Reforesting Scotland 72 Quotes

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Reforesting Scotland 72: Autumn/Winter 2025 Reforesting Scotland 72: Autumn/Winter 2025 by Mandy Meikle
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“Cashel has been here before. Once part of the Rowardennan Estate, it was purchased by the National Land Fund for public benefit and passed to the Forestry Commission to manage before being sold by the Thatcher government. The cycle is now being repeated: private, public, private, public, private. What is land for?

The Cashel Trustees are now proposing to retain a core woodland are but have not said who or what the land is for. How about using the land to demonstrate what support is needed from government if native woodland is to deliver public benefit?”
Nick Kempe, Reforesting Scotland 72: Autumn/Winter 2025
“The footprint of Culardoch Shieling measures 47 square metres and the interior is lined with Sitka. In contrast to traditional shieling huts, it provides accommodation for eating only. From within, the windows mimicking Ronchamp, are placed, not as Corbusier intended, to strategically introduce a deliberate interplay of light and shadow, but rather, to frame specific viewpoints of the Beinn Avon massif. Culardoch Shieling presents us with a clever, romanticised view of what the shieling can be in 21st century Scotland. Unfortunately, it is not a structure that I find convincing. The fusion of modernist borrowings and Swiss-chalet vernacular aside, it is the conceptual basis for this 'shieling' that I find troubling. Obviously the need for shieling huts to provide shelter for those tending the dairy herd is anachronistic. However, the heritage that Culardoch Shieling pays homage to is clearly straight from a 19th century shooting textbook. It's a lunch hut. A 21st century folly, which was never intended for overnight stay, nor for sustained periods of habitation. In Glen Gairn the shieling way of life has become shieling lifestyle.”
Charles Fletcher, Reforesting Scotland 72: Autumn/Winter 2025
“Earlier this year I visited the township of Bragar on the Isle of Lewis to research shielings. I was told the story of a local resident, Mr. Campbell, who lived through the end of transhumance on the island in the 1950s. Mr. Campbell readily recalled that the summers of his youth, spent at the family's àiridh on the Lewis moor, were the happiest time of his life; yet, when his family ceased to keep dairy cows on their croft, he refused to go out to the shieling any more: without the cows, what was the point? The essence of life at the shielings was gone.”
Charles Fletcher, Reforesting Scotland 72: Autumn/Winter 2025
“We are living through an absolutely crucial juncture in human history, when the externalities of our current economic system are coming home to roost. These include misinformation (courtesy of 'Big Tech'), global heating (thanks to 'Big Oil'), and wealth inequality (exacerbated by neoliberal economic policies). Together, these interlocking crises are buffeting our political institutions, threatening to envelop them in a vortex of partisanship and chronic instability. Looming over these challenges is the threat of societal disruption from AI and the imminent collapse of a rules-based international order. At such a time, what we need more than ever is a big vision, a narrative to help people make sense of the bewildering world we live in, and political courage. Both things that seem distinctly lacking from our political class.”
Matt Hay, Reforesting Scotland 72: Autumn/Winter 2025
“As I write, in early July 2025, threatening plumes of smoke sweep across the horizon. Dava Moor, twelve miles from Laikenbuie Ecology Trust, is on fire. The wildfire currently spans over nine miles. As well as the terrible impact on local people, I grieve for the animals. Endangered northern damselflies and white-faced darters live in lochs now surrounded by flames. Never has it felt more pressing to restore health to our habitats and increase Scotland's resilience to climate change.”
Genevieve Tompkins, Reforesting Scotland 72: Autumn/Winter 2025