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Victoria & Albert's Highland Fling
PROGRAMME 2 VICTORIA & ALBERT’S HIGHLAND FLING Introduction The Highlands are renowned throughout the world as a symbol of Scottish identity and we’re about to find out why. In this four-day walk we’re starting out at Pitlochry – gateway to the Cairngorms National Park – on a mountainous hike to the Queen’s residence at Balmoral. Until the 19th century, this area was seen by many as a mysterious and dangerous land. Populated by kilt-wearing barbarians, it was to be avoided by outsiders. We’re going to discover how all that changed, thanks in large part to an unpopular German prince and his besotted queen. .Walking Through History Day 1. Day 1 takes us through the Killiecrankie Pass, a battlefield of rebellious pre-Victorian Scotland. Then it’s on to an unprecedented royal visit at Blair Castle. Pitlochry to Blair Atholl, via the Killiecrankie Pass and Blair Castle. Distance: 12 miles Day 2. Things get a little more rugged with an epic hike through Glen Tilt and up Carn a’Chlamain. Then it’s on to Mar Lodge estate where we’ll discover how the Clearances made this one of the emptiest landscapes in Europe, and a playground for the rich. Blair Atholl to Mar Lodge, via Glen Tilt and Carn a’Chlamain. Distance: 23 miles Day 3. Into Royal Deeside, we get a taste of the Highland Games at Braemar, before reaching the tartan palace Albert built for his queen at Balmoral. Mar Lodge to Crathie, via Braemar and Balmoral Castle Distance: 20 miles Day 4. On our final day we explore the Balmoral estate. -
Place-Names of the Cairngorms National Park
Place-Names of the Cairngorms National Park Place-Names in the Cairngorms This leaflet provides an introduction to the background, meanings and pronunciation of a selection of the place-names in the Cairngorms National Park including some of the settlements, hills, woodlands, rivers and lochs in the Angus Glens, Strathdon, Deeside, Glen Avon, Glen Livet, Badenoch and Strathspey. Place-names give us some insight into the culture, history, environment and wildlife of the Park. They were used to help identify natural and built landscape features and also to commemorate events and people. The names on today’s maps, as well as describing landscape features, remind us of some of the associated local folklore. For example, according to local tradition, the River Avon (Aan): Uisge Athfhinn – Water of the Very Bright One – is said to be named after Athfhinn, the wife of Fionn (the legendary Celtic warrior) who supposedly drowned while trying to cross this river. The name ‘Cairngorms’ was first coined by non-Gaelic speaking visitors around 200 years ago to refer collectively to the range of mountains that lie between Strathspey and Deeside. Some local people still call these mountains by their original Gaelic name – Am Monadh Ruadh or ‘The Russet- coloured Mountain Range’.These mountains form the heart of the Cairngorms National Park – Pàirc Nàiseanta a’ Mhonaidh Ruaidh. Invercauld Bridge over the River Dee Linguistic Heritage Some of the earliest place-names derive from the languages spoken by the Picts, who ruled large areas of Scotland north of the Forth at one time. The principal language spoken amongst the Picts seems to have been a ‘P-Celtic’ one (related to Welsh, Cornish, Breton and Gaulish). -
A Panoramic View of the Park Understanding of the Park’S Lay-Out and Panoramic View of the Park from the East © CNPA Geography As Well As Its Communities
Residents in A school Hundreds of three communities playground has people have signed are being asked been transformed up for two new how their villages into a wildlife training schemes could build on their wonderland thanks launched by the past successes. to a CNPA grant. Park Authority. PAGE 3 PAGE 5 PAGE 7 Issue ten • Winter • 2007/08 A panoramic view of the Park understanding of the Park’s lay-out and Panoramic view of the Park from the east © CNPA geography as well as its communities. Once completed, they will be placed at various entry points around the Park, highlighting to visitors how vast and varied the area is. The panoramas will also be used as promotional material in a variety of ways and formats. For example, at tourist information centres, visitor attractions and by community groups. The first panorama, from the east, has already been produced and will be erected at Dinnet. Mr Vielkind is considered to be at the forefront of his field and is celebrated around the world due to the quality of his work. It will take him around two months to complete each image as he does them by hand. PEOPLE entering the panoramic artist, to produce five The paintings form part of the Entry Cairngorms National Park will be panoramic views of the Park. It will be Point project, which has seen granite markers, featuring the National Park greeted with an interesting sight the first British national park to have such images. brand already placed at entry points – a panoramic view of the Park. -
CNPA.Paper.763.Compl
