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Two Evenings of Entertainment to celebrate World Paracycling in Dumfries

The Usual Place in Dumfries has been chosen as the inspiring venue for two special evenings of entertainment to celebrate and complement the UCI World Paracycling Championship events happening in the town on Wednesday 9th and Thursday 10th August.

The beautiful, welcoming venue on Academy Street will open its doors for two evening programmes of must-see talks and live music all celebrating uplifting themes to inspire and entertain anyone who lives in the region or is visiting for the championships – whether they have a serious interest in cycling or not.

The first night events run at 6pm and 8pm on Wednesday 9th August and feature tales of courage and determination as intrepid, thought-provoking speaker Josh Quigley, world record holding endurance cyclist, is joined on stage by cyclist, innovator and environmentalist Dr Kate Rawles to talk about what it takes to achieve the seemingly impossible in environments around the globe. The evening continues as renowned cycling journalist Trevor Ward talks to Markus Stitz about his incredible experiences circumnavigating the globe on a single speed bike, cycling 21,000 miles across 26 countries in less than a year.

The second night celebrates cultural talent from Dumfries & Galloway and begins at 6pm on Thursday 10th August with ‘A Writer’s Welcome to Dumfries’ featuring celebrated author and poet Hugh McMillan who will talk about his latest collection ‘Haphazardly in the Starless Night’. The evening will continue at 8pm with a bar and live acoustic music sets from Grant Dinwoodie and Jamie McLellan of the hugely popular Lucky Doves and Scottish/Canadian folk and Americana songwriter and performer, Sarah Jane Scouten.

Josh Quigley said: ‘The UCI Paracycling World Championships coming to Dumfries is a huge boost in getting people interested in the area as a cycling destination and I’m looking forward to sharing some stories to inspire even more people to get on their bike and explore what Galloway has to offer.’
Heather Hall, CEO at The Usual Place, said: “The Usual Place is known for its exceptional work in seeing beyond boundaries, encouraging resilience and believing in possibilities for everyone, particularly the thousands of young people with additional support needs who have flourished through the organisation’s many training programmes. We are also known for our warm welcome, beautiful building and community spirit. So, it therefore makes perfect sense for us to welcome audiences to experience our wonderful atmosphere whilst enjoying these fascinating, inspirational and entertaining events. We are very much looking forward to these special evenings.”

Tickets for individual events or whole evening tickets are now on sale only at The Midsteeple Box Office in Dumfries or online via TicketSource.

 

Wallets Marts Weekly Sales Reports 31/7/23 & 1/8/23

WALLETS MARTS CASTLE DOUGLAS LIMITED

MONDAY 31 JULY 2023

 

ANNIVERSARY SHOW AND SALE OF STORE CATTLE

OTM CATTLE AND STORE LAMBS

 

Wallets Marts had forward 761 Store Cattle at their Anniversary Show and Sale.

 

The judge Ian Maxwell awarded the Champion ticket to Messrs McCulloch, Glentoo with a British Blue heifer which went on to make £1700 or 420.8ppk.  Reserve went to Messrs Hansell, Nether Barr.  Best pen of four went to Messrs Kerr, Fagra.

 

Prize List

Single Heifer               1st and Champion        Glentoo

2nd                                Nether Barr

3rd

 

Single Bullock              1st  and Reserve Champion      Nether Barr

2nd                                                            Glentoo

3rd                                                      Fingland

 

Pen of Four                  1st                                                           Fagra

2nd                                                         Fingland

3rd

 

Trade for Store Cattle exceeded Vendors expectations considering the current climate and Vendors left delighted.

 

Topping today at £1800 was a Charolais bullock from Messrs Reid, Meikle Float and 420.8ppk for a British Blue heifer from Messrs McCulloch, Glentoo

 

OTM cattle topped at £2001.65 for an Angus bull from Beoch Farmers, Cairnryan with cows to £1671.18 also for an Angus from Messrs McWhirter, Kenmure, Kirkcowan.  Top per kg was 249 ppk for a Limousin cow from Messrs Hamilton, Derrie.

