No mow May HOMEOWNERS throughout Dumbarton and the Vale are being urged to let their grass grow this month to support a nationwide environmental campaign. The ‘No Mow May’ initiative has been launched by conservation charity Plantlife with a message to lock up your lawnmower for 31 days and let the wild flowers bloom. The Cardross CAN (Climate Action Network) group, Cardross Parish Church and Geilston Hall are all giving their backing to the initiative. Heather Munro, from Cardross CAN, said: “It’s a campaign to encourage us all to care more about the biodiversity in our gardens, because our native pollinators are in sharp decline due to changes in agricultural practices over decades, and collectively our gardens can make a difference.
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April 6, 2021, 4:22 pm
Rev Neil Glover, the minister at Aberfeldy Church in Perthshire, records a sermon beside the Birks of Aberfeldy waterfall (Andrew Milligan/PA)
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A survey of churches in Scotland found nearly all those who responded offered online worship during the first coronavirus lockdown and more than one in eight plans to continue.
A total of 369 congregational leaders from 27 different denominations across Scotland responded to the study and, of these, 96% said they provided online worship during the first lockdown last year, when places of worship were closed.
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