Download a Neil Oliver Audio Walk in Kilmartin Glen to your mobile phone

Neil OliverBBC Radio Scotland and the Open University have collaborated to produce an Audio Walk in Kilmartin Glen. The presenter is Glaswegian Neil Oliver, arguably – but who would argue? – the most galvanic historian to hit the television screen for a long time when he emerged from the team on the first series of Coast. The extent to which his personal contribution underpinned the series was recognised when he effectively became the lead presenter in the following series.

You can download and print off instructions on the walk and you can download the Audio Walk itself to your mobile phone. Argyll’s Kilmartin Glen is a site of primary archaeological and historical inportance to Scotland – as well as beng a very beautiful and mysterious glen where it’s past never seems far from the surface. This audio walk is an imaginative and mobile information source for locals and visitors alike.

The photograph of Neil Oliver above is a screenshot from the television series Coast, reproduced here under fair use conventions.

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Mull’s proposed Pilgrim Way walking route from Iona to St Andrews taken up by Bunessan business woman

In December 2008 the now Environment Minister Roseanna Cunningham (did she know this post was on the horizon?) issued an imaginative call for a new Argyll core walking route to be prepared and launched during Homecoming Scotland 2009. She was floating the idea of the Pilgrim Way.

He suggestion was that it would run across Scotland from Argyll’s Isle of Iona in the west, through its parent Isle of Mull, following the footsteps of St Columba through Stirling and Perth to St Andrews in Fife on the east coast.

Now the standard has been taken up by Janna Greenhalgh from Bunessan, just up the road from Fionnphort which is the connecting port from Mull to Iona.

Like Roseanna Cunningham, Ms Greenhalgh is focusing on the practicalities of the idea. There exists the remains of the old road across Mull whcih could be recoverd and translated into a walking and cyling pagth as part of the proposed pilgrim route. In fact, given the state of Mull’s roads at the moment, if this is opened up, cars may well displace walkers in short order.

Janna Greenhalgh is alert to the economic development potential of the proposed route. Walkers will find the route attractive physically and spiritually. They will need places to stay en route, shops and hostelries to visit and midge repellant to buy in volume.

For Argyll said from the outset that this is a superb idea. Such a development is absolutely in line with where the thrust of Argyll’s economic development must go – playing to its massive strengths: renewable energy, outdoor sporting activities and arts and cultural activities.

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Islay Energy Trust partners Scottish Power Renewables in Sound of Islay tidal energy project

Sound of IslayIslay Energy Trust has voted – at its AGM – to partner Scottish Power Renewables to progress the Sound of Islay Tidal Energy Project which theTrust has been working on for over a year.

Scottish Power’s Head of Renewables Policy, Alan Mortimer, addressed the Trust’s members at the AGM. He listed the reasons why the Sound of Islay is a first class potential source for tidal energy generation:

  • it has a strong, consistent and reliable tidal flow
  • its seabed geography is suitable
  • it is relatively sheltered frm the prevailing south westerlies
  • it has good port facilities to hand at Port Askaig
  • it has power transmission cables
  • it is relatively close to the heavily populated Central Belt with Scotland’s most concentrated energy needs

Philip Maxwell, Chair of Islay Energy Trust and Alan Mortimer signed a Memorandum of Understanding and the agreement is to submit more detailed plans for approval in September this year.

Scottish Power Renewables has an established relationship with Hammerfest Strom UK, the tidal energy technology designers. Its marine turbine – looking much like a wind turbine – was tested for four years in a Norwegian fjord without failure. The indications are that this device will be suitable for conditions in the Sound of Islay.

The thinking seems to be that an array of ten of Hammerfest Strom’s marine turbines would be be installed in the Sound at depths where they would not interfere with shipping regularly on passage through the Sound as well as into Port Askaig.

It is not yet clear where this agreement and this project leave the proposed feasibility study Islay Energy Trust was developing with Aberdeen’s Robert Gordon University but we will report on that shortly.

