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COUNTRYnews


News and views from around the countryside


PRIOR KNOWLEDGE Landscape photographer Colin Prior has been appointed as president of the Association for the Protection of Rural Scotland (APRS). APRS director John Mayhew says: ‘Over the centuries Scotland’s rural landscapes have inspired generations of artists, including painters, poets, authors and musicians. Colin’s superb photographs demonstrate that these links between landscape and art are still very much alive today.’ www.ruralscotland.org


FIVE-STAR FLOORS


Staff at Floors Castle in Kelso are celebrating after VisitScotland awarded the attraction fi ve stars. Built in 1721, Floors is the largest inhabited castle in Scotland and home to the 10th Duke of Roxburghe. News of the VisitScotland accolade came as the castle unveiled its newly-restored 17th century tapestries following extensive conservation work in Belgium. The tapestries are part of a collection originally brought to Floors by the 8th Duchess of Roxburghe, Duchess May, in 1903. A wealthy American heiress who inherited a vast collection of portraits, tapestries and furniture from her parents, the 8th Duchess carried on collecting throughout her time at Floors. www.roxburghe.net/castle


#WhoseSideAreYouOn? Tennis ace Andy Murray is among the sporting stars who have thrown their weight


behind a campaign to stop wildlife crime. The #WhoseSideAreYouOn? campaign is being led by Prince William and footballer David Beckham, with sports stars including Lewis Hamilton and Sir Matthew Pinsent also lending their support. The scheme is running across the Facebook, Google+ and Twitter social networks. www.unitedforwildlife.org


EAGLE EYED Cuin and Sula, the pair of white-tailed eagles that starred in the latest series of BBC2’s Springwatch programme, have also become internet stars after a webcam was set up to monitor their nest on Mull. The birds, which are nesting in a secret location in a Forestry Commission Scotland wood, are raising one chick this year. www.carnyx.tv


CAT WHO GOT THE CREAM Staff at the Highland Wildlife Park near Kingussie have used cutting-edge technology to stop them disturbing a family of Pallas’s cats, a rare species from Central Asia and the Middle East that is kept at the park. Keepers set up a series of microphones to fi nd out when the parents had mated so that they could introduce special medicine into their food. Camera traps were then used to monitor the newly-born kittens. www.highlandwildlifepark.org


146 WWW.SCOTTISHFIELD.CO.UK


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