 

1084 Store lambs were sold to Sellers advantage with many more required to fulfil the demand.  Topping  at £113 for Texels from Messrs Hurst, Low Craiglemine.

 

Leading Prices

 

STORE CATTLE – BULLOCKS

Charolais

£1800, £1560, £1500 Meikle Float; £1490 Barscarrow; £1450 Fagra; £1430 Drumneil

302.8 287.7, Fagra; 285.4 Lochside; 284 Cogarth

 

Angus

£1670, £1650, £1580 Meikle Float

304.2 Meikle Float; 294.4 Barwhanny; 284.9 Low Mains

 

Hereford

£1590 Meikle Float

264.1, 257.3 Meikle Float

 

Limousin

£1580 Meikle Float; £1510 High Glasnick; £1500 Fingland; £1460 Barscarrow

316.6, 315,8, 303.1, 300.5 Bankswood

 

Simmental

£1570 Drumneil; £1570, £1560, £1550 Meikle Float

295.3, 282.8 Slatehouse; 275.3 Low Mains

 

British Blue

£1530, £1450 Meikle Float

268.4, 264.1 Meikle Float

 

Shorthorn

£1320 Castlehill; £1230 Old Cluden

262.4, 261.5 Fell of Lochronald; 260.9 Castlehill

 

Luing

£1290 Hillside

268.8 Hillside

 

Saler

£1290 Fagra; £1280 Falbae

271.8 Awhirk; 271.6 Fagra; 271.1 Ewart Drive

 

Belted Galloway

£1210 Glentoo; £1030 Mains of Machermore

235.9 Glentoo; 235.2 Mains of Machermore

 

STORE CATTLE – HEIFERS

British Blue

£1700 Glentoo

420.8 Glentoo

 

Saler

£1480, £1300 Falbae

265.6 Awhirk; 260 Ewart Drive; 255.2, 254, 253.2 Falbae

 

Limousin

£1410 Fingland; £1390 Nether Barr; £1300 Bankswood; £1280 Killochy

331.6 Bankswood; 321.8 Nether Barr

 

Angus

£1390 Glentoo; £1340 Kirranrae; £1320 Hill of Balmaghie; £1320 Irelandton

260.2 Garrarie; 258.1 Killochy; 254.8 Irelandton254.8 Kirranrae; 253.5, 251 Hill of Balmaghie

 

Charolais

£1360 Hill of Balmaghie; £1360 Glentoo; £1350 Fagra; £1310 Kirranrae

296.1, 272.5 Fagra; 272.3 Kirranrae; 269.8 Glentoo; 268.2 Hill of Balmaghie

 

Luing

£1290 Hillside

264.9 Hillside

 

Simmental

£1290 Hillside; £1260 Garrarie; £1260 Auchenfad

268.2 Garrarie; 266.9, 265.3 Auchenfad; 264.9 Hillside

 

Belted Galloway

£1150 Irelandton

241.6 Irelandton; 209.8 Mains of Machermore

 

Galloway

218.4, 214.5 Auchenfad

 

OTM CATTLE

OTM BULLS

£2001.64 Beoch, Cairnryan; £1316.72 Harvieston

 

OTM BULLOCKS

£1424.86 Waterside of Terregles;

191 Waterside of Terregles

 

OTM COWS

Angus

£1671.18 Kenmure, Kirkcowan; £1469.62 High Glasnick

197 Kenmure, Kirkcowan; 197 High Glasnick; 197 Little Galdenoch; 195 Cotton Street

 

Luing

£1578.42, £1316.34 Hillside

237 Hillside

 

Simmental

£1502.28, £1410.96 Hillside

237, 213 Hillside

 

Limousin

£1367.52, £1349.58, £1306.34 Derrie; £1300.82 Beoch, Cairnryan

249, 231 Derrie

 

Shorthorn

£1329.36 Little Galdenoch; £1264.12 Castlehill

205 Barlochan Wood; 200 Beoch, Cairnryan

 

Charolais

£1315.96 Derrie

197 Derrie

 

Holstein

£1213 West Balscalloch

 

Saler

£1156.66 Harvieston

187 Harvieston

 

OTM HEIFERS

£1561.68 Hillside

241 Hillside

 

STORE LAMBS

 

Texel

£113 Low Craiglemine; £100 Buittle Mains; £97(x2) Barholm Mains

 

Beltex

£99 Low Craiglemine

 

Dutch Spotted

£89.50 Barholm Mains

 

Lleyn

£59 Auchenbainzie

WALLETS MARTS CASTLE DOUGLAS LIMITED

TUESDAY 1 AUGUST 2023

WEEKLY PRIMESTOCK SALE

 

Wallets Marts Castle Douglas Limited on Tuesday 1 August 2023 had forward 1761 prime and cast sheep.

