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Scottish city crowned best 'budget friendly staycation' destination - and it may surprise you
Scottish city crowned best 'budget friendly staycation' destination - and it may surprise you

Daily Record

time2 days ago

  • Daily Record

Scottish city crowned best 'budget friendly staycation' destination - and it may surprise you

You don't need to leave the country to have a great holiday. A Scottish city has been named the best in the country for a "budget-friendly staycation". It was noted for its free attractions and safety. As living costs continue to rise, many Scots are foregoing international holidays in favour of more affordable staycations. According to SumUp, searches for 'cheap last minute holidays' have risen 44 per cent over the past month. In response, the experts have shared a list of the 10 best cities in the UK for a low-cost staycation. SumUp looked into cost-related metrics, as well as cultural and recreational amenities like museums and galleries. Topping the list for Scotland, and coming in at number two on the UK-wide roundup, is Edinburgh. The Scottish capital, which is often viewed as an expensive place to go, received an overall score of 60.85 out of 100. According to SumUp, Edinburgh is a "firm favourite for those seeking a staycation steeped in history and culture". The Scottish capital earned the highest score for museums—26 of them per 100,000 people—with the city home to the free National Museum of Scotland. Other popular free attractions in Edinburgh include the Museum of Childhood and The Writers' Museum. The Museum of Childhood features historic toys, games, clothes, books, and dolls, while The Writers' Museum is dedicated to Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott, and Robert Louis Stevenson. The experts also found that there are 15.92 art galleries per 100,000 people in Edinburgh. These include popular free attractions such as the National Galleries of Scotland and the City Art Centre. Edinburgh was also named as the safest in the ranking, achieving a safety score of 69 out of 100. According to SumUp, this makes it "an appealing choice for families and solo travellers alike". Meanwhile, the average cost of a meal in Edinburgh was found to be £15. The average price of a coffee and beer are £3.89 and £5.50, respectively, according to the experts. Elsewhere, Derry was named the best location in the UK for a budget-friendly staycation with an overall score of 71.32. The city performed particularly well in affordability, with the lowest average meal cost at just £10 and a pint setting punters back just £3.97 on average. Following Edinburgh in third place is Liverpool, which received a score of 58.39. Rounding out the top five are Preston and Belfast, with scores of 57.42 and 53.31, respectively. Product Marketing Lead at SumUp Corin Camenisch commented: "With an increased focus on domestic travel, as well as the cost-of-living crisis still being prevalent, we wanted to highlight the most cost-effective cities for a staycation in the UK. "Not only does this encourage budget friendly travel, but it also encourages local spending and supports local businesses due to extra traffic and tourism. "While some of the cities in our report are popular hotspots among tourists, we hope to shed insight on budget-friendly locations that can also provide memorable experiences that are rich in culture without breaking the bank." The full list of the top 10 cities in UK for budget-friendly staycation can be found below. More information can be found on the SumUp website. Derry Edinburgh Liverpool Preston Belfast Kingston upon Hull Nottingham Leicester Sheffield Stoke-on-Trent

Infinity boosts NSW copper potential with historic gold mine find
Infinity boosts NSW copper potential with historic gold mine find

