Poppy Factory celebrates centenary on International Women’s Day

Lady Haig’s Poppy Factory today marks its 100th anniversary, celebrating a century of life-changing support for Scotland’s veterans. 

Founded in the aftermath of the First World War, when Scotland faced the return of more than 100,000 wounded military personnel, Lady Dorothy Haig established the factory to provide meaningful and dignified work for men disabled as a result of their service.

Many of these veterans had skills and experience, but their injuries meant they faced significant barriers to re-entering the workforce. The factory offered paid work in a structured, supportive environment, combining income with routine, purpose and community.

Comissioned Image take by Eamonn McGoldrick Tel: 07810 482491

Its opening on 8 March 1926 — International Women’s Day — which was not yet widely marked in Britain, has now become even more relevant given that the trailblazing Lady Haig was leading a national initiative at a time when few women held prominent public roles in civic life.

From its beginnings at Whitefoord House in Edinburgh with “three workers, a pair of scissors and a piece of paper”, the factory expanded quickly, producing the distinctive four-leafed Scottish poppy assembled by hand, as well as a range of toys and crafted household items. By the 1930s, the factory was a recognised part of Scotland’s civic landscape, becoming both a workplace and a symbol of national remembrance.

Today, a team of more than 30 veterans, all with supported needs, continue to manufacture thousands of handmade wreaths and other remembrance symbols from purpose-built premises on the capital’s Warriston Road. The factory also produces over 2.1 million poppies for the Scottish Poppy Appeal, organised annually by Poppyscotland in October and November.

Funds raised from the Scottish Poppy Appeal support Poppyscotland’s vital work, providing advice and assistance for veterans, those still serving, and their families. 

Over the years, the factory has been visited by thousands, from school groups, individuals and organisations to learn about its history and heritage, the development of the Scottish poppy, and the continuing importance of remembrance. It has also welcomed royal patrons, including HRH The Princess Royal, who officially re-opened the factory following a refurbishment in January 2023.

Helen Owen, Chair of Poppyscotland, said: “Lady Haig was practical and compassionate and realised the difficulty many veterans faced in gaining employment because of disability after war.

“A dynamo of a woman, she recognised the need not only to create Scottish poppies for Armistice Day, but to provide meaningful work all year round. The factory turned out goods of exceptional quality, and she and her band of ‘lady collectors’ sold the poppies and goods across the length and breadth of Scotland.

“Today, the work of this remarkable woman lives on, and the Factory proudly continues to play its role in supporting the Armed Forces community in Scotland.”

To learn more about the factory’s history, or to book a tour of Lady Haig’s Poppy Factory, please visit www.poppyscotland.org.uk

Lady Haig’s Poppy Factory – NICOLA PETRIE case study

Having come from an Armed Forces family, it felt natural for Nicola Petrie to move into military life, joining the Royal Navy in 1986 at the age of 20.

Nicola, who suffers from MS and now works as a wreath maker at Lady Haig’s Poppy Factory in Edinburgh, began her service as an onshore radio operator at Faslane, tasked with delivering the communication between ships and the naval base, as well as making sure the submariners received their weekly ‘family-grams’.

It was an important role and one Nicola enjoyed for seven years, feeling an overwhelming sense of pride whenever she pulled on her Navy uniform. However, she left her post in 1992 to start a family with her husband John, who she met while serving.

Nicola explained: “I loved my time in the Royal Navy and always looked forward to going to work. The other girls in the department were great and I loved hearing their stories – we had a real bond so I was sad when, after seven years, it was time for me to leave.

“But John and I had made the choice to start a family and that he would remain in the Navy. Back then, if a woman was pregnant she had to leave post. It was disappointing having to give up the job I loved as I really could have made a proper career of it, but it was exciting too knowing that we were going to have children.”

After Nicola left the Royal Navy, she and John went on to have three children – two boys and a girl – and with John away on an eight-month deployment, Nicola juggled home life, looking after their young children and working in a local home improvement firm, later setting up her own company.

Nicola said: “John was in the Navy for 24 years in total but when he left he became a stay-at-home dad and let me put my heart and soul into the business to build a career for myself.

