Shift - Day 5
The final three shifts are all afternoon to late evening (0000hrs finish). So blogs may be delayed due to these late finishes.
Today the hotel is seeing the departure of the Technical Officials (TOs) of those sports at the NEC which have been completed. In particular the TOs for Weightlifting and ParaWeightlifting have left today, but all the other sports will be continuing until Sunday evening/Monday morning. They have taken off their uniform (all blue, compared to the rest of the workforce yellow) and been replaced by normal day clothes.
The weather has cooled overnight - there is a definite chill today. With the shift ending late, looks like the outdoor wear will get its first use when walking back to the hotel tonight
A piece of trivia:
Birmingham’s water comes from Wales. It is supplied via the Elan Valley Aqueduct. This is fed by interlinked reservoirs in the Elan Valley in Mid Wales. Every day over 320 million litres of water travel 73 miles (117 km) from the Elan Valley. The aqueduct is over a 100 yrs old, and was built because in the Victorian era, Birmingham was a rapidly growing city. With plagues of cholera and typhoid endemic at that time, a source of clean uncontaminated water was needed.
The Evan Valley can be reached from Rhayader and it has International Dark Sky status. It has six dams: four on the River Elan (Craig Goch, Garreg Ddu, Pen y Garreg, Caban Coch) and two on the River Claerwen (Claerwen, and the unfinished Dol y Mynach) which form the reservoir system.
Website: elanvalley.org.uk
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