Tuesday 28 February 2012

HMRC Webinars

HMRC hosts really useful webinars - some recorded and some live -  and they cover most of the common themes encountered when starting or developing your business.

From HMRC:

HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) offer a series of free online presentations or ‘webinars’ to give tax help to businesses and the self-employed.

There are two types of presentation each lasting 30 minutes:

Live presentation or ‘webinars’ - available on set dates and include a further 30 minutes for a live questions and answer session. They'll also be available to view from these pages after the event.
Pre-recorded webinars - available to view at a time to suit you 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

The webinars cover many different topics including:
  • business expenses and capital allowances
  • first steps as an employer
  • the Construction Industry Scheme
  • Self Assessment Online
  • an overview of limited companies
  • how VAT works
How can I take part?

Before you start you need to check you have the right computer software and then register in advance.

PC users need: Windows® 7, Vista, XP, 2003 Server or 2000.
Macintosh users need: Mac OS® X 10.4.11 (Tiger®) or newer.

Registering is simple - you only need your name and email address to register. Follow the link below to see what’s available then register for an HMRC webinar.

Live Webinars: http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/webinars/
Pre-Recorded Seminars: http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/webinars/pre-recorded.htm

Monday 27 February 2012

Business Gateway Music - Abagail Grey

Here's a cute little video by Abagail Grey  - filmed on the shores of Loch Ness and featuring a bit of dancing...

Wednesday 22 February 2012

Scotland Food & Drink Awards 2012


Here's a message from Scotland Food & Drink

Applications for the 2012 Scotland Food & Drink Excellence Awards are now open.

The awards, run jointly by Scotland Food & Drink and the Royal Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, have been recognising and rewarding the very best in Scottish food and drink for many years and continue to be considered a true badge of excellence.

This year, for the first time, we are delighted to welcome ASDA as main sponsors. We also offer our thanks to all other sponsors, listed above, for their support of the 2012 awards.

Within the awards, there are a total of 17 categories aimed at rewarding companies and their products in areas such as skills development and new product innovation and everything in between.

We encourage all those who believe they are working hard to excel in any sphere of the food and drink industry to consider entering.

Entries close on Friday 2 March 2012.

If you have any queries about the entry process, please contact David Cochrane on 0131 335 6207 or davidac@rhass.org.uk

For further information, visit the Scotland Food & Drink website: (Link)

European Seafood Exposition 2012 - Partnering Event

Here's a message from Michelle Wemyss of Enterprise Europe Network

As you may be aware, the European Seafood Exposition (ESE) in Brussels is fast approaching (24th – 27th April 2012). For the last 3 years we have been involved in organising a partner brokerage event at ESE. This is hosted by Scottish Development International (SDI) and organised by Enterprise Europe (in the Highlands and Islands Enterprise, Highland Opportunity Ltd & Scottish Enterprise teams).

The aim is to support Scottish companies who are going to ESE by helping them to make most effective use of their time. We do this by offering our market research services prior to the event and an opportunity for them to promote their business across Europe by uploading a profile on our online catalogue. Once they have uploaded their company profile to the catalogue (including what products/services they offer and what they are looking for in a partner) they have the option to request, accept or decline meeting requests from other participants. Our colleagues across our European network also encourage the companies they are working with to participate in the partnering event which is how the catalogue becomes populated.

A couple of weeks before ESE we start to schedule the meetings and provide the companies with their personal schedule for 1-2-1 meetings with their potential business partners. We have an allocated space on the Scottish Pavillion at ESE to host these meetings. It’s almost like speed dating – but for businesses.

We can arrange to bring people who they’d like to meet to their stand or work something out that will suit them. There is certainly nothing to lose in putting a profile in the catalogue to gauge any interest as there is always the option to politely decline meetings.

