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  • Broadband update

    Broadband update

    Full fibre broadband is now available for Dunure!

    If you’re coming to the end of you broadband contract it’s now possible to upgrade to full fibre broadband, with speeds of up to 900 Mbps… that’s a film in less than a minute!

    The installation should be free, and the connection should be more reliable that the one we have now. The new broadband will probably be cheaper and faster than what we have now.

    Many of the suppliers will even pay for the early cancellation costs if your contract still has some months to run.

    You can check availability for your house on the OpenReach checker page.

    There’s a video on the site which explains the installation in more detail.

    One point worth considering: the new fibre optic connection needs a mains socket to work –

    Which means it won’t work in a power cut!

    If you have a care alarm, health pendant, or security alarm which uses the phone line
    you will need some extra help.

    Ofcom have a useful page giving details of the help you can get.

    If you are considering changing your contract, many of the suppliers will tell you you have to have a new phone number.

    You don’t need to have a new phone number!

    You can keep your ‘Dunure’ 500 number – like a mobile phone number that is yours, and
    you have a right to keep it! You will find more information at the One Touch Switch site.

    The bottom line is that you can use a separate VOIP phone line supplier and run it
    on your new broadband contract – no need to have a bundled phone line.

    A simple web search will bring up a number of options.

    More information in my previous post.

  • Dynamic Dunure Call for Positive Comments

    Dynamic Dunure have published a newsletter calling for positive comments on their proposal for the ‘Helm’.

    It is interesting that the choice was made to seek only positive comments.

    Dynamic Dunure claim to reflect the views of Dunure and Fisherton, the ‘will of the people’, yet it seems they are only interested in views which reflect their own. This is not reflecting the views of the village, it is filtering out alternative viewpoints.

    Judge for yourself.

    Remember, this is a £5 million project, with nearly £1 million in consultation fees alone.

    I have asked on numerous occasions for the minutes of Dynamic Dunure meetings, and been met repeatedly with silence.

    Likewise, I have asked for results of surveys carried out and the questions asked: again I’ve been answered with silence.

    It is difficult to reconcile claims that Dynamic Dunure reflect the views of local people when they routinely refuse to publish minutes of meetings and filter comments from the public to suppress free commentary on their proposals.

    It is the view of this site that everyone has a right to their opinion, to express that opinion, and to have their views known without hindrance.

    It’s called democracy.

  • Fisherton Church final Communion

    The Communion on Sunday 14th September

    will be the final Communion in Fisherton Church.

    The service will start at 9:30, followed by tea or coffee.

    Members of the congregation and community are cordially invited
    to attend this important service for the communities of
    Dunure and Fisherton.

  • Dunure Festival of the Sea 2025

    Dunure Festival of the Sea 2025

    Another successful Dunure Festival of the Sea –

    congratulations to all involved!

    This year’s event has once again received excellent reviews on Facebook.

    The organisers have a message:

    What a turnout, thanks to everyone who has supported us, we hope you’re having a wonderful time.

  • Join our contemplative Sundown Service in the Harbour

    Sundown Services


    This year’s sundown services will take place on July 20th and Aug 17th at 6:30 pm in Dunure.


    We hope as usual to be down at the harbour with the sun setting in the background.

    If the weather is inclement (perish the thought) we will hold our service in Fisherton Church

    As always after a short service, we’ll have a wee cup of tea and then a sing song around the campfire.

    All ages .. all welcome!

    “Summer suns are glowing over land and sea;
    happy light is flowing, bountiful and free.
    Everything rejoices in the mellow rays;
    all earth’s thousand voices swell the psalm of praise.
    See God’s mercy streaming over all the world,
    and his banner gleaming, everywhere unfurled.
    Broad and deep and glorious as the heaven above,
    shines in might victorious his eternal love.”

    More details about Alloway and Fisherton Church are here.

  • Interesting opportunities from new broadband

    Interesting opportunities from new broadband

    It seems that the OpenReach vans gathering around Dunure over the past few days are
    upgrading our phone lines.

    The villages of Dunure and Fisherton should have more reliable and faster connections to the phone and broadband networks.

    Information is difficult to find – Openreach (who do the cabling) have closed their phone helpline, and companies like Vodafone, EE, Sky etc. don’t give details on their websites.

