MARCH 2021
LOCAL WALK:
PROPERTY MATTERS:
LOCAL HISTORY:
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wonderful miniature world is being engineered at a site near Almondell Country Park, by the Edinburgh Society of Model Engineers. Learning about all the diverse, creative and inspiring things local people get up to is one of the best things about this job, and I loved the (sociallydistanced) visit to the site last month. There is far more to it than I could include in the article, and they are looking for people to be involved - see the article on pages 8-9 for details. The clocks go forward on the 28th March, so we can look forward to some lighter evenings at last – it’s felt like a very long winter. We’re likely to still be spending plenty of time outdoors over the next few weeks, and in this issue there is a local walk feature to explore with some interesting local history. Bruce has contributed a very interesting local history article again too this month about a household name who was born in Linlithgow. Thanks for reading Konect and supporting local businesses and organisations.
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THIS ISSUE Feature: Engineering a miniature world.............8 Property Matters: A Guide to Virtual Property Viewings...................................................12 Garden Project: Promise of Spring...................15 Parenting: It’s my second lockdown birthday and I’ll cry if I want to............................22 Vet’s Tip: “Dog Poo is Rubbish”........................24 Local Environment: Tails of the unexpected...25 Local Walk: The Shale Trail.................................26 Local History: Captain John West.....................28 Puzzles.......................................................................28 Life Coaching: Change What you Notice.......30 Film Review: Soul....................................................30
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HELEN-JANE SHEARER
LOCAL WALK: Editor
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En
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ondell Model Alm eering Centr gin
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Andrew Newton, ESME member
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Engineering n i at ur e w o r
An extraordinary venue is gradually emerging out of what was an overgrown and neglected woodland near Pumpherston. Acquired by the Edinburgh Society of Model Engineers in 2013, the 11-acre woodland site on Drumshoreland Road is destined to be one of the largest model engineering centres in Europe. It’s a work in progress, but already you can see the vision taking shape: it’s a miniature wonderland with bridges, tunnels, stations, a water feature, over 2 kms of miniature gauge railway track, and much more.
The work party building a platform
And the Society members are keen for the local community to get involved in its creation and development. Perhaps you are entering retirement, between jobs, or a student with time on your hands. It’s a wonderful opportunity to get involved with a constructional project, to have fun, camaraderie and learn some new skills along the way. This is the first time in the Society’s 127-year history that it has had its own permanent site to build tracks and features on, a place where members will be able to come to work on their engineering projects, run their steam trains and other vehicles. They are working hard to create a venue for all generations to enjoy their hobby.
Tracks into the woods 8 | LINLITHGOW
But it’s much more than that. The site and the society is a rich resource that they want to share with the community for learning about engineering as well as other hobbies. @KonectMagazines
An Outdoor Leaning venue The Almondell Model Engineering Centre is available as an outdoor learning venue for schools, higher education, youth groups and industry.
There is free onsite car and coach parking and a 400 sqm Heritage Building for rainy days with toilets, kitchen, a large conference/ classroom with full audio-visual facilities, a training workshop and small meeting room. We would love to hear from teachers, trainers or any organisations that would like to help us make use of our facilities to provide creative learning opportunities.
Please contact Andrew Newton on 07981 756863 or email development@edinburgh-sme.org.uk Almondell Engineering Centre is a beautiful natural environmental setting, and ecology goes hand in hand with the engineering here. The woodland was very dense and unmanaged previously, and it has benefited from active management since the Society took over. Deer and other wildlife make their home here; there are wild areas for insects to flourish; they aim to put up bird boxes in the parts of the wooded area that the tracks do not go through; and they have created a pond which is a picturesque feature for the railway and will also encourage biodiversity over time. Pretty much everything is made from recycled and repurposed material. That’s part of the genius of it. Between them, members and volunteers are bringing a huge amount of skill, experience, ingenuity and hard labour to forge this special venue.
