walkhighlands

Moray walking festival plans 5 day challenge

This summer the Moray Walking Festival has made it easier to accomplish the Moray Way long distance walking route. The Moray Way 5 Day Challenge will provide transport and support to participants over the 95 mile circular walk. The Challenge is one of over 40 events in this year's Moray Walking Festival programme, which takes place in June. The programme, featuring walks, talks and activities for all abilities, ages and interests, will be launched in March. The 5 Day Challenge route, made up of the Speyside Way, Dava Way and the Moray Coastal Trail, takes place from Thursday 19 to

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Posted in News

MCofS says Ben Klibreck wind farm will destroy landscape's soul

The fragile tourism industry in the far north of Scotland would be damaged if a new wind farm application in Sutherland gets the go-ahead according to the Mountaineering Council of Scotland (MCofS). Creag Riabhach Wind Farm Ltd has applied for planning permission for 22 wind turbines, each over 400 feet high, on moorland immediately below Ben Klibreck. The MCofS, which says it has only objected to 5% of Scottish wind farm applications, believes that these 125m turbines will have severe landscape and visual impacts and would diminish the local tourist and recreation resource. Chief Officer David Gibson said: “This site

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Posted in Nature, News

End of mink in Outer Hebrides in sight

Just a few dispersed mink may be left in Lewis and Harris as the long-running drive to rid the islands of the non-native predator reaches its final stretch. The Hebridean Mink Project (HMP) has run since 2001 with the aim of protecting internationally important populations of wader birds from the fur farm escapees. In that time 2,200 mink have been trapped and removed from Lewis and Harris and Uist. The project uses so-called ‘mink police’, small waterproof units attached to the live catch cage traps which are activated when a mink is trapped inside, These mink police units automatically communicate

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Posted in Nature

Action needed to ensure future of Scots Pine

Concerted action is needed to ensure a secure future for the Scots pine, which has been declared Scotland's national tree, leading conservation volunteering charity Trees for Life said today. The charity is warning that higher priority must be given urgently to the conservation of Scotland's pinewoods which have recently taken a battering from winter storms. Trees for Life’s Executive Director Alan Watson Featherstone said: “Declaring the Scots pine – bastion of the Caledonian Forest and one of the world’s most beautiful trees – as a national symbol sends a signal to the world that Scotland values its trees as an

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Posted in Nature

Mountaineers and skiers warned of 'terrain traps'

Massive quantities of snow in the Scottish mountains this winter have prompted mountain safety experts to warn both mountaineers and skiers of the danger of 'terrain traps'. Many hill-goers will not even know the term but there is increasing emphasis on educating mountaineers about how these geographical features can increase the danger from avalanches and the level of damage they cause. This winter has been marked by high winds and a continuous roller coaster of low pressures marching in off the Atlantic, bringing with them high winds and heavy rain. High up however, it has been a different story. Above

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Posted in News

Mountain cameraman Keith Partridge to give Edinburgh talk

Mountaineering cameraman, Keith Partridge is to give a talk in Edinburgh on 3 March. After over 20 years at the cutting edge of mountain and adventure filmmaking Keith says he thought it was time to spill the beans and look at the stories behind the stories. He has been involved in over 60 films all over the world including the iconic series ‘The Edge – 100 Years of Scottish Mountaineering’, ‘Touching The Void’, ‘Beckoning Silence’ on the Eiger North Face and the multi award winning ‘Human Planet’. During the evening at the Royal Lyceum Theatre he will recount tales of

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Posted in News

Third of Scottish native woodland damaged by deer

Grazing animals, particularly deer, are a bigger threat to Scotland's woodland than development, according to a new comprehensive survey. The Native Woodland Survey of Scotland has taken Forestry Commission Scotland eight years to complete, from planning to final report. It is the most detailed study of Scotland's woods to date. It has found that a third of Scotland’s native woods show significant damage from grazing animals, particularly deer, and that up to 14 per cent of Scotland’s ancient woodland has been lost since the last survey was completed. Carol Evans, director of the Woodland Trust Scotland said: “The Native Woodland

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Posted in Nature

2014 Walkhighlands Navigation Courses

Following the success of last year's navigation courses, there will be a further 4 Walkhighlands/MCofS Navigation Courses held in 2014. The first courses will be held in the Ochils in May with a further two courses planned for the Campsie Fells in June. Each course will begin with an hour of work indoors and then the rest of the day will be spent on practical navigation skills on the hill. The course will be run by Heather Morning, Mountain Safety Officer at the Mountaineering Council of Scotland and are aimed at anyone who wants to learn how to navigate for

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Posted in News, Walkhighlands news

Rum do as rat collared on Scots isle

A rat on the Isle of Rum is being tagged and its travels round the island logged via satellite in one of the first projects of its kind anywhere in the world. Researchers on Rum National Nature Reserve (NNR) are keen to move closer to understanding the impact of brown rat behaviour on nearby colonies of the Manx shearwater seabird. The work will be carried out by Sean Carlisle, a PhD researcher from Anglia Ruskin University. Rum is owned and managed by Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH). The island is home to around a quarter of the world’s breeding population of

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Posted in Nature

Hillwalkers help sought on Glen Lyon Munros access

A survey of access problems on a Glen Lyon estate is being carried out by the Mountaineering Council of Scotland. Long-running problems on the North Chesthill Estate have seen a steady stream of complaints from hill walkers who feel they have been obstructed from their legal right of responsible access. Besides being internationally renowned for its beauty, the glen is also home to a popular circuit of four Munros – mountains over 3000 feet – but at the most popular starting point for the walk a gate is regularly locked and signs imply that access is forbidden. Perth & Kinross

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Posted in Access issues, News


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You should always carry a backup means of navigation and not rely on a single phone, app or map. Walking can be dangerous and is done entirely at your own risk. Information is provided free of charge; it is every walker's responsibility to check it and to navigate safely.