Wel cyflawn'r edgescino eu tarartion yma ac raddwn i haes
am rwy Fig
Wel gw Dey‧ ei wneud pa lle i gew translating i newid am eu hunain
Wel mae'n dxericio maeth Maid Eit Sen honesty eu unig
Mae'r�도ch Cymru wedi arleid mewn eithaf newid wedi'u wneud
Mae'r dicei iet yn delogi
Mae'r
Dyna gallwn ein bod modell o'n glwn yn dweud?
Rhinole ar cross dgnmau, dod roedd yn bbêl iawn mwy i fodro gyntaf,
y gallwn o ddiwrnod yn ystod yn allan yn f News Saturday,
wrth gwrs weithio that we should be cutting down on its emissions.
It made you more aware of things you could do and how passionate these people are about the climate.
One of the ones that I found the most informative was about food and climate change
I already knew quite a bit about veganism and climate change and how important that is
but also just kind of about food miles and food production in general.
Os ystod yn ddigonent ar y clynyddoedd gwneud bellach unwiat gradd consisten
Mae wedyn rhan orop i drafyn sy'n sydd arall
A bydd ond i'si'r ste replayos yn ychwaneicorn a philiolaethion ymd lunih yr adeogi一点.
间deddio'r ddeumas, ac mae'n gwneud adeogi最近u.
training ry'n bydd eitha philiolaethion lle bod pethau uchno ychydig sy'n bod y'ch lyfydd yr ardal.
Ac renduo yn ddau'r wrth Salt
Fe ychydig maen nhw'i angen bod yw'r galw fan y'rordd System ond hi yn rhoi ddau a'i gwyrdwyr.
Mae un ar hyn i'r cyms spawn i amddactyenderi remarkableen.
Daeth dnewch yn hyfforddi, yng nghylch usid y type ciysig oibleg Jones!
Ondalu'n cael meddwl damamanol ac fydd yn dwi ddechrau yn ddalig,
nid onions
gallwch i nesaf?
F spinnerwch yr genブwch Yn ystyried pan arPop eu Aberryd unwch,
Just being inspired though by the fact that people could do it.
Yeah consensus is really important and it was just really good to see how hundreds of people can all make a decision together.
Sometimes it can be a bit painful and lengthy to reach consensus with people
but I just think it is a good way of working and it's really worth putting in.
ywos i weithio, yn ymgwrdd ein gysylltu cyllide
sefydlu sicrhau hwnnw i taith meters o'r camp yw mianwganhwyr pobaew因g ac hwnnw i'r drafnol
Romfan- Yong i'ch amser darwydr Rydym arall y camp yw y grais gwerth biwyr yst幹.
Wrth ei wneud yn ddo'i dda i mwy'n ffricub iawn i'r gymforce
fel fy oedd efallai.]
Plwy fydd yn fathau amser ac mae ceux hwnnw er tightly ychynig cw post pol往d-diempyr nhw wedi
e struck twdd i이 sergen eu brosesio.
Fawr cynhyrchi...
Mewn caest yn Hope...
Mi'n rhan gwybod.
Ac rhaid i'n rhaid i'r toillerteb
Fefyn i'n ddau'ch Alma Llyw
Ac yma fod yr hyn yw am wneud.
Mae derbyddbonesJohn,
Mae'r builder ac fynd glebu
Mae'r hoseigolder peth yn dleidio.
Aussi cofanebyl hjemwg ywod cryt...
薜?
Dwi fynd cefais y glo i'n pwneth.
Dwi'n ddME ay fweithio o german ac bar escodotai...
That, you know, pissing only, or
in that kind of...
Yn ca ruthless?
Had different styles
And aesthetics, going for them
You know some were pyramids
Great
Wonderful
I really enjoyed the Caili
Where half the people had walking boots on
And everyone else was barefoot
And it was a total nightmare
pan wneud. Rdyn ni'n nhw'n gentlyll gyd. Padwydden ni mi gymrydd nhw'n 200rol ei fod yn 400ol yn ni.
Cymru yma audible.
Maith addol efo a maith chi'n gweld na, gocynnu eu barath.
Mae o ddyliau, gallu rydych chi das pleasing.
Rwy'n pronydd pickles yn ysgolиib yn oliad y cwrs i ailant ac'r mae gwytaeth rhwng levyn.
Mae colli china i ffordd fan o tynggu.
Hundred a Cinema, allul i'r diwrnodd ucharedd i dda nhw,
a phobl hynny. password i teimlad efoias yn cael ei byd.
cablearne
»,
wasio beth siaradol, rydyn ni'n gar
am dig latte o'r résersrwm credu'n gyr Gibson.
The legal team were really great.
I remember when we left
and the police had kind of made it their task to kind of
photograph everyone and talk to everyone as people were leaving
and there was someone from the legal team there
kind of advising everyone as they left and that was really good.
How they helped people that got into tangles with the police,
I mean they're legal people...
I just thought, the organization
It was amazing it really was.
It was laid out, the kitchens were laid out, we were not outside where the people where
they were staying and it was done in an area so people didn't feel uncomfortable so I can't
remember north to south Scotland round in the north London, every area so you can go
back into where you come from and you have something familiar.
Ydy'r b спросat roedd stakechroed panreid.
Yn ydy gael y begwyd, icol profi'r gbell,
fydd yn cwmpio'n licence mewn niad.
Os oedd yr unrhyw pienoedd yn eophobiaio.
Fy enwed ein pノi yn mynd,
myfenni mwais ikinwch,
yn ymdindig,
destiny'r so railwayag.
nyt synthetic honer mor gofyddfam eraill'n clynyddu gyda hawthedog,
All thrive yr aelpo sydd ei rai bijaf m müs yboxame aaryllonydd.
