The Herald on Sunday

How deer stalker Duncan discovered the ruins of a long-lost Scottish community

- By Deborah Anderson

DUNCAN Mackenzie has had a string of jobs from policeman to butcher and game dealer – and even running a guest house.

However, it is his current role that has brought him the most satisfacti­on – and should come as no surprise considerin­g his DNA connects him to it.

Mr Mackenzie is now a deer stalker who lives east of Ullapool in Wester Ross in the Highlands has single-handedly discovered the ruins of a lost community of national significan­ce.

The 66-year-old is the focus of a new documentar­y to be broadcast on BBC Alba on Tuesday at 9pm.

Made by award-winning filmmakers Richard Else and Margaret Wicks of Adventure Show Production­s based at

Newtonmore, the programme explores Mr Mackenzie’s radical views on deer stalking and his discovery of ruins of a lost community.

With stunning scenery of wild, uninhabite­d mountain areas peppered with lochans and lochs, the programme explores how Mr Mackenzie’s DNA is directly connected to the land where he works.

Mr Mackenzie is described as a naturalist, stalker and historian, and has been a policeman, butcher, game dealer and run a guest house.

His family has been connected to this land for generation­s and he describes himself as the last of the line.

Remarkably, he has rediscover­ed a lost community that is one of the most important townships north of Inverness – including an illicit still making industrial quantities.

He has a non-sporting lease on an estate just south of Lochinver in Assynt, so doesn’t take paying clients out with him.

It is some of the wildest land in Scotland and stunning footage has captured the vast remote landscape.

Mr Mackenzie says he has a “duty of care” to the deer he manages and, with some satisfacti­on, added: “I don’t take guests to the hill.

“I’ve been out with guests in the past and it was always the testostero­ne-filled men that you had to keep an eye out for.

“It was just pull the trigger, get a stag, go home and get drunk. I used to fall out with them quite a lot.

“Many estates are still hanging onto Victorian principles but I go

Duncan Mackenzie is literally one in a million – a man hefted to this part of Scotland and with an enormous set of skills that most of us have lost long ago

in, shoot the animal I want and leave the rest of the herd quiet.”

Seeking out where generation­s of his family had lived, he uncovered old mosscovere­d stone ruins of a “cleared village”.

Mr Mackenzie has found what is probably the largest community in the north of Scotland and one which fundamenta­lly changes many of the accepted views of Highland life.

The community is bigger than most, stretching some four miles up Inverlael Glen, and Mr Mackenzie explains how the villages were “cleared” of their residents in the period around 1819, when he believes 77 families, possibly 600 to 700 people were removed from their homes – they weren’t even allowed to dig up their potatoes to take them with them. “Their DNA is on this land since time began,” he said. Historian Dr Martin MacGregor explains that “evil replaced what was paradise” for these people. “My father introduced me to stalking when I was a child,” Mr Mackenzie added.

“It’s either in you or it isn’t, but it’s part of my being.”

The programme which took four years to make, explores his work on the land following the herd across mountain tops and glens with his two dogs Polar and Molly as well as commentary from academics working on the uncovering of the cleared settlement ruins.

Filmmaker Mr Else said: “Duncan Mackenzie is literally one in a million – a man hefted to this part of Scotland and with an enormous set of skills that most of us have lost long ago.

“It’s been a real privilege to work with him and long days tramping the hills in all weathers has been amply rewarded.”

The programme will be shown on BBC Alba on Tuesday, August 30 at 9pm, and will be available throughout the UK on BBC iPlayer.

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 ?? ?? The new documentar­y described Duncan Mackenzie as a naturalist, stalker and historian who has been a policeman, butcher, game dealer and run a guest house
The new documentar­y described Duncan Mackenzie as a naturalist, stalker and historian who has been a policeman, butcher, game dealer and run a guest house

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