Kilchuimen pupils enjoy a right rural day out at Torlundy
Children left the classroom to get hands on during a day long visit to the Lochaber Rural Education Trust.
Children left the classroom to get hands on during a day long visit to the Lochaber Rural Education Trust.
This was a very good performance for an Oban side who have been short of March practice for so long.
From the thriving, bustling city of Inverness, capital of the Highlands and sitting between the northern end of the Caledonian Canal and the Moray Firth – to the southern tip of Loch Ness and historic Fort Augustus, this map carries you on a journey of mystery and monsters through waterways and glens that have been used as transport routes for thousands of years.
The £220,000 project will see work undertaken on the Fort Augustus and Laggan Swing Bridges on the A82, involving the replacement of the hydraulically operated nose wedges that support the ends of each bridge.
The council worked closely with the NHS and with the local community company, which kindly provided some of the land needed to enlarge the care home garden sufficiently for the six units that were built.
Additional projects either underway or expected to start soon include parking at Ardnamurchan Point and improvements to parking in Glen Nevis.
To make the occasion even more special three local guiders were presented with their five year service awards on the day.
The twelve new homes for local families have green energy technology at the heart of their design
The Telford Centre housing development pilots a new type of house – a flexible, adapted property designed to support residents with increasing need to stay at home and live independently for longer.
The estate has levelled, surfaced and lined a new parking area, while the council has installed car parking machines.