The public are invited to watch the start of what promises to be a head-turning procession between Dingwall and Thurso. Here’s the plan…
A Ross-shire woman has won the backing of an MP in her heart-breaking two-year plight to live closer to the hospital her daughter depends on.
The streets of Ullapol will be buzzing over the coming days as a session of traditional music workshops gets under way.
THE go-ahead for a major Easter Ross housing scheme has been hailed an ‘extremely positive’ development for the nascent Cromarty Firth freeport.
Fears a project funded with public money could create unfair competition for businesses in a fragile Ross-shire community have been raised.
An Easter Ross community stalwart who lost his highly respected twin brother last week is pressing ahead with a fundraising cause close to his heart.
Scottish Water is offering Ross-shire residents an opportunity to discuss a proposal for a new pipe to supply water to a hydrogen production plant.
A FASCINATION sparked by a teenaged visit to a Highland war memorial prompted a Highland man to complete an epic labour of love.
Innis Mhor Care Home in Tain has been egg-ceptionally busy this Easter entertaining local children during the school holidays.
Plans for this year’s Black Isle Show are falling into place with details now being released.
The event is a family favourite across Ross and beyond and has generated thousands for charities down the years.
An Easter Ross Minger ‘has maybe finally arrived’ with a gold medal accolade that sees it ‘rub shoulders with the Gods of British Cheese’.
It opens in Highland Scotland but then spreads out to make connections with cultures across the world.
When Susan Gibson retired as compliance manager for Tesco, she told a friend she planned to do nothing for a year.
History was made on the Cromarty Firth as well-wishers toasted the fruits of three years of work at the launch of a trailblazing new vessel.
The proposed relocation of a powerhouse forming part of a planned Wester Ross hydro scheme has been tabled with Highland Council.
The crew went above and beyond the call of duty after a pensioner got stuck on a remote cliff ledge for over 24 hours.
"I got diagnosed with dyslexia and all the rest – I can't remember them all! – when I was very young it felt like it was the end."
'None of us do it for the sake of getting awards or anything. We do it because there's a need out there that needs to be filled.'
"It can make a huge difference to talk to someone in confidence, who is outside the family and yet who understands the pressures of farming."