Her name? Haggis. Yes, just like the notorious Scottish dish made of minced sheep’s organs. Haggis, who is a female calf just like Moo Deng, was born to parents Gloria and Otto at the Royal ...
The advice travel guru Rick Steeves offers to anyone intent on sampling Scotland's national dish: Just don't think about it.
A CUMBRIAN butcher braved Storm Bert passing abandoned cars in the snow as he drove to Oban to defend a haggis making title.
Viral sensation Moo Deng has some competition after another baby pygmy hippo, Haggis, is born in Scotland. Which is cuter?
When Chicago was just a small frontier town of 12,000, a group of Scots gathered to celebrate St. Andrew’s Day. Fast forward ...
"It is great to have our own little ambassador right here," said the hoofstock team leader at Edinburgh Zoo in Scotland.
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access ...
The baby pygmy hippo can be spotted in her habitat at Edinburgh Zoo, alongside her mum Gloria. Visitors to the zoo can watch ...
haggis. Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Lancashire Evening Post, you can get unlimited access to the website ...
Combining Scotland’s national dish with a taste of Greek cuisine may not be the most obvious or traditional way to serve ...
An endangered pygmy hippo has been born at zoo in Scotland — and called Haggis. The ‘incredibly rare’ animal was born at the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland’s (RZSS) Edinburgh Zoo on ...
The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland's Edinburgh Zoo announced Monday that their own tiny pygmy hippo, named Haggis, was born Oct. 30 to parents Otto and Gloria. The newborn calf is doing ...