Beavers, Lynx & Scotland's Rewilding Story 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿


Conservation and Science


This issue of the newsletter is a day late. Not least because I wouldn't miss the local St. Patrick's Day parade, but also because it felt rather rude to send a very Scottish issue of the newsletter on St. Patrick's Day. And very Scottish it is!

Today, I have two podcast episodes in which we discuss nature restoration and rewilding in Scotland. The first is also a book recommendation, and both the episode and the book cover the same topic: the story of the first legal relocation of 'problem beavers' in Scotland. What makes it particularly interesting is that the relocation was organised by a farmer running a working farm. From the book and the episode, you will learn not only about navigating bureaucracy and opposition from neighbouring farmers, but also about the real, tangible benefits to the farming enterprise that followed the relocation. The book naturally goes into much greater detail, so treat the episode as a taster of what's inside.

The second episode is also set in Scotland and focuses on rewilding. In it, I am showcasing the Scottish rewilding charity SCOTLAND: The Big Picture as my choice for this year's Podcasthon. Podcasthon is a global initiative in which podcasters from around the world dedicate one episode to a charity of their choice. All the episodes are then released in the same week, creating a global wave of awareness. This is my second time taking part, so once you have finished listening, it's worth browsing the other Podcasthon episodes available. As for the episode itself, we discuss the various projects SBP currently have under way, and finish with some exciting news about the project I am most enthusiastic about: an attempt to restore the lynx population to Scotland.

Fighting for Scotland's Beavers

What happens when a farming family decides to become the first private landowner in Britain to legally relocate beavers onto their farm? How do you navigate the bureaucracy, the opposition from farming neighbours and the politics of wildlife management? And can beavers actually help a farm deal with the effects of climate change? To find answers to those questions I sat down with Tom Bowser, author of “Waters of Life: Fighting for Scotland's Beavers”, a book that tells the story of his journey from a self-described placid pacifist to a self-proclaimed radical fighting for beaver restoration.

Tom's family has farmed at Argaty in central Scotland since 1916, running the farm with two aims: producing food sustainably and making it as good a home as possible for nature. From the 2000s, beaver escapes or unlicensed releases led to a wild beaver population in Tayside, much of it on prime arable farmland where they were often unpopular with farmers. The Scottish government gave them protected status in 2019 but also handed out lethal control licences with alarming ease. In the first year alone, one in five beavers of Scotland's tiny population was killed under licence. When Tom was approached about rehoming beavers that would otherwise be shot, he stepped into a process that tested his patience, his relationships with farming neighbours and his faith in the system.

During our conversation, Tom shares hard-won lessons about bridging the divide between farmers and conservationists. We talk about the tribal dynamics that make these discussions so difficult and the importance of speaking to people like normal human beings rather than talking down to them. Tom also describes the real, measurable benefits beavers have brought to his farm, from reduced flood damage to water retention during heatwave summers. Tom's story is a reminder that restoring nature and producing food don't have to be an either-or proposition. Do yourself a favour and buy 'Waters of Life: Fighting for Scotland's Beavers' using the link below.


SCOTLAND: The Big Picture | Podcasthon 2026

What does it take to bring wild nature back to a country that has forgotten what it looks like? Can rewilding truly benefit local communities and rural economies or does it come at their expense? And is Scotland really thirty years behind the rest of Europe when it comes to restoring its landscapes? This is a Podcasthon episode and this year I've chosen SCOTLAND: The Big Picture as my featured charity. Founded by nature photographers and filmmakers it has grown from a single employee to a team of twenty-four in just a few years. Today I'm joined by Lisa Chilton, CEO, and Stef Lauer, Rewilding Training Lead.

Lisa and Stef walk us through the extraordinary scope of what SCOTLAND: The Big Picture has built. At the heart of it all is the Northwoods Rewilding Network, a string of over a hundred land partners spanning the country from the Solway Firth to Shetland. The research backing this work is striking. Rewilded sites within the network have recorded more than 250% more bird species and a tenfold increase in pollinator abundance compared to control sites that weren’t rewilded. Beyond the network, the Loch Abar Mòr project brings together fourteen landowners across 120,000 acres, working to a fifty-year vision that stretches from the summit of Ben Nevis right down to seagrass beds and native oysters on the seafloor.

Our conversation also covers the long and careful effort to bring lynx back to Scotland. Lisa explains how Lynx to Scotland, a partnership involving SCOTLAND: The Big Picture, Trees for Life, and the Lifescape Project, has spent years engaging over fifty national stakeholder organisations and is now conducting one-to-one consultations in the communities most likely to be affected by any future release. The process is slow and deliberate. But as Stef puts it, the question is really about what kind of ecosystem we want to leave for the next generation. On that front, the ambition and the optimism coming from Lisa and Stef are genuinely infectious


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Tommy's Outdoors: Conservation and Science

I am an outdoorsman, podcaster and speaker. I talk and write about the natural environment, biodiversity, conservation, hunting and fishing, rewilding and more. I am particularly interested in wildlife and human-wildlife interactions. I enjoy reading scientific papers on those subjects as much as being outdoors weathering the elements and getting first-hand experiences.

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