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    <title>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper Podcast: Stories from Land to Sea</title>
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    <description>We're bringing you closer to the people, places, and stories of Nairnshire and beyond. Each episode dives deeper into the lives and work of local business owners, artists, artisans, scientists, naturalists, and other inspiring folk who help shape our small but beautiful corner of the Highlands. Join us as we explore community, culture, creativity, and the wild landscapes that make this part of the world so special.</description>
    <copyright>@ 2025 Nairnshire Community Newspaper SCIO</copyright>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2026 17:55:00 +0100</pubDate>
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    <link>https://www.nairnshire.com</link>
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      <title>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper Podcast: Stories from Land to Sea</title>
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    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
    <itunes:author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</itunes:author>
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    <itunes:summary>We're bringing you closer to the people, places, and stories of Nairnshire and beyond. Each episode dives deeper into the lives and work of local business owners, artists, artisans, scientists, naturalists, and other inspiring folk who help shape our small but beautiful corner of the Highlands. Join us as we explore community, culture, creativity, and the wild landscapes that make this part of the world so special.</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:subtitle>We're bringing you closer to the people, places, and stories of Nairnshire and beyond.</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:keywords>Nairnshire, Scottish Highlands, Highlands podcast, Nairn community, Local stories, Scottish culture, Community podcast, Local business stories, Arts and culture Scotland, Highland artists, Scottish makers, Nature and environment Scotland, Rural Scotland, Community voices, Sustainable living Scotland</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</itunes:name>
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    <itunes:complete>No</itunes:complete>
    <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    <item>
      <title>#005 – Donald Wilson returns with Richard Konczak: The night Nairn County became champions</title>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>5</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>#005 – Donald Wilson returns with Richard Konczak: The night Nairn County became champions</itunes:title>
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      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, <strong>Donald Wilson</strong> sits down with <strong>a true local legend, Richard Konczak</strong>, the man between the posts when Nairn County F.C. made history.</p><p>We are marking <strong>50 years since that unforgettable 1975 to 76 season</strong>, when the club won its first and only Highland League title, and Richard was right at the heart of it.</p><p>This conversation feels like sitting in the stands with two people who lived it. Donald guides the story, while Richard brings it vividly to life. From boyhood memories of falling in love with football at Station Park, to training alongside his heroes, and eventually becoming one of them.</p><p>We hear how the team was transformed under the leadership of manager <strong>Innes MacDonald</strong>, not just tactically, but psychologically. This was a side built on discipline, trust, and an unshakeable belief in each other.</p><p>And then comes the drama!</p><p>A season of big results and rising pressure leads to a winner takes all <strong>playoff against Fraserburgh F.C. on May 17, 1976</strong>, a match that would define a generation.</p><p>What follows is unforgettable. A packed crowd and electric atmosphere. A brutal collision that leaves Richard unconscious. A goal line clearance that keeps the dream alive. And a stunning long range winner that seals the title.</p><p>This is more than football nostalgia. It is a story about resilience, leadership, and the power of community.</p><p><strong>Chapters</strong>:</p><ul><li>00:00: Donald Wilson welcomes Richard Konczak</li><li>01:10: The 1975–76 season &amp; playoff victory</li><li>02:30: Falling in love with football &amp; early days</li><li>06:10: Joining Nairn County FC &amp; learning from legends</li><li>10:00: Innes MacDonald: leadership &amp; rebuilding the team</li><li>15:00: Building the squad &amp; key players</li><li>23:00: Captain Davie Cochrane &amp; team mentality</li><li>26:00: Training, fitness &amp; what made the difference</li><li>32:50: Big wins &amp; the title race drama</li><li>37:30: Late-season pressure &amp; playoff confirmed</li><li>42:00: Playoff build-up vs Fraserburgh</li><li>45:05: The match: goals, injury &amp; dramatic finish</li><li>50:00: Celebrations, legacy &amp; what it meant for Nairn</li></ul>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, <strong>Donald Wilson</strong> sits down with <strong>a true local legend, Richard Konczak</strong>, the man between the posts when Nairn County F.C. made history.</p><p>We are marking <strong>50 years since that unforgettable 1975 to 76 season</strong>, when the club won its first and only Highland League title, and Richard was right at the heart of it.</p><p>This conversation feels like sitting in the stands with two people who lived it. Donald guides the story, while Richard brings it vividly to life. From boyhood memories of falling in love with football at Station Park, to training alongside his heroes, and eventually becoming one of them.