Andrew rapidly learned bridge-building skills during the last lockdown @KonectMagazines
Exercise and share with us The lockdown during 2020 restricted development of the site and the Club are looking for new members and volunteers to push forward more activities. If you have an interest in model engineering or simply want to lend a hand, then get in touch. There is plenty to be involved in, from landscaping, surveying, ecology projects, and engineering. Camaraderie and new skills thrown in! Work parties take place on Thursdays and Saturdays starting at 10:00am. To get involved please contact Andrew Newton on 07981 756863 or email development@edinburgh-sme.org.uk
The building, with an eco-friendly heating system, houses a training room, library, conference room and kitchen as well as the members’ workshop area. It is available for a nominal fee for organisations to hold AGMs or meetings, and they will be welcome to tour the site too. There is something very joyful about a site being built not for profit but for the purpose of learning, playing, sharing knowledge and carrying on learning for a lifetime. For more information and to get involved in any way, please visit: www.edinburgh-sme.org.uk development@edinburgh-sme.org.uk Andrew Newton - 07981 756863
Almondell Model Engineering Centre, Drumshoreland Muir, Drumshoreland Road, Broxburn, EH52 5PF This article was written by Helen-Jane Shearer after visiting the Almondell Engineering Centre. Helen-Jane is the Editor of Konect magazines and lives in West Lothian with her family. The Centre is an outdoors venue operating in line with the Scottish Government’s current advice for controlling the virus. ESME is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC041019. LINLITHGOW | 9
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PROPERTY MATTERS
A Guide to Virtual Property Viewings
Agent Guided Viewings ^^^ The increase in popularity of virtual (or remote) property viewings has undoubtedly been driven by the social distancing restrictions that we have become used to since March last year. (It’s probably worth pointing out at the start of this piece that physical viewings and agent valuations of properties are still permitted, and these activities take place every day.) Having said that, and following Government guidelines, it is important to keep physical contact to a minimum and agents should use technology to progress and enhance the buying and selling experience for clients where possible.
Video Tours/Property Walkthrough’s are not new and have been used in different formats for some time however the range and quality of this type of marketing product have developed significantly and now offer homeowners a variety of different options to choose from.
photographs and should be short and punchy, almost a snippet as a ‘teaser’ to encourage more interest. Many of these types of videos however tend to be too long and very quickly disengage the audience who typically skip and fast forward to the end if the timing and production is not spot on. Mid-range video products often provide an interactive experience, allowing the user to control which rooms to view and move around the property at their own pace. In principle, they provide comprehensive coverage of the interior and layout and should give the viewer a better understanding and ‘feel’ for the spaces however some of these products can be quite awkward or ‘clunky’ to navigate depending on which device you are using, and often don’t deliver the memorable user experience that a product of this quality should. Premium level videos generally feature the Estate Agent who is selling the property or the Agent will provide a guided voiceover. These tend to much more engaging and informative as the visual experience is greatly enhanced by the audio description of certain key features, specification highlights and location aspects. One of the other key benefits of viewing a property using this technique is that it allows buyers to see room and space perspective in relation to the agent being present in the property. Like all property marketing products, virtual (or remote) viewings are not intended to replace physical viewings however commissioning the highest quality video production not only shows your property in the most professional and engaging way it also provides the best viewing experience for potential buyers and increases the probability of a physical viewing being requested which of course is the ultimate aim.
These can be summarised into 3 different categories depending on the type of property and the budget available for marketing and promotion. At the entry level, a basic ‘walk-through’ video does as the name suggests by guiding the viewer around the property. This type of product is a good addition to standard 12 | LINLITHGOW
^^^ Agent Accompanied Viewings @KonectMagazines
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taking our own advice Our tiny team, who are keeping the garden centre alive whilst most of us are furloughed, decided to take last month’s Konect advice to heart and set up a firepit in our Scottish Garden. Suitably socially distanced, it made a delightful staff room for their breaks! Hopefully we’ll be allowed to open the garden centre sometime this month and welcome you all back.
