Comment posted Lonely Planet puts Easdale event up there with the 2012 Olympics by newsroom.
For Clootie Dumpling: The only bung we know about is the one that stops a boat taking in water.
We simply put what energy we can behind the places where we find energy. There’s not enough of it around.
No place is perfect and everyone who lives anywhere has a subjective view of that place, which can be positive or negative but is rarely indifferent.
A tiny island like Easdale punches well above its size – as does its Puffer – because it’s always working to make things better, more sustainable, fun. The arts programmne in the Hall is enviable – and as for the Stone Skimming… who wouldn’t smile?
For Argyll will always back positive energies, resourcefulness and inventiveness with everything it’s got. Without these things, nothing gets anywhere.
Recent comments by newsroom
- SNP meeting on Monday may be testing time for mega-coalition proposal
We’re not going to do a ’20 questions’ routine but, to let local politicians off the hook, it’s not any of them.
And we’re now taking a vow of silence. - First Minister’s choice not to condemn mob behaviour proves Farage point
Criticising behaviour – like Nimbyism [a worthy target], should not necessarily require tying it to a party or a group, although if there is good evidence why it belongs there, there is every reason to relate the two.
When you say: ‘Only in a very small number of occasions would I condone taking protest to the point of physical intimidation and I reserve that to some of the most significant ‘upheavals’ in modern times (examples being the fight against apartheid and the civil rights movement in the US) – even then there would be a line I, personally, couldn’t step over.’ – this is wholly understandable but using violence to protest against it is contradictory. I can never get playwright John Arden’s line out my head on this one: ‘You can’t cure the pox by further whoring.’
Civil disobedience is a very attractive and effective expression of disaffection but people are quite resistant to considering it.
Lynda - Arctic Convoy navies celebrated at Loch Ewe as surviving veterans receive Arctic Star medal
Email Jacky Brookes of the Russian Arctic Convoy Museum in Wester Ross: info@russianarcticconvoymuseum.co.uk (Russian Arctic Convoy Museum)
She will be glad to hear from you and of your father.
If you go to this webpage: http://www.veterans-uk.info/arctic_star_index.htm
- you will find an Application Form for the Arctic Star on it.
Alternatively, you can phone: 08457 800 900 and take it from there.
You will be able to get a posthumous medal for your father for his Arctic Convoy service – and although, painfully, he will never have known of it or seen it, he earned it and the medal will be very important to your family. - First Minister’s choice not to condemn mob behaviour proves Farage point
We have people in Community Councils in Argyll who are on the record as not wanting ‘people of low incomes’ in their area. And those will be people of a variety of political persuasions. The socialist NIMBY is not a rare bird.
It is unsafe to give representational status to the fringe adherents of any cause – and that is why the cause itself – any cause – must be clear about what it finds acceptable and what it does not.
The need for the formal, official representative of a country to be clear on matters like this is even greater – and it sets the bar.
How would Mr Salmond react to the same treatment the mob offered Mr Farage in Edinburgh?
It was sudden and unexpected.
It began with an invasion of the pub he was in.
It was intimidating – the mob crowded tight in, creating a real pressure.
The shouting and the abuse was literally ‘in his face’.
There was no way through nor any offered.
It would be surprising if the First Minister were not to feel equally shaken by such an experience – and very surprising if he had effectively condoned it as gleefully afterwards.
Personally, I’m not afraid of much – but the pressure of shouting bodies, the level of unreason, the aggression – with no signals that this might not turn to physical aggression… I wouldn’t have run but I would have been worried for my safety and I would have had no certainty as to the outcome.
The police clearly had reason to take a quite extraordinary series of measures to protect Mr Farage.
One of these was locking him in a pub for his own safety.
That meant that they were uncertain of their ability to protect him against a violence they, who were present – clearly felt was a potential development.