Sharing the stories of the Cairngorms National Park A guide to interpreting the area’s distinct character and coherent identity …a fresh and original approach… Foreword – by Sam Ham Establishment of National Parks throughout the world has mainly involved drawing lines around pristine lands and setting them ‘aside,’ to be forever protected in their natural state, spared both from cultivation and the influences of urbanisation. This has been comparatively easy in countries such as the USA which entered the National Parks business early in its history, when it had the luxury of massive tracts of relatively unmodified land along with enormous agricultural regions to grow its food and take care of the everyday economic needs of people. Such has also been the experience of other developed countries such as Canada, New Zealand, and Australia where the benefits of nature conservation were easier to balance against the economic opportunities ‘lost’ to protection, and sometimes the displacement of indigenous populations. But the experience of these countries is not the norm in places where human resource exploitation has been ongoing for many centuries and where drawing lines around ‘undeveloped’ lands of any significant size is virtually impossible. Indeed, if National Parks are to be established in most of today’s world, they cannot be set aside; rather they must be set within the human-modified landscape. Scots, arguably more so than any other people, have seized upon this idea and have led the rest of the world into a new and enlightened way of understanding the role of National Parks in contemporary society. -
NA-ABS-049: Report to Scottish Ministers
Planning and Environmental Appeals Division Report to the Scottish Ministers TOWN AND COUNTRY PLANNING (SCOTLAND) ACT 1997 Report by Amanda Chisholm, a reporter appointed by the Scottish Ministers Case reference: NA-ABS-049 Site Address: Site at Prony Steading, Glengairn, Ballater, Aberdeenshire Application for planning permission reference APP/2019/2108 dated 6 September 2019, called-in by notice dated 17 April 2020 The development proposed: conversion of part of steading to form dwelling house Date of unaccompanied site visit: 21 July 2020 Date of this report and recommendation: 20 October 2020 Planning and Environmental Appeals Division 4 The Courtyard, Callendar Business Park, Falkirk, FK1 1XR www.gov.scot/policies/planning-environmental-appeals CONTENTS Page Summary Report 2 Preamble 6 Chapters 1. Background 7 2. Planning policy and guidance 9 3. The cases for the parties 13 4. Conclusions and recommendations 24 Appendices Appendix 1: List of documents 34 Appendix 2: Suggested planning conditions and informatives 36 Abbreviations AOD Above Ordnance Datum m3/sec cubic metres per second SAC Special Area of Conservation SEPA Scottish Environment Protection Agency SuDS Sustainable Drainage System NA-ABS-049 Report 1 Planning and Environmental Appeals Division Summary of Report into Called-In Planning Application The conversion of part of an agricultural steading to form a dwelling house at Prony Steading, Glengairn, Ballater, Aberdeenshire Case reference NA-ABS-049 Case type Called-in application for planning permission Reporter -
20 Years of Action for Biodiversity in North East Scotland Contents
20 Years of Action for Biodiversity in North East Scotland Contents The North East Scotland Biodiversity Partnership is a shining example of how collective working can facilitate on the ground conservation through active 1.3 million wildlife records and counting 1 engagement with local authorities, agencies, community groups, volunteers and Capercaillie: monitoring and conservation in North East Scotland 2 academics. As one of the first local biodiversity action partnerships in Scotland, its achievements in protecting threatened habitats and species over the last two Community moss conservation and woodland creation 3 decades is something to be proud of. The 20 articles highlighted here capture Community-led action to tackle invasive American Mink 4 the full spectrum of biodiversity work in the region, including habitat creation Drummuir 21: Unlocking the countryside 5 and restoration, species re-introduction, alien eradication, as well as community engagement, education and general awareness-raising. East Tullos Burn - Nature in the heart of the city 6 Halting the Invasion - Deveron Biosecurity Project 7 Much of the success in enhancing our rural and urban environments in North East Scotland reflects the commitment of key individuals, with a ‘can- Hope for Corn Buntings; Farmland Bird Lifeline 8 do-attitude’ and willingness to engage, widely. Their passion for nature, Local Nature Conservation Sites 9 determination to make a difference on the ground, and above all, stimulate Mapping the breeding birds of North-East Scotland 10 a new generation of enthusiasts, is the most valuable asset available to us. Without these dedicated individuals our lives will not be so enriched. Meeting the (wild) neighbours 11 OPAL - training the citizen scientists of the future 12 The strengths of our local biodiversity partnership make me confident that over the next 20 years there will be even more inspirational action for biodiversity in Red Moss of Netherley - restoring a threatened habitat 13 North East Scotland. -
