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The Inverness Courier
10 March, 2010
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Published:  05 March, 2010

SOME businessmen find it difficult to adjust to retirement. Not so Roy McLennan.

Published:  26 February, 2010

SOON after Rona Lightfoot moved to Inverness, an invitation to become a member of Inverness Piping Society arrived through her letterbox.

Published:  19 February, 2010

EUGENIA Vronskaya admits that initially she was a very reluctant Highlander.

Published:  12 February, 2010

DRIVEN might be an appropriate word to describe Jimmy Girvan.

Published:  05 February, 2010

ROSS County footballer Paul Di Giacomo is not the only member of his household to know the toll that making a living with your legs can take.

Published:  29 January, 2010

JILL Kent recalls learning a valuable lesson as a young teacher when a knife fight broke out between two girls at an inner city school for disadvantaged teenage girls in Belize.

Published:  22 January, 2010

APPROPRIATELY enough for purveyors of Belgian chocolate, the wall of the Black Isle kitchen where Ingrid and Lucas Storey concoct their sweets bears a letter of thanks from Britain's most famous Belgian.

Published:  15 January, 2010

IF all goes according to plan, by the time he retires, James Fraser will have helped steer three colleges through the difficult transition to full university status.

Published:  08 January, 2010

THE office of Inverness's area police commander is in a state of organised mayhem.

Published:  18 December, 2009

RESURRECTED from her watery grave after more than 40 years on the bed of Loch Ness, bomber R for Robert has a place in history as one of only two surviving Wellingtons out of the 11,500 produced.

Peter McEwan

Published:  11 December, 2009

PETER McEwan may have earned an international reputation in academia and the arts world, but his connection to the Loch Ness area is both rather more earthy and otherworldly.

Published:  04 December, 2009

FOR most golfers, getting out on the course provides an escape from work, but for Stuart Rennie, the golf course is his work.

Published:  27 November, 2009

TOM and Siobhan Lauten's burger van might have a picture of Nessie painted on its side, but that is not their only connection to the monstrous.

Published:  20 November, 2009

IF there is one thing Steve "Pelé" Paterson does not want readers to take from his newly published memoir, it is a sense of pity.

Published:  13 November, 2009

IF typical retirement involves sitting down and watching daytime television, then Bill McBryde is an untypical retiree.

Published:  06 November, 2009

THAT'S the first question people ask," Tatiana Castro acknowledged.

Published:  30 October, 2009

A FOOTBALL sits invitingly in the five-a-side pitch's centre circle. Instincts take over and David Abernethy takes a detour to hammer it into the empty goal.

Published:  23 October, 2009

FOR a Highland priest, Mel Langille has some impeccable credentials. He has a passion for Scottish history, has played the bagpipes for over 36 years and even speaks some Gaelic.

Published:  16 October, 2009

THE irony is not lost on Scott Muir.

Published:  09 October, 2009

HER legal career has taken her from the capital cities of Europe to the sparsely populated Falkland Islands on the far side of the world, but for Jill Fryer, there is no place like home.

Published:  02 October, 2009

MEETING Britain's most notable — if not most controversial — prime minister of the late 20th century might well have helped set Murdo Fraser on his own path to Parliament.

Published:  25 September, 2009

ABERDEEN University's recent decision to buy Cromarty Lighthouse next to their Black Isle research field station marks a new chapter in its 20-year history of studying the marine life of the Moray Firth and further afield.

Published:  18 September, 2009

GRAHAM Clark is not someone who believes retirement is an excuse for inactivity.

Published:  11 September, 2009

WHEN George Edwards chats to The Inverness Courier, at least he does so at a more civilised hour than some of his past media encounters — the New York Times called him at at 6am.

Published:  04 September, 2009

AS the head of Radio Scotland, Jeff Zycinski might be expected to make his base in the BBC's gleaming new headquarters at Pacific Quay in Glasgow.

Published:  28 August, 2009

AS an academic whose job is to dispassionately look at the evidence about the battle, it seems only right that Tony Pollard is the only person to appear on both sides in Culloden visitor centre's film reconstruction.

Published:  21 August, 2009

SPENDING six months in one of the world's poorer nations was never likely to be the easiest option for Inverness engineer Jonathan Appleby, but even so he was not expecting to get caught up in a coup.