West Australian

time26-06-2025

  • Business
  • West Australian

Infinity boosts NSW copper potential with historic gold mine find

Infinity Mining has identified a new gold target area, which includes the historic Sir Walter Scott gold mine, about 3 kilometres south of its Cangai copper project in northern New South Wales. The old Sir Walter Scott mine was discovered in 1872, and during the late 1800s, it produced 1790 ounces of gold from 2203 tonnes of ore at an average grade of about 25 grams per tonne (g/t) gold. The mineralisation in the old show is reported to occur in quartz-sulphide veins, hosted by steeply dipping chloritic shear zones within the Carboniferous Gundahl Complex. The complex consists of greywackes, metasediments and cherts, with minor limestone and basalts. In the 1980s, Little River Goldfields and Key Resources conducted exploration at Sir Walter Scott, including rock chip sampling around the old workings, waste dumps and from nearby outcrops. Those programs delivered several high-grade assays going up to 15.8g/t gold along a northwest trending zone for about 500 metres along strike, between Sir Walter Scott and near-neighbour Nova Resources' John Bull gold project. Grades to 7.08g/t gold were picked up in quartz-veined chert around the Sir Walter Scott shaft, and grades between 1.1g/t and 3.89g/t gold were recorded along about 500m of strike around the Sir Walter Scott workings. A total of 12 rock chip assays better than 1g/t gold were reported around Sir Walter Scott out of a total of 32 samples collected. Since the 1980s, limited modern exploration has been conducted around Sir Walter Scott and Infinity views the old show as offering a compelling target justifying further assessment. The company's research and historical data compilation has not revealed any drilling, geophysics or systematic exploration at the project since the 1980s. With the area under-explored, Infinity initially figured that Sir Walter Scott could be an intrusion-related gold system. Novo thinks the same about its John Bull project, which is 3km along strike within a significant structural corridor to the northwest. Novo has a farm-in joint venture over John Bull with TechGen Metals. Recently completed soil sampling at the project has extended the known gold anomaly within a 1 part per billion contour to about 1.5km along strike, including a remarkable soil gold result of up to 1.59g/t. Novo's rock chip sampling also defined peak gold values to 67.9g/t and 29g/t gold from sheeted quartz veins within northeast and northwest trending structural zones in the region, pointing to possible further high-grade gold mineralisation. The company planned to run a 1500m reverse circulation drilling program this month, subject to rig availability. The anomalous gold exploration results at John Bull add some intriguing context to the potential of Infinity's Sir Walter Scott gold prospect, which is 3km southeast along strike and has never been drilled. Infinity has obtained publicly available LiDAR survey data over the central part of its Cangai project from the NSW Government. LiDAR is a remote sensing method used to examine the earth's surface. It measures distance by sending a short laser pulse and records the time taken for the reflected pulse to return. LiDAR surveys produce highly accurate terrain images that can 'see' through vegetation cover and easily resolve areas of historical surface activity, including small pits, excavations, tracks and infrastructure obscured by grass and bush. It is widely used in archaeological and mine pit surveys, and infrastructure and slope stability monitoring. Infinity's data was reprocessed to a 50cm resolution to create a bare-earth digital terrain model that revealed a northwest-trending cluster of shafts, pits and trenches over more than 500m of strike length along the northwest structural corridor, including the Sir Walter Scott and Beagley gold prospects. Infinity's flagship Cangai copper mine lies 3km north of Sir Walter Scott. It produced 4950 tonnes of copper, 52.7kg of gold and 1035kg of silver from 76,940t of ore, making it one of the highest-grade and most successful early 20th-century copper mines in NSW. Infinity sees the multi-commodity copper-gold-silver character of Cangai as adding strength and diversity to its project. Having an untested historical high-grade gold mine on its doorstep is also a significant geological and potential economic bonus. Infinity plans a field visit to its newly appreciated Sir Walter Scott gold target in the coming quarter to undertake preliminary geological mapping and surface geochemical sampling to verify historical rock chip results and ascertain strike continuities and controls. Its ongoing exploration program will be determined by these results. Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:

Mea Culpa: the Ukrainian army's modern version of ancient heroics
Mea Culpa: the Ukrainian army's modern version of ancient heroics

