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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Emylie Howie

New technology allows Renfrewshire veterans to experience the outdoors

Imagine being a keen hillwalker who loves the outdoors but then being unable to enjoy it because of sight loss.

Fortunately, many veterans of the armed forces who have visual impairment can climb their favourite mountains again thanks to Sight Scotland Veterans’ new technology.

The charity’s Hawkhead Centre in Paisley recently installed its first VR headset allowing members with impaired vision to experience the world around them in a new way.

And Jason Turnbull, a Sight Scotland Veterans’ officer at Hawkhead, is using the technology to bring the mountains of Scotland to life once again for those who had long given up hope of climbing them again.

The keen hillwalker, who is responsible for organising activities for the veterans, is combining his passion and the power of virtual reality so that many of the veterans at the Hawkhead Centre can experience Scotland’s great outdoors again.

Jason told the Paisley Daily Express: “I had previous experience with VR headsets, so I was very keen to try it at Hawkhead.

“I watched 360-degree videos on YouTube and thought to myself, ‘I can do better than that’. So, I bought a 360-degree camera and took it up the hills with me.

“I then began showing the veterans who are keen hillwalkers, and those who weren’t, the footage and there was a very positive reaction. They said it was ‘like being back on the hills’.”

The centre officer explained that because the VR headset lenses are close to their eyes, the veterans can experience the video footage like those without vision loss.

He added: “I thought I am on to something here, so I have been going around as many Munros as I can so they can come with me. I am starting with the centrally-located ones, in and around Crianlarich, like Ben More and Stob Binnein.

“I edit the footage and show the veterans when I come back, and they are saying it is absolutely unbelievable. It’s reawakening something in them. It is so rewarding to watch them and see their reaction.”

Jason Turnbull (Submitted)

He added: “Perhaps it has been many years since they’ve climbed that hill, but they realise where they are.

“The VR allows them to revisit somewhere that was special to them. It triggers all those memories and sparks positive feelings within them.”

Noreen Smith, a former army nurse who has macular degeneration, who regularly attends Sight Scotland Veterans’ Hawkhead Centre, has always been a great hillwalker but had to give up her passion due to her vision impairment.

She explained: “The VR is just wonderful, it is just like you are back there again, it brings back so many happy memories for me. I can see the whole landscape, all the tremendous views, it really is like I am walking up the hills again.”

For more information on the Hawkhead Centre, visit sightscotlandveterans.org.uk

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