Our gardens here, like this one, are all looking full of promise and the snowdrops are opening and the daffodils poking up through the soil. How is your garden looking? We bet they are delighting you with the promise of Spring arriving. Lesley and I walked around our garden as we were writing this column (second weekend of February) and counted 24 plants in flower. The weekend before was the Big Bird Count and Lesley recorded a dozen different types of bird visiting. My goodness we are
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A firepit in our Scottish Garden filling up the feeders with Sunflower Hearts every day to keep this merry band happy. The star performers in our garden are the fragrant pink Daphne Bholua and the fragrant yellow Witchhazel, but these stars are supported by Winter flowering Heathers, little annual Violas and Pansies, Primroses, fragrant flowering Winter Box, Lenten Hellebores and many more. Could your garden squeeze in one of these little darlings, or is it crammed full of late winter promise already? The gardening project is contributed by Dougal Philip, New Hopetoun Gardens. Inspiring, informing and entertaining, for more than 40 years.
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LINLITHGOW | 21
PARENTING
It’s my second lockdown birthday and I’ll cry if I want to.. . I can’t actually believe it, but we are on the downhill slope to my youngest daughter’s second lockdown birthday. Who would have thought it!?
We were in the middle of planning her birthday party last year when the world as we knew it was put on pause. Of course I told her we would do something “when this is all over”. I vividly remember the conversation…and unfortunately so does she. According to her I now owe her two birthday parties and probably some extra presents when the shops open again.
So the pressure is on to deliver something special this year. At least this time we have a bit more notice. And by now I am pretty much an expert at celebrating special occasions while on house arrest. We have certainly learned by now that there is not much point in putting things off until “after”. The secret to my success is the local businesses I’ve discovered that have helped keep our special occasions special – even in these strange times we find ourselves in. 22 | LINLITHGOW
Plus I love knowing that by ordering from a small local business I might have made an actual person do a little happy dance. So many small businesses have been hit especially hard this year but these ones you can support from the comfort of your own home no matter the restrictions. So if you need help with an upcoming occasion here are my go to guys. Party On Main Street – or Susan the balloon lady as she is known in our house – makes the most amazing balloon displays and decorations. Her balloons have added a bit of magic to our household when we’ve really needed it this year and I can’t recommend her highly enough. Baby Bear Keepsakes do beautiful personalised, hand-painted gifts for all sorts of occasions. With the shops so often closed now I love knowing that I can still get something a bit different
for a gift or to let someone I can’t see know that I am still thinking of them. I should say that I am not affiliated with either of these businesses other than being a huge fan and a loyal customer. They can both be found on Facebook and Instagram, are based in West Lothian and deliver direct. Here’s to all the other kids out there who’ll be celebrating over Zoom once again…remind them that it just means more cake for them! The parenting column is contributed by Laura Archibald. Laura lives in West Lothian with her family and their campervan Hank. She is mummy, wife, blogger and full-time personal assistant to her two girlie girls. @KonectMagazines
SUDOKU SOLUTIONS
FEBRUARY
MARCH
Your February edition of Konect was so full of local content that we didn’t have space for the Sudoku solution
See page 28 for this month’s Crossword and Sudoku Puzzles
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LINLITHGOW | 23
SOLUTION
FEBRUARY CROSSWORD SOLUTION
Here at Westport we’ve been hearing a lot from our customers about the amount of dog poo in the local community.
Perhaps it’s because we’re all taking more local walks during lockdown but whatever the reason, it’s not good news which is why we are launching a campaign called “Dog Poo is Rubbish”. Dog poo turns a walk from what should be a mental health boost, taking in the scenery, into a slalom with eyes fixed on the path to avoid stepping in something unpleasant. It can also be dangerous. Contact with dog excrement can cause toxocariasis – a nasty infection that can lead to dizziness, nausea, asthma and even blindness or seizures. It’s also illegal – failing to clear up after your dog can lead to a Fixed Penalty Notice of up to £100 or up to £1000 if it goes to court. Being unaware a dog has fouled or not having a suitable bag is not a reasonable excuse.
