This is the beautifil sandy beach at Ardverikie on Loch Laggan. Ardverikie was where the television series Monarch of the Glen was filmed. Scottish native Woods are currently putting together an upland management plan for this wider area, and this was me on my way to Fort William yesterday to pave the way for a first draft going out, then on to Inverness and back to Aberfeldy, 260 mile round trip.
We are experienced woodland advisors with over 80 years of experience between us, and we combine this with a refreshing and pragmatic approach to helping woodland occupiers to work out what they should do with their woodlands and associated open ground. We all have wider skills than just woodland management and can advise on a wide range of farm, deer, river conservation and wildlife management projects. We are happy to hear from other who might be interested in joining us.
Tuesday, 27 April 2010
Monday, 26 April 2010
Native Woodland Discussion Group in the Trossachs
Thursday, 22 April 2010
Camserney Community garden
This is the Camserney Community garden outside Aberfeldy, established and ran by staff and pupils at Breadalbane Academy. The site has grown up very quickly and matured over tw seasons, and is already needing to expand, which it will do by the autumn. Scottish Native Woods accessed some funding through the People's Postcode Trust to buy a rotovator, a gazebo, some trees and hedging, and we are also establsihing a propogation unit here to grow aspen trees from native Highland perthshire sources. A very interesting little experiment, and a very interesting site, with something different going on on nearly eery single square metre. Well done to Peter Butter and his crew.
Tuesday, 20 April 2010
urban trees
The first one shows budleia getting a grip on an abandoned industrial site. Budleia is great at finding wee cracks in the tarmac and the brick work and creating its own urban jungle.
Second picture is at the other end of tree life: a rather more deliberately designed and managed line of trees, just beside the Clyde in Glasgow's Internation Finacial Services District.
Friday, 16 April 2010
Friday, 9 April 2010
Wednesday, 7 April 2010
Beech invasion
These young beech trees are invading a SSSI site at the bottom of Glenlyon. There is an avenue of mature beech trees either side of the road, and they are now regenerating profusely. Beech casts a very dense shade and can out-compete other native trees and woodland flora. It is however a beautiful amneity tree, both in autumn and and in the spring time. Many people associate lower Glenlyon with beech. The big tree here in the middle is an oak, the natural native species on this site.
Beech within a coupe fell
This little group of beech is getting away in a clearing. In many ways, this is good forestry practice, regeneration in a coupe felling system, and beech is well suited to this.
Under the hazel bushes
You can see the beech regeneration here spreading in under this hazel coppice. hazel is just a shrub that requires a reasonable degree of lighting. Beech is a big tree that casts a dense shade. Left unchecked, it will come to dominate this area completely, including to the detriment of our native species.
Monday, 5 April 2010
Jimmy Lambie's pigs
These are domestic iron-age type pigs, not wild boar, but they HAVE escaped from their field, and they ARE running wild in the woods in Glenlyon today.
Saturday, 3 April 2010
Good Friday
Friday, 2 April 2010
What sort of tree is this?
It is a willow, looking very red. The wind/ snow had pulled it down over a path at the Birks of Aberfeldy