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PICTURES: Coigach and Assynt Living Landscapes helps plant more than one million trees on crofts across northern Scotland as part of a project by Croft Woodland Project in partnership with Woodland Trust Scotland

  Article PICTURES: Coigach and Assynt Living Landscapes helps plant more than one million trees on crofts across northern Scotland as part of a project by Croft Woodland Project in partnership with Woodland Trust Scotland By Ian Duncan  |  Updated: 23:28, 11 December 2020 Get the Ross-shire Journal sent to your inbox every week and swipe through an exact replica of the day s newspaper Gallery1 A Highland organisation has helped with a project which has been extended beyond its initial five-year phase because of its success. Coigach and Assynt Living Landscapes was one of a number of groups which worked with Croft Woodland Project in partnership with Woodland Trust Scotland.

PICTURES: Coigach and Assynt Living Landscapes helps to plant more than one million trees on crofts across northern Scotland as part of a project by Croft Woodland Project in partnership with Woodland Trust Scotland

  Article PICTURES: Coigach and Assynt Living Landscapes helps to plant more than one million trees on crofts across northern Scotland as part of a project by Croft Woodland Project in partnership with Woodland Trust Scotland By Ian Duncan Published: 00:01, 11 December 2020 Get the Northern Times sent to your inbox every week and swipe through an exact replica of the day s newspaper Gallery1 A Highland organisation has helped with a project which has been extended beyond its initial five year phase because of its success. Coigach and Assynt Living Landscapes was one of a number of groups which worked with Croft Woodland Project in partnership with Woodland Trust Scotland.

MSPs voice concern at lack of female representation at farming union

by Gemma Mackenzie © Shutterstock / ChameleonsEye Sign up for our daily newsletter featuring the top stories from The Press and Journal. Thank you for signing up to The Press and Journal newsletter. Something went wrong - please try again later. Sign Up The lack of female representation at Scotland’s farming union has been questioned by MSPs. Representatives from the Scottish Government-led Women in Agriculture taskforce were asked why they thought NFU Scotland (NFUS) had no female directors on its board during an evidence session to Holyrood’s rural economy and connectivity committee. None of the three taskforce members –Scottish Land and Estates chief executive Sarah-Jane Laing, Easter Ross farmer Anne Rae MacDonald, and Professor Sally Shortall from Newcastle University – were keen to pass judgment on the union’s gender balance.

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