Published:  14 August, 2009

NOT your typical member of the Free Church clergy, John Wagner's voice has the drawl of the American Deep South rather than the Western Isles — for all that he jokes about marrying a girl from Lewis.

Published:  07 August, 2009

PLAYING cricket in the north of Scotland certainly does not come without certain challenges.

Published:  31 July, 2009

WHEN George Patience opened the Cabinet Office letter informing him that he had been nominated for an MBE, he thought someone was having him on.

Published:  24 July, 2009

DENSELY populated Hong Kong might seem the polar opposite to the wide spaces of the Highlands, but Inverness exile Sue Jamieson still finds plenty of room to breathe in the former British colony.

Published:  17 July, 2009

WHEN an Inverness massage therapist was preparing for a charity visit to Africa, she did not envisage horsemen galloping at break-neck speed towards her, swinging shimmering tribal swords.

Published:  10 July, 2009

WHEN the chance to become a consultant at Raigmore Hospital beckoned for cardiologist Steve Leslie, there was more to interest him in the job than the chance to get closer to his home town of Nairn.

Published:  03 July, 2009

WHILE their pupils prepare for six weeks of freedom, Dalneigh Primary teacher Chrisanne MacLeod and Drakies Primary assistant Reay MacGill are looking ahead to spending half their holidays at another school — and one with far fewer resources than their Inverness day jobs.

Jacqui MacLennan

Published:  26 June, 2009

AFTER living in the Low Countries for over 20 years, it should not be too much of a surprise to learn what Jacqui MacLennan misses about her home city of Inverness.

Published:  19 June, 2009

EIGHT Highlanders head for Canada this weekend to begin what Marie Curie Cancer Care (MCCC) is billing "the Ultimate Cycling Challenge".

Published:  12 June, 2009

AT first sight, Geordie Riddell does not look like a composer whose work has appeared on the same bill as Mozart, Beethoven and Chopin.

Published:  05 June, 2009

FOR an illustration of why Dave Cuthbertson deserves his name, his wife Clare provides a perfect example from a climb in North Wales in miserable conditions.

Published:  29 May, 2009

PEOPLE from Inverness never fail to impress children's charity supremo Katie Gibb who believes that despite the current economic recession locals are still as generous as ever.

Iain Goodwill

Published:  22 May, 2009

EVEN in the days immediately after the death of toddler Iain Goodwill, his parents Mark and Helen knew they had to do something to prevent other families suffering similar tragedies.

Published:  15 May, 2009

WHEN former Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE) executive Jim Rogerson and wife Marion mark their retirement with a round the world trip, they plan on doing so with a certain level of comfort.

George Fraser

Published:  08 May, 2009

THE next few weeks will tell whether George Fraser sees out the year as chairman of an SPL club, but even with the spectre of relegation hanging over Inverness Caledonian Thistle, he remains upbeat.

Jennifer Fraser

Published:  01 May, 2009

WHILE local tourism company Jacobite is dedicated to ensuring visitors to the Highlands have a relaxing time away from their working lives, it seems the Inverness employer has a different approach when it comes time for its own staff to take a break.

Published:  24 April, 2009

IT is Friday night and teenagers are gathering to catch a bus to a popular nightspot. They are typical, if young, weekend revellers, but their venue of choice is somewhat different.

Published:  17 April, 2009

THERE is no point asking angler Abigail Montgomery how big her biggest catch was.

Published:  10 April, 2009

NEWSPAPERS may be full of stories of job losses and failing businesses, but in Nairn company owner Farquhar Laing is taking a much more optimistic view.

Published:  03 April, 2009

FORMER United States president Benjamin Franklin famously stated that an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure — this is the mantra Jim Ferguson lives by.

Published:  27 March, 2009

BORN into a family affected by blindness, Mike Robertson always knew there was a 50/50 chance his two-year-old daughter Kathryn would have eye problems of her own.

Published:  20 March, 2009

TEACHER Suzann Barr could well have Scotland's most beautiful "classroom" to work in.

Marco Busi

Published:  13 March, 2009

WHEN he worked for a university, Marco Busi was described as "an entrepreneurial academic". Now he is in the private sector, he has become "an academic entrepreneur".

Published:  06 March, 2009

WHEN Don and Wendy Matheson first saw Auldearn's historic Boath House for sale, they almost passed it by — and would have done had Wendy not been rather, shall we say, insistent.

