Category: Loch Lomond and Trossachs

December 21, 2021 Nick Kempe 8 comments

It was Drennan Watson, long-time conservation activist in the Cairngorms, who first pointed out to me that when saplings emerge from tree shelters they are the perfect height for deer to nibble.  But until yesterday I didn’t have any photos to demonstrate what happens. The tree tubes were a few kilometres beyond the neglected western…

December 15, 2021 Nick Kempe 5 comments

Following his post on the A82 upgrade (see here), John Urquhart and other volunteers from the Helensburgh and District Access Trust (HADAT) requested a deputation to the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority Board on their alternative proposals for a high road linking Tarbet and Invernan. This was accepted and the HADAT delegation was…

December 13, 2021 Nick Kempe 2 comments

The Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority (LLTNPA) Board meeting today was meant to be held both on-line and in public at the National Park HQ.  With the wave of Omicron sweeping the country, I fully expected the meeting to be cancelled but the notice (above) was up last night and still was this…

December 10, 2021 Nick Kempe 3 comments

In my recent post criticising the  use of plastic tree tubes to plant woodland in the Cairngorms (see here),  I argued that tree shelters wouldn’t be necessary if nature was not so out of kilter – primarily due to sporting land management.  The addiction of the native woodland planting business to tree tubes, however, goes…

November 28, 2021 Nick Kempe 5 comments

While working on my last post criticising the response of the leadership of the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority to the climate emergency (see here), I had no idea of the damage that had by wrought by Storm Arwen at Stronachlachar in the Trossachs.  My thanks to the Steamship Trust for including parkswatch…

November 27, 2021 Nick Kempe 1 comment

The Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority (LLTNPA) website has had a makeover.  If you click on their site address https://www.lochlomond-trossachs.org/ you are greeted by a photo of a digger in the uplands, the hashtag slogan “Let’s do net zero” and a page of links to information on various aspects of the “climate emergency…

November 9, 2021 John Urquhart 9 comments

I am writing this post in my capacity as Convener of Helensburgh and District Access Trust (HADAT), a Scottish incorporated charitable trust which seeks to improve countryside access in the Helensburgh and Lomond area. The trust manages the Three Lochs Way Great Trail and for many years has had ambitions to see that route extended…

November 5, 2021 Dave Morris 9 comments

“We need farmers”. Speaking in Glasgow on 2 Nov, alongside First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and young activists, the former Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Christiana Figueres, emphasised the role of farmers in making a “step change in our relationship to the natural world”. Such a step change was “really…

October 23, 2021 Nick Kempe 4 comments

After my post on NatureScot and the Scottish Countryside Rangers Assocation’s statement on the role of countryside rangers in Scotland (see here), a couple of readers questioned whether access rights were being afforded any more respect on the ground as opposed to what is being said in the policy world.  They were right to do…

October 7, 2021 Nick Kempe 4 comments

In my posts  (see here) and (here) criticising the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority Board for abandoning their decision-making role and allowing senior staff to take control, I was aware of a recent exception to the rule.  At the Planning Committee on 30th August (see here for papers) Board Members rejected a recommendation…

September 29, 2021 Nick Kempe 4 comments

The number of people drowning in Loch Lomond has been a major issue for years, with our public authorities being far more concerned about the health and safety standards being applied to competitors in the European Swimming Championships, all by definition great swimmers, than the general public (see here).  But even after the terrible events…

September 24, 2021 Nick Kempe 5 comments

Regular readers will know that parkswatch has, since its creation, been arguing that the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority (LLTNPA)’s approach to visitor management is fundamentally flawed:  instead of providing appropriate infrastructure, they blame visitors for the things that go wrong as a consequence (litter, human  waste, cars blocking roads); instead of promoting…