21.00 10th October: Mod Naiseanta Rioghail 2009 saw some of the big Continue reading
Tag Archives: Aberdeen
Guess who’s in the middle of the Glasgow Airport Rail Link row?
Stewart Stevenson. Scotland’s inept Transport Minister would appear Continue reading
Scotland leads a new communism – from Argyll to Applecross
For Argyll has been watching with interest a significant political development – the growing tendency for communities in Scotland to take charge of the resources critical to their sustainability.
This process began on Monday 1st February 1993 when the Assynt Crofters’ Trust in north west Scotland became the owners of the North Lochinver Estate. They bought it after a prolonged campaign in the aftermath of the liquidation of its then owner, Scandinavian Property Services Ltd – and renamed it the North Assynt Estate.
This was the first of what we now call ‘community buy outs’ and followed the break up of the estate into seven lots for sale under Edinburgh estate agent, John Clegg & Co.
Crofters were concerned about this plan for two reasons:
- The boundaries of the lots cut across grazing land. This created the possibility of some crofters would have to deal with more than one landlord
- The crofters anticipated that some of the lots would be administered by the new owners themselves rather than by professional factors (estate managers).
This community buy-out was followed by a series of others across the Highlands – the islands of Eigg and Argyll’s Gigha, estates in North Harris and South Uist in the Western Isles and on the Isle of Raasay.
The Herald estimates that the 100th community buy out is now in process with a bid from the Evanton Wood Community Company north of Dingwall to buy 64 acres of woodland from the Novar Estate.
While these developments have been both enabled and fuelled by the Land Reform Act, recent Community buy outs have moved from land to properties crucial to community sustainability.
An Aberdeen town bought former bank premises to convert to a centre for community cohesion and enterprise. In Argyll, the village of Tayvallich has bought a core business of petrol pumps, shop, post office and cafe.
In a different move to take charge of its own destiny, the community of Applecross in Wester Ross – which took over ts own petrol pumps in 1995 – has just appointed a new doctor as a result of its own activities. Alarmed by the prospect of the vacancy not being filled, with remote areas traditionally struggling to find applicants, Applecross left nothing to chance.
It set up a website dedicated to finding a new doctor. It stressed its unique resources as a small, friendly community with access to stunning outdoor activities – hillwalking, climbing, sea kayaking, sailing, fishing – and trumpeted the mountains of Torridon, Skye and Achnashellach and the waters of the Sound of Raasay. It advertised in outdoor pursuits magazines as well as the British Medical Journal.
It attracted interest from all over the world, in sixteen applications from Arizona to Lithuania to Poland and has now appointed Dr Mark Derbyshire from Chepstow, a keen hillwalker and fisherman.
Applecross is currently the focos of the televisoin series, Monty Hall’s Great Escape but Dr Derbyshire didn’t even know about this until after his appointment. It was the community’s own campaign that caught his attention.
The initiatives of these communities are together in the early days in terms of a movement but it is in fact an evolved form of communism.
The earlier communism of reds-under-the-beds frights (and whose demise was recorded in Francis Fukuyama’s book, The End of History and the Last Man), was a monolithic, centrally controlled command economy where, as legend has it, everyone had shoes but all shoes were brown and not necessarily the right size.
This new communism is localised and demand-led, born from local need. It sees people getting together to act in the common local interest, embracing enterprise and moving into management through the establishment of development trusts.
The growth of a dispersed micro politics is an inevitable consequence of the information explosion. Today’s communities are less dependent and much better informed. The enterprise and new energies in Gigha, with long term community development strategies sitting alongside the delivery of short terms solutions is proof, here in Argyll, of what can come of this. Exciting times.
The photographs above are, from the top:
- Ardvreck Castle in Assynt, taken by copyright holder, Richard Baker and reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.
- The breathcatching Bealach na Ba (the Pass of the Cattle) from Loch Kishorn over to Applecross. Until the late 20th century, this vertiginous single track road, hanging above the swallow-hole of a deep dry valley, was the only access to Applecross. The photograph was taken in 1975 by Anne Burgess who owns the copyright. It is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.
National Trust for Scotland to change status of 11 properties – including closure of Argyll’s Arduaine Gardens
Yesterday For Argyll reported that the National Trust for Scotland is shedding around 90 jobs in a restructuring to deal with the recession and falling revenues.