Published:  27 February, 2009

HILTON may not be on the coast but it can now boast a Light House of its own — one which it is hoped will provide a beacon for the Inverness community.

Published:  20 February, 2009

WHEN Jimmy Thomson left Highland Hospice last week, he decided to make Thursday his last day.

Shane Manning

Published:  13 February, 2009

STORMTROOPERS and aliens will be touching down in Inverness this weekend as Eden Court hosts its second comics festival, Hi-Ex, but one of them at least will not be travelling from a galaxy far, far away.

Albert Roux

Published:  06 February, 2009

FOR one Frenchman, the spirit of the Auld Alliance is echoed in his own love for Scotland.

Beata Kaczmarczyk

Published:  30 January, 2009

WHEN Beata Kaczmarczyk was named Young Ambassador of the Year in the Highlands and Islands Tourism Awards, she was shocked to hear her name picked from the four-strong shortlist.

Published:  23 January, 2009

AN airdrop into a rebel held jungle airstrip and a desperate fight to rescue terrified hostages, anti-pirate patrols and the discovery of looted Japanese gold.

Published:  16 January, 2009

TWO years on from the Highland Year of Culture, Scotland is holding another event year, but on a bigger scale.

Published:  09 January, 2009

TWELVE months ago few people would have bet on Clach still being around in 2009.

Published:  26 December, 2008

CHRISTMAS Day for most of us should be a day of celebration spent with friends and family, but not everyone was able to be at home or off work yesterday.

Published:  19 December, 2008

ALMOST a decade on from the closure of Inverness psychiatric hospitals Craig Phadrig and Craig Dunain, an innovative project is under way to ensure the history of the two institutions and the people who lived there is not lost.

Published:  12 December, 2008

WITH newspapers full of stories of companies going to the wall, this hardly seems the most likely time to announce a multi-million pound project.

Published:  05 December, 2008

WITH luck, Paul McLaughlin might soon be back playing his trombone in public again.

Published:  28 November, 2008

DAY1 is an innovative mentoring project which takes youngsters with troubled backgrounds and shows them that they have the ability to achieve. So having Corrin Henderson as co-ordinator of the Inverness-based project is an achievement that is inspirational in its own right.

Published:  21 November, 2008

SOME People Are Gay, Get Over It!", declares the poster at the Inverness office of the Terrence Higgins Trust, the UK's leading HIV and sexual health charity.

Published:  14 November, 2008

JANE Farmer acknowledges her job can sometimes be a sensitive one. Studying health provision in the rural areas of the Highlands and elsewhere in Scotland for the prospective University of the Highlands and Islands' (UHI), she admits that she is not always welcomed with open arms by some of the communities with which she works.

Published:  07 November, 2008

NUMEROUS trophies, shields and awards adorn the shelves of Robbie Paulin's office. The walls are covered in photographs of American football teams in action, while replica helmets of the Miami Dolphins, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Oakland Raiders take pride of place.

Published:  31 October, 2008

GHOSTIES and ghoulies will be abroad tonight, if only on the hunt for sweets and treats.

Published:  24 October, 2008

LIKE Scotland as a whole, the area covered by Northern Constabulary includes both large rural areas and urban centres faced with the usual policing challenges dealt with by its counterparts elsewhere in the country.

Published:  17 October, 2008

DRUMNADROCHIT sub-post master and keen sportsman David Paterson had no plans to retire, not when he and wife Valerie had just invested in the business.

Published:  10 October, 2008

WHEN he was 19, Allan MacKinnon took a trip out of Inverness to go and see rock giants Led Zeppelin. “And I haven’t been right since,” he smiles. Almost 30 years on there is less need for Highland rock fans to make the long trek south to see their heroes — and the man universally known as “Dinner” has been a major part of that change.

Published:  03 October, 2008

RORY MacLeod has put in a good couple of decades' service as chairman of the Inverness-based Highland Accordion and Fiddle Club — just do not ask the man how many years he has held the post.

Published:  26 September, 2008

RESIDENTS of the Highland Capital have grown used to hearing Polish spoken in the streets, seeing Polish food sold in local supermarkets or the Polish delicatessens that have opened in the city centre.

