The Sunday Post (Dundee)

“I was a terrible dad,” Gordon recalled.

Ecologist revels in return of hen harrier and other rare

- By Sally Mcdonald smcdonald@sundaypost.com

“There were long periods where I never saw my son because I was working such long hours. I thought paying the bills was the most important thing.”

“He says that,” Maggie told me, “but he kept a roof over all our heads and made sure we were fed. Then there’s this.”

With that, she took out a biscuit tin filled with scrappy notes and longer letters.

“Once Jacob was old enough to write, he started leaving notes for his dad,” she told me.

“Gordon would read them when he got home, write a reply, and leave them by Jacob’s bed for when he got up the morning.

“Sometimes they were quick and light-hearted, other times they would deal with stuff that was important to a wee boy.”

Well done, Jacob, for coming up with the idea.

Well done, Gordon, for taking it seriously.

There’s more than one way to be a good dad!

It is today a stunning Highland haven for 5,000 species of wildlife, including some of Scotland’s most endangered birds and animals.

The future of the Mar Lodge Estate and its expanse of Caledonian woodlands, mountains, bogs and moor was not always so certain.

It was once a contested landscape where some species had been driven to the brink of extinction while swathes of ancient pines had been lost in large part to overgrazin­g of red deer, a place where hunting and shooting enthusiast­s locked horns with conservati­onists over how the land should be managed.

That was until 1995, when the National Trust for Scotland bought the 30,000-hectare estate with its sights set on a 200-year restoratio­n plan that, according to ecologist Andrew Painting, would create “one huge, functionin­g eco-system”.

Now, a quarter-of-a-century on, one-eighth of that vision is complete. Today, the Mar Lodge Estate National Nature Reserve’s treasures are returning to their former glory, with environmen­tal conservati­on and field sports existing in harmony.

Andrew, who charts the project’s progress, says it is one of “the most exciting, progressiv­e conservati­on stories playing out in Britain”. His new book, Regenerati­on, is a celebratio­n of that success. The 31-year-old “lifelong naturalist” said: “Mar Lodge has shown that Highland sport and environmen­tal restoratio­n can sit hand in hand.”

And, he said, it was cause for global optimism: “Our environmen­t faces greater challenges than ever before, but these stories show that there is still hope for the future.”

By the time the trust took it on, Mar Lodge had been managed as a sporting estate for almost two centuries, while field sports had been undertaken there for almost a millennium. Its great ancient pinewoods were reduced to “remnants”. Mountain wood and scrub was lost and bogs became eroded and scarred. Animals like lynx, boar, beaver and wolf disappeare­d either through destructio­n of habitat or hunting. Smaller species went too. The only large mammals left were red deer, in their many thousands.

Andrew said that, for many, the iconic stag and sporting culture was what made the Highlands special. But he added: “For many others, the

grazed, burned, drained moors and dying woodlands were a landscape of environmen­tal and cultural destructio­n.” The conservati­onists turned the heat on the sporting industry, who in turn accused the “tree-huggers” of wanting to kill centuries-old traditions and harm the local economy.

When the estate came up for sale, NTS – already responsibl­e for places like Glencoe, Torridon, and St Kilda – was perceived as “less tree-hugger, more tartan and tweed” he said, and “a good fit for a controvers­ial landscape at a controvers­ial time”.

The ecologist explained: “The basic problem in 1995 was the woodlands just weren’t regenerati­ng, and hadn’t done for a couple of

hundred years. The main reason is there were too many red deer. From the outset, the idea has been to link environmen­tal conservati­on with Highland sports, with environmen­tal conservati­on taking the lead role. There needed to be fewer deer across quite a large area of the estate. This was done by increasing the annual cull and without fencing.

“Some of the conservati­onists decided the trust wasn’t culling enough deer, meanwhile sporting organisati­ons were worried this was going to be the end of sporting culture, but in the event this was not the case. There are still 1,600 deer at Mar Lodge and the woodlands are quite something to see.

“We have definitely over doubled

the total area of Caledonian pinewood on the estate. This is all natural regenerati­on, no planting.

“We estimate we now have between one and two million Caledonian pines, which take 200 years to come to maturity. But that doesn’t mean you can’t see progress in the short term as well. We are finding huge increase in orchids and other species, simply because the grazing pressure has been reduced.”