For more information: Link or contact Michelle Wemyss

Monday 20 February 2012

50 Facts about Sutherland

 Here's a great list from the Scottish Tourism Forum.  It's an extract from the Pride & Passion Project. (Link)

FIFTY FACTS ABOUT SUTHERLAND.
1. The name “Sutherland” comes from the Norse “southern lands”. That’s because, although it’s in the north of our country, it was in the south to the Vikings!
2. Sutherland has a largely Gaelic-speaking heritage (unlike neighbouring Caithness whose heritage is largely Norse.) The difference can often be seen in place-names.
3. Sutherland is mentioned in the book “Lord of the Rings”, as “Haradwaith”
4. Sutherland has Britain's highest waterfall (with a sheer drop of 658 ft) - Eas a' Chual Aluinn in Assynt. It is three times higher than Niagara Falls.
5. Sutherland is the only county to have three coasts: East, North and West.
6. Sutherland has Britain’s lowest population density – just two people per square kilometre (around one person per square kilometre in the West.)
7. Sutherland has Scotland’s lowest proportion of population of school age.
8. Sutherland’s former county town is Dornoch, on its Moray Firth coast.
9. Dornoch Cathedral was founded in 1224 by Gilbert de Moravia – the last Scotsman to be given a place in the Calendar of Saints! Dornoch’s history is explained at the local Historylinks visitor attraction.
10. Dunrobin Castle, near Golspie, is the seat of the Dukes of Sutherland and their predecessors since around 1228. It has been progressively enlarged and modified since, the most recent major change occurring in the mid 19th century when it was adapted to a “Loire Chateau” style. It has fine Lorimer interiors, and is open to visitors.
11. Scots-American tycoon and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie built Skibo Castle, near Dornoch.
12. Madonna and Guy Ritchie married at Skibo. Obviously the romantic Highland air had a beneficial effect – the marriage lasted more than twice as long as Madonna’s first!
13. The whole Dornoch Firth Area is designated a National Scenic Area, thanks to the fantastic views of coast and landscape afforded from its shores and along its length. Even before you enter Sutherland, you can get a wonderful view of the Firth from Struie Hill, on the A836 near Ardgay.
14. Sutherland has a range of wonderful biking trails, notably those at Balblair near Bonar Bridge and an extensive new network on the hillside above Golspie. There’s no charge for these, and the Golspie trails also offer bike and kit hire.
15. Loch Fleet, near Golspie, is a National Nature Reserve. It’s a fantastic site for viewing wild birds, both native and migratory. The range of plant life around the loch is also exceptional, including the very rare “one-flowered wintergreen”. Loch Fleet is also an excellent location to view seals as they bask on the sandbanks at low tide – often dozens of them!
16. At Loch Fleet’s north-west boundary is the Mound Causeway, built by Thomas Telford in 1816 to provide a sure foundation for a road crossing over the estuary, and so speed communications to the south from Sutherland and Caithness.
17. Sutherland had Britain’s most northerly coal mine, at Brora, whose workings extended out under the North Sea. It has now closed, but Brora Heritage Centre, just outside the village on the banks of the river Brora, tells the story.
18. Sutherland had a gold rush of 600 people when, in 1868, local man Robert Gilchrist discovered gold in the remote Strath of Kildonan, near Helmsdale on Sutherland’s east coast. Visit Helmsdale’s “Timespan” visitor attraction to learn more.
19. Sutherland has the place where the last wolf in Scotland was killed – Loth.
20. The last witch in Scotland to be burned at the stake – Janet Horn – was put to death in Dornoch in 1727. Elderly and clearly unsound of mind, she warmed her hands at the “bonny blaze” before being destroyed by it.
21. Sutherland’s population suffered badly during the “Highland Clearances” when people were cleared from the land to make way for sheep. There is a recently-erected clearances memorial at Helmsdale.
22. More controversially, the hilltop statue towering over Golspie from the summit of Ben Bhraggie dates from the early 19th century, and is of the first Duke of Sutherland, one of the most enthusiastic participants in the Clearances.
23. At Croick, west of Bonar Bridge in Strathcarron, is a small church and churchyard where villagers, in the clothes they stood in, were refused entry to the church by the minister. Their etched pleas are still visible on the church windows.
24. The river Shin is one of Scotland’s best salmon rivers. Seeing the salmon running (swimming upstream to spawning grounds and leaping up waterfalls to get there) is a spectacular sight, and can be seen at the Falls of Shin Visitor Centre. The Centre sells Harrods goods.
25. Loch Shin, 24 miles long and about a mile wide for most of its length, is the largest freshwater loch in the county.