Published:  19 September, 2008

IF, as the old saying goes, police start to look younger as people get older, then here are three officers who will make some people feel very old indeed.

Published:  12 September, 2008

ANDY Kirkpatrick has never attempted the Inverness climbing wall.

Published:  05 September, 2008

FOR someone who makes a profession out of getting the best from people in sport, business and the arts, watching Team GB's success at the Beijing Olympics was a salutary lesson in just how important a change in attitude can be.

Published:  29 August, 2008

POLICE are the people we turn to when society has problems, but what happens when police are themselves the victims of accident or injury?

Published:  22 August, 2008

WHEN Loren Teague hoisted on her backpack and said goodbye to the Black Isle, she never expected it would be 20 years before she saw her home village of North Kessock again, or that she might never have come home at all.

Published:  15 August, 2008

IT has taken over 60 years, but Drumnadrochit woman Agnes Morrison's contribution to the war effort has finally been given the recognition it deserves.

Published:  12 August, 2008

HIS first week in office could not have been more varied for new Inverness Provost Jimmy Gray.

Published:  08 August, 2008

CHRIS Morris can see a bright future in the past. As chair of archaeology at the University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) Millennium Institute, the Lancashire-raised Viking expert is looking forward to establishing his passion for history in an area where he has spent much of his professional life.

Published:  01 August, 2008

JANE Frere's artistic journey has taken her from the shores of Loch Ness to the West Bank of Jordan.

Published:  25 July, 2008

SITTING in the staff room of a Glasgow secondary school, Carolynne Sinclair Kidd had an epiphany.

Published:  18 July, 2008

PAUL Easto can pinpoint the exact moment when he and his friends started to make the move away from their white-collar careers and make a living from their passion for the Highlands.

Published:  11 July, 2008

IN our interconnected world, small decisions made here in the Highlands can make a big difference to the lives of people living thousands of miles away on another continent.

Published:  04 July, 2008

THINKING of starting a voluntary organisation in Inverness? You need "The A-Team". Not for the TV crime fighters' uncanny ability to manufacture an assault vehicle out of the contents of the average barn, but because they could be the perfect organising committee.

Published:  27 June, 2008

IF the new chairman of Inverness Civic Trust takes particular interest in one type of building, there should be no surprise.

Published:  20 June, 2008

IF it had not been for a local tragedy, long-serving driving instructor Donnie Ross's career would have involved a different kind of transport.

Published:  13 June, 2008

DAVID Mowatt was already used to hard living long before he put on an army uniform.

Published:  06 June, 2008

MORE than anyone else on Eden Court's board, newly appointed chairman Ian Morrison was ideally placed to see how history was repeating itself with the theatre's multi-million pound re-building programme.

Published:  30 May, 2008

ASK Barrie Haycock why he decided to move to Inverness, he will tell you it is because he thought the Highland Capital was a good place to come to.

Published:  23 May, 2008

EVEN as a boy growing up in the village of Ardersier, where he still lives, Billy Milne knew more than most about buses.

Published:  20 May, 2008

KAREN Darke is a great believer in making the most of life. Despite being paralysed in a rock climbing accident 15 years ago and being confined to a wheelchair, she has refused to let her physical disability prevent her embarking on a range of arduous adventures from skiing across the Greenland icecap in temperatures of minus 30C to sea kayaking the length of the Canadian-Alaskan coastline.

Published:  16 May, 2008

LIVING just down the hill from Culloden battlefield, Resaurie resident Stuart Brown has a better insight than most to what happened on that April day in 1746.

Published:  09 May, 2008

FOR the last decade Terry Grigg has lived by the shores of the Moray Firth, yet he reckons he has spent as much time away from his Highland base as he has spent there.

Published:  02 May, 2008

WHEN Andres Duany was a student, one of the places held up as a positive example of modern architecture was the town centre of Cumbernauld.

Published:  25 April, 2008

FEW people could be blamed for regarding our world as increasingly insecure. From terrorist attacks to muggings, many people feel more vulnerable than ever before.

Published:  18 April, 2008

FOR years Andrew Hamilton has wanted to take his company — and himself — to Inverness.

Published:  11 April, 2008

WHEN Eric MacLeod told his boss he was giving up a successful career as an accountant to live on a neglected and remote croft in the West Highlands, he was not believed.

