The Sunday Post (Inverness)

New hope in the Highlands: Estate battles to breathe new life into Scots wild lands

Landowner reveals how radical ecological regenerati­on is future-proofing wildlife and woodlands

- By Polly Pullar news@sundaypost.com Pollypulla­r.com

THE drive from Braemar to Mar Lodge in the Cairngorms following the River Dee is impressive, especially if it’s some time since you have been. A visible transforma­tion is apparent right now.

On this gusty morning, bruised clouds chase across a brooding sky as sunlight battles to peek through.

In the courtyard of Mar Lodge silence reigns where just a few months earlier the frenetic, chattering house martins were dipping and diving from nests under the eaves, and the cacophony of jackdaws in a redundant chimney mingled with the gentle songs of willow warblers.

“What would you most like to see?” says Mar Lodge’s conservati­on officer, Andrew Painting. He laughs when my response is the narrow-headed

ant, and we begin a tour of just some of the estate.

The National Trust for Scotland acquired Mar Lodge in 1995.

At 300 square kilometres (115 square miles) and with 15 Munros – Scotland’s mountains over 914m (3,000ft) – including four of the highest in the country, it is a place of superlativ­es.

“Yes, it’s big,” Andrew says, a glorious understate­ment.

“It would take three days for a fit person to walk the estate’s boundaries.

“The ultimate aim here has always been a symbiosis between environmen­tal conservati­on, Highland sport and open access for all. This is no quick fix – it’s a 200-year vision. To understand the Highlands, you must first understand two species – the Scots pine and the red deer. Both have existed on Mar Lodge for 8,000 years, but things have since altered.”

This is one of the coldest and windiest parts of the country. Indeed, Braemar frequently records the lowest temperatur­es. It also contains the most significan­t area of subarctic habitat in the UK and is the largest nature reserve in Scotland.

As sun wins over cloud shadow, the landscape with its burgeoning mosaic of bog and arboreal cover might seem heavenly – yet, to reach this point, there have been hard decisions, controvers­y and conflict.

“This is a contested place, damaged by difficulti­es that blight the nature of Scotland and continue to divide its people. I think it’s changing now, though, and communicat­ion with neighbouri­ng landowners and the local community is good.

“Mar Lodge sits in the middle of environmen­tal restoratio­n

The real power of Mar Lodge is the example we set to other estates

– and we need to retain a hybrid management approach. For now, these woods need a chance, so we have had to cut back our deer. Yet the woods need deer, so they’ll be back.

“Our model for stalking is simple. We want to maintain a comparativ­ely small herd of around 1,500 and to be able to offer a high-quality stalking experience in a healthy ecosystem. This way, there is no impact on financial income and significan­t ecological benefits. Stalking here is of the old school.”

Perhaps one of the most challengin­g issues with conserving and regenerati­ng Scotland’s majestic landscapes is persuading people to recognise that there is a problem in the first place.

Shifting baseline syndrome has much to answer for – many still believe our bare, open landscapes are the norm. For Andrew, this is not only about regenerati­on, but also about redemption and reconnecti­on.

“We don’t come to nature as impartial observers – we all have an emotional and cultural attachment to all life with which we share the Earth.”

It’s also important to recognise that everyone has a different agenda. I witness that the Mar Lodge model is, indeed, different. Stalking and walked-up grouse shooting continues, the public is actively encouraged and yet wildlife is flourishin­g – visibly.

For tree lovers, there can be no more dramatic and impressive species than the Scots pines of the Cairngorms.

We stop to admire an extraordin­ary Scots pine – reputed to be the second-biggest in Scotland. “It’s nearing the end of its life,” says Andrew as we stand beneath the behemoth next to massive fallen boughs that are as vast as mature trees.

We talk of the tree’s vital relationsh­ip with other species – birds, including woodpecker­s, invertebra­tes, and red squirrels, and how its fissures and crannies provide roosting sites for pipistrell­e bats, treecreepe­rs and dozens of microorgan­isms, rare mosses and lichens.

We discuss its vast, unseen undergroun­d root network, its mycelial connection­s spreading wide and communicat­ing with every living thing around it. We also talk about the paramount importance of dead wood.

Before the National Trust for Scotland bought the estate, the far shorter-lived birch had also come to the end of the line. We laugh as we discuss its dramatic takeover bid as dozens of pushy young trees scrape across the vehicle’s flanks.

We stop to see a nest of the fabulous rare narrow-headed ant –only found in five locations in Scotland and one in England. I am in heaven.

The golden eagles are holding their own and, for the first time, sea eagles nest on the estate, too.

Later we watch the ethereal grey-white gleam of a male hen harrier quartering the moorland above the river.

“So, you see,” says Andrew, “you can have grouse shooting and hen harriers, and we no longer carry out muirburn – the burning of grasslands and heather to provide fresh growth.”

Though public access is actively encouraged, campfires are not. We stop at Derry Lodge and Andrew clears up the ash of a camper’s fire.

“Peat can go on burning undergroun­d for days, and a ring of stones is no protection. Leaving this might encourage others to do the same.

“Nothing will ever be perfect, and it’s OK to admit it. But we’re blinkered if we don’t accept that by not managing for one specific species, overall, things do far better. People don’t realise the seriousnes­s of the climate crisis, so we need to build resilience into the landscape and complex habitats, which is what we are doing here.

“For me, the real power of Mar Lodge Estate is not in the amount of wildlife or carbon it holds but in the example of ecological restoratio­n that it sets to other Highland estates.

“So when I wrote my book – Regenerati­on, I realised that the social and political complexiti­es of the ‘Mar Lodge experience’ were just as significan­t to discuss as the successes.”

Aged just 32, Andrew Painting has wisdom beyond his years. I witness his excitement as we find a new stand of healthy young aspens on the riverbanks, and he shows me the rare mountain sorrel growing on the shingle.

He has been working on the estate since 2016, and is now hefted to this place with a deep holistic understand­ing of how to tackle the numerous challenges the estate faces.

Indeed, Mar Lodge represents an optimistic future of how Scotland’s wild lands might begin to recover.

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 ?? ?? The stunning woodlands of Mar Lodge Estate are being managed to build resilience against the threat of climate change
The stunning woodlands of Mar Lodge Estate are being managed to build resilience against the threat of climate change

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