Balmorality, beauty and the Cairngorms National Park plan

September 18, 2016 Nick Kempe 6 comments

Balmoral was in the news twice over the last week, first for a grouse shoot and second because Prince Charles collided with a deer when driving on the estate (see Mirror). Raptor Persecution Scotland provided some excellent critical commentary on the use of soldiers as beaters on the grouse moor but most of the media repeated the story of Kate Middleton being driven up above “the imposing Creag Bhiorrach” by Loch Muick by the Queen for a royal picnic and to watch the grouse shooting without any consideration of what this tells us about how the royal family views the land.

 

Leaving aside the intensification of grouse production and all that implies for wildlife, some of the stories referred to Prince William driving towards or over to Glen Clova – its not certain which – up the Capel Mounth road.   This suggests part of the royal view of their land is it is perfectly acceptable for landowners to be able to drive up onto the tops of the hills or indeed over to neighbouring estates.  I have commented before on how being in a big Range Rover must feel when passing walkers on hill tracks – a sense of power and privilege – because of course only certain people are allowed to drive here.   As the technology has improved and its become cheaper,  private landowners have extended tracks all over our hills.   Post-war there were various proposals to create public roads through the core of the Cairngorms including the Lairig Ghru which were rejected but what has happened is that now  in many parts of the Cairngorms we have  private road networks instead.   What happens on Balmoral is important  because it gives this the ultimate social respectability, royal endorsement.

 

It also tells us something about landowners perceptions of our landscapes.  I think most people would say that a key part of what is special about the landscape in the Cairngorms National Park is that it is unspoilt and feels wild – even if they are viewing it from the public roadside.  Hill tracks from this perspective are scars on the landscape, something that detracts from the landscape and National Park.   The Queen and the rest of the Royal Family can’t share that view as they use these same tracks as a matter of course, see it as their prerogative even.    I suspect they, and most other private landowners, have very different ideas of  beauty to the rest of the population.

 

A search of the Cairngorms National Park draft Partnership Plan does not come up with a single mention of the word “beauty”.   Indeed, there is almost no consideration of landscape and wild land   (see here).   A Plan that took these issues seriously would have to take on the Royal Family and other powerful landowners and it appears the CNPA is simply not up for this – so better just to avoid mentioning it.  To me it just reinforces for me that we will only effectively protect our landscapes through securing fundamental reforms in land ownership.

 

The draft Park Plan though does cast some light on the second story, Prince Charles’ collision with a deer.   On page 8 of the Moorland Evidence document 160621deermoorlandmanagementfinal1 there is a “crude” map of aspirations by landowners for deer densities in the National Park.  It shows Balmoral, along with a great swathe of land to the west, as having aspirations for the highest deer densities in the National Park.    The planners then will not have been surprised then that Prince Charles collided with a deer on the Balmoral Estate.     The same report shows much of Balmoral is in a woodland expansion area where grants are available for woodland planting.  The Plan offers no firm proposals for how the differences between these objectives should be reconciled – how to stop deer eating all the trees – but again  that would mean the CNPA taking on the Royal Family among others.    How Balmoral is managed is in a real sense a litmus test for how well the CNPA is doing.

 

 

6 Comments on “Balmorality, beauty and the Cairngorms National Park plan

  1. This article reeks of the politics of envy! My time in the beautiful highlands has never been marred by the sight of these tracks because I know that they are needed for estate workers to carry out the necessary operations to keep our rare upland moors in superb condition. You only have to look at grouse-moors that have been rewilded by “conservation experts” to see the damage you can expect without access for repair.

    1. Jeff, yes what I write is political but so is your comment. So what do you mean by our moors are in superb conditions and are you saying this has only happened since hill tracks became commonplace? I would also be interested to hear of some example of what you think is the damage caused by re-wilding and where this has taken place. Nick

  2. Where they should be leading by example, it just shows a flagrant disregard for the environment that this lot have. Charlie was probably trying to communicate with the trees by telepathy when he hit the deer.

  3. What a load of un fettered codswallop!! Perhaps the writer should take the time to actually learn about the ways of the countryside and those that live there or even own some of the land before spouting of such a load of rubbish. But then again, I’m sure I will be shouted down by a townhouse full of antis…just because I happen to actually live in the countryside.

    1. Hazel, you are entitled to your views but I think you are creating a false division between town and country. The Queen as I understand it spends most of her time in urban settings and spends a lot less time in the country than the many people from towns who enjoyed the countryside at weekend. And in terms of land ownership is that not one of the big problems, the land in mainly owned by a few absentee landowners?

    2. Ach, fealty and dependence on one source of income and a scarcity of alternative employment leads to biased viewpoints Hazel. As a long time rural, and onetime upland, dweller I fail to see how these newly bulldozed hill tracks help anyone but the few who pay to kill our wildlife … the very one’s who might benefit from some strenuous exercise if they would simply walk to the butts most of them lead too. They simply scar the land and use money made elsewhere to do so.

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