Friday in Edinburgh – things to do today

2014_04_24 CastleFRIDAY – wind down with some theatre

Cleaning Up Titian’s Venice – a talk by Dr Jane Stevens Crawshaw of Oxford Brookes University.  Hawthornden Lecture Theatre, Scottish National Gallery, 12.45-1.30pm.  Free

Untaught to Shine: Stellar Quines theatre company present eclectic, site-specific theatre inspired by the women’s stories held within the Portrait Gallery collection.  National Portrait Gallery, Queen Street. A free pop-up performance at 2pm and a ticketed performance at 7.30pm (£8, tickets from Scottish National Gallery Information Desk or by calling 0131 624 6560 between 9.30am & 4.30pm.)

Scotland’s Storytelling Renaissance: Donald Smith, storyteller and founding Director of the Scottish Storytelling Centre on why live storytelling has re-entered the cultural mainstream in Scotland. 6.30-8pm, Meadows Lecture Theatre , Old Medical School, Teviot Place.  Part of Tradfest and At Home in Scotland: Stories of Place. Free tickets from eventbrite.

Voluntary Arts Week starts today throughout the UK.  For full details, locations and times see www.voluntaryartsweek.org. This week”s events (with lots more to come next week) include: the Scottish Mineral & Lapidary Club Open Week  at 20 Maritime Lane, where you can see members at work in their dedicated workshop. (drop-in, suitable for ages 10+.) and Knitting for All – relaxed informal knitting meet-ups across the city for all ages, beginners and experts equally welcome.

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Collective Gallery preview event for  Camille Henrot’s ambitious film work ‘Grosse Fatigue’. which won the Silver Lion at the 55th Vienna Biennale in 2013.  It attempts to tell the story of the world’s creation from a computer desktop and using the collection of the Smithsonian Institute.   Tonight 6-8pm, then from tomorrow till 16th June (NB closed Mondays.)  Collective Gallery, City Dome, 38 Calton Hill.  For more information call 0131 556 1264 or www.collectivegallery.net




Five things you need to know today Edinburgh!

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Computer Class – Local Development Plan and the Green Belt – Recipe Swap – Learn the Haka! – Portobello Heritage Trust are having a party

Are you aged between 11 and 16? Do you want to learn how to do computer programming? Then there is a class at Drumbrae Library Hub which may be for you

Coder Dojo is an opportunity for kids aged 11 to 16 to learn and practice computer programming skills here in the library; working on group or individual projects with help and guidance from us.

We hold Coder Dojo here every Saturday fortnight at 11:30. Why not come by this Saturday morning and check it out?

http://coderdojoscotland.com/

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The Pentlands Neighbourhood Partnership decided at their meeting in March to lodge a note with the Communities and Neighbourhoods Committee about the Neighbourhood Partnership’s thoughts on the proposed Local Development Plan.

That the Pentlands Neighbourhood Partnership asks the Communities and Neighborhoods’ Committee to note the aim of Juniper Green Community Council to have Curriemuirend Park removed from the next version of the Local Development Plan (LDP).

The conclusion of the recent feasibility study at Curriemuirend Park showed that development on the Park is not economically viable. Building at Curriemurend Park cannot contribute to the effective land supply and would continue to dis-enfranchise large numbers of citizens in our community from CEC’s own green space policy. So, Curriemuirend Park’s removal from the LDP would avoid planning blight, and thus enable the community to continue to use this precious green parkland in our urban surrounds for recreation and healthy pursuits, at the same time protecting an environment in which wildlife can flourish.

 

The information about the Local Development Plan (LDP) which is used by the council to make planning decisions in accordance with the way that the council wants to develop the city’s assets is here on the council website. For example the council wants to provide housing in the West of the city as one of the main issues in the plan.

The proposed LDP was published in March 2013 and this is a copy of it here:-

http://www.theedinburghreporter.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/LDPProposedPlanMarch2013.pdf

You can watch a council video about the LDP process here

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Do you have recipes for sweets and treats you would like to share with our readers?  Then submit them here!  We would like the recipe and a photo if you have it. If you are really techie then you can submit a video too….

We are looking for your best recipes for chocolatey goo-iness or sugary delights that keep you going when you need an energy boost.

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The South-West Community Sports Hub wants to teach you to do the Haka! Here is how you will learn.

“With the Commonwealth Games 2014 in Glasgow drawing near, Edinburgh Active Schools and Community Sports Hubs have teamed up with Dance Base and New Zealand- based dance company Taki Haka to create a virtual flashmob to celebrate the culture of the games and the wider Commonwealth.

Learn the moves and chants with a simple follow-along tutorial video from New Zealand dance company Taki Haka, then film your flashmob and send it in to DanceBase for inclusion in our final ‘virtual flashmob’ video. It’s going to be fun, easy to learn and a great way to get involved in this international movement!

Click the link here to download the Haka Pack and find out exactly how to get involved! ”

The South-West Edinburgh Community Sport Hub is based at Heriot-Watt.

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Portobello Heritage Trust invite you to a community event to celebrate the completion of the rebuild of the 1909 pottery kiln in Bridge Street. The event takes place from 2pm on Saturday, 10 May. There will be music and stalls, with the chance for children to make their own brick. If you haven’t yet seen the outstanding brickwork of the kiln, please make this your opportunity to view it. Please feel free to bring along any colleagues, family or friends you think may be interested. More about the Trust at: www.portobelloheritagetrust.co.uk

 

 




From Twickenham to Murrayfield – by bike!

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Former Scotland and Lions rugby player Roger Baird is taking on a fundraising cycle this summer to raise money for the charity Walking with the Wounded.

The interesting part is that the cycle, called Ride with the Lions, is a mix of rugby and cycling. The riders, twelve of whom have been Lions players, will start out on 21 June 2014 at Twickenham and they will end up a week later arriving into Murrayfield Stadium. This is a 620 mile endurance cycle so it is no mean feat, even for someone who is as fit as Roger is.

The Edinburgh Reporter met him at Murrayfield where he was doing some training to find out about the ride and the charity. If you wish to support the former Scotland winger then please click here. 




Stockbridge Library Exhibition – the Scottish Women’s Hospitals in World War One

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‘Go home and sit still’ is the now infamous reply given to Dr Elsie Inglis when, at the start of the First World War, she offered a hospital unit to the British War Office.  Elsie did neither.  What happened next was the subject of a fascinating and inspiring talk by Chris Short of the Surgeon’s Hall Museum at Stockbridge Library this week.

Elsie Inglis was born in India in 1864; from childhood she knew she wanted to be a doctor. At the age of 22, she enrolled at the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women.  She founded the Scottish Association for the Medical Education of Women, opened a hospital in George Square, and worked with women and children in the slums of the Old Town and Morrison Street.  She was involved in the Suffrage movement, but did not approve of the Pankhursts’ militancy,; instead she became active in the Scottish Federation of Women’s Suffrage Societies.  The suffrage societies funded the setting up of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service Committee, of which Inglis was a founder.

Rebuffed by the UK government, the women offered their hospitals to other countries. The allies (mainly the French) had already lost 300,000 men by December 1914, with a further 600,000 wounded, missing or captured; France and Serbia were happy to accept the offer.

Inglis herself was already 50 years of age and ill; she was not expected to go to the front (although she wanted to) – instead she was needed for essential fundraising.  Fundraisers had to be determined, self-sufficient women, happy with their own company in what could be a lonely job.  They canvassed  in the UK,  India and the USA (though not in the Midwest, with its large German population); they tried but failed in Australia, then ‘a country run by men for men.’   There was much competition from other charities, so the women had to ‘reward’ their donors; wards and even beds were named after benefactors, and in the midst of battlefield carnage wealthy patrons still had to be entertained in the units: the Queen of Serbia visited one whilst the drains were being cleaned out.  Before the end of 1914, £1,000 had been raised, enough to send one hospital unit to France and another to Serbia.

2014-05-05 18.22.15Each unit comprised two senior doctors, ten nurses, an administrator, junior doctors, orderlies and chauffeurs.  Some were single, some married, some were suffragettes, some not.  Many just wanted to get away from the stifling restrictions of middle-class society.  Chris emphasised that the women were not militant man-haters, and only formed the all-women units because they were refused the opportunity to work alongside men. Female doctors in particular were very limited in their choice of work in the UK; obstetrics, child health and traditional ‘women’s roles’ were often the only posts available to these highly educated women; some doctors had to work as nurses to find any employment at all.  Now came their opportunity to prove themselves.

In December 2014, the first unit arrived at Royaumont Abbey, 25 miles from Paris; Miss Francis Ivens was its surgeon.  The Abbey was cold damp and derelict, with no running water or electricity.  They had two pans, one kettle and a stub of candle to with which to cook for 25 people; plumbing and carpentry skills were at first just as valuable as medical knowledge.  There were always some issues between the units and the committees back in the UK; the committees viewed the units as profligate with funds, the units felt that the committees could not understand conditions in the field.  Inglis became a skilled negotiator between the two, explaining the real needs of the units to the fundraisers back in the UK.

The unit soon started to receive serious casualties; shells, machine guns, shrapnel and flame throwers caused horrific injuries.  From 1915, gas led to blindness, lung and skin damage.  There were no antibiotics, amputations were common and the chances of survival were slim, but Royaumont gained a reputation for saving men’s limbs.  Sphagnum moss, a known antiseptic, was sent out from Scotland to dress the wounds.  The number of beds soon grew; from 100 in 1914 to 600 by the end of the war. Orderlies were up at 4.30am to change beds, feed the men, and dress their wounds.  Three hours sleep became a luxury.  The untrained orderlies were not appreciated by all; some qualified nurses resented them, and one retired matron announced that those who wore silk underwear were ‘doomed to perdition.’

