Periodic testing and inspections should be completed: Every 10 years for your home, Every five years for rented accommodation, Every three years for a caravan, Every year for a swimming pool.Electrical inspections are also carried out when buying, selling or renting a property.
Nethy Bridge
Nethy Bridge is a tiny village in Strathspey in the Highland council location of Scotland. The village lies within the historic parish of Abernethy and Kincardine, and also the Cairngorms National Park. Typically affectionately referred to merely as "Nethy" the village has, because Victorian times been a traveler destination kept in mind for its peaceful and secluded area at the edge of the Abernethy Forest. It remains in the heart of Strathspey in the Highlands of Scotland, between Aviemore and Grantown, and is within the limit of the Cairngorms National Park which was established in 2003. A main sector of Nethy Bridge was forestry, with at one time several sawmills in the location, but this has long since diminished and currently much of the revenue is originated from tourism. The name is derived from the River Nethy, a tributary of the nearby Spey, which goes through the town, and the curved bridge which was built in 1810, to a classic Telford design, and remains in the heart of the town. It needed to be repaired after the Moray flooding of August 1829, when part of it was washed away. In total, there are four Telford bridges in Nethy. Originally called Abernethy (Scottish Gaelic: Obar Neithich), Nethy Bridge was relabelled when the trains came this much north in the 1860s. The Great North of Scotland Railway already had a village called Abernethy on its line better southern, so renamed this set Nethy Bridge to set apart both. The placename Abernethy is still regularly made use of around below: Abernethy Highland Games, Abernethy Forest, Abernethy Primary School etc. In 2011 the population of Nethy Bridge was 640. Nethy Bridge was one of the initial areas in the area to develop a traveler association site. A huge part of the web site is to record all properties with their individual history, and also numerous town "elders" have been enlisted to research and record the facts.