</p><p>We hear how the team was transformed under the leadership of manager <strong>Innes MacDonald</strong>, not just tactically, but psychologically. This was a side built on discipline, trust, and an unshakeable belief in each other.</p><p>And then comes the drama!</p><p>A season of big results and rising pressure leads to a winner takes all <strong>playoff against Fraserburgh F.C. on May 17, 1976</strong>, a match that would define a generation.</p><p>What follows is unforgettable. A packed crowd and electric atmosphere. A brutal collision that leaves Richard unconscious. A goal line clearance that keeps the dream alive. And a stunning long range winner that seals the title.</p><p>This is more than football nostalgia. It is a story about resilience, leadership, and the power of community.</p><p><strong>Chapters</strong>:</p><ul><li>00:00: Donald Wilson welcomes Richard Konczak</li><li>01:10: The 1975–76 season &amp; playoff victory</li><li>02:30: Falling in love with football &amp; early days</li><li>06:10: Joining Nairn County FC &amp; learning from legends</li><li>10:00: Innes MacDonald: leadership &amp; rebuilding the team</li><li>15:00: Building the squad &amp; key players</li><li>23:00: Captain Davie Cochrane &amp; team mentality</li><li>26:00: Training, fitness &amp; what made the difference</li><li>32:50: Big wins &amp; the title race drama</li><li>37:30: Late-season pressure &amp; playoff confirmed</li><li>42:00: Playoff build-up vs Fraserburgh</li><li>45:05: The match: goals, injury &amp; dramatic finish</li><li>50:00: Celebrations, legacy &amp; what it meant for Nairn</li></ul>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2026 17:52:17 +0100</pubDate>
      <author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</author>
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      <itunes:author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>3387</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, <strong>Donald Wilson</strong> sits down with <strong>a true local legend, Richard Konczak</strong>, the man between the posts when Nairn County F.C. made history.</p><p>We are marking <strong>50 years since that unforgettable 1975 to 76 season</strong>, when the club won its first and only Highland League title, and Richard was right at the heart of it.</p><p>This conversation feels like sitting in the stands with two people who lived it. Donald guides the story, while Richard brings it vividly to life. From boyhood memories of falling in love with football at Station Park, to training alongside his heroes, and eventually becoming one of them.</p><p>We hear how the team was transformed under the leadership of manager <strong>Innes MacDonald</strong>, not just tactically, but psychologically. This was a side built on discipline, trust, and an unshakeable belief in each other.</p><p>And then comes the drama!</p><p>A season of big results and rising pressure leads to a winner takes all <strong>playoff against Fraserburgh F.C. on May 17, 1976</strong>, a match that would define a generation.</p><p>What follows is unforgettable. A packed crowd and electric atmosphere. A brutal collision that leaves Richard unconscious. A goal line clearance that keeps the dream alive. And a stunning long range winner that seals the title.</p><p>This is more than football nostalgia. It is a story about resilience, leadership, and the power of community.</p><p><strong>Chapters</strong>:</p><ul><li>00:00: Donald Wilson welcomes Richard Konczak</li><li>01:10: The 1975–76 season &amp; playoff victory</li><li>02:30: Falling in love with football &amp; early days</li><li>06:10: Joining Nairn County FC &amp; learning from legends</li><li>10:00: Innes MacDonald: leadership &amp; rebuilding the team</li><li>15:00: Building the squad &amp; key players</li><li>23:00: Captain Davie Cochrane &amp; team mentality</li><li>26:00: Training, fitness &amp; what made the difference</li><li>32:50: Big wins &amp; the title race drama</li><li>37:30: Late-season pressure &amp; playoff confirmed</li><li>42:00: Playoff build-up vs Fraserburgh</li><li>45:05: The match: goals, injury &amp; dramatic finish</li><li>50:00: Celebrations, legacy &amp; what it meant for Nairn</li></ul>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Nairnshire, Scottish Highlands, Highlands podcast, Nairn community, Local stories, Scottish culture, Community podcast, Local business stories, Arts and culture Scotland, Highland artists, Scottish makers, Nature and environment Scotland, Rural Scotland, Community voices, Sustainable living Scotland</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/1e5257b8/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>#004 – Donald Wilson interviews John McCruden: A Marathon Every Day Since 2006</title>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>4</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>#004 – Donald Wilson interviews John McCruden: A Marathon Every Day Since 2006</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/291c7ee1</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, <strong>Donald Wilson</strong> sat down with<strong> local legend John McCruden</strong>, chef, ultra-runner, musician and quite possibly the only man in Nairn attempting to beat Elon Musk to the moon… on foot.</p><p><strong>John has been running a marathon every single day since 2006. He has currently clocked up around 190,000 miles</strong> and he is not slowing down.</p><p>Donald talks to John about how it all began, from the stress of running a busy restaurant to protecting his mental health through running.