Farming Scotland Magazine (September - October Issue 2021)

Page 96

estate Two Scottish landholdings gain prestigious wildlife conservation accreditation Two Scottish landholdings have retained their prestigious international accreditation to recognise their ongoing work in wildlife management and conservation. Wildlife Estates Scotland (WES) accreditation has been awarded to Glenmuick Estate and to Rottal Estate, both of which are nestled in the Cairngorms National Park. WES is a national version of the European Landowners Organisation’s Wildlife Estates (WE) accreditation scheme and is driving forward best practice in land management throughout Scotland’s farms, estates and other rural landholdings. Glenmuick is a traditional mixed highland estate near Ballater offering sporting, tourism, housing and agricultural opportunities. The estate works to ensure a balanced environment

Glenmuick Estate

96

with the primary focus on best practice wildlife management and conservation, including regular and comprehensive breeding surveys. During a dedicated butterfly survey in 2020, 30 species of butterfly were identified on the estate including the near threatened Scotch Argus. Glenmuick are also involved in a collaborative project to restore nutrients on the River Muick in the hope it will rejuvenate algae, insects and aquatic life including juvenile salmon over the coming years. Rottal, meanwhile, is an upland estate with approximately 2600ha of moorland made up of both dry and wet heathland, 200ha of woodland, riparian woodland and scrub and natural regeneration and 400ha of improved and unimproved grass land. The estate farms sheep, has

a grouse moor, red deer, holiday lets and events and also produces electricity via a hydro-electric scheme. The estate is involved with a catchment wide contour tree planting initiative designed to improve natural flood management, control diffuse pollution, improve landscape and habitats and increase biomass and timber production. Rottal has planted 120,000 trees running almost the entire length of the estate and created a number of hedges and riparian plantings along burns. It has also been involved in extensive peatland restoration programmes, creating wet areas, ponds and scrapes. This spring, the estate hosted four curlew nests on an area of restoration. Caroline Pringle, Project Officer at Wildlife Estates Scotland, said: “Landholdings

across Scotland are embarking on vital conservation work that greatly benefits society but often comes at significant cost to the business. Land managers see themselves as custodians of their local habitat and this is especially true at Glenmuick and Rottal. Both estates should be very proud of retaining their WES accreditation following a rigorous process which sets a high benchmark for best practice.” Andrew Walker-Okeover, owner of Glenmuick, said: “The aim of Glenmuick is to do our very best for our shared natural environment and to manage the business of the estate in an ecologically responsible way. The Wildlife Estates Scotland scheme is a great initiative to encourage the sharing of knowledge and best practice management and we are very

Rottal owner Dee Ward and head keeper Mark Palmer on estate using raptor monitoring app

www.farmingscotlandmagazine.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Who’s going where?

3min
pages 130-132

Southern Belle

3min
page 129

Four books reviewed

2min
page 128

Events

3min
page 127

Clothing

2min
page 113

The Money Man

6min
pages 111-112

Machinery

8min
pages 114-126

Finance

2min
page 110

The Cairngorms (Part 5

5min
pages 108-109

Opportunities abound

4min
page 106

With Linda Mellor

3min
page 105

Life on the Islands

2min
page 104

Scottish Game Fair

7min
pages 100-101

Equine

1min
page 99

Conservation Matters

4min
page 98

Scottish Land & Estates

3min
page 97

Estate

2min
page 96

Scottish Forestry

3min
page 95

Forestry

3min
pages 92-94

Pigs

3min
page 89

People

6min
pages 90-91

National Sheep Association

4min
page 88

Scottish Government

6min
pages 86-87

Sheep

5min
pages 83-85

NFU Scotland

3min
page 82

Dairy

2min
pages 80-81

Hutton Institute

3min
page 79

The Vet

5min
pages 77-78

Livestock

9min
pages 67-75

A Livestock Diary

3min
page 66

Quality Meat Scotland

4min
page 76

Rural life around Loch Ness

6min
pages 64-65

Orkney Boreray Sheep

4min
pages 62-63

Ploughs

8min
pages 42-47

Muck Spreaders

4min
pages 54-60

New Zealand (part 2

3min
pages 48-49

Mackenzies Farm Shop Shetland

3min
pages 52-53

British Ploughing Championships

2min
page 51

Increased grain productivity at Balgonie Estate

5min
pages 38-39

Let’s make ice cream

5min
pages 40-41

The Vertical Farm

2min
page 35

Lambs and Strawbs

2min
page 16

Scotch Butchers Club Winners!

2min
page 14

In my view

9min
pages 7-13

Scotland the Brand

3min
page 15

Winter crop preparation with St Catherine’s Seeds

4min
pages 18-19

A problem solved by Vogelsang

3min
pages 24-25

Farming for the Climate

6min
pages 21-22

Crofting

3min
page 23
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.