The summit of Tampie at 723 metres. All photos taken May 2014. |
Roads, fences, gates, burnt heather. A savaged, stripped,
blasted land. That’s the Eastern Highlands, beyond Mount Keen. Walking through
these hills on the TGO Challenge recently was a depressing experience. Nowhere
else in the Highlands have I seen such devastation and destruction. And all in
the name of grouse shooting and deer stalking, all so that a few wealthy people
can spend a few weeks a year killing birds and animals for fun without having
to make any effort or suffer any discomfort.
These hills have been damaged by the shooting industry for
many decades now with regular heather burning and bulldozed roads but recent
developments have taken this destruction to a new level. There are many new
roads, not just bulldozed but built up, raised above the peat bogs on hard
foundations, roads I could drive my car along. And with the roads there are
miles of fences. These are often double, one of the pair being electrified. Many
are tall deer fences. Beside them run the rusting posts of the first fences,
erected in Victorian times when these hills first became so-called ‘sporting’
estates. There are gates too – massive metal ones big enough to allow trucks
through with side gates for walkers. These roads and fences run over summits
and along ridge crests, often at over 700 metres. Surrounding them are the neat
rectangles of burnt heather, creating a dowdy, unnatural, patchwork quilt
effect. There are buildings for shelter too. In one place metal steps led from
the road to a wooden-floored grouse butt so the shooter wouldn’t even have to
touch the ground with their shoes. Can’t get those green wellies muddy.
Old fence posts, new fences |
Walking through this ravaged landscape I saw little
wildlife. There weren’t even many grouse. I did see a few mountain hares – one of
them lying dead beside the road – and some golden plover, whose lonely sad
piping seemed very appropriate, plus a few crows. There were traps though –
cage traps and spring traps – and notices from estates explaining these were
legal and were to keep fox and crow numbers down to protect ground-nesting birds (for which read grouse) – though some I
saw were too small for foxes and looked more designed to catch stoats. One notice
said the estate was installing CCTV because people were damaging their traps. Other
notices explained that deer stalking was necessary to protect the forest. I
didn’t see a sign of a tree above the fenced forests in the glens, nor even a
bush. This landscape is like this to make grouse and deer shooting easy and for
no other reason.
Grouse shooting has become an issue due to the strange
coincidence that the areas where raptors are rare or non-existent happen to be
the same as grouse moors – though of course the estates protest that this is
nothing to do with them and they love raptors. In England there is now a
petition calling for driven grouse shooting to be banned in order to protect
hen harriers. The petition says ‘intensive management of upland areas for the
‘sport’ of grouse shooting has led to the near-extinction of the protected Hen
Harrier in England, as well as increased risk of flooding, discolouration of
drinking water, degradation of peatbogs and impacts on other wildlife.’
George Monbiot, author of the excellent book on rewilding Feral (see my take on it here), has also written about the state
of parts of the Highlands recently in his usual provocative style. In an essay
entitled Highland Spring he writes ‘it
is astonishing, in the 21st Century, that people are still allowed to burn
mountainsides – destroying their vegetation, roasting their wildlife,
vapourising their carbon, creating a telluric eczema of sepia and grey blotches
– for any purpose, let alone blasting highland chickens out of the air.’
That people are allowed to do this, and allowed to build
roads and put up fences and gates, is astonishing. No planning permission is
required as it comes under the heading of ‘agricultural purposes’, which is a
joke of course. As a report issued last autumn said these tracks should come
under planning control (see this post from last December). Until then keeping up the pressure for change –
letters, emails to politicians and the media, posts in blogs and on social
media – is needed. The situation is deteriorating in too many areas. Something
must be done. Wild land coming under new planning regulations should be the
answer but this hasn’t happened yet.
If protection can be gained for these destroyed areas the
next task will be restoration. They are beyond the stage where they can be left
to recover. Roads and fences need removing before this can happen.