I feel – on good evidence – that Tony Blair did more damage than anyone to the political life of this country, to its expectation of honesty in those who govern, to its essential democracy and to its security – and that he has blood on his hands: of untold thousands of innocent Iraqis, of Dr David Kelly, of those who died in London in the bombings of 7th July 2005. I feel the most profound contempt for him.[And Nigel Farage has nothing of this level of gravity on his record.]
But I would act to protect Blair were he to be the butt of anything like this – because I do not wish to be implicated either in what he has done or in any primitive lynch mob response to it.
The best punishment for the attention-seeking and egotistical Blair is to pay him no attention. He is not an homme serieux.
The best response to UKIP and MR Farage, if you are opposed to their politics, is not to vote for them.
Lynda - Walsh to lead all but Lib Dems, Conservatives and George Freeman
No – not speculation – otherwise we would have said so.
But this is not a done deal.
It has to go for approval to an SNP meeting tomorrow [Monday].
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Excuse me? ForArgyll wouldn’t be getting a “bung” to advertise the Puffer Bar would it? Or Easdale Island? Surely not! (See many previous so-called articles that are actually advertising bumf for said pub and island.)
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For Clootie Dumpling: The only bung we know about is the one that stops a boat taking in water.
We simply put what energy we can behind the places where we find energy. There’s not enough of it around.
No place is perfect and everyone who lives anywhere has a subjective view of that place, which can be positive or negative but is rarely indifferent.
A tiny island like Easdale punches well above its size – as does its Puffer – because it’s always working to make things better, more sustainable, fun. The arts programmne in the Hall is enviable – and as for the Stone Skimming… who wouldn’t smile?
For Argyll will always back positive energies, resourcefulness and inventiveness with everything it’s got. Without these things, nothing gets anywhere.
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All is not as it seems on Easdale Island – it is not the tranquil paradise Newsroom seems to think it is.
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@webcraft, where is?
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The British call it ‘stone skimming’, the Americans call it ‘stone skipping’, the Irish call it ‘stone skiffing’ and the French call it ‘ricochet’. In fact most countries have their own terminology for this ancient game. Confusingly the English also refer to it as ‘Ducks and Drakes’.
The Guinness World Stone Skipping Record was 38 skips, established by Jerdone, in 1994 in Texas on the Blanco River near Wimberley.
The official world championships have been held by NASSA since 1989. It was NASSA who were instrumental, in first, defining what is a ‘skip’, and secondly, at the request of Guinness, suggesting verification guidelines. The I.S.S.F., the International Stone Skipping Federation, (NASSA’s ‘parent’), is the Official Guinness Adjudicator for stone skipping records. As far as I am aware the ISSF have not applied for inclusion in the Olympics and Easdale has not applied for membership of the I.S.S.F. and therefore the Easdale event must be deemed unofficial.
On this picturesque and largely crime free island, it is unfortunate that this event seems to attract the criminal element to this industrial free conservation area.
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It seems probable that in its own modest way the Easdale Island stone skimming event is likely to have more financial impact locally and in Scotland than the jamboree about to take place in London this summer. Declarations made when the IOC contract was secured that the London Olympics would have a UK wide benefit have so far proved predictably illusory.
Public sector expenditure from the UK Treasury on this is running at present in the region of around £2,700 million and anyone who believes that this will be the final figure could probably get a well paid job at the MoD.
To date the equivalent “Olympic” pse spend in Scotland is almost £1 million and this has to be reckoned along with the diversion of a sum in excess of £100 million rerouted from National Lottery funding that would normally have been used for Scottish based sports , arts and charitable projects.
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Couldn’t agree more with the Lonely Planet. My husband, Mark Tulloch & I, went to this event for the first time last year and it was great. He came second in the “old Tossers” and 9th overall and having been a competitive rugby and cricket man in his younger days, Mark was fair chuffed.
We hadn’t realised till we arrived that we would be taking a wee boat over to the Island, what excitement even in the rain and dreichness. We got thoroughly soaked, had great burgers, met some lovely people, had a laugh and Mark has found a sport he can still compete well in.
Mark will be going for it big time this year.
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