Hammerfest Strom are also interested in the potential of the Pentland Firth and have been to Caithness for public consutations.

The photograph above, of the Sound of Islay looking across to the Paps of Jura, is reproduced here with the permission of the photographer, Ron Steenvoorden, who publishes the IslayInfo online tourist guide and the Islay Weblog community website. Both sites were winners in their categories in the ForArgyll Awards 2008.

Beach litter art workshop at Kilmartin Museum

Jane Rose, whose exhibition – Island Tidelines – opens at Kilmartin House Museum on 1st March 209, will be running a beach litter art workshop the day before – on Saturday 28th February from 10am-11.30am.

At the same time on the same day, Saturday 28th February from 10.00am – 11.30am, Aisa Nebreda from the GRAB Trust will run a workshop for children, making beach litter mobiles to hang in bedrooms or living rooms.

For details, phone: 01546 510 278

Dog let loose in Campbeltown grabs owner £55 fine

An unaccompanied dog seen wandering around with no collar or lead in Shore Street and St John Street in Campbeltownon Friday (13th February)  and was ‘seized’ in St John Street. (‘Seizing’ is procedural-speak but would be an action most dogs would have something brisk to say about.)

Anyway, the owner – who should have paid attention to the date before doing anything so irresponsible – was fined £55 by the area’s dog warden. The fine was imposed for allowing his dog to stray and for failing to put a collar on it displaying the owners name and address.

Stewart Turner, Argyll and Bute Council’s Head of Roads and Amenity Services and normally a very affable man worked himself into a lather to say: ‘The officers will continue to be pro-active in Mid Argyll, Kintyre and Islay to stamp out this shocking display of poor practice by some dog owners’.

Fun apart, dogs are worth a lot more than being casually left subject to this level of risk.

Kilmartin Museum’s March Exhibition – Island Tidelines – links art with action on the beach

The Island Tidelines Exhibition which opens at Kilmartin House Museum on Sunday 1st March 2009 is even more than an exhibition.

Jane Rose, the artist whose work is featured in the exhibition, is island focused and has moved south west from living on Argyll’s Isle of Tiree  to sister Argyll island, Colonsay. She will be running a beach litter art workshop on Saturday 28th February, 10am-11.30am in a runup to the opening on 1st March.

At the same time on Saturday 28th February, Aisa Nebreda from the GRAB Trust will run a workshop for children, making beach litter mobiles to hang in bedrooms or living rooms.

If you fancy trying your hand at either of these ring 01546 510278 to book because places are limited.  Adults £6, children free.

Aisa Nebreda is also organising a beach clean on the dsay of the opening of the exhibition – Sunday, 1st March at 1.00pm at Kilmory Bay beach. For more information ring Aisa on 01546 604226.

Scottish Government informs Westminster of its continuing opposition to ID Cards

Fergus Ewing, Community Safety Minister, has written to the UK Home Office saying that in the view of the Scottish Government the proposed ID cards represent ‘an unacceptable threat’ to civil liberties.

The matter is reserved to Westminster  but in November 2008 the Scottish Parliament backed a motion by the Scottish Government, voting against the UK Government’s plan to introduce the cards on the grounds that they would not deter crime or increase security but would raise fears about infringement of civil liberties.

Mr Ewing has raised the cost of introducing the cards – estimated at over £5billion, saying that in the current economic climate such money should clearly be spent on more worthwhile targets like schools, hospitals teachers, nurses and policemen. He also noted the uncertain cost to citizens will be compelled to buy the card from 2012. LIke any back street market stall selling dodgy goods, the UK Government is offering the ‘bargain’ of a cut price initial fee of £30 for cards bought now. It is saying  nothing about what it will charge from 2012 but it is known to be expensive.

As For Argyll has reported, the UK Government has corrupted the Young Scot card system by making it a covert ID card and thereby entrapping youngsters in featuring in a national database – a situation they might not choose a little later when they are more aware of the issues involved.