</p><p>They also dive into:</p><ul><li>How John fits a marathon a day around family life, cheffing and café shifts</li><li>His running philosophy, including why he treats the first 20 miles as “transportation”</li><li>Mindfulness on the roads of Nairn, from chimney smoke to freezing winter nights</li><li>His experience running the Great Wall of China in a kilt</li><li>Training methods, midfoot striking and how he strengthens his body rather than breaking it</li><li>The reality of £250 running shoes</li><li>The “dark ages” of chasing Michelin-level perfection in the kitchen</li><li>Music therapy in care homes, including a story that will stay with you long after the episode ends</li></ul><p>It is a conversation about discipline, obsession, creativity, grief, healing and what it means to dedicate yourself fully to something, whether that is running to the moon or making fresh pasta from scratch.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li> 00:00 Challenge to the Moon</li><li> 01:25 Why John started running</li><li> 02:30 A marathon every day since 2006</li><li> 03:00 “I’m halfway to the Moon”</li><li> 05:00 Family running roots</li><li> 08:30 How 26 miles became “easy”</li><li> 09:40 Mindfulness on the roads of Nairn</li><li> 11:00 Injury, cadence &amp; midfoot strike</li><li> 13:00 Fitting marathons around family life</li><li> 15:00 Running the Great Wall of China (in a kilt!)</li><li> 17:30 Winter running &amp; cold weather mindset</li><li> 19:00 £250 trainers &amp; the superglue hack</li><li> 21:30 Therapy through music</li><li> 29:00 The “Dark Ages” of Michelin ambition</li><li> 32:00 Seabank Hotel &amp; John's love for fresh pasta </li><li> 34:00 Beating Elon Musk to the Moon</li></ul>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, <strong>Donald Wilson</strong> sat down with<strong> local legend John McCruden</strong>, chef, ultra-runner, musician and quite possibly the only man in Nairn attempting to beat Elon Musk to the moon… on foot.</p><p><strong>John has been running a marathon every single day since 2006. He has currently clocked up around 190,000 miles</strong> and he is not slowing down.</p><p>Donald talks to John about how it all began, from the stress of running a busy restaurant to protecting his mental health through running.</p><p>They also dive into:</p><ul><li>How John fits a marathon a day around family life, cheffing and café shifts</li><li>His running philosophy, including why he treats the first 20 miles as “transportation”</li><li>Mindfulness on the roads of Nairn, from chimney smoke to freezing winter nights</li><li>His experience running the Great Wall of China in a kilt</li><li>Training methods, midfoot striking and how he strengthens his body rather than breaking it</li><li>The reality of £250 running shoes</li><li>The “dark ages” of chasing Michelin-level perfection in the kitchen</li><li>Music therapy in care homes, including a story that will stay with you long after the episode ends</li></ul><p>It is a conversation about discipline, obsession, creativity, grief, healing and what it means to dedicate yourself fully to something, whether that is running to the moon or making fresh pasta from scratch.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li> 00:00 Challenge to the Moon</li><li> 01:25 Why John started running</li><li> 02:30 A marathon every day since 2006</li><li> 03:00 “I’m halfway to the Moon”</li><li> 05:00 Family running roots</li><li> 08:30 How 26 miles became “easy”</li><li> 09:40 Mindfulness on the roads of Nairn</li><li> 11:00 Injury, cadence &amp; midfoot strike</li><li> 13:00 Fitting marathons around family life</li><li> 15:00 Running the Great Wall of China (in a kilt!)</li><li> 17:30 Winter running &amp; cold weather mindset</li><li> 19:00 £250 trainers &amp; the superglue hack</li><li> 21:30 Therapy through music</li><li> 29:00 The “Dark Ages” of Michelin ambition</li><li> 32:00 Seabank Hotel &amp; John's love for fresh pasta </li><li> 34:00 Beating Elon Musk to the Moon</li></ul>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 05 Feb 2026 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/291c7ee1/a15db7ee.mp3" length="52434991" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/ad3Jls6xZVIX-VrpJArqUYgAy81nS3uFYFtoZSQAeFg/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9hNDY5/NTBlN2YzMWZmZGZj/NGI2OGIxMjU1M2Rh/MDM5ZS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>2168</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, <strong>Donald Wilson</strong> sat down with<strong> local legend John McCruden</strong>, chef, ultra-runner, musician and quite possibly the only man in Nairn attempting to beat Elon Musk to the moon… on foot.</p><p><strong>John has been running a marathon every single day since 2006. He has currently clocked up around 190,000 miles</strong> and he is not slowing down.</p><p>Donald talks to John about how it all began, from the stress of running a busy restaurant to protecting his mental health through running.</p><p>They also dive into:</p><ul><li>How John fits a marathon a day around family life, cheffing and café shifts</li><li>His running philosophy, including why he treats the first 20 miles as “transportation”</li><li>Mindfulness on the roads of Nairn, from chimney smoke to freezing winter nights</li><li>His experience running the Great Wall of China in a kilt</li><li>Training methods, midfoot striking and how he strengthens his body rather than breaking it</li><li>The reality of £250 running shoes</li><li>The “dark ages” of chasing Michelin-level perfection in the kitchen</li><li>Music therapy in care homes, including a story that will stay with you long after the episode ends</li></ul><p>It is a conversation about discipline, obsession, creativity, grief, healing and what it means to dedicate yourself fully to something, whether that is running to the moon or making fresh pasta from scratch.