Scotland
- Bank robber pillow case disguise had no eye holeswww.bbc.co.uk Bank robber pillow case disguise had no eye holes
Matthew Davies had to take the cover off during an armed bank raid in Fife as he could not see.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/19963508
> > A bank robber put a pillow case over his head to hide his identity - then had to take it off as he could not see. > > > >Matthew Davies failed to create eye holes in the cover ahead of the armed raid at a bank in Dunfermline, Fife last September. > > > >The 47-year-old, who threatened staff with a meat cleaver, left the branch with nearly £2,000 but was later arrested. > > > > ... > > > > A hearing at the High Court in Glasgow heard how Davies entered the Bank of Scotland branch and pulled the meat cleaver from the pillow case before putting the bedding item on to cover his face. > > > >But the failure to create eye holes meant he had to take it off. > > > > ... > > > > The court heard how a witness then followed Davies from the branch to his Dunfermline home. > > > >Police later found the cash and a pillow case "consistent with what he put over his head" at his house.
- Baby red panda dies from firework stress, says Edinburgh Zoowww.bbc.com Baby red panda dies from firework stress, says Edinburgh Zoo - BBC News
Three-month-old Roxie choked on her own vomit as fireworks were being set off across Edinburgh on Bonfire Night.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/19959879
> > Edinburgh Zoo's baby red panda has died from stress caused by fireworks on Bonfire Night, according to veterinary experts. > > > >The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) said three-month-old Roxie choked on her own vomit as pyrotechnics were being set off across the city. > > > >Roxie's mother Ginger also died unexpectedly five days earlier, and vets say they cannot rule out this also being linked to firework noise. > > > >The zoo is now joining with animal welfare charities and other campaigners in calling for tighter restrictions on fireworks.
- Orkney island gets broadband via water pipes in UK firstwww.bbc.co.uk Orkney island gets broadband via water pipes in UK first
Cables have been laid within existing water pipes, using the community-owned water system.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/19796821
> > Homes and businesses in the Orkney island of Papa Westray are now receiving their internet through the water network, in what is believed to be a UK first. > > > >Cables have been laid within existing water pipes, using the island's community-owned water system, enabling full fibre broadband to almost all properties. > > > >The innovation allows locals to do things they couldn’t previously, like attending medical appointments remotely and gaming. > > > >It’s now hoped it will attract people to live and work in the island and that water networks could be used to deliver broadband in other hard-to-reach areas. > > > > ... > > > > The internet connection initially reaches Papa Westray via a radio link from neighbouring isle of Westray, before being distributed across the island using the water pipes. > > > >The fibre cable is delivered through a second pipe housed within the drinking water network. > > > >The island became the first to use this approach successfully because the water system is owned by the community, making the work a more efficient and less disruptive alternative to conventional cable laying methods.
- Our priceless collection of 6,000 bricks needs a new homewww.bbc.co.uk Our priceless collection of 6,000 bricks needs a new home
Two Scots who own the biggest brick collection in the UK are looking for a museum to house all 6,000 of them.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/19498281
> > Two Scots who are believed to own the biggest brick collection in the UK are looking for a museum to house all 6,000 of them. > > > >Mark Cranston and Ian Suddaby have spent the last 15 years collecting thousands of Scottish-made bricks from all over the world. > > > >Part of the collection is stored in two large stables in Mr Cranston's garden in the Scottish Borders; the rest is stacked outside Mr Suddaby's house in East Lothian. > > > >The pair have an agreement that if something happens to one of them the other will make sure their priceless collection is safe. However, they have now decided they need to find a more secure and permanent home for them. > > > > Mr Suddaby, an archaeologist who lives in New Winton, told BBC Scotland News the bricks were an important record of Scotland's industrial past. > > > >"Brick-making is a very important part of Scotland's history because we do have some of the best quality fireclay in the world for making industrial bricks. > > > >"And this ties in with the industrial revolution and I think it should be promoted to a wider audience and that should be in some sort of a museum. > > > > ... > > > > Among their collection is a special fire brick that was salvaged from the SS Politician, after it ran aground in the Outer Hebrides in 1941 carrying 264,000 bottles of malt whisky - inspiring the novel and film Whisky Galore! > > > >There is also a brick that was retrieved from the execution block at Barlinnie prison in Glasgow, before it was demolished in the late 1990s. > > > >The men own a Scottish-made brick recovered from an old gold mine in Washington state, USA. Their oldest brick is a drainage tile from 1833. > > > >Their collection even out-numbers that of The Brickworks Museum - the UK's only brick museum - in Swanwick, Hampshire, which has about 3,500 bricks.
- Janey Godley obituary: Turning tragedy into comedywww.bbc.co.uk Janey Godley obituary: Turning tragedy into comedy
The comedian Janey Godley, who chronicled her struggles in unflinching detail, has died after a long illness.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/19492134
> > Janey Godley, who has died aged 63, turned an early life full of pain and tragedy into a successful comedy career. > > > >A tough upbringing in the east end of Glasgow was the thread which ran through her humour. Often angry, she specialised in wringing laughs out of the most unlikely material. > > > >Her act mirrored the city that shaped her: working-class, foul-mouthed, simultaneously angry and sentimental. She delivered her comic broadsides at high speed, jabbing her points home like a street-fighter. > > > >For her fans, she was one of them - and as her reputation grew so did her influence. The former pub landlady became close friends with Nicola Sturgeon, the former first minister, after her videos voicing-over the FM's Covid press conferences became a viral sensation.
