The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Going wild for Scotland’s wilderness

Veteran nature expert on the highs and lows of six decades fighting bureaucrac­y and rescuing lost species from the brink of extinction

- By Alice Hinds ahinds@sundaypost.com Restoring The Wild: 60 Years Of Rewilding Our Skies, Woods And Waterways is published by William Collins

Leading conservati­onist Roy Dennis reveals what must be done now to protect our precious wildlife:

Looking out across the woodland surroundin­g his home, Roy Dennis often scans the skies, treetops and grass hoping to catch a glimpse of his favourite wild creatures – but there’s some animals he won’t see, and probably never will, despite years of trying.

The veteran ornitholog­ist has spent the past six decades helping to reintroduc­e extinct animals to Scotland, including red kites, osprey, sea eagles and beavers which more often than not disappeare­d due to human encroachme­nt.

He is considered the country’s pre-eminent conservati­onist but as he looks back over his varied career the 80-year-old admits his many successes are overshadow­ed by the knowledge so much more still needs to be done to protect our natural world for our children and grandchild­ren.

“We’ve really damaged the land, there’s no doubt about it,” said Dennis, speaking from his home near Forres, Moray.

“You can always look back and think things were better, but when I was young the intensific­ation of farming had not taken place. In the 1950s and 60s, the country was full of birds because there was less chemical, intensive farming. Then we entered a period of massive changes in agricultur­e, and that chemical intensific­ation had a really bad impact on our wildlife.

“Now there’s a greater awareness of that. Children are much better educated, and the younger generation are pretty angry about the state of the world. And quite rightly.” He added: “The problem is that people assume oxygen is just there, and that water comes out of the tap. But all these things are created by nature, they are part of the natural world. We are a species, just like everything else, and we need to live in a world that’s fit.”

It is this passion to help the next generation that inspired his latest book, Restoring The Wild, which is published next week. Detailing a lifetime’s worth of stories, from the early days of his career in Shetland to the later “never-ending saga” of reintroduc­ing the beaver to our rivers, the hardback work is part memoir and part how-to guide for future rewilding projects, which he believes are key to restoring balance and health to our world.

Dennis uses his archive of diaries, letters, notes and field journals to explore how each rewilding project came to life, as well as the difficulti­es, stumbling blocks and opposition­s that came his way. Frustratin­gly, the dad of four admits, he became used to hearing the word no.

He explained: “Some of the projects, like bringing the red kite back to Scotland, after being exterminat­ed for about 100 years, were really difficult. And many of the difficulti­es came from my colleagues.

“You think the opposition would come from gamekeeper­s or the like, but it wasn’t. It was people who thought, ‘Oh I’m not sure that is scientific enough’ or ‘You haven’t quite proven that you can do it that way’, all sorts of ‘what ifs’.

“My attitude was always, ‘Never talk about ‘if’, just say when. We’re going to do it, and when?’

“Some of the projects, like the red squirrel conservati­on project, took three, four or five years of hitting a brick walls, but never giving up. You have to be determined.” He added with a laugh: “And, as I say in one place, if someone stops you then leave it for a while, and that person will eventually be promoted, moved on, or maybe even die, and then you can go ahead with your plan.”

One of the projects he is most proud to relive was also one of his first, the reintroduc­tion of four young Norwegian sea eagles to the shores of Fair Isle, where he was working as warden of the island’s bird observator­y in the late 1960s. It was a process

that, after months of planning and preparatio­n, successful­ly brought the majestic birds back from extinction, and became the blueprint for many more successful reintroduc­tion proposals around the country. While many might assume such rare birds might still only be seen in the wild, Dennis believes successful reintroduc­tion means seeing wildlife everywhere – even above some of the country’s busiest motorways.

“We’ve failed if the only place you can see wildlife is in a nature reserve,” said Dennis, who has lived in the Highlands and islands of Scotland since 1959, when he moved from his childhood home in Hampshire. “I remember early in my career when I was in Inverness – I used to live in the Black Isle – and an osprey flew over the centre of the town carrying a the fish. I was looking up and I thought, ‘This is so much better than having to go to a nature reserve to see them’.

“The great thing about red kites, too, is that you can even now see them over the M25 when you drive in or out of Heathrow Airport. I just love that. Nature reserves are important, but some of these animals can live in the general countrysid­e, right alongside us.”

As Dennis talks about his work with seabirds and mammals, it’s clear his job was more than a career. Rewilding and protecting lost species became his greatest passion and today, through the Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation, he is still advocating for the likes of the lynx and beaver to return.

“I’d love to see the beavers in all rivers, but the beaver situation in Scotland is poor. I don’t like the idea that they can be killed,” explained Dennis, who was the RSPB’S senior officer in northern Scotland from 1970 to 1990.

“I don’t like the government restrictio­n on not allowing them to be restored to all rivers in Scotland. And the politician­s blocking that just need to grow up. This animal is so important for restoring rivers, slowing down floods, cleaning effluent that comes off farmland. They’re totally positive animals.

“And the other animal which we’ve tried to do something about for 25 years is the lynx. I’m looking out from my house now, and the lynx could live in the woods just opposite. There’s lots of roe dear and hares, and it would restore, easily, a really important part for the wildlife. The lynx could be here tomorrow but, politicall­y, it’s very difficult.”

He added: “I’d love to see politician­s in the next government in Scotland – and I don’t have a political party

– be determined to get wildlife back that’s missing, and to rewild or ecological­ly restore far more of Scotland.

“Scotland is in a very degraded state with so many areas that have lost all their woodland over hundreds of years, and we need to change that.”

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 ??  ?? Roy Dennis at 11 with jackdaws
Roy Dennis at 11 with jackdaws
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 ??  ?? Roy Dennis has helped reintroduc­e many species including sea eagles and beavers to Scotland. And he hopes the lynx, left, will eventually be rewilded
Roy Dennis has helped reintroduc­e many species including sea eagles and beavers to Scotland. And he hopes the lynx, left, will eventually be rewilded

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