Tag: conservation

March 15, 2019 Dave Morris 2 comments

What is the connection between national parks and Brexit? Not much might be your first reaction, but read on…… The European Union’s Common Agricultural Policy has an influence on most of the UK’s countryside, from the intensively managed fields adjacent to our villages and towns to the highest summits where the sheep roam freely. Most…

March 12, 2019 Nick Kempe No comments exist

The papers for the next Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority Board meeting on Monday 18th March were published last week (see here).   There are some good things in them, particularly the papers on “Wild Park” and a new Forest Strategy  (see here), which I will consider further in due course.  There are also…

December 27, 2018 Nick Kempe 1 comment

The Royal Family has, ever since Queen Victoria came to Deeside, played a central role in legitimising hunting culture, practice and consequent land-use across upland Scotland.   As long as the way they manage their land at Balmoral and Delnadamph (see here) remains unchallenged, other landowners across Scotland will mimic what they do.  That entails maintaining…

December 7, 2018 Nick Kempe 1 comment

There have been many objections to the Flamingo Land Planning Application but very little consideration given to how it fits with the policies set out in the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority Local Development Plan (LDP).    While politics are often a more important factor than plans in determining planning applications,  the LDP is…

December 5, 2018 Drennan Watson 16 comments

Looking back on my long involvement in conflicts on Cairn Gorm what always strikes me is that the main cause has not be tensions between landuses but simple incompetence – particularly by HIDB/HIE.  Now Highlands and Islands Enterprise is having to take over a bankrupt company running the facility for the second time and there…

November 12, 2018 Nick Kempe 3 comments

The purchase of the Kinrara Estate by Wild Land Ltd, which is owned by Danish billionaire Anders Povlsen, received wide media coverage including from papers who like to treat such matters as part of our celebrity culture (see here).   It raises some dilemmas for people who believe that fundamental land reform is needed to address…

October 12, 2018 Mary Jack No comments exist

Back in August, I noted from the Loch Lomond & the Trossachs National Park Authority weekly planning list the following planning application from Luss Estates   Ref 2018/0166/DET (see here): Proposal Change of use of former slate quays to allow a) the unloading of felled timber (Storage and Distribution Class 6), b) occasional use for…

September 23, 2018 Dave Morris 2 comments

Scotland has almost no natural treeline and lacks the montane scrub zone which is found in other mountainous areas such as Norway and the Alps because of a long history of overgrazing (by sheep and deer) and excessive burning. It is therefore very welcome that the Cairngorms National Park Authority attaches a high priority to…

September 13, 2018 Nick Kempe No comments exist

The consultation on the draft Cairngorms Nature Action Plan closes tomorrow on Friday 14th September.  A month ago (see here) I considered the context for the plan and the proposed priorities for landscape scale conservation:   farmland, freshwater restoration, woodland expansion and peatland .   This post will look at the other two professed aims of the…

August 23, 2018 Ron Greer 19 comments

Hydroelectric power generation  features prominently in the firmament of  the renewable energy icons of the ‘green movement’ and indeed among its most avid supporters, there is almost a zealous fervency about it, bordering on religiosity about its promulgation, indeed one tantamount to a holy dictum of hydro. There is no doubt, in a  political environment…

August 17, 2018 Nick Kempe No comments exist

The consultation on the second five year Cairngorms Nature Action Plan was launched on 20th June and closes on Friday 14th September at 5pm.    The draft plan is easy to read (just 36 pages with big print and lots of photos) and there in an online survey form which focuses on whether the aims, objectives…

August 16, 2018 Anne MacIntyre No comments exist

Following on from the  ‘Lessons from the Pyrenees’ posts I recently visited the Jotunheimen National Park which covers a mountainous area of more than 1,000 km2 including Galdhoppigen, the highest peak in Northern Europe.   It’s not surprising that this is Norway’s premier walking area and, with increasing visitor numbers, there has been significant pressure on…

August 4, 2018 Nick Kempe 5 comments

Listening to Radio Scotland on Wednesday, I heard a reporter extolling the wonders of Loch Lomond as the venue for the European open water swimming championships which takes place over four days starting on Wednesday 8th August (see here).  Spectating at the event is free of charge and unticketed.   The Reporter seemed blissfully aware of…

July 31, 2018 James Graham 6 comments

  [Editor’s note:  my apologies to James and readers, I had  intended to appear publish James’ objection to the Flamingo Land proposal at the end of June.  It makes a forceful case for nature] My objection to the Flamingo Land planning application was as follows. To the east, the Site Boundary is on the River…

July 27, 2018 Nick Kempe No comments exist

The French Pyrenean National Park and the Ordesa and Mont Perdido National Park are much smaller than our two National Parks in Scotland but surrounded by large buffer zones where the National Park influences what activities take place and how land is managed.   In the National Parks themselves there is no permanent human habitation and…

July 12, 2018 Nick Kempe 2 comments

The replacement extension to the Cairngorms National Park Authority HQ, which is now close to completion, has been attracting some critical comments in the Strathy.                 The building, which the Cairngorms National Park Authority leases, is owned by Reidhaven, more commonly known as Seafield Estates, which owns much…

July 6, 2018 Nick Kempe 1 comment

Twenty five years ago a group of dynamic people interested in land-use in Scotland undertook a study tour of Norway and the subsequent report written by Andy Wightman, now a Green MSP (see here), inspired many people to get involved in developing alternatives to blanket blocks of Sitka,   degraded grouse moors and deer “forests”.   Last…