The Independent

time07-06-2025

  • The Independent

Mea Culpa: the Ukrainian army's modern version of ancient heroics

An article about the changing tactics of the Ukrainian armed forces featured a former computer programmer with the call sign 'Grumpy', and said: 'Grumpy is the sort of warrior that young people enjoy pretending to be in video games and nostalgic tales of SAS daring-do from the Second World War.' A couple of readers commented that they expected to see 'derring-do' there, an old-fashioned construction meaning daring deeds or daring action, associated with Biggles and similar fiction. In fact, it is a much older compound than that, and it literally meant 'daring (to) do', so our spelling was true to its origins. According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, Chaucer used 'dorrying don', from Middle English durren, to dare, and don, infinitive of do, to mean 'daring to do' what is proper to a brave knight. It was spelt derrynge in the 1500s and was mistaken for a noun by Spenser, who took it to mean 'manhood and chevalrie'; before being picked up from him by Sir Walter Scott and passed on to the Romantic poets as a pseudo-archaism. All we were doing was modernising it, just as Grumpy was. Angel Digits: A striking instance of spurious accuracy cropped up in our report of the case of the British couple accused of drug smuggling in Indonesia. We reported: 'Mr Umbara told the district court in Denpasar, Bali, that a lab test result confirmed that 10 sachets of Angel Delight powdered dessert mix in Collyer's luggage, combined with seven similar sachets in his partner's suitcase, contained 993.56 grams (2.19 pounds) of cocaine, worth an estimated 6bn rupiah (£271,743).' Thanks to Iain Brodie, who found the use of five, three and six significant digits discombobulating. No doubt the first number was what was reported to the court, in a faintly comical attempt to make the lab results seem properly scientific and ungainsayable. But to a normal person, we are talking about a kilo of cocaine, which does not need to be converted into pounds and ounces, as our readers are familiar with kilograms. And the 6bn rupiah is obviously a rough estimate, so £270,000 would have been more than enough detail for the sterling equivalent. Best of three: In an article about Donald Trump's use of pardons, we said: 'With well-known rappers including Kanye West, Snoop Dogg and Lil Wayne, the latter of whom himself received a pardon from Trump…' Thanks to Teri Walsh for suggesting that we should have said 'last', because 'latter' refers to the second or 'later' of two things. Backing and forthing: In a news story about the strategic defence review, we reported that, 'just two weeks out from the review's publication, there was still some toeing and froing over which department would foot the bill', referring to a dispute between the foreign office and the Ministry of Defence over the cost of the Chagos treaty. Thanks to Roger Thetford for pointing out that this is usually spelt 'toing and froing', because otherwise it looks like toeing as in 'toeing the line'. The departmental squabble has nothing to do with feet, but with the phrase 'to and fro', meaning back and forth. Incidentally, Roger asked if 'fro' is one of those words that is only ever used with one other word. It is, so I have added it to my list, which started as a Top 10 but now has 21 entries: amok, askance, aspersions, bated, betide, clarion, dudgeon, dulcet, figment, forfend, fro, halcyon, hale, inclement, knell, petard, shebang, shrift, scot, serried and squib. Not the dog show: Sometimes one of our writers uses a word I don't know and it is fine because it is guessable from the context, and I come away feeling that I have learned something. Thus it was with our article about the threat to Google's dominance of internet search, which said that one of the things holding back the company's artificial intelligence rivals is 'the unnecessary cruft that comes with the current overly verbose AI answers'. I didn't know that 'cruft' is slang for 'badly designed, unnecessarily complicated, or unwanted code or software', but I could guess and now I do. The sum of human knowledge has been increased.

Steamship marks 125 years sailing on scenic Scottish loch
Steamship marks 125 years sailing on scenic Scottish loch

The Herald Scotland

time06-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Herald Scotland

Steamship marks 125 years sailing on scenic Scottish loch

Departing with a long blast from the ship's steam whistle, the excited cheers of young voices marked the start of a weekend-long Steamboat Festival at Trossachs Pier. The festival is the centrepiece of a special anniversary year for the Steamship Sir Walter Scott, which was crowned Flagship of the Year 2025 by National Historic Ships UK in April. READ MORE: Historic steamship gears up for 125th anniversary celebration Historic ship begins 125th season on scenic Scottish loch SS Sir Walter Scott returns to Loch Katrine An actor portraying Sir Walter Scott joined the celebrations, honouring the poet whose 1810 masterpiece 'The Lady of the Lake' made him and Loch Katrine, where the poem is set, famous. Built in 1899 at Denny's Shipyard in Dumbarton on the Clyde, Steamship Sir Walter Scott was commissioned to replace the ageing and smaller Rob Roy steamer and help satisfy the huge demand for sailings from the large numbers of visitors flocking to the Trossachs. Tributes were also paid to Captain John MacKinnon, who steered the maiden voyage in 1900. A larger-than-life figure, Captain MacKinnon and his family played a defining role in the first half of the Steamer's life. He remained at the helm until his death, when his son Donald took over as captain. During both World Wars, John and Donald's daughters also cared for the ship. Highlights of this weekend's Steamboat Festival at Trossachs Pier include pirate-themed cruises aboard the Rob Roy Smuggler, complete with storytelling, face painting, and a treasure hunt, alongside a flotilla of classic and model steamboats sailing on the loch. There will also be live music, traditional games, appearances from costumed performers, local food and drink tastings, craft stalls, and fascinating heritage exhibitions. In a tribute to the vessel's enduring legacy, 125 local schoolchildren from local schools joined the cruise, recreating the historic maiden journey. (Image: Paul Saunders) James Fraser, CEO and Lead Trustee of Steamship Sir Walter Scott said: "To see 125 schoolchildren aboard this morning's voyage, representing the future, on a vessel that has been sailing since their great-great-grandparents' time, was truly emotional. "This Steamer is more than a boat: she symbolises the Trossachs' unrivalled cultural heritage in Scotland. She was saved for the nation by incredible public support, and today she sails on, restored, celebrated, and loved. "As we mark 125 years, we do so with gratitude and pride. We invite everyone to join us at Loch Katrine this weekend to celebrate a remarkable past and a bright future for this Scottish treasure." The Steamboat Festival runs across the weekend, with Steamship Sir Walter Scott sailing three times a day in her anniversary year until October 26th.