It will be interesting to see if the Scottish Government’s resolve to oppose the introduction of these ID cards in Scotland will be forced to the point of becoming a constitutional issue. It should be. The profundity of the surveillance society we now are is already such an issue. Any attempt to force this upon the nore confident society that is Scotland would be highly provocative.

Herald has major profile on Richard Joynson of Inveraray’s Loch Fyne Whiskies

The business pages of today’s (14th February) edition of The Herald carry a major profile on Richard Joynson – interviewed  in the bar of The George, across the road in Inveraray from Richard’s renowned Loch Fyne Whiskies shop.

The journalist describes Inveraray in terms that make it sound like a two-dimensional pop-up book: ‘Inveraray, once known only for the Duke of Argyll, his storybook feudal bastion on the shores of Loch Fyne and a 19th century jail – boasting ‘A Prison for All: men, women children, babies even lunatics…’

The piece then quotes the success of Loch Fyne Whiskies in being voted Retailer of the Year in 2004 by the whisky industry, using this as its move into a close focus on Joynson himself.

He turns out to have begun his life in Argyll as a fish farm owner/manager in the mid 1980s and moved to whisky retailing in the 1990s, feeling that fish farming was increasingly non-viable. He taught himself about whisky, starting from the useful base of liking to drink it.

The writing rightly reflects the amazingly dense variety of stock Loch Fyne Whiskies carries. It remarks on the way gthe wrap-around ranks of bottles, their names, colours, labels and presentation packaging seems to compel purchase. And it records the gratifying habit of Joynson’s customer base in making regular repeat orders though his website.

A recognisable picture emerges of a shop where tastings, intriguing and well informed conversation and unpretentious advice are the order of the day. With evidence on his side, Joynson tells the reporter that he enjoys talking to people who come into the shop. He is hugely well informed on whisky, he loves the knowledge almost as much as the product and he loves to share it. He is as interested in discussing the options you might have in spending £30 on a bottle  to kill in short order at a party as in a serious present at whatever you want to pay. And his staff are bred in the same engaging mould.

In the interview, Joynson says that he sella around 50,000 bottles a year, around half of which are online sales. He is no passive retailer, but has created the Loch Fyne blended whisky, the chocolate-orange flavoured Loch Fyne liqueur and the breath-taking – literally – Living Cask. He credits the Furnace Inn – in the village of the same name where he lives in a house with a wonderful view in an area – Mid Argyll – which he calls ‘the most beautiful part of the British Isles’ – with helping to finalise the creation of his Loch Fyne Liqueur. This was down to a series of now legendary tastings of the various blends with which he was experimenting.

At the end, the profile presents the picture of a happy and discriminating man with no wish to expand what would clearly be an expandable business. He has no need of the hassle and he doesn’t need to do better than he’s already doing, He says: ‘As long as I can keep my family in steaks and coffee, why bother… I don’t thin k people or companies should be greedy. They should be happy and provide the service and the customers will come’.

You get the sense that the journalist enjoyed Joynson’s company, the conviviality of The George and maybe even the odd dram and some advice from the shop. It’s an attractive piece and it accounts for a soundly founded business that is a way of life.

By the way, if you’re feeling flush, Loch Fyne Whiskies’ ‘Tomorrow’s News‘ informs customers that it has managed to source some more of the second release of the MacAllan Lalique 55 year old. Due in soon – its recommended retail price is £6,000.

UK Treasury planned to delay devolution, redraw boundaries and cast Orkney and Shetland adrift – to protect claim on Scotland’s oil

Oil platformThis scenario is not something to work up much steam about today because it comes from a thirty year-old document acquired by The Times newspaper – but it does underline, as if we didn’t know, just how dirty and how greedily self-serving politics can get.

In 1975 , the UK was looking at a growing spirit of independence in Scotland. In 1965 John Prebble’s book on The Highland Clearances was published and became quickly and powerfully influential in fuelling a sense of colonial betrayal in the Scots people.

