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A remote Shetland island is celebrating its traditional New Year's Day - two weeks after other parts of the world. Foula - which is home to fewer than 40 people - never fully adopted the modern ...
Ruth Aisling, who's on a mission to reconnect with her homeland after spending more than a decade abroad, set off to to an ...
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This is the remote Scottish Island where they will be celebrating Christmas tomorrow and this is why
The Shetland island still follows the ancient Julian calendar putting the island 12 days behind the rest of the UK ONE of Scotland’s most remote islands will finally celebrate Christmas tomorrow – ...
ONE of Scotland’s most remote islands will finally celebrate Christmas tomorrow – more than a week after the rest of the country. The island of Foula still follows an ancient calendar, which means the ...
While most of Britain has long packed away the tinsel and taken down the tree in January, the UK's most isolated island is only just getting into the festive spirit. Foula, a tiny Scottish island ...
December 25 may have come and gone, but inhabitants of a remote Scottish island will not celebrate Christmas for almost two weeks. Foula, the most westerly Shetland Island with a population of only 30 ...
A TINY island school with just two pupils is on the hunt for a new headteacher after the current one left because she misses the mainland. Applications are being encouraged for the job on Foula, 20 ...
Just 30 permanent residents live on Foula, which lays claim to being Britain's most remote inhabited island and operates on a different calendar to the rest of the UK. I learned several new words ...
IT is Britain’s remotest permanently inhabited island with a population of just over 30 people and has been labelled the land at the end of the world. But now Foula has joined the rest of the UK by ...
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