Cairngorms National Park - Highland Perthshire, Aviemore, Glenlivet, Royal Deeside

Cairngorms National Park. Welcome to the Cairngorms Park accommodation and holiday blog. On Cairngorms-Park.com you'll find the widest range of self-catering holiday homes, hotels, guest houses, B&Bs, hostels and caravanning/camp sites situated in the Cairngorms Park, from Blair Atholl to Aviemore, into Glenlivet and Royal Deeside. You'll also find details of all the villages and tourist attractions in the Cairngorms Park, information on active-, water- and snow sports, including every annual event and festival. Look for our definitive guide to the Cairngorms National Park's golf courses, places to eat and drink, the best nightlife, distilleries and other world class visitor attractions. Your Cairngorms Park holiday starts here!

Set against the spectacular backdrop of the Cairngorm mountains and ancient Scots Pine Forests, Aviemore and The Cairngorms National Park 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 National Park.

Wednesday 26 January 2011

Time for UK Tourism businesses to get real

Despite encouraging talk in the early days of the new Coalition Government about the importance of Tourism to the economy, the reality is that the Government Spending Review has impacted on most UK tourism support structures including areas such as quality, training, sustainability and research.

 

The Regional Development Agencies who often led on Tourism are going and are being replaced by more localised Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs). Now Tourism finds itself pitching along with every other sector for representation and funding and however that pans out area by area, one thing is for certain, at best budgets will be cut.

 

Lower down the chain the recently introduced Destination Management Organisations, which took over from traditional Tourists Boards seem to be also fighting for survival and/or working on much reduced budgets. But is this a such a bad thing for Tourism? Or simply time for businesses in this sector to get real?

 

In reality a well run business, as many are, should already been on top of issues such as quality, training, sustainability, research; they are after all the core issues any service led business must manage in order to be competitive in a free market. In any event much assistance has been on offer in all these areas for those looking for support over the past 10 years!

 

Government intervention should only be required or be warranted where there is a clear market failure, not as a matter of course.  Indeed, under the previous government, a market failure in tourism was addressed in terms of providing affordable online booking and therefore a route to online consumers for small business via the creation of Englandnet.

 

Englandnet is a destination management system which drives the publically funded Visit Britain, Enjoy England websites and many locally council funded DMO websites and enables all graded  accommodation providers to make their property available online and thus compete on equal terms with larger scale businesses. Additional software was also made available for free or highly subsidized rates to accommodation providers that enabled them to push their availability to major online booking sites.

 

Given it now exists and small businesses and sole traders can push their offer out to various booking portals such as lastminute.com, means it really is up to businesses to employ this tool. That they choose not to is now a business choice, not a mandate as many would argue for further intervention or support. Indeed even this intervention has been subject to challenge by some within the tourism industry as being anti-competetive; and viewed as state aid by those businesses who invested their own money and time developing their own systems to reach online consumers. So it seems the Government is damned if it does or damned if it doesn't!

 

Equally, if a business chooses not to invest in quality and training that surely is a business decision. Most in business normally complain about government interference, however tourism has become rather dependent on government intervention, some would say too dependent. As such well run business are seemingly at a disadvantage as market forces are being skewed the other way and intervention and state aid is enabling less well run ones to keep going and where intervention has been well meant such as with online booking it has been met by both apathy and anger in many quarters. For those that believe in a free market and business self-determination, should the government be propping up failing businesses or leaving the market to decide which ones offer value for money? Especially when some within the industry challenge such interventions; this alone must lead many who look after such interventions to question their merit!

 

So the cuts may be a blessing in disguise!

 

If nothing else it will show which aspects of the tourism services traditionally offered by LA's are truly valued by local businesses.

 

Tourist Information Centres are an interesting point in case as they seem to divide trade opinion and go to the heart of the problem with public funding. There are many well supported private TIC's up and down the country that manage to survive through trade subs and smart retailing, no doubt established because of an identified need by local businesses to enhance the visitor experience. However and interestingly, in those areas where there have been publically funded TICs, which are now under threat of closure because of budget cuts, it seems they are less valued. Whilst many in those areas are up in arms about the loss of such a 'vital service' and actively lobby to keep them publically funded; there is little actual appetite from local businesses to take on the overheads to retain the service.

 

Perhaps one reason is those TIC’s are not cost effective due to never having to trade on commercial lines.

 

It seems that where a service has been funded, rather than developed through an identified local need, they have less value to businesses and public funding may actually inhibit co-operative local working.

 

So perhaps the cuts will mean that more tourism businesses work together, identify real needs, see each other as potential allies rather than competitors and take charge of their destinations future, building it from the bottom up together.

 

By David Rutherford

 

Wednesday 12 January 2011

Cairngorms Winter Snow Sports Holiday Give Away

One lucky winner will get....
3 night stay at Crubenbeg 4Star Luxury
£75 of Vouchers for ExtremePie.com
Free Snowboard or Ski Hire for 3 days, Supplied by Active Outdoor Pursuits
Days Ski / Board Pass at Glenshee
Days Ski / Board Pass at Lecht
Days Ski / Board Pass at CairnGorm
Girl and Mens Nixon Watch
I Love Snowboarding Inc Gear
I Love Cairngorms Park Tee shirt
Cairngorms Brewery Tee-shirt
686 Tool Belt & Quicksilver Belt
and the famous...
Cairngorms-Park.com Goodie Bag
Prize Fund over £750.00 !

Monday 10 January 2011

Cairngorms National Park win Euro funding

Kingussie Community Development Company has been awarded £93,765 for a micro hydro scheme.Glen Tanar Charitable Trust, based near Aboyne, has received £44,707 towards the cost of refurbishing the Braeloine Centre on the Glen Tanar Estate.
The park authority has been granted £58,300 for a new scheme aimed at increasing consumption of local food.
The authority has also been awarded £160,000 which will be used to offer support to young people through an existing training project.
Other community projects across Britain's largest national park have also benefited from the programme.
Newtonmore Camanachd Association has been granted £25,020 to research the history and culture of shinty in Badenoch.
A project run by Community Learning and Development and Marr Youth Forum will use £16,416 to provide activities for young people to help them avoid anti-social behaviour.
Abernethy Golf Club has secured £7,507 to help create an area where young golfers can learn and practice golf before they feel confident enough to go on the golf course.
A new indoor climbing wall is to be built at Nethy Bridge after the Abernethy Trust has received £3,750.
Cairngorm Mountain Rescue Team has been awarded £8,250.

Thursday 6 January 2011

Glencoe's avalanche transceiver training park opens on Saturday.

An area of a ski centre is to be made available for training in the use of a device designed to help find people caught in a snow slide.

Glencoe's avalanche transceiver training park opens on Saturday.



The resort said the move followed an increase in the numbers of climbers, skiers and snowboarders choosing to wear the devices.

The new park has nine buried transmitters to help users practise in how to operate the transceivers.

Most people buying the equipment are believed to be climbers and snow sports enthusiasts who venture into remoter parts of Scotland's hills to climb or ski.

Scotland's skiing season started early this winter. Glencoe Mountain opened before Christmas for the first time in 10 years.

For all your winter sport info and accommodation...read more

Saturday 1 January 2011

Advertise For Free

This web site is supplied free of charge to all Cairngorms National Park accommodation owners and offers a list of the best Hotels, Self Catering, B&B, Hostels & Camp/Caravanning in and around the Cairngorms National Park area. If you own or manage a accommodation in National Park and wish to advertise for free please click on www.cairngorms_park.com to find out more.

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