In 1974 the playwright John McGrath had had a major success with his play, The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil. This was a sort of dramatised history of Scotland since the Highland clearances, with a picture of the perceived betrayal of the people then followed by the contemporary betrayal in the theft of ‘Scotland’s Oil’.

All of this contributed to a scenario that made the UK Treasury start preparing some contingency planning to protect its own interests in the best imperial fashion. It is some of these contingency planning documents that The Times has now got hold of.

The paper prints extracts from a 1975 paper written by Sir David Walker, then Assistant Secretary at the Treasury. He recommends that: ‘progress toward devolution should be delayed for as long as possible’. This was to allow the following actions to be implemented:

  • that Scotland’s coastal waters should have their boundaries redrawn
  • that a new North Sea sector should be created which would ‘neutralise’ Scotland’s claim
  • that a local campaign for independence in Orkney and Shetland should be incited to split and weaken territorial claims to the oil.

None of this happened, of course, but the will was there. It always is.That’s politics. Never imagine it plays by any rules other than that the winner takes all.

The photograph above of an offshore oil platform was distributed by the American government and is reproduced here under the Creative Comons licence.

Jim Mather’s National Conversation with Argyll’s Arts and Culture group proves revelatory

Jim Mather at KilmartinAs part of the Scottish Government’s National Conversation, Argyll’s  MSP, Jim Mather who is also Minister for Enterprise, Energy and Tourism, engaged yesterday (13th February) with people working in Argyll’s arts and culture community.

There were representatives from across Argyll’s islands and from its various mainland areas, representing venues, events, Gaelic culture, theatre, traditional and classical music, ballet, and the embedding of art and creativity in education, health and therapy.

Councillors Douglas Philand (Depute Spokeman on Arts and Leisure for Argyll and Bute Council) and John Semple were there alongside Robert Livingstone, Director of Hi-Arts, Dr Helen Bennett, Head of Crafts at the Scottish Arts Council, Donald MacVicar, Argyll and Bute Council’s Head of Planning and Performance and a spectrum of Council officers from the arts and community partnerships.

It turned out to be a day of two halves. The morning session led by Jim Mather was energising and enabling and, as one delegate said for everyone, left him feeling more hopeful than he had felt before.

After lunch things fell quickly apart for very interesting reasons which revealed a cultural schism, do not reflect upon the individuals leading the session – and to which this report will return.

Jim Mather kicked off by contextualising the National Conversation – ‘ask the people who do the work’ – in the Scottish Government’s route to ‘the new North Star of economic development’. The big objective is to reach a point in 2011 where Scotland’s growth will match that of the UK as a whole. The chief instruments in achieving this are seen as innovation, adaptation, improvement and the removal of inhibitors. The driving attitude is the presumption of growth.

The Minister managed the session by asking a series of prepared questions of his audience:

  • What business are we in?
  • Who are our beneficiaries?
  • What are people wanting from what we do?
  • How do we measure progress?
  • What needs to change?
  • Who else is in the game?

As responses were offered on each of these questions, they were placed in an evolving and fluid structure (using mind-mapping software developed in East Kilbride) capable of including the practical and the philosophical with some harmony and common purpose.

This ‘map’ becomes the ‘minute’ of the meeting and will be circulated by the Minister to those present.

Everything emerging from this process had its value and the picture evolving before the eyes of the audience began to identify some very important issues and understandings. Subjectively, these included:

  • The geographically dispersed nature of Argyll and the islands dictates the evolution of a unique infrastructure for the arts and culture, capable of marrying with the nature of the place and the practicalities of living and working in it
  • The big thing that art can offer people and what they – often unconsciously – look for in it, is a sense of belonging. This covers the spectrum from the affirmation of individual identity, to social inclusion (membership for the time being), to an enlivened awareness of the human condition.
  • Art adds value to all other elements of being – business, economic development, community, visiting, heritage, education, health, mental health, communication, knowledge, aspiration and ambition.
  • A major contribution of art to life is its ability to rage against the bland

