The Scottish SPCA has bagged £16,000 from the Tesco Bags of Help scheme for education support. Continue reading Bags of help for Scottish SPCA
Month: January 2018
Trinity Community Council News
Here’s your first update of the year and some security advice on sheds from Police Scotland.
Please note that we have two special presentations planned for our next meeting on 12 February and for this reason have booked a larger room than usual at an alternative location – Wardie Parish Church.
Best Wishes
Bill Rodger, Trinity Community Council
Forget Me Not: dementia friendly garden for Lauriston Castle
A dementia friendly ‘forget-me-not garden’ is to be planted in the grounds of a castle by the sea in North West Edinburgh. Continue reading Forget Me Not: dementia friendly garden for Lauriston Castle
Children’s Lottery grant for MCFB
Edinburgh charity Multi-Cultural Family Base has been awarded a £20,000 grant from the Scottish Children’s Lottery. Continue reading Children’s Lottery grant for MCFB
Whaling Days: tenant shares memories of Leith’s bygone industry
A Port of Leith Housing Association (PoLHA) sheltered housing tenant has shared memories of her father working as a whaler in a book about this long-lost industry. Continue reading Whaling Days: tenant shares memories of Leith’s bygone industry
Boswall Parkway: Re-Imagine Your Street
BIODIVERSITY WORKSHOPS
Thursday 1st February
3pm – 5.30pm or 6pm – 8:30pm
Granton United Church, Boswall Parkway
The Workshop will ask:
- How might Boswall Parkway look in the future?
- what challenges and opportunities might there be?
Funded by Adaptation Scotland, the Royal Botanic Gardens Edinburgh is running this pilot project to consult with communities about solutions to climate change and adaptation.
Following an open application process, the Re-Imagining Your Gardens & Streets project was chosen to be our latest Community Engagement Pioneer Project. Jointly ran by the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and Heriot-Watt University, the project will investigate a range of community engagement techniques by running outreach events focused on generating ideas to transform streets in the Granton area into well adapted community spaces.
The design of streets and gardens can significantly influence an areas resilience to climate impacts, with large amounts of paved areas contributing to surface water flooding, reduced biodiversity and urban heat island effect. These spaces are also literally on our doorsteps, and represent a tangible and immediate route in to talking to communities about wider adaptation themes.
However, community improvements are best driven by community aspiration, so this project will focus on first introducing the broad concept of creating well adapted streets and gardens, and then facilitate a community conversation to find the ideal interpretation for this unique area.
We will be working with the creative practitioners from the Museum of Future Now to help community members imagine this aspiration future and the ideas they come up with will be turned into illustrations for display in the community hub.
Alongside this, a neighbourhood adaptation planning tool will be created to help other areas explore the possible routes to creating well adapted gardens and streets. This work will compliment other initiatives ongoing in the city, including Edinburgh Living Landscape and Edinburgh Adapts.
There’s still time to book your workshop place: contact Leone on 0791 873 6481 or email lalexander@rgbe.org.uk
Social Bite’s Josh Littlejohn to address local community council
Tourist tax “far from welcoming”, says Timberbush Tours boss
Think again, pleads tour operator
The chief of a local tour company has appealed to councillors to reconsider plans to introduce a ‘tourist tax’. The city council estimates it must make savings of £150 million over the next five years and will propose a range of measures to address this in in next month’s budget. Councillors see the introduction of a ‘tourist tax’ as one way of avoiding even deeper cuts to council services, but business leaders have warned that any new surcharge on visitors to the city would see them vote with their wallets and choose to go elsewhere. Continue reading Tourist tax “far from welcoming”, says Timberbush Tours boss
Show caution when using public Wifi, warns industry expert
PUBLIC WiFi networks can provide the perfect opportunity to fool unsuspecting users into sharing personal details, according to leading experts. In the run-up to Safer Internet Day, the Scottish Business Resilience Centre (SBRC) is urging caution to those who connect to free WiFi hotspots due to potential risks many people will be unaware of. Continue reading Show caution when using public Wifi, warns industry expert
£4000 target for charitable winemaker’s latest vintage
AN inspiring winemaker who has raised more than £4500 through sales of his artisan red wine has launched a new vintage from 2016. Edinburgh local Giles Cooke is the man behind Our Fathers Wine, where since 2014 he has used his winemaking expertise to create a distinctive Shiraz using fruit from Australia’s Barossa Valley. All profits go to charities close to his heart, and Giles hopes that the new vintage, of which there is just 1000 bottles, could add a further £4000 to charity funds raised. Continue reading £4000 target for charitable winemaker’s latest vintage