Today, as they promised, the Trust released plans to revise the status of 11 of its 130 properties, as part of the same restructuring.
Some properties are to be closed, some to be converted for residential purposes to earn money, some to be moved to external funding and sponsorship.
Of these 11 properties, one is in Argyll and it is one of those slated to be closed. It is the famous and much loved Arduaine Garden at Loch Melfort in Mid Argyll. Arduaine is renowned for its collection of exotic plants and at this moment is hosting its Snowdrop Festival, which runs until 16th March. Arduaine is also one of the ‘Glorious Gardens of Argyll’, marketing themselves jointly to garden visitors.
The statement released by the NTS makes no reference to when Arduaine may be closed nor of what may happen to it. For Argyll is pursuing the matter and will report on it as soon as possible.
The total list of properties affected and the specific decisions taken on each of them is:
- The David Livingstone Centre at Blantyre will no longer be managed by NTS and will be returned to its Trustees unless the full deficit of the property is funded externally.
- Hill of Tarvit Mansion House in Fife is to close and the property is to be let to a suitable tenant. However the gardens and estate would be maintained and remain open to the public.
- Leith Hall House, NW of Aberdeen, is to be closed to visitors, with the the property converted into permanent residential use to meet the cost of managing the estate and garden, which will remain open to the public.
- Barry Mill in Angus is to be offered for external funding or sponsorship. If this does not materialise, it will be closed.
- Hugh Miller’s Cottage in Cromarty is also to be offered for external funding or sponsorship to avoid closure.
- Kellie Castle in Fife will in future be operated by local volunteers provided that the castle’s deficit can be resolved. If this cannot be achieved the castle will be closed to visitors, with the gardens remaining open to the public.
- Haddo House in Aberdeen will change focus to specialise solely on functions, events and pre-booked tours. The shop, tearoom and gardens will remain open to the public, in conjunction with the country park.
- Hutchesons’ Hall in Glasgow will be let to a suitable long term tenant.
- Arduaine Garden in Argyll is to close.
- Inveresk Garden in East Lothian is to close.
- Ben Lawers Mountain Visitor Centre in Perth is to close.
Kate Mavor, Chief Executive of the National Trust for Scotland says of these decisions: ‘We are making some difficult decisions today about some of our properties that are making a loss as part of our overall cost saving programme.
‘We will make every effort to work with our staff and external partners to minimise the changes to these properties. Our members and supporters can rest assured that we will only propose closure, or in the case of the David Livingstone Centre, relinquish management of a property, if it is absolutely necessary.
‘However the Trust is firm in its belief that doing nothing about the affects of the economic downturn is simply not an option’.
The photograph above shows the view from Loch Melfort Hotel, beside Arduaine Garden which is to the immediate right. It was taken by Mike and Kirsty Grundy and is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.
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Passenger and crewman injured this morning as Aberdeen-Shetland ferry hits rough water
The Northlink ferry, Hrossay, coming in to Shetland on the overnight run from Aberdeen, hit rough water this morningat around 6.00am as it rounded Sumburgh Head on the approach to Lerwick.
The ferry rolled twice in quick succession in a sever gale and this is when the injuries happened. The passenger and the crewman were thrown against bulkheads. The passenger sufferd a rib injury and the crewman a head injury. Both are in hospital in Lerwick.
All18 survive as helicopter ditches on approach to platform on Etap Field off Scottish North Sea coast
The RAF received its first report of a helicopter with 18 on board ditching in the North Sea at 6:43 p.m. It was a Super Puma ditching about 120 miles east of Aberdeen as it approached an offshore platform in the ETAP field.
The RAF’s aeronautical rescue coordination center at RAF Kinloss was providing helicopter assistance to the Aberdeen Coast Guard. One RAF helicopter and one civilian helicopter went to the scene and two more civilian helicopters joined them there, with another RAF helicopter in support.
9.30pm UPDATE: It is not known whether or not the pilot had time to make a mayday call but it is now known that all 18 on board have been picked up. James Lyon, assistant controller at RAF Kinloss, says: ‘We have been picking up beacons from their lifejackets… Two aircraft are on the scene’. Three have been taken to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary and and the others are being brought back to the city by a fast rescue boat.