- E-scooter with exercise bike attached seized by police in Invernesswww.inverness-courier.co.uk E-scooter with exercise bike attached seized by police in Inverness
Police officers have seized an electric scooter with an exercise bike welded to it after it was spotted being ridden around Inverness.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/19463362
> > Police officers have seized an electric scooter with an exercise bike welded to it after it was spotted being ridden around Inverness. > > > >In a social media post featuring an accompanying photograph, Police Scotland confirmed road policing officers spotted the adapted machine being ridden without relevant documents. > > > > The post also stated: "Yes, that is an exercise bike welded to it. Rider reported, vehicle seized." > > > >it is currently illegal to ride an e-scooter in a public place in Scotland.
- Unique Bronze Age hoard from Peebles saved for the nationwww.bbc.com Unique Bronze Age hoard from Peebles saved for the nation
Hundreds of items which had lain untouched for 3,000 years were found by a metal detectorist near Peebles.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/19074633
> > A hoard of Bronze Age artefacts unearthed by a metal detectorist in the Borders has been saved for the nation by National Museums Scotland. > > > >It has acquired the Peebles Hoard, which had lain undisturbed for 3,000 years before it was discovered in 2020. > > > >Efforts have now started to secure funding for continued research and conservation of the collection, which includes more than 500 pieces. > > > >National Museums Scotland (NMS) said the man who found it had received a five-figure sum. > > > > Senior curator Dr Matthew Knight said it shed new light on Bronze Age communities in Scotland. > > > >The hoard has been described as one of the most significant ever found in the country. > > > > ... > > > > NMS said it represented a "complex set of material, some of which has no archaeological parallel anywhere in western Europe". > > > >"This includes many unique artefacts, the use of which is yet to be discovered and could transform our understanding of life in Bronze Age Scotland," it added. > > > > ... > > > > The hoard was found in 2020 by metal-detectorist Mariusz Stepien, who alerted the Treasure Trove Unit. > > > >That allowed experts to coordinate a complex retrieval process which involved removing the hoard from the ground in a single block which was then CT scanned.
- Trailer for Midgies horror movie released ahead of filmingwww.bbc.com Trailer for Midgies horror movie released ahead of filming
It started out as a joke about mutant midges - but now a team hope to film the Scottish comedy horror next year.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/18439721
> > A teaser trailer has been released for a Scottish horror comedy film about mutant killer midges. > > > >Fort William-based author and screenwriter Barry Hutchison posted his idea for the movie on social media last summer as a joke. > > > >The response to the post has led to Midgies going into a pre-production phase with cast and locations being considered ahead of a plan to film next year. > > > >Glasgow-based film-maker Alessio Avezzano shot the short teaser this summer, with some of the filming done in Balloch Country Park, West Dunbartonshire. > > > > ... > > > > The teaser features two walkers coming across a frightened scientist, and a laboratory under attack from an unseen menace. > > > >Scottish companies including Motif Studios, which worked on visual effects for a Mad Max film, and digital entertainment firm Blazing Griffin were involved in making the three minute-long short film. > > > > ... > > > > He said the new teaser would form part of a package of materials which will be pitched at film production companies and potential funders. > > > >"We were hoping to be a little further on," said Hutchison. > > > >"Writer and actor strikes in the US ground film production globally to a halt in many ways. As a result of that we lost our US producer." > > > >Hutchison said the focus was now on making the film as much of a Scottish production as possible. > > > > ... > > > > Hutchison added: "We are looking to shoot next year in the summer, although we will be plagued by actual midges which could be problematic." > > Teaser trailer > > IMDb
- Neo-Nazi with 'armoury' in Falkirk home guilty of terror offenceswww.bbc.co.uk Neo-Nazi with 'armoury' in Falkirk home guilty of terror offences
Alan Edward discussed attacking an LBGT group in Falkirk and wrote racist and anti-Semitic posts.
> A neo-Nazi who amassed an "armoury" at his home in Stirlingshire has been found guilty of crimes including plans to commit an act of terrorism. > >Alan Edward, who had nearly 28,000 followers on social media, had discussed an attack on a LBGT group in Falkirk, the High Court in Stirling heard. > > He denied all the offences, but a jury found him guilty of charges under the Terrorism Act, racism, anti-Semitism, holocaust denial and breach of the peace. > > The trial heard that Edward wrote the "the quickest way to someone's heart is with a high power 7.62mm round". > >Police found weapons and equipment including a crossbow, 14 knives - some with Nazi and SS insignia, machetes, a tomahawk, a samurai sword, knuckledusters, a catapult, an extendable baton and a stun gun. > >They also found an air pistol, an SS-style skull mask, goggles and a respirator, fighting gloves with hardened knuckles, pellets, ball bearings, and hunting tips for crossbow arrows. > >Prosecutors said it amounted to "an armoury" of weapons. > >Edward also had an indoor cannabis plantation that he was growing to sell. > >The court heard he possessed and expressed "a set of ideals with a neo-Nazi outlook, incorporating notions of white supremacy, the notion of racial purity of whites, racism, anti-semitism, and hatred of homosexuals and transgender people".