26. Loch Shin’s water level rose by some 12M when the dam and hydro-electric power plant were installed in the 1950s. The rushing water is used twice – a second set of turbines being at Inveran, 10km south of Lairg. Cheap electricity – twice over!
27. Lairg, at the southern end of Loch Shin, has the most extensive postcode area in the UK, stretching sixty miles or more to Cape Wrath, on the north coast.
28. Lairg hosts an annual one-day sheep auction, since 1990 the largest such event in Europe. By the end of the sale probably one sheep looks much like another!
29. Lairg boasts the recently-refurbished Ferrycroft Visitor Centre, less than five miles from the Falls of Shin Visitor Centre, which gives a fascinating insight into local history and wildlife.
30. Sutherland has some of the World’s oldest rocks, Lewisian gneiss – at 2.5 billion years over half the age of the earth.
31. Sutherland hosts the North West Highlands Geopark – Scotland’s first Geopark. “Geopark” is an UNESCO designation. The Geopark uses the outstanding and historic geology of north-west Sutherland to promote tourism, community activity and sustainable local business.
32. Bones of prehistoric animals (sabre toothed tigers etc) have recently been found at the Bone Caves near Inchnadamph.
33. The towering sea cliffs of Handa Island, a bird sanctuary, are home to around 200,000 seabirds, including many species in internationally-important numbers.
34. John Lennon spent childhood holidays in Durness, on Sutherland’s north coast.
35. Sutherland’s Smoo cave runs inland for about 600 meters and is the largest and most dramatic coastline cave in Britain.
36. Balnakeil is the mainland’s most northerly craft village – with a range of distinctive and high-quality local products, edible and otherwise!
37. Sutherland is home to one of the top 15 golf courses in the world – Royal Dornoch’s championship course. Sutherland - with a surprising number of courses including the mainland’s most north-westerly at Durness – is a golfer’s paradise.
38. In the 1930s, sailors of Britain’s biggest warship, HMS Hood, spelled out her name on a hillside above Loch Eriboll, in white-painted stones. The name is still there, regularly repainted by local people and visiting sailors.
39. Sutherland has had what is perhaps the largest meteorite strike ever to hit the UK (in Assynt). But don’t worry – it was over a billion years ago!
40. Sutherland has Scotland’s longest cave system (at Inchnadamph).
41. Sutherland has just one whisky distillery – Clynelish at Brora. It has existed officially since 1819 but may have been around in an “unofficial capacity” since around 1750! Its superb distillations can be sampled as part of its distillery tours.
42. Sutherland has an unique place in the history of geology – the discovery of thrust faults (at Inchnadamph & Knockan) led to the discovery of tectonic plate movement.
43. Sutherland has the highest cliffs on mainland Great Britain (at Clo Mor near Durness) They rise to around 920 feet (nearly 300 metres) with a sheer drop to the sea.
44. Crofters in Assynt, Sutherland, were the first to buy their land under new “community right to buy” legislation.
45. Sutherland had more former Royal Navy “Loch” class warships than any other county (3 named for Assynt lochs).
46. The name of the ominous-sounding Cape Wrath, at the extreme north-west of Sutherland (and Great Britain) actually comes from a Norse word meaning turning point.
47. Sandwood Bay, in Sutherland’s north-west, is famously spectacular, accessible only on foot, and is the home of many legends of mermaids & ghosts.
48. Altnacealgach, in central Sutherland means "burn of the cheat" – so-called because a story runs of a Ross-shire man, with home soil in his boots, taking an oath that he was standing on Ross-shire ground!
49. Altnaharra, in north central Sutherland, consistently records Britain’s coldest midwinter temperatures – minus 22 degrees in a recent winter (but of course it’s lovely most of the time!)
50. Sutherland has the only black & white phone box on Britain – at Achfary. It is decked out in this “house livery” of the Duke of Westminster’s estate.
AND ONE MORE FOR LUCK, AND TO MAKE A PARTICULARLY IMPORTANT POINT!
51. Sutherland is a nature-lover’s paradise, as you may already have gathered. If you still don’t believe that, here are some more “mini-facts” to convince you! Sutherland’s “Flow Country” is the largest expanse of peatland in Europe (second only in the world to Kamchatka, in remote Eastern Russia) Sutherland has the largest area of limestone in Scotland. Sutherland holds 50,000 pairs of puffins at Clo Mor cliffs . Sutherland has 30% of the British population of Black-throated divers. Sutherland has over half the breeding population of the common scoter. Sutherland is the stronghold for breeding greenshank (roughly 40% of UK population) Sutherland has the largest population of breeding corncrakes on mainland Britain, at Durness. Sutherland has some of the few surviving remnants of the arctic flora that developed following retreat of the last ice age. Sutherland has the most northerly oak woodland in Great Britain.