 

1324 Lambs sold to average 247.64ppk.  Top today was £130 for a heavy Texel from Messrs Shaw, Killochy.  Top per kilo was 272.5ppk from Master Blair Austin, Boreland of Girthon.

 

Cast sheep sold to £200 for a Texel ram from Messrs McCubbin, Kenmure, Dunscore with ewes to £133 for Texel ewes from Messrs Dunlop Ashfield.

 

LEADING PRICES

 

Prime Lambs

 

184         32.1 – 39              Average 240.43                 Top 266.2

 

Texel

£100 West Barmoffity; £98.50 Barnbackle; £97.50 Irelandton; £96.50 Fauld O’ Wheat

259.7, 255.8 West Barmoffity; 255.2 Barnbackle; 253.9 Fauld O’ Wheat; 251.3 Irelandton

 

Beltex

£98.50 Lintmill Cottage

266.2 Lintmill Cottage

 

Suffolk

£95.50 Auchenfad; £91.50 Barwhillanty

248.5 Barwhillanty; 246.8 Auchenfad

 

894         39.1 – 45              Average 248.97                 Top 272.5

Blue Texel

£121.50 Low Arkland

270 Low Arkland

 

Texel

£117.50, £116.50 Glenkiln; £116.50 Lagganpark;

272.5 Boreland of Girthon; 258.8 Glenkiln; 258.2 Farhills

 

Cheviot Mule

£110, £103.50 High Borgue; £103.50 Low Arkland

255.8 High Borgue

 

Suffolk

£108.50 Mayfield; £107.50 Long Beoch; £107.50 Drumlane; £100.50 Auchenfad

252.3 Maryfield; 252.3 Drumlane

 

Beltex

£107.50 Maryfield

255.6 Maryfield

 

Charolais

£107.50 Carnavel

246.6, 241.3 Carnavel

 

Scotch Mule

£97.50 Rainton; £96.50 Carleton; £94.50 Boreland of Girthon

241.3 Carleton; 237.8 Rainton; 236.3 Boreland of Girthon

 

Romney

£94.50 Boreland Farm

225 Boreland Farm

 

 

201         45.6 – 52              Average 247.27                 Top 260.2

Texel

£127.50, £126.50 Glenkiln; £125.50 High Currochtrie; £125.50 Low Arkland; £124.50 East Lanegate

260.2, 255.4 Glenkiln; 255.2 Killochy; 253.1 Irelandton; 252.1 Lagganpark

 

 

Suffolk

£121.50 Long Beoch

242.4 Loophill

 

Charolais

£121.50 Loophill

243 Loophill

 

Romney

£115 Boreland Farm

234.7 Boreland Farm

 

Scotch Mule

£106.50 Lagganpark

231.5 Lagganpark

 

45           52+                         Average 227.17                 Top 242.9

Texel

£130 Killochy; £130 Nether Corsock; £128.50 High Currochtrie; £127.50 Kenmure, Dunscore

242.9 Kenmure, Dunscore; 240.7 Killochy; 236.1 Nether Corsock

 

EWES

 

Texel

£133 Ashfield; £127 Barnbackle; £125 Cogarth; £125 West Barmoffity; £121 Balminnoch

 

BFL

£123 Mains of Larg

 

Scotch Mule

£109 Shirmers; £105 Kenmure, Dunscore; £101 Ashfield; £100 Hartburn

 

Cheviot

£109 Ashfield

 

Romney

£97, £95 Boreland Farm

 

 

Blackface

£95, £83 Mains of Larg; £83 Kenmure, Dunscore

 

RAMS

 

Texel

£200 Kenmure, Dunscore; £169 Grange

 

Suffolk

£161 Balminnoch

 

Zwartble

£137 Balminnoch

 

Romney

£97, £95 Boreland Farm

Women’s Cricket: Scotland U17s beat Netherlands and Ireland at Dumfries

Women's Cricket: Scotland U17s beat Netherlands and Ireland at Dumfries
Niamh Muir bowling for Scotland against Ireland U17s

Scotland Women Under-17s started their T20 Tri-Series at Dumfries with convincing back-to-back wins over the Netherlands and Ireland on Tuesday.

