Dobbies’ Edinburgh store celebrates National Pet Day with garden living tips for dogs

To celebrate National Pet Day today (Friday 11 April), Dobbies Garden Centres has unveiled its garden living tips for dogs, giving pet-owners advice on how to create an outdoor space the whole family can enjoy this spring.

Known for its love of dogs, all Dobbies stores are dog-friendly, and the garden centre runs a dedicated programme of events for dogs throughout the year, including Hopping Hounds, Pup-kin Patch, and Santa Paws.

With around 50% of Dobbies customers owning a dog, the garden centre is passionate about helping create harmonious garden living spaces that both pets and owners can enjoy.

Here’s what Dobbies’ Plant Buyer, Nigel Lawton, recommends when it comes to creating a safe and welcoming environment for your pup this spring:

Choose your plants wisely

Playful pups bring lots of joy to the garden, but their energy could be a bit much for delicate plants. That’s why Nigel recommends choosing your spring bedding plants with care.

He says: “Young plants and those with delicate stems might not stand up well to excited paws dashing through flower beds, so consider planting those in raised containers or protected spots.

“In your flower beds, opt for sturdy shrubs and hardy, well-established perennials that can handle a bit more activity.”

Plant protection

When it comes to protecting your hard work, Nigel recommends utilising raised planters and containers to keep plants away from curious dogs.

He says: “If you’ve got a young puppy or particularly lively dog, making the most of container displays will mean you can enjoy spring colour in your garden without worrying about playful paws causing damage.

“All spring bedding plants at Dobbies can be planted in pots, window boxes, or hanging baskets, so you can still create an interesting flower display that your dog can sniff without getting too close.”

Create a dedicated zone for dogs

Your dog loves the garden just as much as you (maybe even more!) so if you have the space, Nigel recommends giving them their own special area for play.

He notes: “To keep your garden looking its best and give your dog a fun outlet, why not create a designated play area for digging, using sand or bark, and sniffing, using dog-friendly plants?

“Filling the area with their favourite toys and treats will stimulate their senses and decrease the risk of them digging elsewhere in your garden.

“Dog-friendly plants like Cornflowers and Calendula, and herbs like Rosemary, Sage and Thyme are safe for dogs to sniff so can be planted to give them a dedicated area to explore with their nose.”

Create shady areas

Nigel says it’s important to be aware of the amount of sun your dog gets in the garden, especially as we approach the summer months.

He comments: “To ensure your garden is a fun and safe space for your dog this summer, it’s a good idea to create shaded areas where they can keep cool.

“You can do this with sun parasols or naturally with trees, like Birch or Maple, or even large shrubs like Camellias can help provide shade for your dog during hot weather spells. You can also add a pet-friendly water feature to your garden to give dogs extra entertainment and keep them hydrated on warmer days.”

Renowned for its love of dogs, Dobbies sells a wide range of dog food and accessories. Well-behaved dogs on a lead are warmly welcomed in all Dobbies stores and in a dedicated area of the restaurant, where Puppacinos are available. Customers can take part in Dobbies’ monthly social media competition, Dogs at Dobbies, by posting a picture and using the hashtag #dogsatdobbies to be in a chance of winning a gift voucher. 

For more gardening tips and advice, visit www.dobbies.com.

Local Care Home to host free Fall Prevention Talk

STRACHAN HOUSE CARE HOME – SATURDAY 26 APRIL 11am

Barchester’s Strachan House Care Home in Blackhall is hosting a free Falls Prevention Talk on Saturday 26th April from 11.00 am and is inviting members of the community to attend.  

Staff and physiotherapist, Kirsten Macleod BSc Hons who are specially trained in Falls Prevention from Strachan House will deliver the talk which will cover topics such as learning valuable tips and techniques to reduce the risk of falls and promote safety for yourself and your loved ones at home.

Our expert team will guide you through practical exercises and offer advice. There will be plenty of time for Q&A during and at the end of the session.  Please come along to Strachan House, 93 Craigcrook Rd, Edinburgh EH4 3PE on Saturday 26th April, if you would like to attend.