    So I had a wee word with the engineers.

    Once they’ve finished changing the cables to fibre cables and the new cables are commissioned, an email will be sent to everyone telling them about the change.

    You don’t need to do anything at that stage – everything should work as before.

    In 2027 that will change.

    In early 2027 the old phone network will be switched off and everyone will have to move to a new fibre phone, or VOIP as they call it it the trade.

    VOIP is short for ‘Voice Over Internet Protocol’.

    The trouble is, when the old connection is removed, our
    old phones will stop working.

    All phones will have to be replaced with ‘VOIP’ phones.

    That’s all well and good, but there’s one way the old phones were better than the new ones.

    The old phones were powered by the phone line, so you could rely on them at all times. The new phones will need a new phone socket, and that socket will need to be powered from the house’s electricity.

    The new phones don’t work in a power cut.

    So if you rely on having access to a phone line at all times – say for medical reasons or a ‘telecare’ device – you will need to ask for a battery backup pack. If you are vulnerable you should be able to get that free of charge. Don’t worry – nothing happens until 2027 – you have plenty of time to get ready for the change.

    If you have a burglar alarm connected to the phone line, you’ll need to check it will work with the new system.

    Details are provided by Ofcom – click the button below for more details.

    When the changeover happens, your phone company may offer to transfer your existing phone number to the new line. If so, well and good. Not all companies are good at this though, and you may still be locked into months or years of your existing contract.

    If your phone company tells you that you’ll have to change to a new number, don’t agree to anything. You can use a process called ‘One Touch Switch’ and keep your own number. Basically, you choose who you want to run your landline, tell them a few details, and choose a date for the switch. You may need to set up a new contract for the landline separately from the broadband.

    You should be able to get a new ‘VOIP’ phone included in your new contract. Just make sure your old number gets transferred at the same time.

    I’ll put up details on changing phone contracts in a separate post.

    Now for the good news!

    The new fibre connections will allow much faster connections to the internet. If you opt to stay with your existing cabling you will probably see only a small increase in speed. That is, you’ll have FTTC (Fibre To The Cabinet). To get the full advantage of the connection you’ll need to upgrade to a fibre connection to your house (FTTP or Fibre To The Property). The upgrade will probably be free, depending on your supplier: they’ll change the copper wire to your house with a fibre cable using the same telephone pole.

    For many of us the only change will be a doubling of download speed for the
    same price as we pay just now – good news!

    The speed you should be able to get can be found here
    just put in your postcode to check your speeds.

  • Dunure’s heritage and The Culzean Way

    Dunure’s heritage and The Culzean Way

    The cultural heritage of Dunure

    is linked to the promising advantages of the Culzean Way in this article.

    Read about one of Scotland’s most important poets, albeit one of
    many who don’t get the recognition they deserve.

  • A Gaelic-named garden plot in Ayr?

    A Gaelic-named garden plot in Ayr?

    One of the Ayr Burgh Records for 1536-7

    records* that one Thome Dalrimple had the few of Garotrodding in Ayr. Could this be for Gàradh Trodain ‘disputed garden’?

    Or are we looking at a Scots formation incorporating rodding ‘track’?

    There are plenty of Gaelic place-names within the old Ayr burgh boundaries (many more interesting Scots ones of course) and Gaelic was still spoken in most of the rest of Carrick at that date.

    I imagine the linguistic situation in Ayr then was probably similar to Inverness in the 19th Century with a substantial proportion of the population being Gaelic speakers but rendered almost invisible by all business being conducted exclusively in Scots and Latin.

    *Ayr Burgh Accounts, Scottish History Society p.10

    Thanks to Michael Ansell on Facebook

  • Alloway and Fisherton Church Newsletter

    The Alloway and Fisherton Church Newsletter for June has been published.

    You may or may not know that the Church publishes videos of services.

    You can view the services at this page: Alloway and Fisherton Services.

    Philippians 4:8  

    Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely,
    whatever is admirable – if anything is excellent or praiseworthy – think about such things.  
    And the God of peace will be with you.

  • Dunure Helm Centre proposal

    This is the architect’s drawing of the ‘Dunure Heritage Centre’
    which is to be re-named ‘The Helm Centre’.

    It’s a large file, so please be patient while it downloads.

    You can see other drawings and proposals for Dunure here.