- Alcohol deaths in Scotland reach highest level in 15 yearswww.heraldscotland.com Alcohol deaths in Scotland reach highest level in 15 years
The number of alcohol-specific deaths in Scotland remains the highest since 2008, according to figures published today by National Records of…
> The number of alcohol-specific deaths in Scotland remains the highest since 2008, according to figures published today by National Records of Scotland (NRS). > >In total, 1,277 deaths were attributed to alcohol-specific causes in 2023, an increase of one death from 2022. > >Male deaths continue to account for around two thirds of the deaths, increasing by 25, while female deaths decreased by 24. > >Phillipa Haxton, Head of Vital Events Statistics at NRS, said: “The rate of alcohol-specific deaths peaked in 2006 and then fell until 2012. Since then it has generally risen. > >“Those aged 45-64 and 65-74 continue to have the highest mortality rates. If we look at the average age at death, that has risen over time. The mortality rates for those aged 65 to 74, and 75 and over, were at their highest since we began recording these figures in 1994. As the same time for age 25-44 the mortality rate has been fairly stable over the last decade.” > > ... > > Scotland continued to have the highest alcohol-specific death rate of the UK constituent countries in 2022 (the latest year for which comparable data exists). > >However, the difference between Scotland and the other UK countries has narrowed over the last two decades. > >In 2001, the alcohol-specific mortality rate for Scotland was between 2.1 and 2.9 times as high as other UK countries. The rate for Scotland was between 1.2 and 1.6 times as high in 2022.
- Fossils of 385 million-year-old fish found in Inverness pavementwww.bbc.com Fossils of 385 million-year-old fish found in Inverness pavement
A National Trust for Scotland worker spotted the dark lumps in a paving stone in Inverness city centre.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/17058962
> >Thousands of people have walked over the remains of 385 million-year-old fish in the slab of Caithness flagstone outside Inverness Town House. > > > >James Ryan, who works at a National Trust for Scotland museum dedicated to Highland geologist Hugh Miller, spotted the fossils while on a wander. > > > >He said: "Whilst fossil fish are known in pavements in cities like Glasgow and Edinburgh, to my knowledge these fossils seem to have gone amiss." > > > > ... > > > > Mr Ryan said: "These fossils in the paving slab are the remains of ancient fish dating to around 385 million years ago - around 140 million years before the first dinosaur. > > > >“Caithness flagstone was laid down as sediment over a period of thousands of years at the bottom of a giant freshwater lake which stretched from the Moray coast up north to Orkney and Shetland." > > > >The fish date from the Devonian period, which are thought to include evidence of a fin. > > > >Mr Ryan said: "I brought them to the attention of a palaeontologist who studies these fossils and they were not aware of them. > > > >"The staff at Inverness museum likewise were not aware of these fossils either."
- Scottish man guilty of planned murder after visiting "Online Killers Market"www.glasgowlive.co.uk Man guilty of murder plot to kill Glasgow lawyer in 'gangland-style execution'
Martin Ready targeted Darren Harty and planned to have him gunned down in a "gangland-style execution". The 41-year-old had gone to a site called Online Killers Market to try and organise the hit on the Glasgow procurator fiscal
> A former lawyer using the name of a movie vigilante has been convicted of a dark web murder plot to kill a Scots prosecutor. > >Martin Ready targeted Darren Harty and planned to have him gunned down in a "gangland-style execution". > > The 41-year-old ex-commercial contracts solicitor had gone to a site called Online Killers Market to try and organise the hit on the Glasgow procurator fiscal. > > Ready used the alias Harry Brown - the same name as the main character in the 2009 Michael Caine film, who took it upon himself to get revenge for his only friend being murdered. > > Ready told jurors he effectively turned vigilante to try and wipe out crime from his hometown of Coatbridge in Lanarkshire. > > He alleged Mr Harty's family ran a bar which was used by criminals to launder dirty money. > >The murder would have then “shone a light” and sparked a police probe into other alleged dodgy dealings. > >But, Ready claimed he was delusional at the time and believed he was an "evil Jesus" figure. > > ... > > Jurors heard how Ready had gone on to the "dark" website, which ultimately turned out to be a front for a lucrative scam. > >A total of 0.2913 Bitcoin - valued at £5,071 - was transferred to the administrator of Online Killers Market as "payment" for the "assassination" of Mr Harty.
- UK Government will not fight Rosebank North Sea oil field legal challengewww.dailyrecord.co.uk UK Government will not fight Rosebank North Sea oil field legal challenge
Environmental groups Greenpeace and Uplift had brought legal claims to stop drilling in the untapped oil sites of Rosebank and Jackdaw.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/16793453
> > The UK Government will not fight a legal challenge against plans to develop two North Sea oil fields. > > > > Environmental groups Greenpeace and Uplift had brought legal claims to stop drilling in the untapped oil sites of Rosebank and Jackdaw. > > > > It comes after the Supreme Court ruled that the environmental impact of new oil fields should be considered when granting licences. > > > > The Government said its decision not to fight the challenge will "save the taxpayer money". > > > > Rosebank is 80 miles to the west of Shetland and contains around 300 million barrels of oil, making it the UK's last major undeveloped oil site. Jackdaw is 150 miles east of Aberdeen. > > > >The licences for the two fields have not been withdrawn. Energy giants Shell and Equinor - who are the developers hoping to drill at the sites - can still fight the challenge.