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li> 00:00 Challenge to the Moon</li><li> 01:25 Why John started running</li><li> 02:30 A marathon every day since 2006</li><li> 03:00 “I’m halfway to the Moon”</li><li> 05:00 Family running roots</li><li> 08:30 How 26 miles became “easy”</li><li> 09:40 Mindfulness on the roads of Nairn</li><li> 11:00 Injury, cadence &amp; midfoot strike</li><li> 13:00 Fitting marathons around family life</li><li> 15:00 Running the Great Wall of China (in a kilt!)</li><li> 17:30 Winter running &amp; cold weather mindset</li><li> 19:00 £250 trainers &amp; the superglue hack</li><li> 21:30 Therapy through music</li><li> 29:00 The “Dark Ages” of Michelin ambition</li><li> 32:00 Seabank Hotel &amp; John's love for fresh pasta </li><li> 34:00 Beating Elon Musk to the Moon</li></ul>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Nairnshire, Scottish Highlands, Highlands podcast, Nairn community, Local stories, Scottish culture, Community podcast, Local business stories, Arts and culture Scotland, Highland artists, Scottish makers, Nature and environment Scotland, Rural Scotland, Community voices, Sustainable living Scotland</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/291c7ee1/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
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    <item>
      <title>#003 - Diana Whitmore: Seeing Potential Before Young People See It Themselves</title>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>3</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>#003 - Diana Whitmore: Seeing Potential Before Young People See It Themselves</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/0ce01fc1</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we’re joined by <strong>Diana Whitmore</strong>, CoCEO of <a href="https://www.growing2gether.org.uk/"><strong>Growing2gether</strong></a>, for a powerful, hopeful conversation about young people, belief, and what happens when we stop trying to “fix” kids and start trusting them instead.</p><p>Diana shares the story behind Growing2gether, an early-intervention programme that brings together two groups often labelled as “vulnerable”: disengaged young people and children with additional support needs. The result? Something quietly transformational.</p><p>We talk about how mentoring younger children helps teenagers rediscover their own self-worth, why positive psychology and coaching sit at the heart of the programme, and what Diana has learned from over 40 years working in the third sector. She reflects on the influence of her lifelong mentor, Laura Huxley, the widow of Aldous Huxley, and how a belief in human potential became the foundation for everything that followed.</p><p>This is a wide-ranging, deeply human conversation about education, mental health, community, resilience, and why every young person needs at least one adult who sees their potential <em>before they do</em>. We also explore funding challenges, working with schools across the Highlands, Moray and Aberdeen, and Diana’s hopes for how this work could shape Scotland’s future.</p><p>At its heart, this episode is a reminder that belief is not a “soft” skill, but a catalyst for real change.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Introduction &amp; welcome</li><li>01:25 What is Growing2gether?</li><li>03:00 Mentoring vulnerable children - why it works</li><li>05:23 Diana’s journey into youth development</li><li>07:40 Positive psychology &amp; believing in young people</li><li>10:28 Building trust, not fixing behaviour</li><li>13:03 Leadership, third sector lessons &amp; turning points</li><li>15:33 Evidence, outcomes &amp; positive destinations</li><li>17:17 Coaching vs telling young people what to do</li><li>19:06 Early champions &amp; support in the Highlands</li><li>22:20 Funding challenges &amp; system change</li><li>25:40 A day inside the Growing2gether programme</li><li>29:25 Why mentoring younger children matters</li><li>32:32 “All young people want to feel they matter”</li><li>34:18 Training teachers &amp; spreading the approach</li><li>36:24 How schools and communities respond</li><li>39:31 What young people have taught Diana</li><li>42:03 Resilience, self-empathy &amp; leadership</li><li>44:40 The role of Growing2gether in Scotland’s youth ecosystem</li><li>48:26 Looking ahead to 2026 and beyond</li><li>52:14 How communities can support the work</li><li>54:26 Messages for young people and adults</li><li>56:14 Closing reflections</li></ul>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we’re joined by <strong>Diana Whitmore</strong>, CoCEO of <a href="https://www.growing2gether.org.uk/"><strong>Growing2gether</strong></a>, for a powerful, hopeful conversation about young people, belief, and what happens when we stop trying to “fix” kids and start trusting them instead.</p><p>Diana shares the story behind Growing2gether, an early-intervention programme that brings together two groups often labelled as “vulnerable”: disengaged young people and children with additional support needs. The result? Something quietly transformational.</p><p>We talk about how mentoring younger children helps teenagers rediscover their own self-worth, why positive psychology and coaching sit at the heart of the programme, and what Diana has learned from over 40 years working in the third sector. She reflects on the influence of her lifelong mentor, Laura Huxley, the widow of Aldous Huxley, and how a belief in human potential became the foundation for everything that followed.</p><p>This is a wide-ranging, deeply human conversation about education, mental health, community, resilience, and why every young person needs at least one adult who sees their potential <em>before they do</em>. We also explore funding challenges, working with schools across the Highlands, Moray and Aberdeen, and Diana’s hopes for how this work could shape Scotland’s future.