See P28 for this month’s Crossword and Sudoku Puzzles
So the aim of our campaign is to clean up the community and educate owners. Local schools have been working on a competition for a campaign poster and we are compiling a map of local dog poo bins – check our social media and website for details soon. And we are making poo bags available outside our Westport practices, and are offering posters and poo bags to any local businesses which have an issue near their premises or would like to raise awareness. Contributed by Stuart McMorrow, head vet at Westport Veterinary Clinic 8 Preston Road. 01506 844 165 | www.westportvets.com 24 | LINLITHGOW
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LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
Tails of the unexpected You may have heard some loud screaming at night over the last couple of months, and wondered what all the racket is. Whilst there could be many reasons, the most likely culprit behind the noise is female foxes (vixens) making their presence known to any males (dog fox) in the area. You’d be forgiven for thinking something much worse was going on, however the easiest explanation is that we’ve been in the peak of fox breeding season across December/January.
Recently I had one of those wildlife encounters, not far from where I stay, that nearly takes your breath away. This fox was on the prowl for lunch, and using its excellent hearing listened for prey beneath the snow before an energetic pounce to claim the prize. It then continued along the path, straight towards me before slipping down the ditch just a few feet away, and coming out again to give me a good stare. Returning to the hunt (one vole does not a meal make)! it headed in the opposite direction, whilst I frantically waved at some people approaching to stop them in their tracks, @KonectMagazines
though I’m sure they walked away with no idea why I was gesturing so enthusiastically.
You can plan to look for specific wildlife, but sometimes the ones you never even dreamed of turn out to be something which stays with you for days. Before the spring brings more cover and easier hiding places, always expect the unexpected when going out for a walk in winter. This column is contributed by Clare Harte and Kate Stevenson, who grew up in Edinburgh and now live in West Lothian. Together they run Scottish Sisters Photography and travel around the country to watch and photograph amazing wildlife and scenic landscapes. Follow them on Facebook @ScottishSistersPhotography LINLITHGOW | 25
You may have noticed little black and white signs appearing, dotted through West Lothian, with “Shale Trail” on them.
They are markers on a new 16-mile walking route between West Calder and Winchburgh. Called “The Shale Trail” and described on the dedicated website as “The pathway of Scotland’s Oil Rush,” it aims to commemorate various human, social and industrial aspects of the all-consuming industry which dominated West Lothian for 100 years from the 1860s to the 1960s. The pink bings that characterise our skylines are the most visible monuments to the industry, but there is more than meets the eye. The Shale Trail is a wonderful - and lockdown-friendly - way to learn about it. It takes in various sites of significance and is punctuated by information signage with stories highlighting aspects of the industry and local life. There is a children’s version as well, with material prepared by local school children. This walk for Konect covers the western half of the trail from West Calder to Howden in Livingston. Start on the Main Street of West Calder, at the memorial bench in front of the old Co-op clock. This is the location of the first story on the trail; read the stories on the website as you go along. From here, walk up Northfield Court, where a footpath heads off the road and down towards Five Sisters bing which you can see in the distance. Follow the 26 | LINLITHGOW
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well-surfaced path through until it comes out onto the road, Tenant’s March.
Turn right on the footpath, and the trail now follows the road for a while, turning left onto Mossend and continuing up to the new housing estate. This estate is at the site of the historic mining hamlet of Mossend. The Trail story at this point tells about the original village – and its football team.