- Andy Murray 'legacy' tennis centre plan is scrappedwww.bbc.com Plans for an Andy Murray 'legacy' centre in Dunblane are scrapped
The proposed £20m facility at Park of Keir would have included tennis, padel and pickleball courts.
> Plans for a tennis centre near Andy Murray's hometown of Dunblane have been scrapped over planning issues and rising costs. > >The £20m project, led by his mother Judy Murray, aimed to build a community multi-sport facility at Park of Keir to mark the tennis legacy of the Murray family. > >The Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) pledged £5m to the project but it met opposition from campaigners who said it should not be built on green belt land. > >Judy Murray's charity, the Murray Play Foundation, said "with deep regret and sorrow" it would now not go ahead. > > A foundation spokesperson said: “Over 12 years, Judy has invested significant time and encountered indifference and opposition for much of that period. > >"However, she and her team persevered until several factors conspired to leave the project unviable in its current form. > > ... > > However, Green MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife Mark Ruskell was one of those opposing the project. > >He said: "I am proud the local community has stood up and protected Park of Keir. > >"At the heart of this project was an exclusive luxury housing development that would have been damaging to the local landscape and would have eroded ancient woodlands and crucial greenbelt land."
- Archaeologists uncover 2,000-year-old prehistoric settlement on the site of HMP Highland in Invernesswww.inverness-courier.co.uk Archaeologists uncover 2,000-year-old prehistoric settlement on the site of HMP Highland in Inverness
The excavation has led to the discovery of a roundhouse settlement relating to Iron Age and Bronze Age occupation of the site.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/16275173
> > Archaeologists have uncovered a 2,000-year-old prehistoric settlement as part of development work on the site of the new HMP Highland in Inverness. > > > >The excavation has led to the discovery of a roundhouse settlement relating to Iron Age and Bronze Age occupation of the site, which also contained earlier prehistoric remains dating back to at least 3,000 BC. > > > >A wide variety of prehistoric remains were found at the HMP Highland site, including occupation areas related to domestic and industrial activities and structural evidence from the roundhouses and other timber structures. > > > > The settlement consisted of 16 roundhouses that survived as circular alignments of postholes, where timber posts had once supported substantial hut buildings. Some of the house sites had been enclosed by palisade fencing to protect the interior.
- Scots council ‘Twinverclyde’ sees 10 sets of twins prepare to start schoolwww.dailyrecord.co.uk Scots council ‘Twinverclyde’ sees 10 sets of twins prepare to start school
Dubbed "Twinverclyde", this marks the fourth consecutive year that twin counts in Inverclyde has reached double figures.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/16162047
> > One Scottish council area will be seeing double this school term, as an astonishing ten sets of twins are due to start primary school. > > > >Dubbed "Twinverclyde", this marks the fourth consecutive year that twin counts in Inverclyde has reached double figures. > > > > The record for twins was set in 2015, when 19 pairs began schools in the area. In the last 12 years, 10 of them saw more than 10 sets of twins begin school. > > > > ... > > > > The class of 2024 will take the Inverclyde twin count to 157 sets since 2013, which is an average of 13 sets each year.
- ‘Seagull insurance’ £1 added to bill as birds steal food from St Andrews’ Cheesy Toast Shack
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/16138208
> > A sandwich business in St Andrews looking to bring in a £1 'seagull insurance' on all purchases - as the birds steal food from up to 30 customers a day. > > > >The owners of the Cheesy Toast Shack say they currently give free replacements to dozens of customers each day - due to seagulls swooping in, attacking people and stealing their newly-purchased food. > > > >The business says this costs them hundreds of pounds a day - and are 'desperate' for a solution. The owners are now 'seriously considering' adding the gull insurance on every purchase to try to cover the losses caused by the winged menaces. > > > > ... > > > > Kate and her husband, Sam, 39, have made various attempts to deter the gulls. From playing birds of prey noises, to buying a bird of prey kite on Amazon - the couple say they have exhausted almost every option, 'apart from shooting them'. > > > >Kate admitted: "The bird noises were not the vibe we ideally wanted down at the beach, and the bird kite we bought didn't do anything - people will sit under them and the gulls will still keep attacking, we have been lost for what else we can do."
- The Scottish horror film finally released 17 years after filmingwww.bbc.com The Scottish horror film finally released 17 years after filming - BBC News
The Bench is a grisly slasher story where a group of friends take a trip to a remote cabin.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/15945465
> > A Scottish horror film has finally been released - 17 years after filming first got under way. > > > >The Bench is a grisly slasher where a group of friends take a trip to a remote cabin in Renfrewshire, only to disappear one by one. > > > >However, the production was struck by a host of difficulties, from badly misjudging the Scottish weather's suitability for filming to money running out half way through. > > > >Writer and director Sean Wilkie told BBC Scotland News that he was a mixture of being "pleased, nervous and relieved" now that The Bench can be seen by the public. > > > > ... > > > > Filming began in Lochwinnoch in 2007, using a cabin owned by friends of the film's director of photography. > > > >For indoor filming, the Caves venue in Edinburgh was used, with Drumpellier Country Park used for occasional outdoor shots. > > > >The film has a cast that includes Two Doors Down star Joy McAvoy and Matt McClure from American horror show Penny Dreadful. > > > > "The first two weeks on location were fine but we couldn’t keep that up," reflects Sean. > > > >"I wish we’d have someone following us all the way though, as it would have made some documentary. Due to the weather and other things we couldn’t finish filming as planned, so we were coming back on odd weekends here and there to complete it." > > > > That was only the start of the film's issues. Initial financing had fallen through at an early stage, but Sean decided to "charge ahead" anyway, something he admits now was "probably a mistake." > > > >The film's original editor departed, so Sean took on that role as well, and by the time reshoots were needed many of the cast and crew were working on other projects.