</p><p>At its heart, this episode is a reminder that belief is not a “soft” skill, but a catalyst for real change.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Introduction &amp; welcome</li><li>01:25 What is Growing2gether?</li><li>03:00 Mentoring vulnerable children - why it works</li><li>05:23 Diana’s journey into youth development</li><li>07:40 Positive psychology &amp; believing in young people</li><li>10:28 Building trust, not fixing behaviour</li><li>13:03 Leadership, third sector lessons &amp; turning points</li><li>15:33 Evidence, outcomes &amp; positive destinations</li><li>17:17 Coaching vs telling young people what to do</li><li>19:06 Early champions &amp; support in the Highlands</li><li>22:20 Funding challenges &amp; system change</li><li>25:40 A day inside the Growing2gether programme</li><li>29:25 Why mentoring younger children matters</li><li>32:32 “All young people want to feel they matter”</li><li>34:18 Training teachers &amp; spreading the approach</li><li>36:24 How schools and communities respond</li><li>39:31 What young people have taught Diana</li><li>42:03 Resilience, self-empathy &amp; leadership</li><li>44:40 The role of Growing2gether in Scotland’s youth ecosystem</li><li>48:26 Looking ahead to 2026 and beyond</li><li>52:14 How communities can support the work</li><li>54:26 Messages for young people and adults</li><li>56:14 Closing reflections</li></ul>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2026 11:20:19 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/0ce01fc1/3dff5c51.mp3" length="82071671" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>3416</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we’re joined by <strong>Diana Whitmore</strong>, CoCEO of <a href="https://www.growing2gether.org.uk/"><strong>Growing2gether</strong></a>, for a powerful, hopeful conversation about young people, belief, and what happens when we stop trying to “fix” kids and start trusting them instead.</p><p>Diana shares the story behind Growing2gether, an early-intervention programme that brings together two groups often labelled as “vulnerable”: disengaged young people and children with additional support needs. The result? Something quietly transformational.</p><p>We talk about how mentoring younger children helps teenagers rediscover their own self-worth, why positive psychology and coaching sit at the heart of the programme, and what Diana has learned from over 40 years working in the third sector. She reflects on the influence of her lifelong mentor, Laura Huxley, the widow of Aldous Huxley, and how a belief in human potential became the foundation for everything that followed.</p><p>This is a wide-ranging, deeply human conversation about education, mental health, community, resilience, and why every young person needs at least one adult who sees their potential <em>before they do</em>. We also explore funding challenges, working with schools across the Highlands, Moray and Aberdeen, and Diana’s hopes for how this work could shape Scotland’s future.</p><p>At its heart, this episode is a reminder that belief is not a “soft” skill, but a catalyst for real change.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Introduction &amp; welcome</li><li>01:25 What is Growing2gether?</li><li>03:00 Mentoring vulnerable children - why it works</li><li>05:23 Diana’s journey into youth development</li><li>07:40 Positive psychology &amp; believing in young people</li><li>10:28 Building trust, not fixing behaviour</li><li>13:03 Leadership, third sector lessons &amp; turning points</li><li>15:33 Evidence, outcomes &amp; positive destinations</li><li>17:17 Coaching vs telling young people what to do</li><li>19:06 Early champions &amp; support in the Highlands</li><li>22:20 Funding challenges &amp; system change</li><li>25:40 A day inside the Growing2gether programme</li><li>29:25 Why mentoring younger children matters</li><li>32:32 “All young people want to feel they matter”</li><li>34:18 Training teachers &amp; spreading the approach</li><li>36:24 How schools and communities respond</li><li>39:31 What young people have taught Diana</li><li>42:03 Resilience, self-empathy &amp; leadership</li><li>44:40 The role of Growing2gether in Scotland’s youth ecosystem</li><li>48:26 Looking ahead to 2026 and beyond</li><li>52:14 How communities can support the work</li><li>54:26 Messages for young people and adults</li><li>56:14 Closing reflections</li></ul>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Nairnshire, Scottish Highlands, Highlands podcast, Nairn community, Local stories, Scottish culture, Community podcast, Local business stories, Arts and culture Scotland, Highland artists, Scottish makers, Nature and environment Scotland, Rural Scotland, Community voices, Sustainable living Scotland</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/0ce01fc1/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>#002 – Nicholas Ralph: Perseverance, Purpose &amp; the Long Road to All Creatures Great and Small</title>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>2</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>#002 – Nicholas Ralph: Perseverance, Purpose &amp; the Long Road to All Creatures Great and Small</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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        <![CDATA[<p>In this festive episode, we sit down with <strong>Nicholas Ralph</strong>, best known for playing James Herriot in <strong>All Creatures Great and Small</strong> on <strong>Channel 5</strong> and <strong>PBS Masterpiece</strong>.</p><p>What unfolds is not an “overnight success” story (Nick laughs at that headline), but a deeply human conversation about perseverance, patience, and following a calling when the path isn’t obvious — especially when you grow up somewhere that doesn’t quite show you the map.