“When I retired from that we both felt that strong pull back to some sort of military life and that’s where Poppyscotland came in. The factory only employs veterans with supported needs, meaning the role was ideally suited to me as a person living with MS. I joined in April of 2025, a year after John, and we absolutely love it.

“We work with like-minded people who have come from all sorts of Armed Forces backgrounds, and everyone has a story or two to tell. It really connects you back to military life, which is all we’ve ever really known.”

When she’s not helping to make the thousands of poppy wreaths produced at the factory every year, Nicola, who lives in Falkirk, enjoys spending time with her two young grandchildren and beloved dog Molly.

Nicola added: “Lady Haig’s Poppy Factory really means something to me. The memorabilia, the tales, the people and visitors who pass by during tours – it’s just a special place and I’m very grateful to be here and be a part of the 100-year anniversary.”

Drylaw Walkers off to Davidson’s Mains on Monday

MONDAY 9 MARCH at 10am

Join the Walking Group this Monday, 9th March at 10am for our next walk to Davidson’s Mains Park.

We’ll be setting off for a fun-filled morning of exploration, so don’t forget to bring your walking shoes, a waterproof jacket, and a bag for your essentials.

This is a fantastic opportunity to connect with like-minded individuals and immerse yourself in the beauty of our local areas.

Date: Monday 9th March

Time: 10am -1.30pm (meet at the centre for 10am)

Lunch: Picnic lunch provided, but bring a bag, walking shoes and a waterproof jacket, please

Destination: Davidson’s Mains Park

Junior Creative Writing Group at Drumbrae Library Hub

TUESDAY 10th MARCH at 6pm

A reminder that our next Junior Creative Writing session will be on Tuesday 10th March at 6pm.

We’re having some special guests from Edinburgh Playhouse along to host a Matilda themed workshops.

Come and join us!

Ages 8+

#GoAllIn

#NationalYearOfReading2026

Open Farm Sunday launch sticker competition

Open Farm Sunday sticker competition offers youngsters the chance to get naturally creative

Budding young artists are invited to get creative and celebrate the 20th anniversary of Open Farm Sunday (OFS) by taking part in an exciting new sticker competition

Launched by OFS organisers LEAF (Linking Environment And Farming), the competition encourages children and young people under the age of 18 to design a sticker inspired by the theme of ‘farming with nature’.  

The winning designs will be turned into official OFS stickers and showcased at hundreds of events across the country when farms open their gates to the public on 7 June.

For two decades, OFS has enabled people of all ages to discover more about how farmers work with nature to produce food sustainably – something LEAF wants to celebrate with this special competition. 

Entrants can let their imagination run wild to show what farming with nature means to them. From wriggly earthworms who keep soils healthy; insect pollinators; cattle grazing and providing natural fertiliser; to carefully managed hedgerows, woodlands and wildflower meadows busting with biodiversity – farmer’s support the natural world while feeding us every day. 

LEAF’s Open Farm Sunday manager, Annabel Shackleton, says: “Each year, Open Farm Sunday welcomes more than 200,000 visitors and gives families a unique opportunity to discover how their food is produced and learn more about sustainable farming.

“In this special anniversary year, young designers have the chance to see their artwork become part of this nationwide celebration.” 

For more information about how to take part and to download the design template, visit www.farmsunday.org/competition 

Competition criteria 

Children need to use the official downloadable template to create their sticker, whether that is with crayons, paints, pens or collage. Designs must be flat so they can be reproduced as printed stickers. 

The competition is open to UK residents under the age of 18, with one entry permitted per person. 

Entries must be submitted by 11:59pm on 6 April 2026 either by email to: openfarmsunday@leaf.eco or by post to: LEAF (Linking Environment And Farming), Avenue J, Stoneleigh Park, Warwickshire, CV8 2LG. 

A panel of judges appointed by LEAF will select the winners, who will be notified by 20 April 2026 and publicly announced on or before 26 April 2026. 

Up to eight winners will be selected, with their designs printed as official stickers and displayed at OFS events across the country.

