🧹 Cleaner in Kintore, Aberdeenshire

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About Cleaners

A cleaner provides regular or one-off domestic cleaning - hoovering, mopping, bathrooms, kitchens, and general tidying.

A trustworthy local cleaner who knows your home is genuinely hard to replace once you find one.

Agree a checklist of tasks and frequency at the start so there are no misunderstandings about what each visit covers.

About Kintore

Kintore is one of Scotland's oldest royal burghs, situated on the River Don roughly thirteen miles northwest of Aberdeen. Despite its ancient origins — it received its royal charter in the twelfth century — the town has seen significant modern growth.

The town has a primary school, a town hall and a selection of local shops and services. A railway station on the Aberdeen to Inverness line reopened in 2020, greatly improving public transport connections.

Kintore's mix of older stone-built properties in the historic core and modern housing on the outskirts gives tradespeople a varied range of work.

Nearby: Inverurie, Kemnay, Westhill

About Aberdeenshire

Aberdeenshire coat of arms

Aberdeenshire is one of the largest council areas in Scotland, wrapping around the city of Aberdeen in a broad arc that stretches from the Cairngorms in the west to the North Sea coast in the east, and from the Angus border in the south to the Moray Firth in the north.

The region is extraordinarily varied: Royal Deeside — the valley of the River Dee running west from Aberdeen through Banchory, Aboyne, Ballater, and Braemar — is one of Scotland's most celebrated landscapes, closely associated with the royal family through Balmoral Castle. The Donside valley to the north offers a quieter, equally attractive alternative.

The north-east coast has a distinctive character shaped by centuries of fishing, with harbours at Peterhead, Fraserburgh, Macduff, and a string of smaller ports that once landed vast quantities of herring and white fish. Peterhead remains one of the busiest fishing ports in Europe, and the coastal towns retain a strong working identity.

Inland, the rolling farmland of Buchan, the Garioch, and the Mearns supports a productive agricultural economy. Market towns like Inverurie, Ellon, Huntly, and Turriff serve as local centres for their surrounding districts, and many have grown significantly as commuter settlements for Aberdeen.

The North Sea oil and gas industry transformed the region's economy from the 1970s onward, bringing prosperity and population growth to towns within commuting distance of Aberdeen. That legacy continues in the energy transition, with Aberdeenshire positioning itself at the centre of Scotland's renewable energy future.

Nearby: Aberdeen, Angus, Perth and Kinross

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