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For Carpet Cleaners
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- Only one Carpet Cleaner spot in Craigellachie
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- £40/month - cancel anytime
About Carpet Cleaners
A carpet cleaner deep-cleans carpets, rugs and upholstery using professional hot water extraction, dry cleaning or encapsulation methods that domestic machines cannot match.
Regular professional cleaning extends the life of your carpets, removes allergens and bacteria and brings back colour and freshness that vacuuming alone cannot achieve.
Ask which method they use and how long drying takes - hot water extraction gives the deepest clean but requires good ventilation and several hours to dry fully.
- carpet cleaning
- upholstery cleaning
- rug cleaning
About Craigellachie
Craigellachie is a Speyside village at the confluence of the rivers Spey and Fiddich, best known for its elegant cast-iron bridge designed by Thomas Telford in 1814.
The village sits at a crossroads of whisky country, with the Craigellachie and Macallan distilleries nearby and the Speyside Way long-distance path passing through.
Properties include traditional stone-built houses, Victorian-era cottages and some modern homes, with the riverside setting adding character to the village.
Craigellachie has a hotel, a village shop and a community hall, with Aberlour and Dufftown nearby for wider services.
The attractive Speyside location draws buyers looking for character properties, generating demand for renovation and sympathetic modernisation work.
About Moray
Moray is a council area on the southern shore of the Moray Firth in north-east Scotland, stretching from the fertile coastal lowlands inland through the broad valley of the River Spey to the fringes of the Cairngorms.
Elgin is the administrative centre and largest town, a handsome settlement built around the ruins of its medieval cathedral - once known as the Lantern of the North. Forres, Lossiemouth, Buckie and Keith are the other main towns, each with a distinct character shaped by the industries and landscape around them.
The region has the highest concentration of malt whisky distilleries in Scotland. Speyside - the valley of the River Spey running through Dufftown, Craigellachie and Aberlour - is home to some of the most famous names in Scotch whisky and the Malt Whisky Trail draws visitors from around the world. Dufftown alone has more distilleries than most countries.
RAF Lossiemouth is one of the largest military bases in Scotland and a major employer in the area, while the Moray Firth coast supports fishing communities at Buckie, Burghead and Lossiemouth. Farming - particularly barley growing, which feeds the distilleries - remains central to the local economy across the fertile coastal plain.
Transport links include the A96 connecting Elgin to Inverness and Aberdeen, with rail services running along the same corridor. The A95 follows the Spey valley south towards the Cairngorms, connecting the whisky towns and providing access to the Highlands.
See what claiming looks like
Lothian Flooring Company claimed their flooring specialist spot in Musselburgh.