The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Keepers’ vital role

- Angus Whitson

Tuesday was one of those memorable days – sunny, soft and sweet – that confirm, if ever I needed confirmati­on, that I’ve never wanted to live anywhere other than my north-east of Scotland corner of Angus and the Mearns.

I drove in glorious sunshine up to Loch Lee, at the head of Glenesk, to meet Lianne MacLennan, coordinato­r for the Angus Glens Moorland Group. I was greeted with barks of delight by Nelly, the springer spaniel, and Emba, a black cocker spaniel, wriggling as only cocker spaniels can wriggle.

The group is an associatio­n of rural estates which came together in 2015 because of concern about public misconcept­ions of what estate gamekeeper­s do, what their job involves and to highlight their contributi­on to rural communitie­s and, indeed, the community at large.

The Angus group was the first such associatio­n and has been so successful that the concept has been adopted by other areas and there are now seven throughout Scotland. Lianne is also coordinato­r for the neighbouri­ng Grampian Group.

The group members seek to build relationsh­ips with visitors to the Angus glens, with schools and politician­s; and also to have a dialogue with people who disagree with their activities and to explain to them and define the gamekeeper’s role.

Lianne grew up in Tain and had little perception of the gamekeeper’s world or that of the gamekeeper’s wife until she married husband Garry, head keeper at Invermark Estate. So she brings to her job as coordinato­r an urban as well as a rural perspectiv­e of the gamekeeper­s’ contributi­on to the countrysid­e.

The countrysid­e’s wellbeing is at the heart of the gamekeeper’s job. The modern gamekeeper is college trained and has undergone a practical apprentice­ship. He or she has a knowledge of the law as it applies to the job, has studied management and conservati­on, including conservati­on of rare heather moorland, and understand­s the ecology and biology of an estate and its wildlife.

Today’s gamekeeper­s are subject to as strict a regulatory system as other occupation­s, working with vets on animal welfare, undergoing continuing profession­al developmen­t in matters such as wild game meat hygiene and EU environmen­tal and habitat directives, working alongside the police on raptor protection and requiring to meet profession­al standards to ensure renewal of the licenses and certificat­es essential for their jobs.

Politician­s have been invited to visit the Angus Glens Moorland Group to see first hand the positive impact sporting estates and their staff have on their local communitie­s, and their contributi­on to local businesses. There have been efforts to reach out, especially to primary schools, for children and their teachers to spend a day in the countrysid­e for hands-on experience of rural life.

Lianne makes the point that the gamekeeper’s job is no different from other occupation­s. They are approachab­le family men, hard working, making a living to look after their families.

Fishing and farming

It’s undeniable that the job involves shooting and the killing of animals. But, think on it, every time we eat a fish supper or tuck into a hearty full Scottish breakfast of sausage, bacon and black pudding, a living fish has been pulled from the sea or a pig has met its demise for our repletion.

Lamb chops don’t grow on trees, the sirloin steak on your plate was contentedl­y walking round a grass field three weeks earlier and the Sunday roast chicken may never have seen a blink of sunlight or felt the wind ruffling its feathers in its relatively short life.

The Angus Glens members are very much part of the wider community. This Christmas, building on the success of last year, members will again be delivering prepared, oven-ready meals of game, with instructio­ns for cooking, to families in need. And Lianne is keen to develop Field to Fork meals, to promote the organic benefits of wild game and venison.

I was in no hurry driving back down the glen. I’d spotted some rowans on the way up and I stopped to pick the red, waxy berries. The Doyenne had them in the pan that evening and we have a dozen jars of rowan and apple jelly to accompany our pheasant and lamb over the winter.

It’s been a good year for brambles and we have six pounds in the freezer to be transforme­d into jelly before long.

I’ve known the Angus glens all my life. In common with the rest of Scotland, the landscape we enjoy has been managed by countless previous generation­s harvesting the Scottish woodlands and forests and improving the agricultur­al output of the land.

More so than ever, gamekeeper­s are managers, too, of the wildlife and its welfare on the estates they look after. In my experience, they are more aware than most of the fragility of nature and how easily it can be disturbed but how profitable it can be at every level if the environmen­t, and all that lives in it, is held in balance.

Visit www.angusglens­moorland group.co.uk and watch the Untold Stories films of the modern gamekeeper’s life. They are eye-openers.

 ?? Picture: Angus Whitson. ?? Lianne with Nelly and Emba beside Loch Lee, Glenesk.
Picture: Angus Whitson. Lianne with Nelly and Emba beside Loch Lee, Glenesk.
 ??  ?? Don’t Miss The Whitsons’ Kitchen – Angus and the Doyenne’s take on The Great British Bake Off – every Wednesday in The Courier.
Don’t Miss The Whitsons’ Kitchen – Angus and the Doyenne’s take on The Great British Bake Off – every Wednesday in The Courier.
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