- Corpse shortage due to rise in Scottish medical studentswww.bbc.co.uk Corpse shortage due to rise in Scottish medical students - report
The shortage has led to colleges cancelling surgical training, according to an inspection report.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/15571037
> > A rise in the number of students studying medicine in Scotland has resulted in a shortage of cadavers, according to a report. > > > >Prof Gordon Findlater, who is HM Inspector of Anatomy for Scotland, found that surgical colleges were having to cancel university training courses because the demand for bodies was so high. > > > >In his 2023-24 report, external to government ministers, he noted that the University of Edinburgh in particular had a "serious problem" in meeting this demand. > > > >According to the Scotland Deanery, which is responsible for training doctors, there were 5,930 medical students in the 2023-24 academic year. > > > >This was up from 5,645 the year before, external and up from 3,928 in 2015-16.
- Willy Wonka And The Chocolate Factory stars join Edinburgh Fringe parody based on doomed Glasgow eventnews.sky.com Willy Wonka And The Chocolate Factory stars join Edinburgh Fringe parody based on doomed Glasgow event
Julie Dawn Cole and Paris Themmen, who played Veruca Salt and Mike Teevee in the 1971 film, will co-narrate the stage reading of Willy's Candy Spectacular: A Musical Parody at Edinburgh Fringe.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/14736241
> > Two of the original stars of the hit film Willy Wonka And The Chocolate Factory will appear at the Edinburgh Fringe as part of a musical parody based on a Glasgow event that left parents fuming and children in tears. > > > >Julie Dawn Cole and Paris Themmen, who played Veruca Salt and Mike Teevee in the 1971 movie starring Gene Wilder, will co-narrate the stage reading of Willy's Candy Spectacular: A Musical Parody. > > > >The show is based on the doomed Willy's Chocolate Experience, which sparked headlines across the globe after being advertised as a "chocolate fantasy" where "dreams become reality" - but instead turned out to be a sparsely decorated warehouse where children were limited to a couple of sweets and a quarter of a can of limeade. > > > > ... > > > > The cast of the parody was unveiled on Monday afternoon, with a bill that also includes Shelley Regner (Pitch Perfect series), Eric Petersen (Shrek The Musical), Nicole Greenwood (In Plain Sight), Wilkie Ferguson (Motown: The Musical), Cassandra Parker (Cabaret) and musicians Monica Evans and Chris Villain. > > > >The show, created by US producer Richard Kraft and directed by Andy Fickman, will run at the Pleasance King Dome from 9-26 August.
- 'The Viking gene survey helped find my cancer'www.bbc.co.uk 'The Viking gene survey helped find my cancer'
A Shetland woman has been telling how a search for a gene variant alerted her to her breast cancer diagnosis.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/13015132
> > A Shetland woman has been telling how a search for a gene variant alerted her to her breast cancer diagnosis. > > > > Christine Glaser, from Whalsay, had been a participant in Viking Genes, a research project that looked at the genetic make up of people from the Orkney and Shetland Islands. > > > > Since those tests were taken, the understanding of the significance of certain genes has improved and last year geneticists sought special permissions to go back to those who took part in the study to ask if they wanted to know their results. > > > > Although she had lost a sister to ovarian cancer, the family was unaware many of them carried a BRCA 2 gene variant that increased their risk of breast, ovarian and prostate cancer. > > > > Christine’s cancer was caught early and successfully treated.
- Stories from Scotland's oldest Highland regiment shared in new comic booknews.stv.tv Stories from Scotland's oldest Highland regiment shared in new comic book
Pupils have created a colourful 12-page comic book about The Black Watch regiment.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/12822375
> > Secondary school pupils have created a comic which shares some of the unique historical stories of Scotland’s oldest Highland regiment. > > > > For the past three months, a group of 30 Perth Grammar School pupils have been putting pen to paper and bringing history to life, detailing seven stories from within the city’s Black Watch Castle and Museum. > > > > The finished product is a colourful 12-page comic book, which will be made available to visitors through the summer holidays. > > > > First year pupil Holly Harrold told STV News: “We started off by getting a sheet of questions, and we went through them on our phones and laptops and researched (the story). > > > > “Then we sketched out a base idea on some plain paper, then wrote what we were going to say about it.” > > > > ... > > > > The collaboration between the museum, school and developing the young workforce has been described as “groundbreaking”. > > > > Funded by Museum Galleries Scotland, the partnership is aimed at inspiring the next generation of heritage enthusiasts.