General Manager, Fran Fisher says: “We want to help and support relatives, friends and members of our local community to better understand fall prevention.

“We are inviting everyone to come along and listen to our talk to raise awareness and to help give people some information and coping strategies.  Please RSVP to StrachanHouse@Barchester.com if you would like to attend.”

Strachan House is run by Barchester Healthcare, one of the UK’s largest care providers, which is committed to delivering high-quality care across its care homes and hospitals. Strachan House provides dementia care, nursing care and respite care. 

For more information, please contact StrachanHouse@Barchester.com

£450M surge of military support to boost Ukraine’s Armed Forces as UK and Germany chair meeting of 50 nations

Package will support UK jobs and growth, with equipment and repair contracts connecting UK companies with Ukrainian industry

The UK is ‘surging’ rapid military support to Ukraine to put them in the strongest position to secure a lasting peace as partners meet in Brussels for the 27th Ukraine Defence Contact Group, chaired by the UK and Germany.

The security of the UK and Europe starts in Ukraine, and a major new military support package will be delivered by British and Ukrainian suppliers to help boost Ukraine’s Armed Forces as they continue to defend against Russian attack. As chair of the meeting, the UK has secured ambitious pledges for Ukraine from donor countries.

Today’s package, worth £450 million, includes £350 million from the UK from this year’s record £4.5 billion military support funding for Ukraine. Further funding is being provided by Norway, via the UK-led International Fund for Ukraine.

The support package will be announced by Defence Secretary John Healey when he chairs the contact group alongside German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius later today, where 50 nations will come together to coordinate urgent military support for Ukraine.

It will include £160 million of UK funding to provide repairs and maintenance to vehicles and equipment the UK has already provided to Ukraine – partnering UK companies with Ukrainian industry, supporting the UK economy and skilled jobs.

Today’s support also includes a new ‘close fight’ military aid package – with funding for radar systems, anti-tank mines and hundreds of thousands of drones – worth more than £250 million, using funding from the UK and Norway. The package builds on the work of the drone capability coalition, led by the UK and Latvia.

This will include high manoeuvrable first-person view (FPV) drones to attack targets, and drones which can drop explosives on Russian positions. These two types of drones are reported to be responsible for 60-70% of damage currently caused to Russian equipment.

The new kit will be procured from a mixture of UK and Ukrainian suppliers, demonstrating how investment into Ukraine’s defence supports jobs and the economies of both the UK and Ukraine.

The £160 million package for equipment repairs and maintenance will ensure vital armoured vehicles and other equipment can get back to the battlefield as quickly as possible. It will be implemented through the UK’s Taskforce HIRST, linking UK and Ukrainian companies to ensure repairs can be conducted in country to ensure that vital equipment is returned to the frontline as quickly as possible.

The support provides opportunities for British companies to learn lessons from the battlefield and support the UK’s own industrial capabilities, an example of the UK-Ukraine 100-year partnership announced by the Prime Minister in action.

Addressing the contact group, Defence Secretary John Healey MP will say: “The work of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group is vital to put Ukraine in the strongest possible position and pile pressure on Putin to help force him to end this terrible war.

We cannot jeopardise peace by forgetting the war, which is why today’s major package will surge support to Ukraine’s frontline fight.

“2025 is the critical year for Ukraine. Our job as defence ministers is to put into the hands of the Ukrainian war fighters what they need. We must step up to deter Russian aggression by continuing to bolster Ukraine’s defences.”

Yesterday, [Thursday] the Defence Secretary and his French counterpart, Minister Lecornu, chaired the first meeting of Coalition of the Willing defence ministers, bringing together 30 countries to progress planning for a reassurance force to support a lasting peace in Ukraine.

The meeting followed a series of high-level meetings of leaders and defence chiefs in the last month to move forward with operational planning.

This work delivers on the Prime Minister’s four-point plan to support Ukraine by ramping up delivery of weapons and equipment, boosting Ukraine’s defensive capabilities in the long term, working with allies to develop robust security assurances, and keeping up pressure on Putin.

