RAINY DAY IN THE NEW TOWN
Summer's in the air.
#Edinburgh
#hyperlocal
#news
An item of "Breaking News". Will appear on the Breaking News page and the front page.
Summer's in the air.
#Edinburgh
#hyperlocal
#news
Sunshine and haze over Calton Hill this morning, where Friends met under the expert guidance of the Scottish Ornithology Club's Stephen Welch to record breeding pairs of bird.
Patient listening and hard stares helped in identifying 18 different species over 2 hours.
Namely: jackdaw, magpie, carrion crow, common gull, herring gull, lesser black-backed gull …
Encouraging how Broughton Pharmacy community library has flourished since modest start in Sept 2019: see p.2 in Issue 289.
Now a well-used local resource with sometimes startling content, including Spurtles.
#Edinburgh
#hyperlocal
#news
Bit of a back-to-front Diana and Actaeon moment here.
For reference follow THIS LINK.
Am glad to report no hind quarters were torn apart afterwards.
11.30pm, Saturday 11 May.
A breathtaking natural spectacle: the aurora borealis.
Or not.
#Edinburgh #hyperlocal #news
Edinburgh's most uneven wall?
No. 35 in an occasional photo-series celebrating Spurtleshire street-name signs.
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#hyperlocal
#news #perspetive
As part of the UK-wide Indie News Week and the ‘No News is Bad News’ campaign from the Public Interest News Foundation, the Scottish Beacon (of which the Spurtle is a founding member) will hold its first public event in Edinburgh on 7 June.
CSG Projects Ltd wants to build a Richard Murphy-designed 5-bdrm home on land it owns between the office at 12 Blenheim Pl and Greenside Parish Church (24/01889/FUL).
This morning, to celebrate International Dawn Chorus Day, Spurtle despatched its Avian Affairs correspondent to the tranquil slopes of Upper Greenside.
Here, at 5.19 am, somewhere above the omnipresent hum and hiss of the OMNi Centre plant, is what they heard …
Blackbird, blue tit, chiffchaff, coal tit, herring gull, nuthatch, robin, song thrush, woodpigeon, wren, Eurasian drug dealer and common taxi.
Edinburgh Council and Edinburgh street performers have recently been discussing how to better manage street performances in the city centre.
The problem of amplified music (Issue 334, p. 3) may be comparatively new, but the difficulty of preventing music-related nuisance has troubled Edinburgh authorities for years.