</p><p>We talk about Nick’s Highland upbringing, discovering acting almost by accident, being told it was a “terrible career choice,” and finding his way from Eden Court Theatre to drama school, to the <strong>Royal Conservatoire of Scotland</strong>, and eventually onto one of the most beloved TV shows of recent years.</p><p>Along the way, Nick opens up about:</p><ul><li>The unseen years behind success</li><li>Why theatre was the best training ground for television</li><li>What it’s really like on a TV set (hint: not glamorous, very muddy)</li><li>The importance of teamwork and kindness on long, freezing shoot days</li><li>How playing James Herriot has quietly shaped his own values</li><li>Why community, compassion, and doing things “with a smile” still matter</li></ul><p>We also get festive - from joyful behind-the-scenes chaos filming the Christmas episode, to favourite Christmas films, to what Nick is taking into 2026 (and what he’s happily leaving behind).</p><p>It’s an honest, generous, quietly inspiring conversation about craft, character, and keeping your feet on the ground — with a lot of laughter along the way.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Christmas Special intro &amp; welcome</li><li>02:08 “An Overnight Success, Ten Years in the Making”</li><li>05:27 Growing up in the Highlands &amp; finding acting</li><li>09:38 “You’ll End Up Living Out of the Back of Your Car”</li><li>13:52 Discovering drama school &amp; The Royal Conservatoire</li><li>19:34 The showcase, agents &amp; getting signed</li><li>23:58 Auditioning for All Creatures Great and Small</li><li>29:12 Theatre vs TV (and birthing a calf to nothing)</li><li>34:06 What life on a TV set is really like</li><li>38:42 Where the love of performing began</li><li>43:26 Perseverance, passion &amp; self-belief</li><li>48:11 What playing James Herriot has taught Nick</li><li>53:02 Christmas episodes, traditions &amp; favourite films</li><li>56:48 Looking ahead to 2026</li><li>58:32 Final thoughts &amp; Christmas wishes </li></ul><p><br></p><p><strong>From all of us at The Nairnshire Community Newspaper - Merry Christmas and Happy New Year - and thank you for listening. Here’s to more meaningful stories in 2026.</strong></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this festive episode, we sit down with <strong>Nicholas Ralph</strong>, best known for playing James Herriot in <strong>All Creatures Great and Small</strong> on <strong>Channel 5</strong> and <strong>PBS Masterpiece</strong>.</p><p>What unfolds is not an “overnight success” story (Nick laughs at that headline), but a deeply human conversation about perseverance, patience, and following a calling when the path isn’t obvious — especially when you grow up somewhere that doesn’t quite show you the map.</p><p>We talk about Nick’s Highland upbringing, discovering acting almost by accident, being told it was a “terrible career choice,” and finding his way from Eden Court Theatre to drama school, to the <strong>Royal Conservatoire of Scotland</strong>, and eventually onto one of the most beloved TV shows of recent years.</p><p>Along the way, Nick opens up about:</p><ul><li>The unseen years behind success</li><li>Why theatre was the best training ground for television</li><li>What it’s really like on a TV set (hint: not glamorous, very muddy)</li><li>The importance of teamwork and kindness on long, freezing shoot days</li><li>How playing James Herriot has quietly shaped his own values</li><li>Why community, compassion, and doing things “with a smile” still matter</li></ul><p>We also get festive - from joyful behind-the-scenes chaos filming the Christmas episode, to favourite Christmas films, to what Nick is taking into 2026 (and what he’s happily leaving behind).</p><p>It’s an honest, generous, quietly inspiring conversation about craft, character, and keeping your feet on the ground — with a lot of laughter along the way.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Christmas Special intro &amp; welcome</li><li>02:08 “An Overnight Success, Ten Years in the Making”</li><li>05:27 Growing up in the Highlands &amp; finding acting</li><li>09:38 “You’ll End Up Living Out of the Back of Your Car”</li><li>13:52 Discovering drama school &amp; The Royal Conservatoire</li><li>19:34 The showcase, agents &amp; getting signed</li><li>23:58 Auditioning for All Creatures Great and Small</li><li>29:12 Theatre vs TV (and birthing a calf to nothing)</li><li>34:06 What life on a TV set is really like</li><li>38:42 Where the love of performing began</li><li>43:26 Perseverance, passion &amp; self-belief</li><li>48:11 What playing James Herriot has taught Nick</li><li>53:02 Christmas episodes, traditions &amp; favourite films</li><li>56:48 Looking ahead to 2026</li><li>58:32 Final thoughts &amp; Christmas wishes </li></ul><p><br></p><p><strong>From all of us at The Nairnshire Community Newspaper - Merry Christmas and Happy New Year - and thank you for listening. Here’s to more meaningful stories in 2026.</strong></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Dec 2025 15:22:35 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/5690ffae/0dee0e46.mp3" length="84850850" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>3524</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this festive episode, we sit down with <strong>Nicholas Ralph</strong>, best known for playing James Herriot in <strong>All Creatures Great and Small</strong> on <strong>Channel 5</strong> and <strong>PBS Masterpiece</strong>.</p><p>What unfolds is not an “overnight success” story (Nick laughs at that headline), but a deeply human conversation about perseverance, patience, and following a calling when the path isn’t obvious — especially when you grow up somewhere that doesn’t quite show you the map.