Argyllshire Advertiser

LOCH LOMOND

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The conservati­on charity Friends of Loch Lomond and The Trossachs has launched an ‘Adopt a Bonnie Banks Bin’ scheme to help transform the overall appearance of the busy 13-mile tourist corridor between Arden and Tarbet.

The £26,000 project has financial backing from nine local tourism businesses as well as Luss Estates, the park authority, Argyll and Bute Council and environmen­tal company ENVA, the charity’s waste disposal and recycling partner.

The annual £26,000 cost covers twice weekly rubbish collection­s for the 20-bin scheme during busy periods.

Over the original nine-month pilot period 25 tonnes of litter was collected and 97 per cent of this waste was recycled - much of it being baled to help fuel steelworks.

The Friends chairman James Fraser said: ‘We were convinced the introducti­on of bins in busy lochside lay-bys with regular emptying and monitoring would greatly improve the situation, and this has proved to be the case with more visitors now treating the area with more respect and helping to keep the bonnie banks almost litter free.’

The charity’s work was praised by MSP for the area Jackie Baillie.

She said: ‘I wish to congratula­te the Friends of Loch Lomond on this scheme which has already produced such positive results.

‘I also wish to thank the partners who have provided their wholeheart­ed support.

‘Sadly, litter on the A82 at the lochside is a serious problem and has been for a number of years.

‘It is exacerbate­d during the summer months when we welcome tourists from home and abroad to see our beautiful area and I am hopeful that, with 20 new bins in the area this summer, we will see a huge benefit and the area will be at its best for visitors and residents alike to enjoy.’

GLEN CROE

Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS) has tested the viability of using drones to plant tree seed on the hillside above the A83 at the Rest and be Thankful. Thought to be the first of its kind in the UK, the trial is part of FLS’s project with Transport Scotland that aims to make it more resilient to the impact of heavy rainfall and reduce the number of serious landslips that close the vital route in and out of Argyll.

FLS operations forester James Hand is overseeing the planting.

He said: ‘Using drones to plant trees is quite common in North America and parts of Europe, but as far as we are aware it’s new to the UK.

‘The benefit of using a drone is that it is quicker and more able to scatter seeds on sites that people would find it hard – or even dangerous - to work on. This first trial was about scattering seeds and determinin­g how fast and high to fly and still achieve the dispersal that we want. It went very well and it’s now a matter of waiting to see how many seedlings emerge.

‘Next year we plan to step up the trial and use a drone with a gravity-fed system to drop pellets of seed, containing a nutrient gel, into the soil and exposed mineral slopes. The gel packets should increase the likelihood of the seeds germinatin­g and growing.

‘If the technology and the technique both work, this could be of significan­t benefit when we look at increasing the resilience of other sites that are at risk from the changing climate.’

HELENSBURG­H

Temporary repairs of potholes on Helensburg­h’s streets have been condemned as ‘a waste of money’ by a councillor for the town.

On Thursday June 2 Helensburg­h Central councillor Ian MacQuire questioned the repairs policy at a meeting of Argyll and Bute Council’s environmen­t, developmen­t and infrastruc­ture committee.

He said: ‘When potholes are fixed, are they properly sealed? I have seen a few in Helensburg­h which have not been sealed; they are just having stones put down.

‘Within a couple of weeks, they are back up again, which in a way is a waste of money.’

Head of roads and amenity services Jim Smith responded: ‘Our approach is to carry out “right first time” repairs and although that is what we aim to do, there will be some situations, in adverse weather, where we have to carry out temporary repairs and do more permanent work later.

‘Quite often we can fix a pothole, but the area adjacent to it will fall.

‘It is a combinatio­n of right first time and emergency repairs.

‘We do have a £100 million backlog of maintenanc­e.’

 ?? ?? Drones have been trialled to plant trees above the Rest and be Thankful.
Drones have been trialled to plant trees above the Rest and be Thankful.

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