A little further along the road, you’ll spot the sign indicating the trail turns left, leaving the road. It take you down some steps through a small wooded area, then skirts some fields. Crossing the B7015, it takes you alongside Breich Water, and it’s a very pleasant stretch of the trail on a good surfaced path, all the way through the fields to the point where Breich Water joins the River Almond. Here you cross a bridge and continue alongside the Almond, striking across more or less open ground with some nice wooded areas. The path is well marked although it was quite muddy in places here when I did this walk. You eventually arrive at Almond Pools, the site of the former Livingston Quarry. The Trail story here explains how these tranquil pools, now a wildlife haven, were created when the Almond was diverted away from the shale deposits for the quarrying. It’s a lovely peaceful spot. Shortly past the pools, the trail takes you up onto the road (Simpson Parkway) briefly
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then turns down the footpath into Livingston Village, through Thirlfield Wynd and out by Almond Valley Heritage Centre. Follow the sign through the housing into the historic heart of old Livingston Village. Here, before heading down Charlesfield Lane on the Trail, we indulged in a very excellent takeaway coffee and cake from Castaway Coffee on the Main Street. From Livingston Village, the Trail follows the River Almond, passes the Civic Centre and continues along the river. At Howden Bridge, pause to see and read about the Howden Rock Ramp, a fascinating wildlife engineering project that is bringing salmon and other wildlife back up the Almond – an extraordinary achievement given the Almond used to be so polluted by industry that it had a chemical smell as it ran though Livingston. Howden is just less than the halfway along the Shale Trail. It’s a good spot to get back on the road and get a bus back to the car in West Calder, if you don’t feel like retracing your steps back along the trail. If cafes are open again by the time this is printed, there will be plenty of refreshment options in West Calder. This article was written by Helen-Jane Shearer. Helen-Jane is the editor of Konect and lives in West Lothian with her family.
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PUZZLES
CROSSWORD
CAPTAIN
JOHN WEST
John West canned fish products are known world wide, but how many people know that the founder of the company was born in Linlithgow?
That at least is the claim made by the company itself - and one echoed in many website entries. ^^^ Solution in the April edition of Konect ACROSS: 1. Outermost (7), 5. Six sided objects (5), 8. Turn (5), 9. Woman’s holdall (7), 10. Media notice (13), 11. Relaxed (6), 12. Idiotic (6), 15. Exhibition (13), 18. Not quietest (7), 19. Very angry (5), 20. Perfume (5), 21. Meals (7). DOWN: 1. Additional (5), 2. Robbers (7), 3. Amusement (13), 4. Racial group (6), 5. Deep thought (13), 6. Religious text (5), 7. Seen (7), 11. Hugs (7), 13. Not public (7), 14. Commented (6), 16. Small rodent (5), 17. Requirements (5)
^^^ Sudoku solution on page 23
SUDOKU
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His birthdate is given as the 27th August 1809 but actually tracking down his birth records is proving very difficult. An entry in the Daily Mail in October 2015 states, “The original John West was born in Linlithgow, Scotland, in 1809. After working in the fishing industry in Scotland, he emigrated to the USA where he pioneered the canning of fish.” The John West Company’s own website states that “he cut his teeth in the local Scottish fishing trade”.
John West’s product won first prize at the Oregon (USA) State Fair in 1873 @KonectMagazines
So, if he was involved with fishing was he born in a coastal town in Linlithgowshire? Another entry in Wikipedia suggests that he had training as a millwright so was he born on a farm – perhaps, it has been suggested, in the vicinity of Ecclesmachan. No school building existed in that village until the 1830s so did John attend a school in Linlithgow – perhaps the one which stood behind the Burgh Hall? What is not in dispute is that, at the age of forty, he emigrated to Canada where he married Margaret and set up house near Quebec. He seems to have begun his working life working in a sawmill - perhaps using his mechanical expertise gained while employed in Scotland. The Californian Gold Rush of the late 1840s saw him trying his luck on the American goldfields where, perhaps having no luck with mineral exploration, he operated a sawmill and opened a general store and post office. In 1853 he moved to the American state of Oregon and took up a 640- acre Land Claim on the Columbia River. He called the community which grew up there, ‘Westport’. Could that be a tribute to his birthplace in Linlithgow? He used his entrepreneurial skills to set up a sawmill from which he exported timber to Australia. As a side-line, he also began exporting salmon which migrated up the Columbia River in their thousands. Initially, the fish were salted, packed in barrels and shipped to California from where they were transported to Great Britain. In the late 1860s he set up his first canning plant – an operation which, by 1873, was producing 22,000 cases of salmon yearly. Using his technical expertise, he invented an automated can-filling machine and a process for turning salmon waste into oil and fishmeal.
