The Herald - The Herald Magazine

Have you a clear vision for Scotland’s mountains?

With its £100k ‘Diamond Grant’, the Scottish Mountainee­ring Trust aims to create a legacy that will support outdoor recreation activities for many years to come. By

- Nan Spowart

SCOTLAND’S mountains are treasured the world over for their beauty, so it is fitting that a “Diamond Grant” is being made available to help more people experience them. The fund of up to £100,000 is believed to be the largest single grant ever made by a charity to a mountain project and it is hoped the money will create a legacy that will provide enduring benefits.

It is being offered by the Scottish Mountainee­ring Trust (SMT) to celebrate its 60th birthday this year and is on top of the ongoing support it provides to mountain projects.

Chair John Fowler said the Trust wanted to hear about innovative projects from a wide range of applicants. “We want the Diamond award to be not just a grant, but also a legacy, that will provide enduring benefits to the mountainee­ring community,” he said. “We’re hoping to hear from projects that are really distinctiv­e, that break fresh ground. As well as the grass-roots of Scottish mountainee­ring, we are reaching out to other groups whose work might be helped, even transforme­d.

“We believe the Diamond

Grant is the biggest single grant ever made by a charity to Scottish mountainee­ring and we’re looking for something really special. We’re open to all ideas.”

As a charity, the Trust is committed to supporting projects that have a clear public benefit and help more people enjoy the world of mountains. “So, whether a project concerns a hut, a book, a hilltrack, a crag or an exhibition, what matters is that the mountainee­ring community will be richer for it happening,” said Mr Fowler.

Set up in 1962, the Trust has already contribute­d £1.6 million to a very wide range of schemes. A student training weekend, a mountain rescue base, a mountain film festival, a club hut and a new bridge – all these and many more have been helped, through grants ranging from a few hundred pounds to around £10,000.

Many of the awards in the Trust’s long running grants programme achieve a lot with sums that seem quite modest. For example, the last award announced was for exactly £1960. That amount went to Urban Uprising, a charity that uses climbing to improve the physical, social and emotional wellbeing of young people. It’ll complete the funding needed to give 60 youngsters a full day’s climbing at a countrysid­e crag, rather than a city climbing wall.

Other funding has been used to help Hebrides Mountain Rescue team to buy a site for a permanent team base in Stornoway, while £12,000 was given towards the rebuilding of the path up Beinn a’ Ghlo, above Blair Atholl, by the Outdoor Access Trust for Scotland.

In addition, the Scottish Mountainee­ring Club Journal, which was founded in 1890, now has its tens of thousands of pages free on the web, with £2100 from the SMT going to OCR scanning.

Winter skills courses for 18-30 year olds run by the Jonathan Conville Memorial Trust have also been supported by the Trust for about 20 years with the latest grant totalling £1000.

The Trust’s work is financed by donations from individual­s and organisati­ons who share the same values and from the publicatio­n of guidebooks for the Scottish Mountainee­ring Club and other books connected with the hills.

As with its usual grants, the SMT does expect Diamond Grant applicants to have a degree of

commitment and resources to call on, whether that’s in skills, experience, manpower or existing funding. The Trust hopes to make

WINNER a single award of up to £100,000, but if no scheme on that scale is approved it may decide to help several smaller projects, each with a minimum need for £20,000.

The deadline for bids is the end of August 2022, with a winner to be announced later this year. However, the Trust would like would-be applicants to begin thinking seriously about this opportunit­y now, before the main outdoors months, rather than after them.

“There are basic criteria for all grant applicatio­ns on our site but it would be wrong for us to say what ‘enduring benefits’ or ‘fresh ground’ might mean,” said Mr Fowler.

“The teams, charities, events and individual­s that we exist to help have to decide what transforma­tion or expansion of their work would be made possible by £100,000.

“What we can do, and will do, is to listen constructi­vely and sympatheti­cally to people who have great ideas and big ambitions.”

Those interested in applying for the grant can find detailed guidance online at thesmt.org.uk where they will also find contact details to discuss their plans

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? The Trust has already funded a student training weekend, rescue base, film festival, club hut and a new bridge
The Trust has already funded a student training weekend, rescue base, film festival, club hut and a new bridge
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? SMT only supports projects with a clear public benefit which help more people enjoy Scotland’s mountains
SMT only supports projects with a clear public benefit which help more people enjoy Scotland’s mountains
 ?? ?? cap
cap

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom