Kingussie Holiday Cottages

Kingussie Holiday Cottages

Set against the spectacular backdrop of the Cairngorm mountains and ancient Scots Pine Forests, Kingussie remains Scotland's favourite all year round visitor destination. Whether you're skiing, snow boarding, climbing, walking or just touring, you'll be doing it in some of Europe's finest and most spectacular scenery.

This web site offfers accommodation links, covering from simple self catering to luxurious holiday homes and fantastic, old character cottages and farmhouses, most of which are situated near to Kingussie, in the Cairngorms National Park.

Below you will find a summary list of some of the best 3, 4 and 5 Star holiday properties available in the Kingussie area. If you wish to find out more information on these properties just click on the pictures and you will be redirected to http Kingussie Holiday Cottages where you will find all the contact details you may require.

Located in the heart of the Cairngorm National Park, Kingussie is the perfect location to enjoy a family holiday or short break. If you are looking for a more secluded location why not check out Crubenbeg, a luxury 4 star Holiday Cottages complex http://www.highlandholidaycottages.com/



Sunday, 20 December 2009

Freezing weather gives Polar Bear the shivers

Freezing Highland weather gives Polar Bear the shivers. Edinburgh Zoo’s former favourite attraction – Mercedes the polar bear – was shifted north to the Highland Wildlife Park to roam in a colder habitat to match her native Canada.

http://deadlinescotland.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/polarbear_highlands_ka_dppa_02.jpg
She was expected to lap up the white stuff like every other Polar Bear on earth.

Families were poised with cameras expecting Christmas card-style picture opportunities.

But when Scotland’s first snow came to Kingussie, the freezing conditions proved too much for Mercedes, and she hid in her den.

Heat-seaking

One zookeeper said: “We all waited with baited breath to see how Mercedes would react to the first snow fall in her new home.

“This week we saw the first snow fall in Scotland, and as would be expected, the Highland Wildlife Park had its fair share.

“However, her reaction was not as exciting as we may have hoped.

“Rather than playing in the fresh snow as we would expect the penguins to do, Mercedes decided to find the warmest and least snowy spot in her enclosure, and to sit out the cold snap right there.”

She has been settling into the massive new enclosure for two months since her move.

The £75,000 transfer was conducted with military precision as she was carefully transported in a giant rhino crate on the back of a truck.

Soldiers even had to build a temporary road for her arrival at the park, which gets 65,000 visitors per year.

Rescued

Her move north brought her nearer to where the remains of one of Britain’s last known resident Polar Bears was found.

It was thought the bear was washed into caves at Inchnadamph in Sutherland 18,000 years ago.

The Wildlife Park stated on its website that Mercedes behaviour will be monitored throughout the winter and urged visitors to send in photos and videos of her in the snow.

Mercedes was rescued from her native Canada after she was scheduled to be shot.

She had been wandering into a nearby town and it was decided there was no choice but to shoot her to protect the public.

But members of the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland arranged for her to be shipped over to Edinburgh, where she arrived in 1984.

She was paired up with male polar bear Barney when she arrived in the capital and they went on to have two cubs, To-Nuik and Ohoto, who were both moved onto other zoos.

When Barney passed away 13 years ago, Mercedes was left on her own.
She is the only polar bear in captivity in the UK.

Scientists estimate that there are between 20,000 and 25,000 polar bears in the wild and a further 200 in captivity around the world.

In the wild, Mercedes would be living in the snow and ice of the North Pole, Alaska, Greenland, Scandinavia, Russia, or her homeland of arctic Canada.

The animals are usually at home in the wintry landscape – even using sea ice to move to different hunting grounds – making Mercedes’ reaction even more unexpected.

in reference to: Freezing Highland weather gives Polar Bear the shivers « Deadline Press & Picture Agency (view on Google Sidewiki)

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