The UK is fully committed to working with allies to step up support to ensure Ukraine remains in the strongest possible position, which is why £4.5 billion of military support will be provided this year – more than ever before.

As well as demonstrating leadership through the Ukraine Defence Contact Group and Coalition of the Willing, the UK is also contributing heavily to NATO’s Security Assistance and Training for Ukraine (NSATU) Command, which is coordinating further support for Ukraine in the form of training and providing more capabilities. Through the International Fund for Ukraine, the UK will manage the NSATU Trust Fund for rapid procurement – which Canada, Denmark and Iceland have already pledged funding towards, to meet Ukraine’s urgent equipment support and logistical needs.

Motorcyclist who died in Queensferry Road crash named

Road Policing officers are continuing to appeal for information following a fatal crash on the A90 Queensferry Road, Edinburgh.
 
Around 11.15pm on Tuesday, 8 April, 2025, officers were made aware of a crash involving a Kawasaki motorcycle and a Peugeot 306. Emergency services attended and the 61-year-old motorcyclist, Ian Harrower from Rosyth, was pronounced dead at the scene.
 
The 31-year-old male driver of the car has now been arrested and charged in connection with road traffic offences. Further enquiries into the incident remain ongoing.


 
Ian’s family have issued the following statement through Police Scotland:

“Ian was a much loved son to Elizabeth, brother to Elaine and dad to Lewis, Kim and Owen. He was a loving husband to Norah and stepdad to Gavin and will be very much missed grandad to Brooke and Taylor. 
 
“He was a true and loyal friend to many and will always be in our hearts never to be forgotten.”
 
Sergeant Paul Ewing added: “We would like to thank the public for their assistance with our investigation and our thoughts remain with the family of Mr Harrower.
 
“Anyone with any further information is asked to contact 101 quoting reference 4274 of 8 April, 2025.”

Bathing Waters: Have Your Say

Do you enjoy spending time at the beach or in the water? We want to hear from you!

We’re looking for your thoughts on bathing waters and how you find out about water quality.

We’ve worked with Scotinform to create a short survey, it takes just 5 to 10 minutes to fill out and you’ll also have a chance to win a £50 voucher!

Your feedback is valuable, share your thoughts at:

https://online1.snapsurveys.com/sepa

Extensive enquiries ongoing into series of wilful fire-raisings

Detectives investigating a series of wilful fire-raisings in Glasgow and the West have visited more than 100 properties as part of extensive door-to-door enquiries and seized almost 700 hours of CCTV footage.

Intelligence is also being gathered, with one stolen vehicle been recovered so far.

A dedicated team of officers are being supported by specialist resources as enquiries continue.

One week on from the first incident, officers are appealing for information after a house was deliberately set on fire in Cortmalaw Gardens, Glasgow on Thursday, 3 April, 2025.

Extensive enquiries are also ongoing into wilful fire-raisings at four other properties across the city.
• Premises in Milton Road, Kirkintilloch on Friday, 4 April, 2025
• Properties in Gala Street and Ashgill Road, Glasgow on Monday, 7 April, 2025
• Property in Meadow Court, Stepps, on Monday, 7 April, 2025
• Premises in Wellington Road, Bishopbriggs on Tuesday, 8 April, 2025

A team of detectives are investigating these incidents and a number of reports of discharges of firearms and fire-raising in the East of the country, which are all being treated as potentially linked at this time.

Detective Chief Superintendent David Ferry, Specialist Crime Division, said: “It is vital that we trace whoever is responsible for these reckless acts as soon as possible.

“While we believe these to be targeted attacks, the consequences could have been far more serious and I want to make it clear this behaviour will not be tolerated.

“I would urge anyone with information about any of these incidents to please get in touch.

“We would also be keen to speak to anyone with dash-cam, doorbell footage or personal footage, from the areas where these incidents have taken place.

“Significant enquiries are ongoing in relation to all of these incidents, and we are utilising all available resources to identify those responsible and bring them to justice.”

A number of arrests have been made in the East and a number of warrants have been executed in the city.

On Thursday, 10 April, 2025, an 18-year-old man and a 17-year-old male youth were arrested in connection with wilful fire-raisings in Edinburgh.