Fud y
gan fydda'r f或m ni wnaeth fath am impressive
addwn i ddynist o tir sheer mewn ff determinad a oedradd hynny.
Rwyohch fel hamdwyd yr haes yn gaf fyny,
Mae ychydig yn ffas� innwyd wedi sefydig iawn o'r cymaint menyfrinol
Ond yw hanes sy'n mynd amser yn ei dyfen nhw i dda arall a hwn i nhw wedi'i ad Lindwyddon werth fidd sufferingau.
Ac fel surfing hwn, ydylockwch fel penderfwymo ar gyfer rhywbeth.
It felt like we were going to walk a tightrope across a big waterfall or something
like that, I was so passionate and I wanted the camp to be a success but there were
all sorts of things that were really scary how the policing was going to be whether we
would manage to pull it off.
It's just fear of the unknown sometimes isn't it, the way that the camp's going to be set
..i sut yw'n hoffa dros y flyodol.
Gallen nhw'n cyhofyrauments Ngwétal job, ym nifer fears o bledisiaid αν questo.
Mae'nいくol am ym wahanol delightful o fooddiolผmai.
You feel very safe while you are there,
..but before all that thing happens you feel unsafe
..how safe you are going to be?
I am using this word only for safe!
You are worried about yourself emotionally and physically.
Rydw i'n hyn ymddangos cyfennidau.
Roddw i
a� Batman y gallwch roedd
gyda weithio mewn repwysm.
Byddwch chi a bliwch chi rifi gefnogiTharnol, bobl Byddwch chi i ddelw i fynd nifer.
Rwy'n rhaid yn gallu hyd i'r erbyn �sfrawidhech ei sg 운동.
Rwy'n ei falnu— i'wch dudu였습니다 rai wrth rahwm holli—mm br cỜur fy propos hi rôl.
Rwy'n credu – run gwych yn aa hamdodionmbun Fe gwrth teiddon Gollol.
Felly mae gwych yn sharesad gyma'i peryasas yma.
I was stopped search three times before making it to the camp, and that was just sort of, I had nothing on me, it was just me, my tent and a bag, and although the police were very sort of friendly, in a way they were over friendly, I felt they were also sort of, we're only friendly because you're doing what we say and if you disagree or don't do what we say then they could turn and be slightly more aggressive.
As far we are aware about our rights, it's going to be no problem because we are not going to do anything wrong, so they can't do anything with us, it's just kind of challenging you and trying to trap you, just to show you okay, we are serious here in mind what you are doing, blah blah blah.
It's definitely done deliberately to discourage people from coming off and ever coming again on another demonstration like that.
I must say, watching the television before we went down, watching the set up and all the reporting was the kind of violence down there, the injunction and police harassment and so on, that was a little bit off putting.
We were taken to court threatened with an injunction, so we didn't quite know what to expect and we were obviously a little bit frightened of being involved in anything.
I think a lot of people find it quite intimidating, all these people taking direct action that's quite scary because they don't fit into society, it's not something that's acceptable for most people in society.
My biggest fear was probably media coverage that the camp was going to get, I think I knew myself that the camp was a positive thing and hopefully going to be a good display of what people can achieve.
You were really made to feel at home, there were a real mixture of people, I loved the way that the climate camp had engaged with the local community and all sorts of people were there so they didn't feel you'd just kind of bust in and were on somebody's territory, you really felt that you were helping a local campaign.
The thing is you've got to experience it to understand, so you've got to go, you've got to get to know the people, you get to know the people and you're with them.
I think I would have loved to have camped out there, I didn't get a chance to stay the whole night but it looked fun.
I guess it's that thing of not knowing what to expect, what it would look like or how I would fit into it or where I would put my tent because all the different little details.
I know people who didn't go who now it's almost like when people say, do you remember at climate camp, do you remember, you can see the pang of regrets that they didn't make that little effort to go and see what it was like because it was something I've never seen before in Sipson.
I think the thing that surprised me most was the way that just a few thousand people could just gather in a field for a week and leave it totally unharmed and just leave it a couple of days later and it would just be absolutely fine as though no one had ever been there.
I think that was just not exactly a surprise but just an awe really.
I think anybody thinking of going, you've got to go talk to the people, see what they're up doing, what they're talking about, get involved and it is a wonderful experience.
I only wish you'd come back for two weeks this time.
Sometimes you are in the city and you have hundreds of people around you and you feel really lonely and that was the opposite.
You could feel that somehow you were linked with people that have been there.
I was smiling for months after it so it's really difficult to pick out one thing. I just came back from the camp just so happy and that still would be really.
On a day-to-day basis what stays with me is thinking about all the friendships that I've formed at the camp, the ongoing and the affinities I've built with people who think similarly, care similarly about the issues that we have to fight for and working with those people, with those new friends on an ongoing basis to pull off the next camp.
You stop the runway to stop new coal power stations and them not just being colleagues but friends that you can laugh with, have fun with, drink beer with.
When they had to carry everything in a wheelbarrow up the lane to the campsite, my heart went out to them. It's quite emotional thinking about it but all the hard work they wheelbarrowed, all their stuff, the determination.
You could have said I'll blow it, I'm going home and I can't go on the site but they didn't. They wheelbarrow loads of straw bales and all sorts of things up the lane and I thought that I'd mind them greatly.
The French ladies husband that totally refused to go down and mix with anybody and his wife gave him such a hammering and he came in with his head bow walking across the field because he was supposed to have gone bowls and he said I'm not mixing with people like that.
She made him come, she said out dare you talk about anybody until you've met them. So I turned up and made him a cup of tea and half an hour later it was an egg a bunch of them. That was him sore with.
Yes this song goes beyond as one style.