Monday 13 February 2012

Business Gateway Recruitment Advisers

 
Business Gateway Highland has launched a service to help create new jobs in some of the region’s most remote, rural areas.

The service will target more than 300 businesses in Caithness, Sutherland, Wester Ross, Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch and Strathspey to help them better understand the process of recruiting staff for the first time.

Two recruitment advisers, based in Fort William and Bonar Bridge, have been taken on to give businesses help on issues including employment legislation, identifying the right people for interview and employment contracts.

Marianne Ross, the new recruitment adviser in Bonar Bridge says: “Business Gateway’s recruitment service sets out to help businesses by providing an integrated package of information, advice and practical support.

This service is highly personal, specialist and designed to help create jobs in some of this region’s most fragile areas by helping give businesses greater confidence and knowledge about the recruitment process.”

Marianne, from Migdale, will be based in the Key Commercial Services offices in Bonar Bridge and can be contacted on 07867 394346 or marianne.ross@highland-opportunity.com

PSYBT to Merge with The Prince's Trust

The Prince's Scottish Youth Business Trust (PSYBT) is to merge with the Prince's Trust on 1st April 2012.

Here's a message from PSYBT's outgoing Chief Exceutive, Mark Strudwick CBE:

"After two decades of operating as a distinct Scottish charity, The Prince’s Scottish Youth Business Trust is to merge with The Prince’s Trust.

Both charities value the tremendous relationships they have with individuals and many stakeholders across Scotland and we plan to harness the strengths of both organisations to provide cost effective, timely and tailored provision for Scotland’s young people.

I am delighted to say that PSYBT will not lose its unique identity. We will be renamed The Prince’s Trust Youth Business Scotland and will retain full control over our assets and Revolving Loan Fund.

Geoff Leask will become Director (Designate) the Prince’s Trust Youth Business Scotland with effect from Monday 13th February and will lead on the integration process prior to merger taking place with effect from 1st April 2012."
 
Link to Press Release.

Congratulations to Geoff on his new role and we wish the new combined operation every success in the future.

Ripples Crafts in the News


Nice article in Saturday's Herald about Helen Lockhart of Ripples Crafts, yarn dyers in Assynt: (Link to Herald Website)

Link to Ripples Crafts

Tuesday 7 February 2012

Website for the Kyle of Sutherland



The Kyle of Sutherland Development Trust has launched its new website: Link

The site is full of useful information for tourists and residents and anyone connected with the area .  For further information and to contribute to the site, contact the Kyle of Sutherland's Community Development Officer, Lynsey Burns

Wednesday 1 February 2012

goNORTH 2012

The 6th & 7th June sees the welcome return of the Highland's premier creative industries showcase.

From goNORTH:

"goNorth was launched in 2001 to provide a platform for artists from the north of Scotland to showcase for music industry and media representatives on their own patch. Originally hosted in several venues on Aberdeen’s Belmont Street, we briefly relocated to Dundee, before settling in Scotland’s most northerly city, Inverness. The event has since developed into one of the country’s leading Creative Industries Festivals, covering a much wider remit from Screen and Broadcast to Designer Fashion and Publishing. 

goNORTH 2011 proved our most ambitious and successful event to date and we are determined to top it this year by bringing together a much wider selection of leading creative industry figures. We intend to deliver a world class programme of panels, workshops, film screenings, training opportunities, Q&A sessions, camera equipment and special effects showcases and a global marathon of live music showcases."

Full details of all this year's goNORTH activities  - and how to register - can be found here.