Batting first In both games, opening partnerships by Sheikh and Walsingham set up the wins with Sheikh scoring 80 not out against the Netherlands and Walsingham 50 against Ireland. With both games reduced to eighteen overs, Scotland scored 153 for 2 against the Dutch who reached 100 for 8 in reply. Against Ireland, Scotland hit 116 for 6 but took wickets in Ireland’s chase of 82 for 9. Local player Niamh Muir featured in both games with a wicket and two good catches against Ireland and final over runs against the Netherlands. Weather unfortunately affected both Ireland Netherlands games on Monday and Tuesday in the six-match tournament as they had to be abandoned and re-scheduled.

 

Essential Resurfacing On The A75 Near Collin Commences Friday 18th August 2023

ESSENTIAL RESURFACING ON THE A75 NEAR COLLIN COMMENCES FRIDAY 18TH AUGUST 2023

Amey, on behalf of Transport Scotland as part of the Network Management Contract for the South-West Trunk Road Unit, are undertaking the essential resurfacing of 890m of the A75 east of Collin from Friday 18th August until Monday 21st August 2023.

This scheme will benefit around 1,300 vehicles using this route each day, by improving the condition of the carriageway and reducing the need for more extensive maintenance in the future.

The work will be carried out using a full weekend closure from 8pm on Friday 18th August until 6am on Monday 21st August 2023, and a signed diversion will be in place. We thank road users for their patience and co-operation while this essential work takes place.

The signed diversion will operate as follows:

Eastbound traffic will leave the A75 at Brownrigg Roundabout taking the A709 to Lockerbie, then south on the B723 to Annan and return north on the B721 to re-join the A75. Westbound traffic will take the diversion route in reverse. HGVs using the M6 and A74(M) will be diverted via the A74(M) at Junction 17 to avoid Hoddom Bridge.

Access for emergency service vehicles will be maintained throughout these works.

Please note, all schemes are weather dependent and may be cancelled or rescheduled if weather conditions are not favourable.

Report On Wigtownshire Maternity Services Due Before IJB Committee 

Report on Wigtownshire maternity services due before IJB committee 

A REPORT on maternity services in Wigtownshire has been prepared for a sub-committee of the region’s Integration Joint Board. 

 

The review of maternity services was launched on January 18 under independent expert chairs, seeking views from stakeholders to help inform approaches.

 

Welcoming the report due before Dumfries and Galloway Integration Joint Board’s (IJB) Transformation and Innovation/Futures Committee on August 10, Head of Midwifery Laura Boyce said: “I’m very pleased that a report is coming to this sub-committee.
“I’d like to express my sincere thanks to the two independent chairs, NHS Ayrshire and Arran Medical Director Crawford McGuffie and NHS Ayrshire and Arran Executive Nurse Director Jennifer Wilson, and for the support provided by professional midwifery expert Angela Cunningham.
“This work started in January within the context of the temporary suspension of low-risk, intrapartum maternity services at Galloway Community Hospital which came into effect in 2018 due to staffing pressures.”

 

The Transformation and Innovation/Futures Committee will meet to consider the report on August 10.

Local Jobs On The Line As Wilko Store On Brink Of Collapse

Image credit DGWGO

A NUMBER OF JOBS in Castle Douglas are under threat after it was announced today that Homes and garden retailer wilko confirmed that it has taken the difficult decision to file a notice of intention to appoint administrators (“NOI”).