</p><p>We talk about Nick’s Highland upbringing, discovering acting almost by accident, being told it was a “terrible career choice,” and finding his way from Eden Court Theatre to drama school, to the <strong>Royal Conservatoire of Scotland</strong>, and eventually onto one of the most beloved TV shows of recent years.</p><p>Along the way, Nick opens up about:</p><ul><li>The unseen years behind success</li><li>Why theatre was the best training ground for television</li><li>What it’s really like on a TV set (hint: not glamorous, very muddy)</li><li>The importance of teamwork and kindness on long, freezing shoot days</li><li>How playing James Herriot has quietly shaped his own values</li><li>Why community, compassion, and doing things “with a smile” still matter</li></ul><p>We also get festive - from joyful behind-the-scenes chaos filming the Christmas episode, to favourite Christmas films, to what Nick is taking into 2026 (and what he’s happily leaving behind).</p><p>It’s an honest, generous, quietly inspiring conversation about craft, character, and keeping your feet on the ground — with a lot of laughter along the way.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Christmas Special intro &amp; welcome</li><li>02:08 “An Overnight Success, Ten Years in the Making”</li><li>05:27 Growing up in the Highlands &amp; finding acting</li><li>09:38 “You’ll End Up Living Out of the Back of Your Car”</li><li>13:52 Discovering drama school &amp; The Royal Conservatoire</li><li>19:34 The showcase, agents &amp; getting signed</li><li>23:58 Auditioning for All Creatures Great and Small</li><li>29:12 Theatre vs TV (and birthing a calf to nothing)</li><li>34:06 What life on a TV set is really like</li><li>38:42 Where the love of performing began</li><li>43:26 Perseverance, passion &amp; self-belief</li><li>48:11 What playing James Herriot has taught Nick</li><li>53:02 Christmas episodes, traditions &amp; favourite films</li><li>56:48 Looking ahead to 2026</li><li>58:32 Final thoughts &amp; Christmas wishes </li></ul><p><br></p><p><strong>From all of us at The Nairnshire Community Newspaper - Merry Christmas and Happy New Year - and thank you for listening. Here’s to more meaningful stories in 2026.</strong></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Nairnshire, Scottish Highlands, Highlands podcast, Nairn community, Local stories, Scottish culture, Community podcast, Local business stories, Arts and culture Scotland, Highland artists, Scottish makers, Nature and environment Scotland, Rural Scotland, Community voices, Sustainable living Scotland</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/5690ffae/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
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    <item>
      <title>#001 - Mark Bradfield: The Hidden Life of Nairn’s Dunes</title>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>1</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>#001 - Mark Bradfield: The Hidden Life of Nairn’s Dunes</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/189b0774</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>For our very first episode of <strong>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper Podcast: Stories from Land to Sea</strong>, we sat down with conservationist <strong>Mark Bradfield</strong>, who moved from Oxfordshire to the Highlands purely out of love for wildlife… and somehow found himself knee-deep in marram grass on Nairn’s Central Beach.</p><p>In this episode, Mark takes us on a fascinating tour of the <strong>Dune Resilience Project</strong>, a pilot scheme designed to protect one of Nairn’s most cherished places - the dunes many of us stroll through daily, often without realising how essential they are in keeping the sea out of Fishertown.</p><p>We cover everything:</p><ul><li>Why Nairn’s dunes are more fragile than they look</li><li>How rising sea levels, stronger storms, and even our own footprints affect the coastline</li><li>The surprising role of marram grass (it’s basically the unsung hero of the Highlands)</li><li>How butterflies, bees, and even moths depend on healthy dune ecosystems</li><li>Why fencing matters, and why Mark really hopes we don’t step over it</li><li>What the community can do right now to help protect the dunes</li><li>How citizen science - and a couple of good apps - can turn all of us into naturalists</li><li>And what’s next for the project as monitoring and data collection begin</li></ul><p>Mark’s passion is contagious, his explanations wonderfully grounded, and he left us seeing the dunes with completely fresh eyes. </p><p>Honestly - you might never look at marram grass the same way again.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Intro: Meet conservationist Mark Bradfield</li><li>02:00 Moving to the Highlands &amp; first impressions of Nairn </li><li>05:00 What conservation really is</li><li>09:00 Water voles, mink, and how ecosystems fall out of balance </li><li>14:00 What the Dune Resilience Project is trying to achieve</li><li>17:00 Why dunes matter more than you think</li><li>20:00 Climate change, storms, and the future of Nairn’s coastline</li><li>25:00 Marram grass: the quiet superhero of coastal defence</li><li>29:00 Wildlife on the dunes: butterflies, moths, bees and more</li><li>33:00 What’s threatening the dunes - and how we can help</li><li>37:00 Clearing scrub, planting grasses, and volunteer power</li><li>42:00 Citizen science and the apps that make it easy</li><li>46:00 What’s next for the project &amp; how to get involved</li><li>50:00 Closing thoughts: patience, hope, and nature’s pace</li></ul>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>For our very first episode of <strong>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper Podcast: Stories from Land to Sea</strong>, we sat down with conservationist <strong>Mark Bradfield</strong>, who moved from Oxfordshire to the Highlands purely out of love for wildlife… and somehow found himself knee-deep in marram grass on Nairn’s Central Beach.