and son's operation. They were arrested in a dawn raid and police finally uncovered the lab at the centre of it all. Andrew said it "felt like a relief at the time", fed up of "deceiving" those around him. Both Andrew and Macauley were sentenced to spend five years in prison in 2018. Despite their court-room bust up, they spent their time in prison together, which Macauley said "saved" their relationship. Including testimony from steroid users, experts and those affected by the culture, Confessions of a Steroid Gang shows how image-obsessed social media, testosterone supplements and a booming black market collided and highlights the health risks of unregulated steroid use and addiction. Speaking on his involvement in the series, Garin Williams, who played Macauley said it was the "biggest project" he'd been involved in so far. "As an actor, you want to show as much emotion as possible on screen and with this story about Macauley's life I had a great opportunity to do so."


Daily Mirror
3 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Halsey's Americana co-star gushes about 'thoughtful' gift from singer
Halsey stars in the new Western thriller, and the singer's young co-star has opened up about working with her Pop sensation Halsey has made her cinema debut in Americana, a Western thriller that's been described as 'Tarantino-esque'. Landing in cinemas next Friday, the film also features Euphoria stars Sydney Sweeney and Eric Dane. The plot follows timid waitress Penny Jo (Sweeney) and military veteran Lefty Ledbetter (Paul Walter Hauser), who join forces to get their hands on a rare Native American artefact. Their quest puts them in the firing line of Dillon MacIntosh (Dane), a merciless criminal working for an antiquities trader. As the story unfolds, viewers meet Mandy Starr (Halsey), a desperate woman fleeing her dangerous past with her son Cal, played by emerging talent Gavin Maddox Bergman, reports the Mirror US. Now, Gavin, who was a pre-teen during filming, has revealed heart-warming stories about working with Halsey. Speaking exclusively to the Mirror 's Screen Time team, the now teenage actor said: "Halsey is such a kind person. She's very generous and we actually found that we have a lot of shared interests, specifically with art." He went on, divulging a thoughtful gesture from the singer: "My 12th birthday was on set and she went out of her way to get me a six-pack of Crumbl cookies as a surprise." But the pop star's kindness didn't end there, with Gavin also revealing a heart-warming wrap present he received from the chart-topper. "She got me an iPad because I hadn't had any devices like that. She wanted me to get into digital art and she was very kind for getting me that," Gavin told us, adding: "That was awesome. It was a really thoughtful gift." Prior to rubbing shoulders with the Colors singer, Gavin had already been acquainted with her chart-topping tracks. "My mom and I love her music," said the young actor. "We used to listen to her on the radio and we became pretty big fans." So when he learned he would be appearing alongside her on screen, it was "very, very exciting". Elsewhere in our conversation, the budding film star also revealed what attracted him to the role of Cal. "I saw this lonely boy, who just wanted to find his space in the world. And that's what we do as kids, we try to find belonging and connection," he explained.


Scotsman
3 days ago
- Scotsman
Scott Turnbull's edutainment is surreally good fun
a Scott Turnbull and his collaborators won £2500 from Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy as part of the Keep it Fringe bursary scheme, launched by Fleabag queen, Phoebe Waller-Bridge (OK, Waller-Bridge's charity contrib-uted too) but you'd think the stage hands could of spent some of it on new paint, ay lad? Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Yes, Scott Turnbull's contagious idiocy has soaked fully into my bones since I succumbed to his "edutainment" this morning at Summerhall (I know other venues exist but that's where I keep getting sent so take it up with the management...) sorry – I'm doing it again. I want to be back in Scott's Surreally Good world...! Scott greets us at the door and shakes hands; as a reviewer I worry I maybe hurt his feelings by piously breezing past him with a haughty pout. Can't get too palsy-palsy ye knaw. Objectivity etc. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad His million-candela smile didn't flicker, though, and he launched into a Dada-esque cavort through one of the silliest and loveliest explorations of... Stockton on Tees. Where he's from. Scott Turnbull presents... Surreally Good An overhead projector (do these still get made?) shows images from transparent slides, as Scott tells the mega-absurd story of 'That's Edutainment!', interspersed with hand-animated adverts which include a commercial for 'Babyfags' – yes, cigarettes for northern babies. He draws in real time – at one point backed by the theme tune from 'Vision On' – a talented illustrator whose characters, with migrating lips pursuing kisses from posh-voiced lovers (posh voices are a thing with him) evoke the style of Jim Moir or perhaps in his dafter moments, Grayson Perry. (Scott will be tickled wi' that comparison, fella!) The audience was chuckling and guffawing throughout and the warmth in the damp, peeling Summerhall dungeon grew steadily as Scott charmed the pants off us. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It doesn't really matter how George Lucas wanted to buy his dad's show, or how Mr Turnbull met Scott's mum (a fishing net was involved); what matters is that he took us into a happy delirium, with that kind of hysterical silliness which can leave you high on laughter. Get in there; you might get a Chufty Badge. Venue 26, Former Womens Locker Room at Summerhall, 11.20am, until August 25 (not 18)