At the start of the war there were no ambulances; the chauffeurs had to drive their own cars to France, and act as their own mechanics.  The roads between the trains  from the battlefields and the units were unlit.  There were three female drivers and one male; only the man was paid.

2014-05-05 18.23.11The Somme Offensive began in July 1916; it was far from the hospital, and when the injured arrived they had to be carried up 71 steps to the wards.   Despite the huge numbers of casualties, (the X-Ray staff were so busy they suffered radiation burns) no man was lost through delay.  By now, however, some of the women were so short of money that they had to leave to take paid jobs.

In March 1918, the Germans began their final Western push; there was aerial bombardment and many more casualties, and women later recalled the constant sound of gunfire.  The German retreat began, and in November the Armistice was finally signed.

On the Eastern Front, the First World War was a continuation of other wars; the area had suffered many years of disruption and turmoil.  The second hospital unit arrived in Belgrade; others soon followed.  Conditions were mediaeval; at first public health measures were needed more than acute nursing. Typhoid, typhus and cholera were rampant; the Chief Medical Officer and many others died of fever.  Inglis was at last allowed to enter the field and run a unit. Her single-mindedness and impatience did not endear her to all, but she was an expert doctor and surgeon, and she loved the Serbs.

Serbia was stuck between Germany and its ally Turkey.  Belgrade fell, and the retreat began over the mountains to Scutari.  The high terrain was a huge challenge to the drivers – ‘we were looking down on eagles.’  One hundred thousand soldiers and fifty thousand civilians died as a nation passed into exile.  Some hospital units went with them, some remained, caring for both Serbian and German soldiers.  Their public health efforts worked, and there was no typhus in the units.  Inglis’ unit was captured – although medical workers were not allowed to be taken as prisoners of war, so they were not labelled as such; they were sent to Hungary and kept in very cramped conditions until they were repatriated.

In 1916 the war was becoming increasingly vicious, especially between Serbia and Bulgaria. Humanitarian principles had been abandoned. Inglis took a unit to Odessa in Russia, sailing to Archangel and then travelling south, as the Dardanelles were closed to shipping.  Conditions were so cold that tea froze in the cup; wolves howled.  The first stirrings of the Russian Revolution began in 1917; Inglis decided that the unit and the Serbian soldiers should return to Macedonia.  The only way to do this was to retrace their steps, and the women sailed back to the UK and up the Tyne in November of that year, many very sad to leave Russia.  Elsie, by now very ill with cancer, died the night after her arrival.  She laid in state in St Giles Cathedral, and crowds eight-deep watched as her coffin was taken to Dean cemetery.  When the papers asked why such women had not been awarded the Victoria Cross, the reply was that they had not worked for Britain.

Inglis’s unit was renamed the Elsie Inglis Unit and returned to Macedonia.  In September an armistice was signed and the women were at last able to visit the battlefields.  What they saw there traumatised more than everything they had endured during the war: no birds, no trees, no flowers, no houses; just mud.

The units went on working after the war, dealing with a major flu epidemic and the paperwork for war pensions.  The women came home gradually, many finding great difficulty in adjusting to home life.  Medical schools started to refuse them entry; the drivers were not even allowed to drive in the UK.  Many women became severely depressed; some went overseas to work. In 1918, some women were finally given the vote and nurses were required to be registered ; both of these advances were thanks in part to the work of the units.

The women of the Scottish Hospital Units have been largely ignored by their home country.  In France, Frances Ivens was awarded the Legion d’honneur; Serbia gave some of the women the White Eagle (its highest award.)  The local communities amongst which they had worked held them in high regard.  Serbia still holds an annual ceremony to remember them, and there is a plaque for them in Royaumont. There have been recent moves to have Inglis’s grave restored and to erect a statue in her memory on the Royal Mile, but so far nothing has happened.  As Chris Short says, we should be proud of our women, who left their homes and families to help their fellow men.

This was an exceptional talk about a little-known subject; Chris’s warm and lively style made it all the more gripping and entertaining.

2014-05-05 18.21.32The exhibition ‘Women, Warfare and Caregiving’ produced by the Surgeons’ Hall and the University of Edinburgh is open at Stockbridge Library until 31st May: Details of Stockbridge Library opening hours can be found on our information page here.

There is lots more fascinating information about the Scottish Women’s Hospital Units, including biographies of many of the women who joined them and details of recent visits to Serbia to research the subject, on the excellent website scottishwomenshospitals.co.uk.  A programme based on these visits is to be shown on STV later this year.

Angels of Mercy: A Women’s Hospital on the Western Front‘  by the late Dr Eileen Crofton was published in 2013 by Birlinn Limited.

The Surgeons’ Hall is closing next week for major refurbishment, but will continue its programmes of talks and outreach work in other Edinburgh venues: see www.museum.rcsed.ac.uk for details.

 




VIDEO Transport for Edinburgh has a new travelshop

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Transport Convener Councillor Lesley Hinds visited the Transport for Edinburgh’s refurbished travel shop on Waverley Bridge today after it reopened last week.

The flagship facility has been completely transformed internally and externally after the umbrella brand of Lothian Buses and Edinburgh Trams committed £500,000 investment for the revamp of the shop.

A major new feature is a series of large display screens that will be updated instantly with the latest travel news including travel disruption and incident notices.

The Edinburgh Reporter met up with Ian Craig CEO of Lothian Buses and Councillor Hinds to talk about the new Transport for Edinburgh organisation represented most obviously here at the new office.

Ian Craig, chief executive of Lothian Buses, said: “Our new Travelshop at Waverley Bridge has been designed to take care of our customers’ ever changing needs, providing them with a range of products, services and information that is easily accessible.

“I hope that this refurbishment and the others that are planned for this year demonstrates our commitment to providing a quality high street presence in Edinburgh, one that further complements our existing services and our developing use of technology.

Councillor Lesley Hinds, Transport Convener at the City of Edinburgh Council, said: “The opening of new Transport for Edinburgh Travelshop on Waverley Bridge is an exciting milestone in this new era for public transport in the city. The site is very prominent and provides a great opportunity to communicate the message about the capital’s new integrated bus and tram services, which will serve residents and visitors alike.”

The revamp of Waverley Bridge is the first instalment of Transport for Edinburgh’s ambitious property development with new Travel Shops opening in the West End and Haymarket by the end of 2014 as well as further plans to rejuvenate the Midlothian Travelshop in Dalkeith.

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Edinburgh Favourite Alfons Bytautas returns for new exhibition

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Royal Scottish Academician Alfons Bytautas will be familiar to many in Edinburgh’s art scene as the head technician at Edinburgh Printmakers from 1979 to 2009. Now based south of the border in Newcastle, he is set to return for a new exhibition in Edinburgh at The Sutton Gallery on Dundas Street. The exhibition, which opens to the public on Saturday May 10th 2014, will show over 40 collages, paintings and works on paper produced over the course of the last two years.

Bytautas has an extensive career as a master printmaker and a visual artist. His paintings and prints can be found in many public and private collections, including the Royal Collection. For this particular exhibition, the Sutton Gallery will display works that draw on a jazz aesthetic, many of them with titles with jazz or literary references. They explore what the artist calls a “tug of war between figuration and abstraction”:

“I have been surprised as to how these imaginary geometrical or natural forms seem to mutate. The images are constructions or arrangements in which certain motifs emerge continuously through the process of re-ordering. By adopting a playful approach, images seem to emerge that are suggestive of cell structures, geological cross-sections or archaic symbols.” – Alfons Bytautas

Born in Selkirk in 1955, Bytautas studied painting at Edinburgh College of Art, where he started to develop his life-long interest to the technic of etching. Soon after graduating in 1979, he started to collaborate with Edinburgh Printmakers, working for 30 years as a Master Printer and Senior Etching Technician. In 1983, he studied at the Parisian printmaking studio, Atelier 17, with the celebrated painter and printmaker Stanley William Hayter.

Alfons has led important pioneer research on printmaking, especially developing acrylic resist etching and photopolymer techniques. He has been inspiring artists and spreading his work methods trough workshops master classes and festivals in the UK, Netherlands, Japan, Belgium and Spain ever since.

Having widely exhibited over the last 30 years, Bytautas has been elected an Associate Member of the Royal Scottish Academy since 1994 and became an Academician in 2006. In addition to his accomplished work as an artist, Alfons still holds a position at the Fine Art Printmaking Studio at Northumbria University, in Newcastle upon Tyne.

Submitted by Colin Herd

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Edinburgh art gallery to display Kelly Holmes torso

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Embracing the spirit of the Commonwealth Games, the Urbane Art Gallery in Edinburgh will be exhibiting the real body casts of athletes Dame Kelly Holmes and Kriss Akabusi MBE, among other sculptures by world leading body-cast sculptor Louise Giblin, in its summer show from 23rd July.

Louise Giblin, who studied art and sculpture at Brighton and Chelsea Art College, is an Associate of the Royal British Society of Sculptors, and her subject matter is the human form. Her models have included well-known politicians, musicians, top sports people, television celebrities, dancers and businessmen. Her sculptures and drawings have been exhibited in London, the USA and Hong Kong.

The Urbane Art Gallery, on Edinburgh’s Jeffrey Street, is delighted to be showcasing her work this summer. Tracey Robertson, gallery director said:- ”Louise’s work is really exciting, and she is becoming very well known, not least because her models are prominent figures in themselves. We are very pleased that she has chosen our gallery to show off her talent. I expect that during the Edinburgh Festival and with Commonwealth Games fever happening, her exhibition will be hugely popular.”