Winners will also receive a personalised notebook featuring their design, creating a lasting keepsake from the competition. 

Letters: Join Lymphoma Action at our National Conference

Dear Editor

Lymphoma Action are delighted to announce the return of our National Conference, taking place on Friday 8 May in York. Anyone affected by lymphoma is welcome to attend, whether they have received a diagnosis themselves or are supporting a loved one.

Readers might be interested in this unique opportunity to hear from lymphoma experts, meet others affected by the condition, ask questions and share experiences.

We will be joined by medical professionals who will talk about why lymphoma causes symptoms and the side effects of treatment, and our dedicated wellbeing sessions will offer practical tips for day-to-day living. Attendees will also hear the personal story of someone with a lived experience of lymphoma.

There will be plenty of time to connect with others affected by lymphoma throughout the day, and to find out more about the services and support Lymphoma Action has available as the UK’s leading charity dedicated to this type of blood cancer.

Our National Conference will be held on Friday 8 May at The Milner York Hotel in York. Tickets cost £30 per person (including lunch and refreshments) and prior booking is essential.

For further information, or to book your place, please visit: 

https://lymphoma-action.org.uk/conference  

Yours sincerely

Amanda Harris

Lymphoma Action

Events and Workshops at Granton Castle Walled Garden

Fancy learning about mushroom growing or flower arranging? 💐

We recently added a number of new events and workshops to our website.

All of them are free to attend unless noted otherwise. Spaces fill up quickly, so don’t delay signing up. 😊

👉️ Details here:

https://www.grantoncastlewalledgarden/events

#grantoncastlewalledgarden

#walledgarden

#mushroomgrowing

#flowerarranging

#freeevents

Leith-based neurological therapy charity announces new name

Leith-based charity Compass Therapy Support Community has rebranded and is now The Neuro Therapy Place.

The Neuro Therapy Place supports people living with neurological conditions through a range of affordable therapies including oxygen therapy, specialist physiotherapy, and other targeted therapeutic interventions.

Our historical and ongoing commitment to fundraising in support of our charitable mission and to improve the lives of our neurological clients, enables us to subsidise our therapies meaning our clients can access them at significantly reduced rates.

Services are also available to individuals without non-neurological conditions at a lower level of subsidy, helping to generate income that supports the charity’s wider mission.

Why The Neuro Therapy Place?

“This change has come from listening,” said Genevieve Harrison, CEO. “When we spoke with the people who know us best, there was a strong sense that our name should clearly reflect both our expertise in neurological therapy, and the sense of belonging people feel when they walk through our doors.

“The Neuro Therapy Place captures who we are: specialist, supportive, and rooted in community. We’re incredibly proud to step into this next chapter with a name that feels truly aligned with our purpose.”

The new name has been carefully selected to reflect the organisation’s specialist focus on neurological conditions, while strengthening its ability to communicate clearly with clients, healthcare professionals, funders, and partners.

The decision follows consultation with external marketing and branding specialists, alongside feedback from members, client representatives, volunteers, and supporters. Research indicated that the previous name did not convey the charity’s specialist focus to prospective clients, health professionals, or funding partners.

Why the change?

The Neuro Therapy Place was selected for several key reasons:

  • Clarity – The name immediately communicates the organisation’s neurological focus.
  • Distinctiveness – It stands out within the health and wellbeing sector.
  • Accessibility – It feels welcoming, personal, and easy to understand.
  • Referral friendly – Clear and memorable for busy healthcare professionals.
  • Stronger fundraising potential – Clearer messaging enables donors and funders to better understand and connect with the charity’s impact.

Strengthening Partnerships and Sustainability

The name change coincides with a renewed strategic focus on long term sustainability and partnership development. In 2025, the organisation appointed a Business Development Manager, and Community Fundraiser to expand external partnerships, increase awareness, and connect with members of the community who may not yet know about its services. 

Commitment to Community Remains Unchanged

While the name is changing, the charity’s mission remains constant: to provide high quality neurological and oxygen therapy, alongside community-based programmes, delivered at subsidised, affordable rates.

