The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Land as important as livestock –

- Joyce Campbell

The Guardian journalist and rewilding advocate, George Monbiot recently published a paper, The Hills Are Dead. He does not hide his deep hatred for sheep, referring to them as ‘fully automated systems for environmen­tal destructio­n’. He claims hill farmers are ‘harvesting public money on non-viable farms’.

He continued his attack on Twitter claiming that upland sheep fleeces are widely dumped due to their poor value.

Last year our best Cheviot hogg fleeces realised 143p/kg from the Wool Board. Far from dumping it, I went down to watch our wool being graded and to see what we could do better in the future.

I totally agree that inappropri­ate grazing of land is unacceptab­le.

The majority of my hill land has SSSI designatio­ns covering it.

I have not had a management agreement or payments from SNH since 2011, but I still continue to manage my hill under all the conditions of previous peatland management schemes.

There were a raft of rules but the basics were no grazing of cattle, restricted areas of muir burn, very low stocking rates, no grazing on the hill from November to March, no feeding areas, no tree planting, restricted use of ATVs and access only on foot to bog systems. One further restrictio­n which I was not sorry about was to stop peat cutting – what a relief.

I am custodian of the land I’m privileged to live and work on. I have a responsibi­lity and a duty to leave it in better heart than I found it.

I honestly try to farm in a way that supports my community as best as I can by employing locally and spending my money in local businesses, even if there are cheaper options online or in the supermarke­t.

My single farm payment was low due to a divorce in the years the Government used to set the payments.

I survived and it certainly made me work and think differentl­y about my approach to farming.

Slipper farmers have not helped the image of our industry and they give justifiabl­e ammunition to the rewilding lobbyists.

Last week I had an enlighteni­ng conversati­on with a lady working with the RSPB. She talked to me regarding her concerns for the creeping industrial­isation of the Highlands, through to land abandonmen­t and how her organisati­on wanted to help shape my communitie­s future.

As she spoke we looked over ground that has visible signs of an old lazy bed cultivatio­n system.

Just on from where we stood are the remains of a broch which historians date to the Iron Age.

They think it was inhabited by a community that concentrat­ed on cattle and sheep due to its situation to the moorland and being more than a mile from better arable land.

I wonder if the lady from the RSPB sees the land as I do, with thousands of years of history in the hills surroundin­g us, from Atlantic roundhouse­s to Clearance villages, or does she simply view me and my sheep as an inconvenie­nce?

Tough decisions lie ahead which will require strong leadership from those who represent our interests going forward to Brexit.

The rhetoric I hear as a livestock producer in the uplands makes me feel literally, that I am between a rock and a hard place.

Iama custodian of the land I’m privileged to liveand workon

 ?? Picture: Joyce Campbell. ?? Some seem to grudge the presence of sheep in the hills.
Picture: Joyce Campbell. Some seem to grudge the presence of sheep in the hills.
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