John West‘s Wild Pacific Red Salmon as we know it today @KonectMagazines
During the period when salmon were not so plentiful his machinery was used to can beef, mutton and brambles. By 1882, thirty-nine of his factories were in operation. Some 1700 fishing boats supplied the products he required. In 1882, he commissioned a 118John West foot propeller-driven photographed in steamer which he, the 1870s rather egotistically, called the “John West”. Captain West, as he liked to be called, died in 1888 a very wealthy man. The company continued under the name “John West” but in the 1920s it was taken over by Unilever. In 1997 it was bought by Heinz who sold it to French-based MW Foods who in turn passed it on to the Thailand based Thai Foods Group.
Margaret West
Further research may come up with more details of John West’s birth and upbringing in, or near, Linlithgow. Meanwhile we can but admire the story of a local lad who became a household name across the world. John West’s headstone in Westport Cemetery This article and photos were contributed by Bruce Jamieson. LINLITHGOW | 29
LIFE COACHING
Change What You NOTICE
Soul is advertised and packaged as the new Disney Pixar kid’s film. However, it is in fact a film tailored for adults. Soul is about Joe Gardner who has a very strong passion for music, and on the cusp of his lifelong ambition he is transported out of his body and must find a way back. Soul contains some of the best animation Pixar has ever done. Seeing the different animation styles varying from hyper detailed humans, to more cartoony looking souls to abstract line drawings it’s all just beautiful and a visual treat to the eyes. Seeing Joe play the piano in one scene is jaw dropping as it looks so real. The score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross (of Nine Inch Nails) is incredible and is really effective in certain scenes. However, Soul wants to have its cake and eat it when it comes to the story. The story wants to be a deep and thoughtprovoking film that touches adult themes, but it also wants to be a simplistic kid’s film. This clashing of ideas leads to the film being painfully predictable from the beginning and instead of exploring the more interesting aspects, it focuses on the more childlike aspects which I found to be cringeworthy. While overall I did enjoy Soul, I don’t think it was the masterpiece AVAILABLE other people were saying it was. NOW ON People should watch this film though while I think it’s just good, other people might be really moved and affected by this film. The Film Review is contributed by Robert Ewing. Robert is passionate about film as an art form, and shining a light on films that may not be on people’s radar. Robert is from Kirknewton. 30 | LINLITHGOW
Can you remember the last time you ought a new car or a shirt or even a pretty candle? Maybe it was an unusual colour of green or blue or purple. Suddenly, you began to notice just that shade of green, purple or blue everywhere you looked. Close your eyes and think of the colour blue. Then open your eyes again and scan the area around you and you will find that you are suddenly aware of even the smallest amount of blue. This happens because the brain has a really clever filtering system, called the Reticular Activating System, which sorts through millions of bits of data which come our way throughout the day and categories this information to help us make sense of our world. This area of the brain is the size of your little finger and can influence everything including your self-esteem, your confidence and what you believe about the world around you. We form this filter ourselves by telling our brain what is important to us, what we believe, what we long for and what we fear and, over time, we attract more of the things that we focus on into our lives. This can sometimes feels really challenging and we wonder why bother? Especially if we tell ourselves that we are fated to experience the same things, work experiences or relationships again and again and think that we are doomed to experience ‘Groundhog Day’ for the rest of our lives. If we created our experiences by the way we think, it stands to reason that we can alter the world around us by thinking differently. Changing the language we use when we speak to ourselves and altering our focus has the potential to change our future forever. The Life Coaching column is contributed by Francine Orr, NLP coach, hypnotherapist & reiki practitioner. Francine is based within Linlithgow Chiropractic on Wednesday afternoons and is also available online. See www.orrganise.co.uk @KonectMagazines