A wealth of valuable insights emerged in response to the question ‘What needs to change?’ These included:

  • The arts have to be recognised as partners in economic and social development, not supplicants
  • The victim culture has to go
  • Perceptions have to change to remove the unspoken assumption that art emerging from rural locations is inevitably poorer, less crafted and less ‘valuable’ than its siblings born in urban and metropolitan surroundings
  • Collaboration across the arts and culture is the key to innovation, development and best use of resources
  • To facilitate this, those involved in the spectrum of arts and culture in Argyll and the islands need to know more about each other, each other’s work and each others places and venues
  • Asking for help should be seen as a strength not a weakness – by both sides of the equation
  • Marketing and consciousness raising about what is actually happening in Argyll is vital

From all of this, produced democratically from an engaged audience, it’s easy to see why energies were high by lunchtime.

The Minister left after lunch. The next session was led by Robert Livingstone from Hi-Arts and Kerry Corbett from the arts wing of Argyll and Bute Council.

This was every bit as revelatory as the morning session – in very different ways and perhaps threw up the single biggest issue which sucks life from art and from those who make it.

Jim Mather’s focus on the need for the conscious management of artistic activity to strengthen its contribution to economic and social development and its own long term health was open and inclusive, evolving a fluid structure from the perceptions of those present. This was not only accepted but welcomed with an awareness of invigoration and progress.

In the afternoon session the audience was immediately faced with an imposed hierarchical organogram with long thin red and pink boxes representing umbrella bodies, square green boxes representing constituents and yellow rectangles clustered and hanging below like a hyacinth representing the big service agencies like SNH, the Forestry Commission etc

It was an imposed not an evolved structure. The hierarchies and their dependant relationships were not immediately persuasive. The diagram was badly drawn. It was barely legible even from the helpful plasma screens around the room.

Most of all it spoke the wrong language and it represented a culture of bureaucracy where pre-decided form imposes itself upon organic functions. The crashing gears as two utterly alien cultures met was, if not audible, certainly visible. Shoulders slumped. Heads sank into necks. Life and hope drained away and did not return. And nothing happened. No actions were even formulated.

The purpose was benevolent – to ‘give’ (itself a telling perspective) the arts community a seat at the table and to do so at a time which may be particularly helpful. The trouble was that, in this context, it represented the clang of the cell door closing off retreat.

The poet William Carlos Williams, in an argument about poetry and whether poets should evolve a form for an individual poem or work to fit what they wanted to say within an existing form – like an ode or a sonnet – said: ‘a crab needs a crab shaped box’. The corollary is that the only way you can fit a crab in a standard box is to crush or amputate the inconvenient parts of the crab’s sprawling and uniquely evolved body.

Here we had the crab and here we had the boxes – and even the attempt to make them fit together was somehow unthinkable. One delegate raised the Bauhaus formulation to explain the predicament: ‘form must follow function’.

Here we also had fellow human beings whose translation into bureacratic management had corrupted their langauge and their perceptions. This was the most powerful and poignant experience of all. People with intelligence, warmth and wit who were no longer intelligible and whose world has become framed by rigid and disabling structures and criteria.

The big challenge we all face – together – is how to free them and how to free a forward-facing arts community into the evolving integration with Scotland’s thrust for innovation-led economic development so hungrily welcomed in the morning.

There are solutions and For Argyll will do all it can to contribute to their evolution in a variety of ways. Argyll’s economic and social development rests upon its wealth of natural and cultural resources. The future lies in the development of renewable energy generation, of outdoor sporting activities and facilities and of artistic and cultural activities and facilities.

That is a future worth working for.

The photograph above of Jim Mather MSP is cropped from a shot issued by Argyll and Bute Council’s Communications Team, showing the Minister at Kilmartin House Museum in Argyll, launching the Registrar General’s Book of Scottish Connections.