Published:  04 April, 2008

A MAGPIE by heart and a magpie by nature is how Gerry Reynolds could be described.

Published:  28 March, 2008

TOMMIE Mackay is not the only one anxiously waiting for the Christian Youth Centre (CYC) on Bank Street to reopen for business after its £170,000 facelift.

Published:  21 March, 2008

TODAY, just as it has been for over 3000 years, the ancient Persian New Year is celebrated as Naw-Ruz.

Published:  14 March, 2008

IN the media frenzy following the revelation of Prince Harry’s service in Afghanistan, it was almost inevitable that Inverness lawyer Douglas Young would get a call from a national newspaper.

Published:  07 March, 2008

TOP of the priority list for campaigner Bill McAllister is removing the Northern Meeting Park from the sites being studied by Highland Council for a new multi-million pound museum and art gallery for Inverness.

Published:  29 February, 2008

VICKI Fraser has never had any doubts about her career, even if it is one that many people feel uncomfortable about dealing with.

Published:  22 February, 2008

KEEPING Inverness Town House running smoothly should be easy going for council officer Ian Burnett, after a military career that saw him dodging bombs, bullets and a bull elephant.

Published:  15 February, 2008

WHEN the Clark family of Milton of Connage Farm on the outskirts of Ardersier decided they needed to diversify in the face of falling milk returns, they took a careful look at their options.

Published:  08 February, 2008

WITH a number one UK album and a brace of top 10 singles to their credit, present day chart toppers Scouting For Girls do not seem to have much in common with 1970s' Highland local heroes The Kut, other than they are both bands.

Published:  01 February, 2008

ERIC Fairbairn already knew what to expect when he was offered the post of governor of Inverness Prison.

Published:  25 January, 2008

PERHAPS it is Sue Fenton's childhood in the flatlands of East Anglia which is to blame for her enduring interest in the wild places of the world.

Published:  18 January, 2008

FROM flying combat missions over Iraq to the more peaceable world of PR may seem a massive leap in itself, but Colin MacGregor already has plenty of experience when it comes to getting into the public eye.

Published:  11 January, 2008

WHEN Donald J. MacLeod joins first minister Alex Salmond at the official opening of Inverness's first Gaelic medium school, it will be a suitable cap to his two decade career promoting Gaelic education.

Published:  04 January, 2008

SCOUTING chalked up a significant milestone this year as it marked its centenary, but for one Inverness Scout 2007 was also a year of significant individual achievement.

Published:  28 December, 2007

IN a world riven by religious divisions, there is an organisation in Inverness which provides a model example of cross-religious co-operation.

Published:  21 December, 2007

SANTA Claus doesn't go to Malawi, but he will this year," Evelyn Campbell declared as she collected some toys from a colleague.

Published:  18 December, 2007

ASK residents of Glendoe Terrace whether they will still be in their homes to celebrate next Christmas and they say that they cannot be sure.

Published:  14 December, 2007

THERE could hardly be a more appropriate ambassador for Inverness than Duncan Chisholm.

Published:  07 December, 2007

FOREIGN migrants may have brought a new cosmopolitanism to the Highlands, but the influx of workers from Eastern Europe and elsewhere has also brought new challenges for public services.

Published:  30 November, 2007

WHEN Ben Willcock's family traced their ancestors, he was impressed to turn up one particular black sheep who had the dubious distinction of being the last man to be hanged for piracy in the US.

Published:  23 November, 2007

FOR many, the experience of voluntary work in one of the world's poorer nations can be a life changing experience. For Calum Munro, originally from the Drakies area of Inverness, it also proved to be career changing.

Published:  16 November, 2007

IF you find Lesley Henderson avidly watching "EastEnders" or "Coronation Street", do not think she is taking a break from work. It probably is her work.

Published:  09 November, 2007

STEFAN Krause intends to brighten up the dark Inverness winter. Following a successful blueprint he introduced back home in Germany, Stefan will this month oversee the conversion of Falcon Square into an open ice rink.

Published:  02 November, 2007

FOR most of his life, David Broadfoot has been an ambassador for his beloved Highlands.

Published:  26 October, 2007

IF Philomena de Lima has to choose one phrase to describe her work, then she will opt for "social justice."

