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Came and gave quote and then completed job on the same day, I was very happy with work done.
Mr Phil Hall
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Hereford
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Coventry
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Came and gave quote and then completed job on the same day, I was very happy with work done.
Mr Phil Hall
This site helped me find a local company who's given me an excellent quote. Thank You.
Ms Michelle Aidoo
This was the best way I have ever got a quote and you know that they are good reliable tradesman with certificates.
Mrs Diana Fox
Extremely efficient and amazingly quick acquiring the nearest relevant companies to my location.
Mrs Gwen Tapp
Hereford
Excellent, saved me the time and trouble of finding local and reliable contractors. Thank you.
Mr K Gregg
Coventry
Very personable and the whole process painless, friendly and efficient.
Mrs Sarah Baxendale
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Ferndale is a town situated in the Rhondda Valley in the region borough of Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales. Neighbouring villages are Blaenllechau, Maerdy as well as Tylorstown. Ferndale was industrialised in the mid-19th century. The very first coal mine shaft was sunk in 1857 as well as was the very first neighborhood to be intensively industrialised in the Rhondda Valley. In Welsh, Ferndale is called Glynrhedynog, the name of one of the old farms on which the town is built. In its infancy Glynrhedynog was also referred to as Trerhondda after the name of the very first big church to be built in the town. The identifying of settlements after chapels prevailed in Wales at the time, as is displayed in village names such as Bethesda, Beulah as well as Horeb, however neither Glynrhedynog nor Trerhondda was predestined to be utilized for long. Glynrhedynog is made from words “glyn” implying valley and also “rhedynog” suggesting ferny, and so coal from the Glynrhedynog pits was marketed as Ferndale coal, a much easier name for English buyers to assimilate. The Ferndale pits are what attracted the labor force as well as their family members to the area, and by the 1880s “Ferndale” was well established as a thriving town. With the phasing in of multilingual roadway indications from the late 1980s onwards, the name Glynrhedynog gradually came back as well as is currently the officially marked Welsh language name for Ferndale. The Welsh language is on the rise in Ferndale after the town embraced the English language throughout the Industrial revolution. A Welsh language institution is positioned near the park and the school is named after the park’s lake, ‘Llyn-y-Forwyn.’ (The Maiden’s Lake).