This rebrand is not about leaving the past behind. It is about ensuring the organisation’s identity accurately reflects the vital specialist work it delivers today and positions it confidently for future growth.

With continued support from funders, partners, and the wider community, The Neuro Therapy Place aims to reach more people, strengthen partnerships, and deepen its impact in the years ahead.

People with dementia at increasing risk of accidental poisonings at home  

  • Accidental poisonings (excluding narcotics and hallucinogens) have soared by 63% in a decade, with 5,770 deaths in 2024.* 
  • Older adults are at highest risk — people aged 65+ are more than twice as likely to die from a poisoning of this type as the general population. 
  • Hospitals in England saw 17,252 non-narcotic and hallucinogen poisoning‑related admissions last year, including nearly 5,000 older adults, who were 55% more likely to require hospital care. 

Accidental poisoning is fast becoming a hidden home‑safety crisis, The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA) has warned, as new figures show 5,770 people died from accidental poisonings in 2024, a 63 per cent increase in just ten years.  

Older adults are bearing the brunt: 2,371 lives lost were among people aged 65+, making them more than twice as likely to die from a poisoning as the general population. To tackle this, RoSPA has published  new guidance, highlighting how people living with dementia are among those at particular risk.  

The surge isn’t only seen in fatalities. Hospitals in England recorded 17,252 poisoning‑related admissions last year — almost 5,000 involving older adults, who were 55% more likely to require urgent care. 

The charity’s guidelines help households protect vulnerable loved ones and include simple steps to prevent dangerous chemicals from being mistaken for everyday items. Many products in the home can be opened and swallowed in moments, especially when confusion, memory loss or impaired visual recognition makes hazardous substances look harmless.  

These cognitive changes can turn ordinary domestic spaces into high risk environments, with the sharp rise in poisoning incidents tragic evidence that too many preventable emergencies are happening in homes across the UK, often without families realising how quickly a situation can escalate. 

Rebecca Guy, Senior Policy Manager, said: “Families with vulnerable relatives can often deal with genuinely frightening moments. Turning away for just a few seconds and realising someone has swallowed a cleaning product is sadly a reality that some of the public have experienced. 

“These aren’t freak accidents. They are predictable, preventable events, and our new guidance is designed to help people act fast to make their homes safer.” 

What you can do RIGHT NOW now to lower the risk  

  • Lock away cleaning and laundry products: high cupboards or secured storage only. 
  • Keep medicines tightly controlled: use organisers, track doses and store out of sight. 
  • Check packaging: ensure harmful products stay in their original containers. 
  • Remove confusion triggers: keep look-alike bottles (e.g., bright drinks and cleaning fluids) apart. 
  • Supervise more closely when unfamiliar items, visitors or new products are around. 
  • Conduct weekly hazard sweeps of kitchens, bathrooms and utility areas. 

Paul Edwards, Chief Nursing Officer at Dementia UK, said: “Laundry and cleaning products are often easily accessible in our homes, and many have brightly coloured packaging which can cause confusion for people with dementia, who may mistake them for other, edible items.

“One of the challenges of supporting someone with dementia is balancing the risk between an individuals’ autonomy against their safety.   

“It is impossible to eliminate risk completely, but these guidelines offer simple steps people can take to reduce the chance of these accidents happening, and provide a helpful checklist for both professional care environments and in the home.”  

Alzheimer’s Society Senior Knowledge Officer, Simon Wheeler, said: “Staying safe is important for people with dementia who want to keep living at home for as long as possible, as well as for those who support them.    

“As a person’s dementia progresses, they might have trouble telling the difference between something that’s safe to eat and something that isn’t.    

“If you want to reduce the risk of accidents, make sure that you store your cleaning products like laundry detergents safely in a cupboard and out of sight. 

“Don’t leave them out on a worktop or near any food or drinks, especially if they might be mistaken for sweets or drinks.”

RoSPA’s latest advice underscores a growing national concern: without simple protective steps, vulnerable people are at real and immediate risk inside their own homes. 