Malina MacDonald

Published:  19 October, 2007

ABOVE her desk in the former Clachnaharry School, Malina MacDonald has these words of wisdom: "We don't stop playing because we grow up, we grow up because we stop playing."

Published:  12 October, 2007

IF LifeScan Scotland, the Highlands' biggest private employer, represents a transatlantic partnership of a Scottish workforce and a US-based multi-national, then it is a partnership personified by the two men at its helm.

Published:  05 October, 2007

IT was while he was a pupil at Inverness Royal Academy in the late 1960s that Mike Jardine, the man behind last month's mountain bike world championships, got the bug for adventure sports.

Published:  28 September, 2007

HE has had a gun pointed in his face by an armed robber, trained police dogs, listens to dance music and married his childhood sweetheart — now he is arguably the most powerful councillor in the Highlands.

Published:  21 September, 2007

THANKS to the cybernetic era junk shop that is eBay, John Sinclair has just managed to get hold of a copy of the first record he ever played on.

Published:  14 September, 2007

ESCAPING to the greenhouse to care for tomato plants is stark contrast to the reality of having to talk someone out of jumping to almost certain death from the Kessock Bridge.

Published:  07 September, 2007

WHEN Brenda Johnston and her husband Bill relocate to Spain next month, she would not be entirely surprised to get a phone call from local Scouts enlisting her aid.

Published:  31 August, 2007

FROM surviving a near fatal car crash at home in Inverness to finding himself behind bars in an American jail, Steve Lyall's life has experienced ups and downs which have also seen him share the stage with his musical heroes and lead an online campaign to harness New Yorkers' energy to combat war and poverty.

Published:  24 August, 2007

AT the age of just 17, Gillian Slider is making history. As Scotland's first full-time youth convener, over the next year she will provide the area's decision makers with a young person's view.

Published:  17 August, 2007

THERE are plans afoot for a gap year in the Gillespie household when it is time for 15-year-old Cait to leave school for university.

Published:  10 August, 2007

IT is not uncommon for someone to have two jobs to help make ends meet. But to have double that amount — and mostly for pleasure — would be daunting, unless you are Charles Bannerman.

Published:  03 August, 2007

BERT Scorgie has always been a worker. By his calculation, over the course of his working life he has had some 56 jobs, including one he stuck with for 16 years.

Published:  27 July, 2007

ENDING their inaugural season as double cup champions and third in the North Caledonian League exceeded the goals and ambitions of everyone — even the management team at Inverness City.

Published:  20 July, 2007

AS he watches a new Millburn Academy rapidly taking shape next to the existing school, departing rector Graham Spence does not feel sorry about missing out on teaching in the £26 million new facility.

Published:  13 July, 2007

THREE times, Nairn woman Monica Lee-Macpherson has been brought back from the brink of death — pneumonia and a blood clot in her lung seven years ago, during surgery on her back when she was unknowingly injected with an anaesthetic she was allergic to, and finally a car crash.

Published:  06 July, 2007

LIFE is turning full circle for some retired people in the Highlands as, their working days over, they go back to school.

Published:  29 June, 2007

WHEN Bob Wynd first stood for Highland Council at the age of 60, he had modest ambitions. "All I wanted to do was sort out the Culloden Balloch road," he said.

Published:  22 June, 2007

WHEN 100 years of Scouting is celebrated at Holyrood Palace today in the presence of Princess Anne, there will be few more appropriate guests than Nairn resident Arthur Fulton.

Published:  15 June, 2007

ANGUS Dunn says he now has 15 years of experience of writing festivals under his belt as he gets ready for an appearance at the Nairn Book and Arts Festival this afternoon.

Published:  08 June, 2007

INVERNESS College has not been without controversy in recent years.

Published:  01 June, 2007

FROM fixing televisions to hob-nobbing with royalty and representing Inverness in the world's most populous nation, Bill Smith's eight years as provost of Inverness were certainly not without variety.

Published:  25 May, 2007

AS a pupil at Inverness Royal Academy in the 1970s, Sue Black had little idea of what job she would do when she left.

Published:  18 May, 2007

FOR some people, suicide is a taboo subject. However, Angela Fisher does not agree.

Published:  11 May, 2007

BY her own count, Sarah Farquhar is now embarking on her fourth career.

Published:  04 May, 2007

FOR Highland marketing expert Yvonne Crook, marketing her home area, as she does through her many tourism industry clients, is no hard task.

