From his Bridgend base, Mr Huxtable also made darts for semi finalist, Gerwyn Price and Dutch player Michael Van Gerwen for the tournament, which has run since February.
After growing up seeing the Guardian's Hay Festival supplement every year when her dad would buy the paper, this year she was in attendance as a Writer at Work."Publishing, it can feel like a closed door sometimes and it's hard to know who you need to speak to, what it is you actually need, how you get an agent," the 39-year-old said.
She said if audiences at events like Hay Festival were not representative they may not know their books are not diverse enough, or "that they need to hear other voices".Jade added the festival's effortsbringing in a younger audience and providing a space for all voices was "really making the difference".
"I'm seeing younger people, more ethnically diverse people, a lot of really good queer representation happening... and that's really, really important," she said."We're seeing a more modern Wales perhaps being represented whilst not losing that classic literary approach.
"We have a really rich national history of literature and there's nothing wrong with being middle-class, there's nothing wrong with really literary writing like classic books.
"There's just a place for all of our different types of writing. That's the most important thing."They are working to find them and give the dead a decent burial like they have done for others since Thursday.
"I have never seen that kind of floods before in my life, but I am grateful that my family survived it," 65-year-old Ramat Sulaiman said.Ms Sulaiman's house was completely destroyed, rendering her family homeless.
She said 100 children who used to sleep in a Quranic school two blocks from her house "all got washed away"."It was a painful sight for me. The children cried for help, but no one could do anything. As their cries got louder, their building sunk and flowed away."