Supporting Louise in the summer show, and in her first major exhibition, is Scottish artist Rosie Playfair, who will be exhibiting new paintings for this show. Rosie, who is a partner in the Edinburgh PR firm Playfair Walker, graduated from Dundee Art College in Graphic Design. She describes her stylised work as ’designerly’ rather than painterly. Rosie has previously exhibited in galleries in Edinburgh, Dundee and Stirling. Her work is held in private collections in London, Edinburgh, Paris and St Tropez.

Submitted by Rosemary Walker

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Leith School of Art Alumni Show

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‘An attempt to communicate something of the deeper nature of reality’ – that’s how painter Craig Jefferson describes his art.  Jefferson’s bold and colourful canvases form part of Leith School of Art’s Alumni Exhibition, which opened last week at the Dovecot Studios.  The exhibition celebrates the School’s 25th birthday, and brings together the work of some of its very best students.

Jefferson’s ‘Clay Figure & Mirror‘ and ‘Empty Chair‘ make striking use of yellows, reds and turquoise; there are also some black and white pictures worked in oilbar, soot and graphite. Images seem to drift in and out of their surroundings; the chair becomes visible as you move away from the canvas, only to melt into the background as you move closer.

craig jefferson - 'clay figure & mirror'
Craig Jefferson clay figure and mirror

Painting is well represented in the exhibition.  Hans Clausen describes his raw materials as ‘the palette of everyday detritus.’  Here he shows ‘Before Present’, commemorative plates suspended upside down over a mirror, and ‘Raking over the past’, a huge rake made from a piece of  red acrylic with a hardwood handle.  Clausen is interested in ‘the visual vocabularies, narrative qualities and emotive associations of ubiquitous objects’ and describes his work as ‘an attempt to examine the relationship between artist, object and viewer.’  His thought-provoking pieces take items out of their conventional contexts, encouraging us to question how we see, or do not see, things that have acquired unchallenged and accepted associations through daily use.

Owen Normand, BP Portrait Award Young Artist of 2013, is interested in the link between narrative and image, and aims to depict a turning point in a character’s story.  He says that the lone figures in his paintings are meant to ‘act as a stimulus for the viewer to create his own narrative.’  The titles are similarly enigmatic: The Drawer features a man holding a guitar, whilst The Acoustics of Snow shows a young woman looking out as snow falls on water.   Puzzles of a different kind are seen in Alastair John Gordon‘s exhibits; some look like wood covered in masking tape, others appear to be pieces of wood lying on top of another wooden surface ; each is a trompe l’oeil, a painting made to look like a three-dimensional object.  Gordon is following a tradition of illusionist painting that proliferated in Northern Europe in the 1600s.  In his work parts of the real wood panel underneath the painting are often left exposed, as he seeks to ‘explore the cognitive boundary between displays of death and displays of life.’

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For Michael Hlousek-Nagle art ‘is an essential emotional unburdening of the psyche, a safety valve…a statement of faith in the continuity and unity of human experience.’  Hlousek-Nagle follows the Western figurative tradition, feeling that the human figure is still relevant in attempting to understand the fundamental questions in life. He has produced the art work for the covers of a series of acclaimed recordings by the composer James MacMillan OBE, and his portrait of MacMillan stands out in this collection of his paintings.

An artist dedicated to engagement with his public, Chris Rutterford films his projects throughout their conception.  From an illustration background, he is used to deadlines and pressure, ‘I like my work to have an honesty and force that comes from rapid execution.’  The video here shows him painting his 20m mural, Tam O’Shanter; it is accompanied by a brilliant bluegrass rendition of the poem by his cousin’s band, The Turkey Smokers. Rutterford has now started to paint in public, ‘turning the simple act of painting into more of an adrenalin sport.’

Glasgow-based artist Toby Paterson is interested in the post-war reinvention of cities under the influence of Modernism, and says his work ‘positions itself between architectural conception and built reality.’  He exhibits Pavilion Plan, a screenprint bathed in white so that the plan itself is barely visible, Ludic Bricolage, in which detached staircases, signs and a chess table seem to float in the space of a red background, and Hypothetical Relief: Moscow – strips of acrylic are formed into curves, resembling a bird’s eye view of a dolls’ house or a plan for an office.  He aims to ‘hint at the possibility of a creative engagement with and reinterpretation of the spaces that surround us.’

Jane Keith exhibits scarves, ties and scarves to showcase her fabrics. Rich in natural colours – russets,, blues, greens – they are inspired by landscapes, seascapes, colours and most importantly patterns; tractor trails, dried seed heads of wildflowers, ploughed fields. Keith hand prints and paints her textiles at her studio in Balmerino, Fife.  Strong horizontals mingle with slanting lines; on some scarves, concentric circles resemble whirlpools or tractor wheels.  Clothing of a different kind comes from Morwenna Darwell.  A striking blue dress and coat have an oriental, mysterious feel; Darwell says that one of her many interests is 1960s Hong Kong (another is pigs..)  Morwenna, who is now studying at the Royal College of Art, tries to create garments with interesting tactile qualities as well as carefully considered cutting.

The show  also includes some impressive jewellery, with work by Jessica Howarth and Ebba Goring.  Howarth crochets cotton then casts it into precious metals and combines this with gemstones ; her pieces here were inspired by her hometown on the banks of Loch Leven, the setting for a dramatic episode in the life of Mary Queen of Scots.  Queen Mary’s influence is seen in a beautiful heart-shaped pendant on a green necklace and some very pretty filigree earrings.  Meanwhile Goring has made a fascinating miniature village, complete with tiny houses, sheep, goats and pigs, from enamel, copper, silver, gold and silver leaf.

Tim Moore is an artist: he is also electronic musician Discreet Unit and as such continues to DJ and perform worldwide.  Moore combines drawing, typography and printmaking with digital techniques.  Interested in graphic art and musical performance, he enquires into typography and the visualisation of music. His screen print Commitment, referencing John Wolfgang Van Goethe and WH Murray, draws the viewer into the meaning of words scattered across the canvas.  He also exhibits his artwork for the cover of Linkwood – System, an album released by his brother.

Moore is not the only dual-career alumnus represented in the show: Tommy Grace is the synthesiser operator for rock group Django Django as well as a highly successful artist working in print, and co-founder of Edinburgh’s Embassy Gallery.  Here he shows hybridised newspaper collages that draw us in to read their words – until we see that they are all typed in Lore Ipsum, a text of scrambled Latin used by graphic designers to allow them to concentrate on the layout and visual appearance of a document.  Moore says that his works ‘reject the communicative function of the printed word and remain stubbornly mute.’

Jamie Stone’s contribution to this exhibition is a short film, Orbit Ever After.  He focuses on domestic dramas within fantastical settings, and tries to capture a ‘more textural, rural kind of science fiction.’  The film, which was nominated for a 2014 BAFTA, is about feeling stuck, drifting and yearning for escape.  Nigel lives with his family on a ramshackle space ship; the girl of his dreams is orbiting in the other direction; what can he do?  Orbit Ever After, which features Mackenzie Crook and Thomas Brodie-Sangster, has already won numerous awards. It was made on a low budget, using miniatures and some inventive techniques to deal with such problems as antigravity.

Pernille Spence - Not My Tomorrow

Pernille Spence is a performance artist.  The Breath Between Us is a film (made with Dr Sonia Rocha, a researcher into hypoxia) of Pernille blowing into a meteorological balloon; controlled breathing techniques enabled her to maintain this for three and a half hours.  Pernille is interested in the invisibility of oxygen; as the balloon inflated her breath became visible until the balloon was finally (and deliberately) popped.  Not My Tomorrow is a record of Pernille’s four day performance work based on personal accounts of prisoners of conscience and others whose fate has been taken out of their own hands.  For 14 hours each day, she was shut into a black-painted one metre square box on which she etched the names of prisoners and political hostages.  As she scratched lines on the glass, light from the box gradually spilled into the darkened gallery space.

An installation, performance, video and sound works artist, Graham Maule regards artwork as ‘a process culminating in an event rather than a product.’ His work here involves a series of black boxes inside some of which films are playing, lights, and a video showing on a screen covering one wall. Maule works for the Wild Goose Resource Group, a project of the Iona Community; for him art is a ritual process involving both artist and audience. In this installation we are led into a dark and unsettling room; a walking stick and a pair of 3D glasses lie on top of one of the boxes,; on the screen, a dog runs about.

Paul Clowney and his wife were close friends of the founders of Leith School of Art, Lottie and Mark Cheverton, all of them sharing a strong Christian faith.  Lottie and Mark were killed in a car crash in 1991, but the school carried on under its present director Phil Archer.  Clowney himself died in 2012, but his work is exhibited at the Dovecot in a fitting tribute to the founding vision of the School.  Found items form the basis of Clowney’s these pieces: he has used mainly driftwood to create Tidy Beach and Presque Vue.  Clowney’s friend Simon Jenkins described him as ‘having ways of thinking about art and faith that were unfamiliar and highly creative…he was so curious about objects that they would eventually reveal their secrets to him.’  This surely could apply to all of the artists exhibiting here; all of them have gone on from Leith to make their mark in the art world, each of them is a testament to the huge achievement of the Chevertons in setting up the school and of Phil Archer in carrying it forward to where it is today.