- Scotland’s remote land of bogs and bugs in line for world heritage statuswww.theguardian.com Scotland’s remote land of bogs and bugs in line for world heritage status
A decision from Unesco on giving the peat-rich Flow Country the same standing as the Great Barrier Reef is just weeks away
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/12796407
> > It is a land of mire, mist and midges that could soon be awarded a special status among the planet’s wild habitats. In a few weeks, Unesco is set to announce its decision on an application to allow the Flow Country in north Scotland to become a world heritage site. > > > > Such a designation is only given to places of special cultural, historical or scientific significance and would put this remote region of perpetual dampness on the same standing as the Great Barrier Reef, the Grand Canyon and the Pyramids. > > > > The Flow Country straddles Caithness and Sutherland in the most northerly part of the British Isles and is the largest area of blanket bog in the world. Covering 4,000 sq km, it is also home to a remarkable range of wildlife that includes the black-throated diver, golden plover, greenshank, golden eagle, merlin and short-eared owl, as well as otters and water voles.
- Study indicates that Firth promontory could be an ancient crannogwww.heritagedaily.com Study indicates that Firth promontory could be an ancient crannog
A study by students from the University of the Highlands and Islands has revealed that a promontory in the Loch of Wasdale in Firth, Orkney, could be the remains of an ancient crannog.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/12348267
> > A study by students from the University of the Highlands and Islands has revealed that a promontory in the Loch of Wasdale in Firth, Orkney, could be the remains of an ancient crannog. > > > > A crannog is a partially or entirely artificial island, typically built in lakes and estuarine waters of Scotland from the prehistoric period onward > > > > Despite significant variations in methodology, most crannogs on mainland Scotland were built by driving timber piles into the loch bed and filling the interior with peat, brush, stones, or timber to create a solid foundation. > > > > In largely treeless regions like the Western Isles, these island dwellings utilised a diverse mix of natural, artificially enlarged, or entirely artificial islets. > > > > The discovery was made by students from the UHI Archaeology Institute, who were conducting test-pitting on a promontory at the northern end of the Loch of Wasdale. > > > > According to a press statement by UHI: “It appears as an islet on the 1882 Ordnance Survey map. Little is known about the site, but the fact the shoreside edges appear to show the remains of walling led to the suggestion it may be a crannog.” > > > > ... > > > > The test-pitting revealed large quantities of cairn-like rubble, in addition to more structural remains or a stone surface, indicating that the entire promontory/islet is artificial. > > > > Martin Carruthers, a lecturer at UHI, said: “A structure made up of some very large masonry seems to lurk at the heart of the cairn makeup. Constructing this ‘monument’ must have been a very substantial undertaking.” > > > > “In terms of artefacts, apart from some later post-medieval glazed pottery, we recovered a single worked flint, probably a ‘thumbnail’ scraper, which is most likely later Neolithic in date,” added Carruthers.
- Antifa International - Kirkcaldy reportback!antifainternational.tumblr.com Antifa International - Kirkcaldy reportback!
Kirkcaldy reportback! On Saturday the 18th of May 2024 a group of antifascist members of the community disrupted an event organised by Women Won’t Wheesht in Kirkcaldy. These people were workers, locals and members of the public. They were transgender, cisgender, gay and straight. They were unaf...
- How did Scottish wrestler Joe Hendry become a chart topper?www.bbc.co.uk How did Scottish wrestler Joe Hendry become a chart topper?
Wrestler Joe Hendry has seen his entrance music shoot to number four in the charts following fan support.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/11681223
> > Do you believe in Joe Hendry? From a wrestler's entrance music to beating artists like Taylor Swift, Sabrina Carpenter and Dasha, it seems yes, the public do believe in Joe Hendry. > > > > The Scottish professional wrestler saw his song 'I Believe in Joe Hendry' reach number four in the official charts, in what he describes as a "series of fortunate random events". > > > > Now the 36-year-old from Edinburgh is considering his next move - whether projecting his face on the Las Vegas Sphere or writing a song for the first minister of Scotland. > > > > Hendry, who is signed to Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), was a musician for a decade before becoming a wrestler. > > > > ... > > > > Hendry not only has the support of the wrestling community, his family have his back too. > > > > Drew Hendry, the SNP MP for Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey, is his uncle. > > > > He said: "It’s been cracking to see the wrestling community and the wider public get behind Joe, he’s absolutely deserving of the top spot. > > > > "I’ve always believed in him." > > > > Joe has even offered his musical services to the new first minister. > > > > "If John Swinney had given me enough notice, we could have done 'I Believe in John Swinney' for him, that would have been no problem," he said. > > The song.
- WWE fans slam 'extortionate' prices for Scottish clashwww.bbc.com WWE fans slam 'extortionate' prices for Scottish clash
The event at Glasgow's OVO Hydro costs at least £300, with premium tickets more than £2,000.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/11679178
> > Wrestling fans have hit out at "extortionate" ticket prices for WWE's first ever Scottish pay-per-view show, Clash at the Castle. > > > > The "premium live event" comes to Glasgow's OVO Hydro venue on 15 June. > > > > The cheapest tickets cost £300, with premium tickets more than £2,000. > > > > ... > > > > A WWE spokesperson told BBC Scotland News that some tickets had been on sale at lower price point across two nights at the venue. > > > > However, they declined to give details of how many of these tickets were available or how many had sold. > > > > Journalist Ross Brady, who has followed WWE to events in London, Cardiff and New Orleans, said he was not able to find a ticket for less than £300. > > > > He said: "The first prices that went up were for combo tickets of around £330, so I waited for the event on the Saturday and it was £303.50 for just the single ticket.