Thursday 19th February UPDATE: Visibility is said to heva been down to half a mile and the helicopter was in view of the platform when it hit the water. The ditched helicopter, said to be missing its tail boom, is reported to have sat upright in the water because of its flotation bags. This made escape a lot easier.
The rescue was more difficult because it took place in darkness and with a cloud base lower then the platform’s deck. There were so many rescue units in the area that a mid-air helicopter collision was a real risk. An RAF Nimrod coordinated movements and acted successfully to defend against this possibility. The Air Accidents Investigation Branch is launching an investigation into the accident and is sending nine people to Aberdeen today.
The First Minister, Alex Salmond has thanked the rescue services for their successful efforts to avert ‘that could have been a terrible tragedy’.
Trump Entertainment Resorts files for bankruptcy protection but Balmenie golf project said not to be threatened
Donald Trump resigned as Chair of the Board of Trump Entertainment Resorts five days ago and yesterday the company filed for bankruptcy protection in New Jersey. Doing this gave it the jump on its creditors who were said to be planning to present an involuntary winding-up petition.
This is the third time that this company has been in this position but, as For Argyll reported earlier, Trump learned from those earlier experiences. It is the actions he took then in the restructuring of his companies and their interrelationships that lends some credence to the assertion that his major golf resort initiative at Balmedie in Aberdeen is not threatened by this situation.
Since the earlier failures with his Atlantic City casino resort, Trump has made each of his companies standalones so that they cannot drag each other down. The casino industry is obvioulsy vulnerable to recession and as a result of this, as we reported in December 2008, Trump Entertainment Resorts missed a $55million interest payment then, a signal that it was in real trouble. Yesterday was the expiry of the period of grace the company had to make this payment and saw it file for bankruptcy protection instead.
The Trump organisation has always talked a good talk and yesterday Trump’s senior representative, George Sorial, who has been closely involved with the Balmedie Links project, was saying bullishly that the project is moving even faster than they had envisaged. He points to the weak pound as a major commercial advantage to them, saying that contracts costing them $1 million per annum are now down to $650,000, so they’re going ‘full steam ahead’.
Jessops to close 12 Scottish shops including Helensburgh
The camera and photographic equipment retailer, Jessops, is closing twelve of its Scottish shops because they are no longer financially viable. It is to close a further four stores in England and one on Wales.
Of the Scottish shops to go, three are in Glasgow, with the others in Aberdeen, Arbroath, Ayr, Dunfermline, East Kilbride, Elgin, Kirkcaldy, Stonehaven – and Helensburgh in Argyll.
Jessops say that discussions with staff are now going on but are saying nothing about the extent of expected job losses.
Argyll encouraged by 38 expressions of interest in marine energy development in Pentland Firth
An indication for Argyll of the depth of interest in marine energy generation is the announcement by the Crown Estate that it has received 38 expressions of interest in leasing parcels of the sea bed in Scotland’s Pentland Firth for marine energy projects. These expressions of interest have come from single companies and from consortia.
The Crown Estate owns the seabed between the mainland and Orkney – which one day will be an issue and, unsurprisingly is delighted with the lively response to its opening the Pentland Firth area for such bids. First Minister Alex Salmond also found the degree of interest encouraging.
The Scottish Government is preparing a new planning document – the Marine Spatial Plan – which will describe the commercial opportunities and the challenges to be faced in harnessing marine energy.
Argyll has very real potential resources in marine and tidal renewable energy development. The main one of these is the Sound of Islay with its 9 knot bore and, as we have reported, the Islay Energy Trust are already engaged with Aberdeen’s Robert Gordon University in a major project which will see trials of a marine turbine installation take place in a selected area of the Sound.
The level of interest in the Pentland Firth is proof of the incentive for Argyll’s to start preparing for such developments in its own powerful seaways and waterways.
The photograph above is by the copyright holder, Peter Ewards and shows the shoreline on the Sound of Islay looking north across to Jura and the Paps of Jura. It is reprodiced here under the Creative Commons licence.
Ignore media reports – For Argyll and Alan Reid MP have ensured that there will be no analogue radio switchoff in Argyll or the Highlands
Some of today’s national media are reporting on the coming switch to digital radio, involving switching off the currrent analogue signal across the country. This immediately kills off AM and FM radio, leaving listeners with no choice but to buy a Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) radio Continue reading












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