Leith School of Art Alumni Exhibition is on at the Dovecot Studios, Infirmary Street until 31st May.  The Studios are open Monday to Saturday 10.30 to 5.30.  Entry to the exhibition is free. Stag Espresso runs the excellent cafe in the building; the cafe is open 8.30 to 5 Monday to Friday and 10 to 5 on Saturdays.

 




Thursday in Edinburgh – things to do today

2014_04_24 CastleTHURSDAY – it’s the busiest day again

Untaught to Shine – see Friday.  Ticketed performance at 7.30pm only today (ie no free pop-up): prices and contact details as Friday. National Portrait Gallery, Queen Street.

Portrait Gallery

Portrait Gallery Insights: Making History.  Imogen Gibbon.  5.30-6pm at the National Portrait Gallery.  Free but limited places, so booking essential on 0131 624 6560

The Drawing Room: Artist-led workshop exploring contemporary drawing practice.  Booking required: 0131 624 6410 or email education@nationalgalleries.org   5.30-6.45pm, Gallery of Modern Art ONE.

Tradfest and Blackwell’s Edinburgh present Dilys Rose: Pelmanism.  Dilys Rose, Scottish poet, fiction writer and teacher of Creative Writing at Edinburgh University introduces her new novel, Pelmanisn – ‘a razor-sharp portrait of mental illness and its impact on those around you.’  To obtain your free ticket, visit Blackwell’s front desk or call 0131 622 8218.

At Looking Glass BooksAnnie Donovan, prize winning author of Buddha Da, will introduce her new novel, Gone Are The Leaves, ‘an enchanting story of friendship, betrayal and growing up.’  6.30pm.  More details from the bookshop on 0131 229 2902.

Local singer/songwriter Catherine Lomax plays folk & acoustic covers plus her own original material.  Part of Tradfest. 7-10.15 pm at the Ensign Ewart Bar, 52-523 Lawnmarket.  Free and unticketed.

A Lovely Way to Burn.  Louise Welsh discusses her latest novel with the BBC’s Serena Field.  A Lovely Way to Burn is the first book of The Plague Trilogy and takes the reader on a terrifying journey into the depths of London in the grips of a pandemic.  6pm at the National Library of Scotland, George IV Bridge.  Booking essential: call 0131 623 3734 or visit www.nls.uk/events/booking.

University of Edinburgh Centre for South Asian Studies: ‘Seeing Like a Feminist.’  A public lecture by Professor Nivedita Menon (Jawaharial Nehru University, New Delhi and Singhvi Visiting Professor, University of Edinburgh).  4-6pm, Conference Room, David Hume Tower, George Square.

Reporting Europe’ – University of Edinburgh Europa Institute (supported by the Office of the European Commission in Scotland): a panel of journalists (Lesley Riddoch, Alex Massie, Paul Gillespie, Dr Simon Usherwood and John Palmer) will discuss the role and responsibility of the media when it comes to ‘reporting Europe.’ 6-7.30pm, St Cecilia’s Hall, Niddry Street.  Free but booking essential via eventbrite.

For other events this week read our full list here.




Five things you need to know today Edinburgh!

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Property Sub-Committee – Edinburgh University opens up to industry – National Trust going cruising – Blossom Trees – Royal Blind need your help

The council’s property sub-committee meets this morning under the Convener Councillor Alasdair Rankin to discuss progress being made following the difficulties with Statutory Repairs which led to the closure of the Property Conservation service. This was a service afforded to owners who could not agree on common repairs to their buildings. This meant that in the case of several owners in a stair who could not agree a statutory notice would be imposed to ensure that a property could not then be sold without the repairs being paid for. In many cases the council undertook the actual building work and billed the owners. Unfortunately the system worked well for many years but was misused leading to its closure.

There are now just under 3,000 statutory notices which remain in the review process. These notices affect around 30,000 properties, and are the cases where no works have been carried out to the properties. A way of dealing with these has to be found, but the situation is fraught with difficulties, and is a huge financial burden on the council. It is costing about £100,000 a year in staffing costs alone to investigate the history of what actually happened. These notices lead to difficulties in the sale of properties where an outstanding notice is found, and conveyancing solicitors will be among those consulted in developing a new computer-based system to evaluate and categorise all of these notices.

Up till now invoices of £2.3m have been issued for cases where work has been carried out by the council, but only £415,400 has been recovered from property owners thus far. In the cases examined by external firm Deloittes to date it is estimated that £2.5m will not ever be recovered out of the total due and payable of £10.3m. Some of the projects where sums will not be recoverable will be in excess of £50,000 in each case.

In total it is expected that the council may have to write off a total of £5.5m out of a total amount billed to property owners of £22m of work carried out. Deloittes are now working on the review of 61 projects where the total sum due to the council is £10m. They started off with some easier cases where they were able to identify that the work had been done quite easily, and where the money was perhaps known to be available, but the latter cases are those where details are much more complicated.

It is costing £950,000 to employ Deloittes to carry out this investigative work, which is the amount estimated at the outset.

A new Shared Repair Service has been set up by the council to do much the same as the old council service, but with more scrutiny and governance.

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The University of Edinburgh is throwing open its doors to industry later this month, as part of a programme designed to develop stronger collaborative ties between business and the academic community.

‘Access All Areas’ is a one day event taking place on Wednesday 28th May at the University of Edinburgh. Open to all companies looking to explore opportunities to access research facilities and academic expertise, the event will showcase some of the best Science and Engineering facilities and expertise in Europe.

To date, the University of Edinburgh has collaborated with some 2,500 companies, many of which have taken advantage of the broad range of expertise, equipment and capabilities available to further develop their product offerings.

The University is renowned for providing extensive support for companies across a wide range of market sectors. Typical projects have involved the analysis of new products/materials, waste water treatment, problem solving, improving product performance, and the testing of products or ingredients under extreme conditions.

The event is part of the University’s continuing goal of leveraging its outstanding knowledge base and expertise to benefit industry, as Ian Sharp, Commercial Relations Manager at Edinburgh Research and Innovation, explains;

“There is a real focus on ensuring impact from our research, facilities and expertise through wider collaboration with Industry. The Event’s talks and tours will be deliberately organised into smaller groups, to allow companies greater interaction with our technicians and academics. This will open up opportunities for attendees to gain a fuller understanding of how accessing our facilities and knowledge base could provide tangible benefits to their business.”

“For example Edinburgh Genomics, one of the largest genomics facilities in the UK, will provide an overview of the support it offers the life science industry. Recent investment in new gene sequencing platforms and new staff has created a world class array of facilities, technology and expertise which many companies are beginning to benefit from.”

Other facilities on show include the FloWave Ocean Energy Research Facility which provides outstanding scale modelling capabilities for the marine renewable energy and oil and gas industries. This is a world-unique facility for testing and de-risking marine platforms, technologies and projects. The £9.5 million facility was funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and the University of Edinburgh.

The large wave and tidal tank is able to mimic the normal and extreme conditions of coastlines around Europe for testing wave or tidal current devices at scales up to 1:20. It will be suitable for testing submersible devices, remotely operated vehicles, offshore wind installation and service vessels and other marine tools.

Registration for the Access All Areas event on Wednesday 28th May is now open until 16th May, and places can be reserved at www.accessallareas.eri.ed.ac.uk

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The National Trust for Scotland will set sail from Leith at 8.00pm on Friday 9 May onboard Pearl II. This year one-week cruise will travel the sea paths of the Norse, calling first at Kirkwall, Orkney.

Passengers will have a chance to explore Viking heritage in Lerwick, Fair Isle, Torshavn and Caithness. The trip wouldn’t be complete without the renowned, remote and so much loved UNESCO World Heritage site, St Kilda, owned by the National Trust for Scotland.

After a brief turnaround back in Leith on 16 May, Pearl II will then head for Helgoland on the Trust’s White Nights and Baltic Gold cruise. During the two-week cruise, passengers will have a chance to enjoy white nights at an overnight stay in St Petersburg.

The itineraries are not the only reason why the Trust’s cruises are so appealing.

Cruise Director Elaine Bruges said:

“Our lecture and entertainment programmes continue to lie at heart of our holidays and our cruise team features a host of familiar faces and new talent to keep our passengers entertained. As always we are travelling with a team of experts in wildlife, geology and history to help point out the finer details of the landscape we are sailing through.

“Also, the ship offers the ultimate in service and comfort, and with a maximum of 450 guests, we have managed to create a friendly, club-like atmosphere that our like-minded travellers enjoy so much.”

For more information about the National Trust for Scotland’s cruises call 0844 493 2457 or email cruises@nts.org.uk

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We are still looking for your best blossom photos to our photo feature on EdinburghReportage. The blossom is starting to blow off the trees and carpet the pavements and streets, but it is still pretty nonetheless.

Add your best photos here. 

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The Royal Blind have put out a call for help. “We are seeking volunteers to assist at stalls to raise funds and awareness at the Leith and the Meadows Summer 2014 festivals.  If you are passionate and enthusiastic about our services and comfortable in engaging with the public Royal Blind wants to hear from you.”

Contact gary.seath@royalblind.org about volunteering.

 




Stockbridge Photography Club photo of the week

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This week’s photo comes from Kathleen McGovern, who noticed the flowers along her usual cycle path

The Stockbridge Photography Club is a non profit community club. We don’t have any joining fees, and provide aspiring photographers with education and experiences to help them get the best from their camera.

We’ve just announced a few events, with some more to be confirmed next week. More information can be found on Facebook or our website, where you can sign up to receive email alerts when we add new events.