The 18-year-old man was arrested and charged in connection with an incident which took place in Hay Drive on Friday, 4 April, 2024, a wilful fire at a premises in Albert Street on Thursday, 6 March, 2025 and the wilful fire of a vehicle in the Parrotshot area on Sunday, 2 March, 2025.

He is due to appear at Edinburgh Sheriff Court today, Friday, 11 April, 2025.

The 17-year-old male youth has been released pending further enquiries.

A number of items relevant to the investigation, including weapons, have been seized, along with drugs and cash during the execution of warrants in the past few weeks.

Detective Chief Superintendent Ferry added: “A number of arrests have already been made in connection with incidents in the East and arrests will continue across the country over the coming weeks.

“I want to reassure the communities in the East and West of Scotland that we have a team of detectives working on this investigation and our continued action in recent weeks demonstrates our commitment to tackling this type of crime.

“We will continue to carry out additional high-visibility patrols and disruption activity and I would encourage anyone with any concerns to approach these officers, so we can take action.

“If anyone has information that can help with our enquiries then please contact us immediately.”

Anyone with information is asked to contact Police Scotland via 101 quoting incident number 0562 of Friday, 21 March, 2025.

Alternatively, you can call Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111 where information can be given anonymously.

New Futsal class at Craigroyston

We have a new Futsal class for players aged 9 – 12yrs starting after the Easter Break.

Indoors at Craigroyston Community High School on Thursdays from 4.30 – 5.30pm

Book online at https://scf.classforkids.io or contact Paul for more information: footballdd@spartanscf.com

Queen Alexandra’s trailblazing coronation dress on show as Edwardians exhibition opens at The King’s Gallery

On display for the first time in more than 30 years, Queen Alexandra’s magnificent gold coronation dress is among more than 300 works from the Royal Collection that go on show at The King’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace from today (Friday, 11 April) in the new exhibition The Edwardians: Age of Elegance.

The exhibition explores the lavish lives and tastes of two of Britain’s most fashionable royal couples – King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra, and King George V and Queen Mary – during a period of great opulence and profound change, as Europe edged ever closer towards war and Britain stood poised on the brink of the modern age.

Visitors will be immersed in the glamour and drama of the Edwardian era, with the exhibition’s free multimedia guide narrated by Downton Abbey’s Hugh Bonneville.

After Queen Victoria’s 40 years of mourning, the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra was designed to be a public spectacle, heralding a glamorous new era for the royal family. Just three days before the ceremony, Edward required emergency surgery for appendicitis, delaying the event for six weeks.

When the coronation finally took place on 9 August 1902, it became one of the most sumptuous royal events in British history. The exhibition reunites for the first time an array of items commissioned and worn by the royal couple for the occasion.

Traditionally, a coronation dress would be a plain white or cream gown, inspired by ecclesiastical robes. However, Alexandra was a fashion trailblazer, known around the world for her style.

She chose a dramatic gold dress designed by the female-led Parisian fashion house Morin Blossier, sewn with thousands of tiny gold spangles designed to sparkle in the electric lights that had been installed in Westminster Abbey for the first time in honour of the occasion.

At Alexandra’s suggestion, the coronation dress became the first royal outfit to include the national emblems of Britain (rose, thistle and shamrock), a tradition continued on every subsequent coronation dress, including those of Queen Elizabeth II and Queen Camilla.

Forty needle-workers in Delhi spent five months embroidering the gown’s gold net, before it was sent to Paris to be laid over cloth of gold and made into the final gown. The rarely displayed dress is very fragile, and conservators have spent more than 100 hours preparing it for display.

Exhibition curator Kathryn Jones said: ‘While it has darkened over time, Alexandra’s choice of a shimmering gold fabric would have been incredibly striking at the coronation; there are descriptions in contemporary newspapers of moments in the ceremony where the Queen appears in an extraordinary blaze of golden light, the dress glowing in the new electric lighting.

“It’s a powerful example of Edward and Alexandra’s attempts to balance tradition and modernity as they stood on the cusp of the 20th century: a shining moment of glamour before the world was at war.’

