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Flock to the Show: Scotland’s rural charity launches public art trail


By David Porter

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The Flock will be on tour across Aberdeenshire and Invernessshire in April
The Flock will be on tour across Aberdeenshire and Invernessshire in April

The Royal Highland & Agricultural Society of Scotland (RHASS) is getting set for the start of Flock to the Show, a public art trail that will travel across Scotland this April and May.

It will be making a stop at John O'Groats next month as part of the tour.

The campaign celebrates the return of the Golden Shears World Sheep Shearing & Woolhandling Championships to the Royal Highland Show, which takes place June 22-25.

The art trail features over 35 specially designed sheep sculptures, decorated by artists from across the UK.

Designed to engage visitors of all ages, the trail will also raise awareness of different causes related to farming, including regenerative agriculture, rural isolation and climate change.

Artists who designed a sheep include Charlotte Brayley from Comrie, Perthshire, whose art project on her pet sheep, Alan, helped pay for her wedding, and Megan Reilly from Hamliton, South Lanarkshire, who designed the ‘Shepherds Delight’ sheep and has painted over 1000 murals in her artistic career.

As part of the campaign, there will be four opportunities, one in each area, to win a VIP Royal Highland Show experience for all the family – available for children and adults of all ages to enter. Budding artists can download a sheep outline from the Royal Highland Show website and create their own design to be in with a chance of winning.

Information on how to enter can be found in the Flock to the Show section of the Royal Highland Show website.

Following the tour, the flock shall return to the Royal Highland Show during the Golden Shears in June this year, which will be the only time the sheep sculptures will gather together in one location.

The flock will then be auctioned at a gala dinner in September to raise funds that will support the Royal Highland & Agricultural Society of Scotland Bicentennial Fund, which supports projects dedicated to sustainability in the rural sector.

The tour will cover four main areas – Aberdeenshire and Inverness; Dundee, Fife and Perthshire; Strathclyde and Dumfries & Galloway; and Lothian and the Scottish Borders.

Aberdeenshire and Inverness: April 3-16: Locations include: Eastgate Shopping Centre, Ballater Visitor Centre; Aviemore Visitor Centre; Douneside House Tarland; Logie Farm Steading Forres; and John O'Groats Visitor Centre.

Stirling, Dundee, Fife and Perthshire: April 18-30: Locations include: House of Bruar; Gloagburn Farm Shop; Visit Scotland iCentre St Andrews; Falkirk Wheel; Loch Leven’s Larder; and the Kelpies Visitor Centre.

Strathclyde, Dumfries & Galloway and Glasgow: May 2-14: Locations include: Buchanan Galleries; Glasgow Queen Street train station; Gretna Green; and SRUC Barony.

Lothians and the Scottish Borders: May 16-30: Locations include: St James Quarter; Edinburgh Waverley Train Station, Drift, North Berwick; Melrose Rugby Club; and Craigies Farm.

Full details of the Flock to the Show tour can be found on the Royal Highland Show website: royalhighlandshow.org/flock-to-the-show

The Royal Highland Show takes place from June 22-25, and tickets are on sale now at: royalhighlandshow.org

Mairi McAllan MSP helped celebrate the launch by paying a visit to the colourful flock
Mairi McAllan MSP helped celebrate the launch by paying a visit to the colourful flock

Jim Warnock, Chairman of Royal Highland Show organisers, the Royal Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland (RHASS), commented: “We are very much looking forward to seeing our flock out and about across Scotland. Not only does Flock to the Show celebrate the return of the Golden Shears to the Royal Highland Show, but it will also shine a spotlight on some important causes in the agricultural and rural sectors.

“We hope that everyone will get involved and pay a visit to our flock when they arrive in your region - with such a brilliant and diverse range of designs from talented artists, visitors won’t be disappointed!”

Commenting on the Flock to the Show campaign, Minister for Environment and Land Reform Mairi McAllan MSP said: “The prestigious ‘Golden Shears’ competition taking place in Edinburgh this year highlights the high international standing of Scotland’s agricultural industry.

"Our rural communities should be rightly proud of that reputation, and this exhibition is an important way of celebrating their success.

"I hope it can help to encourage more young people into what is an essential, thriving, and highly regarded sector, to learn important skills, and even become qualified shearers.

"The innovative exhibition is also a unique and creative way of drawing attention to important agricultural issues – such as the cost of living and doing business, rural isolation, animal health and welfare, and the climate and nature emergencies."


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