Submitted by Stockbridge Photo Club

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The Kelpies

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We went to visit the Kelpies at Helix Park in Falkirk at the weekend. They are fabulous and worth a visit. Very photogenic even in some flat grey light…

 

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Operation Wolf first day success in Leith

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Several people are now subject to criminal proceedings following the first public enforcement day of Operation Wolf.

Around 40 officers and seven partner agency representatives were deployed across the Leith area yesterday to tackle the issues the local community identified as a policing priority.

During the high-visibility patrols that were carried out, four people were arrested for drug and warrant offences, while a further 16 people have been reported to the Procurator Fiscal for various road traffic offences.

During the stop and search activity that was undertaken, evidence was found which led to three properties in Midlothian being searched.

As a result, diamorphine and £3,000 cash were recovered along with a number of items believed to be stolen property.

In addition, local policing teams carried out 28 visits to licensed premises and a further five people were issued with fixed penalty notice tickets in relation to antisocial drinking.

All of the activity undertaken as part of Operation Wolf yesterday yielded vital intelligence on ongoing criminal activity and this will all be progressed accordingly during the initiative.

Superintendent Matt Richards said: “Our communities in Leith identified drugs, antisocial behaviour and violence as local concerns and yesterday’s activity was specifically tailored to tackle these issues.

“A number of arrests and reports to the Procurator Fiscal were made for a variety of offences with quantities of drugs and potentially stolen property seized.

“More importantly, however, we were able to demonstrate our commitment to our communities by acting on the information they provide us with responding through the dedication of appropriate resources.

“Operation Wolf is about meeting the needs of the public through the information they provide us with in our policing plans. Enforcement days will continue throughout the coming days and weeks to address a range of offences and issues impacting on communities throughout Edinburgh.”




Edinburgh features at the City Art Centre this weekend

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The capital’s history and changing cityscape will be revealed with an exhibition set to open in Edinburgh this weekend at The City Art Centre.

A Capital View – The Art of Edinburgh, which will run until 6 July 2014, follows Edinburgh’s changing landscape through the centuries. From the medieval city huddled around the confines of the Royal Mile, through the development of the New Town, to the industrial changes that led Edinburgh to become the bustling Capital city it is today, the exhibition will feature a stunning series of prints, paintings, sketches, photographs and artefacts.

With works from many notable Scottish artists, the exhibition also features early landscapes from French artist William Delacour, English landscapist Paul Sandby and local aristocrat John Clerk of Eldin, portraits of leading civic figures, pioneers and performers by James Howe, John Kay and Charles Doyle, and influential works by Edinburgh Enlightenment artists Sir Henry Raeburn and Alexander Nasmyth.

Convener of Culture and Sport Richard Lewis
Convener of Culture and Sport Richard Lewis

Councillor Richard Lewis, Culture Convener for the City of Edinburgh Council, said: “The unique landscape of Edinburgh and the city’s rich heritage is part of its appeal and is appreciated by residents and visitors the world over, and this exhibition offers a fascinating perspective on the city’s history. In the year of the Referendum and the Commonwealth Games, it is fitting that this exhibition will shine a spotlight on Scotland’s Capital.”

A Capital View complements a major new publication based on the City’s art collection, written by Alyssa Popiel and published by leading independent publisher Birlinn Ltd.

Alyssa Popiel, author of ‘A Capital View: The Art of Edinburgh, One Hundred Artworks from the City Collection’, said: “Edinburgh is a stunningly beautiful city, full of heritage and history.  Over the centuries its world famous views have inspired generations of Scottish artists. The City Collection is one of the most significant collections of Scottish art and I hope this portrait of my hometown will inspire visitors to rediscover and appreciate our historic city and familiarise themselves with some of Edinburgh’s great artists.”

In August, the City Art Centre will welcome a further two major exhibitions: Urban / Suburban, which will be based on the theme of architecture and the built environment in Scottish art, and the Commonwealth themed Where Do I End And You Begin, which will launch as part of the Edinburgh International Art Festival and Glasgow 2014 Cultural Programme. Both exhibitions will launch on 1 August 2014.

For more information on exhibitions at The City Art Centre, visit Edinburgh Museums and Galleries’ website.




VIDEO – Building at James Gillespie’s making progress

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Cabinet Secretary for Education Michael Russell, laid a section of concrete at the new main teaching block for the rebuild project at James Gillespie’s High School on Whitehouse Loan this morning.

City of Edinburgh Council Education Convener Cllr Paul Godzik, local MSP Jim Eadie and Councillor Cathy Fullerton were also present to witness the next stage in the building project.

The high school rebuild is part of the unique James Gillespie’s Campus Project. This will include new buildings being constructed across the whole campus which serves pupils aged from 3 to 18 years in nursery, primary and high schools all on the same site.




Wednesday in Edinburgh – things to do today

2014_04_24 CastleWEDNESDAY – a new exhibition at Bon Papillon, and even more talk of independence..

In the Outdoors is a new exhibition of paintings by Leo du Feu and Susan Smith at the Bon Papillon Gallery, Howe Street.  Leo and Susan (his mother) share a passion for landscape, and the animals and birds of Scotland.  Ongoing until 2nd June: open 10-5 Wednesday to Sunday, closed Monday and Tuesday.

Tradfest:  Revolution by the Pen: Scotland’s Literary Renaissance – a talk by Donald Smith, author and storyteller.  12.45-1.30pm Hawthornden Lecture Theatre, Scottish National Gallery, The Mound.

Tradfest and Blackwell’s Edinburgh present Gerry Hassan ‘Caledonian Dreaming – the Quest for a Different Scotland.’  Hassan examines the state of contemporary Scotland, the independence referendum and its wider consequences. 6.30-7.30pm.  Collect your free ticket from Blackwell’s front desk or call 0131 622 8218.

Reviving and Bereaving: Walter Scott & the Ballads.  Kaye McAlpine and Lucy Macrae explaine Scott’s love of the Border ballads and demonstrate their lasting power and emotional appeal. National Library of Scotland, 6-7pm.  Free tickets from The Scottish Storytelling Centre Box Office: 0131 556 9579

National Library of Scotland George BridgeRuskin & Geddes: A Natural Revival?  Writer Tom Hubbard and artist Kenny Munro lead a journey ‘from natural source to artistic stream’, showing how the arts & crafts movement and the Celtic Revival grew together in Scotland, rooted in the natural environment.  2-3.30pm, National Library of Scotland; free, book via the Scottish Storytelling Centre Box Office: 0131 556 9579.   Part of Tradfest.

University of Edinburgh: Scotland’s Religious Future.  Professor Mona Siddiqui, Professor of Islamic and Interreligious Studies at the School of Divinty in conversation with Mike Russell MSP, Scottish Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning.  The event will address the changes Scottish independence could bring constitutionally and to the church in Scotland, as well as covering the position of faith communities, and religious and cultural identity. 6-7pm  (doors open 5.30pm), George Square Lecture Theatre, George Square.  Free but booking essential via eventbrite.  Further information from  Julia.Woolman@ed.ac.uk

Collective Gallery, City Observatory, 38 Calton Hill – an informative tour of the exhibitions led by gallery staff.  Drop in, no booking required.  1pm every Wednesday.

If you would like to know what is happening the rest of this week then read more here.




Five things you need to know today Edinburgh!

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Portobello Park  – Woodland Walk in Colinton Dell – Edinburgh Zoo Nights – Kelpies and Horses – University spin offs 

Representatives of Portobello Park Action Group (PPAG) will give evidence to the Scottish Parliament for the second time today as they keep pressing the argument that The City of Edinburgh Council should build its long overdue Portobello High School on what they describe as ‘an alternative and suitable site’.

Importantly, the PPAG spokespeople are adamant that if the Bill is passed, they believe it could set a precedent for all Scottish councils to build on inalienable common good land even if some local residents oppose it.

The campaigner say that arguments about the siting of the much needed new Portobello High School are longstanding, resulting in a Court of Session ruling in favour of the Park’s defendants, and point out that the City of Edinburgh Council is promoting a Bill in the Scottish Parliament which could overrule that.

Moreover, PPAG says it is becoming increasingly concerned that evidence presented by the City of Edinburgh Council is not reliable. They claim that a PPAG Freedom of Information request has shown that a vital legal opinion about the risk of a legal challenge – should the plan to develop Portobello Park go ahead – was kept from Edinburgh’s councillors, which PPAG say means that they were unable to make a decision on the future of the school’s location on a sound factual basis.

Former Edinburgh councillor, Stephen Hawkins who represents PPAG says:

“If the Portobello Park Bill goes through, not only will it enable the City of Edinburgh Council to override its citizens’ right to common good land in Portobello, it could set a principle for other councils across Scotland to ride roughshod over their residents’ common good land too.

PPAG fully supports the urgent need for a new Portobello High School on one of the several available sites but believes that the Council has misrepresented the facts, thereby pushing it through council processes and dishonestly boosting public opinion in favour of building the school on Portobello Park.

“There are reasonable alternative sites, but the Council seems disinterested in them. We have also been promised that if the new building is put up in Portobello Park, the existing school site will be turned into green space. It is hard to have faith that this will actually happen, given the Council’s honesty on this matter to date.

“All MSPs and Scottish councillors must realise that this is not just an Edinburgh-based issue. If the Portobello Park Bill goes through, people across the whole of Scotland could find their precious common good land being developed and be powerless to stop it.”

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zn_bannerEdinburgh Zoo Nights offer you the opportunity to see and hear what the zoo is like after dark! The next one is on 23 May and you can book your tickets here….if you dare! You should note that the pandas are not on show during the Zoo Nights series. Next dates are 6, 20 & 27  June.

