Teaching materials to encourage an active lifestyle are to be unveiled to mark the third anniversary of Glasgow's Commonwealth Games.
Called the "Thrive tool kit", it will be promoted at six roadshows across Scotland by a group of ambassadors who encourage physical activity.
This toolkit will be publicly available and will contain teaching materials and resources to allow as many people as possible to benefit from the learning gained from Legacy 14 projects.
The Toolkit can be accessed from the link below:
Projects including an outdoor gym, dog training events, wildflower meadows, fruit growing and a pop up market place, are beginning to spring up across the country thanks to Stalled Spaces Scotland.
A slice of the 2014 Commonwealth Games legacy funding is coming to the Cairngorms National Park, which will help to encourage as many people as possible to use the Park for physical activity at least once a day.
Legacy 2014 Physical Activity Fund is a new fund to further encourage physical activity among Scotland’s least active people as part of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games.
The lasting legacy of the Commonwealth Games has a permanent fixture in East Lothian with the unveiling of nine commemorative cycle stands across the region.
A framework has been drawn up for an annual Commonwealth Legacy Week which will enable Legacy 2014 partners to participate and individually and collectively demonstrate that the legacy impact of the Games is going from strength to strength.