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Up Helly Aa is a fire festival which is currently celebrated annually at 11 locations throughout Shetland, involving 12 Up Helly Aa Festivals. The longest running, largest and most well known is held in Lerwick on the last Tuesday in January, and is the most synonymous with the term 'Up Helly Aa'. Those outwith Lerwick, (sometimes referred to as 'country Up Helly Aa's'), are smaller but they are nevertheless spectacular. The only Up Helly Aa date that is fixed is Lerwick - the others may not happen each year and the dates may vary, but the 2012 dates for all the festivals (in the order they occur), are shown below:
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Shetland Places
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Explore Shetland step by step
Make your choice from all our Shetland Settlements.
Or, visit our modern and ancient "capitals" Lerwick and Scalloway.
No visit to Shetland is complete without taking a ferry to visit one of the Outer Isles.
When rambling through Shetland
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Shetland Life
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Shetland's best values: The people!
Here you can meet some of those who represent our community as well as some of the incoming folks and other native Shetlanders of the past.
Present Day Shetland
is a vibrant community based both in,
- a great variety of businesses representing traditional but still important industries like fishery to the spearheads active in the renewable energies sector and
- the active life in our communities, our schools and the modern colleges which play a major role in our social and cultural life.
Shetland Heritage
is represented by far more than our famous archaeological monuments such as Jarlshof and the Broch of Mousa. Most importantly, it is a living heritage, living in our
arts, crafts, music and festivals, as well as the continuation of traditional Shetland industries such as fishing, crofting, and knitwear.
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Spotlights on Shetland Culture
About Shetland Music, Literature, Arts & Crafts,
Science and Cultural Events in Shetland</sup>
Aald Daa is the nom-de-plume of a Shetland author better known as Cavy Johnson, born on the 9th of May 1941 at Sandgarth, Delting, who collaborates with his younger sister Beth Gerrard, born Elizabeth Jane Johnson on the 24th of September 1946, also at Sandgarth.
'Cavy' was christened Robert Henry Johnson. His nickname was acquired when he arrived as a schoolboy at the Janet Courtney Hostel in Lerwick and it has followed him ever since. Once, a friend seeing his signature of 'R.H. Johnson' asked what the 'R.H.' stood for. Cavy, always a joker, replied "Right Honourable".
After attending the Anderson Educational Institute and Edinburgh University, Cavy had his career in the 'Met Office'. He spent several years working at Lerwick Observatory, but most of his career was at Met Office headquarters at Bracknell in Berkshire, where he finished up leading a shift team which operated the huge computers producing the national forecast. He retired from the Met office in 2001, and managed to return to Shetland in 2006.
Cavy contributed to the New Shetlander from the early 1960s. The pen name Aald Daa was first used for the poem "Da Peerie Hoose Ahint Da Burn" (inspired by the fiddle tune of the same name), which was a tribute to the passing of the outdoor water closet--a radical departure for the New Shetlander at the time !
Publications by this author are:
Mareel Spotlight
As the Mareel cinema and music venue is built we will add the latest pictures from the site here, on a regular basis.
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