Anger at Campbeltown to Glasgow Citylink bus service

(Updated: Jim Mather, Argyll’s MSP, has already taken action on this matter – see below.) Continue reading

Scotland’s first canoe trail opens. A prompt for Argyll?

Fort William to Inverness – The Great Glen Canoe Trail – is 67 miles of waterway Continue reading

Did you know that Scots get 41mpg? Public consultation on Argyll’s long distance walking trails begins

Ron Simon Core PathsCouncillor Ron Simon – pictured left – launched  yesterday evening (5th March) the latest stage in years of work at Argyll and Bute Council in working with landowners, residents, local and visiting walkers to plan a network of paths across Argyll and Bute.

The draft Consultative Plan was launched at Ardrishaig Hall to an audience which included community representatives, landowners, walkers and members of Argyll Outdoor Access Forum, holding its AGM immediately after the event.

In his opening address Councillor Simon noted that, according to research at Aberdeen University, the average Scot walks 900 miles a year – and drinks 41 gallons of alcohol in the same period. Work it out. Ron Simon did – 22 miles to the gallon. Some walkers in the audience began absent-mindedly to pat their back pockets for the reassuring presence of the hip flask.

Councillor Simon then changed gear to a thoughtful and imaginative conjuring of what people’s core paths would once have been – the track’s in the grass between family crofts, between friend and friend and from township to township. Suddenly something solidly practical began to take on another dimension – our imprint on time.

Ron Simon paid tribute to the consistent work done on this project by Douglas Grierson from Argyll and Bute Council. He described Mr Grierson as having spent so many years with bundles of maps under his arm that people wondered why on earth he didn’t simply get Sat Nav if he couldn’t find his way around.

John Auld from the Outdoor Access Forum then spoke,  reminding the audience that the development of the plan for the network of long distance trails – and shorter paths – through Argyll was born from Scotland’s Land Reform Act.

Mr Auld handed over to Jolyon Gritten, Access Manager for Argyll and Bute Councl and responsibe for steering this development. Mr Gritten underlined the fact that the plan has been concerned to link the core paths with water-based activities, supporting access for water craft to Argyll’s inland lochs, sea lochs and coastal waters. The draft plan identifies no fewer than 1547 launching points from the core paths. These will support the great interest in dinghy sailing, sea kayaking and canoeing, among other water-based activities.

Other key points were that 43% of the existing long-distance trails are on minor roads. These are part of the National Cycle Network developed by Sustrans. 57% of the trails are off-road – some are simple ‘trodden’ paths on grass, some are level and gravelled. (Not all trails will be accessible to everyone although many support disabled acess and use.) 28% of these off-road trails are in the forest estate and will be maintained by Forestry Commission Scotland. The remainder are on privately owned land.

Jolyon Gritten pointed out that this development of paths, by agreement and consultation, has the advatage to landowners of largely controlling the routes taken through their land by walkers; and to landowners, residents and businesses alike, of being able to gauge in advance when, in the year, there will be larger numbers of walkers coming through.

The existing main walking trails, including one in preparation, are:

  • The Cowal Way
  • The Kintyre Way
  • The West Island Way (Bute)
  • The West Highand Way
  • The Three Lochs Way (in process)

Then there are the cycle tracks:

  • The Argyll and Bute Council cycle network from Loch Long through to Loch Lomond
  • The Campbeltown to Oban link in the National Cycle Network (NCN)
  • The new 53 mile extension to this, from Oban to Fort William (in construction)

Beyond all thse resources, there are, as Ron Simon and Jolyon Gritten repeated, 353 miles of ‘aspirational’ paths – our collective wish-list. These miles represent work long into the future.

Then it was question time – with, among others, Jolyon Small from the audience making two key points. (No, this is not an error. Jolyon Gritten was presenting the plan. Jolyon Small from Ardrishaig was in the audience. From a position where the only previously known Jolyon was in The Forsyte Saga, suddenly here were a live brace of them.)

Mr Small’s first question focused on the signage for the trails which is still to be developed. Essentially he lobbied for a European or International Standard of signage to be adopted which, among other features, displays distances and times and has coloured bands on waymarks indicating information not dependant on any language. Others agreed. Mr Gritten is interested in the proposition and invited particiopation in the development of the signage system.

The choice, as Mr Small made clear, is between usability and the ‘charm’ of a plethora of local variations.