Wilko CEO Mark Jackson said; While we can confirm we’ve had a significant level of interest, including indicative offers that we believe would meet all our financial criteria to recapitalise the business, at present, we don’t today have an offer that provides the necessary liquidity in the time we have available, given the mounting cash pressures we’re faced with.
Unfortunately, with this in mind, today we’re having to take the difficult decision to file an NOI.
We’ll continue to progress discussions with interested parties with the aim of completing a transaction which preserves the business and will encourage those interested parties we’re in discussions with to move as fast as possible.  We continue to believe that our robust turnaround plan, with significant re-stabilisation cost savings in progress, will deliver a profitable wilko and maximise the significant opportunities that we know exist. We’re a £1.2bn turnover business with strong presence on UK high streets through our 400 stores, online at wilko.com and through our great value wilko own brand products, serving local communities with their everyday household and garden needs for over 90 years.
That said, while we’ll continue to progress these indicative offers, without the surety of a recapitalisation being able to be completed within the necessary time frame and given the cash position, we’ve been left with no choice but to take this action.

World Summer of Cycling comes to Dalbeattie This Weekend

World Summer of Cycling

The World’s largest ever cycling event – 13 World Championships across 7 disciplines – takes place across Scotland from 3-13 August, featuring thousands of athletes, including the world’s very best.

To celebrate the event and showcase all this spectacular area has to offer cycling, Dalbeattie Community Initiative (DCI) is excited to announce Rocks and Wheels is hosting the Dalbeattie Bike Fest on Saturday 5th August at the Birchvale Theatre on Maxwell Street.

This free event is designed to inspire our young riders to aspire to future UCI Championships, and will include a mobile pump track, climbing wall, live stream of the downhill final from Fort William, e-bike tours, a photoshoot with a twist, a complimentary bike check and much more – including various stalls, an “unusual” past and present bike show, refreshments, BBQ, music, raffle and a dress up your bike competition.

Our Honorary Patron, Dame Barbara Kelly will be dropping by to announce the winners of the event t-shirt and cycle jersey competitions.

The standard of entries was extremely high, and a selection can be seen in the window of The Initiative’s offices at 71 High Street.

DCI Project Coordinators Maria Rawlings and Tom Marshall have been working hard to pull the event together and they welcome everyone to attend, adding:

“This is an exciting ‘free’ afternoon for friends and family to experience the best Dalbeattie has to offer”.

Glenkens & District Community Action Plan Steering Group Publishes Update

Glenkens & District Community Action Plan

The Glenkens & District Community Action Plan was published in 2020, and is owned and kept relevant by the CAP Steering Group, with support on delivery from the Glenkens Community and Arts Trust (GCAT).

The Steering Group has been meeting in its present form for some 18 months now and so felt it was timely to publish an Update Report on the progress of the Community Action Plan to date. The Report also sets out the challenges and opportunities facing delivery of the CAP priorities as they aim for ever more ambitious delivery. The most pressing challenge at present is achieving core support to fund the roles that will set the Glenkens up for success in the future.

Fiona Smith, outgoing Chair of the CAP Steering Group, said, “The Glenkens and District Community Action Plan sets out the priorities of our communities really clearly. Through the CAP Steering Group and the support of GCAT, we are demonstrating an effective model of delivery within a remote-rural community which we think may be of interest to others. We have therefore shared this Report widely and will continue to seek support from regional and national bodies to help us achieve our ambitions”

. Highlights from the last 2 years that have been directly driven by CAP delivery include:

• Creation of the Glenkens Local Food Hub • Creation of the Glenkens Hub website

• Creation of the Glenkens Youth Group

• Creation of the Glenkens Community Spaces Network

• Positive work on the creation of new Community Housing

• Adoption of a Vision for Land Use in the Glenkens

• Hosting D&G Citizens Advice Service in the Glenkens

• Creation of new support scheme for local childminders

• Commissioning of a report into the energy efficiency of many of our public buildings.

 

As well as many other projects and capital upgrades and investments. John Paterson, new Chair of the CAP Steering Group, said “In the 3 years since the Community Action Plan was published, community groups across the Glenkens & District have achieved great things.
There is a clearly demonstrable wish to work together, to complement each other rather than to compete. There are skilled and engaged people and great potential in the area. Our community has demonstrated a track record in administering large amounts of money with high standards of transparency, accountability and effective delivery.
We should all be very proud of what we have achieved through working together on the Glenkens and District Community Action Plan.” The full Update Report can be found on the Glenkens Hub website, alongside the Reports of the meetings of the CAP Steering Group.