Published:  27 April, 2007

MIDWIFERY is not a skill normally associated with retired regular army colonels, yet it was training as a midwife which led to Lochardil resident Catherine Morrison’s military career.

Published:  20 April, 2007

IT does not take long to realise that Nick Martin likes animals. Visitors to the Drakies home he shares with partner Carol are likely to be greeted by his small white terrier before noticing photographs of his three cats — if not the cats themselves.

Published:  13 April, 2007

AS someone who has spent more than half his life professionally involved in football, Brian Irvine makes it clear that if he had a choice he would still be involved in the game professionally.

Published:  06 April, 2007

THERE is a good reason why Steve Sharpe adopted the name "Happyness Drum Circle" for his drum teaching.

Published:  30 March, 2007

WHEN Margaret Straube, Highland Council's senior registrar left her job this month, it marked the end of 34 years' service recording the most significant milestones of people's lives.

Published:  23 March, 2007

AS he prepares for retirement after over 30 years in local government, Mike Greaves is looking to the future in his usual manner, optimistically.

Published:  16 March, 2007

SCOTT Armstrong feels privileged to have the job he does. As the senior Visit­Scotland representative in the Highlands, it is part of the Kirkhill resident’s duties to promote the area to the world, not something he has great difficulty in doing.

Published:  09 March, 2007

BEHIND the till at Norval’s gift and craft shop on Church Street is an item that is certainly not for sale, nor is it just for decoration.

Published:  02 March, 2007

AN ageing population and the trend for people to move away from their home areas has led to a growing number of elderly people living on their own and feeling vulnerable.

Jim Alexander

Published:  23 February, 2007

BY his own admission, Jim Alexander has itchy feet. Yet even though those feet have taken him around the world, they always seem to bring him back to his home town of Nairn.

Published:  16 February, 2007

FOR almost 25 years it has been the aim of Gaelic advocate Finlay Macleoid to give children a head start over him in speaking the language.

Published:  09 February, 2007

THOSE who know David Sutherland as the guiding hand behind a successful business with a nine figure turnover, or as two-time chairman of Inverness Caledonian Thistle FC, might get a rather different view of him if they turned up at his farm any weekend.

Published:  02 February, 2007

A DECADE ago, John Burns would have been surprised at the path his life has taken.

Published:  26 January, 2007

BROUGHT up in the Highlands, it is no surprise that landscapes and scenes of country life have always played a major part in photographer Rebecca Marr’s portfolio.

Published:  19 January, 2007

CHRISTINA Stewart learned at at early age the benefits of a bedtime song.

Published:  12 January, 2007

THOUGH latterly much involved with plans to set up a community radio station in Inverness, Mike Gilmour's first professional involvement came in a different guise.

Published:  05 January, 2007

SCOTLAND’S relationship with Italy is a long one, dating back to well before even Hadrian and Antonius decided to do a spot of wall-building.

Published:  29 December, 2006

OFFICIALLY, Billy Nelson has retired, but that does not mean he has not been busy this festive season.

Published:  22 December, 2006

USUALLY Poppy Fraser is more than happy to let her mother Drusilla do the cooking at Christmas.

Published:  15 December, 2006

A CHARITY set up to combat AIDS in big cities and best known for its work with the gay community may not seem to be tailor-made for the wide spaces of northern Scotland, but it still has a vital role to play, according to the man setting up its Inverness office.

Published:  08 December, 2006

WHILE other little boys set their hearts on being train drivers or test pilots, John Ross had another ambition in mind. “From the earliest years, I wanted to be a missionary,” he revealed.

Published:  01 December, 2006

RENEWABLE energy projects? Eastern European workers pouring into the Highlands? They may be aspects of Highland life in the early 21st century, but Archie Chisholm has seen them all before.

Published:  24 November, 2006

THOUGH he is resident in Inverness, Neil Hinchliff must be ready at any time of the day or night and in any conditions to drop what he is doing and head for the west.

Published:  17 November, 2006

IF the law has a long arm, then Andrew Laing is one lawman who needs it to reach the furthermost parts of his patch.

Published:  10 November, 2006

IT was not until Amina Kinani moved to Inverness that she adopted the headscarf that covers her head and immediately identifies her as a Muslim woman.