Herstory Tour relaunches for International Women’s Day

The Real Mary King’s Close is celebrating International Women’s Day with a specially curated Herstory Tour. The underground experience invites visitors to journey underneath The Royal Mile and learn all about the incredible lives of the women who once lived and worked on the now hidden streets of Edinburgh. 

The one-hour tour will include fascinating revelations about some of the most famous women in Scottish history. The tour is guided by a former resident of The Close, including Janet Chesney, a member of the last family to leave the historic street behind.

Guests will even get to meet Mary King herself and find out how she obtained voting rights nearly 300 years ahead of her time. They will also hear how revolutionary thinkers like Sophia-Jex Blake and the other medical students who formed the Edinburgh Seven pioneered gender equality.  

The Herstory Tour shares stories of the women who faced suppression and persecution over the centuries but also of how Auld Reekie’s most influential women shaped the city’s history and impacted our lives today.  

Mary King’s Close is known for having been “a haven for independent women” with 45% of properties having a female head of the household.

The Close is the perfect place to celebrate International Women’s Day, learning about the achievements of the women of the Close.

Paul Nixon, General Manager at The Real Mary King’s Close, said: “Telling stories of the past, shining a light on Edinburgh’s history and those who came before us are things we are extremely passionate about.

“We are delighted to be sharing the less popular stories of some of the remarkable women who once occupied the Close.

“We can’t wait to welcome everyone on the Herstory Tour and explore a hidden world together.”

Tours will run on Sunday March 8th at 1400 and 1600.

Prices are £30 per adult / £24 per child (5 to 15yo – no under 5 allowed). 

For more information and bookings please visit: www.realmarykingsclose.com

The future is calling!

150 years since the first phone call was made, the lines are about to go silent

Exactly 150 years since the first telephone call was made by the Scottish innovator, Alexander Graham Bell, one West Lothian telecommunications company is urging people to future-proof their phone systems before the lines go quiet forever.  

Born in Edinburgh, the revered inventor, scientist and engineer Alexander Graham Bell was granted a patent for “transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically” on 7th March 1876, and three days later on 10th March, he made the first ever telephone call to his assistant Thomas Watson.

This landmark moment in history transformed the way we communicate, replacing slow, written correspondence with instant, real-time conversations. 

But as our communication needs have continued to evolve, the traditional phone system is no longer able to keep pace. And so in January 2027, BT Openreach will shut down the Public Switch Telephone Network (PSTN), the technology behind analogue landline phones. 

Commenting on the PSTN switch-off, Workflo Solutions’ managing director Michael Field said; “This change has been deemed necessary because the network of traditional copper lines is no longer equipped to handle the demands of today’s advanced digital world.

“Bandwidth limitations restrict its ability to support features such as video conferencing and data sharing – crucial tools for modern businesses. And maintaining this ageing infrastructure has become increasingly expensive and impractical.”

Any equipment that currently uses the PSTN will stop working in January 2027. From phonelines to security alarms, door entry systems to CCTV, any technology that relies on the old copper lines will be affected.

And so to coincide with the 150th anniversary of the very first phone call, the telecommunications experts at Workflo Solutions are urging people to move to a single, digital Internet Protocol (IP) network that primarily uses full-fibre connections.

Described by Workflo Solutions as the next generation of business communication, IP leverages the power and flexibility of the internet to deliver voice, data and video services over a single, high-speed fibre optic network. This shift to IP signifies a major technological leap forward in terms of speed, reliability and functionality.

Speaking ahead of the150th anniversary of the first phone call, Michael Field said; “That iconic dial tone, the audio signal that once indicated when the exchange was ready for a number, is set to go silent in just a matter of months. So it is imperative that businesses act now to avoid disruption as the UK moves to a fully digital telecommunications system.

“The 150thanniversary of the first telephone call serves as an important reminder of just how reliant we have become on instant, uninterrupted communications. The future is calling, but if you’re unsure what you need to do to keep up with these technological developments, don’t worry.

“Workflo Solutions is offering free assessments to help guide businesses through this important transition to ensure the changeover is as seamless as possible.”

Businesses can book their free PSTN switch-off readiness audit at www.workflo-solutions.co.uk/pstn-switch-off-readiness-audit.