Unacceptable telecommunications masts (19) – the temporary withdrawal of the Glenmore “repeater” mast to Ryvoan

On Tuesday, 20th August, I and other objectors received this letter by email notifying us that the planning application for this 25m high telecommunications mast in the Glenmore Forest had been withdrawn. As usual, the description of the proposed development tells you little,  but this is the “repeater” mast whose only purpose was to enable…

Unacceptable telecommunications masts (19) – the Creag Dhubh appeal and the rotten Shared Rural Network programme

In May, in a welcome move, Highland Councillors rejected the recommendation of their officers to approve a 25m high telecommunications mast on the south facing slopes of Creag Dubh, above the A86 between Laggan and Newtonmore, and refused planning permission on the grounds that: “This proposed installation of a telecommunications mast is considered contrary to…

Unacceptable telecommunications masts (18) – Ryvoan and the ridiculous Shared Rural Network Programme

Mobile phone operator Three’s Planning Application for a 22.5m telecommunication mast 400m from Ryvoan bothy, ostensibly intended to provide mobile coverage for the big four operators in the “Total Not Spot” between there and Glenmore, is generating just the sort of criticism needed to scupper the whole disastrous Shared Rural Network (SRN) programme.  Besides over…

Unacceptable telecommunications masts (8) – in BrewDog’s Lost Forest in the Monadhliath Wild Land Area

On 5th February a planning application was published on Highland Council Planning portal to erect a 27.5m high telecommunications mast along with 2 x 15m wind turbines and 36 solar panels in the heart of BrewDog’s Lost Forest (see here). While the application states “the proposed site is located towards the foot of Creag Shollier,…

Unacceptable telecommunications masts (4) – the full potential impact of the SRN scheme

Parkswatch has already featured the Shared Rural Networks (SRN) scheme, and some instances of its potential impact (see here), (here) and (here). Some digging (mostly by others) reveals that the  potential impact  of the SRN scheme is much bigger and much worse that many people previously thought. To recap, the Shared Rural Networks (SRN) scheme is…

Unacceptable telecommunications masts (3) – the developers playing cat and mouse in Torridon and the Cairngorms

On Monday objectors to the proposal to build a  telecommunications mast in the heart of Torridon (see here) were informed the application has been withdrawn. A small but significant victory which shows that the roll-out UK Government’s Shared Rural Network programme is far from a foregone conclusion. There had been 92 comments from the public…

Unacceptable telecommunications masts (2) – at the eastern end of Loch Mullardoch on the Glencannich estate

In a recent post on the proposed telecommunications mast at the western end of Loch Mullardoch (see here), I criticised the organisations which have rightly formed a coalition agains  the Shared Rural Network programme for not campaigning hard enough to protect  Scotland’s finest wild land from descretation. Those organisations – I am a member of…

The UK Government, landowners and telecommunications masts – the landscape and environmental impacts

Who benefits from the telecommunication masts?   The spate of new telecommunications masts which, as George Allan from the North East Mountain Trust explained on Monday (see here), threaten some of Scotland’s finest landscapes are intended to eliminate “total not spots”.  They form part of the Shared Rural Network programme and are being  funded by…

Outdoor education & a community watersports hub in Balloch as an alternative to Flamingo Land

The importance of outdoor education, the contribution this could make to people’s physical and mental health, safety (eg reducing drowning accidents) and understanding/enjoyment of the countryside, has been regularly discussed in Scotland for 50 years or more but since its heyday in the 1980s provision has steadily decreased.  The failure of the Loch Lomond and…

Unacceptable telecommunications mast (17) – the Ryvoan planning application & the Cairngorms National Park

On 10th July Mitie, acting on behalf of Three, who are working for Digital Mobile Spectrum Ltd, who report to the Big Four mobile operators which include Three submitted a planning application to erect a 22.5m telecommunications mast by Ryvoan bothy (see here for planning papers).  A week earlier David Craig  explained on parkswatch (see…