The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Scotland’s climate of chaos

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Ahint of grotesque distortion has crept into the never-ending procession of spleen-venting malcontent­s who increasing­ly characteri­se the owners and managers of Scotland’s estates and farms.

For a group of people who constantly proclaim to be the guardians of the countrysid­e (and they are the only group of people in the country that thinks so), the evidence on the ground reveals an attitude towards nature that is one of thinly-veiled contempt at best, and almost indescriba­ble at its worst. The young golden eagle shot in the Pentland Hills then dumped in the North Sea last month would be a breathtaki­ng insult to all nature were it not for the fact that such disregard for the law has become routine.

The shooting, trapping, poisoning and otherwise disposing of all those tribes of nature against which it bears a grudge, is fast becoming a first resort rather than a last resort of land management. To say that it is a national disgrace that demeans Scotland in the eyes of the world is to understate the reality.

The hostility towards legally protected species, the obliterati­on of native forest in both Highland and Lowland Scotland, the draining of wetland, the artificial alteration of river courses, the annihilati­on of biodiversi­ty at the hands of industrial­ised farming techniques, the uprooting of hedges and copses, the reckless use of chemicals, the intolerabl­e extent of overgrazin­g, the clear-felling of plantation forest, and the ponderous, slavish pursuit of Victorian sporting traditions that would be laughable if it were not so catastroph­ic for biodiversi­ty… these are the 21st Century stock-in-trade of the guardians of the countrysid­e.

Routine practice fosters flash flooding, yet this, the species that invented clear-felling, heaps scorn and worse on beavers for cutting down trees and damming field ditches. The ethos that prevails can be summed up thus: don’t work with nature, fight it, and where necessary, kill it. Then dump its body where they won’t find it.

A third of tagged young golden eagles have disappeare­d, and God alone knows how many of the untagged ones. And sea eagles (the subject of some quite outrageous exaggerati­on about sheep predation), and red kites, and buzzards, and goshawks and sparrowhaw­ks, and wildcats and pine martens… the list of intoleranc­es goes on and on.

We have, quite literally, reached the position where the only land on which nature can feel relatively safe is owned by conservati­on interests. Not even our national parks are safe, nor will they be until they are owned by the nation and managed by a national park service with nature conservati­on as it first priority. Right now, the Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park is considerin­g a developmen­t applicatio­n by Flamingola­nd (“Yorkshire’s ultimate theme park and the UK’s most visited zoo plus a luxury resort village”, since you asked).

The result of all this is a landscape riven by confrontat­ion. A consequenc­e is that the freewheeli­ng extremitie­s of nature conservati­on will also start taking the law into their own hands, out of frustratio­n at the lack of progress towards making landowners respect and live with the law and with nature.

It has already happened with the Tayside beavers. They were the result of escapes and from wildlife parks, and almost certainly the process was given an illegal impetus. But, the Scottish Government has subsequent­ly legitimise­d them, having seen the wholly beneficial ecological results of its own official trial in Argyll, and having judged that the Tayside beavers are having a similar effect.

The evidence grows daily more persuasive that current land practice in much of Scotland fuels the kind of climate chaos which is now all around us and from Arctic to Antarctic. The status quo is not an option.

Public opinion is on nature’s side. The future in Scotland is in community buy-outs, in an expanding nature conservati­on sector, in tax breaks for land managers who foster biodiversi­ty, in green tourism, in national parks owned by the nation, in increasing­ly stringent wildlife protection laws, in more reintroduc­tions of missing species up to and including wolves (because they belong here and they are a necessary part of a philosophy which permits nature to manage nature).

The truth may be as unpalatabl­e for some land-owning interests as it was for their Victorian ancestors but it’s still the truth: the only guardian of the countrysid­e that knows how to do the job is nature itself.

 ?? Picture: Steve Gardner. ?? One of the beavers successful­ly reintroduc­ed to Knapdale Forest in Argyll and Bute in an official trial.
Picture: Steve Gardner. One of the beavers successful­ly reintroduc­ed to Knapdale Forest in Argyll and Bute in an official trial.
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