
Scottish village buys a large part of Langholm Moor from the Duke of Buccleuch, planning to create a nature reserve and a regeneration project.
Buccleuch, Buccleuch. It has a familiar ring to it. Didn’t we stay at the Buccleuch Arms on our honeymoon trip through Scotland? I think so, but it’s been 50 years, so …
I do clearly remember the beautiful rolling hills of the Scottish Lowlands and the black-faced sheep wandering over the roads like they owned them, which of course, they did. So whether or not I was ever in the Buccleuch environs, I love today’s story about a Scottish village’s determination to preserve 8 square miles of beauty.
Severin Carrell writes at the Guardian, “A village in southern Scotland has succeeded in buying a large part of Langholm Moor, a famous grouse moor held for centuries by the dukes of Buccleuch, among the UK’s most powerful hereditary peers.
“Buccleuch Estates said on Monday it would be selling just over 2,000 hectares (about 5,000 acres) of Langholm Moor [to] the local community, which plans to create a leading new nature reserve and community regeneration project.
“The deal, the largest ever community buyout in the south of Scotland, follows months of fundraising by the Langholm Initiative, which only succeeded with hours to spare before the deadline of 31 October.
“Kevin Cumming, the initiative’s project leader, said he was thrilled with the deal. ‘Community ownership can be a catalyst for regeneration, which we want to show can be done with the environment at its heart,’ he said. …
“Buccleuch Estates told the campaigners it would continue talking about the possibility of buying the remaining 2,100 hectares that covers much of the former grouse moor, which would involve the Langholm Initiative raising [almost $3 million more]. …
“The Langholm buyout is one of three community land sales involving Buccleuch in south-west Scotland, all part-funded with taxpayers’ money.
“Earlier this year, Buccleuch Estates sold 300 hectares of land around the village of Newcastleton and has offered to sell 1,560 hectares of moorland, pasture and brownfield land to a community trust at Wanlockhead in the Leadhills for nearly [$2 million]. …
The Langholm Initiative hopes the moorland regeneration, ecotourism and rural industries it plans to fund will bring enough money to plough back into community regeneration and bring in new residents.
“The scheme will focus on creating a new nature reserve called Tarras Valley, including restoring Langholm’s ancient peatlands and protecting the area’s threatened populations of hen harrier. The initiative hopes its reforestation and peatland restoration projects will attract subsidies from programmes funding measures to combat global heating.”
People who inherit vast lands they cannot afford to keep up either have to sell them or get creative. They can end up being owned by the land — a status I do not envy. I’m thinking of people I knew who inherited Rokeby on the Hudson River and rented it out for weddings and such, including the shooting of a pretty wild art film. I’m glad the Buccleuch Estates are trying to help others preserve what is sold off.
More at the Guardian, here.
Earle sent a similar story from his own life. “My sister and I bought a large tract near where our great grandfather built his homestead at the border of Sonoma and Mendocino Counties, CA. We donated a conservation easement on it to the Sonoma Land Trust, building houses for ourselves and committing the rest to preservation. When one of us needed to sell, it took a year to find a buyer willing to buy a preserve, but we finally found one who has a solar energy business and is devoted to environmental causes. He, his wife and daughter are loving it.”
This is lovely news. I recently watched a nature program which pointed out that there USED to be plenty of trees in Scotland until we humans cut almost all of them down. It will be fascinating to see what effects begin to ripple through the landscape as a result of their re-foresting efforts…
We know how to take down. We know how to build back up. It just takes a will to do it.
Holy cats! One of my blogging friends, Mr. Tootlepedal, was involved in this. Actually, Mrs. Tootlepedal, his wife, was on the Langholm Initiative committee. Bravo to them! That was a lot of hard work and fundraising. What a gift to the town! And to the creatures that live on the land.
Golly, one does meet the *best* people through blogging!
Sure do! Both Tootlepedals are gems!