When I brought my wife to Talsarnau in 1946, she felt very strange at first, as she could not understand Welsh.  My mother helped her a lot as she always spoke to her in Welsh as her English was  not very good. 

Eleanor went to Welsh classes but she soon found out that she had a lot of words that we don't use and when we had the children she soon picked a lot from them. 

I'm sure that is the best  way for people like her to learn.  I went through all  the houses  in Talsarnau and Llandecwyn as they were when I  went  in the Army at the beginning of the war.  I think there were  only 12  houses with English speaking people but today  it  is  fifty fifty.   Mrs. Syn Hughes, the wife of Hugh Owen Hughes, whom  he met in Newlyn Cornwall, when he was a sailor, they lived in  Bryn Street and Mrs. Hughes could speak Welsh as good as any of us and was  very  proud of it and today Mrs. Orton and Mrs.  Harper  are working so hard that I'm sure in a few months they will be fluent Welsh speakers, and others as well.

CaerffynnonI  remember  when I was a boy working in Caerffynnon with Mr. Haigh he asked Dafydd Jones the gardener, one day, to  fetch  his gaberdeen, old Dafydd had no idea what it was, so he got hold of the watering can, and I can see him now and Mr.  Haigh  saying "That  is not the right thing David Jones"., he wanted his  cape!  One day it was raining and Mr. Haigh wanted me to take it as I was going home for dinner but I hid it by the lodge as I knew the children  would  be out of the school as it was dinner  time  and they would laugh at me.