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We went to see the Kelpies at the weekend. This is but a short jaunt from Edinburgh although we hope they improve the signage soon! If you go past the Kelpies on the motorway then you have gone too far as we found out.  They are beautiful, and the Helix Park is a good resource for locals walking dogs or just having a walk along the canal. The car park closes at 8.30pm but there is overflow car parking at Falkirk Football Stadium for those photographers who want to catch the Kelpies when they are illuminated after dark.

We hope you like the photos we have published here. If you have any photos of horses (yes we know that Kelpies are not horses!) then feel free to add them to our photo storyboard on EdinburghReportage. Does anyone keep horses within the city limits? Send us a photo then!

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Fifty nine (59) potential businesses from three of the Capital’s universities  – the University of Edinburgh, Heriot Watt University and Napier University – are each aiming to land the £60,000 first prize of cash and pledged support package on offer in this year’s Converge Challenge, the annual entrepreneurship start-up programme funded by eight Scottish Universities and the Scottish Funding Council.

In total, a record number of 111 entries, almost double from the last year, have been received from across Scotland’s university community this year and the quest to reach the Converge Challenge final which takes place later in the year, promises to be the most intense yet.

Entries from the Capital include a raft of business propositions to develop a variety of ideas. These include the development ofan alternative eye dropper device that consistently delivers an accurate dosage of medicine to the eye from Napier University, a start-up which provides dairy products to students in Ghana from Heriot Watt and a pioneering online and retail space where consumers co-create their own eyewear submitted from The University of Edinburgh.

Submissions for this year’s Converge Challenge have increased by 83% on last year’s total, which delights Converge Challenge Director, Olga Kozlova.

“This is the fifth year for the Converge Challenge programme and I am delighted to see more and more projects coming forward as the competition acts as a beacon for entrepreneurship among our scientists and students. This year Converge Challenge is bigger than ever with dedicated training provided to over 50 budding entrepreneurs and record total funding pot of £68K in cash and £56K worth of business support.

As our economy continues on its road to recovery, it is crucial that we can keep the pipeline of innovative ideas coming forward from our university-based flowing and do our best to help the individuals develop them into successful profitable businesses.”

For the participants there is now an anxious wait to see if they made it into the Elevator Pitch stage which will take place on the 3rd June at the Royal Society of Edinburgh, when they have to deliver a 60 second pitch to a panel of judges, a hundred-strong audience and a ticking clock. And this would be just a small part of the tasks they have to complete before the winners are announced on the 30th of September at the awards dinner held at Heriot Watt University.

Since its first launch in 2010 Converge Challenge has grown every year attracting more and more of university-based entrepreneurs and enabling them to develop their entrepreneurial skills and explore commercial potential of their inventions. The programme delivers nearly 30% incorporation rate and 4 out of 5 of these businesses has gone on to secure follow-on funding. The organisers are looking forward to see what this record year is going to bring.

 

 

 

 




Ross County 1-0 Hibernian

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A Richard Brittain penalty midway through the second half ensured Ross County’s place in the SPFL for next season but added to Hibs’ despair in what has turned out to be a nightmare end to the season.

The Easter Road side must now wait until their final match of the season against fellow strugglers Kilmarnock on Saturday to secure their top flight status after losing to Ross County in Dingwall tonight.

All eyes will be on Rugby Park tomorrow when Kilmarnock face St Mirren, and Terry Butcher’s men could find themselves in second-bottom place beforehand if results go against them tomorrow.

Whatever the outcome, survival remains in their own hands when they face Kilmarnock at Easter Road on Saturday.

Butcher made two enforced changes to the team that drew with Partick Thistle at the weekend with Jordon Forster replacing the suspended Michael Nelson and Danny Handling replacing the injured Kevin Thomson.

Hibs started the game brightly and Jason Cummings  (pictured) tested  keeper Mark Brown in the County goal before Handling dragged a shot wide.

Yann Songo’o then almost grabbed an opener for County with a close-range header which flew just over the bar before Alan Maybury forced another save from Brown.

Skipper Liam Craig twice went close with headers but it was keeper Ben Williams who kept the scores level with a fine save from a Richard Brittain strike as both teams looked for the win which would guarantee top flight football next season.

Jordan Forster then went close with a header but it was the Staggies who took the lead when Scott Robertson’s challenge on Jordan Slew inside the box was penalised by the referee and Brittain fired the ball into the corner of the net leaving Williams helpless.

Slew almost doubled County’s lead when he forced Williams into a brave save Cummings sent in a powerful drive which was inches wide.

The teenager then sent a header past the post as Hibs pressed for an equaliser but County held on for a precious win after Brown kept out Forster’s header.

Hibernian: Ben Williams, Alan Maybury, Jordon Forster, Ryan McGivern, Lewis Stevenson, Alex Harris, Scott Robertson, Sam Stanton, Liam Craig, Danny Handling, Jason Cummings

Subs: Sean Murdoch, James McPake, Paul Cairney, Owain Tudur Jones, Danny Haynes, James Collins, Duncan Watmore

Photo by John Preece

http://www.photoboxgallery.com/jlp-photography




Hibernian EOS 2-1 Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale

Hibs training centre

Hibs’ EOS beat Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale 2-1 at the Training Centre on Monday to secure their place in the Central Taxis East of Scotland League Cup Final.

Jamie Beaton opened the scoring with his sixteenth East of Scotland League goal of the season, but Lothian Thistle equalised through a hotly-disputed penalty which was saved by Hibernian EOS keeper Kleton Perntreou, but Thistle managed to score from the rebound.

With extra time looming, midfielder Dean Horribine scored the decisive goal in the final minute to win the tie.

Afterwards Head of Academy Coaching James McDonaugh told Hibernian TV: “It was played as a semi-final, both teams were eager to win it.

“I thought we were on the front foot when Beaton scored and then the linesman gave them a penalty for an off the ball incident.

“It was a great penalty save from Kleton (Perntreou) but we just couldn’t keep out the rebound, this time the linesman kept his flag down as their player tapped in from close range.

“The second half was quite even but we finally got over the line in the final minute when (Lewis) Allan squared to (Dean) Horribine, who finished with composure into the bottom corner.

“Credit to Lothian, you can see why they’re Premier League winners but again our lads character was first class and edged through.”

Hibs’ EOS will face the winner from Tuesday night’s semi-final between Craigroyston and Spartans EOS with the Central Taxis East of Scotland League Cup Final taking place on Saturday at Marine Drive, Muirhouse (home of Civil Service Strollers), kick off 3pm.

Next up Hibs’ EOS will face Edinburgh University in the East of Scotland League King Cup quarter final at the Training Centre on Wednesday evening, kick off 6.30pm.




Police launch Operation Wolf to target crime in capital

Police Scotland

Police in Edinburgh today publicly launched, a new operation aimed at tackling the specific crimes affecting the city’s various communities.

Operation Wolf, which is supported by City of Edinburgh Council, will see uniformed and plain-clothes officers across the Capital take part in various enforcement days during May to target those involved in violent crime, antisocial behaviour, drugs, hate crime and domestic abuse.

Police Scotland’s Operational Support Unit will also provide vital assistance to local policing teams throughout the city in the coming month to undertake these ‘days of action’ in areas where the public have identified the need for a robust police response.

Today’s Operation Wolf activity was carried out in the Leith area where local residents and businesses have previously raised concerns over alcohol and drug-related crime.

Local officers were deployed throughout the region to provide a high-visibility presence and engage with the public to offer reassurance and address any problems brought to their attention.

A number of arrests were made on Thursday 1st May as part of covert activities undertaken during Operation Wolf. Six men were charged with football-related disorder offences following the recent Edinburgh, derby, while a woman and two men were also arrested as part of efforts to disrupt serious and organised crime in the Capital.

Further covert enforcement was carried out in the Drylaw area yesterday resulting in the arrest of six males aged 26, 21,20, 15, 14 and 14 for two break-ins to garages in the Ravelston area.

In addition, a number of stop and searches were conducted yesterday and 12 people were arrested for crimes including warrant offences, breach of bail, hate crime and acquisitive crime. Four traffic offences were also detected and a drugs warrant was executed as part of Operation Wolf’s commitment to tackle the variety of issues affecting the Capital’s communities.

Superintendent Matt Richards, who is leading on Operation Wolf, said: “Today we publicly launched Operation Wolf and so our communities can expect to see lots of police activity as we carry out various enforcement days throughout the month of May.

“Each area of the city has identified different issues, which they want their local policing teams to prioritise and the activity undertaken in your area is a reflection of our commitment to addressing the concerns of our communities.

“We would encourage Edinburgh’s residents and businesses to continue and engage with us so we can develop the appropriate local response and tackle the crimes most adversely affecting your area.”

Community Safety Leader, Councillor Cammy Day said: “Operation Wolf is an excellent way to show the community that the police and the council are listening to their concerns and are serious about tackling the issues that they are worried about.

“This initiative supports the coalition’s ongoing plans to make Edinburgh as safe as possible for residents and visitors.”




Street Food Saturday at The Tram Stop

Jones & Son at The Tram Stop Market

After years of surviving roadworks and disruption, the stallholders at St Mary’s Market, tucked behind John Lewis on the corner of York Place, have decided to take a positive attitude to the launch of the Edinburgh Trams on 31 May 2014 and re-name the market as The Tram Stop.

Market Operator, Vicky MacDonald, said “We’ve had our challenges during the roadworks, including turning up one morning and discovering the market site had been dug up for emergency repairs, and like many others, we suffered because customers didn’t want to fight their way through the city. However, we’re really looking forward to the trams bringing new customers to York Place and the stallholders all agreed it can only be good for business.”