Historic steamship gears up for 125th anniversary celebration
Historic steamship gears up for 125th anniversary celebration

The Herald Scotland

time21-05-2025

  • The Herald Scotland

Historic steamship gears up for 125th anniversary celebration

A recreation of the original cruise will commemorate the historic milestone. In tribute to her enduring legacy, 125 local schoolchildren have been invited to join the voyage, officially launching the three-day Steamboat Festival, which runs from Friday, June 6 to Sunday, June 8 at Trossachs Pier. Visitor interest in Loch Katrine in the heart of Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park continues to grow, boosted by the introduction of a new scenic tower at the 'Birthplace of Scottish Tourism' above Trossachs Pier. READ MORE: Historic ship begins 125th season on scenic Scottish loch Opened in late summer 2024, the scenic tower and lookouts are now accessible via a restored pathway, allowing visitors to once again enjoy the iconic Victorian panoramic vista. It was here in the early 1800s that Sir Walter Scott found inspiration to write 'The Lady of the Lake'—a blockbuster poem that helped bring Loch Katrine and Scotland to international fame. Already, the tower has welcomed more than 20,000 visitors. The investment by the The Steamship Sir Walter Scott Trust - a charitable organisation which was formed in 2005, to preserve the Steamship for the nation and the enjoyment of the public - has not only reopened one of Scotland's most celebrated views but also helped preserve a site of exceptional cultural and natural significance for future generations. James Fraser, CEO and Lead Trustee of Steamship Sir Walter Scott, said: 'This is a year of special celebration, legacy, and gratitude. Steamship Sir Walter Scott was saved for the nation thanks to the incredible generosity and determination of our supporters, and it's hugely rewarding to have welcomed over one million visitors back on board following major restoration works 20 years ago and again a couple of years ago. "The season has got off to a real flyer with record numbers enjoying cruises on the historic Steamship boosted greatly by a prolonged period of great weather. The Steamship Sir Walter Scott (Image: Paul Saunders) "We're especially excited about the upcoming Steamboat Festival, which promises a fantastic weekend for all ages. Highlights include pirate-themed cruises, a treasure hunt, face painting, costumed story-telling actors, a flotilla of steamboats and steam launches, live music, games, food and drink stalls, and plenty of family-friendly attractions. "It's shaping up to be a truly memorable way to mark 125 years of this much-loved vessel.' After being built in 1899, the Steamship Sir Walter Scott was conveyed in sections from Dumbarton along the River Leven, towed to Inversnaid, carried overland by horse-drawn wagons and reassembled at Stronachlachar on Loch Katrine. Half of the total bill of £4,269 was related to the cost of delivery. It has never sailed any waters other than Loch Katrine, which has been supplying Glasgow's drinking water since 1859. A £1.3 million refurbishment, which began in 2007, converted the vessel from being coal-fuelled to being powered by Scottish smokeless biofuel to reduce the environmental pollution and to cut the risk of diesel spilling into Glasgow's water supply. Passengers aboard the Steamship enjoy live commentary telling the story of the vessel's construction, history, and role in shaping Scottish tourism, as well as the nature and wonders of Loch Katrine. They can also view the engine room during a voyage. At the pier, where passengers depart for a cruise, there is an immersive exhibition showcasing the history of Loch Katrine's steamships. The exhibition includes the human stories of the captains, crew and key people over the 125 years, whose dedication contributed to the Steamship's success and ensured her safety through two World Wars before the challenges of ownership around her 100th anniversary, which resulted in the transfer to a dedicated and independent charitable trust in 2007. The Steamboat Festival will run daily from 10am-5pm from Friday, June 6 to Sunday, June 8.

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