A Greener Stranraer Oyster Festival On The Menu

A Greener Stranraer Oyster Festival on the menu
The Oyster Bar at 2022 Stranraer Oyster Festival credit Colin Hattersley.jpg

Stranraer Oyster Festival has revealed its full programme for 2023 alongside a pledge to ‘go greener’ and help safeguard the wild, native oyster bed that the festival celebrates.

 

Michael Caines, Tony Singh, Julie Lin and Felicity Cloaks are among the chefs demonstrating their culinary flair. They’ll join local chefs, artisan traders, musicians and skilled oyster shuckers at the three-day festival in south west Scotland.

 

Taking place from Friday 15th to Sunday 17th September, Stranraer Oyster Festival has quickly become established as one of the biggest food festivals in Scotland, and a must-visit for oyster enthusiasts, with visitors attracted from all over the UK.

 

As part of their commitment to the environment, festival organisers have pledged to return the shell of every oyster consumed at the festival back to Loch Ryan, to help grow the native oyster bed, located just a short distance from the festival site.

 

Allana Hardie of Stranraer Development Trust, the community organisation that runs the festival, explained:

“The beauty and ecological importance of Loch Ryan and its wild, native oyster bed is at the very heart of Stranraer Oyster Festival, and we have always been mindful of our responsibility to manage the festival sustainably. This year we want to go even further. We’ve reviewed every area of festival and site management to see where we can reduce our environmental footprint.
“Collecting back the oyster shells to return them to Loch Ryan has so many benefits. It reduces waste from the festival, it will create valuable shell habitat for young oysters which will help the oyster bed grow, and it will naturally sequester the carbon that’s embodied in the oyster shells.”

 

With almost all of the UK’s native oyster beds overfished to near-extinction in previous centuries, Scotland’s last wild, native oyster fishery is not just nationally important; it’s important at a species level. The oyster shell circular collection scheme is just one of the green initiatives undertaken this year, which has been partly inspired by Dumfries and Galloway Council’s Greener Events Toolkit. Other eco-friendly festival measures include marine litter picks, improved waste management and using a ticketing provider that offsets carbon emissions through tree planting.

 

The festival is supported through Dumfries and Galloway Council’s Major Events Strategic Fund and EventScotland’s National Events Funding Programme. The work of Stranraer Development Trust is also supported by Kilgallioch Community Fund and South of Scotland Enterprise.

 

Councillor Ian Blake, Chair of the Council’s Communities Committee said:

“The Oyster Festival is the perfect recipe for a great day out or weekend break in Dumfries and Galloway. The promotion of local produce and the wonderful unspoilt environment is a real tonic for visitors. It’s fantastic that the Festival is back and stronger than ever since the COVID-19 pandemic.”

 

Councillor Jackie McCamon, the Vice-Chair of the Communities Committee said:

“Stranraer’s regeneration is really taking shape and the Oyster Festival helps to showcase the beautiful setting the town has. This year’s Festival once again will celebrate Loch Ryan, our local food and drink industry and provide a huge economic boost for Stranraer and the wider Wigtownshire area.”

 

Paul Bush OBE, VisitScotland’s Director of Events, said:

“The Stranraer Oyster Festival is a fantastic celebration of Scotland’s natural larder and Dumfries and Galloway is the perfect stage for such a food and drink event. I’m delighted to see that the festival has again attracted such a high quality line up of guests with Michael, Tony, Julie and Felicity joining an already packed programme in the region.”

 

Why Stranraer Oyster Festival Matters 

For a town that was defined for decades by being the main ferry port to Northern Ireland, it was feared – once the ferries left town – that Stranraer might lose everything. Stranraer Oyster Festival was born out of community passion to write a new story for Stranraer.

 

Established to promote Stranraer as a tourism destination and to raise awareness of the unique, experience of Scotland’s wild, native oysters, the festival has had a huge impact on Stranraer’s economy, and its identity.

