The Scotsman

Log on to choose Scotland’s favourite tree

● Shortlist for Tree of the Year competitio­n is unveiled

- By ANGUS HOWARTH newsdeskts@scotsman.com

IT began life as a sapling plucked by a Scottish officer from the mud of no-man ’sland during the First World War.

Lieutenant David Mccabe found the young tree while at the front at Passchenda­le in 1917 and sent it home to his family in Perthshire.

He later died from his wounds and never returned to see it grow to maturity.

But a century later the spruce keeping his name and memory alive stands proud in Crieff and has been shortliste­d as a contender for the annual Scottish Tree of the Year competitio­n.

Members of the public are being urged to support their favourite tree as the new shortlist is unveiled.

The shortliste­d trees for Scotland include the Beauly Sycamore, Beauly, a huge tree which has stood for several centuries, dominating the picturesqu­e ruins of Beauly Priory, a site Mary, Queen of Scots visited in 1564 on her way to Dingwall.

Also in the running is The Big Tree, Kirkwall, Orkney, a 200-year-old sycamore which is a well-known and muchloved landmark used as a meeting place by generation­s of Orcadians and saved twice from felling by public outcry.

The Carnegie Oak in Pittencrie­ff Park, Dunfermlin­e, was planted in 1904 by the industrial­ist and philanthro­pist Andrew Carnegie, who lived as a boy within a stone’s throw of the park, known locally as The Glen.

The Greenock Cut Oak, passed by thousands of people completing the Greenock Cut Trail every year, stands covered in ferns, mosses and lichens. It is an ambassador for Shielhill Glen Site of Special Scientific Interest and an outdoor classroom.

The Old Holly Bush, Castle Fraser, is believed to be one of the oldest holly trees in Scotland. It has a girth of 10ft 5in, and stands on what is believed to have been the edge of a 17thcentur­y enclosed garden that was surrounded by a holly hedge rather than a wall.

Beccy Speight, Woodland Trust chief executive, said: “Once again, the public have nominated many fantastic trees with truly inspiratio­nal stories, which highlight how intrinsic trees are in peoples’ lives.”

A total of 28 trees have been chosen from nomination­s for four shortlists, six each for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and 10 for England.

One tree will be chosen by experts from the four national winners to go forward to represent the UK in the 2018 European Tree of the Year contest.

To vote, visit woodlandtr­ust.org.uk/treeofthey­ear

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 ??  ?? Iconic trees – Beauly Sycamore, main picture, and clockwise, the Carnegie Oak, Dunfermlin­e; Old Holly Bush, Castle Fraser, Aberdeensh­ire; Greenock Cut Oak, David Mccabe’s Spruce, Perthshire and the Big Tree, Kirkwall, Orkney.
Iconic trees – Beauly Sycamore, main picture, and clockwise, the Carnegie Oak, Dunfermlin­e; Old Holly Bush, Castle Fraser, Aberdeensh­ire; Greenock Cut Oak, David Mccabe’s Spruce, Perthshire and the Big Tree, Kirkwall, Orkney.
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