Published:  03 November, 2006

OVER 30 years in the Highlands have done little to erode Malcolm Dent's mellow Surrey tones, but for the past six years he has been putting that voice to good use in providing a service for the sight-impaired in the area and beyond.

Published:  27 October, 2006

WHEN Bryan McIlwraith opened his practice in Inverness 30 years ago, he would have to explain to patients what an osteopath did.

Published:  20 October, 2006

ERIC Robertson knows what it is like to be either side of a referee's decision, both as the man making the call and the one on the receiving end.

Published:  13 October, 2006

LIKE any student, Sheila Urquhart is proud of her framed educational qualification certificate, which she keeps in her living room.

Published:  06 October, 2006

TOMORROW Kenneth MacKinnon will make a belated, but long anticipated, return to the stage in Inverness.

Published:  29 September, 2006

THERE are, Kay Barron readily admits, a number of negative points about Britain's fashion industry.

Arthur Fraser

Published:  22 September, 2006

IF his neighbours in the little village of Milton by Drumnadrochit ever wondered why congregationalist minister Arthur Fraser decided to rename his cottage Stonington...

Constable Malcolm Raeburn Pic: Northern Exposures 01463 710420

Published:  15 September, 2006

SOMETIMES the battle against the burglar is won before he even attempts a break-in.

Former Highland Council music adviser Bert Richardson keeps his hand in at the piano post-retiral. Pic: Phil Downie 01463 831249

Published:  08 September, 2006

MOST music teachers hope to inspire their pupils and even colleagues, but few can have been presented with their own theme tune on retirement.

Bingan Xu explores Inverness Town House during his placement with the council.

Published:  01 September, 2006

WHEN Bingan Xu returned to China last weekend he took with him a new found taste for shortbread, but a whole lot more.

Published:  25 August, 2006

BY day, Karen Sutherland of Dalneigh works in Highland Council's graphics department, designing and illustrating local authority literature.

Published:  18 August, 2006

IT is a long way from the Wild West to the shores of the Moray Firth, but if you spot Ian Parnham walking through Culbin Forest with his dog, that is where his mind is likely to be wandering.

Published:  11 August, 2006

FIVE years ago this month, chief constable Bill Robertson hung up his uniform for the last time, but despite expectations did not abandon the Highlands.

Published:  04 August, 2006

The Inverness music scene is buzzing with new talent and new music. Calum Macleod meets a man glad to be involved in helping teenagers let their hair down

Published:  28 July, 2006

An ambulance driver with Scottish music in his soul and a drag act called Maggie in his repertoire has retired after 30 years' service. Calum Macleod learned of his musical influences and career.

Published:  21 July, 2006

A glass eye and basset hounds have featured in the life of the man who now administers the city of Inverness. Bob King met the official who feels at home in the Highlands.

Published:  14 July, 2006

A retiring army chaplain who has served in Northern Ireland and the Balkans talks to Calum Macleod about the contradictions and dilemmas of the job.

Published:  07 July, 2006

A retiring head teacher who turned his back on a promising football career talks to Calum Macleod.

Published:  30 June, 2006

Actor Charlton Heston wore his back to front and Lord Lovat wanted repair after repair. Calum Macleod discovers the ins and outs of the kilt business from one of the best.

Published:  23 June, 2006

Calum Macleod meets the city's access officer and finds problems with fires, litter and even tonnes of dumped tyres but no full scale land anarchy.

Published:  16 June, 2006

AN artistic former teacher is on the verge of a new venture. Calum Macleod finds how the Queen and a Harris Tweed evening dress played their part.

Published:  09 June, 2006

Campaigning former garage owner Bruce MacGregor and his musician son Brian have united to run a visitor centre at Bogbain. Bob King learned of their plans for the business.

Published:  02 June, 2006

Sharing a police van with the school football team and meeting the mother of a child with malaria, it's all in a life's work for one city head, as Shirley Hastings discovers.

Published:  26 May, 2006

From small beginnings on a poor farm in Kincardineshire to life as a comfortable Inverness benefactor. Calum Macleod discovers how one farmer has made a difference to his rural community.

Published:  12 May, 2006

Abandoned as a child by her father, Judy Westwater was forced to fend for herself among destitute African youngsters. She told Calum Macleod about her extraordinary life.

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