 

Launched in 2017 by Stranraer Development Trust, the festival has grown in ambition, in visitor numbers and in economic impact every year it’s been held. After four festivals, independent economic analysis demonstrated that Stranraer Oyster Festival has generated almost £5 million for the local economy so far, supporting hundreds of jobs, showcasing multiple local businesses and organisations, providing volunteering and training opportunities for members of the community, and stimulating tourism development in the area.

 

Romano Petrucci, Chair of Stranraer Development Trust, commented:

“In a very short period of time Stranraer Oyster Festival has become a hugely important part of Stranraer’s identity, and a real focal point for celebrating the very best that Stranraer and the wider Galloway area has to offer.
“We are looking forward to delivering an action packed festival that entertains, inspires and satisfies our visitors. Loch Ryan’s unique native oysters are of course at the heart of our festival, but this three-day event is about the people and the place too. There is simply no finer way to enjoy our oysters, and our town’s hospitality, than relaxing next to Stranraer Harbour looking out at beautiful Loch Ryan as the sun sets across the water with Ailsa Craig on the horizon.”

 

Stranraer Oyster Festival is more than just a food festival. It’s a community-led initiative, a journey through Scotland’s cultural heritage, a unique marketplace, and a sustainable destination.

 

Romano added: “No one should ever doubt our community’s ability to create, produce and deliver the very best, and the very best is what we will always seek to deliver.”

 

About Loch Ryan Native Oysters

For hundreds of years the wild, native Loch Ryan oysters that thrive at the bottom of the sea loch were a hidden gem – seemingly better known in the fine dining restaurants of London, than they were by local folk. The festival changed all that, and Stranraer Oyster Festival is now a flagship event in the community’s determination to regenerate the town.

 

Native oysters are considered ecosystem engineers because they help maintain marine ecosystems by filtering water and providing habitat for coastal wildlife.

 

The oyster bed has been protected by Royal Charter since 1701. Sustainable management of the bed by Loch Ryan Oyster Fishery Company began in 1996 and oyster numbers are believed to have grown from 1 million to 60 million today. Loch Ryan oysters are now being used in native oyster bed restoration projects across the UK and in Germany.

 

Tristan Hugh-Jones of Loch Ryan Oyster Fishery said:

“We are continually trying to increase the size of the population, so we will fish in a particular area for a season. We’ll take only the largest oysters, about 5% of the total catch, and we tip the small oysters back into a well marked area of the loch. The smaller oysters are put close to each other to give the best possible chance of fertilising eggs and producing spats.
“What is extraordinary about Loch Ryan is the water has a circular movement, so the same water manages to stay in Loch Ryan for the ten days that the larvae need before settling onto natural shell on the floor of the loch. It’s incredibly unique.”

 

About Stranraer Oyster Festival

Tickets cost £6 per day or £12 for the full three-day event for over 12s, with concessions available. Additional charges apply for selected chef demonstrations.

 

General admission tickets for Stranraer Oyster Festival 2023 can be purchased from www.stranraeroysterfestival.com

£500 Donation For Portpatrick Lifeboat From Local Hotel

PhotoCredit/ Jeanette Hardy Portpatrick Lifeboat

Portpatrick RNLI Lifeboat crew were invited to the Portpatrick Hotel and Apartments to receive a £500 donaton to the RNLI from hotel manager Konrad.

 

Ian Beck Chairman of Portpatrick Lifeboat said’, The Portpatrick Hotel and Apartments support our Lifeboat station and crew in many ways throughout the year. They are always happy to host events and team meetings and are continue to be a generous donor to our annual Lifeboat Week coffee mornings. This kind donation from Konrad and the team just further cements the great partnership our charity has with the hotel’.

 

Volunteer Press Officer Jeanette Hardy added, ‘It really was a pleasure to meet the KOSB team and hear some of their stories of their time in the army. The team here at Portpatrick really appreciate their support.

 

PhotoCredit/ Jeanette Hardy Portpatrick Lifeboat

 

 

To make a donation to the RNLI visit RNLI.org/support-us/give-money/donate