Stallholders will be celebrating the return of the trams with a special Street Food Saturday on 10th May from 11am to 5pm. The market is located at the ‘end of the line’ on the corner of York Place outside St Mary’s Metropolitan Cathedral, just next to the last tram stop.

“We’d like to encourage local restaurants, cafes and bars who’ve been affected by the tramworks to celebrate with us and have a stall at the market to showcase their menus or create something new for the occasion. It will be great for customers as everything must be under £5 a portion and some of our regular traders are even offering freebies, like the sourdough starter kits that Breadshare Bakery will be giving away,” said Ms MacDonald.

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Stall fees are £50 for the day and include a traditional market stall with red and white striped roof.

Some of the food on offer includes Jones & Son Bespoke BBQs, with their slow-cooked pulled pork, home-made chilli jam and coleslaw, as well as hand rolled porchetta with salsa verde and Ninja Buns, selling steamed Taiwanese buns with pulled chicken, braised beef or tofu fillings.

However, Edinburgh Markets are still taking new applications. For further information please go to www.edinburghmarkets.co.uk




Tuesday in Edinburgh – things to do today

2014_04_24 CastleTUESDAY – from folksong to organ music, from independence to the English language…

Tradfest and  Blackwell’s Edinburgh (South Bridge) present David Torrance ‘A New Union’ – Scotland in a Federal UK.’  In this new book, Torrance argues for a wholesale transformation of the famously uncodified British constitution.  He advocates a ‘new union’, a UK federation in which Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland become sovereign states on a more equal footing.   6.30-7.30pm.  To obtain your free ticket call in at the shop’s front desk or call 0131 622 8218.

Tradfest: Clash of the Titans: Revival & Renaissance.  Raymond Raszkowski Ross examines the famous clash between Hamish Henderson and Hugh MacDiarmid about the role of folksong in literature, and its wider significance for Scottish culture. 6-7pm National Library of Scotland. Free tickets from the Scottish Storytelling Centre Box Office on 0131 556 9579.

Tradfest: Cafe Ceilidh.  A free afternoon of traditional songs and music in the Storytelling Court of the Scottish Storytelling Centre.  2-4pm, unticketed.

National Library of Scotland George BridgeWalter Scott & the Storytellers:  Anne Fancett and Lisa McKenna explore Scott as ‘Wizard of the North’ and master storyteller.  2-3.30pm at the National Library of Scotland, George IV Bridge.  Book by calling the Scottish Storytelling Centre on 0131 556 9579.  Part of Tradfest.

University of Edinburgh: Professor Bettelou Los,, Forbes Chair of English Language, gives her inaugural lecture ‘Changing English.’  5.15-6.15pm, Lecture Theatre 175, Old College, South Bridge.

St Mary’s Metropolitan (RC) Cathedral, Picardy Place. Concert with Belgian organist Luc Ponet from Our Lady’s Basilica in Tongeren.  Music by Widor, and the mighty ‘Storm’ Fantasia by Jacques-Nicholas Lemmens.  Free entry, retiring collection.  7.30pm.

If you really need to know now what is happening the rest of this week then read more here.




Five things you need to know today Edinburgh!

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Youth Day to be held in June – RBS branch to close – Community Safety Surgery  – Whisky adventure –  Learner Drivers

Forth and Inverleith NPs are engaging with young people through group discussions, Twitter and Survey Monkey to identify activities that will inform the programme for the youth day which will be held at Royston Wardieburn Community Centre on Saturday 21 June 2014.

The event aims to bring together young people across North Edinburgh, supporting both Neighbourhood Partnerships’ local community plan priorities of  ‘improving the wellbeing of and services for children, young people and families’. The day will be split up with under 12’s activities earlier and older teenagers activities later in the day. Suggestions to date include live bands, an open mike, barbeque, dance/music workshops, football competitions, screening videos made by young people and a bicycle assault course.

If you wish further information then contact  jim.pattison@edinburgh.gov.uk

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The Royal Bank of Scotland in Balerno is to close on 1 August 2014.

The nearest branch will be in Juniper Green, and the bank has committed to renovating that branch. Customers will also be able to withdraw cash at the local post office.

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If you are a learner driver then you might make use of this resource over here on the Tales of One City site. It will allow you to do lots of off road practice for your theory test!

You will need a library card number to log in.

 

 




Edinburgh Festival of Cycling 2014

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The first Edinburgh Festival of Cycling was held last year and was hailed a great success by all those who organised, supported or attended the events.

So it is no great surprise that there is to be another this year taking place between 12 and 22 June 2014 at venues across the city.

We have seen an advance copy of the programme and there are so many events on offer it will be difficult to choose what to go to. We are having a wee thought about the night ride…..starts at 23.00 on 20 June and finishes at 7.00am. 60 miles around the highways and byways of East Lothian on the summer solstice. After a rest stop in Dunbar you then head back to Leith for breakfast, all the while raising funds for Edinburgh charity It’s good 2 give! on the way.

What about you? What will you be going to? Click here for the calendar of events which is being added to all the time.

The Edinburgh Reporter met with festival organiser, Kim Harding, to find out what it is all about.




Scottish National Gallery to stage golfing exhibition this summer

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The Scottish National Gallery will stage an exhibition of golf paintings this summer including the John Lavery illustrated. Charles Lees’s The Golfers, said to be the greatest golfing painting in the world which was painted in 1847 and portrays a match played on the Old Course at St Andrews, will be the centrepiece among the highlights of The Art of Golf: The Story of Scotland’s National Sport.

The exhibition will explore golf as a subject of fascination for artists from the seventeenth century to the present day, bringing together around 60 outstanding paintings, by artists such as Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669), Hendrick Avercamp (1585-1634), Paul Sandby (1731-1809) and Sir Henry Raeburn (1756-1823). The exhibition will have a particular emphasis on the emergence of the sport in Scotland, and will include a section devoted to John Lavery’s stunning paintings from the early 1920s of North Berwick and its surrounding golf courses.

The exhibition will also explore the origins of the game and its importance for the development of golfing tourism in Scotland. Examples of early golf equipment will also be on display.

The Art of Golf will overlap with two important sporting events in Scotland in 2014: the Commonwealth Games, Glasgow (23 July – 3 August) and the Ryder Cup, Gleneagles (23 – 28 September), the biennial competition played between teams of professional golfers representing the United States and Europe.

THE ART OF GOLF: THE STORY OF SCOTLAND’S NATIONAL SPORT
12 July – 26 October 2014
SCOTTISH NATIONAL GALLERY, The Mound, Edinburgh EH2 2EL
Admission £8/£6
Switchboard 0131 624 6200 | nationalgalleries.org




Robert Louis Stevenson Fellowship awarded to Edinburgh writer

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Scottish Book Trust is delighted to announce that Iain Johnstone, an Edinburgh-based writer, has been awarded one of four Robert Louis Stevenson Fellowships, based in Grez-sur-Loing in France.

The Fellowships, supported by Creative Scotland’s Creative Futures fund, were initiated in 1994 by Franki Fewkes, a Scottish enthusiast then living in France. As well as giving writers a chance to escape the hustle and bustle of their everyday lives to devote time to their writing, Fewkes intended it to be an opportunity for the Fellows to meet other artists and to absorb new cultural and social influences.

Situated at the edge of the Forest of Fontainebleau, Grez-sur-Loing was visited regularly by Stevenson, who was attracted by the commune’s established community of writers and artists. It was there, at the Hôtel Chevillon, that he met his future wife Fanny Osbourne. Stevenson found both the place, and its well established community of writers and artists, highly attractive and he returned to Grez-sur-Loing for three successive summers.

Iain_Johnstone-1Children’s playwright Johnstone will retrace Stevenson’s footsteps in August 2014, enjoying a residence of one month in a self-catering studio apartment at the Hôtel Chevillon International Arts Centre at Grez-sur-Loing, allowing him to take time away from his usual environment in order to develop his work.

Johnstone has been a professional theatre composer, actor, director and writer for twenty-six years. He has worked with most leading Scottish theatre companies including Dundee Rep, The Royal Lyceum, Communicado and NTS. South of the border he has worked with Northern Stage Newcastle, the RSC, the National Theatre, National Theatre of Wales and Told By an Idiot (with whom he is an Associate Artist). Johnstone is Artistic Director of Edinburgh-based Wee Stories Theatre, where he co-created much of the company’s acclaimed work over the last fourteen years, including his one-man show, One Giant Leap.

Commenting on the fellowship, Johnstone said: “Being able to spend one month in a beautiful part of France entirely focused on writing a play set in France during and after the Great War is an incredible opportunity for me. It is also wonderful for my self-confidence as a writer. I am straining at the leash to get there and start scribbling!”

Will Mackie, Head of Writer Development at Scottish Book Trust, said:

“We’re thrilled to offer this wonderful opportunity to Iain, a dramatist whose work is greatly admired and widely enjoyed.  We wish him a productive and enjoyable stay at Hôtel Chevillon – a beautiful, tranquil and richly evocative environment where the presence of one of our greatest writers is so keenly felt.”

Emma Turnbull, Development Officer at Creative Scotland, said:

“The RLS fellowships offer a much needed opportunity for writers to retreat beyond the demands of everyday life to focus entirely on their writing. Hotel Chevillon has hosted many Scottish writers over the past 20 years, and every writer who has undertaken a fellowship in that time has spoken about how beneficial the time and space were to the development of their work. This year’s recipients all submitted work of excellent quality and were able to demonstrate how the fellowship would benefit their work. We wish them well.”