Mcmorran, Robert
UHI Thesis - pdf download summary Constraints and opportunities for integrated multifunctional forest management in the Cairngorms region of Scotland McMorran, Robert DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (AWARDED BY OU/ABERDEEN) Award date: 2008 Awarding institution: The Open University Link URL to thesis in UHI Research Database General rights and useage policy Copyright,IP and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the UHI Research Database are retained by the author, users must recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. This copy has been supplied on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement, or without prior permission from the author. Users may download and print one copy of any thesis from the UHI Research Database for the not-for-profit purpose of private study or research on the condition that: 1) The full text is not changed in any way 2) If citing, a bibliographic link is made to the metadata record on the the UHI Research Database 3) You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain 4) You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the UHI Research Database Take down policy If you believe that any data within this document represents a breach of copyright, confidence or data protection please contact us at [email protected] providing details; we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 26. Sep. 2021 CONSTRAINTS AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR INTEGRATED MULTIFUNCTIONAL FOREST MANAGEMENT IN THE CAIRNGORMS REGION OF SCOTLAND A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Robert Benjamin Francis Mc Morran, BSc, MSc. -
Statement of Importance: Dee Valley Special Landscape Area
Statement of Importance: Dee Valley Special Landscape Area Location and Boundaries This SLA includes the valley of the River Dee from Dinnet in the west to Peterculter in the east. It includes the river and associated landscapes, taking in the adjoining hills, and covers the settings of riverside towns such as Aboyne and Banchory. The boundary has been drawn to include landscapes which help to frame the river and its setting. The River Dee continues east through the administrative area of Aberdeen City to reach the North Sea. Designation identifies the strong identity of the Dee Valley, and its scenic qualities which are a combination of the river, with wooded valley sides rising to moorland hills, and occasional limestone outcrops. The importance of the Dee Valley for tourism, with its numerous visitor attractions and facilities including castles and estates that contribute to built heritage. The naturalness of the Dee Valley, with its river and broadleaf woodland is also recognised. The River Dee from the B974 at Banchory (Source: LUC) Designation Statement The Dee is one of Aberdeenshire’s major rivers, and the Dee Valley has a strong sense of place. It comprises an intact farmed valley landscape, with wooded sides rising to moorland hills. The Mounth rises to the south and the Grampian Outliers to the north. The valley has a strong sense of naturalness, created by the combination of river and broadleaf woodland. The ecological value of the river, its tributaries and its surroundings contributes to the landscape character, as well as being recognised as nationally and internationally important for nature conservation. -
Old Caledonian Pinewood by Dunlop, Balharry and Watson, July 2013
Old Caledonian Pinewood by Dunlop, Balharry and Watson, July 2013 Note by Ramblers Scotland This paper has been commissioned by Ramblers Scotland because of increasing concern over the future of native pinewoods in the Cairngorms National Park. These pinewoods are remnants of the ancient woodlands of Scotland, generally known as the Old Caledonian Pinewood, and found in various parts of the Highlands. They are directly descended, over thousands of years, from the original forest cover that was established after the last Ice Age. The largest and most natural tracts are found in the Cairngorms National Park to the east, north and west of the central massif. The OCP is of enormous biological, historical and conservation value. A walk through these ancient woodlands provides an opportunity to experience the forest ecosystem in as natural a condition as is possible in the UK. Protecting these ancient remnants and allowing them to flourish and expand into surrounding areas should be a top environmental priority for Scotland. But in too many places the OCP is not in a sound ecological state and is not expanding in the way that it can. Foremost amongst the concerns are proposals by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds to expand the OCP in the northern Cairngorms through planting. While this would establish new areas of native woodland it would not meet the essential criterion that defines the OCP - tracts of native pinewood, dominated by Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris), that have been established, from one generation to the next, by the natural regeneration of the existing remnants. -
BALLATER PATHS Screen
