A new head teacher is wanted at one of Scotland's remotest schools, which is home to one stop of the world's shortest flight.
With a population of around 85, the people of Papa Westray, or Papay as the Orkney island is known locally, want a head with the same "can-do" attitude.
The £58,128-a-year post - plus a "generous" relocation package - is being advertised due to current head Tim Ross making the shortest of career moves.
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Tim won't have to travel far - as Pappa Westray and neighbouring Westray can be flown in less than a minute.
When he started at Pappa Westray three years ago he was teaching just four pupils - the same number as the school had ducks.
Now larger Westray is to be his new home.
Tim was recently appointed to the same role at Westray Junior High School. While recruitment continues Tim oversees his old school one day a week in support of an acting principal teacher, Karl Simpson.
"For anyone interested in education in Scotland today, the Papay School is a great place to be. It may be peedie (small), but it's powerful, and it provides wonderful opportunities to work with a committed staff team. As a teacher, the potential for capitalising on Curriculum for Excellence, and autonomy for planning exciting teaching and learning is very rewarding," said Tim.
"Westray and Papay are close communities and I hope to work with my successor on Papay to further strengthen these links."
Papay has a roll of nine at present - four children in the nursery department and five within the primary section.
Karl has been a supply teacher at Papay for two years and recently stepped up in the acting principal role while a head teacher is found.
He said: "I have never felt more welcome in a school or a community. But that is an important part of whoever is successfully appointed - they must want to be part of the close-knit community. It's an integral part of the role for that commitment to the residents as well."
The pupils also enthuse about their school experience.
Ten-year-old Eva moved to the island with her family in October 2022 from Somerset at the other end of the country.
She left a 200-pupil school and a class of around 30 - and now finds herself being taught in a composite class of five, including herself, serving P1-P7.
Eva cannot praise her new life highly enough and the best bit - "I love the school!" she says.
"Everyone has been really welcoming and friendly, not just at the school but the whole island. They were very supportive and helped a lot. The school is just like a small family. When I first walked into the classroom I was blown away as there's so many cool things - a library with so many books, you have your own desk with compartments and a mini kitchen where you can make stuff.
"The teachers and staff here are very funny - they love to make jokes and they are smart. I enjoy the work they set us - it's at your stage; they know what we need."
The island may be small but it has a forward thinking attitude.
With a history stretching back thousands of years, Papay's more recent past has seen plenty of positive projects bring a sense of vibrancy to the island. There's an annual arts festival, a fantastic community shop, one of Orkney's best hostels and a refurbished craft and heritage space, housed on the shore in the island's former kelp store.
The island is rich in archaeology - including the Knap of Howar - older than the Pyramids - the restored ancient kirk of St Boniface, the remains of the medieval chapel at St Tredwell's Loch and chambered cairns on the Holm of Papay.
Papay is also special for birds and birdwatchers, particularly on the North Hill. A wealth of birds can be found on the island every day of the year.
The famous hop between Papa Westray and its neighbour Westray is the world's shortest scheduled flight.
It usually takes just two minutes - including taxiing - to complete the 1.7 mile flight, which is about the same length as the runway at Edinburgh Airport. The flight is claimed to have been done in 47 seconds, but the official record is 53 seconds!
Tim moved to Orkney with his parents in 2002. Educated at Stromness Academy, Tim was later awarded a PhD in physics after five years of research and study at the University of Richmond, Virginia in the United States.
Tim spent two years as a teacher in Stanley, the capital of the Falkland Islands.
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The role at Westray Junior High School in Orkney pays more than £66,000-a-year.
The school is home to 87 pupils aged three to 16, on an island with a population of just under 600.
The island packs a lot into its 18 square miles: a nine-hole golf course; shopping and art galleries; a hotel and bistro; cafe and chip shop; a GP surgery and playparks for the kids.
Many of the students from Westray go on to finish high school at Kirkwall Grammar School in Kirkwall, or continue their studies at Orkney College UHI.
Applications for the Papay job close on March 5.
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