- What is your favorite places to visit in Scotland?
My wife and I are looking to have a vacation in Scotland and we're trying to figure out what we should plan. We are American but don't care for tourists traveling. I love to feel a more realistic local experience. My favorite memories of our Ireland trip are small town pubs and rural scenic places. The museums like the one in Trinity College was good too. I enjoyed walking the backstreets of Dublin and finding the Stags Head pub.
Thank you for any advice.
- Time Team detectives make Iron Age discovery behind Largswww.largsandmillportnews.com Time Team detectives scoop could be thousands of years old
Archaeological detectives believe they have discovered a major discovery in the back hills dating back to the iron age.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/11208456
> > The Inverclyde Time Teamers, say they have found a previously unrecorded prehistoric hut circle, dating from between 1200BC and 500AD on the moors, just under a mile north east of Haylie viewpoint > > > > Two of the detectives, Stephen McAllister and Allan Kinniburgh, were surveying the piece of land during Sunday afternoon after aerial photographs and computerised mapping and scanning equipment indicated it was a possible hotspot. > > > > Stephen said: “Our target presented as circular structure with a very well defined raised outline, approximately 10 metres across. > > > > "We thought it might have been a sheep ree, remnants of an Iron Age defensive dun or a prehistoric enclosure. > > > > “Having had a closer inspection, and comparing this with similar structures we have visited or discovered, we have a very high level of confidence in announcing this as something that looks like a previously unrecorded prehistoric dwelling or hut circle find.
- Beltane Fire Festival: Raving the night away in celebration of May Day and the start of summerwww.scotsman.com Beltane Fire Festival: Raving the night away in celebration of May Day and the start of summer
Beltane is held each year on the last day of April
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/11120995
> > Bonfires, blazing torches, body-painted dancers, drummers, jugglers, musicians, fire-eaters, ancient Celtic rituals and a spectacular backdrop. > > > > No, it’s not a scene from cult film The Wicker Man. > > > > It’s what you can expect at the annual Beltane Fire Festival taking place in Edinburgh capital this week. > > > > Beltane is held each year on the last day of April, continuing overnight into May Day, to mark the arrival of summer and celebrate new life and fertility. > > > > The event, which first began in 1988 as a protest against rave laws and a way to reclaim green spaces, includes modern interpretations of rituals and customs with roots dating back to the Iron Age. And fire. Lots of fire. > > > > The May Queen, as her name implies, presides over the show, guiding a procession of drummers and performers around the city’s landmark Calton Hill and acting out healing rites. > > > > During her journey she interacts with the Green Man in ceremonies symbolising the birth of summer.
- Solar farm community benefit would be just a tenth of windfarm cashnews.stv.tv Solar farm community benefit would be just a tenth of windfarm cash
Objectors had slammed the plans for 100,000 solar panels claiming it would damage the protected ecology of the area.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/10167016
> > Proposals for a massive solar farm near Coylton are a step closer after South Ayrshire Council offered no objection to the plan. > > > > Objectors had slammed the plans for 100,000 solar panels, which will generate 85 megawatts of electricity and fill an area the equivalent of 15 football pitches, claiming it would damage the protected ecology of the area close to Martnaham Loch. > > > > But councillors on the Regulatory Panel were concerned that the amount of cash being proposed for community benefit was just a tenth of that agreed with wind farms in the area. > > > > The Scottish Government’s Energy Consent Unit makes the final decision on the application, with the council a statutory consultee. > > > > Independent councillor Alec Clark asked an agent for the applicant Locogen for the amount of community money being put up by the company for each megawatt of electricity generated. > > > > He was told that, over the 40 year operation of the facility, £500 would be given per megawatt. This totals around £22,500 each year. > > > > Cllr Clark was not impressed by the figures and said: “I would suggest that that is a very low level of community benefit. I am quite acquainted with the many wind farms we have around South Ayrshire, especially in the Carrick district, and the minimum community benefit there is £5000 per megawatt.”
- JK Rowling in ‘arrest me’ challenge over Scottish hate crime lawwww.bbc.com JK Rowling in ‘arrest me’ challenge over Scottish hate crime law
The Harry Potter author described several transgender women as men in a series of social media posts.
> JK Rowling has challenged Scotland's new hate crime law in a series of social media posts - inviting police to arrest her if they believe she has committed an offence. > > The Harry Potter author, who lives in Edinburgh, described several transgender women as men, including convicted prisoners, trans activists and other public figures. > > She said "freedom of speech and belief" was at an end if accurate description of biological sex was outlawed. > > Earlier, Scotland's first minister Humza Yousaf said the new law would deal with a "rising tide of hatred".
- Austrian incest monster Josef Fritzl wants to move to the Highlands and 'roam free'www.pressandjournal.co.uk Austrian incest monster Josef Fritzl wants to move to the Highlands and 'roam free'
The 88-year-old's lawyer told The P&J that her client "will get out of prison - but it will take time".
> According to reports in The Scottish Sun, Fritzl has said that if does get out, he wants to move to the Highlands because of its “spectacular scenery”. > > He got the idea after watching a documentary about Shakespeare in his high-security prison. > > He said: “I was filled with this wonderful, uplifting feeling, this sense of inspiration for this fantastic culture. > > “And it was then I knew that when I get released, it is not Austria I want to stay, rather I want to emigrate to the UK. > > “Above all I want to roam free on the wild Highlands of Scotland.”