Jolyon Small’s other point was that, with the development of the core paths being a part of Argyll’s economic development plan, there is a problem in creating a magnetic attraction for walkers from elsewhere to come here. The current state of the roads by which they will cross Argyll to get to the trails is so very poor. Mr Small understood that this was not within the remit of the Council’s PUtdoor Access Team working on the core paths but – rightly – felt that the issue should be addressed nationally as part of the nexus of developments.

There will be a follow up feature on Argyll’s core paths quite soon and we will shortly add to the foot of this article a list of the venues and dates for the series of local consultations that begin on Cove on 16th March. Each of these will also be entered in the For Argyll Events Calendar on the appropriate date.

39 year-old climbing guide survives 700ft fall in Glencoe

Yesterday afternoon, Max Hunter, a  39 year-old climbing guide leading three clients at the time, fell 700ft with a collapsing cornice in the Stob Coire nan Lochan area.

Mr Hunter,  who works for a climbing company, moved to Fort William from Swansea for the climbing opportunities offered by Scotland’s mountains.

Glencoe Mountain Rescue Team and an RAF helicopter were on the scene and got the guide airlifted to Belford Hospital in Fort William – where he has had time to come to terms with his good luck.

NHS Highland introduce ‘surgical pause’ so that if you’re in theatre for a tonsilectomy they won’t take your leg off

Those undergoing surgery under the auspices of HNS Highland should be able to let some of the nightmares recede a little now. The health authority has introduced the ‘surgical pause’  – a practical and basic check list to be gone through by theatre staff before the Surgeon holds out his hand and says: ‘Scalpel’.

It’s a ‘doors to manual’ approach – ‘I say it, you do it/check it’ routine:

  • Who is this patient?
  • Is this the patient we’re expecting?
  • What is the operation scheduled for this patient?
  • Are there any medical issues or allergies we need to be aware of?
  • Are we going to need blood and have we got enough of it?

This will come as a relief to some said to have secreted on their person a little card with their name and operation on it to hand to theatre staff before they got the needle.

The ‘surgical pause’ pre-operative routine is  now in use at Oban’s Lorn and the Isles Hospital, Fort William’s Belford Hospital, Wick’s Caithness General Hospital and Raigmore Hospital in Inverness.

Raigmore Hospital’s theatre manager, Gavin Hookway (do they hire them for their names?), has said that he has been impressed by how the staff had taken up ‘the challenge’ of introducing the system.

All we can say is that if theatre staff regard doing this sort of  basic check as ‘a challenge’, it’s no wonder the NHS has some unfortunate case histories where ingrown toenails resulted in post-operative amputees.

Homecoming Scotland 2009 gets a return of an unexpected kind – the stolen Glenfinnan Stone

GlenfinnanThe historic Glenfinnan Stone is a foot across and has a hole cut into it allegedly to support the standard of Bonnie Prince Charlie when he raised it at Glenfinnan on Monday 19 August 1745, launching the second Jacobite rebellion.

In 1989 the stone vanished from where it had always lain, on a mound near the monument at Glenfinnan at the head of Loch Shiel.

The stone and its disappearance was mentioned to presenter Ben Fogle in a episode of the BBC’s Countryfile programe by Iain Thornber, a local historian from Lochaline in Morvern, across from Argyll’s Isle of Mull and in the same land mass as Glenfinnan.

Two weeks after the transmission of the programme the BBC received a letter which they passed on to Iain Thorber. It was from a woman who had seen the show while on holiday in Skye but was herself from Hartlepool. She had the stone in her rockery there but had not known what it was or where it had come from.

It has emerged that the stone was taken from Glenfinnan and domesticated in a rockery somewhere in Scotland, from where it was passed on to the Hartlepool lady for her own rockery. After making contact with Iain Thornber when she found out about the stone on Countryfile, she has voluntarily returned it.

The West Highland  Museum in Fort William, custodian of several Jacobite relics, will house the Glenfinnan Stone until, according to Iain Thornber, arrangements for its secure display in its own place can be made with the Roman Catholic Church which owns the Glenfinnan site.

The photograph of Genfinnan above is by Flaxton and is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.

Missives ready to sign for £80million Fort William waterfront development

Developer, Fort William Waterfront, is about to see the signing of missives by Highland Council to enable work to start on a proposed £80million waterfront in the town on its frontage to Loch Linnhe. Work will include the developer rerouting part of the A82.

The 7 hectare site will include a supermarket and a library. No prizes in this for innovative – or even contemporary – thinking, of which there is admittedly  not much around. However Fort William badly needs some structural revision with the town long looking back-to-front after the A82′s lochside bypass of its narrow winding streets.

Those living in North Argyll will welcome both more choice and new experiences not far from home.