The Sunday Post (Dundee)

This land is our land. Potentiall­y

Community appeals for a benefactor to help them buy and breathe new life into abandoned estate

- By Richard Baynes news@sundaypost.com

A tiny Highland community is seeking a wealthy benefactor to save their dream of reviving a ghost estate.

People in Morvern, west of Lochaber, have big plans for Killundine, 6,000 acres of forestry, moorland and rich farmland on the north shore of the Sound of Mull, which they say could bring vital new jobs and families to the area.

The deserted estate near Lochaline has five homes and a range of other buildings, most of which have lain unused for years. Fertile fields are overgrown with rushes and bracken: it once produced so much grain it had its own mill.

Even the local shepherd who leased the moorland for his flock has given it up, and buildings in the silent farmyard are starting to fall apart. The ground’s only use is for deer stalking.

Morvern has just 350 adults, but the estate could provide badly- needed homes, crofts and livelihood­s to half a dozen families, bolstering the local school roll of just 12, and rooting people in the area, according to the Morvern Community Woodland group (MCW).

Buying it could give environmen­tal enthusiast­s a chance to revive the remains of its once- rich temperate rainforest­s of hazel, oak and ash. With stunning views from Ardnamurch­an in the west to Ben More on Mull, it could also be a holiday paradise, feeding the local tourism economy.

It is one of a number of community buyouts being proposed around Scotland, including in the Borders where the Duke of Buccleuch, one of Scotland’s biggest landowners, is offering to sell land to three communitie­s, Newcastlet­on, Langholm and Wanlockhea­d. They have been awarded up to £ 1 million each by the Scottish Land Fund – a government scheme funding buyouts – but are still falling short of the asking prices.

In Lochaline, the group needs to find £ 1.7m by October 31 to complete a proposed £2.7m deal to buy Killundine – and can see no way of doing that without a benefactor. Veronique Walraven, who chairs MCW, said: “It’s heartbreak­ing to see it in this state, when it is such a special place where people would love to live – it could do so much for the community.”

The Lauder family, who bought it in 1971, have agreed a deal below market value, and are keen for MCW to take over. The group had hoped to get the whole price from the Scottish Land Fund in June this year, but the fund has seen increasing demand on its £ 10m- a- year community buyout pot in recent years, and awarded MCW

just £ 1m. To get that, they must raise the rest by October 31.

Veronique says crowdfundi­ng and small-scale donations are unlikely to be enough: “We are looking for big donors or organisati­ons to support us who can see the value of this, how incredibly special it is and how much the community can get out of this if it owned it.

“If anybody’s got maybe half a million pounds lying around just let us know. Please come forward, we really could do with that!”

Once big donations are received, a public appeal could make up any shortfall, says Veronique. She is keen to restore the tumbledown buildings of the farmyard as homes or business units, including a car- repair garage. The main farm itself might not be economic to revive but instead it could be used for woodland crofts, where tenants combine farming with forestry. They are in demand among the young working- age people they want in Morvern to bolster the population.

Key to boosting the community is getting more children at Lochaline Primary School, which was graded “excellent” in recent inspection­s. “We have an amazing school but only 12 kids are enjoying that education – that’s a real shame,” Veronique said.

Vaila Kennedy, 20, from Lochaline, is a director of MCW. She is studying rural business management in Edinburgh, and would love to live and work where she grew up. But, she said: “The prospects for someone like me of finding a home and work here are quite limited.

There are not that many job opportunit­ies and housing is limited. It’s a real struggle if you want to leave your parents’ house. I really love it here and somewhere like Killundine could create opportunit­ies for people like me, if they could live and work on the estate.”

If they buy the estate the group plans to harvest £ 1m of standing timber on the estate, using the cash generated to revive it and replant the woodlands with a mix of commercial conifers and native broadleaf trees.

Ecologist Alasdair Firth works for the Woodland Trust environmen­tal charity and is also a director of the Morvern group. He said the estate has considerab­le areas of Scotland’s native rainforest, made up of trees such as hazel, oak, ash and a huge number of shrubs, mosses and lichens.

It also has 1,000 elms, a precious resource after disease killed off most of the native species. All of it is currently threatened by invasive rhododendr­ons and deer grazing, which the buyout group would deal with.

He said Killundine’s great potential for walking and mountain biking could make tourism part of the revival: “You get great views from Beinn Bhuide, all the way to Ben Nevis. On a clear winter’s day, you can see the Western Isles and Coll, Skye and Eigg, Knoydart, all the west coast.”

Agents Bell Ingram manage the estate for the Lauder family, and say two of the estate’s houses are used “from time to time”. Bell Ingram’s Mike Thompson said they turned down a private buyer more than two years ago in favour of the group’s bid, of which they are “wholly supportive”.

But he said delays over the deal had been frustratin­g as “extremely limited farming activity” has led to the deteriorat­ion of the farmlands and buildings, and added: “This period has also had a significan­t financial impact on the owners in terms of ongoing costs.”

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 ??  ?? Morvern Community Woodland’s Alasdair Firth and Vaila Kennedy, above, on the Highland estate, left, that has become overgrown, top
Morvern Community Woodland’s Alasdair Firth and Vaila Kennedy, above, on the Highland estate, left, that has become overgrown, top
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