- Hiker films ‘panther’ roaming field in Scotlandwww.independent.co.uk Hiker films ‘panther’ roaming field in Scotland
Footage captures the moment a “hybrid panther” is seen stalking through the Scottish countryside. At least, that is according to Gordon Welsh, 50, who was walking along a road near Blackdog, Aberdeenshire, when he spotted the animal. Mr Welsh, from Aberdeen, says the beast spotted was the size of a ...
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/4742834
> > Footage captures the moment a “hybrid panther” is seen stalking through the Scottish countryside. > > > > At least, that is according to Gordon Welsh, 50, who was walking along a road near Blackdog, Aberdeenshire, when he spotted the animal. > > > > Mr Welsh, from Aberdeen, says the beast spotted was the size of a greyhound – if not bigger – and was “solid looking”. > > > > He is one of Britain’s big cat believers, who claim that the UK has its own wild population of large felids – like panthers and pumas. > > > > “From the way it was moving, the tail size and that, it was slightly like a panther, but it could be a crossbreed,” Mr Welsh said of the animal.
- Scotland's Oldest Tartan Rose From a Peat Bogwww.atlasobscura.com Scotland's Oldest Tartan Rose From a Peat Bog
The 400-year-old fabric extends the iconic pattern's history in Scotland by over a century.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/4711678
> > SOMETIME AROUND THE 1980S, MAYBE, a rough, yellow-tinged piece of fabric, slightly larger than a placemat, was pulled from a peat bog in Glen Affric, Scotland. The cloth is a swatch of tartan, the fabric associated with Scottish kilts, featuring the telltale interlocked stripes of various sizes and colors. (The term also applies to the pattern, which many know as plaid. But not all plaids are tartan, and to add to the confusion, in Scotland a plaid is a long piece of tartan that is pleated and wrapped around the body.) How and when this fabric, now known as the Glen Affric tartan, found its way into the peat is a bit of a mystery, and now, researchers are starting to unravel its checkered past, one that places it in a unique position in Scottish cultural and sartorial history. > > > > ... > > > > While who wore it is uncertain, how it ended up in the bog—where anoxic conditions preserved it—is a bigger mystery. “The really intriguing question, apart from who it belonged to, was what were the circumstances that led to it? It wasn’t just dropped,” he says. “It’s obviously a deliberate act. Was it sacrificial? Was it murder? Was it ceremonial? All of those things are open to question because there are no other elements associated with the find that can help us with that.”
- 'Killer clown' stalking Scots village taunts cops to catch him in creepy video
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/3437128
> > A 'killer clown' has scoffed at police - saying they’ll never catch him. The creepy character, wearing a Pennywise-style outfit - complete with scary mask and make-up - has been leaving red balloons dotted around the village of Skelmorlie in North Ayrshire in recent weeks.
- Wildcats thriving in Scottish Highlands conservation projectwww.bbc.co.uk Wildcats thriving in Scottish Highlands conservation project
Nineteen cats were released into the wild in the summer at Cairngorms National Park in the Highlands.
- Coin hoard linked to clan chief killed in Glencoe Massacre found under fireplace
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/3178946
> > A hoard of coins believed to have belonged to a Highland clan chief who was murdered in the Glencoe Massacre were discovered hidden under a fireplace during an archaeological dig. > > > > The 17th century hoard of 36 coins included international currency, and was hidden beneath the remains of a grand stone fireplace at a site which was believed to have been a hunting lodge or feasting hall. > > > > The site was associated with Alasdair Ruadh “MacIain” MacDonald of Glencoe, clan chief from 1646-1692, who was a victim of the Glencoe Massacre along with members of his family. > > > > ... > > > > Artefacts discovered at “the summerhouse of MacIain”, included European pottery, and silver and bronze coins, dating from the 1500s to 1680s, during a University of Glasgow dig in August. > > > > ... > > > > Historians believe whoever buried the coins may have been massacred as they did not return for them.
- Farmed Salmon ‘Plagued’ With Sea Lice And Micro-Jellyfish During Summer Heatwaveplantbasednews.org Farmed Salmon 'Plagued' With Sea Lice And Jellyfish During Summer Heatwave
Vegan charity Viva! filmed inside five Scottish salmon farms and found all were infested with sea lice, while water temperatures soared.
- ‘Insulting’: Beano fans pour scorn on UK government advertwww.theguardian.com ‘Insulting’: Beano fans pour scorn on UK government advert
Anger at ‘created in London’ tagline on poster of Dennis the Menace, who was made by a cartoonist in Dundee
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/2723672
> > Millar was not alone in expressing derision at the advert, part of the “Made in the UK, sold to the world” campaign run by the Department for Business and Trade. > > > > It depicts Dennis and Gnasher alongside the headline “Created in London. Unleashed in more than 100 countries” and in smaller print clarifies that it is referring to the animated television series produced from DC Thomson’s Fleet Street office. > > > > But this distinction did not lessen the ire of many Beano fans, who on X described the advert variously as “insulting”, “disrespectful” and “predictable”. > > > > Chris Law, the Scottish National party MP for Dundee West, called the campaign “cultural appropriation” and “utter garbage”. “Perhaps before the UK government start appropriating local Dundee created characters in the Beano they ought to do a bit of basic research,” he said.