News
St Davids: Bug Farm focus of new BBC documentary
AN ‘innovative’ Welsh couple from St Davids, scientist Dr Sarah Beynon and award-winning chef Andy Holcroft, are bringing a brand new industry to Wales in the form of bug food – and now their endeavours are to be the feature of a brand new documentary The Bug Grub Couple on BBC One.
Sarah and Andy have spent the last four years building foundations for their new venture in the country’s smallest city.
Sarah, an Oxford University scientist and farmer founded the award-winning Dr Beynon’s Bug Farm on her original family farm in 2013. The Bug Farm is a research and education centre focusing on the importance of bugs and how we can produce food efficiently and sustainably.
“I strongly believe that insect protein is a new ingredient here in the western world that can improve the sustainability of our food production systems and improve the nutritional quality of our food. It’s not about a squirming grub on a stick, it’s about utilising a new source of protein to help us to eat more healthily and more sustainably,” says Sarah.
Chef Andy Holcroft launched the Grub Kitchen, which is located alongside the farm and offers an interesting double menu with a choice of ‘normal’ food next to insect versions. The Grub Kitchen is the UK’s first full-time restaurant serving food containing insects and recently won the award for the Most Innovative Business of the Year in Wales.
Andy said: “As a chef, it’s not often you find new ingredients. Edible insects give me a whole larder of exciting, new ingredients and flavours to experiment with and the possibilities for new dishes are endless.”
The documentary shows that bugs use up very little water and can eat waste products, while other animals need feed from edible arable crops. The challenge for the couple is to change people’s perceptions of bugs from creepy crawlies to edible, sustainable and tasty food.
First Minister of Wales, Rt Hon Carwyn Jones AM, features in the documentary and shares his thoughts on bugs as a new and sustainable source of protein. He thinks it’s just a question of ‘broadening people’s minds’ and the industry could be a benefit to Wales.
The programme follows Sarah and Andy as they take their ambitious plans to the next stage by taking Andy’s dishes out of the restaurant and into the mainstream by launching their new food brand Cricket Cookies.
They also travel to the Netherlands to meet large-scale insect farmers and have their products tested by top food scientists.
The Bug Grub Couple will be broadcast on Monday, August 7, at 7.30pm on BBC One.
Community
Mayors and community leaders join Milford Haven Founders Day celebrations
Town’s civic leaders praised as event highlights community spirit
A HOST of civic dignitaries and community representatives joined residents for this year’s Milford Haven Founders Day, helping to mark the town’s annual celebration of its heritage and community spirit.
The event, held on Saturday, welcomed mayors and representatives from towns across Pembrokeshire, alongside police officers, clergy and local business leaders.
Milford Haven Founders Day organisers thanked guests for attending and supporting the occasion, describing their presence as helping to make the day “even more special”.
Among those attending were the Mayor of Milford Haven, Mark Woodward, accompanied by Mayoress Evija Upeniece Woodward; the Mayor of Haverfordwest, Councillor Randell Izaiah Thomas-Turner, accompanied by Mayoress and Sheriff Councillor Dani Thomas-Turner; the Mayor of Pembroke, Jonathan Grimes; the Mayor of Pembroke Dock, Councillor Tony Wilcox; and the Mayor of Neyland, Councillor Peter Hay, accompanied by Mayoress Mitzy Hay.
The event also welcomed local Police Community Support Officers from Milford Haven and Neyland Police, Reverend Dr Adrian Furse of St Katharine and St Peter’s Church, Milford Haven, Milford Haven Business Circle chairman Byron Thomas Jenkins, and treasurer Amanda Dyson.
Organisers said the strong turnout from civic leaders reflected the importance of Founders Day as a celebration of Milford Haven’s identity and local pride.
A spokesperson for Milford Haven Founders Day said: “Your presence and support helped make the day a memorable celebration of our town, its history and its community spirit. We are truly grateful that you took the time to join us and share in the festivities.”
Pembroke Mayor Jonathan Grimes later praised the event, commenting: “Thank you for the kind invitation – it was a wonderful event!”
Photo caption:
Civic guests: Mayors, community representatives and local officers gather during Milford Haven Founders Day celebrations (Pic: Captured Soul Photography).
News
Davies attacks Welsh Government funding for campaign urging people to limit red meat
WELSH CONSERVATIVE Shadow Farming Minister Andrew RT Davies has called on Plaid Cymru ministers to stop funding public information campaigns which he says undermine Welsh meat.
The criticism follows a Welsh Government response to a written question from Welsh Conservative Senedd Leader Darren Millar, which showed £662,000 was allocated to the Climate Action Wales campaign during 2025-26.
Examples of the campaign include online advice on ‘green food choices’, sustainable eating and meat-free options, alongside wider material on energy, travel and consumer behaviour.
The campaign gives advice on reducing carbon emissions through choices on food, travel, energy and purchasing. Its sustainable food guidance says meat is among the largest contributors to greenhouse gas emissions, particularly from ruminant livestock such as cows and sheep.

It also advises people to limit red and processed meat, while saying those who do eat meat should try to buy local, sustainably farmed produce where available.
Mr Davies said Welsh meat should be promoted rather than undermined.
He said: “Welsh meat is of the highest quality and the industry forms a key part of our economy.
“Plaid Cymru separatists must celebrate it, not fund campaigns that undermine Welsh meat.
“No project aimed at discouraging meat consumption should receive public funds.”
The Welsh Government response said the figures related to public information campaigns connected to the previous government’s policies.
Education
Teacher incentive scheme branded ‘sticking plaster’ by school leaders
SCHOOL leaders have warned that a Welsh Government plan to increase incentive payments for trainee teachers in priority subjects risks creating a “two-tier workforce”.
NAHT Cymru said the move may help attract some new teachers, but warned it does not address the wider recruitment and retention crisis facing schools across Wales.
The Welsh Government’s priority subject incentive scheme offers grants to eligible postgraduate teacher trainees in subjects including biology, chemistry, design and technology, digital technology and computer science, mathematics, international languages, physics and Welsh.
Laura Doel, national secretary of NAHT Cymru, said: “While we agree that an ambitious plan to help schools struggling with recruitment and retention of teachers is needed, we don’t think focusing on subject-specific incentives is the way to go.
“This risks creating a two-tier workforce and appears to be a short-term sticking plaster solution for a systemic problem.”
She said there appeared to be no requirement for teachers to remain in schools for a set number of years after induction in order to keep the payment.
Ms Doel added: “We know a significant proportion of teachers leave the profession within the first five years of teaching.”
NAHT Cymru said ministers should focus instead on the wider pressures affecting teachers, school leaders and primary schools, as well as secondary subjects where recruitment is difficult.
The union said improving pay, terms and conditions, and reducing workload would do more to make teaching an attractive long-term career.
Ms Doel said: “By going further in restoring the real-terms value of pay, which fell sharply over the previous decade, improving terms and conditions, and bearing down on unsustainable levels of workload, ministers could make the profession an attractive long-term career proposition once again.
“But schools also need fairer funding to recruit the staff and support staff they need and deliver for pupils.”
She said ensuring schools receive the full consequential funding owed through the Barnett Formula should be a priority for the new administration.
NAHT represents more than 38,000 school leaders across early years, primary, secondary and special schools in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
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