Alexandra draped herself in jewels and pearls for the coronation, including a diamond necklace and earrings that were a wedding gift from Edward, on show for the first time, and the Dagmar necklace, a wedding gift from the King of Denmark. Also on display is her ostrich feather fan, its handle set with a diamond crown, an ‘A’ and the national emblems.

Alongside Alexandra’s ensemble, visitors will see Edward’s cloth-of-gold coronation mantle, the thrones commissioned for the occasion, and Edward and Alexandra’s state portraits by Sir Samuel Luke Fildes, measuring more than three metres high. Just like the dress, the thrones represented a break with royal tradition, having been commissioned from a French firm rather than British, reflecting Edward’s interest in French design.

On show for the first time is Alexandra’s copy of Sir Edward Elgar’s Coronation Ode for King Edward VII, acquired and signed by the Queen in 1902It was the King who suggested to Elgar that words could be added to a section of his first Pomp and Circumstance March in honour of the coronation; he admired the tune and thought that it would make a good song. The resulting piece is known today as Land of Hope and Glory.

The Danish artist Laurits Tuxen was appointed as Alexandra’s ‘Special Artist to the Coronation’. On public display for the first time in over a century, his painting of the new Queen kneeling for the anointing captures both the magnificence and solemnity of the moment.

The exhibition features a further four paintings by Tuxen, including a never-before-seen depiction of the marriage of George and Mary in the Chapel Royal at St James’s Palace. Over her customary black mourning clothes, George’s grandmother Queen Victoria can be seen wearing the white lace from her own wedding dress, worn in the same chapel 50 years earlier.

The Kokoshnik Tiara, which George’s mother Alexandra wears in the painting, is also on display.

The two royal couples surrounded themselves with fashionable society figures, their lives a whirlwind of garden parties, concerts and costume balls.

Visitors will see mementos from these events, ranging from a ‘Mary, Queen of Scots’ costume worn by Alexandra to a fancy-dress ball in 1871, to a pair of Tiffany & Co gold opera glasses studded with diamonds and pearls.

Meanwhile, large-scale portraits by the most fashionable society painters of the day, including Philip de László and John Singer Sargent, capture the era’s spectacular fashions.

As well as magnificent royal occasions, the exhibition explores the couples’ domestic lives. Displays evoke the cluttered interiors of their private residences, where decorative objects and photographs covered every surface.

Highlights include family snapshots taken by Alexandra on one of the earliest Kodak cameras, and pieces from the group of Fabergé animal sculptures commissioned by Edward in 1907: the single most important contribution to the royal collection of Fabergé and the largest order ever placed through the firm’s London branch.

All four figures collected works by the great contemporary artists of the period. Highlights from their private art collections include two luminous Frederic Leighton portraits, one of which was the first painting acquired by Edward aged just 17; Sir Edward Burne-Jones’s Study for a Head of Sleeping Beauty, displayed for the first time; a copy of Oscar Wilde’s Poems, on public display for the first time and featuring a rare hand-written message from the author; and Charles Baugniet’s atmospheric painting ‘After the Ball’, on view for the first time in over a century, which captures the elegance and exuberance of the era, with a society beauty asleep in her ballgown, having danced all night.

Tomorrow: Wildflower seeding in Drylaw

DRYLAW GOOD APPLES PROJECT

🦋🐞🦋🐞Wildflower seeding on Saturday 12th April 2 – 4pm at the East Orchard with Drylaw Good Apples.

We will be planting Scottish nectar rich wildflowers and Yellow Rattle, a special flower which deters the growth of thick grass, and opens up the space for other flowers to take root.

Come along to create habitats and food sources for butterflies, bees, ladybirds, and all other insects. 🦋🐞🦋🐞🦋

Children especially welcome as Alia will be putting up the hammocks and whittling sticks as a children’s activity. Adults can help with the wildflower preparations.

Hot drinks provided. Free!

📅 Sat 12th April

🕙 Time 2-4pm

📌Location: Easter Drylaw Avenue, down the wee lane between nos 6 and 8

👍 Activity: wildflower seeding