The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Economic boost from grouse shooting laid bare in study

Figures revealed as rural communitie­s gear up for the start of 18-week season

- GraeMe sTrachan gstrachan@thecourier.co.uk

A study has revealed the multi-millionpou­nd impact of grouse shooting on rural communitie­s in Tayside.

It came as more than 350 gamekeeper­s, their families and traders took part in a march in Edzell yesterday to mark the upcoming grouse season.

Of estates in Perthshire canvassed by Tayside and Central Scotland Moorland Group, three respondent holdings generated local contracts totalling almost £2 million during 2015/16.

Businesses in Angus benefited to the tune of more than £4.2m from seven respondent estates while the Grampian region saw £3.1m invested locally across 10 estates.

Trades and services around Loch Ness and Inverness-shire secured trade worth £6.2m from 11 estates providing accounts.

Speyside saw local income of nearly £4m from six polled estates and the towns and villages around the Lammermuir Hills in the Scottish Borders enjoyed more than £2.7m of business from six estates, with grouse shooting as their principal income.

The final total across all the estates who participat­ed was £23,169,891, with two estates in the Tomatin area creating more than £880,000 of downstream economic benefit.

That sum, which does not take into account wages paid to gamekeeper­s or other staff, means downstream businesses, from garages to building firms, benefit from business worth, on average, £514,886 from each estate.

“Grouse shooting attracts criticism in some quarters but the survey tells the story of the value of country sports to smaller rural communitie­s,” said Lianne MacLennan of Scotland’s regional moorland groups.

“The results do not show the wages that keep the gamekeeper­s and their families in the glen villages.

“What we wanted to understand better is how the impacts trickle down.

“There is not a rural community in these seven areas that could afford to lose either the number of jobs created by the grouse estates or the business people are deriving from all the work that goes on in these places.

Perthshire builders Frankerton work on moors from Morayshire to the Borders, with 75% of their business coming directly from grouse estates which enabled the firm to expand from two employees only 10 years ago.

“We employ nine people now and six of those are working full-time for estates, with the others working on other constructi­on contracts such as windfarms,” said Frankerton’s Bryan Paterson.

“We, too, use local hotels and businesses when we are working. That is when you see how far into communitie­s the work generated, goes.”

Over the studied period, there was significan­t investment made in buildings, public path repairs and renewable energy projects as well as core grouse moor management.

The 18-week season is due to start on Saturday.

Animal rights campaigner­s have condemned the annual event known as the Glorious Twelfth.

The League Against Cruel Sports director Robbie Marsland said: “The annual celebratio­n of the start of the grouse shooting season is a ridiculous tradition which has long had its day. The Glorious Twelfth is a poor attempt to justify a blood sport which is responsibl­e for the mass killing of wildlife on an industrial scale as well as irreversib­le damage to the environmen­t.”

 ?? Kim Cessford. Picture: ?? More than 350 gamekeeper­s, their families and traders took part in a march in Edzell yesterday to mark the upcoming grouse season.
Kim Cessford. Picture: More than 350 gamekeeper­s, their families and traders took part in a march in Edzell yesterday to mark the upcoming grouse season.
 ??  ?? The shooting season starts on Saturday.
The shooting season starts on Saturday.

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