</p><p>In this episode, Mark takes us on a fascinating tour of the <strong>Dune Resilience Project</strong>, a pilot scheme designed to protect one of Nairn’s most cherished places - the dunes many of us stroll through daily, often without realising how essential they are in keeping the sea out of Fishertown.</p><p>We cover everything:</p><ul><li>Why Nairn’s dunes are more fragile than they look</li><li>How rising sea levels, stronger storms, and even our own footprints affect the coastline</li><li>The surprising role of marram grass (it’s basically the unsung hero of the Highlands)</li><li>How butterflies, bees, and even moths depend on healthy dune ecosystems</li><li>Why fencing matters, and why Mark really hopes we don’t step over it</li><li>What the community can do right now to help protect the dunes</li><li>How citizen science - and a couple of good apps - can turn all of us into naturalists</li><li>And what’s next for the project as monitoring and data collection begin</li></ul><p>Mark’s passion is contagious, his explanations wonderfully grounded, and he left us seeing the dunes with completely fresh eyes. </p><p>Honestly - you might never look at marram grass the same way again.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Intro: Meet conservationist Mark Bradfield</li><li>02:00 Moving to the Highlands &amp; first impressions of Nairn </li><li>05:00 What conservation really is</li><li>09:00 Water voles, mink, and how ecosystems fall out of balance </li><li>14:00 What the Dune Resilience Project is trying to achieve</li><li>17:00 Why dunes matter more than you think</li><li>20:00 Climate change, storms, and the future of Nairn’s coastline</li><li>25:00 Marram grass: the quiet superhero of coastal defence</li><li>29:00 Wildlife on the dunes: butterflies, moths, bees and more</li><li>33:00 What’s threatening the dunes - and how we can help</li><li>37:00 Clearing scrub, planting grasses, and volunteer power</li><li>42:00 Citizen science and the apps that make it easy</li><li>46:00 What’s next for the project &amp; how to get involved</li><li>50:00 Closing thoughts: patience, hope, and nature’s pace</li></ul>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/189b0774/11fcbd36.mp3" length="68746112" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>2858</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>For our very first episode of <strong>The Nairnshire Community Newspaper Podcast: Stories from Land to Sea</strong>, we sat down with conservationist <strong>Mark Bradfield</strong>, who moved from Oxfordshire to the Highlands purely out of love for wildlife… and somehow found himself knee-deep in marram grass on Nairn’s Central Beach.</p><p>In this episode, Mark takes us on a fascinating tour of the <strong>Dune Resilience Project</strong>, a pilot scheme designed to protect one of Nairn’s most cherished places - the dunes many of us stroll through daily, often without realising how essential they are in keeping the sea out of Fishertown.</p><p>We cover everything:</p><ul><li>Why Nairn’s dunes are more fragile than they look</li><li>How rising sea levels, stronger storms, and even our own footprints affect the coastline</li><li>The surprising role of marram grass (it’s basically the unsung hero of the Highlands)</li><li>How butterflies, bees, and even moths depend on healthy dune ecosystems</li><li>Why fencing matters, and why Mark really hopes we don’t step over it</li><li>What the community can do right now to help protect the dunes</li><li>How citizen science - and a couple of good apps - can turn all of us into naturalists</li><li>And what’s next for the project as monitoring and data collection begin</li></ul><p>Mark’s passion is contagious, his explanations wonderfully grounded, and he left us seeing the dunes with completely fresh eyes. </p><p>Honestly - you might never look at marram grass the same way again.</p><p><strong>Chapters:</strong></p><ul><li>00:00 Intro: Meet conservationist Mark Bradfield</li><li>02:00 Moving to the Highlands &amp; first impressions of Nairn </li><li>05:00 What conservation really is</li><li>09:00 Water voles, mink, and how ecosystems fall out of balance </li><li>14:00 What the Dune Resilience Project is trying to achieve</li><li>17:00 Why dunes matter more than you think</li><li>20:00 Climate change, storms, and the future of Nairn’s coastline</li><li>25:00 Marram grass: the quiet superhero of coastal defence</li><li>29:00 Wildlife on the dunes: butterflies, moths, bees and more</li><li>33:00 What’s threatening the dunes - and how we can help</li><li>37:00 Clearing scrub, planting grasses, and volunteer power</li><li>42:00 Citizen science and the apps that make it easy</li><li>46:00 What’s next for the project &amp; how to get involved</li><li>50:00 Closing thoughts: patience, hope, and nature’s pace</li></ul>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Nairn dunes, dune resilience project, coastal erosion Scotland, Scottish Highlands conservation, marram grass restoration, wildlife conservation Nairnshire, climate change Scottish coast, citizen science Scotland, water voles and invasive species, coastal community resilience Highlands, Nairn beach conservation, dune habitat restoration, Scottish coastal wildlife, small blue butterfly Highlands, protecting dunes Scotland</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/189b0774/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
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