New name unveiled at George IV Bridge hotel

IMAGE 1 - Hotel Missoni Edinburgh crowned as G&V Royal Mile Hotel

The Edinburgh Reporter has been wondering what was going to happen after Missoni decided to take its name back from the hotel on George IV Bridge. We passed by the other day when the sign at the front door was being changed, but the workmen would not divulge what they were changing it to!

The Carlson Rezidor Hotel Group has now announced that Edinburgh’s city centre, five-star Hotel Missoni Edinburgh will be crowned G&V Royal Mile Hotel.  Under its new name, the unique property will also join Quorvus Collection, a new generation of expertly curated luxury hotels in Carlson Rezidor’s growing global portfolio. The G&V Royal Mile Hotel has also announced a number of exciting developments to come, including working with familiar faces of the Scottish design world.

The new name, G&V Hotel, is an abbreviation of George & Victoria and gives a proud nod to the area’s royal heritage and the hotel’s enviable location in the heart of Edinburgh on the corner of George IV Bridge, Victoria Street and The Royal Mile.

As well as announcing a new name, the hotel also confirmed it will collaborate with a trio of local Scottish design talent including innovative Edinburgh-based fashion designer Judy R Clark, leading Glasgow-based design legends Timorous Beasties, and local kilt king Howie Nicholsby.  The designers will all work with the hotel to reveal new, modern Scottish inspired uniforms, crockery and linens.

IMAGE 2 - Hotel Missoni Edinburgh crowned as G&V Royal Mile Hotel

The hotel will remain a design hotel at heart and all of the unique and much loved interiors, style, ethos, strong management team, staff and friendly 5-star service will not change, with a continued pride in its bold, beautiful design beginnings.  Award-winning restaurant Cucina will remain at the heart of the hotel and will continue to serve some of the finest, authentic Italian cuisine in the city.

Testament to the hotel’s enhanced luxury offering, the property is also set to unveil an exclusive guest lounge this summer, which will provide five-star luxury with enviable views across the city of Edinburgh.

Carina Svensen, G&V Royal Mile Hotel’s General Manager, said; “G&V Royal Mile Hotel will embody modern, yet relaxed luxury.  Along with our fantastic team here at the hotel, I’m looking forward to the journey ahead, enhancing the guest experience, drawing on local character, culture and home-grown talent, as well as making the most of our privileged location.

“To be working with local Scottish design talent Judy R Clark, and Howie Nicholsby on our new uniforms and Timorous Beasties on our new crockery and linens, is truly exciting for us, and we’re sure all of our guests will be just as excited when we reveal the new designs in summer.  We’ve no doubt our kilted doormen will be attracting even more attention when we unveil our new, unique bespoke kilts too!”

After five successful years working in partnership with Missoni, the fashion brand and Carlson Rezidor Hotel Group will cease to work together, in line with their individual long-term business strategies.

IMAGE 3 - hotel Missoni Edinburgh crowned as G&V Royal Mile Hotel

Quorvus Collection name originates from the Southern sky Corvus constellation featuring the five brightest stars. It is inspired by the lifestyle and sensibilities of the contemporary global traveler. Member hotels are historic landmarks, contemporary residences, classic boutiques and urban retreats – all different in scale, architecture, ambiance and design, yet committed to the same, unparalleled service philosophy. Quorvus Collection has a luxury lifestyle value proposition based on a signature suite of hallmark services. The holistic “Q24” concept targets both body and mind, and focuses on six core elements: wellness, replenishment, style, inspiration, entertainment, and connectivity.

As it joins Quorvus Collection, the hotel will also become part of the Club Carlson loyalty scheme, offering guests even more benefits.  Club Carlson is a hotel rewards program that allows members to enjoy a collection of services, benefits and privileges, as well as earn free hotel award nights at over 1,000 hotel locations around the world.

Photos show Howie Nicholsby, 21st Century Kilts; Edinburgh designer, Judy R Clark; Carina Svensen, General Manager, G&V and Alistair McAuley Partner, Timorous Beasties




Rats abandoned beside bins in West Norton Place

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The Scottish SPCA is appealing for information after a box containing 11 rats was abandoned outside a block of flats in Edinburgh.

Scotland’s animal welfare charity was alerted on Friday (2 May) after a member of the public made the discovery beside some bins at West Norton Place.

The rats, four boys and seven girls, are now in the care of the Scottish SPCA’s Angus, Fife and Tayside Animal Rescue and Rehoming Centre near Dundee, where staff will rehome them.

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Animal Rescue Officer Lauren Walker said, “It looks like these little guys and girls have been deliberately abandoned as they were left inside a cardboard box which had air holes in it.

“West Norton Place is quite a busy area so we think it’s likely the person responsible would have been seen.

“If anyone witnessed anything suspicious or knows of anyone who owned a number of rats but doesn’t anymore, we’d ask them to contact us.”

Abandoning an animal is an offence under the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006 and anyone found guilty of doing so can expect to be banned from keeping animals for a fixed period or life.

Anyone with information is being urged to contact the Scottish SPCA Animal Helpline on 03000 999 999




Fisherrow Sands given a big clean up

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VOLUNTEERS CLEAN-UP WITH M&S  

– More than 150kg rubbish collected at M&S Big Beach Clean-up 2014 –

Over 200 local volunteers descended on Fisherrow Sands in Musselburgh last week to take part in Marks & Spencer’s (M&S) Big Beach Clean-up. M&S customers and employees were joined by Provost Ludovic Broun-Lindsay, Councillor John McNeil, Musselburgh Rotary Club, the Prince’s Trust and other local community groups to help free the beach from rubbish and protect the area’s marine life.

The event is run in partnership with the Marine Conservation Society (MCS) and litter pickers collected everything from wrappers, tin cans and pieces of rope to more unusual items such as 40 shoe soles and car tyres.  More than 30 bags of rubbish were collected from Fisherrow beach, weighing in at a staggering 150kg.

Elaine Anderson, store manager at M&S Edinburgh Kinnaird said: “We were absolutely delighted with the turn-out for this year’s Big Beach Clean-up and would like to thank everyone who gave up their time to help tidy Fisherrow Sands. The clean-up is all about bringing the local community together to help protect marine life and the environment, and it was fantastic to see so many people working together, having fun and supporting such a great cause.”

Sheryl Skelton, is team leader for the Prince’s Trust in Dalkeith, which works with young people to provide them with employability skills. Around 10 volunteers for the organisation took part in today’s beach clean. Sheryl said: “Our young people joined the beach clean today as part of their team certificate course. Part of the course involves working with different groups, so the event provided the perfect opportunity to do this. We all really enjoyed taking part and it was great to see such a big turn out.”

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East Lothian Provost, Ludovic Broun-Lindsay said: “Fisherrow Sands is used by the local community, visitors and tourists across the year, which is why it is so important that we all take an interest in making sure that the beach continues to be an enjoyable place for people to come.  It’s fantastic to see so much litter collected so a big well done to everyone who took part. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed it!”

The M&S Big Beach Clean-up is part of M&S’ Forever Fish campaign which is funded by the profits from the 5p carrier bag charge in M&S foodhalls. This year, activities took place across 95 beaches and 45 canals in the UK between 24thand 30th April.

  

  




Concert for Sick Kids on 6 May

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Some of the finest vocal talent in Scotland is set to unite for a one-off concert in aid of the Sick Kids Friends Foundation (SKFF) this month.Edinburgh’s ‘Voice of the Town’ singing group will join a number of upcoming singer songwriters at the Minto Hotel, Edinburgh on Tuesday 6 May 2014, to raise much needed funds for the patients of the Royal Hospital for Sick Children (RHSC) in Edinburgh.

 

The Concert for Sick Kids will see singer songwriter Scott Cowie, recently signed to a recording label in Los Angeles, in-demand session vocalist Madaleine Pritchard and Edinburgh performer Carrie Mac, who has previously supported Eliza Doolittle and The Proclaimers, line up in a bid to support the children’s charity.

 

Finishing off the evening, Voice of the Town, who have performed with the likes of Susan Boyle, Jai McDowall and Karen Dunbar, will treat the audience to a variety of contemporary gospel, soul, r‘n’b and pop music.

 

All proceeds from the concert will be donated to the SKFF to help with a number of the charity’s on-going projects including funding music therapy sessions for children in the oncology and neurology wards, as well as at the charity’s drop in centre.

 

The Sick Kids Friends Foundation works in partnership with childhood cancer charity Star for Harris to promote the role music has to play in enriching hospital life for thousands of children battling serious illness.

 

Rachel McKenzie, head of community fundraising said: “We’re delighted that the Voice of the Town and their partners have elected the Sick Kids Friends Foundation to benefit from this exciting and unique musical event.

 

“Music therapy is a vital strand of what we do to bring creativity and excitement to the healing process at the RHSC. Supporter events like these help us gather the funds needed in order to provide this kind of innovative care to sick children and their families.”

 

Steve Morton, Musical Director of Voice of the Town said: “The Concert for Sick Kids will see a number of hugely popular artists combine forces in order to put on a spectacular evening of entertainment and simultaneously raise vital funds for a much-loved foundation.

 

“We look forward to welcoming concert-goers from across Edinburgh for a night of good music for an even better cause.”

 

The Concert for Sick Kids will take place at 8pm on Tuesday, 6 May at The Minto Hotel Edinburgh. Tickets are priced at £8.50 per person and can be purchased at www.ticketsource.co.uk/date/103263 or  via telephone on 03336 663366.