Reporting of the current row between the Scottish Conservatives Continue reading
Tag Archives: Angus
Scottish Avalanche Information Service kicks in today
Scotland’s Avalanche Information Service (SAIS), operating Continue reading
Oregon beats Scotland to the 20th Anniversary Glenfiddich Fiddle Championship
The 2009 Glenfiddich Fiddle Champion was Rebecca Lomnicky from Corvalis in Oregon. Continue reading
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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Argyll to get funding to maintain construction industry and housing development during recession
The Scottish Government recently announced that it had set aside £17million from its total projected spend of £120million to reinvigorate the Scottish economy in these recessionary days.
Deputy First Minister, NIcola Sturgeon has just announced the successful bidders for parts of this £17million allocation. The money will be spent by housing associations on unsold homes and land and on getting housing developments off the ground.
The government announced in August that it was bringing forward £100million from money it had set aside for 2010/11 in its £1.5billion affordable housing programme. Its intention is to kick start stalled housing developments. Since the August announcement, that money to be brought forward has been increased to £120million, with a pledge to spend £40million of it this financial year and £80million next year.
Argyll and Bute will share £3.7million with the Western Isles, Aberdeen, Angus, North Ayrshire, East Dunbartonshire and East Renfrewshire. This is to be used by housing associations to buy up land for developments.
Argyll and Bute will also share £3 million with Aberdeenshire, Perth and Kinross, Borders, West Lothian, East Ayrshire and East Dunbartonshire. This allocation is to be spent on kick starting actual building.
£10.1million will fund the purchase of homes from private developers in Orkney, Dundee, Clackmannanshire, Stirling, East Lothian, Midlothian, Edinburgh, North Lanarkshire and Glasgow.
Graeme Brown, Director of Shelter Scotland, is anxious to discover how many of the resulting new homes will be for rent and is urging the government to spend the rest of the promised cash as soon as possible.
One of Mull’s young Sea Eagles found deliberately poisoned in Angus
It has been announced that one of Mull’s young white-tailed sea eagles – it hatched on the island only last year – was found poisoned along with a Buzzard (also a protected species) on the Glenquiech Estate in Angus in May. A mountain hare was also killed.
Aroud thirty pieces of poisoned meat were found on the ground close to their bodies; and on the nearby Glenogil Estate, thirty two cubes of poisoned venison were found on fence posts. This particularly presents irrefutable evidence of the intent to poison large raptors.
Mull’s RSPB Scotland Officer, Dave Sexton, says that tough fines and prison sentences have to be given to people committing wildlife crimes. There is also an economic cost to such criminal actions. The sea eagles bring in about £2million a year to Mull’s economy.
Sexton says: ‘Like many people on Mull today and elsewhere in Scotland we’re upset and devastated that one of the chicks that so many people have done so much to help has been found dead. What’s so annoying and frustrating about this case is that it had clearly got through it’s first real wild test, which is its first winter away from its parents, it had to fend for itself, it had clearly done very well and was on the road to maturity, but it didn’t bank on what some people will do to our majestic birds of prey by trying to kill them’.
Environment Minister Michael Russell says: ‘The sea eagle is a magnificent bird of prey which has been brought back to Scotland to enhance our natural environment. Poisoning them is simply unacceptable and I would urge anyone with information to contact the police. This is a despicable crime’.












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