Welcome to Ballater Ballater, renowned for its Royal connections lies on a meander of the River Dee under the shelter of Craigendarroch. As you will see, Ballater is a very Ballater attractive village that has helped put the ‘Royal’ into Cairngorms Royal Deeside. Ballater is the nearest settlement to, National Park Paths and was the railhead for, Balmoral Castle, which lies eight miles along the River Dee to the west. Explore Deeside © VisitScotland Ballater Paths A network of paths and tracks lead out of the village, For information on paths, local events, providing a variety of routes to enjoy with fine views, facilities and accommodation: a rich local history and abundant wildlife. This leaflet Visitor Information Centres: suggests 6 routes of varying length, all starting and finishing in Ballater so you can give the car a rest! Ballater: 01339 755 306 (open all year) Each colour-coded route is shown on the map and Crathie: 01339 742 414 there are corresponding coloured waymarkers along each route to help guide you. However, please take a Useful web sites: few minutes to read the route descriptions on the map www.visitballater.com before you set out, just to make sure that your chosen www.visitabdn.com route is suitable for you and others in your group. www.deesideway.org www.visitcairngorms.com Other Walks www.cairngorms.co.uk A visit to Ballater wouldn't be complete without visiting the Burn o’ Vat in the Muir of Dinnet National Nature If you enjoyed Ballater Paths then look out for Reserve and don't miss the nearby Cambus o’ May other Community Path Leaflets to help you forest with its wee lochans – a haven for dragonflies. -
The Cairngorms National Park Pàirc Nàiseanta A’ Mhonaidh Ruaidh
EXPLORE 2020-2021 the cairngorms national park Pàirc Nàiseanta a’ Mhonaidh Ruaidh visitscotland.com Welcome to… Contents 2 The Cairngorms National the cairngorms Park at a glance 4 Heart of the park national park 6 Wild and wonderful THE HOME OF COUNTRYCLOTHING Fàilte gu Pàirc Nàiseanta 8 Touching the past SCOTLAND’SMOST PRESTIGIOUS INDEPENDENT STORE a’ Mhonaidh Ruaidh 10 Outdoor adventures 12 Natural larder 14 Year of Coasts and Waters 2020 16 What’s on 18 Travel tips 20 Practical information 24 Places to visit 32 Leisure activities 35 Food & drink 35 Tours 35 Events & festivals 36 Family fun 37 Accommodation 44 Regional map The Watchers at Corgarff, SnowRoads scenic route Are you ready for a wild and wonderful welcome? Then step inside Britain’s biggest National Park. This really is a mighty place of towering mountains, arctic plateaux, hidden glens and deep forests. You could fit two Lake Districts into the Cairngorms National Ashopping destination like no other, exquisite gift ideas in our Country Park, so it’s fair to say that you will have more than enough The House of Bruar showcases Living Department, then enjoy spectacular Scottish scenery, exhilarating the very best in Scottish style astroll through our Art Gallery adventures and family-friendly activities to with original creations in luxury and Fishing Department. The make your stay unforgettable. natural fibres. Premium lambswool, best of Scotland’snatural larder Cover: Kincraig fine merino and pure cashmere takes centre stage throughoutour Come and get a real feel for adventure, are all beautifully represented in Food Hall, Restaurant, Bakery enjoy family-friendly activities and exciting Credits: @VisitScotland, agorgeous cascade of colours, and Delicatessen, while our events across the Cairngorms National Park Kenny Lam, Damian Shields, complementedbytraditional and award-winning Butchery continues throughout the year. -
Housing Land Audit 2019
Housing Land Audit 2019 Aberdeen City Council Aberdeenshire Council Housing Land Audit 2019 Housing Land Audit 2019 – Executive Summary ..................................... 1 1. Introduction ................................................................................ 4 1.1 Purpose of Audit ........................................................................... 4 1.2 Preparation of Audit ..................................................................... 4 1.3 Housing Market Areas .................................................................. 4 1.4 Land Supply Definitions ............................................................... 5 2. Background to Housing Land Audit 2019 ................................ 7 2.1 2019 Draft Housing Land Audit Consultation ............................... 7 2.2 Local Development Plans............................................................. 7 3. Established Housing Land Supply ........................................... 8 3.1 Established Housing Land Supply ................................................ 8 3.2 Greenfield / Brownfield Land ........................................................ 8 4. Constrained Housing Land Supply......................................... 10 4.1 Constrained Housing Land Supply ............................................. 10 4.2 Analysis of Constraints ............................................................... 10 4.3 Constrained Sites and Completions ........................................... 12 5. Effective Housing Land Supply .............................................