The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

It’ s Royal Highland no-show

- NANCY NICOLSON, FARMING EDITOR

This year’s Royal Highland Show has been cancelled – but plans are in the pipeline for livestock judging to go ahead at Ingliston without spectators.

The show’s directors have made the inevitable but financiall­y crippling decision to cancel Scotland’s flagship agricultur­al event for a second year after discussion­s with government advisers.

The Royal Highland and Agricultur­al Society of Scotland (RHASS) chairman Bill Gray said his board was deeply disappoint­ed and had left “no stone unturned” in the effort to hold a show which would satisfy even some of the 200,000 or so people who flock to Ingliston every June.

“We had hoped beyond hope, particular­ly with the direction of travel before Christmas, that the vaccinatio­n rollout would enable the show as we know it to go ahead,” he said.

“However the prospect of extended restrictio­ns, combined with advice from Scottish Government officials, left us with no choice but to seek an alternativ­e.”

The 10,000 people who bought advance tickets for June’s event will have their money refunded.

Meanwhile, the RHASS is now planning for a “Royal Highland Showcase” event to take place at the showground in June, but behind closed doors, with only exhibitors attending to parade their livestock for showing in the traditiona­l judging rings.

The aim is to live-stream the event globally, with RHASS members getting VIP access to the live streaming for free as part of their member benefits.

RHASS chief executive Alan Laidlaw cited the success of this year’s online Celtic Connection­s festival which was streamed from Glasgow across the globe.

“The world will be able to watch,” he said.

“It has proved successful for other showing organisati­ons and we want to try that – a hybrid between a live event and an online presence – to give people the opportunit­y to show their livestock and genetics and still have a celebratio­n of that, but just not in front of the public we’d normally have.”

The cancellati­on of the show for a second year has serious financial implicatio­ns for the RHASS after it lost £4.5 million last year and a further £2m from events income at the Royal Highland Centre.

 ??  ?? SHOWTIME: This year will see a Royal Highland Showcase, viewed from a distance.
SHOWTIME: This year will see a Royal Highland Showcase, viewed from a distance.

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