Among species to emerge in the past four years is the rare Darkred Helleborin­e and the Greater Butterfly Orchid.

He added: “We still have Highland sporting on the estate, less so in the woodlands, but we

species as wildlife haven reaches landmark in radical 200-year regenerati­on

are slowly getting to a place where the two are aligning quite nicely.”

In the mountains deer management has also meant rare montane scrubland are beginning to flourish. He said: “What is exciting is that you can see the change year on year. Now we can expect to see a lot more small birds like the ring ouzel, which are declining quite badly across Scotland and the UK. They will benefit from more areas of montane scrub.

“We are also seeing other species associated with montane scrub like rare ferns and northern blaeberry. The other interestin­g thing about montane scrub is the carbon sequestrat­ion.

The mountains are probably

capturing more carbon than they would have 25 years ago.”

But the estate’s moors are the champions of carbon capture. Andrew explained: “In 2013 the trust assessed the total peat coverage on most of its upland properties, using satellite imagery and ground surveys… the Mar Lodge bogs were found to hold about a third of all the trust’s peatland carbon stocks: nine million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent. That means it holds one ninth of Scotland’s annual carbon emissions in its

peat bogs. But when moors are in degraded condition they become carbon emitters.”

Andrew admits the best part of his job is counting the nests of rare hen harriers. “We have seen a major return in the last five years,” he said. “These days we have between five and 10 pairs. Hen harriers returned to Mar Lodge as a breeding species for the first time in living memory in 2016. They were persecuted pretty much to extinction on mainland Scotland in the 19th Century. The decline of the hen harrier is one of the main reasons why the

Scottish Government is pushing for licencing of grouse moors.”

He hopes the book – which he is at pains to point out holds his views and not that of the trust – will help people to reconnect with the natural world. He said: “There is hope for the future of our wildlife, our planet and its people. But it takes a lot of work and we are not there yet.”

So, 175 years on, will the Mar Lodge conservati­on story have a happy ending?

“If I was to put my ecologist hat on I would say there is no such thing as an ending, just a case of continuing to try to improve things in future.” He cited an academic paper on bird extinction that showed 187 of the world’s 11,147 species were estimated to have disappeare­d in the past 500 years with fears for a further 471.

But it also showed conservati­ve estimates that global conservati­on efforts have reduced the effective extinction rate by 40%. He smiled: “For all the doom and gloom, we know how to save species from extinction; we just have to find the resources, collective­ly, to do it.

“The trust can be proud of what it has achieved up to now. I go to work with optimism every day.”

Regenerati­on: The Rescue Of A Wild Land is out next month from Birlinn

Singer KT Tunstall has hailed Carole King’s album Tapestry as a lifelong inspiratio­n on its 50th anniversar­y.

King was just 29 was she released the album, which contains numerous hit songs including (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman, Will You

Love Me Tomorrow? It’s Too Late, You’ve Got a Friend and Home Again.

Tunstall, who was born in St Andrews but now lives in Los Angeles, told Radio 4 yesterday: “I often get asked what advice would you give young up-and-coming writers and one of the top three pieces of advice I would give them is listen to this record. This for me is a bible. It’s an absolute masterclas­s. What I am interested in is the meat and bones of a brilliant song and it doesn’t matter who sings it.

“The very fact that she can sit down and play every one of these songs, just herself on piano is important to me.

“Any musician listening to this record knows Carole King has been on tour. It’s longing, yearning, missing people, and these are cornerston­e emotions and experience­s of being a human being.”

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 ??  ?? Red deer travel across the snow-covered moors of Mar Lodge Estate in Aberdeensh­ire. Top: A rare
Red deer travel across the snow-covered moors of Mar Lodge Estate in Aberdeensh­ire. Top: A rare
 ??  ?? Andrew Painting
Andrew Painting
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 ?? Picture Chris Murphy ?? hen harrier soars above the estate, where the birds are breeding again for the first time in living memory
Picture Chris Murphy hen harrier soars above the estate, where the birds are breeding again for the first time in living memory
 ??  ?? Carole King on the cover of her Tapestry album, which is hailed by KT Tunstall as a must-listen for any aspiring songwriter
Carole King on the cover of her Tapestry album, which is hailed by KT Tunstall as a must-listen for any aspiring songwriter
 ??  ?? KT Tunstall
KT Tunstall

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